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Start Artist Song Time Album Year Crystal Palace Outside The Box 4:00 Scattered Shards 2018 0:05:30 Black Strat Band Lost in the Sea (In Memory of Aylan Kurdi) 8:18 Absence 2018 0:13:48 Leap Day March Under The Symbol 5:56 Timelapse 2018 0:20:43 Airrace Eyes Like Ice 3:57 Untold Stories 2018 0:24:41 Arena Scars 5:12 Double […]
Letizia Battaglia e la crociata contro la censura dell'immagine. “I fotografi e i giornalisti hanno il dovere di mostrare anche le atrocità del mondo: non è colpa loro se il mondo è atroce”. Una campagna in sostegno all'uso delle immagini che Letizia Battaglia insieme a tanti altri ha portato avanti per decenni. Una crociata contro la censura. Nella memoria collettiva rimangono indelebili il ritrovamento di Moro, l'uccisione di Mattarella (fotografato dalla stessa Battaglia). Ma anche le immagini del corpicino di Aylan Kurdi. Foto strazianti ma perché straziante è la verità. Non mostrarle può in qualche modo renderle meno reali? Senza quelle foto che hanno raccontato le stragi, oggi forse la cultura della lotta alla mafia non sarebbe così radicata. Sono cruente, “indecenti”? O solo necessarie per raccontare una storia che, altrimenti, rimane parzialmente nascosta e per creare un sentimento di consapevolezza nella gente?
Moltissimi gli omaggi al maestro Franco Battiato. Matteo Cruccu e Massimo Gramellini sul corriere.it, offrono la loro visione prendo in considerazione i capisaldi della musica del cantautore siciliano: la sintesi perfetta, la musica colta alla portata di tutti, la ricewrca di un centro di gravità permanente. Nessuno con la sua continuità e il suo status.Francesca Paci, su La Stampa, racconta invece la vicenda del bambino Aylan Kurdi che coinvolge i fenomeni migratori aumentati in questo ultimo mese: "Poi la tutina fradicia e lo zucchetto azzurro sfumano sullo sfondo, come sfumò a suo tempo la maglietta rossa del bambino Aylan Kurdi, e alla ribalta restano i numeri, irrilevanti in verità ma tanto alti nella percezione dell'opinione pubblica da poter essere usati come testa d'ariete. Il punto è che la paura dell'invasione cresciuta con l'incertezza economica ha reso ancora più vulnerabile l'occidente, la fortezza Europa come gli Stati Uniti sigillati sul confine messicano, giganti spaventevoli disposti alla resa immediata alla sola minaccia dell'orda migrante. [...]."
Khaled Hosseini, a New York Times sikerszerzője, a Papírsárkányok, az Egyezer tündöklő nap és az És a hegyek visszhangozzák írója ezzel a mélyen megrázó, csodálatosan illusztrált könyvecskével mondja el minden korosztálynak és a világ minden olvasójának, mit érez a közelmúlt szívszorító menekültválságával kapcsolatban. Az Ima a tengeren egy, a háború miatt menekülő apa levele fiához. A tengeren való átkelés előestéjén az apa az alvó fiút nézve először egykori békés életüket, majd a háború pusztítását idézi fel. Éjszaka van, s a holdfényben aggódó apa mindössze annyit tehet gyermekéért, hogy a veszélyes tengeri út előtt imádkozik. Hosseinit a Törökországban tengerbe fulladt hároméves szíriai kisfiú, Aylan Kurdi szörnyű tragédiája indította arra, hogy emléket állítson azoknak a családoknak, akiknek el kellett menekülniük otthonaikból. --- Szerző: Khaled Hosseni | Rajzolta: Dan Williams | Fordította: Nagy Gergely | Felolvassa: Ambrus Attila József | A képekkel illusztrált videó megtekinthető: https://youtu.be/k5SKiS3mXkM #khaledhosseni #danwilliams #ambrusaalkotoistudioja #ambrusattilajozsef
durée : 01:51:22 - Le 5/7 - Il y a cinq ans, la photo d’Aylan Kurdi, un petit garçon syrien de 3 ans mort noyé sur une plage turque alors que sa famille tentait de rejoindre l’Europe avait ému le monde entier. Cinq ans plus tard, que reste-t-il de cette onde de choc ? Fabienne Lassalle, co-fondatrice de SOS Méditerranée, est l'invitée à 6h20.
