Friday 19 April 2024
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▪ How peace talks divided Colombia’s EMC guerrillas
▪ ‘Living in Fear’: Landowners in Uganda’s Oil Field on Brink of Eviction
▪ Better Incentives Needed to Expand Solar Energy in Cuba
▪ Who Should be the Next UN Leader?PART 4
▪ Africa Pushing Limits To Boost Renewable Energy Supply Chain, Security Access
▪ Who Should be the Next UN Leader?PART 3
▪ Trade Deception Returns in Pan-Africanist Guise
▪ Colombia says EMC guerrilla leader abandoned peace talks
▪ Solar Power and Biogas Empower Women Farmers in Brazil
▪ Terror on Colombia-Venezuela border after assassination of anti-corruption activist
▪ Migration in the Americas: A Dream That Can Turn Deadly
▪ Rural Entrepreneurs Thriving Against All Odds in Zimbabwe
▪ Conflict’s Long Shadow Has a Name: It’s Hunger
▪ Who Should be the Next UN Leader?PART 2
▪ Education Cannot Wait in Responding to the Regional Crisis Stemming From the Armed Conflict in Sudan
▪ Leaders Need to Break the Chokehold of Debt and Austerity. Our Health Depends on it
▪ Colombia’s largest FARC dissident group urges ceasefire with government and ELN rebels
▪ Why virtually all child sex crimes in Colombia go unpunished
▪ Pioneering Digital Initiative Empowers Pacific Islands to Tackle Climate Disasters
▪ Who Should be the Next UN Leader?Part 1
▪ Secondary Education Is a Bottleneck in Brazil
▪ The Climate Alarm Is Ringing – It’s Time to Stop Silencing It
▪ IPCI 2024: Oslo Commitment Protects Sexual and Reproductive Rights Across All Contexts
▪ World Says Goodbye To a Caribbean Literary Giant
▪ IPCI 2024: Technology as a Tool to Advance and Threaten Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights
▪ Climate Governance, Adaptation, and Digital Solutions
▪ Food Security and Food Safety in Africa Must Go Hand in Hand
▪ Colombia’s ELN guerrillas say peace talks have been “frozen”
▪ Rwanda: A Ravaged Country That Bounced Back
▪ Women Affected by Gender-Biased Climate Change Deserve Justice
▪ The US Must Address More Than LNG To Mitigate Climate Change
▪ How Colombia’s Supreme Court found out Uribe allegedly bribed witnesses
▪ To Mitigate Climate Change Associated Disasters That Impact the Agricultural Sector – Launch Multipronged Efforts
▪ When the Man Who Built the Bombs Met the Man Who Dropped the Bombs…
▪ IPCI 2024: Oslo Conference Focuses on Parliamentary Power over Reproductive Rights
▪ China, India Sri Lanka Embroiled in the Geo-Politics of the Indian Ocean
▪ Carbon Markets Biased, Distorted, Undermined
▪ Colombia’s prosecution announces fraud and bribery charges against Uribe
▪ El Salvador’s Cycles of Violence Through a Teenager’s Eyes
▪ A Hamas-Israel Cease-Fire, Perhaps?
▪ Kwibuka30: Learning from the Past, Safeguarding the Future Against Genocide
▪ UN Staff Warned Against Public Comments on the Devastating Conflict in Gaza
▪ Colombia to investigate if intermediaries stole healthcare funds
▪ Colombia’s police say 175 “invisible narcos” control drug trade
▪ In the Shadows of the Wars in Ukraine Gaza, Iran and Russia are Growing Ever Closer
▪ 30 Years On, Genocide Survivors Embark on a Journey To Build a Resilient Future
▪ Following Asian Countries’ Leads, Climate Action Opportunity for Developing Nations
▪ ‘Scattered Measures’ in Humanitarian Aid for Gaza Are Not Enough – UN Secretary General
▪ Senegal’s Democracy Passes Crucial Test
▪ Guerrillas attack military base in Cali, Colombia’s 3rd largest city
▪ Social Protection, a Key Solution for Directing Climate Finance To Poor Small-Scale Farmers
▪ Civil Registration is Shaping World’s Largest Election Year With 76 Nations Going to the Polls
▪ Has the World Progressed or Regressed, 30 Years After a Landmark Population Conference?
▪ Education Either Makes Us or Breaks Us
▪ No Turning a Blind Eye to Protection Dominican Republic’s Natural Resources, Says Environment Minister
▪ Colombia’s congress sinks Petro’s flagship healthcare reform
▪ Can Preserving Goa’s Khazans Address Climate Threats?
▪ Taking Charge: Three Actions to Help Combat Climate Change and Save Amazonia
▪ ‘The world is bigger than 5’
▪ Tensions with China Drive Investors Towards Vietnam
▪ India’s Farmers Could Use Better Monsoon Forecasts
▪ UN Security Council Holds Rare Nuclear Disarmament Debate
▪ Food Security Issues in Asia
▪ Breaking the Silence: Gender-Based Challenges in the Lesotho Highlands Water Project ll
▪ Developing Countries’ Government Debt Crises Loom Larger
▪ “I’m More Optimistic than Before Regarding the Goal of Ending Hunger in Latin America”
▪ Endowment Funds Can Revolutionise Sarcoma Care in Developing Countries
▪ Israel’s De Facto Peace Plan
▪ Climate Change: the Partnership with Asian Pacific Small Island Developing States
▪ UN in Geneva to Partially Shut Down— for Second Time— Due to Cash Flow Crisis
▪ Made in Africa: Africa’s Fashion Redefining Narratives About the Continent
▪ Biden Quietly OKs More 2,000-Pound Bombs Warplanes for Israel
▪ WHO Calls for More Data on Violence Against Older Women and Women With Disabilities
▪ Why Farmers in India and Pakistan Are Shifting to Natural or Regenerative Farming
▪ The Impact of Climate Change on a Biodiversity Hot Spot
▪ Colombia expels Argentina’s ambassador and embassy staff
▪ Revival of Hope: How a Remote Indian Village Overcame Water Scarcity
▪ Ahead of UN Summit of the Future, Mobilizing Youth for Change
▪ The Kids of the Islamic State: A Childhood Stolen
▪ The Gambia Must Not Repeal FGM Ban
▪ Global Governance: Time for Reform
▪ Abandoned Children Growing Problem in Northern Syria
▪ IMF Urges Non-alignment in Second Cold War
▪ Child Malnutrition in Peru Driven Up by Poverty and Food Insecurity
▪ Governments Worldwide Prioritize School Feeding for Its Multiple Benefits
▪ Colombia to break off ties with Israel if UN ceasefire demand is not met
▪ Parents Harness Pedal and Wind Power To Demand Climate Action
▪ UN Security Council At Last Adopts a Ceasefire Resolution in Gaza
▪ Will Israel Defy Another Security Council Resolution?
