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La sanidad en Gaza continúa en cuidados intensivos un mes después del alto el fuego: “Esto no es vida, esta realidad se parece a la muerte”

Faltan medicamentos, material para cirugías y equipos para diagnosticar. Las organizaciones humanitarias y las agencias de Naciones Unidas piden a Israel facilitar la entrada de suministros médicos y la evacuación de pacientes críticos

How public assassinations are silencing Yemen’s women

According to the Yemeni Network for Rights and Freedoms, 5,618 violations against women between January 2017 and July 2025 across 17 governorates.

A grassroots initiative opens digital pathways for nomadic Kashmiri children

Since mid-2024, urban young people across India have been connecting tribal Bakarwal kids to training in digital animation, coding, and web design.

The cracks are showing in Egypt’s latest pyramid scheme

The Giza Plateau is set to be turned into a giant concert venue again. Entertainers are thrilled, but archaeologists are aghast.

Nigeria's Christians And Muslims Find Peace Through Football

Two football teams — each comprised of eight Muslims and eight Christians — faced off as a mixed crowd cheered. Only months earlier, 52 people were killed in yet another ethnoreligious massacre nearby. Some of the players on the field had lost relatives in that attack. Yet, they chose football over

TRT World - ‘Bitter experience of imprisonment’: Virtual reality revives horrors of Assad's notorious prisons

A museum in Damascus lets Syrians step inside Saydnaya prison through VR, ensuring that the tortures and disappearances under Baathist rule are not forgotten.

How Israel’s daily attacks on Lebanon transformed Hezbollah

Hezbollah has responded by issuing a directive: stay hidden, effectively placing their members under what many describe as a form of "house arrest".

Morocco Is Profiling and Imprisoning Young People to Crush Gen Z Protests

Police are targeting Moroccan youth based on their appearance amid mass anti-corruption protests over government underfunding of healthcare and education.

From exile, I watched El Fasher fall – and my family fight to survive

A Darfuri journalist recounts his family’s harrowing ordeal after the RSF seized their city last week.

Residents of Gabès rise up against decades of toxic pollution

For over 50 years, industrial waste has suffocated Gabès, and now a city once silenced by pollution is fighting back for the right to breathe clean air

Sudan’s El-Fasher massacre revealed in firsthand testimonies

Families escaping El-Fasher speak of unimaginable fear and loss as RSF fighters carried out executions, sexual violence, and systematic terror across the city

Execution, Sexual Violence, Kidnapping: Survivors Recount Horrors Inside El-Fasher and on Trek to Escape RSF Takeover

The Rapid Support Forces, who seized control of the last major army stronghold in Darfur, have been targeting civilians and conducting mass atrocities.

’We’re treated in the corridors’: Gaza’s healthcare catastrophe

Patients in Gaza face life-threatening conditions as hospitals overflow, medical supplies run out, and the ceasefire fails to restore essential healthcare

How a fake scooter company used AI to defraud African migrants of millions - Africa Uncensored

How a sophisticated Ponzi scheme masquerading as an electric scooter investment platform leveraged deepfake technology and cryptocurrency to target Africans in the diaspora

Visually impaired Arabs turn to AI for empowerment and equality

Across the MENA region, blind and visually impaired individuals are embracing AI as a gateway to independence, even as they navigate persistent barriers

The young lawyer taking Pakistan to court over its unfair ‘period tax’

Mahnoor Omer hopes the case will put public pressure on the government to make sanitary products affordable in a country where they cost too much for most women

In Yemen, Marriage Rules Are Tightening Control Over Women — More to Her Story

Since 2019, more than 70 restrictive marriage contracts have been imposed across Houthi-controlled territories, banning women from singing, carrying smartphones, and traveling without male guardians.

To protect angel sharks, a Libyan biologist collaborates with fishing communities

Sara Almabruk is strategizing how to save Mediterranean angel sharks, “custodians of the seafloor” whose robust presence can indicate a healthy ecosystem.

Inside Israel’s tax war on Palestinian churches

Systematic financial targeting by Israel, property disputes, and administrative restrictions threaten to undermine the future of Palestinian Christians

Tanzania’s digital battlefield heats up ahead of election

Amid crackdowns on dissent, a high-stakes struggle between government supporters and critics is under way.

