Planning for each Olympics typically begins a couple years before, but the usual site visit 18 months in advance had to be substituted with pandemic-induced Zoom conference calls and studying schematics. apne.ws/9YzCYd9
At the Bird’s Nest, four static, remote-operated cameras captured the opening ceremony and remain in place for the closing in #Beijing2022. apne.ws/9YzCYd9
The @AP brought fewer remote setups to Beijing than in the summer, so the photography staff had to choose the sports where the tech would “pay the most dividends,” said photographer David J. Phillips, the man behind the mechanics. apne.ws/9YzCYd9
“It’s like playing a video game, and I’m not good at video games,” said @AP photographer Jeff Roberson. “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever done.”
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There has been a dramatic increase in the number of people unaffiliated with organized religion.
AP's religion team explores how this phenomenon is playing out in several countries, including regions where openly being a "none" is rare or even dangerous. projects.apnews.com/features/2023/…
These so-called "nones" — atheists, agnostics, or "nothing in particular" — comprise 30% or more of the adult population in the U.S. and Canada, as well as numerous European countries. Large numbers are secular in Japan, Israel and Uruguay as well. apne.ws/QAEtH23
Most people in Italy, long considered the cradle of the Catholic faith, retain a nominal affiliation. But in a place steeped in tradition, a growing number of Italians have little adherence to doctrine or practice. apne.ws/8dizqIp
Russia has created a vast detention system across two countries to hold thousands of Ukrainian civilians.
An @AP investigation found routine torture, slave labor and psychological abuse within the system. apnews.com/article/ukrain…
Nearly 100 police evidence photos from liberated regions were also obtained by @AP. They showed tools of torture, including the same ones repeatedly described by former civilian captives held in Russia and occupied regions. apnews.com/article/ukrain…
Russia has plans to expand the system in both occupied Ukraine and at home, according to government statements and a document obtained by AP ordering construction of 25 new prison colonies and six other detention centers in occupied Ukraine by 2026. apnews.com/article/ukrain…
BREAKING: The U.S. Supreme Court rules colleges and universities must stop considering race in admissions, putting an end to affirmative action in higher education. https://t.co/jv4l1qxcyqapne.ws/IPmvUPv
The court's conservative majority overturned precedents reaching back 45 years in ruling against admissions plans at Harvard and the University of North Carolina, the nation's oldest private and public colleges, respectively. apnews.com/article/suprem…
The vote was 6-3 in the North Carolina case and 6-2 in the Harvard case. Justice Elena Kagan was the other dissenter. https://t.co/owYOyD9fLVapne.ws/ro1Yz0b
Muhammed Rashid could hear the panic in his wife’s voice and began recording the call.
It would be the last time he spoke with Setera Begum. apne.ws/UaZrZue
Setera’s fateful journey began decades earlier when her family fled civil unrest and a repressive military regime in Myanmar. The persecution of ethnic Rohingya Muslims by the Buddhist majority has pushed more than one million Rohingya to Bangladesh. apne.ws/UaZrZue
The camps have been plagued with violence, widespread hunger and frequent fires. Conditions have deteriorated so much in recent years, that a growing number of Rohingya have decided to risk their lives rather than stay behind in the camps. apne.ws/UaZrZue
Ten years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court halted what many consider the heart of the landmark law known as the Voting Rights Act. Now, the court is set to issue a ruling on whether it will be reinforced or further eroded. apnews.com/article/voting…
The @AP spoke with six people who are part of a small, vanishing group that lived at the epicenter of the struggle for voting rights six decades ago. apnews.com/article/voting…
Stephen Schwerner’s brother was murdered in Mississippi as he tried to register Black people to vote. He is immensely proud of his brother, Mickey Schwerner, but with a great sense of loss: “I don’t think anybody in our family has ever gotten over it.” apnews.com/article/voting…
For many students, new measures restricting how schools address race, gender and sexuality are having deeply personal effects. Some students of color and LGBTQ+ kids feel like their very existence is being rejected. apne.ws/Nx8knLy
Harmony Kennedy, 16, has experienced racism at her Tennessee school, where a classmate mocked the murder of George Floyd. To her, laws that could limit the teaching of Black history feel like a gut punch. apne.ws/p77SLXI
Leo Burchell, a transgender student in Pennsylvania, had teachers’ support when he transitioned in 2020. Then, the school barred using students’ chosen pronouns without parental permission. It feels like a shrinking of the space where he’d felt safe. apne.ws/8te7exg