▪ South Asian Network on Human Rights Calls on Bhutan to Free Political Prisoners
▪ Grassroots Venezuelan Initiative Aims to Combat Electricity Crisis with Solar Energy
▪ Building Resilience and Mental Health Capacity of Youth
▪ Defending Human Rights is Increasingly Dangerous: US Congress Companies Must Act
▪ World’s Democracies Threatened by Disinformation Generated by Artificial Intelligence
▪ FARC dissidents claim guerrillas supported Petro in Colombia’s 2022 elections
▪ Taliban Rule Exacerbates Malnutrition Crisis: Afghan Women and Children Hardest Hit
▪ Conservation Efforts by Ethnic Communities in Bangladesh Bolster Water Security
▪ Fall-out from Ecuador’s Crises Highlights Need to Invest in Grassroots Resilience
▪ Written in Memory of Alexei Navalny and Osip Mandelstam
▪ Breaking Down Barriers to Women’s Land Rights Starts in Our Homes
▪ Reimagining Cooperation in a Polarized World in the Context of Zimbabwe?
▪ New Report Examines Progress on Global Sustainable Development Goals
▪ Fueling Future: Dabaa Nuclear Project Offers Light in Egypt’s Economic Gloom
▪ Women’s Land Rights in Farming Need Further Recognition
▪ Unpaid Caregivers, a Symbol of Inequality in Chile
▪ Petro proposes constituent assembly to push through reforms
▪ Managing Transboundary Aquifers for Peace
▪ Biogas Is Key to Harmony Between Agribusiness and Environment in El Salvador – VIDEO
▪ In Pakistan, Death Can Be Just a WhatsApp Share Away
▪ Indigenous Women Fight for Their Future, Their Land, Rights Self-Determination
▪ Industrial Policy, East or West, for Development or War?
▪ Democracy’s Contested Territory
▪ Petro proposes negotiations with Colombia’s paramilitaries
▪ Education Cannot Wait Interviews Professor Mohammed Belhocine, Commissioner for Education, Science, Technology and Innovation within the African Union
▪ How A Program in Ghana to Create Green Jobs Can Be a Lesson for US Mayors Across the Globe
▪ Exploring New Depths: NF-POGO Centre of Excellence Driving Innovative, Diverse Ocean Observation
▪ Colombia’s war crimes tribunal assumes all investigations against former AUC commander
▪ Colombia partially suspends ceasefire with dissident FARC guerrillas
▪ How Women in Ahmedabad Slums Are Beating Back Climate’s Deadly Heat
▪ Gender Rights: Resistance Against Regression
▪ Countering Growing Authoritarianism Requires a Robust Civil Society, Media Academia
▪ Africans Can Solve the Disease that Haunts Us — Here’s How
▪ Beekeeping Offers Opportunity to Zimbabwean Farming Communities
▪ After 13 years in Conflict Displacement, Syrian Women Girls Must not be Forgotten
▪ The Ups and Downs of Control of Transgenic Crops in Mexico
▪ Petro urges UN narcotics commission to focus on healthcare
▪ Biden’s Balancing Act: Israel’s National Security vs Palestinian’s Humanitarian Crisis
▪ US Delivers Both Life –and Death– to a Devastated Gaza
▪ Brazil’s Biofuel Potential Set to Expand Thanks to Sustainable Aviation Fuel
▪ US Senators Say Biden Must End Arms Sales if Israel Keeps Blocking Aid
▪ LPG, a Useful “Transitional” Fuel for the UN’s Clean Cooking Effort
▪ ECW Announces New Grant Funding for Ukraine’s Education Programs for Children Impacted by War
▪ Global South Stagnating under Heavier Debt Burden
▪ Thailand’s ‘Humanitarian Corridor’ for Myanmar Faces Pushback
▪ Colombia’s Supreme Court picks new chief prosecutor
▪ Colombia’s acting chief prosecutor quietly signs off on major reform
▪ Pollution – a Threat To Our Groundwater Resources
▪ Mortality and Misery in the Hamas-Israel War
▪ Maternity Benefits: Critical Tool to Ensure Mothers their Newborns are Free from Poverty
▪ State Fails to Stem Kidnapping For Ransom Crisis in Nigeria
▪ Colombia’s urban peace processes at risk
▪ It’s Africa’s Time To Shine, says UN Under Secretary Claver Gatete
▪ Netanyahu Is Rendering Israel Morally Bankrupt
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Inside Women Dominated Seaweed Farms in Kenya’s Indian Ocean Waters
▪ Unveiling Blind Spots Critical Insights to Fight Poverty Effectively
▪ Alarming Increase in Journalists Killed in Conflict Zones Last Year, says UNESCO
▪ Stepping Up Investment in Latin American Women is Imperative
▪ Colombia’s top court still stuck over chief prosecutor pick
▪ Into the Abyss: The Scramble for the Ocean Floor
▪ Colombia appoints representatives in genocide case against Israel
▪ Celebrating Tenacity of Women Farmers: an Incredible Catalyst for Socio-Economic Transformation
▪ African Bloc Can Pursue Feminist Foreign Policy in Global Governance Reform Push
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Rural Tajik Woman’s Road to Empowering Women Living with HIV
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Why Legal Equality Is Key to Women’s Economic Rights and Well-Being
▪ New Attempts to Reduce Gender Inequality in Brazil
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024
▪ UNWRA Chief Warns Agency’s Fate ‘Hangs in the Balance’
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Spare Us the Token Flowers: International Women’s Day is a Call to Action
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Stop Racially-Biased Attention when Dealing with Sexual Harassment of Women of Color
▪ Building Popular National Economic Alternatives*
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024 In a Fearless Gesture, Woman Police Officer Averts Mob Lynching
