News headlines in 2021, page 26

  1. Women and girls at high risk of being pushed into modern slavery 

    - UN News

    Women and children are at high risk of being pushed into contemporary forms of slavery, UN-appointed independent rights experts said on Wednesday.   

  2. Despite COVID-19 connectivity boost, world’s poorest left far behind 

    - UN News

    Some 2.9 billion people still have never used the internet, and 96 per cent live in developing countries, a new UN report has found. According to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the estimated number of people who have gone online this year actually went up, to 4.9 billion, partially because of a “COVID connectivity boost”.   

  3. Inequality is Set to Kill Millions – “We Have to Fight it Together.”

    - Inter Press Service

    GENEVA, Dec 01 (IPS) - This week I called out to the world to warn them that inequalities are making us all unsafe. I noted starkly our new analysis that we face millions of additional AIDS deaths – 7.7 million in the next decade alone – as well continued devastation from pandemics, unless leaders address the inequalities which drive them. We have to treat this threat as an emergency, as a red alert.

  4. How Inequality Drives HIV in Adolescent Girls and Young Women

    - Inter Press Service

    Nov 30 (IPS) - Despite the advances that have been made against HIV, the world has 37 million people living with HIV. And 680,000 people died from AIDS-related causes in 2020. While the prevention of mother to child transmission, and provision of treatment as prevention, are great successes, there are still gaps. Over 1.5 million new HIV infections were recorded in 2020.

  5. Fighting Loss of the Greater Mekong's Prized Rosewood Forests

    - Inter Press Service

    CANBERRA, Australia, Nov 30 (IPS) - The famed Rosewood forests of the Greater Mekong region in Southeast Asia produce dark, richly grained timbers zealously sought after worldwide by manufacturers of luxury furniture, flooring and musical instruments, among other products. But their high value has also made them a major commodity in transnational organized crime.

  6. Battle to end HIV, COVID, demands greater international solidarity

    - UN News

    The early years of the HIV/AIDS epidemic were “plagued by confusion, fear, isolation, and discrimination” against those infected or at high risk, the President of the UN General Assembly reminded a commemorative meeting on Tuesday marking World AIDS Day – 40 years after the first cases were reported.

  7. Israel-Palestine: Risk of 'deadly escalation' in violence, without decisive action

    - UN News

    With violence continuing daily throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process urged the Security Council on Tuesday to adopt a more coordinated approach to the region.  

  8. How to Tackle the Femicide Epidemic

    - Inter Press Service

    BRISTOL, UK, Nov 30 (IPS) - Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, the increase in domestic violence rates has led the United Nations to declare a ‘shadow pandemic’ of gender-based violence. In the most brutal cases, the violence has led to murder – or ‘femicide’, as the World Health Organisation calls the killing of women specifically because of their gender.

  9. World trade reaches all-time high, but 2022 outlook ‘uncertain’: UNCTAD

    - UN News

    Global trade is expected to be worth about $28 trillion this year - an increase of 23 per cent compared with 2020 - but the outlook for 2022 remains very uncertain, UN economists said on Tuesday.

  10. Workers with HIV-AIDS continue to face stigma, discrimination: ILO

    - UN News

    “Myths and misconceptions” about HIV and AIDS continue to fuel stigma and discrimination in the workplace, the International Labour Organization (ILO) said on Tuesday. 

Powered by Inter Press Service International News Agency and UN News