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Trial by Media: The Risks to Defendants of Differing US and UK Approaches – JD Supra

[co-author: Maia Cohen-Lask*]

On Jan. 4, 2022, a trial that has gripped white-collar crime lawyers on both sides of the Atlantic that of Elizabeth Holmes concluded. Following a 15-week trial, jurors in the state of California returned guilty verdicts on four of the 11 counts on the indictment, convicting Holmes of defrauding investors in her company, Theranos Inc.

For British observers, the U.S. trial largely proceeded in a familiar way to an English trial of similar facts. However, one area of striking difference between the two jurisdictions lay not in the law and procedure but in the manner of the media reporting. The American coverage of the trial was elaborate and exhaustive, comprised of detailed newspaper reports on both the pretrial and trial proceedings, as well as podcasts and other analytical long-form journalism. This is a curiosity for English lawyers, who are used to conducting criminal proceedings safe in the knowledge that media coverage will usually be restrained. Indeed, much of the reporting from the American media during the course of Holmes trial would undoubtedly be in contempt of court were it to be replicated during an English trial. This reflects the different legal landscape relating to trial reporting in the U.S. as compared to the U.K. These differences will assume ever greater practical significance as prosecuting white-collar crime increasingly becomes an international endeavor.

The two jurisdictions have fundamentally different starting points when it comes to the reporting of criminal trials. In England, the position is governed by the Contempt of Court Act 1981. This creates the strict liability rule, whereby it is in contempt of court to publish anything that creates a substantial risk that the course of justice in the proceedings in question will be seriously impeded or prejudiced, regardless of intent. The default position is therefore one of restriction. The exception to this restriction is an allowance for a fair and accurate report of legal proceedings held in public, published contemporaneously and in good faith.

By contrast, the starting point in the United States is a permissive one, due to various constitutional protections in place. These protections uphold the principles of the freedom of speech and the freedom of the press under the First Amendment, which, while not completely without limitations, generally give reporters in America more leeway in what they report and how they cover ongoing criminal trials. There is no comparable strict liability rule on the media in the U.S., as the American system values the scrutiny of the press in criminal proceedings and views the medias criticisms as a tool to hold the justice system accountable. Thus, while counsel may move for an injunction to restrict the publication and dissemination of information in an effort to limit the medias coverage of a criminal trial, because prior restraints generally are viewed as infringing on First Amendment rights, the bar is high for the success of such motions.[1]

The different reporting environments created by the two regimes result in huge differences in the everyday reporting of trials. In England, court reports will be mostly limited to a summary of the evidence given that day, often by way of verbatim quotes, from journalists keen not to accidentally fall on the wrong side of the strict liability rule by inserting comment. By contrast, in the United States, as seen with the Holmes trial, court reporting while the trial is ongoing might include opinion pieces as to the strength of the evidence or interviews with legal experts about the prospects of success of lines of defense. Faced with this heightened level of public engagement and debate, the U.S. court will utilize alternative measures to protect the right to a fair trial indeed it is not uncommon in high-profile cases for judges to instruct juries not to consume media related to the trial.

One area of particularly marked distinction between the jurisdictions is in the reporting of pretrial rulings. In the U.K., there is an automatic ban on reporting rulings made at pretrial hearings until after the conclusion of the trial.[2] This ban can only be disapplied by the judge dealing with the matter, and only if it is in the interests of justice to do so. By contrast, in the U.S., the press generally has a right under the First Amendment to report on pretrial hearings. Judges can close pretrial proceedings to the public upon request by the prosecution and defense, but would need to make special findings on the record that the closure was necessary to preserve higher or overriding values, and the order would need to be narrowly tailored to serve those higher or overriding values.[3] In this respect, the two systems are mirror opposites: in the U.K. there is a presumption of no pretrial reporting unless the judge disapplies it, whereas in the U.S. the presumption is in favor of pretrial reporting unless the judge restricts it. This dichotomy has the effect that the U.K. public usually remains unaware of whether there have been pretrial hearings (or indeed what the outcomes of those hearings were), while in the U.S. any attempt to restrict reporting can itself become the subject of intense reporting during the trial.

