News
From Conservation to Coexistence: How Peace and Security Underpin Conservation in Northern Kenya
Jan 15, 2019
The Africa Biodiversity Collaborative Group speaker series aim to foster information exchange and lessons sharing among cross-sector practitioners. As part of this series, on November 13,…
Liberia: Sinoe Community Conserving Its Forest but Gets No Support
Jan 15, 2019
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James Harding Giahyue, FrontPage Africa
When Nitrian obtained a community forest status in 2011—one of the first to do following a new law seeking to give communities their shares of…
Myanmar: Establishment of Land Bank under Way
Jan 15, 2019
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Eleven Myanmar
Efforts are being made to set up a land bank in order to solve land use problems, said Thaung Tun, Union Minister for Investment and…
Jordan/Iraq: Jordan, Iraq Agree to Finalize Basra-Aqaba Oil Pipeline
Jan 15, 2019
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Al Bawaba
King Abdullah of Jordan visited Iraq on Monday to activate security agreements between the two countries and finalize an oil pipeline project from Basra to…
Iraq: Devastating Drought Dries up Kabul [Video]
Jan 14, 2019
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Neil Bowdler, Agence France-Presse
Residents of the Afghan capital, Kabul, are drilling deeper and deeper for water as the country's drought takes hold. The water shortage has been exacerbated…
Iraq/Kurdistan: 30,000 bpd of Oil ‘Looted’ from Kirkuk, Taken to Sulaimani: PUK Official
Jan 13, 2019
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Rudaw
Some 30,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil are being looted from Kirkuk and smuggled into Sulaimani, a top Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) official…
Afghanistan: 2,000 Hectares of Grabbed Land Recovered in Kabul: Governor
Jan 12, 2019
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Gulabuddin Ghubar, TOLOnews
Kabul governor Yaqub Haidari on Saturday said that at least 2,000 hectares of land was recovered in Kabul over the past 10 months. He said…
Afghanistan: In War-Weary Kabul, Burning Coal and Tires Keeps Residents Warm — and the City Choked by Smog
Jan 12, 2019
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Alex Horton and Sharif Hassan, Washington Post
Afghanistan, long embroiled in conflict, has focused for the past 18 years on security and reconstruction at the expense of issues affecting the environment, according…
Afghanistan: Afghanistan's Kabul Faces Water Crisis as Drought, Population Strain Supply
Jan 11, 2019
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Agence France-Presse
Every year 80 million cubic metres (2.8 billion cubic feet) of water are extracted from Kabul's aquifers -- nearly double the natural recharge rate through…
Iraq: Head of Livelihoods Program
Jan 10, 2019
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Mercy Corps
Mercy Corps is a leading global organization powered by the belief that a better world is possible. In disaster, in hardship, in more than 40…
Syria: WASH Capacity Development for the Syrian Crisis
Jan 10, 2019
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Save the Children UK
Save the Children UK is an international non-governmental organisation that promotes children's rights, provides relief and helps support children in developing countries. Save the Children…
Iraq: WASH Project Manager
Jan 10, 2019
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Terre des hommes Foundation Child Relief
Terre des hommes (Tdh) is the leading Swiss organisation for children’s aid. Since 1960, Tdh has helped build a better future for deprived children and…
Iraq: ‘Living Under a Black Sky:’ The Forgotten Cost of Conflict
Jan 10, 2019
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Bryan Bowman, Globe Post
As Iraq continues to rebuild after the war with ISIS, environmental pollution, an often overlooked consequence of conflict, threatens the public health and future security…
Myanmar: Myanmar Cracking Down on Opium, but Conflicts Push Drug Trade
Jan 10, 2019
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Al Jazeera
The amount of land being used to grow opium poppies continues to decline in Myanmar, but ongoing conflicts are hampering efforts to stamp out the…
Myanmar: Risk of Floods as Myanmar Builds Bridge Near Border
Jan 10, 2019
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Abdul Aziz, Coxs Bazar
The Myanmar government is building a bridge on Tambru canal close to Bangladesh’s barbed- wire border fence. Built on Myanmar’s land, the bridge has too…
Myanmar: Traders Hope for a Boost from New Gem Laws
Jan 9, 2019
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Kyaw Ko Ko, Myanmar Times
