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UN report lists companies complicit in Israel’s ‘genocide’: Who are they?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Social Media   来源:Education  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Umukher Farah is a Somali mother living on the Andover estate with her baby son. She is so worried about his future that she decided to attend Sadia's conference, even though Ismael is only nine months old.

Umukher Farah is a Somali mother living on the Andover estate with her baby son. She is so worried about his future that she decided to attend Sadia's conference, even though Ismael is only nine months old.

When asked about his response to this violence, he said: “Southport has just been torn apart, but we can’t think of [that] at the moment.“Everyone is just concentrating on getting Leanne home so we can see her.”

UN report lists companies complicit in Israel’s ‘genocide’: Who are they?

Since the attack, fans of Taylor Swift have so far raised over £310,000 for the victims and their families.The group, who are working with Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, had originally aimed to raise £13,000."Cruel, crisis, disappointed" - just three words used to describe the effect cuts being made by Birmingham City Council are going to have on people in the second city.

UN report lists companies complicit in Israel’s ‘genocide’: Who are they?

The local authority met on Tuesday to discuss the proposals as part of plans to tackle a £300m budget deficit over the next two years.BBC News has spoken to three people to find out what it means for them.

UN report lists companies complicit in Israel’s ‘genocide’: Who are they?

It's 07:30 GMT and Harry has had breakfast and is ready for school. He is doing some bhangra dancing in his living room while he waits for his taxi to pick him up.

The moves are energetic - it's a flamboyant routine and it's one Harry does every morning.“They do it because they can,” he shrugs. “They see no reason to stop.”

It was two years after the mass protests of 2020 that the police turned up for Dmitry Luksha. By then, he had imagined he was safe.“Those two years were my undoing,” he knows now, having spent 28 tough months in jail.

When he was released, unexpectedly, he thought he would stay in Belarus. But that was impossible.“I would jump whenever the lift opened. Or when a minibus with tinted windows pulled up. And there were so many armed police in the street,” Dmitry explains, from the safety of Warsaw where tens of thousands of other Belarusians now live, for the same reasons.

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