▪ A Regional Commitment Is Underway For Food Security and a Sustainable Future
▪ Freedom of Speech Is Silenced in Nicaragua
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Investing in Women is More than just Good Economics, it’s Crucial to a Sustainable Society
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024International Women’s Day/International Life Day
▪ UN Whistle Blowers Fired for Challenging Risky Investment Policies of the Pension Fund
▪ Gaza Massacre and Western Hypocrisy
▪ How Colombia’s prosecution got Uribe in even deeper legal trouble
▪ Venezuela Bids Farewell to Its Last Glacier, Wrapped in Plastic
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024The Misogynistic Minority
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Progress Hinges on Feminist Leadership
▪ UN Environmental Assembly Call for Action to Address Planetary Triple Threat
▪ International Women’s Day, 2024Support the Women and Girls Fighting for Rights
▪ From Gas to Ash: The Struggle of Nigerian Women Amidst Surging Cooking Gas Prices
▪ Greece: Another First for LGBTQI+ Rights
▪ Salvadoran Poultry Farms Produce Biogas, Easing Socio-environmental Conflicts
▪ Colombia suspends arms imports from Israel
▪ Colombia’s ombudsman warns for possible turf wars in Bogota
▪ Turkey Keeps Bombing Civilians in Syria’s Northeast
▪ Air Quality Sensors Boosting Nairobi’s Fight Against Air Pollution
▪ Bearing Witness: No Safety for Children in Gaza
▪ IPBES Invasive Alien Species Assessment
▪ Colombia’s foreign ministry in turmoil over “corrupt” passport deal
▪ Africa’s Debt Crisis Needs a Bold New Approach– a Way Forward
▪ ‘I Haven’t Forgotten Where I Came From,’ says Yvonne Pinto, Incoming IRRI Chief
▪ Bali’s Ancient Canine Guardians on the Brink of Extinction
▪ Hapless New Year for Global South
▪ Paramilitaries’ former commander repatriated to Colombia
▪ Female Genital Mutilation Continues Amid Sudan’s Conflict and Forced Displacement
▪ Abusive Use of Veto Power Against Global Public Opinion — Why?
▪ UN’s Credibility at Stake—as Russia and Israel Continue to Remain Defiant
▪ ‘Unbounded’ Impunity Emboldens Israel
▪ No Ceasefire Gaza Threatens Humanitarian Aid, Raises the Palestinian Question
▪ Western States Scramble to Explain Themselves, as UN experts call for Arms Transfers to Israel to “Cease Immediately”
▪ Parcels for Prisoners: Exiled Myanmar Activists Keep the Revolutionary Faith
▪ Russia: Moments of Dissent after Two Years of War
▪ Call for Scaled Up Funding for Much-Needed, Successful Joint Program in Nigeria
▪ No God but Greed: Slavery and Indifference
▪ Voices from the World Social Forum 2024 – PODCAST
▪ Funding, Policy Changes Could Result in Countries Reaping Benefit of Migration
▪ The World Social Forum: The counterweight to the World Economic Forum
▪ Children’s Futures at a Crossroads
▪ Colombia’s Supreme Court still deadlocked over new chief prosecutor
▪ Colombia arrests disgraced prosecution executive on contraband charges
▪ Unpacking 2023, the Warmest Year on Record
▪ Pakistan’s Election Outcomes Leave Many Unhappy
▪ #UNmute: Over 350 Civil Society Organizations Ask for Real Inclusion in UN Summit of the Future Negotiations
▪ Coastal Indigenous and Minority Women Driving Kenya’s Blue Forest Conservation Efforts
▪ Inside Kenya’s Seed Control Battle: Why Smallholder Farmers Want to Share Indigenous Seeds
▪ It Is Imperative To Protect Children In War
▪ Who Wants to Live by the Sea?
▪ Cambodia’s Declining Fish Catch: Can the Tide Be Reversed?
▪ ELN says peace talks with Colombia’s government could be “frozen”
▪ Small Island “Digital” States: Charting the Course for Transformation
▪ New Anti-Rape Crisis Centre Brings Hope for Sexual Abuse Survivors in Pakistan
▪ Phasing out from Fossil Fuels: An Imperative for Climate Justice
▪ Snowless Winter and a Climate Crisis: Kashmir’s ‘Unprecedented’ Weather
▪ INTERVIEW: AI Expert Warns of ‘Digital Colonization’ in Africa
▪ Colombia increases troops in the north to combat paramilitaries
▪ 80% of Colombia’s healthcare intermediaries lack legally required funds
▪ Forced Migration Grows, Justice Withers, Say Activists at World Social Forum
▪ Women Biomass Producers: Energy’s Largest and Largely Invisible Workforce
▪ Inequality Also Afflicts Clean Energy in Latin America
▪ Smallholder Farmers Are Key to CGIAR Response to Hunger Crisis
▪ Making Chile’s Economy More Dynamic, Greener, and Inclusive
▪ Imperialism, Globalisation and Its Discontents*
▪ Another World Seen Through the Lenses of Gender and Sexuality
▪ South Africa vs Israel: ICJ Reclines SA’s New Application But Says Israel Duty Bound to Protect Civilians
▪ World Social Forum Activists Unravel Roots of Israel’s Occupation of Gaza
▪ Local Knowledge and Women’s Leadership are Key to Food Justice: Activists
▪ Educate an Africa Fit for the 21st Century
▪ UN’s Financial Troubles Jeopardize Critical Human Rights Work
▪ Grassroots Voices Unite to Call for Climate Justice
▪ Unveiling the Power Play: Non-Profit Funding as a Strategic Tool for Agenda Setting
▪ UN’s Cash Crisis May Force Hiring Freeze, Limit Official Travel Curtail Expenses System-Wide
▪ Bob Marley: One Love Review – Play I Some Music, Bring I Some Memories
▪ World Social Forum Insists: Another World is Possible!
