Refugees
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Investigators say teenager who injured four people on a train before being shot dead acted with ‘Islamist religious motive’
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Rev Sally Smith baptises a group of refugees at St Mark’s Church in Stoke-On-Trent
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US, China, Japan, Germany, France and UK accommodate just 2.1 million refugees, according to Oxfam report
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Rusty 1970s-era Volga and Lada cars that were discarded by refugees crossing border from Russia sell for up to €640
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Millions of women are fleeing their homes. How can their rights be better protected en route? Join an expert panel on Thurs 21 July, 2pm-3:30pm BST
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Britain pledged to take in 20,000 Syrian refugees by 2020. How close are we to that target and how does the current initiative match up to previous schemes?
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The Long Read: When Kate Clanchy began teaching the children of refugees, she sought out those silenced by trauma and loss. Their weekly sessions released a torrent of untold stories
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Brisbane-based Sha Sarwari has won a national art prize with his installation of the postcards Australians never sent
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Refugees are too often described by politicians and parts of the media as a problem. But behind the headlines are people with powerful personal stories. The Guardian’s Dear Australia project is a new series that will hear the firsthand testaments of refugees and asylum seekers. Together their videos will tell the larger story of those who seek sanctuary to build new lives in Australia
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Mangar Makur Chuot left Sudan as a child after his father was killed during the civil war. He lived for eight years in a refugee camp in Kenya before his family were granted asylum in Australia. To launch the Guardian’s Dear Australia series, we tell the remarkable story of South Sudan’s 200 metres hopeful and how he’s heading to the Olympic Games and a possible match-up with Usain Bolt
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Mangar Makur Chout spent eight years in a refugee camp after fleeing from the civil war in Sudan that killed his father. He found a new life in Australia and is now set to race in the 200m for South Sudan at the Olympic Games in Rio. ‘I know I’ve done a lot when I was young and I’ve suffered on the way,’ he says. ‘It builds you as a person’
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Advocates say people can expect similar treatment wherever they settle, but critics say scheme is betrayal of refugee rights
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The former New Zealand prime minister – one of 10 confirmed candidates to take part in a debate at UN general assembly in New York – said it was critical the best person is chosen for the role, regardless of region
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Dzhon Khen-mu tells RFE/RL why building a booming business ultimately drove him to flee, leaving his family behind
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No unaccompanied minor given sanctuary since the PM’s promise
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Italy debates how law must tackle racism as Chinyery Emmanuel is granted asylum after husband’s death
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The ordeal of 13 Syrian women is powerfully re-created through horrific personal testimony and heartbreaking nostalgia
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Leadership in doubt as 12 Alternative für Deutschland members and co-leader walk out for not ousting MP Wolfgang Gedeon
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US imperialism has torn Europe apart, according to a state editorial. But how does this compare to the DPRK’s take on other global news events?
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Queens of Syria, an adaptation of Euripides’ antiwar tragedy The Trojan Women, will visit London, Liverpool and Edinburgh
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Bassel Mcleash, 29, had been in Toronto for just a month when he got a chance to thank Justin Trudeau personally for refugee policy
The returnees: what happens when refugees decide to go back home?