This was borne out in Holmes trial, where a number of applications by her lawyers to have evidence excluded from the trial were reported on at length. For example, in May of last year, Holmes lawyers moved to exclude evidence of customer complaints about the accuracy of blood testing results. The motion was denied by U.S. District Court Judge Edward Davila, and the contents of both the motion and his ruling were widely reported on contemporaneously. In an English trial, the public would not know, at least not until the trials conclusion, that a defense team had argued to exclude evidence in this way. From the English perspective, there is a real risk that any juror aware of this fact might view the evidence when it came to be given in a different or more significant light. Meanwhile, in the American system, jurors who have been significantly influenced by pretrial media coverage should be weeded out under voir dire examination, so this type of information being in the public domain may have a more subtle impact on a jurors state of mind than the straightforward biases caught under voir dire.

The limitations that a judge can order under English law can in some circumstances go beyond comment and pretrial rulings, to limit day-to-day reporting of the evidence being given at court. (As noted above, this is usually an exception to the strict liability rule.) Under s4(2) Contempt of Court Act 1981, [T]he court may, where it appears to be necessary for avoiding a substantial risk of prejudice to the administration of justice in those proceedings, or in any other proceedings pending or imminent, order that the publication of any report of the proceedings, or any part of the proceedings, be postponed for such period as the court thinks necessary for that purpose. Such postponement is most commonly ordered where there are sequential trials of different defendants relating to the same matter. In practice, when there are sequential trials, little if anything will be reported of the earlier trials until all trials have concluded. This is not the case in the U.S. Rather, the American system relies on protections such as voir dire examination of jurors in the later trial to ascertain knowledge or bias based on reporting of the first trial, or through a change in venue to combat the risk of unfairness.

This is notable in the Theranos case, where the trial of Holmes co-defendant, Ramesh Balwani, is due to start in mid-March. His trial will take place against a backdrop of Holmes headline-grabbing evidence that she suffered a pattern of physical and psychological abuse at his hands at the time they were jointly running the company. These allegations are unlikely to form part of the prosecutions case against Balwani, and plainly Holmes will not be present at his trial for cross-examination, but given the comprehensive reporting of her testimony, Balwani may well feel that this is something he will need to address in his trial. This is not a situation a defendant in an English trial would likely ever have to face.

These differences are not merely of academic interest. In a world where white-collar crime is increasingly global, and cases where there are parallel U.S. and U.K. proceedings are on the rise, these different reporting standards have the potential to cause unfairness. This risk is particularly acute where a defendant faces trial in the U.K. and there is already extensive media coverage of a prior or concurrent trial into the same or similar facts in the U.S. That reporting may not be permitted under English law, but it is perfectly lawful under the different rules in the U.S.

A first example of how this might arise relates to the jury selection process. In the U.S., there are protections in place intended to afford a fair trial by jury despite the permissive reporting rules (for example, voir dire, mentioned above). However, in the U.K., the process of jury selection is instead usually undertaken by way of a written questionnaire designed to weed out those who have been particularly exposed to media coverage (for example, in the high-profile 2014 trial into News International journalists accused of phone hacking, individuals who followed particular campaigning celebrities on social media were excluded from serving on the jury). Direct questioning by counsel (rather than the judge) is only permitted if there is already a prima facie case to support the basis for challenging a juror. The U.K. approach is therefore a less targeted and less detailed process than the American jury selection system, which typically utilizes direct oral questioning of individual potential jurors by the judge and/or counsel in addition to pre-voir dire written questionnaires. Thus, in high-profile cases where there have been American trials with detailed global media coverage, the tools available to a British Crown Court judge to address the effects of that coverage on the subsequent U.K. trial are more limited. This presents a real risk of jurors serving in an English trial having been exposed to a degree of reporting for example, journalistic commentary on the strength of the defense being run by alleged accomplices of the defendant that the English system is simply not designed to guard against.

A defendant faced with the imbalance of U.S. reporting and a U.K. trial will therefore find themselves between a rock and a hard place. A British judge would no doubt approve a detailed jury questionnaire seeking to exclude those who had closely followed the news. And the jury would be directed to ignore any media coverage they may have seen. But without voir dire to examine how media coverage has actually affected jurors views, in reality defendants in U.K. trials will find themselves less protected than those in the U.S.

