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With the law stalled amid internal divides and US pressure, resolving the crisis will be a litmus test for Iraq's future

Residents in Gaza’s war-torn regions fear that temporary displacement could become permanent as Israeli officials signal plans for territorial annexation.

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.

Taking control of the Al-Aqsa compound has long been a goal of Israel's far right, with Ben-Gvir's latest visit a further challenge to the fragile status quo

In Gaza, where food is scarce due to Israel’s ongoing and deliberate starvation tactics, mothers are improvising meals to save their loved ones from hunger

The success or failure of disarming Hezbollah could determine whether Lebanon establishes full state sovereignty or returns to a cycle of war

Despite relentless attacks and risks, Gaza’s journalists continue documenting their people’s suffering amid a deliberate campaign to silence them, highlighting the deadly cost of truth-telling.

In a More to Her Story investigation, women on Malawi’s tea plantations say that years after landmark settlements, sexual abuse remains widespread and unchecked. Photo: Skip Russell via Flickr

Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces is using kidnappings to help fund its war efforts and, in the process, unleashing terror on Darfur’s civilians.

Los residentes de la gran urbe en la que vive un millón de gazatíes, se preparan para una nueva oleada de masivas evacuaciones forzosas tras conocer la decisión del gabinete israelí de tomar toda la Franja
Power and water outages have combined with record-breaking heat. Three Iranians tell us how they’ve had to adjust.

Figures from the Bashir era are planning a political return to power in Sudan, with observers saying affiliated fighters have been deployed to support the army

After 16 years of closure, Benghazi International Stadium is once again hosting matches, reflecting wider efforts to revive Libya’s sporting sector

Centenares de gazatíes han fallecido tratando de conseguir comida en una Franja devastada, donde el bloqueo de Israel hace que la ayuda entre con cuentagotas y no se distribuya de forma segura. Solo en julio al menos 24 niños menores de cinco años murieron de hambre, según la OMS

The Israeli government has transferred control of one of Islam’s holiest sites in the West Bank to settlers, sparking widespread anger and international concern

Desperate parents in Gaza struggle to feed their children as famine unfolds due to an Israeli blockade.
Some Lebanese turn to AI tools for help dealing with psychological problems brought on by war and economic crises.
Exiled from their country by civil war, Sudanese mothers in Egypt are refusing to subject their daughters to female genital mutilation (FGM).

Traumatised families from both Bedouin and Druze communities find themselves living in shelters, haunted by the deadly violence that tore their homes apart

Syria sits at the apex of Turkey’s regional vision. But have those ambitions been fractured by sectarian unrest in Suweida and Israel’s escalatory strikes?

Analysts unpack Israel’s sinister designs in the Palestinian territories, forcing the starving people into tiny ‘humanitarian zones’ before trying to force them out of the besieged enclave.

The small clinic in northern Uganda’s Obongi District sits at the end of a dusty road, its tin roof catching the morning sun. Inside, two volunteer health workers sort through meagre medical supplies while a local elder quietly coordinates referrals for gender-based violence survivors.

As starvation tightens its grip on Gaza under Israel’s ongoing genocide, children and the elderly are dying from hunger in overcrowded hospitals and displacement shelters. Families tell TRT World the hunger is not accidental, but systematic.

It was around noon on 23 June when a brief but shocking piece of news broke: Israel had attacked Evin prison in Tehran.

I wasn’t waiting for the committee’s report to tell me what happened. The truth is clear to anyone who wants to see it.

El bloqueo israelí empuja a más de dos millones de personas a sobrevivir sin apenas alimentos. Más de 100 organizaciones denuncian una catástrofe humana provocada deliberadamente

Israel’s renewed push for clan rule in the West Bank and Gaza aims to undermine national unity and destroy the concept of a Palestinian state

Eight nations formed the Hague Group as a legal-political alliance of Global South countries to push for the implementation of international law in Palestine

A fragile ceasefire has brought a measure of calm after deadly sectarian violence in Sweida, Syria. Over 1-thousand 1-hundred people have been killed and around 128-thousand people have been displaced over the past week. The violence between long-time rivals the Druze and the Bedouin drew in Islamist-led government forces, the Israeli military, and other armed factions in Syria. Civilians trapped in the conflict zone are facing a dire humanitarian crisis as aid convoys struggle to reach those in need.

The impact of Syria’s coastal forests in Latakia will be long-lasting, as experts warn that food chains and ecosystems will suffer adverse effects for years

As Europe fortifies its borders, growing numbers of North Africans are moving southwards into other African countries.

Aisha Al-Hawatmeh’s hydroponics initiative is not only tackling the water scarcity issue in Jordan, but also turning it into an economic opportunity for women

Rural farmers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo face increasingly erratic weather without access to effective tools to prepare. A remarkably simple early warning system is offering new hope for over 3,000 farmers and displaced people across the region.

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

A century ago, colonial borders divided the Borgu people between Benin and Nigeria. Today, soccer is reuniting them.