▪ UN Tax Convention is Historic Opportunity at Risk of Failing
▪ Tracking Global Development in Child Benefits Through New Monitoring and Information Platform
▪ What if Super Bowl 2025 Attendees and All Stadium Food Selling Stores Carry Food Grown In Urban Areas?
▪ Last Chance Saloon? Myanmar Junta Imposes Military Conscription
▪ The West’s Frankenstein Moment
▪ Women, Girls Equal Partners in HIV Responses, Says Activist
▪ Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Religion Demographics
▪ Start-ups Powering up Africa’s Solar Energy Ecosystem
▪ North Ignores ‘Perfect Storm’ in Global South
▪ World Social Forum Seeks to Reemerge as an Influential Gathering of Diversity
▪ IACHR urges Colombia’s Supreme Court to pick chief prosecutor
▪ Nepal Farmers Face Another Year of ‘Agricultural Drought’, Threatening Food Security
▪ History’s Inflation Lessons
▪ What Is It Like to Live in Ecuador, One of the Most Violent Countries?
▪ State of the World’s Migratory Species Report ‘Alarming’ Threats, Global Action Urged
▪ Climate Change Is Amplifying Households’ Food Insecurity, Putting More Pressure on Women’s Mental Health
▪ UN Secretary-General Wants Peace through Institutional Reforms
▪ Polycrises are Pushing More Women into Poverty: How can we Help Halt that Trend?
▪ Yangon—A Junta-Ruled Bubble in a Fragmenting Myanmar
▪ Colombia’s government and FARC’s former political chief announce peace talks
▪ From Memory to Policy
▪ Africa’s Absence as Permanent Member a “Flagrant Injustice,” says UN Chief
▪ Unrest in Bogota after Colombia’s Supreme Court fails to pick new chief prosecutor
▪ Drought Narrows the Panama Canal, Delays Shipping
▪ Proven Vector Control Interventions Needed to Stem Malaria Infections in Africa
▪ Revolutionist Returnees: Fulfilling Dreams, Finding Freedom
▪ Is Anti-Woke a Grass-Root Movement?
▪ Embodying the Spirit of the Dragon
▪ Hit by Climate Change, Authorities Seek to Improve Saffron Yields in Kashmir
▪ White House Still Denies Mideast Turmoil Linked to Gaza
▪ Neocolonial ISDS, Abused, Biased, Costly, and Grossly Unfair
▪ In Africa, Witch Branding Destroys Elderly Women’s Lives
▪ How Soil Microbes Could save the World
▪ Nuclear Disarmament: A Natural Buddhist-Catholic Alliance, says Japanese Leader
▪ Solar Energy Gives Important Boost to Small-scale Farmers in Chile
▪ Is the Reform of the UN Security Council a Good Try in a Lost Cause?
▪ Inclusive Sustainable Businesses Set New Pathways for Sri Lanka
▪ Israel Could Face Further Legal Action For Non-Compliance of ICJ Ruling
▪ The West’s Addiction to War Must End in Gaza
▪ Cubans Are Waiting for a Major Boost to Low Emissions Transport
▪ Road to COP29: Highest Climate Ambitions Needed to Decarbonize World
▪ Unlocking India’s Potential with AI
▪ Saudi Arabia Accused of ‘Sportswashing’ Its Human-Rights Record
▪ Moimuna Nursing Institute Ushers Hope for Vulnerable Rural Girls in Bangladesh
▪ Girls Just Want to Have Funds!
▪ Female Genital Mutilation and Cutting in Asia Remain a Neglected Problem
▪ Landlocked Developing Countries Conference to Address Development
▪ Colombia urges Israel to cease fire in Gaza
▪ Ecuador vows to repatriate 1,500 convicts to Colombia
▪ How Colombia’s deputy chief prosecutor is protecting an alleged drug trafficker
▪ Pressure on Colombia’s Supreme Court to pick new chief prosecutor
▪ Colombia extends ceasefire with ELN
▪ In-Depth Interview with Yasmine Sherif, Executive Director, Education Cannot Wait: Getting to Know Her
▪ Myanmar’s Military Catastrophe: Three Years and Counting
▪ The Spectre of Migration: A conversation with Hammoud Gallego
▪ Genocide Convention @75: A Call for its Application as a ‘Living Force in World Society’
▪ Poverty and Inequality Mark Rural Life in Latin America
▪ Discrimination, a Killer of Dreams for People Affected by Leprosy
▪ Prospects for Commonwealth Countries, Addressing Gaps and Shaping Expectations for COP29
▪ Onerous Debt Making Poorest Poorer
▪ How Asia Can Unlock $800 Billion of Climate Financing
▪ Blinken’s Visit to Africa: Is US Counterterrorism Counterproductive?
