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World Wide Jun 05, 2026

Gaza’s Infrastructure Crumbles as Gas, Engine Oil and Spare Parts Run Out

Palestinians in Gaza face a new wave of hardship as shortages of gas, engine oil and spare parts cr…
Amid an already dire humanitarian situation, Gaza is now confronting a cascade of infrastructure failures caused by acute shortages of fuel, engine oil and critical spare parts. The lack of these basic supplies is halting hospital generators, crippling water desalination, and grounding emergency vehicles, deepening the crisis for millions of residents. Humanitarian Crisis Deepens: Critical Shortages of Fuel, Oil and Parts in Gaza Dr Raed Hussein, director of the al‑Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, warned that a small generator supporting the main 400 kVA unit failed, forcing the shutdown of surgical operating rooms. Similar failures are reported across civil defence, where fire‑rescue vehicles and ambulances are out of service due to lack of fuel and engine oil. Cost Surge and Resource Scarcity: Numbers Behind the Shortage Engine oil price: ≈2,200 shekels per litre (up from ~25 shekels pre‑war). Seal component price: from 7‑12 shekels to hundreds of shekels. Cylinder head gasket: from 120 shekels to ≈2,000 shekels. Desalination output: 16,000 m³/day (down from 20,000 m³/day in March). Three firefighting vehicles and two ambulances have already broken down. Ripple Effects on Health, Water and Mobility The generator failures at al‑Aqsa Martyrs Hospital have forced the closure of operating rooms, raising the risk of a health disaster. Water and sanitation systems, already strained by energy restrictions, are producing less clean water, exacerbating disease risk. Transportation has collapsed: many cars sit abandoned, and residents like Heba Qahman must push wheelchairs for hours to reach distant hospitals. What Lies Ahead: Prospects for Relief and Systemic Recovery Humanitarian agencies warn that without a steady flow of fuel, oil and spare parts, essential services will continue to deteriorate. UNICEf highlights the need for immediate access to energy supplies and replacement components to restore water treatment capacity. Long‑term recovery will depend on lifting restrictions on imports and establishing reliable supply chains, otherwise Gaza’s infrastructure may face irreversible damage.
#Gaza #Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital #UNICEF
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Education Jun 04, 2026

Nigeria's Second-Chance Schools: Empowering Women Through Education

In northern Nigeria, a growing number of women are enrolling in second-chance schools to gain educa…
The Plight of Women in Northern Nigeria In northern Nigeria, particularly in rural communities, girls are more likely to drop out of school due to cultural practices such as early marriage or poverty, which forces parents to prioritize enrolling male children over females. According to UNICEF, more than half of the girls in the region are not attending school. The Women Centre for Continuing Education The Women Centre for Continuing Education (WCCE) in Sokoto State, northwest Nigeria, was established in 1997 to provide adult education and vocational skills to women. The centre offers a three-year curriculum for its primary section and three years each in the junior and senior levels for secondary sections. Students also sit for the mandatory Junior Leaving School Certificate of Education (JLSCE) and Senior School Certificate of Education (SSCE) examinations. The Challenges Despite the initiative, several challenges persist, including poverty, early marriage, and restrictive gender norms that prioritize domestic responsibilities over education. Many women lose confidence after years away from formal education, and some communities still view education as an investment for boys rather than a lifelong right for women. The Way Forward To bridge the gender disparity in education, Nigeria must adopt a lifelong learning framework that recognizes education as a continuous right and opportunity. This requires increased investment in adult education, digital and remote learning platforms, community-based education, and flexible pathways for women who missed formal schooling.
#Nigeria #Women's Education #Second-Chance Schools
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World Wide May 29, 2026

