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Tolerance ca® - La question ouïghoure Unanimité à Ottawa sur le « génocide ouïghour » : véritable débat ou consentement fabriqué ?
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Canada Imposes Sanctions On Senior Russian Officials
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Four-year-old Canadian girl rescued from Syrian detention camp, mother left behind
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TORONTO, Ontario (CTV News) A little girl has been rescued from a detention camp in northeast Syria and is on her way to Canada, but her Canadian mother is not with her.
The four-year-old girl, whose identity is being withheld, was rescued not through the efforts of the government, but the efforts of her Canadian aunt and a former U.S. diplomat, CTV News can confirm.
The girl’s mother was not allowed to leave with her. In a text message, she said she kept a brave face, but her heart “was broken in a million pieces.”
Four-year-old Canadian girl rescued from Syrian detention camp, mother left behind
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From Feb. 18-22, Human Rights Watch Canada showcased a selection of their films for Toronto’s 18th annual Human Rights Watch Film Festival, a cinematographic exhibition that celebrates diverse human perspectives from around the world. With COVID-19 disrupting the festival’s typical execution, Canadian cinematographer and festival co-chair Nicholas de Pencier discussed how the team adapted their original vision to a virtual format.
“This year’s festival looks radically different from last year’s and the many previous years,” Pencier said in an interview with
The McGill Tribune. “We would gather for a number of nights in the winter in a theatre and have that sense of community around films that resonate issues of human rights [….] The whole team has had to reimagine what a festival looks like in the constraints of being limited to a virtual iteration [….] In fact, there [have been] some wonderful bonuses.”