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Sunday, June 7, 2026
Remittances and migration: the case of Nepal

To reach their place of work, Nepalese international workers must often pay fees for airfares, recruitment agencies, medical exams and orientation training. There are also often long and costly waiting times for passports and visas.

Equity and Transparency in Climate Finance: Expectation in COP-24

Absence of legally binding agreement on funding has created immense uncertainty for the vulnerable developing countries to secure the required finance especially for adaptation.  Under the initiatives of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), developed countries promised to mobiliz

Hydropower project in DR Congo : A Deal for Chinese and European companies

On October 16, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) government announced a 14 billion USD joint and exclusive development agreement with a consortium of Chinese and European developers to construct the Inga 3 hydroelectric dam, following years of delay and controversy. The Chinese consortium is le

World Bank, Asian Development Bank, still pouring billions into fossil fuels in climate-vulnerable

World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank are investing almost $5 billion in fossil fuels in 10 Asian countries. Three of the world’s biggest development banks have kept investing heavily in fossil fuels in some of the world’s most climate-vulnerable co

A new perspective on aid delivery

For most of us who have worked in #aid-#funded #programs, it is a mystifying and frustrating #business, especially when you have had the experience of working for different aid agencies as I have had (#UNICEF, #AusAid, #USAID and the #German aid agency (#GIZ), as well as #multilaterals such as the #

600,000 hit by earthquake in Lombak, Indonesia

Over 20,000 #people are in #temporary #shelters while thousands more are under open skies in need of #drinking #water, #food, #medical #supplies, and #clothes.

Three Nobel Prizes in economics ≠ the truth about aid

Terence Wood Aid will never solve all the world’s development problems. Aid can be improved. Aid can and should be criticised. But when criticism is incoherent and incorrect, it is worse than no criticism at all. Development twitter erupted in chirping this week. The cause was a Guardian op-edfro

In disasters, violence against women is the huge, often hidden story

Sharman Stone Of the nearly 700,000 Rohingya refugees that have crossed into Bangladesh since August 2017, well over half are women and girls, and many, have reported grave human rights abuses. After her son’s murder, Miriam* finally fled her village in Myanmar’s conflict-ravaged Rakhine State.

World Meteorological Organization steps up action on water

The World Meteorological Organization is revamping its strategy on water in order to face up to the unprecedented challenges posed by water stress, floods and droughts and lack of access to clean supplies. WMO Executive Council held a special one-day dialogue on water as part of a concerted drive to

Nobody Wants You To Know What Is Happening In Ethiopia

Soma Basu My story – Behind Ethiopia’s Prosperity: Systematic Genocide Of An Ancient Tribe – explains the rot in the country and why I was seen as a threat or why any reporter is seen as a threat or why Swedish journalists Johan Persson and Martin Schibbye were imprisoned and tortured for

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