Connie Agius is a journalist at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. She has also worked for Channel 4 News in London, and contributed to Newsweek and Deutsche Welle. She tweets @con_agius
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| UpdatedConflict, insurgency and vandalism are some of the reasons behind a new spate of ancient sites being reclassified by UNESCO as under threat.
Topics: history, unrest-conflict-and-war, syrian-arab-republic, mali, yemen, iraq, libyan-arab-jamahiriya
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| UpdatedMarried at 13 and pregnant by 15, the story of Maria Concetta Cacciola, who died after deliberately swallowing acid, offers an insight into the life of a woman born into the 'Ndrangheta — the mafia group in Italy's Calabria region.
Topics: law-crime-and-justice, crime, women, italy
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| UpdatedBoko Haram attacks on schools, students, and teachers in north-east Nigeria have left nearly 1 million children with little or no access to school, Human Rights Watch says.
Topics: terrorism, unrest-conflict-and-war, schools, nigeria
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| UpdatedTax havens are an ideal environment for organised crime to launder the piles of cash they accrue. And the evidence is the Italian mafia have been using these havens to funnel their dirty money for decades.
Topics: law-crime-and-justice, international-law, business-economics-and-finance
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| UpdatedThe Panama Papers fiasco has shown how firms are happy to act as gatekeepers to the illegal secrets of clients, but the Italian mafia has been investing money made from illegal activities for decades, complicating the job of law enforcement organisations.
Topics: crime, fraud-and-corporate-crime, european-union, italy
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| UpdatedA group in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan, where journalists are banned from entering, is training locals to report on the region's otherwise undocumented war.
Topics: journalism, information-and-communication, unrest-conflict-and-war, sudan
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| UpdatedWomen in low-income countries are twice as likely to deliver a stillborn baby as those in richer nations, while Australia lags behind other developed nations in tackling the problem, a new study published in The Lancet suggests.
Topics: pregnancy-and-childbirth, research, medical-research, australia
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There are fears the African nation of Burundi could enter civil war if a resolution is not reached at the next round of peace talks later this month.
Topics: refugees, unrest-conflict-and-war, burundi, tanzania-united-republic-of
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| UpdatedMalta is ranked as the most progressive country in the world for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and genderqueer (LGBTIQ) rights, and the Maltese Government is continuing to push ahead on the issue.
Topics: gays-and-lesbians, fertility-and-infertility, international-law, malta
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| UpdatedAfter leaving his home town which had become a scene of war, and escaping imprisonment by Islamic State, Abo Taim finally made it to Sweden. But now he says he may have to go back.
Topics: refugees, world-politics
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| UpdatedUnlike Australia, Italy is forced to absorb hundreds of thousands of migrants and asylum seekers. And as the immigration sector there thrives, so too do the organised crime groups that are seeking to profit from the public contracts on offer.
Topics: immigration, law-crime-and-justice, foreign-affairs, government-and-politics
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| UpdatedA key Government appointee in Indigenous affairs has spoken out against planned cuts to an organisation which helps Aboriginal victims of domestic violence.
Topics: indigenous-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander, community-and-society, indigenous-policy, federal-government, government-and-politics, domestic-violence, australia, nt
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| UpdatedA Chinese company in business with federal MP Clive Palmer has warned that his aggressive behaviour could force other Chinese investors to reconsider putting money into his other ventures.
CITIC Pacific's president Zhang Jijing told Four Corners that Mr Palmer's behaviour would be closely examined by the business community.
Mr Palmer is in what is being described as a "poisonous" legal dispute with Chinese state-owned CITIC Pacific over royalty payments in a huge iron ore development in Western Australia.
Tonight's Four Corners will examine Mr Palmer's business interests and how they may have influenced his decision to enter federal politics.
Topics: mining-industry, industry, business-economics-and-finance, federal-government, government-and-politics, states-and-territories, australia, qld, wa
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| UpdatedA company owned by the Reserve Bank of Australia made illegal attempts to strike a business deal with brutal Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
A joint Four Corners/Fairfax Media investigation uncovered secret files showing officials from the RBA's Note Printing Australia (NPA) went to Iraq in 1998 to discuss the sale of plastic banknotes to Iraq.
They met with Saddam's brother-in-law Arshad Yassin, who documents said was "willing to open all doors for us".
The deal was called off six months later after Australian diplomats uncovered the NPA's dealings with the Saddam regime.
Topics: corruption, banking, currency, world-politics, international-law, iraq, australia
Posted
Truffle grower Colin Roberts knows the value of a good working dog.
Topics: food-and-cooking, animals, crop-harvesting, oberon-2787
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Truffle farmer Colin Roberts knows the value of having a good truffle dog
Topics: food-and-cooking, crop-harvesting, animals, oberon-2787
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| UpdatedA resident of the Syrian city of Aleppo has described the aftermath of two deadly explosions at a university in the city.
Topics: unrest-conflict-and-war, terrorism, syrian-arab-republic
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| UpdatedZambia has become the latest country to ban the hunting of lions and other endangered wild cats as the continent tries to arrest the predators' plummeting population.
Topics: animals, conservation, world-politics, nigeria, united-kingdom, zambia
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| UpdatedSyria's chargé d'affaires Jawdat Ali has been sent back to Damascus in the wake of the dreadful Houla massacre.
In countless phone conversations and many unanswered emails to Mr Ali, I tried and failed to get comment from the Syrian government on the unrest.
But journalists shouldn't leave the Syrian government alone. They have a job to do, and all those committing crimes against humanity must be held to account.
Topics: unrest-conflict-and-war, journalism, world-politics
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Bahrain has deported a group of journalists and producers for Britain's Channel 4 News after the controversial Formula One Grand Prix.
Topics: unrest-conflict-and-war, world-politics, bahrain
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| UpdatedAn Amnesty International report details 31 methods of torture used in Syria and says the scale of torture has risen to levels not witnessed in years.
The report compares the torture regime to the notorious era of president Bashar al-Assad's father, Hafez al-Assad.
One opposition protester says he was restrained, gagged and forced to watch his father being beaten in front of him.
Topics: unrest-conflict-and-war, law-crime-and-justice, syrian-arab-republic
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| UpdatedDoctors and medical professionals in the Kingdom of Bahrain are suffering appalling consequences for simply doing their duty.
Topics: government-and-politics, world-politics, activism-and-lobbying, health, doctors-and-medical-professionals
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| UpdatedHow did Sakher Hallak, a Syrian doctor with no vendetta against President Bashar al-Assad, end up being tortured to death by Syrian forces?
Topics: death, rights, world-politics, unrest-conflict-and-war, human, syrian-arab-republic