LGBT+ women footballers score as male players fear to come out

Men's football still lacks top-tier openly gay players, while the women's game is full of proudly lesbian and bisexual stars

Many U.S. cities cannot measure climate emissions progress - report

Cities account for two-thirds of the world's energy demand and 70% of energy-related emissions


Sewing a way out of sex work in Spain

Paid work - making clothes - is a path back to normality, they say, a way to feel useful, not used, and learn how to fit into society after being trafficked underground


In New York, a diverse, new group works the soil

Women and non-binary people are running some of the best-known organic farms on Long Island, in what is a growing, $50 billion industry nationwide


Act now to avert disaster in drought-hit East Africa, aid agencies say

More than 15 million people across the Horn of Africa are struggling to access basics such as food and water after poor rainy seasons destroyed their crops


Bangladesh tries new way to aid flood-hit families: cash up front

Money in advance of an expected disaster can give vulnerable people resources to avoid the worst losses, backers say


Britons care more about climate change than Brexit, survey shows

Seven in 10 British adults believe climate change matters more in the long term than quitting the EU, says a poll commissioned by Christian Aid


INSIGHT-Wrongful detentions, judges' quotas in the search for illegals in India's Assam

U.N. experts warned that the citizenship drive in Assam risked rendering millions stateless or in prolonged detention, and that the process 'could fuel religious discrimination'


WIDER IMAGE-Reuters photo captures Guatemalan mother begging soldier to let her enter U.S.

Almost a third of Mexico's National Guard are now assigned to patrol the border to stem the flow of U.S.-bound migrants


115 feared dead after worst Mediterranean shipwreck of the year

Libya is a hub for migrants, many of whom try to reach Europe in unseaworthy boats


Climate records fall as Europe bakes in heatwave

Climate specialists said such heatwaves are becoming more frequent as a result of global warming from greenhouse gas emissions



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