▪ Funding for UN Palestinian Relief Agency is Threatened While Investigations Continue
▪ Building a More Resilient Work Force to Meet Challenges of Tomorrow
▪ Higher Education in Central America: Poor Quality and Unaffordable for the Poor
▪ Should We Attribute All Climate-Related Disasters Only to Global Warming?
▪ Snow Tales: ‘Too Little, Too Late,’ Say Climate Experts
▪ How to Ease Rising External Debt-Service Pressures in Low-Income Countries
▪ Illegal Artisanal Mining Threatens Amazon Jungle and Indigenous Peoples in Brazil
▪ Serbia’s Suspicious Election
▪ ICJ Orders Israel to Take All Measures to Prevent Genocide in Gaza
▪ International Court of Justice Set to Deliver Order in Genocide case.
▪ Under the Scorching Sun Kenyan Farmers Find New Ways to Beat Climate Change
▪ Ban or Restrict? Quandary Facing Governments as Vaping Entices Teens Worldwide
▪ Why Land Matters with Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez
▪ Jailed in Limbo: The Armenian Prisoners in Azerbaijan
▪ Addressing the Dual Challenge of Food Waste and Food Insecurity: Here’s Some Ideas
▪ Rights Coalition Calls for Israel Arms Embargo to End Gaza Carnage
▪ Beyond the Farm: How Empowering Women Farmers Drives Change in Jordan and Beyond
▪ Colombia’s foreign minister suspended over passport debacle
▪ Learning for a Lasting Peace
▪ Zimbabweans Gambling for a Living Amid Escalating Hardships
▪ IPS Offers Climate Change Justice Fellowship
▪ African Women on the Frontline of Peacekeeping
▪ PPPs’ Private Gain at Public Expense
▪ Rwanda’s Biodiversity Conservation Gains Momentum With Bird Sounds Recording
▪ Matchmaking for Green Cities? Accelerating Climate Finance in Urban Areas
▪ Settling the Middle East Vs West Asia Debate
▪ Is Bangladesh Sleep Walking to Dictatorship ?
▪ Colombia investigating senate president’s alleged mafia ties
▪ Scared of Sharps? This MAP Shows the Way to Delivering Painless Vaccines
▪ The Birthrate Blues
▪ At least 233 children died of hunger in Colombia in 2023
▪ Turning Protracted African Conflicts into Sustainable Peace
▪ Death Penalty, Condemned by UN, Still in Force in US– but With a New Twist
▪ The Ghost of Oil Haunts Mexico’s Lacandona Jungle
▪ Gaza Health Workers Struggling to Save Injured Without Medical Supplies, WHO Expert Warns
▪ Trapped and Trafficked—Fishers Tell of Forced Labor Horror
▪ Climate Change Is Taking a Major Toll on Agriculture. Here’s How to Support Farmers
▪ 2024: A Year of Cautious Hope for African Economies Facing Worldwide Challenges
▪ Guatemala’s Chance for a New Beginning
▪ Centuries-Old Rituals Are Slowly Fading Away in Cambodia
▪ Hindu Woman Doctor Confident of Election In Pakistan Polls
▪ The Global Femicide Epidemic
▪ The Impact of Climate Migration on Developing Nations
▪ Mozambique Insurgency Significantly Decreased, Say Experts
▪ World Bank Enables Foreign Aid Theft
▪ Iran, Back to the Grim Normal
▪ Colombia sends military reinforcements to border with Ecuador
▪ Humanitarian Cash Not Accelerating Aid Delivery in Nepal’s Earthquake Response
▪ New Era: Unlocking Africa’s Agriculture Potential Through CGIAR TAAT Model
▪ AI Will Transform the Global Economy: Let’s Make Sure It Benefits Humanity
▪ Guerrillas join forces in southwest Colombia
▪ Here’s How We Can Improve Women’s Participation in International Trade For Economic Prosperity
▪ Colombia extends ceasefire with FARC dissidents
▪ With Attack on Yemen, the U.S. Is Shameless: “We Make the Rules, We Break the Rules”
▪ The World’s Richest Men Leave Women Far Behind—Amid Rising Economic Inequalities
▪ Why Should Climate Change and Biodiversity Loss Be Tackled Together?
▪ The Baloch Women From Pakistan Want Their Missing Relatives Back
▪ South Africa’s Genocide Case Flawed, Premature, Inaccurate, says Israel
▪ Bangladesh: Election with a Foregone Conclusion
▪ Advanced Economies Must Let the IMF Play a Productive Role on Climate
▪ Palestine: Nothing Can Justify Genocide, It’s Not the Time for Silence
▪ South Africa’s Genocide Case Against Israel at the International Court of Justice
▪ Where Does the International Criminal Court Stand on Charges of Mass Killings in Gaza?
▪ How Afghan Women Connect and Learn in the Face of Taliban Restrictions
▪ Assessing Public Debt Sustainability with a Long-Term View
▪ Cooperative Farming Makes Bangladesh’s Coastal Women Farmers Climate-Resilient
▪ Ready or Not, America, Your Population Is Also Aging
▪ From Chemical Engineer to Climate Justice Avenger: A Journey with Yamide Dagnet
▪ Martin Luther King’s Message Shook the Powerful: Vital People can Hear it Today
▪ Technology Transfer Critical to Revolutionizing Africa’s Pharma Industry
▪ Time to End the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict with a Two State-One Nation Solution
▪ How Much Does the UN Really Cost?
▪ 2024 Demands Swift Action to Stem Sudan’s Ruinous Conflict
▪ Is it Time for Palestine to be Voted UN Member State?
▪ Colombia raises minimum wage by 12%
▪ There Is No Democracy Without Gender Equality
▪ Homeless Families Now a Growing Issue in Zimbabwe
▪ Will the Human Rights Movement Survive the Gaza War?
