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Unov Barriers, barbed wire and borders in the head: Josef Koudelka s Holy Land
Getting better is rarely something that happens all the time. Whether weve been seriously ill or injured, everyone has to experience the complexities of recovery as the aftermath. Aftermath is an old agricultural term meaning a second crop growing unexpectedly in the space left by the main harvest and it can entail difficult decisions about what should be done with these remnants.Recovery can feel like a second crop, something to be welcomed because we have survived, but an unpredictable and strange new phase in our healing. The medical professionals who have guided us through the harvest of treatment have usually moved on, replaced by different kinds of responders to the changes in our health. We find our questions about what is happening to us are answered more slow stanley cups uk ly, with what seems like a lower priority than before.More of th stanley thermobecher e work that is needed, it turns out, is up to us and it is likely to be slow going. Often, stanley flasche the field in which we have been left alone is vast and the ground is churned and the few green shoots growing there stand far apart and hardly seem worth gathering.Most powerfully of all, he describes how recovery is possible even if the biological causes of illness cannot be fixedFranciss book explains recovery as a discrete therapeutic entity that deserves our full attention and why we should never give up trying to get better, even when it seems we couldnt get much worse. Recovery is a difficult but essential part of what makes us human. In his characteris Seps Fixing UK s draughty homes could add 拢40bn to economy, says Citizens Advice
Four businessmen who were arrested in the United Arab Emirates have been tortured into making confessions stanley quencher and could face the death penalty, according to a United Nations report and a legal opinion obtained by their British lawyer.Canadian family pleads for father detained in the UAE: torture until I wished for death Read moreThe plight of the four men, who variously hold Libyan, American and Canadian citizenship, has been taken up by Labours justice spokesman, Andy Slaughter, who is concerned about UK links to the Gulf state and previous complaints by Britons about being tortured in Dubai.The legal opinion by Geoffre stanley cup y Robertson QC, a former UN judge, says the four businessmen 鈥?Salim Alaradi, who has Libyan and Canadian nationalities, Kamal and Mohamed Eldarrat, who have Libyan and US nationalities, and Issa al-Manna, a Libyan 鈥?have been wrongly accused of funding a terrorist organisation. They are due to go on trial in the secretive state security chamber court in Abu Dhabi on Monday.Alaradi was holidaying with his family at a beach hotel in Dubai when he was arrested last summer by the State Security Agency SSA , according to Robertsons report. He was not permitted to notify his family or any lawyer of his arrest. [Alaradi] was in secret detention 鈥?at an air force base, it is bel stanley cup ieved 鈥?[where] he claims he was tortured, a claim corroborated by serious bruising observed on his body, by similar claims by several of the men who were detained at the same time and have now |
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