Israeli Forces Cross Litani River, Killing Five in Southern Lebanon

Israeli air strikes and a ground advance across the Litani River on 29 May 2026 killed at least fiv…
On 29 May 2026, Israeli air strikes and a ground push that crossed the Litani River resulted in at least five civilian deaths in southern Lebanon, while Pentagon‑level talks were scheduled to address the rapidly deteriorating security situation. Israeli Ground Advance Across the Litani River Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that Israeli forces had moved north of the Litani River, roughly 30 km from the border, marking a significant expansion of the ground offensive. The advance was accompanied by air strikes on towns such as Abbasiyeh and Deir Qanoun al‑Nahr, and evacuation warnings for seven additional southern towns. Casualty Toll and Child Impact Figures Five civilians killed in the latest strikes. Four deaths in Abbasiyeh and one in Deir Qanoun al‑Nahr. UNICEF reported 15 children killed and 62 injured in the past week, averaging 11 child casualties every 24 hours. Lebanese Ministry of Public Health cites 77 children killed or injured in the last seven days. Since March 2, 126 civil‑defence workers have been killed and 310 wounded. Humanitarian Crisis and Regional Stability Risks The intensified bombardment has forced hundreds of thousands of Lebanese to flee their homes, with about 40 hospitals in the south already closed. Aid groups, including Doctors Without Borders, warn they may have to withdraw if security does not improve, compounding the risk of a broader humanitarian catastrophe. Prospects for Pentagon Talks and Conflict Trajectory Lebanese and Israeli delegations are set to meet at the Pentagon, where Lebanon will demand an immediate halt to Israeli attacks. Israeli Brigadier General Amichai Levin and Lebanese officer Georges Rizkallah will represent their sides. The outcome of these talks could influence whether the conflict remains localized or escalates further, especially given U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's expressed support for Lebanon’s sovereignty.
#Israel #Lebanon #Litani River
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Entertainment May 29, 2026

TV tonight: Olly Murs' Soccer Aid spectacular and more

Olly Murs takes part in the 20th annual Soccer Aid match, alongside celebrities like Jill Scott and…
Olly Murs Steps Into the Unknown for Soccer AidOlly Murs recently completed a brutal 400km journey from Old Trafford in Manchester to the London Stadium by running, cycling and rowing – and raised £830,000 for Unicef. On Sunday, he will take part in the 20th annual Soccer Aid match, along with Jill Scott, Tom Hiddleston, Wayne Rooney, Jermain Defoe, Owen Cooper and Angry Ginge.Under the VinesPressing concerns: the first season of this breezy wine-making daytime drama saw chalk-and-cheese step-cousins Louis (Charles Edwards) and Daisy (Rebecca Gibney) grow close after jointly inheriting a kaput New Zealand vineyard. But as this second run begins, Louis seems set on heading back to London with his ex.Gardeners' WorldWith summer making an early appearance, now is the time to embrace Monty Don’s colourful, bold flowers. Only got a patio to play with? Rekha Mistry has big plans for a small space. And Carol Klein is discovering the science of what happens to a seed from the very moment it is sown.Hunting Britain’s Fugitives: DispatchesHow many people are at large in the UK, guilty of serious crimes, but on the run and easily evading the authorities? Lawbreakers may think justice will never catch up with them, but some are less successful at escaping the attentions of reporter Matt Shea, who takes it upon himself to track them down and, in spite of the potential threat of violence, confront them.PoniesAmerican widows Bea (Emilia Clarke) and Twila (Haley Lu Richardson) have made an impactful debut as spies in Moscow in 1977: they’ve burned down a pub. How can they top that? A confident comedy drama fleshes out its two protagonists by giving Bea a new mission that requires her to toughen up, while Twila benefits from letting her guard down.Smoggie QueensLike a more chaotic, camper Beautiful People, the series ends with a bang as the gang, through flashbacks, recount a cheating scandal that happened during the final of the Mr Teesside competition. Expect several unreliable narrators, fake chest hair and “Detective Sexy” (AKA Dickie wearing fake breasts and a Sherlock cap).Film choiceFuze (David Mackenzie, 2025), 6.15am, 12.10pm, 8pm, Sky Cinema Premiere. Two of the bookies’ favourites to be the next James Bond go head to head in David Mackenzie’s tense, rug-pulling thriller. Aaron Taylor-Johnson stars as no-nonsense army bomb disposal major Will Tranter, called to defuse a second world war bomb in central London.
#Olly Murs #Soccer Aid #ITV1
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Health May 23, 2026

