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Canada Adds $35M To Help Bangladesh Women And Girls Amid Rohingya Crisis

Darpan News Desk, 23 Nov, 2017 01:16 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada will spend $35 million over five years to help Bangladesh address the needs of women and girls as the country deals with a massive influx of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.
     
    International Development Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau announced the new spending — to be directed through United Nations agencies — from Bangladesh, where she was getting a first-hand look at the crisis that has seen more than 620,000 Rohingya flee Myanmar since August.
     
    The new Canadian spending comes as Myanmar and Bangladesh signed an agreement earlier today that would allow for the return of the Rohingya.
     
     
    However, the government of Myanmar announced no details of the plan, which was immediately criticized by Amnesty International.
     
    Bibeau visited women and children in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, currently the epicentre of the world's most pressing humanitarian crisis.
     
    It started when the Myanmar army began what it calls clearance operations in response an attack by a group of Rohingya insurgents, an offensive that many have said amounts to ethnic cleansing.

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    B.C. Launches Public Process To Re-establish Human Rights Commission

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    Jassi Sidhu ‘Honour Killing’: Canadian Supreme Court Stays Extradition At Last Minute

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    Jassi Sidhu Honour Killing: Punjab Police Takes Custody Of Accused Malkiat Kaur, Surjit Singh Badesh

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    The team is on way to India. The accused, Malkiat Kaur and Surjit Singh Badesha, mother and maternal uncle of Jassi, are likely to be produced before a Sangrur judge on Thursday.

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    Therapy Dog Mistaken For Wolf, Shot And Killed Near Whistler, B.C.

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    WHISTLER, B.C. — A woman says her four-year-old therapy dog has been shot and killed by a hunter who mistook the animal for a wolf near Whistler, B.C.

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    Victoria B.C. Filmmakers Face Backlash, Death Threats Over Gender-Based 'Justice Pricing' Of Tickets

    Victoria B.C. Filmmakers Face Backlash, Death Threats Over Gender-Based 'Justice Pricing' Of Tickets
    Organizers for the Victoria premier of "Building the Room" used "justice pricing" when tickets went on sale last week, with white males being charged $20, while others paid $10.

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    At 36, Dhoni Still Going Strong

    At 36, Dhoni Still Going Strong
    Back then, Dhoni initially took the posers in his stride, but as they started coming at him with unfailing regularity, he decided to go on a counter-attack.

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