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A Year Like No Other is an SBS News collaboration with the University of Technology Sydney. It features stories written by journalism students.
Sydney man Alex Eagles knew he wouldn’t see his Belarusian fiancee Katya Slepneva for a couple of months when he flew home after visiting her in February.
But the 28-year-old didn’t realise he might not see her again this year.
The couple met at a museum in Germany three years ago while travelling. They were both looking at a radar telescope which neither of them knew much about, but they soon fell in love.
Magnum’s moment of reckoning
In the nearly three years since the #MeToo movement transformed journalism, Magnum Photos, the world’s most prestigious photo agency, has portrayed itself as an industry leader. Magnum issued a code of conduct for its members in 2018, and its CEO boasted the same year it had not received a single complaint against any of its photographers. The agency chose women as both president and CEO, added more female photographers, and insisted it was taking harassment and abuse seriously.
But even as Magnum touted its efforts to confront the industry’s abuses, women who worked with one of the agency’s best-known photographers were telling a different story. Eleven women have described to CJR inappropriate behavior from David Alan Harvey over a span of thirteen years, ranging from suggestive comments to unwanted sexual advances to masturbating without their consent on video calls. His behavior was reported to Magnum as early as 2009, but the agency sat
part of that law requires police to check the status of everyone they stop. those who cannot prove they are legal u.s. residents can be arrested. the justices today are going to look at the legal issues, specifically does congress have the exclusive power over immigration or are k states like as can states like arizona get involved? the obama administration sued arizona to block the law. saying the federal government should be in charge of immigration. attorneys representing arizona argue that the law is necessary to control illegal immigration in a state that shares a border with mexico. as the justices were hearing arguments inside court, protestors were argue, they are side of the case outside. delia goncalves has more. reporter: after a 48 hour prayer vigil outside a u.s. supreme court, hundreds of protestors rally against the arizona immigration law. what do we want? justice. reporter: advocates from around the country say this fight is not only for immig