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‘Don’t want to fight’: Ukrainians abroad slam plan to deny embassy services
Names marked with an asterisk have been changed to protect identities. Warsaw, Poland – When Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, Kyrylo, an IT specialist in Poland, rushed to evacuate his parents from Kyiv. Since then, he has been the family’s main breadwinner.list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4list 2 of 4list 3 of 4list 4 of 4end of list To support Ukraine from across the border, he makes donations and buys Starlink satellite-internet kits in Europe for volunteers back in his homeland. Although he is guilt-stricken living abroad, he feels joining the army would not...…Names marked with an asterisk have been changed to protect identities. Warsaw, Poland – When Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, Kyrylo, an IT specialist in Poland, rushed to evacuate his parents from Kyiv. Since then, he has been the family’s main breadwinner.list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4list 2 of 4list 3 of 4list 4 of 4end of list To support Ukraine from across the border, he makes donations and buys Starlink satellite-internet kits in Europe for volunteers back in his homeland. Although he is guilt-stricken living abroad, he feels joining the army would not...WW…
Anti-LGBTQ laws in Uzbekistan fuel hostility and violence
This article is more than 1 year oldThis article is more than 1 year oldCampaigners say widespread homophobia in the conservative Islamic country is being inflamed by calls to decriminalise same-sex unionsSupported byFirst published on Fri 2 Apr 2021 03.00 EDTUzbekistan’s LGBTQ+ community says it is facing increasing threats and repression after anti-LGBTQ+ protests turned violent and this week banning the publication of content deemed to show disrespect for society and the state.Human rights groups say that the legislation, passed on Tuesday, will prevent media or online commentators...…This article is more than 1 year oldThis article is more than 1 year oldCampaigners say widespread homophobia in the conservative Islamic country is being inflamed by calls to decriminalise same-sex unionsSupported byFirst published on Fri 2 Apr 2021 03.00 EDTUzbekistan’s LGBTQ+ community says it is facing increasing threats and repression after anti-LGBTQ+ protests turned violent and this week banning the publication of content deemed to show disrespect for society and the state.Human rights groups say that the legislation, passed on Tuesday, will prevent media or online commentators...WW…
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