Sudan’s Golden Harvest Returns Slowly as Women’s Cooperatives Fight to Revive the Gum Arabic Trade

Most of the world’s gum arabic, the ingredient that keeps soda fizzing and pharmaceuticals stable, once came from Sudan

The Farmers Sheltering Displaced Palestinians on Their Land

Their own homes have been destroyed. But the Palestinians sheltering Gaza’s displaced on their agricultural lands contin

Ivorians protest ‘flawed and rigged’ system as pivotal election looms

Civil society and opposition in Ivory Coast urge shutdowns and boycotts as Alassane Ouattara seeks fourth term in presid

Children under fire as Pakistan drone war escalates

Shahfahad Khan Dawar was helping three of his seven children and his nephew prepare for school in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in May when one of his sons ran to him pointing into the sky and exclaiming, “Baba, Baba, there’s a drone.”

Surviving South Sudan's tough ride-hailing market

Where six ride-hailing apps have launched and failed, Shilu-ANA is a symbol of local ingenuity in one of Africa's newest countries.

Will Hamas disarm? A looming question mark over Gaza's ceasefire

Despite growing international pressure, much ambiguity remains over Hamas's position on laying down its weapons, risking a resumption of Israel's war

Morocco bows to Gen Z pressure with budget hikes and election overhaul

The Gen Z 212 movement has proven digital frustration can turn into street-level mobilisation

The ‘Palestinian Mandela’ remains in an Israeli prison

Marwan al-Barghouthi, often called the ‘Mandela of Palestine’, was imprisoned 23 years ago. His release could unify Palestinian political factions. So Israel won’t countenance it.

The Aleppo pistachio harvest: Syria"s farmers return to fields once scarred by war - TRT World

After the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government, Syrian farmers are returning to pistachio orchards long abandoned during years of conflict and state seizures.

Regional Crackdown: How East Africa’s Regimes Are Targeting Critics Beyond Their Borders - Africa Uncensored

As elections near in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania, activists and journalists are being abducted across borders in a coordinated campaign to silence dissent, a sign of rising cross-border repression in East Africa.

How Sudanese women are building lifelines from the ashes of war - Shareable

Across Sudan, women are resurrecting nafeer, an ancient practice of communal solidarity, adapting it into a decentralized network...

“We Estimate That Nearly One Million of Gaza’s 1.1 Million Olive Trees Have Been Destroyed”

Gaza’s olive groves have been bulldozed by the Israeli military, dried up from lack of water, or remain inaccessible, leaving Palestinian farmers with little to harvest.

“La gente pregunta día y noche cuándo recibirán comida, tiendas de campaña o ropa de invierno”: las bombas callan, pero la escasez de alimentos continúa en Gaza

Desde la entrada en vigor del alto el fuego, hay alimentos básicos como harina o arroz, pero la carne o las verduras son aún un lujo, y la ONU advierte de que el número de camiones con ayuda tiene que aumentar drásticamente

Israel’s exploding robots still terrorise Gaza neighbourhoods

Israeli forces have erased entire Gaza neighbourhoods by deploying remotely controlled explosives.

Sudan’s People Are Rebuilding Their Capital Without Government Help

U.S. aid has evaporated. Government promises remain unfulfilled. But Khartoum"s residents are making their neighborhoods livable again, with or without institutional backing.

Dozens Remain Imprisoned in Egypt for Palestine Solidarity While Sisi is Hailed as a Gaza Ceasefire Broker

“Gaza used to unite Egyptians. Now it only reminds them of what they"ve lost

“It’s like a nightmare”: War and sanctions push Iranian workers to the brink

Amir Masoud, a 34-year-old website content writer in the Iranian capital, Tehran, knew layoffs were coming but was in denial about the fact they would affect him personally.

Cuando la ciencia se topa con la religión: la ‘fatua’ que permite sacrificar cuervos desata una batalla medioambiental en Libia

Una interpretación de la ley islámica califica a estas aves carroñeras como “dañinas”, pero los ecologistas sostienen que regulan las poblaciones de insectos y roedores y esparcen semillas en la Montaña Verde, un oasis de biodiversidad libio

“Los escombros son parte de la patria a la que no renunciaremos”: regreso a ninguna parte en Gaza

A los gazatíes les cuesta identificar sus casas entre las montañas de ruinas en las que se han convertido sus barrios. Enfrentarse a la destrucción de su vida anterior es su nueva realidad

El plan de paz llegó tarde para Musab y Zakaria

Los ataques israelíes han arreciado en la última semana, causando más de un centenar de víctimas mortales, a pesar del anuncio de Trump, desde hacía días, de un posible acuerdo para frenar la guerra en Gaza

