More than 4 million vaccine doses have been flown toPyongyang, raising hopes that North Korea could open up again to UN agencies and NGOs amid…
View More Four million vaccine doses for children and pregnant women flown to North KoreaCategory: Global Development
Doctor behind trial of HIV prevention drug recounts breakthrough moment
When the doctor behind the trial of a new HIV prevention drug heard the results, she could not contain her emotions. “I literally burst into…
View More Doctor behind trial of HIV prevention drug recounts breakthrough momentHIV drug could be made for just $40 a year for every patient
A new drug described as “the closest we have ever been to an HIV vaccine” could cost $40 (£31) a year for every patient, a…
View More HIV drug could be made for just $40 a year for every patientMost new HIV infections occurred outside sub-Saharan Africa for first time – UN report
The majority of new HIV infections last year occurred in countries outside sub-Saharan Africa for the first time. African countries have made swift progress…
View More Most new HIV infections occurred outside sub-Saharan Africa for first time – UN reportLuxury ute tax loophole costs Australians $250m a year, researchers say
A loophole in Australia’s tax law is in effect subsidising the price of luxury utes such as Ram and Chevrolet SUVs, costing taxpayers more than…
View More Luxury ute tax loophole costs Australians $250m a year, researchers sayMyanmar junta ‘bombing schools’, with 170 sites hit in past three years – report
Airstrikes, arson, shelling and ground fighting between the military and armed rebel groups have damaged at least 174 schools and universities in Myanmar since a…
View More Myanmar junta ‘bombing schools’, with 170 sites hit in past three years – reportFilm honours 41 ‘heroines’ lost in Guatemala children’s home fire
Ada Kelly Alfaro says the cries from friends asking for help still haunt her daughter, Cynthia Phaola Morales, seven years after she survived a fire…
View More Film honours 41 ‘heroines’ lost in Guatemala children’s home fireUK ‘turning a blind eye’ to threats to kill Saudi activists living in exile
Saudi exiles living in the UK have spoken of threats to their lives and harassment over their support for improvements in human rights in their…
View More UK ‘turning a blind eye’ to threats to kill Saudi activists living in exileScores of asylum-seeking children are still missing from the UK’s Home Office hotels as a new report reveals that many are likely to have been trafficked. The most recent figures show that 118 unaccompanied children remain unaccounted for, some as young as 12. The study, released on Wednesday, is the first to conclude that children placed inside the hotels were at “increased risk of trafficking”, contradicting Home Office claims that the youngsters were not exploited. Experts said the findings reinforced demands for an official inquiry into the “national scandal”. The report, by the University College London (UCL) and Ecpat UK, was commissioned after it was revealed last year that dozens of asylum-seeking children were kidnapped by criminal gangs from hotels run by the Home Office. Basic checks to keep youngsters safe were not carried out in a scandal regarded among the most shameful of the last government. The new report details interviews with professionals involved in the care of the children, including a former Home Office hotel worker who knew of three trafficking incidents from their hotel. Traffickers contacted the young people, they said, “via a fake [social media] account or Facebook … [It] is not that they are naive, but when in such a bad situation, they think: ‘OK, it’s the risk but this place is also bad.’” Researchers found that Home Office attempts to protect the children actually drove them into the hands of criminals. Hotel staff were instructed to knock on the doors of children every hour throughout the night, especially for nationalities deemed to be of high risk of going missing, such as Albanians. “Ironically, [this was] the reason that most kids went missing,” said the former Home Office hotel worker. Seven hotels were run by the Home Office to accommodate minors who arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel in small boats, many from Africa, including Eritrea and Sudan. Such hotels were in operation from 2021 until January 2024 after a high court ruling deemed them unlawful.
Snakes beware: reptiles targeted across Bangladesh after rise in sightings of Russell’s viper
Amin Mandol was harvesting peanuts from a char – a bank of sand and silt – in the Padma, the lower part of the Ganges,…
View More Snakes beware: reptiles targeted across Bangladesh after rise in sightings of Russell’s viper