Bangladesh measles outbreak kills over 500 children

A measles outbreak in Bangladesh has killed over 500 children, with 13 deaths reported in the past …
The Measles Outbreak in Bangladesh A measles outbreak in Bangladesh has killed more than 500 children in the deadliest surge there in decades. The death toll continued to rise on Saturday, with 13 children passing away in the past 24 hours alone, increasing the total to 512, according to a health department tally that began on March 15. Causes and Complications of Measles Measles, which has no specific treatment once caught, is a highly contagious viral disease that spreads through coughs and sneezes. The disease primarily affects children and can cause severe complications, including pneumonia, brain inflammation and death, particularly among malnourished or unvaccinated children. Vaccination Efforts and Challenges The South Asian nation of 175 million people has rolled out a mass vaccination drive to combat the outbreak. United Nations children’s agency (UNICEF) country chief Rana Flowers said this week that the campaign has reached 18 million children. However, the health department said the full impact of the vaccinations would take months to be felt. The Impact on Healthcare and Future Prospects Hospitals in the capital Dhaka, which have been overwhelmed with cases, have set up dedicated wards but lack sufficient numbers of intensive care beds. UNICEF stressed the need to boost vaccination programmes and increase funding for health facilities, surveillance and data systems in the future. Future Outlook and Prevention UNICEF said gaps in immunisation worsened during and after the chaos of the 2024 student-led uprising that toppled the government, leaving large numbers of children unprotected. The health department’s death toll comes after the government said the outbreak was now contained, noting a decline in cases in several previously hard-hit areas.
#Bangladesh #Measles Outbreak #UNICEF
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World Wide May 11, 2026

Royal Opera House Urges UK to Intervene in Case of Jailed Georgian Bass Singer

The Royal Opera House in London has urged UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer to intervene in the case o…
The Plight of Paata Burchuladze The Royal Opera House in London has urged Keir Starmer to intervene in the case of Paata Burchuladze, a world-renowned bass singer who has been imprisoned in Georgia since October on a charge of leading a coup against the country’s authoritarian leader. The Event Details The 71-year-old Burchuladze, who has performed at the Royal Opera House and the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, was arrested after joining a protest outside the presidential palace in the Georgian capital, Tbilisi. He was given a seven-year jail sentence, which Burchuladze suggested to the court was equivalent to a life sentence given his age. The Data Analysis Burchuladze has been a high-profile pro-democracy campaigner in Georgia for more than a decade. He has also served as a goodwill ambassador for the UN and Unicef. More than 100 people are considered political prisoners in Georgia. Over 500 people were arrested during recent peaceful demonstrations, with more than 300 reporting torture and ill treatment. The Impact Analysis Burchuladze's imprisonment is seen as a warning to others who dare oppose the regime in Georgia, which is perceived to be pivoting away from the west and towards Russia. The EU has suspended its negotiations over Georgia’s accession to the bloc as a result of the regime’s democratic backsliding. The Prediction The Royal Opera House's appeal for Burchuladze's release has been echoed by other international figures, including Christina Scheppelmann, the general artistic director at Belgium’s national opera, La Monnaie, in Brussels. The outcome of this case may have significant implications for Georgia's democratic future and its relations with the west.
#Royal Opera House #Paata Burchuladze #Georgia
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Environment Apr 29, 2026

