Archive for ‘Climate carnage’

18/09/2025

‘The Needs Are Huge’: Pakistan Reels from Floods as Millions Left Homeless

Human Wrongs Watch

By Vibhu Mishra

(UN News)* — A senior UN humanitarian official in Pakistan has warned that “the needs are huge” as massive floods across Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit-Baltistan continue to leave millions homeless, destroying vital crops and pushing fragile communities to the brink.

A seven-year-old wades through waist-deep floodwater in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous – and hardest-hit – province.
© UNICEF/Fahad Ahmed | A seven-year-old wades through waist-deep floodwater in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous – and hardest-hit – province.

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17/09/2025

Greece’s Latest Assault on Civil Society

Human Wrongs Watch

By Eva Cossé, Senior Researcher for Europe Human Rights Watch*

16 September 2025 — Greece’s Migration Minister Thanos Plevris recently announced his intention to adopt new measures to silence criticism of the government’s migration policies.

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A group of newly-arrived migrants board a ferry in Souda, on the island of Crete, Greece, July 11, 2025. © 2025 Nicolas Economou/Reuters

The move, which came in the wake of a victory by civil society groups at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), is part of the Greek government’s broader assault on civil society and is likely to worsen the already hostile environment for nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), particularly those working on migration.

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17/09/2025

Most of This Population Wants Immigrants, But Not the Government

Human Wrongs Watch

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PORTLAND, USA, Sep 15 2025 (IPS)** Most of the population in this country wants immigrants, but the current government does not share the same sentiment.
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Opinion polls show that the majority of the U.S. population holds positive views on immigration. Credit: Shutterstock.

The country in question is the United States, often referred to as a nation of immigrants, home to more immigrants than any other country worldwide, having received over 100 million immigrants since its founding in 1776.

Opinion polls show that the majority of the U.S. population holds positive views on immigration.

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16/09/2025

United Nations’ Humanitarian Work ‘Underfunded, Overstretched, and Under Attack’

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — “Underfunded, overstretched and under attack” is how the United Nation’s top aid official has referred to the UN and the support it is providing to the humanitarian sector.

A child stands amidst the ruins left in the aftermath of the devastating October 2023 earthquakes in Herat, Afghanistan.
© WHO/Zakarya Safari | A child stands amidst the ruins left in the aftermath of the devastating October 2023 earthquakes in Herat, Afghanistan.

The international community is currently dealing with multiple humanitarian crises across the world, including conflict-driven crises in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen.

Other crisis hotspots include Afghanistan, Haiti, Myanmar and the Sahel.

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16/09/2025

NGOs on a Virtual Blacklist at UN High-Level Meetings of World Leaders

Human Wrongs Watch

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 15 2025 (IPS)* – When the high-level meeting of over 150 world political leaders takes place September 22-30, thousands of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and their accredited UN representatives will either be banned from the UN premises or permitted into the building on a strictly restricted basis– as it happens every year.

This year will not be an exception to the rule.

The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) is a coalition of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in over 100 countries promoting adherence to, and implementation of, the United Nations nuclear weapons ban treaty. Credit: ICAN

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15/09/2025

Back from Iran, Afghan Families Wonder What Tomorrow Holds

Human Wrongs Watch

By the International Organization for Migration (IOM)*

Herat, Afghanistan, 12 September 2025 At the Islam Qala border, the wind never rests. Dust stings the eyes and clings to skin as the 40–degree heat turns the ground into a furnace.

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15/09/2025

The United Nations Turns 80: a Miracle It Has Lasted So Long

Human Wrongs Watch

SANTIAGO, Chile, Sep 12 2025 (IPS)** At eighty, the United Nations is bogged down by structural limitations and political divisions that render it powerless to act decisively – nowhere more clearly than in the Gaza genocide.
 

 

There is only one treaty in the world that, despite its limitations, binds nations together: the United Nations Charter. Representatives of fifty nations wrote and ratified the UN Charter in 1945, with others joining in the years that followed.

The charter itself only sets the terms for the behaviour of nations. It does not and cannot create a new world. It depends on individual nations to either live by the charter or die without it.

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14/09/2025

‘Deadly Floods’ Displace over 100,000 in South Sudan

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — Over 100,000 people in South Sudan have been displaced by what the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, has called “new deadly floods.”

People displaced by flooding carry children and belongings along a waterlogged road in Bentui, South Sudan. (file)
© UNHCR/Tiksa Negeri | People displaced by flooding carry children and belongings along a waterlogged road in Bentui, South Sudan. (file)

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09/09/2025

‘Pervasive Gender Inequalities in Sub-Saharan Africa’s Agrifood Systems, Despite Women Powering Half the Agrifood Workforce’

Human Wrongs Watch

By FAO’s Regional Office for Africa*

Dakar  In sub-Saharan Africa, approximately three out of four working women (76 percent) are employed in agrifood systems, and women make up 49 percent of the agrifood systems workforce.

©FAO

Within agrifood systems, women’s employment in off-farm segments – such as production, processing, distribution, consumption and packaging – is increasing across the region, rising to 29 percent in 2022 from 21 percent in 2005.

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08/09/2025

‘Tell Us When the Next Storm Will Come’—Human Stories From Kashmir’s Deadliest August

Human Wrongs Watch

SRINAGAR & KISTIWAR, India, Sep 4 2025 (IPS)* – The relentless rain that battered the mountains and valleys of Jammu and Kashmir this August shattered lives and records.
 
The Kishtwar cloudburst on August 26 buried Chesoti village beneath a torrent of mud and boulders, killing at least 65 people, with several still missing. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

The Kishtwar cloudburst on August 26 buried Chesoti village beneath a torrent of mud and boulders, killing at least 65 people, with several still missing. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

In the span of just 31 days, more than 100 lives were lost, scores of families were displaced, and entire communities devastated, not just by the sheer force of nature but by the uncertainty and chaos that followed.

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