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Published December 25, 2020, 11:48 AM
The year 2020 is unlike any other, as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic brought nations down to its knees and the community quarantines required Filipinos to stay indoors in order to curb its transmission.
Throughout all these ordeals, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) remained on its toes and kept a lookout against human rights violations. Concerned about women and children being stuck at home with their abusers, as well as sexual exploitation of children on the rise, the CHR broughts its services online.
CHR Spokesperson Atty. Jacqueline Ann de Guia said that they promoted the CHR Webinar Series called “Human rights in the time of Covid-19” in order to “educate the public and stakeholders on human rights principles and the importance of a human rights-based approach in ensuring the rights of the vulnerable sectors in this period of pandemic.”
Comoros Journalist Oubeidillah Mchangama Held for 3 Days Over Facebook Posts allafrica.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from allafrica.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Media release: Calling all aspiring writers to enter this year’s Ian Bell Award
THE National Union of Journalists invites entries by young writers for an award to commemorate Ian Bell, the radical journalist and author who died in December 2015.
The competition is aimed at young writers who have yet to break into professional journalism. Entries should be in the critical spirit of Ian Bell and written in a style – lively, taut, provocative but thoughtful – suitable for online and newspaper publication. The subject can be drawn from politics, culture, modern society, history, international affairs, Scotland, or related topics, and can be investigative reporting or informed commentary.
Financial Times slips into the red as row over Lionel Barber s payoff rages
The business newspaper has pursuing growth through digital subscriptions as print sales and advertising revenues decline
Lionel Barber, former editor of Financial Times
The
Financial Times has swung to a loss last year amid an ongoing pay row over a £1.9m golden goodbye handed to former editor Lionel Barber.
The newspaper recorded a pre-tax loss of £4.6m for the 12 months to December 2019, down from a £8.1m profit for the previous year, according to its latest accounts.
In recent years it has focused on revenue from digital subscriptions in favour of advertising and sales of the print title.