International


Liberia: Gbarpolu, Bong in Land Dispute

Sep 21, 2017 | New Dawn

The state-owned Liberia Broadcasting System or LBS, reports that the land in question situates in an area called Jungle James Camp, Lofa Bridge. The camp…


Iraq: Iraqis Track Abandoned Homes with Digital Tools

Sep 21, 2017 | Chris Arsenault, Thomson Reuters Foundation

In camps across northern Iraq, people forced from their homes by Islamic State militants are using their phones to track what is happening to their…


Afghanistan: Trump, Ghani Agree US Can Help Develop Afghanistan's Rare Earth Minerals

Sep 21, 2017 | Reuters

U.S. President Donald Trump and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Thursday backed having companies from the United States develop Afghanistan’s reserves of rare earth minerals,…


Climate Change: Lessons in Climate Adaptation from the Military - Interview with Sherri Goodman

Sep 20, 2017 | International Affairs Review

Sherri Goodman is a Senior Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in the Environmental Change and Security Program, the Global Women's Leadership Initiative,…


Iraq/Kurdistan: Chevron Drills Oil Well in Iraqi Kurdish Area after Two-Year Gap: Sources

Sep 20, 2017 | Ron Bousso and Dmitry Zhdannikov, Reuters

U.S. firm Chevron drilled its first exploration well this month in Iraqi Kurdistan after a two-year break, industry sources said, signaling its confidence in the…


Liberia: CSO Group Wants Land Rights Act Amendment before Passage

Sep 19, 2017 | Front Page Africa

The Civil Society Organization (CSO) working group on Land Rights in Liberia, in collaboration with the National Civil Society Council of Liberia has alarmed that…


Myanmar: Is Myanmar's Jade Business Driving Ethnic Tensions?

Sep 19, 2017 | Al Jazeera

Over the past few weeks, nearly 400,000 people escaping violence in Myanmar's eastern state of Rakhine have streamed into Bangladesh, creating a humanitarian crisis. The UN…


Myanmar: Monitoring System Updated for Thilawa SEZ and Yangon River

Sep 18, 2017 | Myat Moe Aung, Myanmar Times

Myanmar-Japan Thilawa Development Limited (MJTD) set up a weather monitoring system, using Japanese technology, at Thilawa Special Economic Zone and surface water level sensor on…


Colombia: Land Restitution: Chengue Dances Again

Sep 18, 2017 | Bogota Post

The 2016 delivery of a land restitution sentence brought little solace to the residents of Chengue, but when government agencies began delivering on orders, despair…


Afghanistan: First Plant to Produce Renewable Energy Inaugurated in Herat

Sep 17, 2017 | MIddle East North Africa Financial Network

The first ever plant solar to produce 2mw energy through wind and sun was inaugurated Sunday in Herat province. The contract of the plant was…


Myanmar: Water, Sanitation Crisis: Roadside Refugees Suffer the Brunt

Sep 17, 2017 | Pinaki Roy and Mohammad Ali Jinnat, Daily Star

Tens of thousands of Rohingyas, who are staying either in the open or in makeshift tents by the Cox's Bazar-Teknaf highway, hardly have any drinking…


Iraq: War and Dysfunctional Politics Threaten Iraq’s Marshlands

Sep 16, 2017 | Economist

The recovery of southern Iraq’s marshlands is arguably one of the great environmental triumphs of recent times. Reduced to dust and withered reeds when Saddam…


Afghanistan: Millions of Hectares of Land Remain Uncultivated in Afghanistan

Sep 16, 2017 | Zabihullah Jahanmal, TOLOnews

Officials from Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Livestock (MAIL) said Afghanistan has 7.5 million hectares of arable land but only a small portion of the…


Middle East: Future Wars in Mideast Probably on Water: Iranian Diplomat

Sep 16, 2017 | Iran Front Page

Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs Seyyed Abbas Araqchi says the issue of water, water resources, coping with water scarcity, as well as…


Iraq/Kurdistan: OPEC's Second-Biggest Producer Could Possibly Split in Two — And Start an Oil War

Sep 15, 2017 | Sam Meredith, CNBC

An oil-rich province in the north of Iraq plans to vote in a referendum on Kurdish independence later this month, prompting fears of regional conflict…


