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Thursday, July 16, 2026
Botswana: Diamond mining continues to cause suffering for Bushmen

Despite ever increasing profits from multinational diamond mining operations in the country, Botswana’s Bushman communities continue to suffer. Last week the second-largest diamond in history was discovered close to the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, the recognized ancestral homeland of the Bushma

18 Village Councils in India demand Coca Cola stop using groundwater

Eighteen village councils (panchayats) in the immediate vicinity of the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Mehdiganj in Varanasi district in India have come together to demand that the groundwater used by Coca-Cola be stopped immediately due to the growing water crisis in the area. Panchayats, or village c

The Story of a Solar Fridge: Film

Vincent Urban DR Congo is often a forgotten crisis. It doesn’t show up much in the news, but millions of people continue to be forced from their homes cut off from health care and other essentials because of ongoing waves of violence. In October 2015, I accompanied the humanitarian organisati

What’s common between bureaucrats salaries, business persons tea and farmer suicides in India?

In the early 1990s, when the new economic policy of reforms was introduced in India, the trickle down theory was more aggressively propagated. Who have actually gained riches and who have been marginalized? This morning I woke up to few very interesting news. News 1: Seventh Pay Commission for 23.5

Silencing the Thunder is about wild bison-human conflicts|Award winning|2015 HD

When temperatures drop in Montana, in USA, wild bison migrate to lower elevations outside the boundaries of Yellowstone National Park. But once outside, they run the risk of being killed because some carry a chronic disease called brucellosis that ranchers fear could spread to cattle. Silencing the

Indigenous Baka people report more abuse despite assurances

In new video testimonies, Baka “Pygmies” in southeast Cameroon have reported ongoing abuse and torture at the hands of wildlife officers World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has helped to create a new protected area without the consent of the Baka or their neighbors. Baka living to the south of th

We are entering a new era of migration – and not just for people

Jessica Hellmann, University of Minnesota and David Ackerly, University of California, Berkeley “As ecologists, we know one thing for sure: when the climate changes, organisms move”. The world is watching as refugees flood into a Europe unprepared for the new arrivals. Conflict and socia

Earth dies faster this year!

As on 13th August 2015, on Earth Overshoot Day, the humans of world have spent resources of the Earth by more than 50 per cent the Earth can renew for this year In 2000, the Earth Overshoot Day fell in early October. This year it has moved ahead to 13th August. To maintain the consumption […]

Take it over and keep it with you-participatory governance from Urok islands, Guinea-Bissau

Luís Melo This is an award winning film that explores participatory governance in the Urok Islands, a marine protected area in the Bijagós Archipelago, Guinea-Bissau Neram N’Dok is a Bijagó expression which means “take it and keep it with you”. The Urok Islands includes the islands of Fo

Broken Landscape: a film on the lives of people affected by “rat hole” coal mining, Meghalaya, India

The film Broken Landscape examines the lives of those on the front lines of water-energy-livelihoods choke point, complicated by illegal mining and  corruption   In India’s resource-rich, green, yet poor state of Meghalaya, unscientific or “rat hole”coal mining has been one of

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