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Youngest boy in court over summer riots sentenced
A 12-year-old boy, who is the youngest to appear in court in relation to this summer's riots, has been handed a 12-month referral order.

US jails rife with violence, abuse and overcrowding
In California, lawyers accused staff at the Los Angeles County jail of chaining mentally ill detainees to chairs for days at a time. In West Virginia, people held in the Southern Regional Jail sued the state, saying they found urine and semen in thei...

Children among thousands of refugees in prison-like facility in UK
Thousands of refugees, including children, are being held in prison-like conditions at a refugee detention center in England, and that has drawn concerns about the British government’s treatment of asylum-seekers.

British police custody black deaths
Thousands of anti racism activists gathered in central London Saturday for a march on Downing Street in an effort to combat institutional racism in the British police force.

Queensland police: woman who was raped and abused killed herself after being wrongly identified as offender, report finds
Domestic and Family Violence Death Review Board’s 2022 annual report found Maeve* took her own life after protection order issued.

Why is solitary confinement increasing in federal prisons? New chief wants to know
President Joe Biden has sought to limit the use of restrictive housing in prisons, but Bureau of Prisons data has shown otherwise, perplexing the agency's new director.

British families demand answers over police custody deaths
Thousands of anti-racism activists have gathered in central London for a march on Downing Street against institutional racism in the British police force.

Two Black men wrongly convicted of Malcolm X murder to receive $36 million
The two black men, who were exonerated last year for the 1965 assassination of US Islamic civil rights leader Malcolm X, will receive 36 million dollar from the city and state of New York.

Why US Nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Should be Legally Assessed by International Court
The US nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August 1945, respectively, created a dangerous historic precedent which has yet to be legally assessed by international institutions, Alexander Panov, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of ...

US universities accepted millions of dollars from Saudi Arabia after Khashoggi murder
American universities, 144 of them, were gifted $270m in 2019 from the kingdom. Despite outcries about Khashoggi's murder, universities continue to accept money.

How Denmark is ‘othering’ its Muslim population
A bizarre new list to categorise Muslims based on their countries of origin is at the heart of what critics call an attempt to further discriminate against the community.
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