▪ Fear as Russian Anti-LGBT Law Comes into Effect
▪ Deadly violence against Colombia’s leaders remained high in 2023
▪ Nigeria Prioritizes Climate Action to Mitigate Natural Disasters
▪ Europe’s Shift to the Far Right and its Impact on Immigration
▪ US Hypocrisy Over Russian and Israeli Killings
▪ Colombia’s war crimes tribunal orders detention of two governors
▪ Amidst a Horrendous 2023, Civil Society is Fighting Back Society
▪ Regime Change in Israel
▪ Catastrophic Shortage of Food in Gaza– Starvation as a Weapon of War
▪ South Asian Women, Girls Need Responsive Legal System to Gender Violence
▪ What’s in Store for Indian Farmers After Cop 28’s Conclusion in Dubai?
▪ From Bureaucratic Labyrinths to Accessible Civil Registration
▪ The Opaque Chain of Electric Cars Assembled in Mexico
▪ Saving Energy, Saving Forests: How Kindle Stoves Are Changing Women’s Lives
▪ Latin America Can Boost Economic Growth by Reducing Crime
▪ World Bank Enables Private Capture of Profits, Public Resources
▪ New Megaport in Peru Ignores Complaints from Local Residents
▪ Myanmar Refugees Build Schools, Cafes and Hope in Mae Sot
▪ Fundraising in Africa: How Looking Inward Makes the Difference
▪ Watching the Arctic Melt, Meteorologist’s Experience on Icebreaker Oden
▪ Weathering the Storm: Navigating Climate-Care Nexus in the Philippines
▪ Caribbean Confidence High Post COP28, But Vigilant Follow-Through on Key Deals Needed
▪ UN and Humanitarian Partners Seek $46 Billion for Humanitarian Assistance
▪ Peru’s Andean Peoples ‘Revive’ Water that the Climate Crisis Is Taking From Them
▪ Shock Femicide Forces Italy To Face Its Problem With Gender-Based Violence
▪ Colombia’s ELN guerrillas agree to suspend kidnappings
▪ The United States, the United Nations, and Genocide in the Gaza Strip
▪ A Desperate Plea from Palestinians: Drop Your Nuclear Bomb on Gaza–and Exterminate Us
▪ IFAD’s Record-Breaking Pledges: Lifeline for Rural Communities Cornered by Climate, Hunger
▪ Sustainability, Human Wellbeing Depend on Rethinking, Redefining Value of Resources
▪ UN Staffers Face Threat of Being Forced Out of the US– at Retirement
▪ Kabul Residents Endure Hours-Long Queues in Severe Water Crisis
▪ Sudan’s Conflict Needs Civil Society Solutions
▪ ‘Imperfect COP28’ Gives Direction For Managed, Equitable Move From Fossil Fuels
▪ India’s Sexual Violence Bills Fail to Criminalize Marital Rape
▪ EBRD Provides Footing for Youth-led Businesses in Central Asia
▪ Colombia’s EMC guerrillas vow to stop kidnapping
▪ COP28: Deal to ‘Transition Away’ From Fossil Fuels Agreed
▪ Africa’s Great Blue Wall
▪ Rich Nations, IMF Deepen World Stagnation
▪ From Dancing ‘For a Living’ to Dancing For ‘Women’s Dignity’
▪ What Is the Cost of Phasing Out Fossil Fuels in Latin America?
▪ Latvia: A Vital First Step Towards Marriage Equality
▪ The Solutions to Child Poverty Must Reach the Most Vulnerable Communities
▪ Colombia massively violating rights of human rights defenders: court
▪ Clean Energies Underpin Self-Sustainable System at Cuban Farm – VIDEO
▪ ‘Stop Wars and Step Up ‘Measly’ Contributions’ to Climate Finance—Jeffrey D. Sachs
▪ Rise of the Global South Highlights Minamata Convention on Mercury COP5
▪ Finance at COP28: After the Euphoria, Come Questions Galore
▪ It’s Time To Align Climate Finance and Social Justice, Says Youth Climate Activist
▪ Colombia’s illegal armed groups holding 91 people hostage: ombudsman
▪ Colombia pulls police powers to persecute drug consumers
▪ Charting Out a Sustainable Path for Island, Coastal Communities Facing Climate Crisis
▪ Africa’s Negotiators Urged to Leverage on African Science at COP28 High Table
▪ Sikh Faith Inspires Environmental Stewardship
▪ Fair taxation for All
▪ U.S. Misuses Trade Agreements to Undermine Food Sovereignty
▪ Israel’s 2,000-pound Bunker-Busting Bombs, Supplied by US, May Have Annihilated Gaza
▪ Climate Justice is the Responsibility of the Wealthier Nations, Says Bangladesh Climate Envoy
▪ Freedom, Equality and Justice Lead to Peace
▪ Farm to Fork: COP28 Provides RoadMap to Fix Africa’s Broken Food Systems – IFAD
▪ Fashion Forward: Protect Africa from ‘Fagia’ Amid Alarming Global Stocktake
▪ COP28: One Health Steps Delight Many, Others Show Cautious Optimism
▪ COOP28: Sowing Seeds of Change in Fertile Hearts and Minds
▪ Greening Education: Education Paying Highest Cost for Ongoing Climate Crisis
▪ Renewable Commitments at COP28 Pose Stiffer Energy Challenges for Latin America
▪ For Africans, the Climate Debate Around the Role of Livestock Misses the Mark
▪ Why Climate Justice and Global Financial Reform Are Inseparable
▪ Harmful Industry Blowing Smoke on Human Rights
▪ COP28 Hits: Key Wins as Africa-Focused Pledges, Deals Announced
▪ Supreme Court postpones election of Colombia’s new chief prosecutor
▪ Colombia’s war crimes tribunal loses 500 pieces of evidence
▪ Faith Pavilion Adds Spiritual Dimension to Climate Crisis Resolution
▪ Combating Corruption to Address the Triple Planetary Crises
▪ COP28: Climate Migrants’ Rights, Risk-based Labor Polices Under the Spotlight
