TASSC International FY18 Highlights
Read MoreA growing network of volunteer mentors is providing invaluable support to TASSC International’s community of asylum seekers as they look to transfer the professional skills and achievements they left behind in their home countries to work in the US.
Read MoreIn the aftermath of the gruesome murder of Jamal Khashoggi, we cannot lose sight of the fact that brutality against journalists is not isolated to any one country but occurs regularly worldwide under repressive governments whose political leaders deliberately target journalists to silence the truth.
Read MoreFollowing the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Léonce Byimana, was interviewed by the National Catholic Reporter, about how news of Khashoggi's murder has impacted TASSC survivors.
Read MoreAs the torture and murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi draws worldwide outrage, a group of international journalists will speak out about the torture they endured at the hands of their own governments across the world.
Read MoreTASSC works with over 300 survivors of torture from around the world, and an estimated 5-8% are asylum seekers or asylees from the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community.
Read MoreTASSC seeks to bring to light the complexities of the current struggle in the Anglophone, or English-speaking region of Cameroon, which began in fall of 2016.
Read MoreIn a shocking move, in March 2018 Uganda dictator Yoweri Museveni removed Kale Kayihura, one of his most fervent supporters and head of the Ugandan police.
Read MoreTASSC is disturbed to find bigotry and intolerance against an entire religious faith take root in the highest court of the United States.
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