News headlines for “Trade, Economy, & Related Issues”, page 11

  1. Sudan’s Crisis: Mass Killings Continue While the World Looks Away

    - Inter Press Service

    LONDON, December 30 (IPS) - Satellite images show corpses piled high in El Fasher, North Darfur, awaiting mass burial or cremation as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia tries to cover up the scale of its crimes. Up to 150,000 El Fasher residents remain missing from the city, seized by the RSF in November. The lowest estimate is that 60,000 are dead. The Arab militia has ethnically cleansed the city of its non-Arab residents. The slaughter is the latest horrific episode in the war between the RSF and the Sudan Armed Forces, sparked by a power battle between military leaders in April 2023.

  2. Living with nature, the climate lesson from Brazil’s caatinga

    - Inter Press Service

    USERRA DAS ALMAS, Brazil, December 29 (IPS) - “The work of collecting seeds saved me from depression,” caused by her daughter’s suicide at the age of 29, said Maria do Desterro Soares, 64, who lives in the poor rural community of Jatobá in northeastern Brazil.

  3. ‘Zambia Has Environmental Laws and Standards on Paper – the Problem Is Their Implementation’

    - Inter Press Service

    CIVICUS discusses environmental accountability in Zambia with Christian-Geraud Neema, Africa editor at the China Global South Project, an independent journalism initiative that covers and follows China’s activities in global south countries.

  4. The Fight Against Femicide: Victories and Setbacks in 2025

    - Inter Press Service

    MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, December 27 (IPS) - Hours before world leaders gathered in Johannesburg for the 2025 G20 summit in November, hundreds of South African women wearing black lay down in a city park for 15 minutes — one for each woman who loses her life every day to gender-based violence in the country. The striking visual protest was organised by a civil society organisation, Women for Change, which also gathered over a million signatures demanding the government declare gender-based violence (GBV) a national disaster. Hours later, the government acquiesced.

  5. ‘People Reacted to a System of Governance Shaped by Informal Powers and Personal Interests’

    - Inter Press Service

    CIVICUS discusses Generation Z-led protests in Bulgaria with Zahari Iankov, senior legal expert at the Bulgarian Centre for Not-for-Profit Law, a civil society organisation that advocates for participation and human rights.

  6. Development cooperation agreement marks new phase in UN-Iraq partnership

    - UN News

    Better access to education, the protection of the environment and good governance are some of the areas in which the United Nations helps countries improve.

  7. First Person: Felipe Paullier, the youngest ever senior UN official, charged with giving a voice to young people around the world

    - UN News

    A paediatrician by training, Felipe Paullier has long been an advocate for youth. Formerly Director of the Uruguayan Government's Youth Institute, a role which involved several joint actions with various UN agencies, he was appointed to run the UN Youth Office in 2023, the youngest senior appointment in United Nations history.

  8. The Bitter Sweet Future of Cocoa Showcased During COP30, Belém

    - Inter Press Service

    BELÉM, Brazil, December 24 (IPS) - Izete dos Santos Costa, also known as Dona Nena among locals in Combu Island, welcomed hundreds of people from around the world during the recent climate conference in Belém.

  9. A Grim Year for Democracy and Civic Freedoms – but in Gen Z There Is Hope

    - Inter Press Service

    NEW YORK, December 24 (IPS) - 2025 has been a terrible year for democracy. Just over 7 per cent of the world’s population now live in places where the rights to organise, protest and speak out are generally respected, according to the CIVICUS Monitor, a civil society research partnership that measures civic freedoms around the world. This is a sharp drop from over 14 per cent this time last year.

  10. In Kenya, Smallholder Farmers Push Back Against Corporate Control of Agriculture

    - Inter Press Service

    GITHUNGURI, Kenya, December 24 (IPS) - For the past two years, Samuel Ndungu, a smallholder farmer, has been growing organic food and supplying it to the local market in Githunguri, just outside Nairobi.

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