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1-11 of 11
- Jude MaCrory is a dissident Irish Republican. Amid fears that Brexit will lead to renewed violence along the Irish border, Jude's name is splashed across the papers as the bomber of Derry courthouse. He speaks up about what he sees is happening around Brexit.
- In the Chinese city of Chongqing, rappers try to figure out what can and can not be done since new censorship guidance has been issued, forbidding any form of improvisation.
- On March 20, 2003, the American Army under the command of George W. Bush invaded Iraq to overthrow Saddam Hussein's regime and to destroy its supposed weapons of mass destruction. A war that lasted for eight years, costing the lives of 500.000 civilians, and displacing five millions. Although there are 1.3 millions lawyers in activity in the United States and thousands of NGOs, no one has ever intended to sue the planners of a war deemed illegal by the United Nations. No one except Inder Comar.
- Through a Skype call the daily life, dreams and fears of a family in Eastern-Ukraine is revealed while the bombs are falling in the background.
- As Pope Francis pledges to instate a "zero tolerance" approach to child abuse in the Catholic Church, generations of victims continue to come forward. They're asking why their allegations have not been taken seriously until now.
- A Syrian artist returns to his hometown to survey the damage and finds out what it's really like to live, and paint, in a war zone.
- The young friends Eva, Sarah and Abd wander through the ruins of Aleppo. They seek support from each other and encourage each other in their struggle to break away from their parents.
- Bushra Al Fusail is a young photographer living in Sana'a, the capital of Yemen. The city has been under siege for weeks now, ever since the civil war swelled into a geopolitical conflict involving Iran and Saudi Arabia. News from Yemen is scarce, images few and footage of everyday life non-existent. Now that driving has become so expensive, men often use bicycles. Bushra Al Fusail's idea for Yemeni women: Let's ride bicycles, too! Using Facebook, she invited eighty women to come for a bike riding lesson followed by a ride through the streets of the capital city. Bushra took pictures and filmed the event, and posted the footage on Facebook as Bike4Yemen. These brief moments of freedom caused an uproar in the country. Bike4Yemen swiftly became a political issue, and participants feared their identities would be made known. News of the initiative spread. From New York to Cairo, from Australia to Paris, solidarity bike rides were organized.