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For Independence Day, NPR wants to know: What does freedom mean to you?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Style   来源:Data  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:referred to the decision as a “course correction” in an opinion fully joined by four conservative colleagues.

referred to the decision as a “course correction” in an opinion fully joined by four conservative colleagues.

If the deal the U.S. is envisioning in east Congo goes well, it might end up stabilizing the region, said Gyude Moore, a former Cabinet minister in the West African nation of Liberia, now at the Center for Global Development, a think tank in Washington.If not, “this deal, especially in a region crawling with conflict where there hasn’t been a credible political solution, is fraught with risks for the United States as it pursues this extractive foreign policy in Africa,” Moore said.

For Independence Day, NPR wants to know: What does freedom mean to you?

Liam Karr, the Africa team lead at the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute’s critical threats project, said the Trump administration and its advisers know enough to avoid the risks, including those of getting American security forces directly involved.The larger risk is that American intervention meets the fate of U.N. and African peace efforts before it, Karr said. “And this just kind of falls flat on its face, and doesn’t go anywhere.”Banchereau reported from Dakar, Senegal. Associated Press writers Justin Kabumba in Goma, Congo, and Jean Yves Kamale in Kinshasa, Congo, contributed to this report.

For Independence Day, NPR wants to know: What does freedom mean to you?

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — A suicide bomber in theon Sunday targeted young recruits waiting to register at a military camp, killing at least 13 and wounding 21 others, witnesses said.

For Independence Day, NPR wants to know: What does freedom mean to you?

Mogadishu has been repeatedly targeted by

which has waged an insurgency for over a decade. The group frequently attacks military and government sites as part of its effort to impose its strict interpretation of Islamic law.Years after the declarations, community organizers and public health advocates in Milwaukee and Sacramento County say not much has changed. Officials counter that it’ll take more than a few years to undo centuries of structural and institutional racism.

But experts, officials and advocates all agreed on one thing: The declarations were an important first step toward creating a racially equitable society. Extensive research shows racism can have detrimental health impacts on people of color, including chronic stress and anxiety and higher rates of heart disease and asthma.AP correspondent Kenya Hunter reports on how communities responded to racism being declared a public health issue.

“If we’re not going to name racism in the first place, then we’re not going to start to develop solutions to address it,” said Dara Mendez, who teaches epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh and studied the early declarations. “... Then the next step is (asking) what are the actions behind it? ... Are there resources? Is there community action?”Lilliann Paine wanted to see everyday public health work focus on the intersection of racism and public health, and in 2018 brought the idea to the Wisconsin Public Health Association. Milwaukee, where Black people are the

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