“¡Hemos vuelto a la vida!”: la alegría embriaga a los gazatíes, mientras ansían el regreso a su tierra y a la normalidad

La gente se congrega para abrazarse, besarse en la cabeza y compartir su alegría, mientras miles de desplazados se enfrentan a la decisión de volver a sus barrios destruidos o esperar a que las fuerzas israelíes ofrezcan garantías de seguridad

Palestinians in Gaza wait for ceasefire’s promises to become a reality

Ceasefire sparks cautious optimism in Gaza, but uncertainty lingers over promised reconstruction and aid distribution.

Up in smoke: Israel's war devastates Lebanon's historic tobacco heartland

The scale of destruction marks an unprecedented reversal for an industry that has sustained southern Lebanese communities since the Ottoman era.

Palestinians in Gaza’s south relearn sound of peace after truce deal

The first phase of a Gaza ceasefire agreement has dramatically reduced Israeli attacks in southern Gaza.

Hoe telewerken het leven van Soedanezen in de diaspora veranderde – MO*

Hoog opgeleide Soedanese vluchtelingen in Oeganda vinden hun waardigheid terug in telewerk.

We felt invisible': Why Gen Z protests are shaking Morocco

An initial outpouring of national solidarity with Gen Z protests has turned to public anxiety, revealing Morocco's deep-rooted fear of instability

Tanzania’s digital battlefield heats up ahead of election

Amid crackdowns on dissent, a high stakes struggle between government supporters and critics is under way.

Two years of genocide: Gaza families trapped between death, displacement, and despair

Amid Gaza's ruins, families mark two years of Israel's brutal genocide, as they struggle to cope with death, displacement, hunger, and a shattered health system

Cairo Keeps Building, But the Housing Crisis Won’t Go Away

In Cairo, it is easy to see the actual issue behind the global housing crisis: the need for fair distribution

Where does the Palestinian cause stand after two years of Israel's genocide in Gaza?

After two years of Israel's war on Gaza, the Palestinian cause has returned to the centre of world politics - but without a clear path forward

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Photos: In Syria, local Paralympic games bring hope and joy

More than 300 athletes with varying disabilities are set to compete in 14 different sports over the 10-day event.

In DRC’s Ituri, uncertainty for coffee farmers amid conflict, climate woes

Local cooperatives are stepping in to support vulnerable farmers, mostly women, struggling in conflict-ridden east DRC.

‘Too terrified to leave the house’: Internet trolls in Libya target women

From death threats to smear campaigns, Libyan women working for change are being silenced online.

Israel war on Gaza updates: No deal means captives in ‘coffins’, says Hamas

These were the updates on Israel’s war on Gaza for Monday, September 2.

A Nigerian developer’s app joins efforts to fight sexual crimes

Helpio allows victims to report cases and seek help amid fear of stigma and soaring sexual assault figures.

Israelis protest, union calls strike after six more captives killed in Gaza

Angry demonstrators stage mass protests as Israel’s largest trade union calls for a general strike on Monday.

Strike raises pressure on Israeli PM as US prepares ‘final’ ceasefire deal

The pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu to agree a ceasefire deal and bring home surviving captives from Gaza is rising.

Healing with music: A Moroccan NGO revives the spiritual practice

A unique initiative relieves sick children from the coldness of hospitals and clutches of pain through music lessons.

Alaa al-Dali: The Gaza para-cycling star fighting for a shot at glory

The Gaza Sunbirds para-cycling group have overcome war and personal adversity for a chance to compete internationally.

Winning the mental game: Football as a fix in Africa’s largest refugee camp

Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp has rapidly expanded in its 34 years, and now sport is one of the inhabitants' best hopes.

In South Sudan, hunger complicates plans to end wildlife poaching

Conservationists urge the protection of wildlife, but in absence of food, many communities say they are forced to hunt.

‘It’s finding the strength to live’: A gym bro’s guide to surviving Gaza

Exercising in Gaza presents unique challenges, but one resident copes by working out whenever and wherever he can.

Syria war updates: Opposition takes Damascus, al-Assad flees

These were the updates on Syria's war for Sunday, December 8.

Muslims in Gaza mark Eid amid mourning and destruction

As Israeli attacks continue, Muslims in Gaza mark another Eid al-Adha with prayers among ruins.

