World News

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    Could bitcoin serve as a hedge against US Tariffs?

    If you hold a certain amount of bitcoin or whether you’re planning to buy some soon, you must be wondering what impact the US tariffs have on the coveted crypto’s price. A market analysis by Inky Cho, Financial Markets Strategist...

  • Transgender who fled to Thailand faces extradition to Malaysia

    Transgender who fled to Thailand faces extradition to Malaysia

    The future of a transgender Malaysian businesswoman hangs in the balance after she was arrested for illegally entering Thailand while fleeing prosecution under Islamic law in Malaysia. Nur Sajet fled from Malaysia where she faces charges of up to three years in prison and a fine for dressing as a woman in 2018 at a religious event. The transgender cosmetics…

  • Libya: Will elections finally bring healing?

    Libya: Will elections finally bring healing?

    Throughout the year, national and international hopes have been pinned to the date of the Libyan national elections on December 24. However, exactly three months prior to this election date, the situation on the ground is becoming increasingly fractured. This week, the Tobruk-based lower chamber of the Libyan parliament, also called the House of Representatives, withdrew its support for the…

  • UN General Assembly: Africa’s leaders push for unity

    UN General Assembly: Africa’s leaders push for unity

    World leaders are delivering their speeches at the United Nation’s General Assembly in New York. In the past, Africans have mainly ignored this event but this year appears to be different. DW has the highlights of what several African nations brought to the global arena. Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan makes debut Making her maiden appearance at the UN General…

  • Modern masculinity in Africa: Pressures, expectations and breaking the mold | Thaiger

    Modern masculinity in Africa: Pressures, expectations and breaking the mold

    What does it mean to be an African man in the 21st century? What kind of pressures are men under? And how do we even define masculinity in the modern world? These were just some of the questions put to the panel in the latest edition of The 77 Percent’s Street Debate in Nairobi, Kenya. Conversations around masculinity and manhood…

  • India: Why many medical students are taking their own lives

    India: Why many medical students are taking their own lives

    In what should be the beginning of a successful career, Barnali took her entrance exam to become a medical student in India this year. But the experience has been far from pleasant, as she explained to DW. “My parents are both doctors,” she began. “So I have always felt pressurized to take up medicine as a career. I don’t think…

  • German election: Pakistani-origin female politician eyes Bundestag seat

    German election: Pakistani-origin female politician eyes Bundestag seat

    Misbah Khan, a Green party candidate for the German federal parliament, talks to DW about her journey in German politics as a young female politician with a migration background. SOURCE: DW News

  • German election: Which chancellor hopeful does the EU want?

    German election: Which chancellor hopeful does the EU want?

    EU heads of government haven’t made any official statements about the upcoming German election. But think tanks and insiders have speculated which chancellor candidate each country might prefer. In the running are Angela Merkel’s current finance minister, Olaf Scholz, of the center-left Social Democrats (SPD); Merkel’s favorite, Armin Laschet, from her conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU); and Annalena Baerbock, the…

  • UN General Assembly: Germany struggles to define its place in the world

    UN General Assembly: Germany struggles to define its place in the world

    It’s morning at the German mission to the United Nations and diplomats are buzzing around the lobby, getting set for one of the many “side events” that flank the UN General Assembly (UNGA). Germany is hosting a meeting on the Libyan peace process, an attempt to keep the country on track to holding democratic elections for the first time ever…

  • Tackling malnutrition in Ghana | Thaiger

    Tackling malnutrition in Ghana

    Nurses in Pelungu, eastern Ghana teach pregnant mothers how to cook food to retain maximum nutrition. Malnutrition and anemia are prevalent among rural Ghanaians despite an abundance of fresh food. SOURCE: DW News

  • Video of feet on bread appears to be from India, not Thailand

    Video of feet on bread appears to be from India, not Thailand

    A video and news story that sent an uproar through the Thai community of workers at a bread factory putting their feet on the bread before packaging has been revealed to have not taken place in Thailand. The Immigration Bureau had ordered a far-reaching check on breadmaking factories across Thailand and particularly in Bangkok to try to uncover the source…

  • Malaysia considers further re-opening to domestic tourism

    Malaysia considers further re-opening to domestic tourism

    Malaysia’s tourism minister says the re-opening of inter-state travel is now a high priority as the country seeks to reboot domestic tourism. Datuk Seri Nancy Shukri says other islands are hopeful they will soon be able to follow Langkawi, which re-opened for vaccinated domestic tourists on September 16. According to a TTR Weekly report, the tourism ministry is considering re-opening…

  • US judge orders Facebook to disclose anti-Rohingya content as part of international case against Myanmar

    US judge orders Facebook to disclose anti-Rohingya content as part of international case against Myanmar

    A court in the US has ruled that Facebook must disclose posts it removed from its network on the grounds that they were inciting violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. The move comes as a number of countries take action against Myanmar in the International Court of Justice. The Bangkok Post reports that Judge Zia Faruqui has criticised Facebook for…

  • Opinion: Small-scale farmers must control our food system

    Opinion: Small-scale farmers must control our food system

    The Food Systems Summit in New York is supposed to come up with a global strategy to fight hunger and feed a rapidly growing world population. But it’s focused too much on the big agro industry. Corporate interests are taking center stage and expanding their influence in the UN system to an alarming extent, undermining democratic decisions. The concerns of…

  • Togolese fitness coach fights obesity

    Togolese fitness coach fights obesity

    Mercy Tchawalla from Lome, Togo helps women regain confidence by leading fitness classes. SOURCE: DW News

  • AfricaLink on Air – 22 September 2021

    AfricaLink on Air – 22 September 2021

    South Sudan President Salva Kiir mulls retiring+++Namibia’s parliament debates reconciliation agreement with Germany+++Liberians coping with floods SOURCE: DW News