On September 2nd, 2015, the limp body of refugee toddler, Aylan Kurdi, was found on a beach in Turkey.
Este miércoles 2 de septiembre, Cinco continentes comienza con el juicio de los atentados yihadistas de enero de 2015 de París que causaron 17 víctimas mortales. Los ejecutores de los ataques, dirigidos contra el semanario satírico Charlie Hebdo, la policía y un supermercado judío, no se sientan en el banquillo porque fallecieron en las operaciones policiales para detenerlos, por lo que se habla de un juicio que quiere enviar un claro mensaje: que la democracia es más fuerte que el terrorismo. Es la opinión del filósofo y politólogo francés, Sami Naïr, con el que conversamos hoy. Además, nos fijamos en los menores migrantes cuando se cumplen cinco años del hallazgo del cadáver del niño sirio Aylan Kurdi en una playa de Turquía. Recogemos un informe de Amnistía Internacional que documenta detenciones arbitrarias, abusos y torturas de las autoridades de Irán durante las protestas sociales de 2019 y nos fijamos en las particularidades del sistema político libanés. Escuchar audio
This week we put some of the stories about racism in the recent news into historical context: Dawn Butler stopped by police, the so-called "crisis" over migrant crossings, and Prince Harry on the roots of racism. Dawn Butler's Tribune article Amnesty on the Gangs Matrix Scene from Nightcrawler The media and refugee Aylan Kurdi 'Greece abandons 1000 migrants' 49% of Britons don't sympathise with migrants Prince Harry on racism Queen Elizabeth I, racism and slavery LGBT+ Labour Scotland tweet
Pour ce deuxième portrait de la saison, j'ai eu l'immense privilège de m’entretenir avec Sophie Tarnowska, la fondatrice de WeDoSomething Montréal, un organisme à but non lucratif dont l’objectif est d’être un antidote au sentiment d’impuissance qui nous envahit face à l’état du monde en utilisant les mauvaises nouvelles comme un levier.Sophie tente de faire sauter les barrières entre nous et les autres en formulant le vœu que nous parvenions à les abolir un jour. Elle utilise comme fils conducteurs les événements pour relier les montréalais aux communautés qui ont besoin de leur aide, et le storytelling pour nous éduquer à l'autre ou accompagner les OBNL et les entreprises dans l'alignement de leur mission et de leurs valeurs.Nous avons parlé de : fun-raising, impact social, instinct philanthropique, protopiste, retour émotionnel sur investissement, Aylan Kurdi, crise des réfugiés syriens, communautés autochtones, team building et femmes inspirantes (Elizabeth Dunn, Elizabeth Guilbert, Priya Parker, Thelma Nelson, Beatrice Deer, Mère Teresa).
Photojournalism often succeeds where words fail. From powerful, iconic, and polarizing images, like Nick Ut's Vietnam-era "Napalm Girl" to three-year-old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi lying face down on a sandy beach in Turkey - these images tell stories with vivid urgency. Constantine, author of the Exiled to Nowhere book and exhibit, discusses the challenges and ethical implications of documenting war and atrocity with WorldOregon's Tim DuRoche. Constantine has spent much of the past fifteen years living and working in Asia. In 2005, he began work on his long-term project, Nowhere People. Constantine has spent the past 10 years documenting stateless communities in eighteen countries, including Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Dominican Republic, Ukraine, Serbia, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, and Lebanon. His work has been featured in various publications including the New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Newsweek, The Atlantic, The New Republic, CNN, and Al-Jazeera.