The Syrian interim authorities say the military has withdrawn from the southern province of Sweida, after days of deadly clashes with militias linked to the Druze minority. The truce was reached after mediation by the US, Turkiye and Arab nations. Nearly 600 people have been killed in the clashes in Sweida since last Sunday. Israel says the internal fighting prompted it to launch a strike on the Syrian Defense Ministry headquarters in central Damascus. Israel says it was to protect the Druze minority. Turkiye and ten Arab nations have condemned the strike. They have also stressed support for Syria"s security, stability and sovereignty, and rejected all foreign interference in Syria"s affairs. The US says it does not support the Israeli strike on Syria, as concerns remain over how long the fragile ceasefire will last.

Israel bloquea desde hace semanas la entrada de la asistencia necesaria para alimentar a los recién nacidos, según denuncian la OMS y Unicef

As wildfires tear through Syria’s coastal forests, local volunteers are risking their lives alongside emergency crews to protect the land they call home

Hezbollah stands at a critical juncture as it decides whether to disarm and preserve a political role in Lebanon or risk renewed war with Israel

"Have you gotten your Syrian citizenship yet?" one asked, nodding toward the newspaper between them. The other chuckled.

New graduation ceremonies for soldiers have divided observers over whether the Syrian army can produce competent military personnel in just six months

Despite growing pressure to return, many Syrian refugees in Lebanon say they simply cannot afford to leave due to lack of money and destroyed property back home

Syria’s wildfires are the first major natural disaster since the country overthrew the al-Assad regime in December.

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

“The message is clear: you bomb our universities, and we will teach in tents. You starve us, and we will learn by candlelight. That’s the Palestinian way.”

Recent wildfires have torn through southeastern Turkiye’s Hatay, still recovering from a February 2023 earthquake.

Los bombardeos israelíes y la ocupación militar de la Franja impiden enterrar a los fallecidos en los cementerios tradicionales. En varios lugares se han habilitado zonas para dar una sepultura a las víctimas, pese al trauma que esto genera entre sus familiares

Despite efforts to clean up oil spills, the Gulf’s fragile ecosystems continue to suffer, with long-term impacts on biodiversity and the local economy

After years of conflict, Juba’s youth take to the streets with theater to bridge ethnic divides

With Israel entrenching its presence in the south and Syria seeking international breathing room, a low-profile, risk management agreement could emerge

