ANALYSIS-Central America's 'poorest of the poor' hit hard by U.S. aid cuts - charities

Hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras was slashed and frozen by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration in June

Homeless photographer's haunting images spotlight London's 'invisible' population

'Homeless people are homeless - they're not hopeless', said the artist


LGBT+ film funding row lands Brazil minister in court

Brazilian prosecutors said the citizenship minister's suspension of film funding was motivated by anti-LGBT+ discrimination


Acne on Instagram? Russian women share their images of beauty

The #AllIsFineWithMe trend is the latest initiative to push back against unrealistic pressures on women and girls to look perfect


Agri-foodtech female leaders struggle to attract investment - report

Agri-foodtech includes a wide range of startups and social enterprises that specialise, for example, in recycling waste, redistributing food surplus or developing sustainable packaging


'Empty promises' could pop bubble of investing for good

As impact investing gains popularity, it is coming under greater scrutiny and mounting pressure to develop global standards through which impact can be properly assessed


TIMELINE-Greta Thunberg's rise from lone protester to Nobel favourite

The 16-year-old is tipped to become the youngest ever recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, which will be announced next week


For sale: UK jail that held Oscar Wilde for gay sex

The jail housed the Irish poet and author for most of the two-year sentence he served for gross indecency


‘All I can do is pray’: A family in limbo as U.S. slows refugee admissions

The U.S. government plans to slash the refugee ceiling to 18,000, its lowest since the modern refugee program began in 1980


Court rules Northern Ireland abortion ban violates UK human rights commitments

Northern Ireland has some of the tightest abortion restrictions in the world, but a change in the law appears inevitable soon


Nearly 600 Burundian refugees head home as mass repatriation starts

Burundi and Tanzania agreed in August to start repatriating 200,000 refugees, saying that conditions in Burundi had improved


Opinion

OPINION: UK government must act to pardon everyone convicted of historic consensual same-sex offences  

The UK government must stop dragging its heels and move quickly to pardon all those convicted of historic consensual same-sex offences



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