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Following Iraq's liberation from the Islamic State group, Mosul's minorities continue to face challenges, striving for justice and peaceful coexistence.
°®Âþµº Meets: 64-year-old Amjad Assad, who has almost single handedly digitised thousands of cassettes and old 78's that span a century of musical history.
Stepping foot in Mosul's vibrant fish market, resilience blossoms amidst the echoes of conflict, signalling the revival of community spirit post-IS.
The Mama Tarada wooden vessel becomes the latest addition to the network of boat clubs across Iraq, adding to the country's rich cultural and maritime heritage.
Cyprus has been on the frontline of asylum seekers influx for some years and as far-right rhetoric rises against them, so does the discrimination and violence.
A political battle is in full swing in Iraqi Kurdistan after Islamic parties claimed NGOs are corrupting the Kurdish youth through gender-based programmes. The division points towards a mistrust of Western-backed funders within the Islamic community.
On the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, °®Âþµº discovers how disabled Syrian Kurds seeking refuge in Iraq are greeted with hostility by Iraqi authorities, the Kurdish Regional Government and worrying indifference from the UNHCR.
After 34 years from the Halabja chemical attack, the destiny of hundreds of Kurdish children stranded in Iranian hospitals are yet unknown.Â
A local NGO is leading the first campaign of its kind to expand women’s legal access to abortion in Iraqi Kurdistan.
A new mural emblazoned on a Manhattan wall highlights the plight of Kurdish artist Zehra Dogan, serving a prison sentence for one of her paintings