▪ Revolutionizing the Building Sector for Sustainable, Resilient Cities
▪ Civilian Deaths in Gaza a Stain on Israel and its Allies
▪ Global Civil Society Launches Manifesto for Ethical AI
▪ Beware Carbon Myopia at COP28: Why Climate and Nature Action Must Now Come Together in the Race for a Liveable Planet
▪ Art and Climate Change
▪ Big Cons: How Consultancy Firms Undermine Governments
▪ Emerging Climate Finance Infrastructure to Match Africa’s Green Bankable Solutions
▪ Electrifying Cooking: Decarbonizing Africa’s Electricity Grid Towards Net Zero
▪ Role of Women Irreplaceable in Management of Natural Resources
▪ A “Little India” in Little Armenia
▪ NCDs Are Killing the Caribbean – PODCAST
▪ The Climate Crisis is an Education Crisis
▪ ‘War on Drugs’ Failed and Policies Need Major Overhaul – Report
▪ Taking Charge Against Plastic Pollution in India
▪ Nowhere is Safe in Gaza — and Nowhere Left to Go
▪ People, Planning Behind Sustainable City Management
▪ The Intergenerational Impact of Nuclear Testing in Polynesian States
▪ Why the UN COP28 Climate Talks Must Serve Farmers to Achieve a “Just Transition”
▪ Ten African Countries to Benefit From USD 100 Million Released by Green Climate Fund
▪ From ‘Peak Oil’ to ‘Peak Energy’? … and Why It Matters
▪ Pacific Leaders Announce Largest Conservation Effort in History
▪ A Climate Scientist’s View of COP 28
▪ Lawmakers Told: Plan From the Cradle For Healthy Aging
▪ UN Volunteers – and Their Over Reaching Mission
▪ Netherlands Latest Country to Tilt to the Right
▪ Lawmakers Told: Plan From the Cradle For Healthy Aging
▪ ECW’s Emergency Appeal for Crises Impacted Children Facing Double Tragedies
▪ Human Rights Crucial as Wealthy Nations Reap Energy Transition Benefits
▪ Why is There Funding for War But Never for Climate Finance, Ask Feminists
▪ Why Agroecology Should Be Considered as Key for Climate Negotiations
▪ Israel-Jordan Relations in The Wake of The Gaza War
▪ Hearts and Minds: We Need to Understand the Critical Role of Human, Social, and Institutional Leadership to Achieve the Goals of the 2015 Paris Agreements
▪ Colombia’s constitutional court signs off on Petro’s peace policy
▪ Harnessing Data to Advocate for Safer Roads – UN Support for Sustainable Financing
▪ Climate Change Not Just Another Issue in Your Inbox, Leaders told
▪ Mass Protests Send Message of Solidarity with Palestinian People
▪ Mass Protests Send Message of Solidarity with Palestinian People
▪ Restoring Indigenous Trees: New Mission to Combat Climate Change in Rwanda
▪ How Colombia seeks to regulate coca, cannabis and poppy
▪ Scale of Death Destruction in Gaza Result of Wide-Area Explosives in Populated Areas
▪ Salvadoran Rural Communities Face Climate Injustice
▪ “I Want to Live On” – Documentary Premiere on Kazakhstan Nuclear Test Survivors
▪ Colombia’s armed conflict deescalated: report
▪ Only 21% of land used for gold mining in Colombia has permits: UN
▪ Navigating Russian Censorship from the Polar Circle
▪ Rich Distort Climate Problems, Offer Self-Serving Solutions
▪ This Doctor Helps Himalayan Women Ward off Cervical Cancer
▪ This Doctor Helps Himalayan Women Ward off Cervical Cancer
▪ Oceans: Our First Line of Defense Against the Impacts of Climate Change
▪ Colombia’s prosecution “used to export cocaine,” says president
▪ Suicides, Another Face of the Crisis in Venezuela
▪ Right Here, Right Now: ECW’s USD 150 Million Climate Appeal to Save Children at Risk
▪ Argentina Plunges into the Unknown
▪ The Increase in Nuclear Rhetoric on the Korean Peninsula is Deeply Concerning
▪ Young Musician’s Death Exposes Zimbabwe’s Collapsing Health System
▪ Latin America Heads to COP28 with Insufficiently Ambitious Goals
▪ Tackling Agrifood Inequality Can Boost the Bottom Line
▪ Colombia’s government coalition cracks
▪ Dear World Leaders, Are You Listening Now?
▪ U.S.-China Climate Agreement: A Leap Forward in Global Climate Cooperation
▪ What the EU Can Learn from Africa
▪ Autocracy on the Rise, Warn Civil Society Groups, Seeking UN Expert on Democracy
▪ Latin America Still Has a Long Way to Go to Eliminate Gender Violence
▪ Colombia’s prosecution calls Uribe to testify over massacres and homicide
▪ Can COP 28 Deliver for Cities and Climate Migrants?
▪ Africa Will Not Cope with Climate Change Without a Just, Inclusive Energy Transition
▪ A Reinvigorated Regional Commitment to Tsunami Preparedness in Asia the Pacific
▪ Colombia’s peace commissioner replaced
▪ Give Wildlife a Seat at the Table
▪ COP28: Strengthen Climate Resilience in Small and Vulnerable Countries
▪ A Crisis of Humanity
▪ ECW Interviews France’s Minister of State for Development and International Partnerships Chrysoula Zacharopoulou
▪ GLOBAL COOPERATION ON CLIMATE CHANGE: What Have We Achieved and What Needs to Happen Next?
▪ Colombia registers 5 massacres in 48 hours
▪ The Cries of Gaza Reach Afghanistan
▪ Innovative Gender Bond Series Uplifts Rural Women to Drive Climate Action in Asia
▪ Indigenous Voices and Food Systems Lead the Way at COP28
▪ Middle-Income Country Trap?
