Women of the resistance: The heroines of Algeria's fight for independence
Our reporters explore the taboos surrounding sexual violence as a weapon of war, and we discuss the subsequent culture of silence that has hampered Algerian feminism.
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Our reporters explore the taboos surrounding sexual violence as a weapon of war, and we discuss the subsequent culture of silence that has hampered Algerian feminism.
During the Algerian War of Independence, Mansourah was one of thousands of communities the colonial French rulers turned into resettlement camps. These forced removals affected nearly half the rural Algerian population, and at the end of the war, more than two million people were dispersed between two thousand "regroupement camps" created by the French army. The deeply moving documentary sees the director take her father, Malek, back to Mansourah – a village he fled as a 10-year-old boy in 1960. It unravels her father's story but also the memories of those displaced as well as the inhabitants who saw their village turn into a camp they could not escape from.
Franck Renouard, a winegrower in southern France, knows a thing or two about drought. The Gard region where he is based is known for its dry Mediterranean climate. But even here, drought conditions in the winter have startled the business owner.
Liverpool were drawn to play Benfica as all three remaining English clubs were kept apart and Bayern Munich were paired with Spanish side Villarreal.
>> Read our webdocumentary: Sixty years on, Algerian and French nationals share stories of the Algerian War
Speaking to FRANCE 24's Marc Perelman from Moscow, Marina Ovsyannikova began by thanking French President Emmanuel Macron for offering her political asylum in France, but said that as a "patriot" she preferred to stay in her home country of Russia.
TASS reported that the Khimkinsky court of the Moscow region ruled to detain Griner for at least two more months.
Also this week, Colombia's left-wing coalition made major gains in parliamentary elections. We take a closer look at former guerrilla Gustavo Petro, the leftist candidate who's now the one to watch in the presidential race in May.