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Nahlah Ayed

Nahlah Ayed

Foreign Correspondent at CBLT-TV (CBC Toronto) Online

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Influence score
71
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Location
Canada
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • International News
  • United Kingdom

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Recent Articles

cbc.ca

How to deal with Russia: U.S. diplomat’s 5,000-word telegram still resonates 75 years later | CBC...

In 1946, U.S. diplomat George F. Kennan authored a secret document about Russia that would cool international relations and help launch the Cold War. Seventy five years later, Kennan’s Long Telegram still echoes in Washington and in Putin’s Russia.
globenewswire.com

MEDIA ALERT: Ethiopian novelist and Booker Prize finalist, Maaza Me...

TORONTO, May 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- WHAT:Maaza Mengiste, award-winning author of The Shadow King, will deliver the 8th Annual Pluralism Lecture via...
theglobeandmail.com

Globe multimedia project awarded by Amnesty International

The Globe and Mail’s Gone project by Stephanie Nolen, Félix Márquez, Laura Blenkinsop, Jeremy Agius and Timothy Moore is the winner of the mixed media category
cbc.ca

With the world in crisis, what’s an intellectual to do? | CBC Radio

In 1919, Romain Rolland wrote the Declaration of the Independence of the Mind as a call to intellectuals to rise above division, censorship and nationalism of their day. Nahlah Ayed speaks to Canadian and international thinkers to consider the role of the intellectual today, and to rewrite the decla…
cbc.ca

‘A missed opportunity’: Egypt 10 years after the Tahrir Square prot...

It’s been a decade since Egyptians dared to disrupt the status quo of living in a police state. But 10 years after the protests in Tahrir Square, many Egyptians view them as naive or misguided, writes Nahlah Ayed.
cbc.ca

Debating the value of God at a time of crisis: Leibniz vs Voltaire ...

Is the concept of God useful at a time of crisis? German philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and French writer and philosopher Voltaire had different views on that question.
cbc.ca

The dirt on handwashing: the tragic death behind a life-saving act ...

The resistance Ignaz Semmelweis encountered to his life-saving ideas would ultimately lead to his tragic end. With handwashing in the midst of a renaissance in the era of the coronavirus, Dr. Semmelweis deserves at least some of the credit.
cbc.ca

Are conspiracy theories really ‘a new religion’? | CBC Radio

Conspiracy theories may be ultra-divisive today, but there was a time when they were an acceptable form of knowledge. They are powerful in political battle — and even more so in an age of rising populism. But if you think we’re in a golden age of conspiracy theories, think again.
cbc.ca

2 former Myanmar soldiers now in custody say they killed dozens of ...

Two men believed to be deserters from Myanmar’s army are in the custody of the International Criminal Court at The Hague after reporting their participation, under military orders, in the 2017 campaign of killing and rape of countless Rohingya Muslim civilians.
cbc.ca

Take it like a Stoic: coping in the time of coronavirus | CBC Radio

Early Stoics knew all about crisis: They lived through wars, exile and episodes of infectious disease, as well as the loss of loved ones. In the time of coronavirus, modern Stoics say their predecessors have lessons that speak directly to coping with the constraints of pandemic living.
cbc.ca

Beirut blast a ‘knockout punch’ after succession of crippling blows...

Tuesday’s blast in Beirut came as Lebanon was barely limping through an economic and political crisis, writes Nahlah Ayed.
cbc.ca

After 2 decades of peace, the threat of an Irish Brexit border is s...

The Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland have been divided by a largely invisible border since 1998. But Brexit has sparked anxiety that the border could once again become very visible — and a cause of conflict and violence. Ideas host Nahlah Ayed went there to hear what people are saying.
cbc.ca

The peace walls of Belfast: Do they still help keep the peace? | CB...

More than 20 years after the Good Friday peace agreement was signed, the so-called peace walls remain in Northern Ireland. Host Nahlah Ayed heads to Belfast to find out if the walls are helping or hindering community reconciliation between Catholic and Protestant, Republican and Unionist. This is th…
cbc.ca

‘Historic day for international justice’: UN Rohingya ruling brings...

The International Court of Justice’s public rebuke of Myanmar for its treatment of Rohingya Muslims may be a turning point turn for the moribund international justice system.
cbc.ca

Killer robots march into uncharted ethical territory | CBC Radio

What happens if autonomous weapons fight our wars? What if they select and kill targets without any human intervention? The world is closer to this scenario than ever before. But there’s no consensus on whether — or even how — it would ever be ethical. This episode delves into the complex conundrums…
cbc.ca

Iran vs. U.S.: War in progress, shaped by Soleimani, goes on withou...

Iran has lost its chief architect of regional influence to a U.S. airstrike, but rather than spark a new war, this new round of violence is an escalation of a war in progress.
cbc.ca

Make debate great again: How bad political argument is undermining ...

We have forgotten how to argue, and it’s easy to become extremist in our political views. That is undermining our democracies from within, according to two philosophers.
cbc.ca

Warrior woman: How a British secret agent — who became a Canadian —...

Sonya d’Artois parachuted into occupied France under the cover of darkness in late May 1944, and along with other female agents working in secret, helped the Allied forces make their D-Day landings and ultimately win the Second World War.
cbc.ca

Extraordinary destruction and flooding in Mozambique point to unpre...

Beira is still in mourning, still bearing the scars of sudden catastrophe. As the city tries to get back on its feet, its people are still trying to make sense of a singular storm that defied the rules of any they have ever known.
newsinteractives.cbc.ca

Survivor of Guatemalan massacre seeks justice

After Ramiro Cristales survived a massacre in Guatemala, he eventually embarked on a quest for justice. It took him to Canada and back to Guatemala. Now that pursuit is at risk of unravelling.
newsinteractives.cbc.ca

Walled world: Lessons from Europe’s border barriers

U.S. President Donald Trump may currently be the world’s most vocal defender of border walls, but Europe has had years of experience putting up barriers to keep people out.