Photos: Nepal’s first Paralympic medallist returns home to hero’s welcome

Cheering crowds greet taekwondo player Palesha Goverdhan, whose podium finish brought Nepal its first Paralympic medal.

From obscurity to prime time: Women’s football hits the TV screen in Egypt

TV matches, institutional investment and shifting perceptions fuel unprecedented interest in the women’s game in Egypt.

Yemen’s Al-Qahira Castle Survived Centuries of War and Neglect. Can It Survive Its Own Restoration?

With funding for preserving the historic site in jeopardy, local officials are wondering what will come next for the 800-year-old structure

Africa's Oldest Mummy Is a Toddler Who Died 5,400 Years Ago, Nearly a Millennium Before the Egyptians Started Mummifying Their Dead

Libya's civil war has placed the Uan Muhuggiag mummy at risk. But negotiations are underway to transport the rare artifact from Libya to Rome, where it will undergo restoration and scientific analysis

Nigerian refugees return to ruined homes in the face of armed group threats

We must live, we must hope', say returnees who were displaced for a decade from homes in Malam Fatori, Borno State.

Tanzania’s digital battlefield heats up ahead of election

Amid crackdowns on dissent, a high-stakes struggle between government supporters and critics is under way.

‘We are starving’: Bread becomes a distant dream for Palestinians in Gaza

Desperate parents in Gaza struggle to feed their children as famine unfolds due to an Israeli blockade.

ChatGPT therapy: The Lebanese turning to AI for mental health support

Some Lebanese turn to AI tools for help dealing with psychological problems brought on by war and economic crises.

A grassroots initiative opens digital pathways for nomadic Kashmiri children

Since mid-2024, urban young people across India have been connecting tribal Bakarwal kids to training in digital animation, coding, and web design.

Without water, how do you fight wildfires? Algeria leans on AI, drones, and trucks.

Rural Algerian firefighters are pioneering new ways to combat wildfires fed by Algeria’s hot, dry climate. With artificial intelligence and new laws, the government is streamlining faster responses and saving lives.

Boko Haram made them child soldiers. Will their communities take them back?

As former child soldiers flee Boko Haram in Nigeria, their communities are grappling with how to deal with their return.

Liberia’s government wants to ban FGM. Many of its women don’t.

Activists in Liberia want to end female genital mutilation there. But first, they need to get the buy-in of those who practice it.

A journalist recounts his daughter’s miraculous birth in war-torn Sudan

A journalist recounts the experience of his daughter’s birth in Sudan amid the country’s brutal civil war.

She fled war in Sudan. Now she grapples with returning.

Sudan’s civil war has generated one of the world’s worst displacement crises. Here’s what that’s like for one family living through it.

How football is helping Yemenis cope with the prolonged war

Unofficial tournaments and street football are where many Yemenis are finding solace amid continuing conflict.

Africa 54: Uganda’s energy minister sits down with VOA, talks oil reserves, and more

"On Africa 54: Uganda’s Minister of Energy and Mineral Development speaks with VOA about the East African nation’s oil reserves and the logistics of getting it to the world market. Plus, analysts speak on how U.S. presidential debates impact the outcome of who would occupy the White House following the elections in November. This and more news-related updates on today’s Africa 54!"

Niger’s first Para taekwondo athlete's road to Paris 2024 Paralympic Games

"24-year-old Ide Oumarou Jabirou says he always dreamt of one day carving out his path to the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, and his amputated left arm was not an obstacle. VOA Africa Reporter Boureima Balima has the young athlete’s story from Niamey, Niger, narrated by Omary Kaseko. Camera: Luc Oga. In collaboration with Egab.co."

While Egypt Grapples with Fuel Shortages and Power Cuts, One Village Never Goes Dark

On the sweltering summer nights when Egypt struggled with power cuts, a small village nestled in the Nile Delta remained alight. In June, reeling from a shortfall of foreign reserves and a natural gas shortage, Egypt introduced new measures to cope with a relentless summer heatwave that has strained

The Middle East Has a ‘Sextortion’ Problem

The region’s social stigmas are deterring women from reporting online sexual abuse.

Army barrel bombs spark exodus as South Sudan peace deal crumbles

Civilians face brutal attacks and dire straits in displacement camps.

Escaping Gaza’s war, Palestinians find little solace in Egypt

The lack of aid and official recognition means escape from the most immediate horror has simply been replaced by a new struggle to get by.

