By Natalia Micevic in Beni, the Democratic Republic of Congo*
Attacks by armed groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s eastern Beni region is forcing families from their lands in the so-called “triangle of death.”
24 August 2018 (UNHCR)* – When gun and machete-toting assailants swept into her village and started hacking at her neighbours, Priscilla ran for her life.
“They cut my parents’ throats and killed them because they were too old to run,” says the 48-year-old. “We hid in the bush for three days, almost naked, with barely anything on our backs.”
25 August 2018 (UN Environment)* – An analysis of a new draft rule to regulate greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. power generation sector clearly demonstrates the dangers of air pollution, with up to 1,400 extra deaths per year expected from proposed changes to how coal-fired power plants can operate.
The analysis, released this week by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), looks at the impacts of replacing the Clean Power Plan – a 2015 rule to cut greenhouse gas emissions from power plants by 32 per cent by 2030 – with the Affordable Clean Energy Rule.
Under the Clean Power Plan, the federal government handed states targets on reducing emissions and encouraged the closure of coal-fired power plants. The new rule allows states themselves to set targets and encourages existing coal-fired power plants to increase their efficiency as the “best system of emission reduction”.
The mass human exodus that began last autumn from Myanmar to Bangladesh has turned Cox’s Bazar into the world’s largest refugee settlement.
Refugee Nurul Amin, 35, watches families arrive in the mega refugee camp of Kutupalong, Cox’s Bazar. They are on their way from the UN transit centre to their new homes inside the camp. Photo: Ingebjørg Kårstad/NRC
.
24 August, 2018 (Norwegian Refugee Council)* – “When the Myanmar military attacked my home, I lost four of my closest family members; my father, my brother, my sister and one of my nephews.
.
Everything I owned was burned down – I’ve lost everything,” says Nurul Amin, 35, a refugee in Cox’s Bazar. He arrived with his family a year ago.
The European Union sparked controversy by extending heavy restrictions on genetically modified organisms by classifying them as gene-edited crops.
You probably heard less about a public meeting hosted by the FDA on “cultured meat” – meats that don’t come directly from animals, but instead from cell cultures.
25 August 2018 (Wall Street International)*–Mangroves are one of the most biologically complex ecosystems on earth. They play a very important role in mankind’s well-being and on the health of our planet.
If you’ve traveled in the tropics or subtropical regions, you surely have noticed the peculiar group of trees growing along the shores, estuaries, or rivers.
Those are called mangroves. Mangroves are trees and shrubs that grow on low-oxygen soil and salty conditions. They thrive even when they are flooded twice daily by ocean tides.
COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh, 24 August 2018 (UNFPA)* – 25 August marks the one-year anniversary of the fastest-growing refugee crisis in the world. Over 720,000 Rohingya have fled violence in Myanmar in the past twelve months, joining some 213,000 already in Bangladesh to create the world’s most densely populated refugee settlement.
Harrowing accounts of gender-based violence have been widely reported.
Many of the refugees walk for days before reaching safety. They brave jungles, mountains and rivers to seek shelter in one of the settlements in Cox’s Bazar District. More than half of them are women and girls.
Juba (IOM)* – South Sudan is one of the most dangerous and challenging places in the world to be an aid worker. Thousands of South Sudanese risk their lives every day to provide lifesaving assistance in their own communities, with millions of people facing unprecedented levels of humanitarian need since the crisis broke out in December 2013.
Amura, midwife. IOM/Mclaughlin 2018.
In a country beset by conflict, one can wake up and find an emergency suddenly strike in their own village, driving individuals to provide assistance in extremely difficult and challenging conditions.
24 August 2018 (Norwegian Refugee Council)* – The Norwegian Refugee Council is appalled by recent media reports of killings of civilians by parties to the conflict in Yemen.
.
10-year-old Moamer is one of thousands of affected civilians in Yemen. Photo: Nuha Mohammed/NRC
Statement from the Norwegian Refugee Council’s acting country director in Yemen, Suze van Meegen:
“We are appalled by conflict that appears entirely ungoverned by the laws of war and astounded at the silence of the many governments enabling it. We cannot comprehend any possible moral justification for killing civilians fleeing to safety as their towns become battlegrounds.
An alarming 22.2 million people in Yemen need some kind of humanitarian or protection assistance, an estimated 17.8 million are food insecure-8.4 million people are severely food insecure and at risk of starvation- 16 million lack access to safe water and sanitation, and 16.4 million lack access to adequate healthcare.
NEW YORK, 24 August 2018 (UNICEF)* – “I had hoped that the outrage that followed the Saada attack in Yemen two weeks ago would be a turning point in the conflict. Yesterday’s reported attacks in Ad-Durayhimi, killing 26 children, indicates that it was not.
Boy playing on piece of exploded artillery shell which landed near his home, in the village of Al Mahjar, a suburb of Sana’a, Yemen. Photo: UNICEF/Mohamed Hamoud
“I – once again – call for the warring parties, those who have influence over them, the UN Security Council and the international community to take action and end this conflict once and for all.