
Hashed Mozqer
Articles
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Apr 3, 2024 |
thenewhumanitarian.org | Hashed Mozqer
Republish this articleMonths after the start of new US sanctions targeting Yemen’s Houthi movement, ordinary Yemenis say they are struggling to access money transfers from outside the country that – after nine years of war and economic collapse – have become a lifeline for many. Yemenis were already facing rising food prices and the collapse of basic services in the midst of a massive humanitarian catastrophe.
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Feb 17, 2024 |
elpais.com | Hashed Mozqer
Después de que su marido se trasladara a Arabia Saudí por motivos de trabajo, Fadya Salman, de 27 años, empezó a enviarle fotos suyas desnuda desde su casa en Saná, la capital de Yemen. No era lo mismo que estar juntos, pero les ayudaba a mantener vivo su vínculo. Después le robaron el teléfono. El ladrón amenazó con publicar las fotos en internet a menos que Salman ―cuyo nombre, al igual que el de otras fuentes, se ha cambiado aquí para proteger su seguridad― saliera con él.
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Jan 3, 2024 |
fullerproject.org | Xanthe Scharff |Sarah McClure |Sarah Mcclure |Hashed Mozqer
In the past year, the Ivy League hit a milestone that corporate America hasn’t even come close to reaching: Six of eight prestigious institutions were run by women. Three were on their second round of women presidents, with two of them people of color. In a Forbes list of the top 20 colleges, more than half had women and or people of color at the helm.
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Dec 28, 2023 |
fullerproject.org | Sarah McClure |Sarah Mcclure |Hashed Mozqer |Yessenia Funes
In our turbulent and divided world, there is one unifying constant: Women and girls bear the brunt of conflict. Across most of the globe, they are excluded from war and peace–level decisions. And yet, they suffer disproportionately when things fall apart. They are at home with small children and elderly relatives when bombs start to fall. Their bodies are instrumentalized as weapons of terror. They scramble for food, water, and fuel when male relatives are called up for fighting.
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Dec 21, 2023 |
fullerproject.org | Hashed Mozqer |Yessenia Funes |Cheena Kapoor
SAN DIEGO: Lynda Reed loved her work in the research office of San Diego’s Naval Medical Center, but when her mother’s health began to falter she quit and became a full-time caregiver, moving in with her mother. She cooked her diabetic meals, administered medications, drove to medical appointments, and helped with housekeeping and daily living – full time work with no pay at all. Then, in 2019, her mother died.
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