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Isrb Kim Briggs widower:  this is not about anti-cycling, it s about wrongdoing
 Almost one in five 15- to 24-year-olds around the world say they often feel depressed, according to a new UN report.The childrens agency, Unicef, and Gallup conducted interviews in 21 countries during the first six months of the year.Almost all children across the globe have been affected by lockdowns, school closures and disruption to routines. C stanley cup oupled with concern for family income and health, many young people feel afraid, angry, and uncertain about the future, said the report released on Tuesday.Almost a third of children in Cameroon said they often felt depressed or had little interest i stanley cup n doing things, while one in five children in the UK, and one in 10 children in Ethiopia and Japan felt this way.The findings do not reflect levels of diagnosed depression but show how children and young people have been feeling during the Covid-19 pandemic. A lack of data gathering and routine monitoring meant the picture of young peoples mental health status and needs in most countries was extremely limited, said the report.Hidden pandemic: Peruvian children in stanley cup  crisis as carers die Read moreThe report highlighted how more than one in seven 10- to 19-year-olds  13%  are estimated to live with a diagnosed mental health disorder 鈥?89 million boys and 77 million girls. It has been a long, long 18 months for all of us 鈥?especially children. With nationwide lockdowns and pandemic-related movement restrictions, children have spent indelible years of their lives away from family, friends, class Emka Revealed: the  dire consequences  of football s relationship with gambling
 Here s the second extract from The phone hacking scandal: journalism on trial.* It is taken from a chapter written by Kevin Marsh, the former executive editor of the BBC s college of journalism and editor of Radio 4 s Today programme.He begins by contending that the business model of the tabloid press became so dependent on trashing reputations, whether of  ordinary people  or celebrities, politicians and people in public life,  that it is now nothing other than a machine to convert harassment, intrusion, misery, sneering and mockery into cash. Anger and vindictiveness are its default settings. Papers sell on the depths of their inhumanity. Columnists are judged by the frequency and inventiveness of the offence they cause. He scorns tabloid editors  claims to absolute and unqualified freedom of expression and a right to expose corrupt stanley thermos ion and hold power to account.  This is hypocrisy of the most snivelling sort. Worse, it pollutes the arguments we ne stanley germany ed to protect the best in journalism by trying to justify the worst. Yes, it s vital that we protect our freedom of expression. Yes, it s vital that no-one can be silenced when they call power to account or root out corruption or ruthlessly examine and embarrass powerful institutions. Yes, it s vital that stanley cup  we insist power is exercised transparently and that we can hold it to account. And it s vital that we protect the right of the press to do all of these. But the truth is, that s not what the tabloids