  • Haitian migrants at US border keep hoping

    Haitian migrants at US border keep hoping

    A pale yellow building next to a dusty football field in the border town of Del Rio in Texas represents hope for migrants wanting to come to the US. Those who have made it here have crossed the river and the border, and, for the moment at least, have left behind some of their uncertainty. Migrants holding brown paper envelopes…

  • Angola’s ‘traveling’ Beauty Salons

    Angola’s ‘traveling’ Beauty Salons

    Male manicurists, or “unheiros”, are a common sight in Cuito, central Angola. Most of their clients are men aged 15 to 35. This male grooming is done by young people wanting to support families and pay for studies. SOURCE: DW News

  • World in Progress: The men experiencing domestic violence

    World in Progress: The men experiencing domestic violence

    Reporter/Presenter: Andreas Boueke/Connor Dillon SOURCE: DW News

  • World in Progress: Daring to speak up

    World in Progress: Daring to speak up

    SOURCE: DW News

  • Interview: Tackling tricky topics at Berlin’s Human Rights Film Festival

    Interview: Tackling tricky topics at Berlin’s Human Rights Film Festival

    For more on the Human Rights Film Festival Berlin, go to: https://www.humanrightsfilmfestivalberlin.de/de SOURCE: DW News

  • Cochlear implant surgery in Uganda

    Cochlear implant surgery in Uganda

    Cochlear implant surgery is the last alternative for children when a hearing aid and other interventions fail. Cochlear implantation has become more accessible in Uganda. Kampala Audiology and Speech Centre is a reference institution. According to KASC, hearing impairment affects almost 12% of adults. Many Ugandans believe they have been witchcrafted and don’t seek proper treatment for their impairment. The…

  • Witnesses recount horror of Perm State University shooting

    Witnesses recount horror of Perm State University shooting

    Alexei Trapesnikov was about to get in his car and leave Perm State University after a presentation on campus — but he wasn’t able to. “The security guards at the entrance told me to turn back,” Trapesnikov, a reporter with Rossiyskaya Gazeta, told DW. “I saw a man covered in blood running towards the building. He appeared to have a…

  • Thai woman tricked into human trafficking in Dubai brought home safely

    Thai woman tricked into human trafficking in Dubai brought home safely

    A Thai woman who had been tricked into being a sex worker in Dubai, a city on the Persian Gulf Coast of the United Arab Emirates, returned safely to Thailand, today. The woman was able to send a video message through Facebook on Sunday where she pleaded for help. She says she had been deceived by an advertisement looking for…

  • Nambia: A timeline of Germany’s brutal colonial history

    Nambia: A timeline of Germany’s brutal colonial history

    1840s: Missionaries from the German-based Rhenish Missionary Society arrive in what is now called Namibia. 1883: Adolf Lüderitz, one of Germany’s first prominent colonialists, signs an agreement with Chief Joseph Frederick of Bethanie in what is now southern Namibia. The treaty gives the German businessman rights to the area around a strategic natural harbor called Angra Pequena, which he renames…

  • Melbourne hit by 6.0 magnitude quake, tremors across south-east Australia

    Melbourne hit by 6.0 magnitude quake, tremors across south-east Australia

    The Australian city of Melbourne, capital of the south-eastern state of Victoria, has been struck by a 6.0 magnitude earthquake, damaging buildings but with no serious injuries reported. The quake struck on Wednesday morning, with tremors felt as far away as Adelaide and Sydney. It measured higher on the Richter scale than a 5.6 quake that struck Newcastle, New South…

  • Mexico finds a Latin American ally in Venezuela’s Maduro

    Mexico finds a Latin American ally in Venezuela’s Maduro

    The recent summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) in Mexico was the first big meeting of its kind since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Participants ranged from Cuban head of state Miguel Diaz-Canel to Ecuador’s laissez-faire conservative president, Guillermo Lasso. Even Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro made a last-minute appearance — though he is wanted…

  • Namibia debates German genocide deal

    Namibia debates German genocide deal

    Namibia’s parliament on Tuesday resumed debate around the signing of a joint declaration with Germany regarding the former colonial power’s recognition that it perpetrated genocide in the early 1900s. Parliamentary debates in June had been suspended as Namibia battled a devastating wave of COVID-19 infections, which delayed the National Assembly in agreeing to Berlin’s May offer of a formal apology…

  • Is reconciliation with New Delhi possible in Indian Kashmir?

    Is reconciliation with New Delhi possible in Indian Kashmir?

    “Just like everything else in Kashmir, I am a shadow of my previous self,” says 58-year-old Shabir, a boatman from the city of Srinagar in Indian-administered Kashmir. Shabir, whose name has been changed, used to be the proud owner of a traditional yellow Shikara boat on Dal Lake. The lake’s floating market had been Shabir’s bread and butter. That was…

  • Scientists study bats in Cambodia to find clues about Covid

    Scientists study bats in Cambodia to find clues about Covid

    Scientists are collecting samples from bats in Cambodia to better understand the Covid pandemic. The researchers chose the region as a similar virus was found there in bats years ago. 2 samples were taken from horseshoe bats back in 2010 in the Stung Treng province, which is close to Laos. The samples were placed in freezers at the Institut Pasteur…

  • Iran enriches uranium as the West watches on

    Iran enriches uranium as the West watches on

    Iran may now be capable of producing enough weapons-grade uranium for a single nuclear warhead within just a month. That’s according to US experts who were quoted in The New York Times last Wednesday after reviewing classified new data from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The experts weren’t permitted to speak in an official capacity, but told the newspaper…

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