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  • South Africa Cape Town 29 April 2020 Olwethu Njoloza from  Girls Leading Change. Girls Leading Change has been developed to effectively involve partners from all segments of our community in collaborative work to develop our teen girls into better and more compassionate human beings, who live their lives successfully, while not becoming just another statistic. We are creating a platform where our girls will discover their talents and passions, where the potential of every girl will be ignited. We want our girls to be able to look beyond their current circumstances, to understand that there is more to life than what they are exposed to. This is a platform which seeks to inculcate the culture of the desire to achieve and to dream big, a platform which will create an inspired generation. As part of our outreach programs, during the corona virus pandemic, we are distributing dignity packs to teens girls in underprivileged communities. Photographer Ayanda Ndamane African News Agency /ANA
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  • June 2, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - Remembrance of the 50th anniversary of the death of BENNO OHNESORG in front of the town hall Schoeneberg. Dr. DIRK BEHRENDT, Senator for Justice, Consumer Protection and Anti-Discrimination, GRETCHEN KLOTZ-DUTSCHKE, former student activist, and WOLFGANG WIELAND, Justice Defender, rember the protests against the Shah's visit to the town hall and the subsequent police intervention.BENNO OHNESORG was a student at the Freie Universität Berlin and took part in the protests against the West Berlin visit of the Shah Reza Pahlavi on June 2. In the evening next to the German Opera, there were clashes between demonstrators and the police. The police officer Karl-Heinz Kurras shot the then 26-year-old Ohnesorg in a backyard on Krummenstrasse near the German Opera. The exact circumstances of the death are controversial and could not be clarified in detail. Kurras was released in court proceedings. The death of Ohnesorg led to a radicalization within the German-wide student protests and foreign-parliamentary currents towards the end of the 1960s. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
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