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  • World NewsTexas abortion ban has ‘vast psychological consequences’

    Texas abortion ban has ‘vast psychological consequences’

    When Sam realized she was pregnant, she knew exactly what she wanted to do. “I woke up with morning sickness a few weeks after a one-night-stand and immediately scheduled an appointment with Planned Parenthood,” said the financial advisor, who asked we use her nickname, in an interview with DW. The year was 1982 and Sam, who was 19 years old…

  • SponsoredThe Thaiger Digital Summit – Seven Thai Tech Start-Ups Speak Out

    The Thaiger Digital Summit – Seven Thai Tech Start-Ups Speak Out

    Disrupt or Die. Tune in to a full-tilt, one-hour online event led by The Thaiger’s Co-Founder and leading digital entrepreneur Michael Kenner. On the virtual stage will be fast-paced conversations with seven amazing start-up disruptors who are set to change Thailand’s online space. From super apps, the sharing economy, big data, to taking business off the sois and onto digital…

  • World NewsGerman election: What’s at stake for India?

    German election: What’s at stake for India?

    At the end of October 2019, German Chancellor Angela Merkel embarked on one of her last major international visits before the pandemic struck. Accompanied by a dozen key government officials, as well as a high-profile business delegation, Merkel traveled to India with the specific goal to “deepen and consolidate” a relationship that has undoubtedly grown in importance since she became…

  • World NewsItaly: Palermo puts migrant children center stage

    Italy: Palermo puts migrant children center stage

    When the Rainbow Choir reunited for its first rehearsals after the pandemic last summer, the sense of excitement was palpable. “Louder,” bellowed the ensemble’s maestro, snapping his fingers as he paced around the room. The young singers needed little encouragement — grinning in unison, they soared through another verse of an Italian movie soundtrack. Run by the Teatro Massimo, Palermo’s…

  • World NewsAngela Merkel in Poland: Bidding good-bye to a difficult partner

    Angela Merkel in Poland: Bidding good-bye to a difficult partner

    After Angela Merkel was elected chancellor of Germany in the fall of 2005, Warsaw was one of the first capitals she visited, along with Paris and Brussels. Poland had joined the European Union a year earlier. Germany was full of hope as it eyed its new partner on the right bank of the Oder River. Sixteen years later as Merkel…

  • World News9/11, the ‘war on terror’ and the consequences for the world

    9/11, the ‘war on terror’ and the consequences for the world

    Twenty years have passed since the September 11 attacks. At Ground Zero in New York, the towers of a new World Trade Center rise above the skyline, and there is a memorial to the nearly 3,000 victims of the attacks. The city has bounced back and now has more residents than in 2001. Until the pandemic, the economy was booming. …

  • World News9/11 through African eyes

    9/11 through African eyes

    Kenya Zainab Aziz I knew about the attack immediately because I was a journalist, working for the national broadcaster in the capital, Nairobi. In my heart and mind I was thinking of the people inside those buildings. I was shocked, even before I knew the details. The attack gave me flashbacks to the US embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania…

  • World NewsIndian farmers vow to turn up the heat on Modi’s government

    Indian farmers vow to turn up the heat on Modi’s government

    Thousands of farmers gathered at a grain market outside the Indian capital New Delhi this week in protest against new market-friendly agriculture laws that they say threaten their livelihoods. It came after another rally on Sunday involving tens of thousands of farmers vowing to remain defiant against the government over the controversial measures. These rallies proved some of the biggest…

  • World NewsCOVID: How the delta variant has shattered Vietnam’s success

    COVID: How the delta variant has shattered Vietnam’s success

    Through the first four months of this year, Diep Nguyen was enjoying Vietnam’s impressive containment of COVID-19. Her cafe in an upscale area of Ho Chi Minh City was becoming more popular, and she had begun experimenting with serving cocktails. On May 31, she stopped in-person service as several of her employees lived in neighborhoods that were turning into infection…

  • World NewsYoung Slovenian Obama scholar spearheads the fight for water and equal rights

    Young Slovenian Obama scholar spearheads the fight for water and equal rights

    Sunday, July 11, was a typical summer’s day in Slovenia, with temperatures hovering just below 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit). In the evening, as a storm brewed over the capital, Ljubljana, Nika Kovac, the leader of the campaign against the Water Act, was listening to the first unofficial results of the referendum. “The most important thing we have done with…