A second example relates to the tools available to a defendant to defend themselves against detailed, adverse media coverage. The different reporting rules between the U.S. and the U.K. mean that defense lawyers have a wholly different relationship with the media in the two countries. Because of the realities of trial by media in the U.S., defense attorneys in high-profile criminal cases in America may seek to use the press to their advantage by crafting a public relations strategy. This allows the defense the opportunity to publicly respond, in particular where there are misleading or inaccurate stories circulating (unless the defense is forced into silence due to gag orders). Indeed, it has become increasingly common for defense attorneys in the U.S. to engage directly with the press to publicly deny or combat statements made by the prosecution. This can include full press interviews (such as that given by Balwanis attorney, Jeff Coopersmith, to Nightline in 2019). By contrast, it is rare for English defense lawyers to make any comment before, and certainly not during, a trial. Any comments given are limited to the fact that the client protests their innocence, without details. Therefore, in a transatlantic case, a U.K. defendant may face the intensity of the press coverage of an initial U.S. trial, and perhaps co-defendants in the U.S. seeking to minimize reputational damage, with likely no similar recourse with respect to engaging with the media through their lawyers. This only exacerbates the risks of jury selection noted above.

In an increasingly international prosecution landscape, it cannot be long before a defendant in an English court finds themselves grappling with the adverse impact of American reporting arising in relation to a prior U.S. criminal trial. Given the risks outlined, lawyers in both the U.K. and U.S. should be aware of these differences in order to effectively educate and manage the expectations of their clients who may be required to stand trial on either or both sides of the Atlantic. Whats more, if this starts to become a regular issue, revisiting the way that juries are selected, and the degree of detail with which they can be examined, may be a necessary consequence.

***

*This article was co-authored by Corker Binning's senior associate

[1] See Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539 (1976) (finding the heavy burden imposed as a condition to securing a prior restraint was not met and reversing the lower courts decision to uphold a gag order on the media).

[2] S41 Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996.

[3] See Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court, 478 U.S. 1 (1986).

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Trial by Media: The Risks to Defendants of Differing US and UK Approaches - JD Supra

Top five movies to put on your list for the True/False Film Festival – The Maneater

True or false?

This question is usually followed up with a response of one or the other. However, in Columbia, this age-old question takes on a whole different meaning.

Every year, Columbia welcomes hundreds of film fanatics into town for the True/False Film Fest each spring. While last years festival was featured outdoors, this year is bringing moviegoers back into the nine theaters in Columbia March 3-6.

With 53 films to choose from, all with different run times, plotlines and in different locations, it can become a bit overwhelming to lay out your schedule. However, this process can become less stressful. Here are the top five films to see throughout the weekend:

We Met in Virtual Reality

Showtimes: Friday, March 4 at 10 p.m. Missouri Theatre, Saturday, March 5 at 12:30 p.m. Showtime Theater @ The Blue Note, Sunday, March 5 at 8:30 p.m. Big Ragtag

As virtual reality became a staple in the gaming and tech industries, it was only a matter of time before a dedicated community formed. This documentary provides an immersive view into the world of VRChat, an online virtual platform geared toward facilitating conversations with people around the globe. Set during the pandemic, this film could provide a meaningful depiction of online connection back when in-person connection wasnt possible.

2nd Chance

Showtimes: Thursday, March 3 at 10 p.m. Missouri Theatre, Friday, March 4 at 7:45 p.m. Rhynsburger Theatre, Saturday, March 5 at 10:30 p.m. The Picturehouse

Have you ever wondered how the concealed bulletproof vest was created? Richard Davis, the founder of the aptly titled Second Chance body armor company, stars in this zany look into the creation of this product featuring him shooting himself more than 100 times to prove the validity of the vest.

No, Im not kidding.

With a multitude of interviews, this film provides a true slice-of-life take on the uncanny story of an American man making a truly American product.

I Didnt See You There

Showtimes: Friday, March 4 at 6:45 p.m. The Picturehouse, Saturday, March 5 at 9:30 a.m. Missouri Theatre, Sunday, March 6 at 5:30 p.m. Showtime Theatre @ Blue Note

The term freak show has been used in circuses, vaudeville acts and numerous shows displaying people doing outlandish things in the name of entertainment. However, when the curtain closes and the costumes come off, how do those people go about their lives? Filmmaker Reid Davenport explores the concept of the freak show both in the past and its modernized depictions. Davenport also connects this back to his own life as a person with a disability. The movie displays how a circus tent pitched outside of Davenports apartment led to a film about soul-searching, unsolicited attention and Americas obsession with infantilizing and othering the different.

