ARTICLES
Caring for the dogs of war: Ukraine’s front-line soldiers take time to shelter pets caught up in invasion
‘A lot of our guys have died,’ said one soldier near besieged Bakhmut. ‘But as long as we have food, we will feed the dogs.’
‘There are no moral rules.’ Russia’s treatment of PoWs shows a systemic pattern of abuse.
‘A system of terror.’ Recently freed female PoWs detail Russia’s pattern of abuse.
‘A wound that will stay with us forever.’ Inside a traumatized Ukraine
The trauma of women and children who have been attacked, tortured and raped by Russian soldiers is leaving victims in a dark place. Many have nowhere to turn for help.
‘She doesn’t like to speak.’ The children who fled war-torn Ukraine face long recovery
Many who have experienced violence from Russian attacks, lost a parent or have no home to return to are in deep distress
Stories of deliverance for Ukrainian soldiers after months of Russian PoW camp hell
Three Ukraine soldiers, including a pregnant medic, survive six months in a squalid Russian prison to tell their stories
No end in sight to war for overwhelmed Ukraine psychologists dealing with the mental health fallout
Beyond dealing with the physical horrors, panic attacks, insomnia, flashbacks, anxiety and depression affect majority of patients
Three weeks of hope for the unbreakable mothers of Ukraine war
“Women struggle with sexual assault, even in peacetime, but in war it’s impossible,” said Masha Efrosinina. “I cannot imagine their trauma.”
‘Our people are so alone:’ Iranian women express hope and despair amid violent protests
Friends since the Iran-Iraq War in the ’80s, one got out, the other stayed. ‘I am sure we are not going to go back to where we were. Everything has changed.’
After the Taliban: Leading Afghan women now struggle to survive as refugees
Once influential Afghan professional engineers, government leaders and journalists now live in poverty as refugees in border countries
Is Canada ready for a menopause revolution?
Half of Canadian women feel unprepared and three quarters who sought medical advice found it lacking
The Haida’s fight to save their centuries-old ‘trees of life’
More than 2,000 hectares of Haida Gwaii forests are clear cut every year forcing the ‘cedar people’ to travel hours to find ancient giants for their spiritual traditions
Afghan women fear they’re being erased
Afghan women say they’ve lost their rights to study, work and dress freely. They have also lost their legal protection, leaving them defenceless against forced marriage, rape and murder.
She’s gone from house arrest to Green Party deputy leader. How I met Rainbow Eyes
I have seen Angela Davison, known as Rainbow Eyes, transform from a quiet fugitive to a transformational leader.
Are sea lions and seals eating too much of B.C.’s salmon? The answer may lead to a cull
Photogenic they may be. But the mammals’ diet may be upsetting the balance of B.C.’s marine ecosystem.
Amid Victoria’s drug crisis, the angel of Pandora Street helps keep homeless people alive
Once an addict herself, Millie Modeste says this is “what I was meant to do” as deaths from toxic drugs take more lives in B.C. than all other unnatural causes.
For Logan Staats, defending Wet’suwet’en territory is the fire that fuels his music
Singer-songwriter Logan Staats was performing at the Wet’suwet’en blockade in northern British Columbia in November when a swarm of RCMP officers grabbed his hair, slammed his face on the ground, jumped on top of him and arrested him, he said.
Black Canadians’ chances of getting kidney transplant hurt by race-based adjustment
Charles Cook has survived a stroke, a heart transplant, a kidney transplant and months in Toronto General Hospital. The 53-year-old knows he’s one of the lucky ones. But he worries that while waiting for his next new kidney, his luck will run out.
‘Here comes another madman’: Ukraine’s painful echo for Polish Canadians who fled Soviets
Eighty-nine-year-old Conrad Busch of Vancouver Island remembers holding the hands of his two younger sisters, his baby brother clinging to his back, as they pushed their way through a crowded railway station in Jablonowo, Poland, to escape the advancing Soviets.
Should Canada forgive the Taliban? Afghan voices from both sides of a divided and desperate land
Habibullah, a Taliban soldier in Afghanistan, remembers setting land mines at age 17 on his first day of fighting near Kandahar. “I saw a Canadian tank explode and knew I had killed for the first time,” he remembers with remorse.
As reports of rape by Russian soldiers pour in, a famous Ukrainian appeals to victims
Reports of Ukrainian women and girls being raped by Russian soldiers are increasingly emerging from the war zone. Masha Efrosinina, a Ukrainian TV presenter and Honorary United Nations Ambassador for Population Issues, is working with the Ukrainian National Police to help rape victims come forward.