  • World NewsEgypt: New ruling on hymen repair stirs up controversy

    Egypt: New ruling on hymen repair stirs up controversy

    During a recent live Facebook broadcast in Arabic, Dr Ahmed Mamdouh, director of the Sharia Research Department of Egypt’s highest religious authority, the Dar al-Ifta, said that “in some cases, patching is required and legitimate for a girl who has been raped or deceived and wants to repent and turn a new page.” This new fatwa — the name given…

  • World NewsDW correspondents able to leave Afghanistan

    DW correspondents able to leave Afghanistan

    Just over a week after international coalition forces pulled out of Afghanistan, DW’s correspondents and their families have managed to leave the country via Pakistan. DW had asked all employees in Afghanistan to go to Kabul as soon as possible when it became clear that the Taliban would take control over the country. The situation for journalists in Afghanistan had…

  • World NewsThe lone hero of Abidjan’s cleanup | Thaiger

    The lone hero of Abidjan’s cleanup

    Djo Drigbé is 37 years old and has one mission: to see the city of Abidjan clean. He removes trash from beaches, streets, and gutters. He is unemployed and doesn’t receive any salary for his work. Donations guarantee a meal for his family. Drigbé lives with his partner and son. His dedication has drawn admiration. Drigbé dreams of working for…

  • World NewsAfghan families flee to Pakistan over Taliban forced marriage fears

    Afghan families flee to Pakistan over Taliban forced marriage fears

    Khalid Shinwari, 25, has taken a sigh of relief after managing to flee Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and reaching Pakistan in recent days. A father of three, Shinwari’s family first moved to Pakistan during the Afghan civil war of the 1990s that brought the Taliban to power. “My father then thought that Pakistan would be a safe place to come to, given…

  • World NewsThe comeback of Gambia’s dictator

    The comeback of Gambia’s dictator

    Human rights groups in the Gambia have decried the possible return of former President Yahya Jammeh, who ruled the Gambia from 1994 until he was forced into exile after refusing to accept defeat in the 2016 elections. Jammeh is accused of human rights violations and killings of political opponents during his 22-year reign. Ahead of upcoming presidential elections in December,…

  • World NewsBicycling picks up speed among youth in Kashmir | Thaiger

    Bicycling picks up speed among youth in Kashmir

    A growing number of Kashmiris are taking up bicycling in the restive mountainous region, both to stay fit and fight environmental pollution. SOURCE: DW News

  • World NewsOpinion: Jair Bolsonaro tests Brazil’s democracy

    Opinion: Jair Bolsonaro tests Brazil’s democracy

    Jair Bolsonaro stopped governing a while back. In three years, his government has inaugurated a few local infrastructure projects and liberalized gun laws, which has led to a sharp increase in arms sales in a country that is already notoriously violent. Apart from that, Brazil’s president has promoted the ongoing destruction of the Amazon rainforest and mismanaged the COVID-19 pandemic…

  • World News‘Governing Afghanistan today will not be easy’

    ‘Governing Afghanistan today will not be easy’

    A Taliban spokesman announced on Tuesday the names of those who would fill key government posts as the group assumes complete power over Afghanistan. Despite previously claiming that they would rule differently to the group’s repressive regime in the 1990s, the list was filled with mostly old guard stalwarts. The Taliban’s supreme leader said the new government would be guided…

  • World NewsCan the Taliban govern Afghanistan?

    Can the Taliban govern Afghanistan?

    The Taliban leadership took a long time to announce their interim government — three weeks after taking control of Kabul. Analysts say the fight for Panjshir province kept them busy all this while, and once the last resistance stronghold fell to the group, their spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, unveiled the caretaker government on Tuesday. Even though it is just a caretaker…

  • World NewsIran: The girls choosing education over tradition

    Iran: The girls choosing education over tradition

    Reporter: Dominika Nooripur / Presenter: Ineke Mules SOURCE: DW News

  • World NewsWorld in Progress: Change sweeps the East

    World in Progress: Change sweeps the East

    From the Middle East to Central Asia, new societal trends are emerging that are challenging long-held norms. In Iran, women and girls are banking on education as the key to progress. Young entrepreneurs in Egypt are reaping the rewards of start-ups. Meanwhile in Turkey, Afghan refugees are stuck in a state of limbo. SOURCE: DW News