Riotsville, USA

Showtimes: Thursday, March 3 at 7:15 p.m. Showtime Theatre @ Blue Note, Saturday, March 5 at 8:00 p.m. The Picturehouse, Sunday, March 6 at 9:30 a.m. Missouri Theatre

The 60s were rife with civil unrest and protests for Black rights and advancements. The police response? Cities called Riotsvilles. Created by the U.S. military, riotsvilles served as fictional places that helped police train for responding to civil disturbances. The main component of this film resides in the never-before-seen footage and images documenting these cities. This film offers a look into the birth of the militarization of state police and the consequences it had on citizens exercising their First Amendment since.

Mija

Showtimes: Thursday, March 3 at 4:30 p.m. Showtime Theatre @ Blue Note, Saturday, March 5 at 12:00 p.m. The Picturehouse, Sunday, March 6 at 6:30 p.m. Missouri Theatre

Mija opens with Doriz Muoz, an up-and-coming music manager supporting her undocumented family and her recently deported brother through her occupation. Launching rising stars like Kali Uchis and Omar Apollo into superstardom, the looming threat of losing her family rings clear with each passing day. When Muoz connects with Jacks Haupt, a young singer encountering the same issues as Muoz, their bond becomes inseparable. Dealing with topics like immigration, creative struggle, family and ambition, the film presents an opportunity to display a story of perseverance that many people go through nationwide.

True/False also offers short films that can be watched in batches listed here. Whether youre attending the festival for the documentaries or just to have fun, now you have some films in your arsenal to check out.

Edited by Lucy Valeski, lvaleski@themaneater.com

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Top five movies to put on your list for the True/False Film Festival - The Maneater

Tips to Build a Successful Digital Marketing Strategy – CIO Applications

Fremont, CA: Internet marketing has expanded dramatically in recent years. The sheer number of businesses joining the established business bandwagon attests to the enormous income potential of internet ventures. Despite the fact that there are numerous opportunities available online, success in internet marketing requires more effort and resources. In the following paragraphs, we will look at some effective strategies for harnessing the full power of digital marketing to foster businesses.

Figuring out the Area of Expertise

Because internet marketing is such a broad field, it is critical that one can understand who their customers are and what they want. Many businesses conduct consumer and market research to better understand their target buyers' mindsets, preferences, and purchasing patterns. As an entrepreneur or businessperson, one must target a specific market/audience (niche) rather than everyone. This will be reflected in the keywords one selects for SEO and SEM campaigns.

Making an Internet Marketing Plan

An internet marketing strategy guides all of one's decisions and activities along the way. It also assists one in developing and implementing sound strategies, as well as evaluating the outcome or results of one's activities. A company's internet marketing strategy should include all measurable objectives and goals, as well as milestones for one's marketing activities. Most importantly, one should integrate one's internet marketing business plan with the company's existing business plan and ensure that it is in sync with the company's medium and long-term business goals.

Creating a Professional Website and Optimizing It

A company's website serves as its portal into the world of internet marketing. It is the first thing visitors, and customers notice. A company's values should be reflected on its website, and new customers should be able to make quick decisions because of it. To make a company's website useful, include sections such as FAQs, e-mail and chat support, and, if necessary, a ticket system. The key here is to establish and maintain a professional image for a company.

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Tips to Build a Successful Digital Marketing Strategy - CIO Applications

Gingrich: If GOP Retakes the House, 1/6 Committee Members …

The 2022 midterms are here. Its likely that the Republican Party retakes the House and possibly the Senate. With Bidens appalling approval numbers and the likelihood that not much else is going to get done on the Hill, Democrats face a thin record to sell to voters who only see inflation rising, a supply chain crisis that remains out of control, and a president who is totally aloof. The Democrats only have a four-seat majority in the House. Its going red. So, what will be the fate of the January 6 Select Committee? It should be trashed. I think it will since we all know its a Democratic Party circus being used as a fundraising ploy. Its also a shoddy and transparent push to convict Trump onsomething to prevent him from running for president again. The irony is the more aggressive this committee gets on their January 6 hysterics; it only increases the likelihood that Trump runs out of spite. Yet, former Speaker Newt Gingrich went even further, suggesting that the committee members could be jailed for their involvement in the anti-Trump witch hunt (via Newsweek):

Representative Liz Cheney, a Wyoming Republican, responded with a warning after prominent Republican Newt Gingrich suggested that members of the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021 attack against the U.S. Capitol could face jail time if the GOP returns to power.

