Culture

India forcibly sterilised 8m men: One village remembers, 50 years later

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Arts   来源:Sustainability  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"The ideal outcome would be one where humanity shares in this new intelligence bonanza," he tells the BBC. "Maybe our brains are augmented by AI systems."

"The ideal outcome would be one where humanity shares in this new intelligence bonanza," he tells the BBC. "Maybe our brains are augmented by AI systems."

Still Waiting presents collages that capture moments of pause, of waiting.Tbourida La Chute by Olivier Unia

India forcibly sterilised 8m men: One village remembers, 50 years later

The Open competition celebrates the power and dynamism of a single photograph.Olivier Unia was chosen for his photograph Tbourida La Chute.Many of the photographs taken during a traditional Moroccan 'tbourida' show the riders firing their rifles.

India forcibly sterilised 8m men: One village remembers, 50 years later

With this image, the photographer wanted to share another side of the event, and show how dangerous it can be when a rider is thrown from their mount.The Last Day We Saw the Mountains and the Sea by Micaela Valdivia Medina (Peru)

India forcibly sterilised 8m men: One village remembers, 50 years later

Medina's project explores female prison spaces across Chile, and the dynamics that shape the lives of incarcerated women and their families.

For the 2025 Youth competition, photographers aged 19 and under were invited to respond to an Open Call and enter their best images from the last year.The statement came a day after the Indian embassy in Iran said that it had "strongly taken up this matter with Iranian authorities" and requested that the missing Indians be "urgently traced and their safety ensured".

Many Indians, particularly from Punjab, travel to developed countries in search of job opportunities and a better life.Some fall victim to scams run by travel agents, who charge exorbitant fees and send them through illegal or unsafe routes, often without proper documentation.

Gurdeep Kaur recounted the events that led to her 23-year-old son Amritpal Singh going missing to BBC Punjabi.The family had hired a travel agent in Hoshiarpur - where they live - to secure an Australian work permit for her son.

copyright © 2016 powered by FolkMusicInsider   sitemap