  • World NewsAfghanistan: What Taliban rule means for Sikhs and Hindus

    Afghanistan: What Taliban rule means for Sikhs and Hindus

    After taking shelter at the Gurdwara Dashmesh Pita at Karta-E-Parwan near Kabul for weeks, Afghan Sikhs and Hindus have left for their homes in different parts of the country. The collapse of Afghanistan’s civilian government and the takeover of the conflict-stricken country by the Taliban last month have thrown the lives of religious minorities in disarray. Just about 250 Sikhs…

  • Sponsored“No Place Like Home” – New Online Care Marketplace SAIJAI Launches Digital Start-Up in Thailand

    “No Place Like Home” – New Online Care Marketplace SAIJAI Launches Digital Start-Up in Thailand

    Press Release A new digital on-demand online marketplace named SAIJAI has launched in Thailand and is setting its sights on democratizing home care in the country. Borne from a dynamic consumer behaviour shift over the past sixteen months to home-based lifestyle needs, the start-up brand is eyeing the Care From Home (CFH) marketplace, Thailand is the first market in its…

  • World NewsParis: Can a trial help heal victims of the Bataclan terror attacks?

    Paris: Can a trial help heal victims of the Bataclan terror attacks?

    Ever since November 13, 2015, Sebastien Dauzet has been feeling vulnerable. That night, nine gunmen attacked what he considers the heart of his neighborhood. Theterrorists killed 130 people in attacks at the Stade de France stadium just north of Paris, as well as in several bars and the Bataclan music venue in the capital. It was France’s bloodiest terror attack…

  • World NewsBelarus: Germany, EU slam Kolesnikova verdict

    Belarus: Germany, EU slam Kolesnikova verdict

    The news from Minsk did not come as much of a surprise: A court in the Belarusian capital on Monday sentenced the well-known Belarusian opposition figure Maria Kolesnikova to 11 years in prison. Her colleague in the Belarusian opposition’s Coordination Council, the lawyer Maxim Znak, was handed a 10-year jail sentence. Kolesnikova became one of the most prominent faces of…

  • World NewsMikhail Khodorkovsky: ‘Dialogue only strengthens Putin’s regime’

    Mikhail Khodorkovsky: ‘Dialogue only strengthens Putin’s regime’

    DW: About a year ago, Alexei Navalny was poisoned. What impact did this have on political life in Russia and on the country’s opposition? Mikhhail Khodorkovsky: Fortunately, this event hasn’t ended badly so far. Alexei Navalny might be in prison but he is still alive. Nevertheless, the poison attack against him is a move away from normal statehood and towards…

  • World NewsGuinea’s future uncertain as coup leaders tighten grip on power

    Guinea’s future uncertain as coup leaders tighten grip on power

    The morning after the coup, the capital woke up on Monday to a new reality which has left Guineans with mixed feelings. “There is a great sense of uncertainty,” said DW’s correspondent in Conakry, Bangaly Conde. “Today we saw an image of Guinea we are not used to see. We are very disappointed with the army,” one Guinean told DW.…

  • World NewsIndia’s ambitious palm oil push triggers biodiversity fears

    India’s ambitious palm oil push triggers biodiversity fears

    The Indian government introduced a new plan in August to boost the production of palm oil. India is one of the largest consumers of palm oil, which is used in almost everything from soaps to chips. But the country still imports most of its palm oil. India also produces a range of other vegetable oils, like mustard and soybean, but…

  • World NewsBattling through Ghana’s lean season

    Battling through Ghana’s lean season

    The World Food Programme reports hunger has increased by 30% higher since year than last year and it is the highest level in a decade. But one man’s initiative is helping those struggling. Nanleeb Konlan farms large plantations of grains,which he distributes for free to poorer communities in the lean season. SOURCE: DW News

  • World NewsWhy is Gambia’s President Adama Barrow scared of his military?

    Why is Gambia’s President Adama Barrow scared of his military?

    Gambian President Adama Barrow wants Senegal to send over 600 troops to his country ahead December elections. This is in addition to the Senegalese forces already there as part of the ECOWAS peace mission deployed in 2017. DW’s Jane Nyingi spoke to Omar Walle in Banjul and first wanted to know if the Gambian army is capable of handling its…