 Hello and welcome to the International Daily Roundup by People's Dispatch, where we bring you major news developments from around the world. Our headlines, Protests, Seconds, Police Violence and Repression Continue in Greece, WHO Report reveals 1 in 3 women have been subjected to physical or sexual violence, second NLD official killing custody amid police and military raids in Myanmar, Colombian activists assassinated in ongoing crackdown on social movements, and in our video section, we look at India's farmers who are holding solidarity protests to mark International Women's Day. In our first story, Protests, Seconds, Police Violence and Repression continue in Athens on March 10. Today's march was held following instances of severe violence by the police on March 9. Nearly 5,000 people had gathered in Nia Semirini area on Tuesday to hold a march against police repression. This was after reports were circulated of police beating up a man during an inspection of lockdown violations on Sunday. Tuesday's march was organized by student groups and trade unions including the all workers militant front. As the protests continued in the evening, there were reports of police officers using flash grenades and tear gas. Protesters were also brutally beaten up on the streets. Police officials have announced that ten arrests have been made so far. Greets has been witnessing a surge in police violence. Greek ombudsman Andreas Potakis stated that reports of police violence increased by 75 percent in the past year. Many have accused the conservative-led new democracy government of using the pandemic as an excuse to crack down on dissent. The government has also introduced a controversial education bill which will increase policing on campuses. This includes the permanent deployment of police officers on university spaces. The bill has sparked mass protests across the country over the past few months. In our next story, one in three women are subjected to physical or sexual forms of violence across their lifetime. These figures are part of a report published by the World Health Organization and partner organizations on March 9. It is based on data collected between 2000 and 2018. It indicates that nearly 736 million women face violence by their intimate partners as well as by others. The numbers have remained more or less stable over the past decade. One in four women between the ages of 15 and 24 who have been in a relationship will have already experienced intimate partner violence by their mid-20s. Young women have been at the highest risk of this violence in the past 12 months. This kind of violence affects nearly 641 million women across the world. Moreover, 38 percent of the murders of women across the globe are committed by their partners. However, given that cases of violence are grossly underreported, the actual numbers are expected to be much higher. The report also acknowledges the relationship between violence and economic vulnerability. Around 37 percent of women living in the world's poorest countries have already experienced physical and or sexual intimate partner violence. 33 to 51 percent of women between the ages of 15 to 49 in Oceania, southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa have faced intimate partner violence. The report highlights the need for addressing systemic economic and social inequalities to prevent this kind of violence. This includes access to education, safe work and ensuring that essential services are accessible to survivors. We now go to Myanmar when a second official from the National League for Democracy party has been killed in custody. As reported by Al Jazeera, Zawmiat Lin, died after being detained in Yangon at around 1.30 am local time on March 8. The death was announced by a member of the now-desolved upper house of parliament. The NLD is led by the now-deposed state councillor Ong Sang Suu Kyi, who is also in detention. Zawmiat Lin was the head of the Suu vocation institute on Yangon. As reported by a local news portal, his family was informed of his death on March 9. His wife was then asked to identify his body at a military hospital. She reported that he had suffered a large wound on his abdomen. The military has claimed that he got hurt while jumping over a fence to escape arrest. The death of this person follows the custodial death of NLD member Kheen Maung Lat on March 6. Maung Lat was a ward chairman in Pabiran township in Yangon. His body was recovered from the same military hospital on March 7. According to witness accounts cited by Human Rights Watch, there were severe wounds on his hand and back. The father of the NLD minister from the same township was also arrested by security force on March 7. Another party official, Ya Maar, was also reportedly arrested for the Bago region on March 9. Meanwhile, mass arrests of protesters have also continued in Yangon. Around 200 protesters were reported reportedly detained by the police on March 10. Security forces have also raided a township of striking railway workers as well as multiple media offices. We now head to Colombia where assassinations of activists have continued across the country as the government cracks down on social movements. Social leaders and former combatants of the defunct revolutionary armed forces of Colombia or FARC have been targeted at alarming rates. The Institute of Development and Peace Studies has reported 31 such deaths already in 2021. The Institute confirmed the death of Luis Hermides Alvarez on March 9. He was fatally shot by unidentified men in the town of Venadilo on March 3. He was killed 8 days after the assassination of his father, Jose Aver Alvarez. Both have been prominent activists in the region and had contested the local elections as part of the left wing Colombian Liberal Party. Over 50 people have also been killed in 16 massacres registered in this year alone. Increasing paramilitary red violence has also displaced hundreds of people. The Ombudsman office reported on March 8 that 300 people from the indigenous Emberakashio community had been displaced because of the violence. This was days after at least 178 indigenous people fled their homes in the Antiqua department. For our final story, we go to the borders of the Indian capital, New Delhi. These borders are served as the epicenter of the ongoing farmers protests against the central government's farm laws. To mark International Women's Day on March 8, demonstrations were organized in solidarity with women farmers and to honor their contributions to the protests. Here is Jagmati Sanghwan from the All India Democratic Women's Association to talk about the demands of the struggle. We want women who work for 70% of the farmers in the parliament to do the right thing. But they only have 13% of the entitlement. For the farmers who have no entitlement, they don't get any benefits. That's all your time for today. We'll be back tomorrow with more news from around the world. Until then, keep watching People's Dispatch.