News headlines in July 2025, page 26

  1. Staff Union Dismisses UN Restructuring as “Chaotic, Incoherent, Rushed & Lacking Strategy”

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, July 8 (IPS) - A coalition of UN staff unions, led by the 60,000-strong Coordinating Committee of International Staff Unions and Associations (CCISUA), has written to UN member states criticizing the UN80 reform process as “incoherent and lacking strategy”.The union, one of the largest single coalitions in the world body, is asking the 193 member states to take over the UN reform process which is currently in the hands of a Task Force.

  2. US tariff delay deepens trade uncertainty, warns top UN economist

    - UN News

    A leading UN trade official warned on Tuesday that the United States’ decision to delay the end of a tariff suspension by a few weeks risks prolonging global uncertainty and undermining long-term investments and commercial contracts.

  3. In South Asia, anaemia threatens women’s health and economic futures

    - UN News

    Anaemia remains one of South Asia’s quietest but most pervasive health crises, disproportionately affecting the region’s poorest women and girls – and with 18 million more cases projected by 2030, experts say urgent, unified action is critical.

  4. Ukraine: UN refugee agency helps repair homes amid ongoing conflict

    - UN News

    As relentless attacks continue to damage homes and communities across Ukraine, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has now helped repair over 40,000 war-damaged homes – marking a major step in helping displaced families return and recover.

  5. South Sudan’s longest cholera outbreak enters critical stage

    - UN News

    On the eve of the fourteenth anniversary of its independence, South Sudan – the world’s youngest country – is experiencing its worst and longest cholera outbreak.

  6. Gaza: Hospitals rationing critical supplies, ambulances stalling

    - UN News

    UN humanitarians have warned that the catastrophic conditions in Gaza are worsening, as tents, schools, homes and medical facilities come under attack, and fuel supplies run out.

  7. UN summit confronts AI’s dawn of wonders and warnings

    - UN News

    The UN’s flagship platform on artificial intelligence opened in Geneva on Tuesday, launching four days of high-level dialogue, cutting-edge demonstrations and urgent calls for inclusive AI governance. The event comes as autonomous and generative systems evolve faster than regulatory frameworks can keep pace.

  8. Srebrenica, 30 years on: UN officials and survivors call for truth, justice and vigilance

    - UN News

    At the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, survivors of the Srebrenica genocide joined top officials in marking 30 years since thousands of Bosnian Muslims were systematically killed in the worst atrocity on European soil since World War II. The affirmed the need to counter denial, support survivors and promote lasting peace.

  9. UN rights office urges restraint in Kenya as fresh protests turn deadly

    - UN News

    The UN human rights office, OHCHR, has expressed deep concern over the killing of at least ten protesters in Kenya on Monday, amid reports that police and security forces used lethal force to quell violent demonstrations in Nairobi and across the country.

  10. Kenya’s Shirika Plan: A New Dawn for Refugee Rights and Integration

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, July 7 (IPS) - When Jean Baremba arrived in Kenya in 2018, he looked forward to rebuilding a life shattered by war in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

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