International community, ah, i british manager, welcome to d w. News asia. Glad you could join us. The taliban have systematically destroyed the rights of women and girls across have gone on since seizing power. Nearly a year ago, the Hotline Group have mostly excluded females from public life. They have ordered women to cover themselves from head to toe. They have denied them representation in the cabinet and the routine, the torture and threatened women in a new report titled death in slow motion leading rights group, Amnesty International sees and i got taken together. These policies form a system of repression that discriminates against women and gold. At almost every aspect of their lives, they suffocating crackdown against jonathans female population is increasing day by day. The most visible part of this crackdown is in afghanistan. Schools where girls can be seen only up to the primary level. The taliban have forbidden them from studying father. Its addicted. Thats crushing dre
Oh, hello. Guys, this is the 77 percent the platform with your idea. You know, the channels with young people clearly have the solution, the future the 77 percent, every weekend on the w. A city the of the news asia coming up today understands women and girls facing death in slow motion. Thats the title of a new report. Fired rights group describing life of women under taliban rule. Ill be asking an afghan education is if the poly bond can be forced to change its ways. And if the key to that my live with the International Community ah, i british manager, welcome to the w news, asia. Glad you could join us. The thought about have systematically destroyed the rights of women and girls across have gone on since seizing power. Nearly a year ago, the Hotline Group have mostly excluded females from public life. They have ordered women to cover themselves from head to toe. They have denied them representation in the cabinet and the routine, the torture and threatened women in a new report tit
But i minimize that. But i think the question you asked, i mean, most miraculous about the whole thing is not that something didnt go wrong, thats pretty miraculous, but that nobody challenged it. Yes. I mean, the only challenge came because i took the position that if the pardons hadnt been delivered, they couldnt i said lock the prison door, dont let anybody out. Roger humphreys got out because that was earlier in the week, but the rest of them didnt. They sued, and they got out because the courts eventually held that once the governor issues the pardon or commutation, thats it. And for those of you who dont know who Roger Humphreys was, please read the book. It is, that is keel, you captured the drama of that story. I mean, its a stunning story. Lee smith was part of it. Frank sutherland had his hand on it. Keel, with a story that has this much detail as you have in your book, you had to encounter factual conflicts. What was the biggest factual conflict in your interviewing that you
We want to start the conversation by talking about rosa parks. What do we know about rosa parks, jane . I wanted to start today with an evening meeting. That evening is november 27, 1955. On that november 27 rosa parks came to a meeting at dexter Avenue Baptist Church to hear tm howard, dr. Tm howard talked about the recent acquittal of the two killers of emmett till. Dr. King introduce fascinating and howard was there to spread the word. Howard had been one of the key organizers in trying to get even a trial of those two men and after those men he had been acquitted was on a tour through the country to spread the word and to continue the organizing after that travesty had happened as the two men who had lynched emmett till have been found not guilty. So this is november 27, 1955. Rosa parks sits there and she is talking about the lynching of emmett till and he is talking about the deaths of two other organizers in mississippi who would try to register to vote and have been killed and
Existence and they are are safe and they are beautiful but we want Public Policy transformation for our communities and our young sons and daughters who are living and dying all over the United States. We are optimistic that they can be better and we have to organize. Stokely carmichael said organize organize organize and that is what we need to do. [applause] you know, i love anything sasha and malia and so any kind of image of them is beautiful and i do love them and i believe the notion put forward of that kind of new generation set of conversations but i also think and i know that is a set of possibilities as kendall said that is very limited, very small, very narrow and very elite. The two images that are notions of communities talking to each other and having dialogue has stuck with me this week where the interview with juror 37 that Anderson Cooper did and im really glad for that interview. I am very thankful for the honesty of juror p37 and what she said and the insight that sh