Fears raised over facial recognition use at Moscow protests
Lawyers say several people were held after being identified by surveillance cameras in Moscow during protests last week
'We are telling our story': Indian farmers record their protest in print
The four-page newspaper, featuring stories in Punjabi and Hindi, has become a vital means of communication and record of the farmers' protests amid internet shutdowns
Palestinian cave-dwellers worry over Israeli settler incursions
Palestinian cave-dwellers have been living there at least since the 1830s, using some caves as shelter for sheep and goats and others as homes
India's Taj Mahal, revered temples join anti-child labour push
Thousands of children hawk, beg or make souvenirs to sell to tourists and pilgrims at famous religious sites
Man who didn't pay sex worker can't use immorality excuse - Swiss court
A man who refused to pay a sex worker in Switzerland - where sex work has been legal since 1942 - arguing the contract is "immoral" was convicted of fraud
Scared by global warming? In Iceland, one solution is petrifying
To battle climate change, firms are experimenting with a so-far-expensive technological solution: sucking carbon dioxide from the air and turning it into rock below ground
Tokyo Olympics chief retracts sexist comments, refuses to resign
The hashtag "Mori, please resign" trends on Twitter as Tokyo Olympics chief apologises for saying women talk too much
Law firms champion pro bono amidst global health crisis
The Thomson Reuters Foundation publishes the 2020 TrustLaw Index of Pro Bono: a survey identifying global pro bono legal trends.
Kenya school gives second chance to teen mums forced out of classes
Stigma, logistics and lack of money force about 13,000 pregnant girls to drop out each year, but the number is likely to spike due to COVID-19 lockdowns