*RE-UPLOAD* Iraq: Ghosts of Mosul
Two years after ISIS’s defeat in Mosul, its widows and children remain unwanted, lacking papers and a future.
Two years after ISIS’s defeat in Mosul, its widows and children remain unwanted, lacking papers and a future.
Thousands of jihadists in Benghazi prisons languish for years without trial, straining authorities.
In Los Angeles’s Iranian diaspora, Assal, Sudi, and Roozbeh—exiles for 30 years—share criticism of Iran’s government.
Reporters following Idlib since 2018 found boys like Hammoudi, Bilal, and Ahmad forced into work at 12, their earnings vital for survival—returning in 2023 to see how war shaped their lives.
Since 2022, Sri Lanka has faced soaring inflation, a food crisis, and failed organic farming policies.
Haiti, the Americas’ poorest state, shares Hispaniola with the booming Dominican Republic, where many Haitians cross the border but face hostility.
With 39% gun ownership, Serbia saw mass protests after killings; Vucic launched a nationwide disarmament campaign.
Fifteen years after its debt crisis, Greece still struggles with corruption, weak public services, mistrust, migration, Turkey tensions, and Chinese control of infrastructure—yet retains strengths to build on.
France’s coal plants are reopening amid the energy crisis, reviving fossil fuel use.
Gokcedere, 50 km from the quake’s epicentre, is devastated and depends on volunteer aid.