Displacement and upheaval in southern Lebanon as Israel intensifies airstrikes

Thousands of affected families had already been displaced. Many are now asking: When nowhere feels safe, where do you go?

Iran uses Israeli bombings to speed up Afghan expulsions

Iran has been deporting hundreds of thousands of Afghans for years but is now ramping up xenophobic sentiment to quicken the exodus.

In the West Bank, Tulkarm reels from Israel’s new military campaign

From widespread destruction of homes and infrastructure to severe movement restrictions, Israel’s largest military operation in the West Bank in years is taking its toll.

‘If we survive’: Palestinians in Rafah on fears of an imminent Israeli invasion

Around 1.5 million Paletinians are bracing for catastrophe if Israel invades Gaza’s last refuge amid the daily struggle to find enough food to eat.

Inside Gaza’s supposed ‘safe zone’, where displaced Palestinians struggle for survival

Israel told Palestinians to flee to al-Mawasi, but it lacks basic infrastructure, is still attacked, and is hard for aid groups to reach.

Soaring number of migrants trapped in Yemen face abuse and starvation, say NGOs

Urgent funding needed to help people return home as humanitarian crisis reaches critical levels, according to migration organisation

Journalist and aid worker: How Israel’s starvation of Gaza forced me to be both

Israel’s restriction of food – even after the ceasefire – has forced Mohamed al-Astal to take on a dual role as someone who both reports and helps.

From exile, I watched El Fasher fall – and my family fight to survive

A Darfuri journalist recounts his family’s harrowing ordeal after the RSF seized their city last week.

Egypt’s economic woes lure digital nomads – but cast others out to sea

While the Red Sea resort of Dahab draws those who earn dollars and can work anywhere, a third of Egyptians live in poverty and see a perilous voyage to Europe as their only hope

Kenyan police officer fights youth crime with soccer

Security personnel and residents like Austin Otieno say that Ominde’s soccer initiative, which kicked off four years ago, has impacted youth behavior, crime rates, and incidents of police violence

The pharmacist who sells onions: Palestinians go hydroponic in Jordan’s ‘Gaza camp’

In crowded Jerash refugee camp, hydroponic horticulture allows residents to grow their own crops efficiently in an arid country – and provides a stateless people with an income

Drones are saving snakebite victims in Ghana – but only when the mobile signal works

A US logistics company has completed 8 million deliveries across six distribution centres, but mobile connectivity gaps are still a problem

7/24: A Scorching Southern Med, Early Damask Rose Harvest, Lebanon’s Heat-Resistant Bees

This month, we are bringing you a special issue of Lapilli in partnership with Egab, an Egypt-based initiative aiming to empower local journalists across the Middle East and Africa. Thus, in this edition, we focus especially on the southern and eastern portions of the Mediterranean basin. We’ll do so

Egypt slashed child deaths. Now an exodus of doctors threatens progress

School insurance scheme transformed survival rates, yet economic crisis and physician flight put decades of gains at risk

The Middle East Has a ‘Sextortion’ Problem

The region’s social stigmas are deterring women from reporting online sexual abuse.

Why Egypt’s plans for solar power are left in the shade

The government is keen on rooftop panels. Its citizens are not | Middle East & Africa

A Dispatch From the Border of Gaza and Egypt - The Doe

A man in Gaza struggles to find hope during war living on the border with Egypt, as his family is displaced and constantly in danger.

As Egypt’s economy dips, sustainable fashion soars

Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.

Amidst Ongoing Conflict, Efforts To Save This Endemic Tree Are Threatened

On Yemen’s Socotra island, poverty and political disruption hinder efforts to give its prized dragon’s blood tree a future. A local journalist explores efforts to preserve it despite all odds.

In war-torn Syria, efforts to save a river refuse to die

Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.

Amidst ongoing conflict, efforts to save this endemic tree are threatened

Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.

How the Gulf’s lifeline for Egypt is worrying Cairo’s residents

Plans to redevelop downtown Cairo in Dubai’s image are drawing sharp criticism from Egyptians who are worried about the loss of heritage and autonomy.

How a popular hunting destination in Egypt is looking to become an ecotourism hot spot

Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.

In Libya, one person’s garbage is another person’s gain

Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.

Rising From the Ashes—Again

Lebanon’s Souq al-Khamis is more than a market—it’s a living archive. After more Israeli bombardment, another round of rebuilding begins.