Food Security: World Hunger Worsens as War, Climate Shocks Hit Food Access

Sep 15, 2017 | Agnieszka De Sousa, Bloomberg

The number of people suffering from hunger last year rose at the fastest pace since at least the beginning of this century as conflicts and…


Iraq/Kurdistan: Iraqi Kurds to Vote on Independence Despite Region's Fears

Sep 14, 2017 | Associated Press

Iraq's Kurds vote this month on whether or not they support independence for their enclave in the country's north, a step toward their long-held dream…


Iraq/Kurdistan: Western Powers Press Iraq Kurd Leaders to Shelve 'Very Risky' Independence Vote

Sep 14, 2017 | Raya Jalabi and Ulf Laessing, Reuters

The United States and Western allies pressed Iraqi Kurdish leaders to ditch a “very risky” independence vote on Thursday, presenting an alternative plan in an…


Iraq: Tribal Clashes, Political Void Threaten Oil Installations in Iraq's South

Sep 13, 2017 | Aref Mohammed and Ahmed Rasheed, Reuters

Worsening clashes among tribes and a political void is threatening security at oil installations in Iraq’s main southern oil producing region, officials and security sources…


Urbanisation-Led Sand Shortages Fuelling Violent Conflict and Environmental Disasters

Sep 13, 2017 | Cameron Jewell, The Fifth State

Sand and gravel are now the world’s most extracted materials – surpassing fossil fuels – but overexploitation and shortages are fuelling violent conflict and leading…


Bangladesh: Rohingya Refugees Crossing into Bangladesh Face Another Threat: Land Mines

Sep 13, 2017 | Annie Gowen, Washington Post

More than 300,000 members of Burma’s Rohingya ethnic minority have poured into Bangladesh in recent days, after a brutal military crackdown that the U.N. human…


South Sudan: Corruption Plagues South Sudan and Threatens the Growth of Its Oil Industry

Sep 13, 2017 | Paul Ilado, Star

Many major international oil companies that had entered into EPSAs with the pre-independence government in Khartoum have found it difficult ,if not impossible, to negotiate…


Colombia: Colombia's Ex-FARC Guerrillas Are Training as Coffee Growers and Baristas in Cauca

Sep 13, 2017 | Sorrel Moseley-Williams, Independent

“I want Colombia to be different,” says Jhon Benavides, an aspiring barista and, from the age of 14 until last year, a guerrilla in the…


Afghanistan/Iran: Iran, Afghanistan to Launch Joint Project to Restore Hamun Lake

Sep 13, 2017 | Iran Front Page

Head of the Wetlands Office of the Iranian Department of Environment, Arezoo Ashrafizadeh, said Iran and Afghanistan are working together on a joint strategic plan…


South Sudan: War-Ravaged South Sudan May Scrap Expensive Oil Subsidies

Sep 12, 2017 | Denis Dumo, Reuters

War-ravaged South Sudan is considering scrapping state subsidies on oil because it hasn’t been able to pay civil servants for four months and diplomatic staff…


Iraq/Kurdistan: Kurdish Independence Vote Draws Ire in Baghdad

Sep 12, 2017 | Chase Winter, Deutsche Welle

Iraq's parliament on Tuesday voted to reject a Kurdish independence referendum planned later this month, raising already simmering tensions between Baghdad and Erbil that could…


Afghanistan: More Effort Needed to Minimize Impact of Climate Change

Sep 12, 2017 | Nabeela Ashrafi, TOLOnews

Drought and soil erosion as a result of climate change could further destabilize Afghanistan, environmental experts warned on Tuesday.  This comes as scientists report that…


Iraq/Kurdistan: Oil Revenues Real Motive for Kurdistan Independence Vote

Sep 10, 2017 | Press TV

Sa’ad al-Muttalibi believes the leader of Iraq’s Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani, has been using the referendum to further blackmail the political system in the country…


Afghanistan: Grape Farmers Expect Bumper Crop This Year

Sep 9, 2017 | Zabihullah Jahanmal, TOLOnews

According to the ministry, this is an increase of more than 15 percent against last year. MAIL spokesman Lotfullah Rashid said Afghan farmers will earn…


Iraq: Iraq's Killing Fields: The Lethal Legacy of Landmines – in Pictures [Photos]

Sep 8, 2017 | Sean Sutton, Guardian

After decades of conflict, Iraq has been left littered with unexploded booby-traps. The Mines Advisory Group has spent 25 years in the country working to…