A viral bird and a clever machine reveal how recycling can become theatre — while plastic waste keeps flowing into Turkey.
A spiraling economic crisis, shrinking job prospects, and Israeli movement restrictions are putting a strain on relationships and destabilizing families.
Ayman Odeh, head of the Arab Democratic Change list and one of the few Arab members of Knesset, told TNA that there were 2,600 murders since 2000.
A scene of devastation in Minab, Iran, as parents waited to know the fate of their young daughters after the bombing of a girls' elementary school killed over 100.
With the arrival of Ramadan, Israel has barred more than 250 Palestinians from entering Al-Aqsa Mosque, turning a season of devotion into one of separation
Halal scam: yes, it’s a paradox. But these schemes are not what they seem.
For many families, the loss extends beyond appliances and furniture. It is the loss of privacy, hospitality, and dignity, values closely tied to Ramadan.
With Israel treating annexation of the West Bank as a fait accompli, what role will a new constitution play in bolstering Palestine’s bid for statehood?
Amid sweeping food and aid restrictions, dozens of Israelis, including the Shin Bet chief's brother, have been indicted over alleged cigarette smuggling in Gaza
During Iran’s most comprehensive shutdown yet, thousands of illegal satellite terminals kept footage flowing — and exposed how fragile the regime’s “national internet” really is.
Over 150 men who spent decades behind bars were deported to Egypt in the Gaza ceasefire deal, where they face a reality of ‘permanent alienation.’
The deadline passed on 1 February with no ceasefire. In the days that followed, both warring parties escalated drone warfare targeting populated areas.
Algunos palestinos que salieron hace meses para recibir atención médica regresan a una Franja devastada para reunirse con sus familias, aunque eso pueda significar su muerte por la falta de tratamientos
Egyptian nationalists really want to know.
"The security and living conditions have become unbearable.”
El Programa Mundial de Alimentos se ha visto obligado a reducir las raciones y habrán agotado los suministros en marzo si no llega nueva financiación para reemplazar el tijeretazo de EE UU a la peor crisis alimentaria del mundo
Jeremiah Kithinji had never touched a computer before he finished high school. A decade later, he is teaching robotics, and even took a team of rural Kenyans to the World Robotics Olympiad in Singapore.
One year after it formed, the new technocratic government faces mounting challenges as it struggles to disarm Hezbollah and implement economic reforms
Hamada Abu Layla spent 22 years earning three degrees from Gaza universities. Now they mock him from a garbage dump.
While international powers publicly call for de-escalation and humanitarian ceasefires, their regional allies are flooding Sudan’s battlefields with weapons
Yemen’s economic crisis, banking restrictions on money transfers, and growing digital financial literacy have fuelled the adoption of cryptocurrencies.
Whether in Aleppo, Tehran, or Istanbul, bazaars operate as parallel centres of power, able to negotiate with rulers - or bring governments down
Within 48 hours in January, the town recorded nearly 300 millimetres of rainfall, roughly three-quarters of its annual average.
The measures were first introduced after a suicide bombing on 24 November 2015 that targeted a bus carrying members of the presidential guard remains in force.
Glyphosate is a non-selective, systemic herbicide that attacks plant roots, preventing regrowth for two to three years.
Las familias gazatíes no pueden pagar los elevados precios de los pocos productos que quedan para la infancia en los mercados
Volunteers struggle to fill the gap left by declining international support in Sudan.
It was the latest eruption of a conflict over power, identity, and competing regional agendas that has been building in Yemen’s south for years.
The writer and director of the video, Ban al-Jumaili, defended the work. She told TNA, its message was "the unification of all sects and religions".
More than 11,000 people have disappeared during Israel’s military campaign. Their absence torments the families left behind.
The case exposes a fault line running through Egyptian public life, between laws that exist on paper and a culture that struggles to enforce them.
More than 300 athletes with varying disabilities are set to compete in 14 different sports over the 10-day event.
Local cooperatives are stepping in to support vulnerable farmers, mostly women, struggling in conflict-ridden east DRC.
From death threats to smear campaigns, Libyan women working for change are being silenced online.
These were the updates on Israel’s war on Gaza for Monday, September 2.
Helpio allows victims to report cases and seek help amid fear of stigma and soaring sexual assault figures.
Angry demonstrators stage mass protests as Israel’s largest trade union calls for a general strike on Monday.
The pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu to agree a ceasefire deal and bring home surviving captives from Gaza is rising.
A unique initiative relieves sick children from the coldness of hospitals and clutches of pain through music lessons.
The Gaza Sunbirds para-cycling group have overcome war and personal adversity for a chance to compete internationally.
Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp has rapidly expanded in its 34 years, and now sport is one of the inhabitants' best hopes.
Conservationists urge the protection of wildlife, but in absence of food, many communities say they are forced to hunt.
Exercising in Gaza presents unique challenges, but one resident copes by working out whenever and wherever he can.
These were the updates on Syria's war for Sunday, December 8.
As Israeli attacks continue, Muslims in Gaza mark another Eid al-Adha with prayers among ruins.
Cheering crowds greet taekwondo player Palesha Goverdhan, whose podium finish brought Nepal its first Paralympic medal.
TV matches, institutional investment and shifting perceptions fuel unprecedented interest in the women’s game in Egypt.
With funding for preserving the historic site in jeopardy, local officials are wondering what will come next for the 800-year-old structure
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
We must live, we must hope', say returnees who were displaced for a decade from homes in Malam Fatori, Borno State.
Amid crackdowns on dissent, a high-stakes struggle between government supporters and critics is under way.
Desperate parents in Gaza struggle to feed their children as famine unfolds due to an Israeli blockade.
Some Lebanese turn to AI tools for help dealing with psychological problems brought on by war and economic crises.
Since mid-2024, urban young people across India have been connecting tribal Bakarwal kids to training in digital animation, coding, and web design.
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.
As former child soldiers flee Boko Haram in Nigeria, their communities are grappling with how to deal with their return.
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 the experience of his daughter’s birth in Sudan amid the country’s brutal civil war.
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.
Unofficial tournaments and street football are where many Yemenis are finding solace amid continuing conflict.
"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!"
"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."
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 region’s social stigmas are deterring women from reporting online sexual abuse.
Civilians face brutal attacks and dire straits in displacement camps.
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.
Thousands of affected families had already been displaced. Many are now asking: When nowhere feels safe, where do you go?
Iran has been deporting hundreds of thousands of Afghans for years but is now ramping up xenophobic sentiment to quicken the exodus.
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.
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.
Israel told Palestinians to flee to al-Mawasi, but it lacks basic infrastructure, is still attacked, and is hard for aid groups to reach.
Urgent funding needed to help people return home as humanitarian crisis reaches critical levels, according to migration organisation
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.
A Darfuri journalist recounts his family’s harrowing ordeal after the RSF seized their city last week.
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
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
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
A US logistics company has completed 8 million deliveries across six distribution centres, but mobile connectivity gaps are still a problem
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
School insurance scheme transformed survival rates, yet economic crisis and physician flight put decades of gains at risk
The region’s social stigmas are deterring women from reporting online sexual abuse.
The government is keen on rooftop panels. Its citizens are not | Middle East & Africa
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.
Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.
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.
Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.
Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.
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.
Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.
Ensia is a solutions-focused nonprofit media outlet reporting on our changing planet. Published by the Institute on the Environment.
Lebanon’s Souq al-Khamis is more than a market—it’s a living archive. After more Israeli bombardment, another round of rebuilding begins.
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 Kanyanya Youth Urban Oasis initiative provides nutrient-dense food to schools in need by bringing the farm to them.
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.
Khadra Abu Sariya’s voice trembles and her eyes well up as she recalls a song etched into memory by pain.
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
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.
Parkinson’s, cerebral palsy, and taunts from society failed to deter Paralympian who bagged silver at Tokyo Paralympics.