Abandoned for the crime of getting sick

When Rabab Adel was diagnosed with hepatitis C, her husband left. He abandoned Adel, a 49-year-old teacher from Egypt’s Fayoum province, along with their two children, claiming he needed to protect himself. He also stopped supporting his family financially.

The Youth-Led Container Garden Movement Tackling Child Hunger in Uganda

The Kanyanya Youth Urban Oasis initiative provides nutrient-dense food to schools in need by bringing the farm to them.

A Refugee-Led Cooperative Supported Thousands of Syrians in Greece. Now, They’re Bringing Organic Farming Home.

With the civil war over, an organic farming cooperative that supported more than 13,000 Syrian refugees in Greece has returned to help rural communities rebuild.

How Palestinian folk music carries the Nakba’s memory 77 years later

Khadra Abu Sariya’s voice trembles and her eyes well up as she recalls a song etched into memory by pain.

In Egypt, prospect of Trump win raises fears over school funding | Context by TRF

Ahead of the U.S. vote, there are fears that U.S. funding for technical schools in Egypt could be reduced or stopped if Trump wins

A Wall of Trees is Reversing Desertification and Empowering Communities in Nigeria

For years, the Sahara Desert has crept steadily toward communities in Kano State, Nigeria, drying up farmland and threatening livelihoods. Makoda village is holding it back with a wall of trees.

How Moroccan Paralympian Kassioui beat cerebral palsy and society

Parkinson’s, cerebral palsy, and taunts from society failed to deter Paralympian who bagged silver at Tokyo Paralympics.

Yemen was already a hard place to raise an autistic daughter. Then the war started

In Yemen access to healthcare is expensive and limited, but autistic women also face physical and sexual violence – and the violence of being hidden away.

Demolition deadline about to pass for Cairo’s historic houseboats

Egyptian authorities adamant that Nile houseboats will be destroyed or towed, but residents are hoping for a miracle.

Egyptian former squash world No 1 switches to represent England

ElShorbagy’s shock decision to play squash for England has led to criticism in Egypt, his home country.

All aboard Botswana's Elephant Express

Botswana's eastern Okavango panhandle has as many elephants as it does people, leading to conflict where they both live in close quarters. Can a solution as simple as a bus help?

Moroccan public push for Ukraine death sentence citizen’s release

Moroccan government silent after Moroccan-Ukrainian Brahim Saadoun was sentenced to death by Ukrainian separatists.

Blackouts force Syrians to return to old ways to keep lights on

A worsening economy and a greatly reduced electricity supply has left Syrians relying on old-fashioned ways for power.

‘You Can’: A way out for abused wives in Upper Egypt

Up to 86 percent of married Egyptian women face spousal abuse, particularly in Upper Egypt. 'You Can' aims to help them.

Egypt’s new El-Sahel road leads to accident reports and confusion

The road was supposed to be a major new development, but the Eid holidays showed many drivers have no idea how to use it

Inside Israel’s tax war on Palestinian churches

Systematic financial targeting by Israel, property disputes, and administrative restrictions threaten to undermine the future of Palestinian Christians

How a fake scooter company used AI to defraud African migrants of millions - Africa Uncensored

How a sophisticated Ponzi scheme masquerading as an electric scooter investment platform leveraged deepfake technology and cryptocurrency to target Africans in the diaspora

In Juba's rumor mill, Riek Machar's trial fractures what's left of truth - Africa Uncensored

With a government ban on media making verification difficult, misinformation about the trial of South Sudan vice president Riek Machar is heightening tensions in the country.

Yemeni café becomes sanctuary for migrants, intellectuals | Africanews

In the capital Sana

Fighting Sextortion in Egypt: A Feminist Group’s Controversial Partnership with Pornhub - Women’s Media Center

When Egyptian feminist group Speak Up announced a partnership with Pornhub—the world’s largest website for adult content—to rapidly identify and remove non-consensual content, it received immediate backlash. Are its efforts meeting the reality of sextortion in the country, or normalizing a platform that has often hosted non-consensual and illegal content?

