Acclaimed Turkish digital artist Uğur Gallenkuş has partnered with the Kulczyk Foundation for seven murals that highlight global inequalities and injustice. The murals will be seen in five Polish cities, promoting the latest season of the Kulczyk Foundation’s documentary series ‘The Domino Effect’.
Forced begging is the most prevalent form of human trafficking in Senegal. Human Rights Watch estimates that every day more than 100,000 talibés – children living in religious schools to learn the Quran – are forced on to the streets under the threat of violence to beg for food or money.
The Kulczyk Foundation has today announced a new project in partnership with the HOPE Foundation for Women & Children of Bangladesh. The project will improve access to mental health and psychological support services (MHPSS) for those living in the region, with a particular focus on women and children living in Bangladesh including the country’s significant Rohingya community.
Persecuted in Myanmar, forced to seek refuge in neighboring Bangladesh and then exploited and trafficked to places unknown. That’s the reality for many Rohingya Muslims living in Cox’s Bazar – now the world’s largest refugee camp accommodating nearly one million people – as they are targeted by human traffickers and lured from the refugee camp with false promises of employment and better living conditions.