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Student journalists shouldn t be censored | Opinion

Student journalists shouldn’t be censored | Opinion Updated May 04, 2021; Posted May 03, 2021 Maggie Garbarino, a senior at Fairleigh Dickinson University and a media intern at the Lesniak Institute for American Leadership, says legislators should pass a bill that would grant student journalists the right to freedom of speech and freedom of the press without fear of censorship. Facebook Share By Maggie Garbarino The battle for student press rights is still underway in New Jersey. It has been six years since advocates Thomas McHale and John Tagliareni began their fight for bill S108/A169, which would grant our state’s hardworking student journalists their rights to freedom of speech and freedom of the press without fear of censorship.

Foul-mouthed mum threatened to torch terrified neighbours after dousing them in petrol at a barbecue

Foul-mouthed mum threatened to torch terrified neighbours after dousing them in petrol at a barbecue Gemma Wood, 38, went berserk at a garden party and then attacked a peace-maker with a kitchen knife Updated Rachel Wood has been jailed (Image: GMP) A drunken mum threatened to torch terrified neighbours after dousing them with petrol at a barbecue and then attacked a peace-maker with a kitchen knife. Gemma Wood, 38, went berserk during a garden party to celebrate a neighbour s new baby. When police were called, they found Wood had pinned down another resident she was attacking with a six-inch knife. She s dead, sozzled Wood told officers, although her victim survived.

Sexual Violence, Trauma, and Neglect: Observations of Health Care Providers Treating Rohingya Survivors in Refugee Camps in Bangladesh by Physicians for Human Rights - 20/10/2020 [EN]

By Shahanoor Akter Chowdhury, MA, MSS, PHR consultant; Lindsey Green, MA, PHR senior program coordinator, Program on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones; Linda Kaljee, PhD, senior research investigator, Henry Ford Health System, Global Health Initiative; Thomas McHale, SM, PHR deputy director, Program on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones; and Ranit Mishori, MD, MSH, PHR senior medical advisor, professor of family medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine. In August 2017, the armed forces of Myanmar (Tatmadaw) unleashed a campaign of widespread and systematic attacks on the country’s Rohingya communities, escalating previous episodes of violent human rights abuses committed against the Rohingya population. The United Nations (UN) and multiple human rights groups documented that Myanmar security forces committed rape, gang rape, sexual slavery, forced nudity, genital mutilation and other forms of violence targeting sexual organs, sexual assault, and threats and attempts at

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