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  1. 110

    Photograph by Tomás Munita

    Early this morning, Tomás Munita and Bryan Denton were named the 2013 recipients of the Chris Hondros Fund Awards, offering financial support to photographers who work in the same vein that Hondros did — with empathy, dedication and humility. See more of the winner’s work here.

    Pictured: Porters wait for a sack of guano to carry on Guañape Norte Island off the coast of Peru. May 2008.

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    1. 14

      Statement on the Ríos Montt Conviction for Genocide, War Crimes

      Guatemala City/Brussels   |   13 May 2013

      In a historic decision, a Guatemalan court convicted former military dictator José Efrain Ríos Montt on 10 May of genocide and crimes against humanity for the massacre, torture, rape and forced displacement of indigenous villagers during counter-insurgency campaigns in the early 1980s. The verdict is unprecedented: never before has a national court found a former head of state guilty of genocide. It sends a powerful message: no one is above the law and everyone – including indigenous communities long marginalized by discrimination and poverty – has the right to seek justice in the courts.

      That the trial took place in Guatemala – a country where, as Crisis Group has reported, impunity was long the norm for abusive or corrupt officials, organised crime bosses and common criminals alike – is testament to the courage and persistence of judges, prosecutors, human rights defenders and members of the Maya-Ixil community themselves. Speaking through translators, witnesses recounted harrowing tales of murder, gang rape and flight after the army torched their villages and fields. Although truth commissions led by the UN and the Catholic Church collected similar testimonies in the 1990s, coverage of the trial allowed many Guatemalans to hear and read for the first time about atrocities committed during an armed conflict that began in 1960 and lasted for more than three decades. 

      By having the courage to testify in open court – subject to cross examination by defence attorneys – these witnesses may also encourage the victims of more recent crimes to come forward. Impunity feeds a vicious circle in Guatemala: because most crimes go unpunished, few bother to even report them. Opinion polls show that Guatemalans have little confidence in the courts or the police, who are often viewed as either ineffective or corrupt. But over the five-week trial, the country got a rare glimpse of an independent judiciary in action as the three-judge tribunal heard from about 100 witnesses, including indigenous survivors, psychologists, historians, forensic anthropologists and military experts.

      The process is far from over. Ríos Montt’s attorneys have motions and injunctions pending in other courts that could annul the trial. They have also promised to appeal his conviction, a process that could take months or even years. Nor is Ríos Montt the only individual targeted for prosecution as a war criminal. The tribunal acquitted his co-defendant, former director of military intelligence José Mauricio Rodríguez Sánchez, because it concluded that he had no direct command over troops. But it urged prosecutors to pursue other alleged violators. Among those now facing trial is an ex-guerrilla commander charged with massacring civilians in the village of El Aguacate.

      Critics contend that these prosecutions will re-open old wounds in a country where tension is already high in many rural areas over mining and access to land or electricity. But failing to prosecute those responsible for political repression in the past would only perpetuate the cycle of impunity that encourages criminal violence today. President Otto Pérez Molina should continue to support the efforts of Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz, recipient of Crisis Group’s Pursuit of Peace Award in 2011, to bring criminals to justice, regardless of their military rank, political power or economic might. Pérez Molina has promised to respect the judicial process. By holding to that promise, he will demonstrate to the world – and more importantly to his fellow citizens – that Guatemala is no longer a country where criminals can operate without fear of prosecution.  

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      1. 179

        We have reporters around the world who are willing to go anywhere to find a good story and explain what it means. And they are the reason we are launching this blog.

        Our correspondents won’t just be reporting the news, they will be looking to tell stories that connect us all. They will be seeking out, well, parallels, between stories far away and those close to home. And in the process, we hope to offer up some uncommon answers and alternate perspectives.

        Welcome to ‘Parallels,’ NPR’s International News Blog
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        1. 5

          BDC Founder Mike Kamber and photojournalists Alan Chin and Ashley Gilbertson spoke on the Leonard Lopate Show yesterday about covering the Iraq War and Mike’s upcoming book Photojournalists on War.

          Listen to the interview HERE

          Tomorrow, Wed., May 15, a reception and book signing will take place at 25CPW at 6:30 p.m. followed by a discussion at 7:30 p.m. with Mike Kamber, Dexter Filkins, and photojournalists featured in the book.

          © Ashley Gilbertson (first photo)

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          1. 5

            Actual photo of, Dzhokar Tsarnaev, the younger of the Boston Marathon bombers, being taken into custody, in Watertown, Massachusetts. Photo taken by Secret Service Agent.

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dzhokhar_and_Tamerlan_Tsarnaev

            The two brothers, responsible for, the Boston Marathon bombings

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            1. 2

              When do you think it’ll be safe to look up news for my Chechen Republic blog? I don’t know if it will ever be the same. There’s so much “Russia’s Caucasus region is a festering hole of Islamic terrorist” crap that it makes me wary and very sad.

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              1. 13

                Alexei Navalny’s Day in Court

                The case against him may be phony, but Alexei Navalny, the Russian blogger and opposition activist, faces long odds in his trial, which begins Wednesday. When Putin cannot co-opt his enemies, it seems, he has other means of crushing them.

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                1. 3

                  syrian refugees resort to trunks of trucks when tents are scarce in Bab el Hawa

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                  1. 335

                    Photograph of a Broken Fire Escape after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, 03/25/1911

                    One of the deadliest industrial disasters in United States history, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City left 146 workers dead in 18 minutes on March 25, 1911.  

                    Locked doors kept the workers from escaping; there was not enough water to put out the flames, and firemen’s ladders were too short to reach the upper stories. Many of the young women and men working there leapt out the windows and fell to their deaths onto the sidewalk outside. Others were crushed in the elevator shaft or when the fire escape collapsed.

                    The fire led to sweeping reforms in labor laws and safety standards, providing a boost to labor unions, and was a pivotal event in the career of future labor secretary Frances Perkins.

                    (Last year’s post has additional photos of the fire and the victims, a few may be considered graphic.)

                    via Prologue: A Factory Fire and Frances Perkins

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                    1. 119

                      thecivilwarparlor:

                      General William Tecumseh Sherman, U.S.A

                      I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine. It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, for vengeance, for desolation. War is hell
                      - William Tecumseh Sherman

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