South Sudan Faces Catastrophic Hunger Crisis as 8 Million People at Risk

Nearly eight million people in South Sudan face acute hunger as conflict and displacement worsen a …
The Growing Humanitarian CatastropheNearly eight million people in South Sudan are at risk of acute hunger as conflict and displacement worsen an already dire humanitarian crisis, according to a United Nations report. The situation has reached critical levels, with international organizations warning of an "irreversible humanitarian catastrophe" if immediate action is not taken.Escalating Food Insecurity CrisisPublished on Tuesday, the report warns that 7.8 million people in the country will suffer high levels of food insecurity in the coming months — equivalent to 56 percent of the population. The Food and Agriculture Organization, World Food Programme and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) have called on the international community to take immediate action to prevent what they described as an "irreversible humanitarian catastrophe."Alarming Child Malnutrition StatisticsThe report states that the number of children aged between six months and five years old who are suffering from acute malnutrition has risen by 100,000 over the past six months, to a total 2.2 million. It estimates that 700,000 children are at grave risk of dying. Many nutritional services in South Sudan have been damaged or closed due to ongoing fighting, driving up the number of people at risk of acute malnutrition. Meanwhile, supply shortages and inadequate funding have reduced access to life-saving treatment.Root Causes of the CrisisThe humanitarian crisis in South Sudan — the world's youngest country — is being fuelled by ethnic conflict, climate change and the spillover of fighting from neighbouring Sudan, with which it broke following a referendum in 2011. The country's worsening economic crisis has further compounded the situation. South Sudan remains one of the poorest countries in the world.Political Instability and Future OutlookIn recent months, fears have grown that the nation could return to all-out civil war, more than seven years after a peace agreement in 2018 ostensibly ended fighting that led to the deaths of nearly 400,000 people. Heavy clashes between the state army, the South Sudan People's Defence Forces, and opposition groups have intensified in recent months. The tensions stem from a long-standing feud between President Salva Kiir Mayardit and suspended Vice President Riek Machar, who is currently on trial in Juba on charges of murder, treason and crimes against humanity, which he denies.
#South Sudan #UNICEF #World Food Programme
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Health Apr 27, 2026

The Silent Killer: How War and Neglect Revived Measles in Sudan's Darfur

A devastating measles outbreak has swept through East Darfur, Sudan, killing dozens and infecting o…
East Darfur, Sudan — Hawa Adam did not expect a childhood illness to kill her son. Ali was two years old when he fell sick on February 25 in Labado, in Sudan’s East Darfur state. He died two days later.“I thought it was one of the ordinary childhood diseases,” the 37-year-old told Al Jazeera. “I never imagined I would lose my child to this epidemic.”Hawa attributes his death to the absence of basic medical care – no vaccination, no qualified doctors. “Most doctors”, she says, “left the area after the war broke out, forcing those with means to seek treatment abroad, in South Sudan or Uganda.”The Collapse of Routine Immunization in East DarfurA measles outbreak has struck several Labado districts since March, killing approximately 70 people and infecting about 1,000 others across 12 residential neighbourhoods, in a population of roughly 12,000, which includes displaced people who arrived during the war, according to Mohamed Abdel Aziz, 32, coordinator of the Labado crisis unit.Those numbers were disputed by East Darfur’s health director, Dr Jabir al-Nadeef, who confirmed to Al Jazeera that measles has struck four districts of the state, but only reported 300 cases and 26 deaths, figures that diverge substantially from those documented by the Labado emergency room.“Vaccines only arrived on April 11 from Chad via UNICEF [United Nations Children’s Fund ], after a prolonged period with no supply, and a vaccination campaign is scheduled to run from April 18 to 24 across the state,” he said.Measles is one of the world’s most contagious diseases, spread by contact with infected nasal or throat secretions or breathing in air that was breathed out by someone with measles, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Outbreaks can result in severe complications and deaths, especially among young, malnourished children.Transmission: Contact with infected secretions or airborne particles.Current Coverage: Measles vaccination has fallen to 46 percent.Routine Immunization: First dose of diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis dropped to 48 percent in 2024.Quantifying the Human Cost: Disputed Death Toll and Economic BarriersThe first measles cases in Darfur in the current outbreak were recorded in January, according to UNICEF. It is unfolding against the backdrop of a near-total collapse of public health infrastructure across Darfur, where war has gutted facilities, halted routine vaccination and driven out medical personnel.“We discovered the outbreak by accident,” Abdel Aziz, the coordinator, told Al Jazeera. The teams had been conducting home visits for a fire-prevention workshop when they saw the scale of the outbreak, with almost half of the homes visited having measles cases.In the al-Nil neighbourhood, Ismail Issa, 38, lost his two-year-old daughter Makarem on March 11. His brother Ahmed lost an 18-month-old son, Issa, on March 25. Then Hasan, the three-year-old son of Ismail’s sister Medeeha, died on March 23. All three families live in adjoining homes, and the infection passed between them.Abdel Aziz traced much of the death toll directly to a supply failure. Medicines ran out at the government health centre on February 23. Drugs remain available at private pharmacies, but most residents cannot afford them.Intravenous fluids: 8,000 Sudanese pounds ($20.50).Antibiotics: 10,000 to 15,000 pounds ($25.60 to 38.40).A Public Health Catastrophe UnfoldingAsmaa Jalaluddin, 28, lives in the Dar al-Naim West neighbourhood of Labado with her three children. Her three-year-old daughter, Mashaer Rajab al-Sheikh, fell ill on April 5 with fever, diarrhoea and persistent vomiting. She stopped eating and kept her eyes shut for four days.On April 8, Asmaa took her to the Labado health centre, where she was told her daughter had measles. With no medicines available, she was directed to travel to Shuairiya, 40 kilometres north. There, on April 10, Mashaer received fever reducers and vitamins and slowly began to open her eyes again. She was discharged two days later.Local doctors are now calling for intervention from international health organisations, noting that diseases that had been eliminated are returning.UNICEF spokesperson for Sudan, Eva Hinds, told Al Jazeera that “measles cases continue to be reported across Darfur, with insecurity, displacement, damaged health facilities, and prolonged disruption to routine immunisation all constraining the response.”UNICEF says that a measles-rubella vaccine catch-up campaign has been completed across all localities in Central Darfur and West Darfur, as well as parts of North and South Darfur, reaching approximately 2.1 million children aged nine to 14. Vaccination in remaining areas, including East Darfur, is scheduled for mid to end of April, aiming to reach close to 750,000 children across all nine of the state’s localities.The Long Road to RecoveryFor the families of Labado, the calendar offers little comfort. In the al-Nil neighbourhood, three siblings buried their children within days of one another over the Eid holiday. In Dar al-Naim West, a mother counts the days until her daughter’s 14-day isolation ends. In the Safaa neighbourhood, Hawa Adam has already buried hers.“They could have still been alive,” Hawa Adam said. “Those without money die in Darfur.”
#Sudan #Measles #UNICEF
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Business Apr 27, 2026