Gingrich, who served as House Speaker from 1995 to 1999, made the remarks during an interview with Fox News on Sunday morning. He predicted what will happened to the January 6 committee if Republicans take control of Congress. "The wolves are gonna find out that they're now sheep, and they're the ones whoin fact, I thinkface a real risk of jail for the kind of laws they're breaking," Gingrich said.

Cheney, a staunch Trump critic, serves as the vice-chair of the House select committee investigating the January 6 violence. She tweeted a response to Gingrich's threat later on Sunday.

Yeah, I dont know about jail, but if remarks like this ruffle the feathers of liberals and anti-Trump RepublicansIm all for it. And Liz Cheney is the perfect person to fall for this because shes just obsessed with de-Trumping the GOP. Its not going to happen, Liz. Maybe that will sink in when you get primaried out of your seat. Leaving out the straight to jail aspect of this, the committee has been saddled with eye roll-worthy moments. The texts that Mark Meadows turned over would probably bear more weight if key members of the committee didnt peddle doctored versions of them. The credibility of this whole act was shoddy, to begin with, and Democrats spewing fake texts just embodies the ethos around this whole production. The truth doesnt matter if Trump goes down. Hes not. How many times have we heard that the walls are closing in, and nothing happens?

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Gingrich: If GOP Retakes the House, 1/6 Committee Members ...

Afghanistan six months on from the Taliban takeover photo essay – The Guardian

Augusts adrenaline may have worn off but the harrowing memories have not faded. Its been six months since the Taliban took Kabul, the countrys then president and his cabinet fled and thousands of people flooded the airport in panic, so desperate for a way out that several men tried to hold on to a departing plane and fell to their deaths.

Food distribution in the northern Jowzjan province. Due to the economic crisis, many people cannot afford food, even though its widely available in the market.

Shaista, 50, from Jowzjan, says that since the Talibans takeover, her husband and children have lost their jobs. Right; Madina, 50, from Jowzjan.

Already scarred by four decades of war, Afghanistans rapid regime change has left a mark that will take a long time to process. As the Taliban are slowly putting their government in place, many Afghans feel lost and confused. With uncertain futures, some see little alternative but to seek a new life abroad, adding to a diaspora of more than 5 million worldwide.

Most people, even in Kabul, have no access to clean water in their homes. Here, people are seen filling up jerrycans with water for drinking and cooking.

Some of those who decided to stay, or who did not have an option to leave, say they will have to give the Taliban a chance, even though the group has not been recognised internationally. There isnt a large enough opposition anyway, and Taliban fighters have been stationed even in the most remote valleys of Panjshir, where the last battles of resistance played out.

We will keep fighting if we have to, were not tired, said Ziaul Rahman, a 21-year-old Talib stationed in Afghanistans Logar province. Resistance fighters, whether in Panjshir or in the Uzbek-dominated Jowzjan province, say the same.

For the past three and a half years of living and working as a journalist here, I have visited most of the countrys provinces. Since the Talibans takeover, I managed to return to many of them again, learning more about how people across the almost nation of 40 million perceive their new rulers.

The Taliban have been accommodating to foreign journalists, a privilege that has not been granted to all Afghan reporters. Several have been tortured, beaten, detained and intimidated and have since either left the country or are trying to get out.

To summarise or even generalise about the sentiment of a place as diverse as Afghanistan is, of course, impossible.

Destruction is widespread in Sangin, Helmand, previously right on the frontline. Here, every house is destroyed, few have been rebuilt, and people are starting over.

The data is bleak: last week Joe Biden announced that $3.5bn of frozen Afghan funds including the private savings of ordinary Afghans would be distributed to 9/11 victims, even though not a single Afghan was involved in the attacks.

