News headlines for “G8: Too Much Power?”, page 133

  1. South Africa Must Respond – & Lead-- on COVID-19 & SDGs

    - Inter Press Service

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, May 18 (IPS) - Sitting on the southern tip of Africa during a time of social distancing, while the entire planet fights Covid-19, we cannot help but reflect on how vulnerable our country is to this scourge.

  2. Without Universal Health Coverage We Are Sitting Ducks When the next Pandemic Strikes

    - Inter Press Service

    NAIROBI, Kenya, May 14 (IPS) - We live in a different world to the one we inhabited six short months ago.

    With more than 4 million people infected and over 280,000 dead globally by mid May 2020, Covid-19 has ruthlessly exposed the vulnerability of a globalised world to pandemic disease. People are slowly coming to terms with the frightening and heartbreaking death toll, and we are still not out of the danger.

  3. Malawi’s Vulnerable Shortchanged in Human Trafficking Prevention Efforts

    - Inter Press Service

    BLANTYRE, Malawi, May 13 (IPS) - Malawi is a source, destination and transit country for human and sex trafficking. But the poverty-stricken nation, where almost 80 precent of its population is employed by the agriculture sector, doesn't have the funds to combat the crime.Malawi is not doing enough to enforce its laws on human trafficking, resulting in a number of cases against perpetrators being dismissed by the courts, according to a local rights group. But local officials say that this Southern African nation — one of the poorest countries in the world — just doesn't have the financial resources to do so.

  4. COVID-19: Zimbabwe’s Smallholder Farmers Step into the Food Supply Gap

    - Inter Press Service

    BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe, May 12 (IPS) - Bulawayo, Zimbabwe' second city of some 700,000 people, has experienced a shortage of vegetables this year, with major producers citing a range of challenges from poor rains to the inability to access to bank loans to finance their operations. But this shortage has created a market gap that Zimbabwe smallholders — some 1.5 million people according to government figures — have an opportunity to fill. 

  5. Finding Money for Public Health, Green Economic Recovery & SDGs

    - Inter Press Service

    LONDON, May 12 (IPS) - The coronavirus pandemic underscores the profound fragility and unsustainability of today's world. It exposes the chronic underinvestment in human health and well-being and the consequences of a relentless exploitation of biodiversity and the natural environment.

  6. Africa’s Health Dilemma: Protecting People from COVID-19 While Four Times as Many Could Die of Malaria

    - Inter Press Service

    BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe, May 11 (IPS) - Experts across Africa are warning that as hospitals and health facilities focus on COVID-19, less attention is being given to the management of other deadly diseases like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, which affect millions more people.

  7. COVID-19: Developing Countries Must Not be Left Behind

    - Inter Press Service

    WAGENINGEN, Netherlands / ROME, May 05 (IPS) - Globalization has been a driver for increased prosperity world-wide, but it has been in reverse in the last years due to the growth of populism in the USA and Europe. The COVID-19 pandemic may well provide further momentum to increasingly national-interest oriented policies in the west.

  8. Has COVID-19 Reversed Progress for India's Small Tea Growers?

    - Inter Press Service

    UNAKOTI, India, May 04 (IPS) - As the sun sets over the hills, Prafulla Debbarma, a small tea grower in Dhanbilash village in north eastern India, walks along the labyrinth path of his farm and past a thick blanket of well-grown tea plants. In the fading light, the farmer appears deeply worried. This tea farm, the sole source of his livelihood, remains unharvested thanks to the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.

  9. How South Africa can Address Digital Inequalities in E-learning

    - Inter Press Service

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa, Apr 30 (IPS) - South Africa's education system is complex, with historical inequalities dating back to apartheid. Most of the country's pupils come from disadvantaged backgrounds. Language is an issue; most pupils do not speak English as a mother tongue, yet English dominates in many classrooms. And, as the COVID-19 crisis has showed, there's a huge digital divide at play.

  10. Pandemic Lays Bare Africa’s Deficits, but Youth Will Grow the Future

    - Inter Press Service

    IBADAN, Nigeria, Apr 29 (IPS) - Africa's frailties have been brutally exposed by the coronavirus pandemic. The virus has reached nearly every country on this continent of 1.3 billion people and the World Health Organization warns there could be 10 million cases within six months. Ten countries have no ventilators at all.

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