ULTRA-LOW-COST airline Wizz Air has set up a UK subsidiary company based at Luton Airport to deal with the Brexit aftermath. The new company has been granted an Air Operator’s Certificate (AOC) and Operating Licence (OL) by the United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority. Wizz Air UK will have eight new Airbus A320 and A321 aircraft in service by the end of 2018 - an investment of £630million - and will create around 300 new management, pilot and cabin crew jobs POLICE have found an injured Brit tourist lying unconscious at the side of the road on Spain’s Costa Blanca after an ambulance crew ‘lost’ him on the way to hospital. It is alleged that the man had been injured in a fight between four British tourists in Benidorm and was being taken by the ambulance crew to hospital. But National Police officers soon discovered he didn’t arrive there when they went to get a statement from the man..........Police launched an immediate search and the man was found unconscious in a roadside gutter approximately 500-metres away from the hospital. The police officers said they detected a ‘strange attitude’ from the two ambulance crew and called in the Guardia Civil to perform alcohol and drug tests. It is reported that both tested positive for ‘at least cocaine and marijuana’. It was Aylan Kurdi who changed their lives. The three-year-old boy had fled the Syrian city of Kobane with his parents and older brother in a bid to reach Canada. His little body, dressed in a red t-shirt and shorts, was found washed up on the shore near Bodrum, Turkey after unsuccessfully trying to reach the Greek island of Kos on a dinghy on September 2, 2015. The image of the drowned child, which made world news, suddenly illustrated the magnitude of the biggest refugee crisis experienced in Europe since World War II. It also moved three Spanish firefighters from Seville into action: Manuel Blanco, 47, Quique Rodríguez, 32, and Julio Latorre, 34, decided they had to do something to help all those people fleeing the war in Syria. As soon as a patient enters a hospital in the region of Madrid, they receive a Welcome Guide. And this is the first recommendation they will read: “Don’t bring money or valuable items to the hospital. If you have these on you, hand them over to a family member for safekeeping. The hospital will not be held responsible for their potential loss.” This stern warning is normally reinforced by doctors who insist that to avoid being robbed, patients must keep all valuables out of sight in their locker and ensure the locker key is with them at all times. It is sound advice. Hospitals have become easy pickings for thieves. Patients and their families are prime targets for robbers – they are in an unknown environment, experiencing high levels of stress and are easily distracted. Doctors at the Fundación Jiménez Díaz hospital in Madrid say that they have seen thieves pretending to be sick, then entering the rooms of sleeping or sedated patients. Nurses also regularly urge patients not to leave their valuables lying around Five people have been shot during a n appalling Bank Holiday weekend in London including a 13-year-old boy who was blasted in the face during a botched drive-by while walking down a high street with his parents. Police investigating the 'senseless and appalling' crime in Harrow, north west London, said the child was an 'innocent bystander' in an attack that also left a 15-year-old in hospital with head injuries. A third person was shot in the arm, but vanished before the emergency services arrived, Scotland Yard has revealed, and a 39-year-old man was arrested and later released under investigation. On Monday, police were called after a 30-year-old man was shot in New Cross, south east London. Meanwhile, a young man is fighting for his life after being stabbed in east London on Monday.......Elsewhere, two men died in stabbings in Liverpool and Luton over the Bank Holiday weekend. A 19 year-old woman, was in court for shoving a pensioner while already having a total 49 offences with 13 convictions. This female thug admitted shoving a woman aged 70 to the ground. The victim suffered a bang to the head and a fractured pelvis. Her defence team said she lashes out when 'under threat'. She was remanded for refusing to face Judge Anthony Potter. Judge Potter adjourned the case and remanded her into custody. A mum has been branded an 'unhinged maniac' by a judge after she attacked another driver with her car key – but she was spared jail for the sake of her children. The 28 year old female thug, launched a foul-mouthed tirade at a female driver, after chasing her down following a near miss at a roundabout. She ran up to the other carcar and began to threaten her, despite frightened children screaming in the back of her car. She then brutally attacked the other driver.......She was sentenced to 21 months in prison, suspended for two years 35 day rehabilitation order and 100 hours of unpaid work............'You should feel thoroughly ashamed of yourself for what you put them through. 'Not only did they have to witness you behaving like an unhinged maniac, but they have had to pick up the sense of anxiety over this court case. 'You should bear that in mind for every day of the next two years, because I am going to suspend the sentence, against my better judgement. 'The children are probably just better off having you at home rather than having both parents in prison.