Between Caracas and Beirut: Lebanese diaspora after Maduro

Venezuela’s Lebanese diaspora faces fear, silence and economic ruin after Maduro’s arrest, trapped between political reprisals in Caracas & collapse in Lebanon

Nigeria's Christians And Muslims Find Peace Through Football

Two football teams — each comprised of eight Muslims and eight Christians — faced off as a mixed crowd cheered. Only months earlier, 52 people were killed in yet another ethnoreligious massacre nearby. Some of the players on the field had lost relatives in that attack. Yet, they chose football over

Music Gigs in Tehran Defy Iran’s Cultural Red Lines

Despite risks and canceled public concerts, organizers, artists and DJs—from Iranian folk to Western techno—keep music alive at secluded events in Tehran

Homs: A stability test that Syria’s new authorities are failing

Violence in Homs raises questions over whether Syria’s new authorities can enforce the rule of law, or if the country risks reproducing patterns of warlordism

Pope Leo’s visit: What future for the Middle East’s Christians?

As Christian communities dwindle across the Middle East, Pope Leo XIV’s trip raises questions about symbolic gestures versus structural solutions

Libya cracks down on illegal bitcoin mining amid sector growth

In 2021, the war-torn North African nation accounted for approximately 0.6 per cent of the global Bitcoin hash rate, surpassing several European nations.

La sanidad en Gaza continúa en cuidados intensivos un mes después del alto el fuego: “Esto no es vida, esta realidad se parece a la muerte”

Faltan medicamentos, material para cirugías y equipos para diagnosticar. Las organizaciones humanitarias y las agencias de Naciones Unidas piden a Israel facilitar la entrada de suministros médicos y la evacuación de pacientes críticos

How Netanyahu’s pardon request could reshape Israeli politics

With an eye on elections, a pardon might cement Netanyahu’s dominance and deepen the transformation of Israeli politics into a project for his own survival

How Gaza is entering an uncharted era of foreign guardianship

By placing Gaza under an international trusteeship, the UN has triggered the most consequential reshaping of Palestinian political authority since 1948

Ghosts of empire

Lebanese farmers hopeful as four-year Saudi export ban may end

In April 2021, Saudi Arabia announced a widespread ban on imports of fruits and vegetables from Lebanon, blaming an increase in drug smuggling.

Iran struggles with harshest drought in over half a century

The Latian Dam, with a capacity of 76 million cubic meters, currently holds only 7 million cubic meters—the lowest level in 6 decades of operation.

Viven con VIH en Egipto y se casan a través de grupos secretos de Facebook, pero los extorsionadores les acechan: “No tenemos miedo a la enfermedad. Tenemos miedo a la gente”

Hombres y mujeres seropositivos buscan pareja desde el anonimato en redes sociales por temor a ser discriminados. Aunque hay casos de éxito, algunos han sido víctimas de delincuentes

Gaza in limbo: Is phase two of Trump’s ceasefire plan possible?

Israel, Hamas, and the PA will all face political, military, or security costs in phase two, making an indefinite delay of the deal preferable to progress

They threw themselves on people and killed them': Militia kills thousands in Sudan

With Sudan's El-Fasher captured by a militia accused of mass killings, those who escaped are suffering in a refugee camp and mourning the deaths of family and friends.

How public assassinations are silencing Yemen’s women

According to the Yemeni Network for Rights and Freedoms, 5,618 violations against women between January 2017 and July 2025 across 17 governorates.

Los deportados de Trump sacuden Esuatini: viaje al pequeño reino africano

Una coalición de ONG lleva a los tribunales el pacto por el que Estados Unidos pagó 4,4 millones de euros al país africano a cambio de que recibiera migrantes que fueron expulsados sin acceso a un juicio, algunos de ellos tras haber cumplido sus condenas

Two decades in the making, the Grand Egyptian Museum building is as intriguing as its artifacts

The Grand Egyptian Museum is the largest museum in the world for a single civilization, and holds a total of around 100,000 artifacts. It finally opened to the public this month.

“A Second West Bank”: Israeli Military Raids Escalate in Occupied Syrian Border Villages

Israeli forces are entrenching even further in Syria as Benjamin Netanyahu says he wants a demilitarized “buffer zone” stretching to Damascus.

El invierno mata sin balas a la población a la intemperie en Gaza: “¿Sobrevivimos a los bombardeos para sucumbir al frío y la lluvia?”

Cerca de 1,5 millones de habitantes de la Franja necesitan un refugio para protegerse del invierno inminente, según la ONU, pero el número de tiendas de campaña, mantas y ropa de abrigo que Israel autoriza es insuficiente

El invierno mata sin balas a la población a la intemperie en Gaza: “¿Sobrevivimos a los bombardeos para sucumbir al frío y la lluvia?”
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