The United Nations says at least half a million Afghans have lost their jobs since the Taliban takeover, and estimates that by mid-year up to 97% of people could be living below the poverty line. The majority of development aid funding almost 80% of the previous governments expenditure has ceased, throwing the country into economic crisis.

Human Rights Watch has reported executions and enforced disappearances of former government officials, and to this day many people live in fear and remain in hiding. With the newly appointed all-male cabinet and divisions within the Taliban, Afghanistans future remains uncertain.

As we feared, the situation is worsening in most respects a reflection of the Talibans determination to crush dissent and criticism, said Patricia Gossman, an associate Asia director for Human Rights Watch. Revenge killings, crushing womens rights, strangling the media the Taliban seem determined to tighten their grip on society, even as the situation grows increasingly unstable in the coming months.

At first sight, the changes on Kabuls streets arent all too visible. Surrounded by majestic mountain peaks, parts of the city are still bustling. Kebabs wrapped in fresh warm bread are sold by the roadside, and boys selling balloons navigate through busy traffic. The Talibans post-victory euphoria has ebbed, and while the city was flooded with insurgents in summer, most of them now seem to have left. Those remaining man checkpoints or work in the newly established government.

While the Taliban initially detained all drug addicts and moved many of them to prisons, now more are again seen on Kabuls streets. Right: Sayed Jafar, a carpet vendor, sits in his shop in Kabul. Since the Taliban takeover, business has essentially stopped as his customers have left the country.

Yet at a closer look the city is emptier, though the number of beggars has increased significantly. Once buzzing coffee shops are vacant; several restaurants have permanently closed. Outside the Iranian embassy, long queues of people wait for visa appointments; they say they are hopeless. At a Kabul maternity clinic, a newborn boy lies abandoned. His family doesnt have the money to take care of another child, said Latifa Wardak, one of the hospitals doctors.

Rahela Shahavi, 25, works as a nurse in the postnatal ward at Malalai maternity hospital, where up to 100 babies are delivered each day. Out of the 446 staff, 400 are women. Right: nurses and midwives working in the prenatal ward at Rabia Balkhi hospital in Kabul sit down for lunch.

The trauma of the last months haunts many, and although Afghans are private people who often choose to conceal emotion, they visibly carry their pain. Ive noticed it when interviewing people. The conversations last longer, because there is a real need to talk and process. With countless cups of green tea consumed, many describe the loneliness felt after their family members escaped the country. Memories of the past Taliban regime are recalled, often linked to present fears. Tears are shed.

There are good moments, too. On a snowy morning, Naim Naimy, 63, from the southern Kandahar province, said he had travelled six hours to see a white Kabul. Ive been watching the weather forecast, he said, standing amid trees in a park, soft white flakes melting on his skin. I love snow, he added, smiling.

In Kan-e-Ezzat village, as on many other similar frontlines, the guns have fallen silent since the Talibans takeover. Wardak had been one of the first provinces to see a resurgent Taliban after the start of the 2001 US-led invasion, with conflict almost a constant over the past decade.

Whenever fighting erupted, Lal Mohammad, 48, would run through the familys compound gathering his children and other relatives, shoving them towards a small, dark, underground cowshed. They would sit amid the dung, crammed in and scared, around 40 of them, sometimes for hours, listening to the sounds of bullets and mortars, often in the cold of the night, waiting for the flare-up to pass.

Naila, 10, from Wardak, has been having nightmares for months, even now that the war has stopped.

The Kabul-based International Psychological Organisation (IPSO) has said Afghanistan is a trauma state, estimating that 70% of Afghans are in need of psychological support.

Lal admitted to being traumatised too. He never aligned with the Taliban, but said he was glad that fighting had at least stopped. Most of his family sustained injuries over the years. He pointed to his 12-year-old nephew Sheer, sitting on a cushion next to him, his right hand deeply scared by a shrapnel wound. Little aid had trickled down to Lals village. The foreigners brought us cookies but little development, he said cynically.

Everyone in this village has either lost a family member or has an injury. Everyone is traumatised and tired. We didnt want the Russians, nor the Americans, nor the Taliban. We just want peace. Today I can at least tell my children that the war is over.

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Afghanistan six months on from the Taliban takeover photo essay - The Guardian