ULTRA-LOW-COST airline Wizz Air has set up a UK subsidiary company based at Luton Airport to deal with the Brexit aftermath. The new company has been granted an Air Operator’s Certificate (AOC) and Operating Licence (OL) by the United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority. Wizz Air UK will have eight new Airbus A320 and A321 aircraft in service by the end of 2018 - an investment of £630million - and will create around 300 new management, pilot and cabin crew jobs POLICE have found an injured Brit tourist lying unconscious at the side of the road on Spain’s Costa Blanca after an ambulance crew ‘lost’ him on the way to hospital. It is alleged that the man had been injured in a fight between four British tourists in Benidorm and was being taken by the ambulance crew to hospital. But National Police officers soon discovered he didn’t arrive there when they went to get a statement from the man..........Police launched an immediate search and the man was found unconscious in a roadside gutter approximately 500-metres away from the hospital. The police officers said they detected a ‘strange attitude’ from the two ambulance crew and called in the Guardia Civil to perform alcohol and drug tests. It is reported that both tested positive for ‘at least cocaine and marijuana’. It was Aylan Kurdi who changed their lives. The three-year-old boy had fled the Syrian city of Kobane with his parents and older brother in a bid to reach Canada. His little body, dressed in a red t-shirt and shorts, was found washed up on the shore near Bodrum, Turkey after unsuccessfully trying to reach the Greek island of Kos on a dinghy on September 2, 2015. The image of the drowned child, which made world news, suddenly illustrated the magnitude of the biggest refugee crisis experienced in Europe since World War II. It also moved three Spanish firefighters from Seville into action: Manuel Blanco, 47, Quique Rodríguez, 32, and Julio Latorre, 34, decided they had to do something to help all those people fleeing the war in Syria. As soon as a patient enters a hospital in the region of Madrid, they receive a Welcome Guide. And this is the first recommendation they will read: “Don’t bring money or valuable items to the hospital. If you have these on you, hand them over to a family member for safekeeping. The hospital will not be held responsible for their potential loss.” This stern warning is normally reinforced by doctors who insist that to avoid being robbed, patients must keep all valuables out of sight in their locker and ensure the locker key is with them at all times. It is sound advice. Hospitals have become easy pickings for thieves. Patients and their families are prime targets for robbers – they are in an unknown environment, experiencing high levels of stress and are easily distracted. Doctors at the Fundación Jiménez Díaz hospital in Madrid say that they have seen thieves pretending to be sick, then entering the rooms of sleeping or sedated patients. Nurses also regularly urge patients not to leave their valuables lying around Five people have been shot during a n appalling Bank Holiday weekend in London including a 13-year-old boy who was blasted in the face during a botched drive-by while walking down a high street with his parents. Police investigating the 'senseless and appalling' crime in Harrow, north west London, said the child was an 'innocent bystander' in an attack that also left a 15-year-old in hospital with head injuries. A third person was shot in the arm, but vanished before the emergency services arrived, Scotland Yard has revealed, and a 39-year-old man was arrested and later released under investigation. On Monday, police were called after a 30-year-old man was shot in New Cross, south east London. Meanwhile, a young man is fighting for his life after being stabbed in east London on Monday.......Elsewhere, two men died in stabbings in Liverpool and Luton over the Bank Holiday weekend. A 19 year-old woman, was in court for shoving a pensioner while already having a total 49 offences with 13 convictions. This female thug admitted shoving a woman aged 70 to the ground. The victim suffered a bang to the head and a fractured pelvis. Her defence team said she lashes out when 'under threat'. She was remanded for refusing to face Judge Anthony Potter. Judge Potter adjourned the case and remanded her into custody. A mum has been branded an 'unhinged maniac' by a judge after she attacked another driver with her car key – but she was spared jail for the sake of her children. The 28 year old female thug, launched a foul-mouthed tirade at a female driver, after chasing her down following a near miss at a roundabout. She ran up to the other carcar and began to threaten her, despite frightened children screaming in the back of her car. She then brutally attacked the other driver.......She was sentenced to 21 months in prison, suspended for two years 35 day rehabilitation order and 100 hours of unpaid work............'You should feel thoroughly ashamed of yourself for what you put them through. 'Not only did they have to witness you behaving like an unhinged maniac, but they have had to pick up the sense of anxiety over this court case. 'You should bear that in mind for every day of the next two years, because I am going to suspend the sentence, against my better judgement. 'The children are probably just better off having you at home rather than having both parents in prison.
