ARTICLES
Afghan women desperate to escape Taliban rule: ‘We don’t know how long we can hide’
Maryam Said Anwar’s says her body still bears the scars from the beatings with a screwdriver she endured at the hands of her husband. Forced to marry when she was 13, Anwar says she was drugged, beaten and tortured by her husband. “Even as l lay full of pain and blood on the ground, he would hit my face and remove my nails with heavy-duty pliers.”
Trouble in paradise: For struggling Caribbean islands, a prayer for return of Canadian tourists
Glenda’s voice falters as she remembers the day her son was laid-off from his airline job and her taxi business was shuttered.
Trauma and the Taliban: How their return to power has thousands of Afghans in Canada reliving horrors of the past
Ahmed Fadozai can still remember the moment the knife was plunged into the man’s neck.Fadozai, now an entrepreneur in Houston, was in Kabul’s Ghazi soccer stadium in 1998, waiting to watch a soccer match with friends. Instead, military trucks rolled in, soldiers jumped out, hoisted up a man and then decapitated him.
Warning: This story contains descriptions of violence.
Canadian leaders must cooperate and develop cyberresilience
Last week, the Winter Olympics were taken offline by a cyberattack. This week, hackers breached the German government's computer network. Every day, the volume and velocity of cyberattacks are increasing. From threats to our democratic processes to theft of credit-card information, managing cyberrisk is a necessary priority for all public and private organizations.