▪ Colombia’s deputy chief prosecutor denies mafia links
▪ Lula Meets First Brazilian Chair of IPS
▪ What Will Tomorrow’s World Order Look Like?
▪ A Sperm Whale Reserve for All of Us
▪ Improving Livestock Health Is a Net Positive Move Towards Net Zero
▪ The World’s Right-Wing Left-Wing Torturers
▪ War crimes tribunal indicts Colombia’s former army chief over extrajudicial executions
▪ Uribe helped plan 1997 massacre, former warlord tells Colombia’s war crimes tribunal
▪ Will the UN Ever be Able to Eradicate Systemic Racism Within?
▪ Australia: Reconciliation Back to Square One?
▪ For Every Child, Every Right—Delivering Psychosocial Support for Crisis Impacted Children
▪ Accelerating Change: Global Call to Action on World Toilet Day to Meet 2030 Sanitation Goals
▪ Colombia’s war crimes tribunal allows submission of former AUC commander
▪ Colombia’s deputy chief prosecutor again linked to drug trafficking
▪ The Carnage in Gaza Cries Out for Repudiation Opposition. Maybe Poetry Can Help.
▪ COP28: Climate Summit in Closed Civic Space
▪ US has Provided Over 130 Billion Dollars in Aid Weapons to Israel– the Largest Ever
▪ Pacific Games Channels Youth Aspirations in the Solomon Islands
▪ Argentines Get Used to the Fact that Inflation Can Always Get Worse
▪ Good for Girls and Good for the Planet: Eco-Friendly Sanitary Towels
▪ The Carnage in Gaza: Here Are Steps to Rein In
▪ Colombia announces resumption of peace talks with FARC dissidents
▪ Colombia’s army agreed to leave drug trafficking route to guerrillas
▪ A Bigger and More Relevant Role for Youth Within the UN System – Part II
▪ IPEF: New Cold War Weapon Backfires
▪ Forced Labor: Exposing Dark Web of Fisheries Labour Abuses
▪ Colombia’s army chief accused of illegally spying on wife’s teacher
▪ Colombia suspends arms imports from Gaza ceasefire opponents
▪ Deaths in the Israel-Hamas Conflict
▪ Smallholder Farmers Gain Least from International Climate Funding
▪ A New Youth Envoy: Symbolic Change or Real Hope?– Part I
▪ Time to Convert Climate Change Rhetoric into Action, Says WFP’s Gernot Laganda
▪ New Robotic-Assisted Surgery Offers Inspiring Hope for Rwanda
▪ What Is Israel’s End-Game in Gaza?
▪ ‘Taking Palestine Back to 2005’ — UN Warns of Socioeconomic Impacts of Gaza War
▪ Colombia’s state council nullifies election of former Senate president
▪ Shared Responsibility: Eradicating Hunger in Latin America and the Caribbean
▪ Carbon Market Greenwashing Systems Deepen Inequalities in Global South – Experts
▪ Healthcare Crisis Follows Deadly Earthquake in Nepal
▪ Recognizing Food Land-Use Systems as Contributors to Climate Change
▪ Colombia to press war crime charges against Netanyahu
▪ Colombia’s ELN guerrillas release Luis Diaz’s father
▪ Colombia failing to protect human rights defenders: Amnesty International
▪ Israel’s Military Is Part of the U.S. War Machine
▪ Arms Suppliers to Israel Hamas Should Face War Crime Charges—But Will They?
▪ Nagorno Karabakh: Displaced, But Far From Safe
▪ Why Demography is Key to Unlocking a Sustainable Future for Asia the Pacific
▪ Fast-Track Climate Resilience Building of Small and Vulnerable Nations Ahead of COP28
▪ PPPs Fiscal Hoax Is a Blank Financial Silver Bullet
▪ Colombia’s peace commissioner under fire over guerrilla incidents
▪ Community Efforts Boost Wastewater Treatment in El Salvador – Video
▪ High Prevalence of Undetected Hypertension Found in Bangladesh
▪ Where Do We Go Once the Israel-Hamas War Ends? – PART II
▪ The Relentless Struggles of India’s Seawall Mammas
▪ FARC dissidents suspend peace talks with Colombia’s government
▪ Amidst Tears and Grief, Afghan Women Call Out To the World
▪ Fighting Malnutrition and Changing Mindsets in Rwanda
▪ Where Do We Go Once the Israel-Hamas War Ends? – Part I
▪ Zimbabwe’s Election Widens Gender Gap in Politics
▪ Colombia’s judicial branch marred by Gnecco Clan corruption claims
▪ ELN kidnapped dad of soccer star Luis Diaz
▪ Petro urges Biden to stop “massacre of Palestinians”
▪ Iran, a Murdered Teenager and a Fading Protest
▪ Argentina: Unpalatable Choices in Election Plagued with Uncertainty
▪ Commonwealth Civil Society Offers Ministers Crucial Recommendations for Gender Equality Advancement
▪ Gaza Spells Jungle
▪ Deforestation, Encroachment Threaten West Africa’s One Health Plans
▪ Venezuela’s Young Women Particularly Vulnerable to the Crisis
▪ Kashmir’s Apple Industry Faces Dire Threats as Climate Change Takes its Toll
▪ Hurricane Otis and the Indifference Toward the Children of Acapulco
▪ António Guterres in Nepal: Transitional Justice to the Fore
▪ Israel suggests Colombia and Chile support “Hamas terrorism”
▪ Military intelligence sheds light on Colombia’s illegal arms imports
▪ Colombia recalls ambassador from Israel over “massacre of Palestinian people”
▪ Communities Taking a Sting Out of Poaching With Alternative Livelihoods
▪ The Killings in Gaza Should Stain Our Moral Conscience
▪ Even Rich Nations Now Worried About ISDS
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