I wrote a poem after the young boy Aylan Kurdi was drowned and washed up on a beach in Turkey. I read the poem on anchor - Zvi Weiss got in touch about it. He awakened my awareness.
Michael starts out linking Aylan Kurdi’s body washing up on shore in Greece, with unemployment, austerity, and our interconnection. How do we wake up in the middle of confusion? He then talks about emptiness as a practice of not-knowing, and how to work with confusion. Madison, WI 1 hr.
This week we look at the racist game on the Apple iTunes store “Survival Island 3 - Australia Story”, Charlie Hebdo’s controversial depiction of Aylan Kurdi, the young Syrian boy washed ashore, MTV Australia’s tweet about Eva Longoria and America Ferrera. And we feature #OscarsSoWhite and how that translates into Australian media with upcoming Logies. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Aylan Kurdi, photojournalism, airline posters, early television
- This episode features an interview with Samah Sabawi, a Palestinian Australian Canadian writer and human rights advocate. - She discusses the ongoing oppression Palestinian people face, even when the bombs are not dropping and most of the media is ignoring the issue. - Samah Sabawi also leaves us with her powerful poem Red Shirt, Blue Jeans about Aylan Kurdi, the Syrian toddler who recently drowned, sparking changing discussions about asylum seekers. - For more information on this episode and for links to all of the stories and clips from it, go to: http://progressivepodcastaustralia.com/2015/09/14/110/
In this week's Podcast of Ideas Rob Lyons, Claire Fox and David Bowden discuss the week's news, including the migrant crisis and the drone assassinations of two British Jihadis in the Islamic State.
Han är FN:s särskilda sändebud i Syrien ett jobb som kallats ett mission impossible. Men Staffan de Mistura med 42 år i FN och erfarenhet av 19 krig ser ändå med optimism på situationen i landet. Trots allt dödande i Syrien, och det faktum att halva den Syriska befolkningen är på flykt, ser Staffan de Mistura med optimism på sitt uppdrag att få fred i landet.Han tror att bilden på den döda lilla pojken på stranden, 3-åriga Aylan Kurdi från Syrien, kan bli ett uppvaknande för världen. I intervjun med Martin Wicklin berättar han om hur hans svenska rötter har påverkat hans yrkesval, om vägvalet världen nu står inför och varför han alltid har med sig en pepparkvarn i silver med på sina resor. Söndagsintervjun träffade Staffan de Mistura på FN:s kontor i Bryssel.KontaktMail: sondagsintervjun@sverigesradio.se Facebook: Söndagsintervjun i P1 Twitter: @sondagsintervju Instagram: @sondagsintervjun_p1
No Podcast Rio Bravo desta semana, conversamos com Flavia Piovesan, mestre e doutora pela PUC de São Paulo e especialista em direitos humanos e direito internacional. Na entrevista, a professora analisa a condição de vida daqueles que, correndo risco nos seus países de origem, têm buscado refúgio em outras nações. Flavia Piovesan fala a respeito do compromisso legal e da responsabilidade compartilhada que os países em desenvolvimento e as nações já desenvolvidas precisam assumir no sentido de enfrentar esse impasse, que, na semana passada, alcançou definitivamente a opinião pública global com a morte de Aylan Kurdi, o garoto de três anos que, junto com a família, tentava escapar do destino fatal na Síria.
No Podcast Rio Bravo desta semana, conversamos com Flavia Piovesan, mestre e doutora pela PUC de São Paulo e especialista em direitos humanos e direito internacional. Na entrevista, a professora analisa a condição de vida daqueles que, correndo risco nos seus países de origem, têm buscado refúgio em outras nações. Flavia Piovesan fala a respeito do compromisso legal e da responsabilidade compartilhada que os países em desenvolvimento e as nações já desenvolvidas precisam assumir no sentido de enfrentar esse impasse, que, na semana passada, alcançou definitivamente a opinião pública global com a morte de Aylan Kurdi, o garoto de três anos que, junto com a família, tentava escapar do destino fatal na Síria.
