2018
June
20
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 20, 2018
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

It’s always encouraging to hear that a Monitor story has had a particular impact. We thought you’d like to know of a recent example.

In April, staff writer Howard LaFranchi wrote about the dramatic change achieved by a group of teenage girls in India who decided they’d had enough of the alcohol-fueled mismanagement of their rural community. Their story caught the eye of Anagha Krishnan, a young Indian-American who founded TheGirlCodeProject in 2016 to connect girls with technology. Anagha, who immigrated to the United States when she was 12, and who hails from the same Indian state as the teens, contacted Howard.

What followed was a Skype call between Howard in the United States, Anagha in Vietnam (where she was setting up another project), and the girls in India. The teens cheerfully waved their copies of the Monitor Weekly so Howard could see they’d received them. Anagha asked the girls if they would commit to sharing with other villages what they have learned about driving change and progress. They enthusiastically said yes. This week, Anagha is talking to her organization’s board about making Thennamadevi its first undertaking in India.

Today is World Refugees Day. The United Nations reports that 68.5 million people were displaced as of the end of 2017. Of those, 16.2 million became displaced during 2017. As the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said, “We are at a watershed, where success in managing forced displacement globally requires a new and far more comprehensive approach.” 

Now, to our five stories.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Martial Trezzini/Keystone/AP
The United States nameplate at UN headquarters in Geneva adorns an unoccupied seat June 20, a day after the US announced its withdrawal from the United Nations Human Rights Council.
Patrik Jonsson/The Christian Science Monitor
Mayor Jason Lary is viewed as the architect of the one-year-old city of Stonecrest, Ga. A 95 percent African-American city so new that it still registers as a neighboring town on Google Maps, it has a population of 53,000. Stonecrest and the neighboring city of South Fulton last year became the first black cities of their size to incorporate since Reconstruction.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Former members of the leftist guerrilla groups ELN and FARC, members of the right wing paramilitary groups, and victims of the armed conflict in Colombia participate in a soccer match for the peace in Dabeiba, Colombia, June 19.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters
Women model wedding gowns during the 14th Annual Toilet Paper Wedding Dress Contest in New York June 20. Top designers compete for a grand prize of $10,000. The sponsor, Quilted Northern, asks that entrants use only its brand of toilet paper, tape, glue, and needle and thread.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we'll turn our attention to the Russians and Saudis. Are they planning to reshape the oil industry ahead of Friday's OPEC meeting? 

More issues

2018
June
20
Wednesday
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