The new amendments to the law governing the extraction of gemstones in Myanmar are expected to offer relief for the gem industry in Mandalay. Industry…
Colombia: Illegal Deforestation Spikes in Colombia: How FARC Prevented Deforestation and the Government Cannot
Jan 9, 2019
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Ooda Loop
Although FARC groups have been largely demobilized in the two years since the peace deal they signed with the Colombian government, the government has been…
Niger: Signing of a Peace Agreement between Fulani and Mahamid Arab Communities in the Diffa Region of Niger
Jan 9, 2019
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Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue
The Fulani and Mahamid Arab communities from the municipalities of Foulatari, N’guelbeli, Goudoumaria and Mainé Soroa in the Diffa region of Niger signed a peace…
Can a South China Sea Code of Conduct Help Ensure Regional Stability? Here Are Four Ways It Could Be Strengthened
Jan 8, 2019
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Aaron Rabena
The China-Philippines Scarborough Shoal stand-off in 2012, the China-Vietnam oil-rig incident in 2014, China’s island-building and militarisation operations, the Philippines’ Permanent Court of Arbitration landmark…
H2O: Water Conflicts to Watch in 2019
Jan 8, 2019
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Kayla Ritter
In 2018, water sparked quarrels across the globe, from the mountains of Central Asia to the world’s driest desert. Water systems were also a casualty…
Liberia: China Breaks Ground for Liberia’s First Plywood Factory
Jan 8, 2019
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Samuel G. Dweh, FrontPage Africa
“We are here to break ground for the construction of a plywood factory, the first of its kind in Liberia, and for Liberia,” a Chinese…
DRC: Investigating DR Congo's Illegal Gold Trade
Jan 8, 2019
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Lisa Dupuy and Klaas van Dijken, Deutsche Welle
The conflict-ridden African nation is rich in gold — and gold smugglers, who are often linked to rebel groups. But tracing commercially available gold back…
DRC: DRC Miner SMB Leaves Responsible-Sourcing Scheme to Join Another
Jan 8, 2019
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Fiston Mahamba and Barbara Lewis, Reuters
The Democratic Republic of Congo’s biggest miner of coltan, an ore containing metals used in mobile phones, is leaving the ITSCI certification scheme relied on…
Climate Change and National Security, Part II: How Big a Threat Is the Climate?
Jan 7, 2019
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Michelle Melton
The US national security establishment has been increasingly vocal that climate change is a national security threat—and the US is not alone in this regard.…
Colombia: How Organized Crime Profits from Deforestation in Colombia
Jan 7, 2019
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Bjorn Kjelstad and Felipe Puerta, InSight Crime
Two years after the signing of a peace deal between the Colombian government and the FARC, Colombia’s forests are under siege and experiencing heightened levels…
Myanmar: Salween Peace Park to Keep Lands in Local Hands
Jan 7, 2019
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Lawi Weng, Irrawaddy
Representatives of the Salween Peace Park have said there is no vacant land in Karen State and that all land and its natural resources are…
DRC: DRC on the Brink
Jan 7, 2019
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Resource Clips, Greg Klein
This is the place that inspired the term “crimes against humanity.” As a timely new book points out, American writer George Washington Williams coined that…
Liberia: Green Advocates, IDI Develop New Tools to Hold Oil Palm Farmers Accountable for Environmental and Human Rights Violations
Jan 7, 2019
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Alloycious David, Liberian Observer
Green Advocates International (GAI) and Inclusive Development International (IDI) have developed new advocacy tools that would be used by local communities to hold oil palm…
Afghanistan: At Least 30 Gold Miners Killed in Afghanistan Landslide
Jan 6, 2019
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Sayed Salahuddin and Alex Horton, Washington Post
At least 30 workers were killed in a landslide in northeastern Afghanistan while illegally sifting for gold, officials said Sunday. The landslide occurred in Badakhshan…
Afghanistan: Afghan Villagers Panning for Gold Die as Tunnels Collapse
Jan 6, 2019
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Najim Rahim and Mujib Mashal, New York Times
More than two dozen villagers panning for gold in the northern Afghan province of Badakhshan were killed on Sunday after the makeshift tunnels where they…