The big story right around the world this week was that photo. The image of 3 year old Aylan Kurdi washed up on the beach highlighted the plight of hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing Syria. Today, we ask: was it ok to turn away from that image? And how has it changed us? Also we’re at the tail end of The Bachelor and Rosie Waterland has noticed something about this season that’s veryyyyyyy interesting. The show is hosted by Monique Bowley and Mia Freedman and thanks to Amy Stockwell Mia recommends Julia Baird’s extraordinary piece in the NY timesAmy Stockwell can't stop watching Mr Robot. Amazing tv show about hackers starring Christian Slater.Monique recommends everyone sending a letter to an asylum seeker Details for the Mamamia Writer's Competition are here. Enter! And for tickets to see Rosie Waterland and Mia Freedman in conversation, go to Moshtix. Contact the show on @mamamiapodcastsemail us podcast@mamamia.com.auOr join the conversation on the Facebook Page This podcast is produced by Monique Bowley for the Mamamia Podcast Network. Support from this podcast came from you because you lent us your ears. Thanks for that.
Épisode 003 – Émission du 7 septembre 2015 Au menu cette semaine : Des enfants utilisés comme boucliers idéologiques par les syndicats devant les écoles. Le drame de Aylan Kurdi utilisé par Anne-Marie Dussault contre Harper, alors que l’information n’était pas vérifiée. Le rapport Robillard et l’éventuelle fin du monopole de la vente d’alcool au [...]
En ocasiones las imagenes más macabras no son las que muestran desmembramientos; en ocasiones las imagenes más impactantes son las que nos recuerdan lo impotentes que somos ante la muerte. Aylan Kurdi murio ahogado tratando de escapar la sangrienta guerra civil, incitada y auspiciada por Estados Unidos, La Unión europea y sus aliados Árabes. Su hermanito de tan solo 5 años Galip también y su madre Rihan sufrieron la misma suerte. El conflicto en Siria tiene responsables, en este podcast tratados de aclarar quienes son esos responsables, las razones de su intromisión en los asuntos de otro país y hacemos una coneccion con el constante mito de la “invasión” de nicaragüenses que supuestamente sufrimos en Costa Rica.
In little more than a week, there was the on-camera “live” killing Aug. 26 of two journalists, Alison Parker and Adam Ward; graphic video taken by Ward and by the apparent shooter; and on Sept. 4, the heart-wrenching photos of three-year old Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi, lifeless on a Turkish beach, who drowned trying to escape sectarian violence. Should such images be published? Are there limits, in law or in journalism? Prof. Diana Huffman, who lectures on media ethics and media law at the Phillip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, says at times there is no purpose in publishing – but at other times, there is. A conversation about what we can see – and, perhaps, shouldn’t.
It's been a great summer of #satsisterssummerfun for all of us @instagram. Thanks for the more than 1100 photos that got posted. In a random drawing, we selected two winners. Congratulations to @sosaysshe and @rustysun. Email us at sisters@satellitesisters.com to tell us where to mail your prize - a fantastic package of Sol de Janeiro 2-Step Samba Foot Fetish Care to keep your summer fun going on. Stay tuned for an upcoming announcement of a new contest for the fall. On today's Satellite Sisters podcast, Sheila anticipates Liz's birthday later this week and shares some very vague predictions from online horoscopes. Sheila's birthday comes later in the month but she's a Libra. Sheila also has some offbeat practices about how to beat the heat. Think fold-out couch, ceiling fan and Brazilian sarong. Plus, she's wandering the aisles of Rite-Aid daily now and has spotted some new products worthy of her investigation. She tries them out on Liz and Monica. It's not in her horoscope, but Monica is fine with the return of the fanny pack as predicted in the New York Times this week. She believes in hands-free living. Go for it sister. Also on today's show, Liz shares some information about an email she received from Mercy Corps in response to the drowning of 3 year old Aylan Kurdi. Here is the photo essay about about the special items Syrian refugees carried with them created by Mercy Corp workers in refugee camps.
In which Juliet Harris & Terence Dackombe review the week. Should newspapers and television publish photos and film of young Aylan Kurdi?; Were there any last minute bargains before the closure of the football transfer window?; Online friendships... they don't really count, do they?; Plus four great tracks of music.
A licoes da morte do pequeno Aylan Kurdi. Comentario de Ageu Magalhaes.