EasyJet's Compassionate Policy Tested by Family Facing Child's Brain Tumour

A UK family, coping with a toddler's grade‑4 brain tumour, was denied a full refund for a £4,000 Ea…
Lead: A Tragic Diagnosis Meets an Inflexible Airline PolicyJB from Wiltshire is organising a wedding when his two‑year‑old daughter receives a diagnosis of an aggressive grade‑4 brain tumour. The family booked £4,000 of EasyJet flights for a stag‑do, but the airline offered only a voucher for one passenger and a tax refund for the rest, citing a narrow interpretation of its compassionate‑illness policy.EasyJet Refuses Full Refund for Stag Party Amid Child's Cancer DiagnosisBooking: 14 passengers, total cost £4,000Request: Credit note to postpone travel for all passengersAirline response: Voucher for the best‑man's fare + tax refund for othersPolicy cited: "Compassionate serious illness policy" applies only when the patient is on the booking£4,000 Booking and Refund Offer BreakdownThe airline’s partial offer covered roughly £200 in tax refunds, leaving the majority of the group out‑of‑pocket. Travel insurance was available for most participants, but excess fees and uncertain payouts meant many would still bear significant costs.Implications for Airline Compassion Policies and Consumer TrustEasyJet promotes a partnership with Unicef and publicises its commitment to children’s health, creating a stark contrast with its handling of this case. The incident raises questions about:Transparency of "compassionate" clauses in terms and conditionsConsistency of policy application across all passengers on a bookingPotential reputational damage when corporate messaging clashes with customer experiencePotential Regulatory Scrutiny and Calls for Policy ReformConsumer‑rights groups may push for clearer guidelines requiring airlines to extend compassionate refunds to entire bookings when a family member is critically ill. If regulators intervene, EasyJet could be compelled to revise its terms, making the policy discretionary language less ambiguous and ensuring equitable treatment for all affected passengers.
#easyJet #Unicef #UK
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