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Why not enough food is reaching people in Gaza even after Israel eased its blockade

Why not enough food is reaching people in Gaza even after Israel eased its blockade

The Standarda day ago
Palestinians rush to collect humanitarian aid airdropped in central Gaza Strip, Thursday, July 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
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For war-ravaged youth, education is an anchor amid chaos, not a luxury
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  • South China Morning Post

For war-ravaged youth, education is an anchor amid chaos, not a luxury

Most global actors still treat education as an afterthought during crises, something to address only once food, water and shelter are secured. But in places like Palestine, Syria and Afghanistan, this hierarchy collapses. Education isn't a post-crisis luxury; it's the anchor in the chaos. Over the past decade, I've learned that education must be treated as a frontline intervention, restoring not only learning, but also safety, identity and hope. It's not just about classrooms. It's about systems that endure. This requires a different mindset, prioritising community-led design over one-size-fits-all frameworks, embedding psychosocial support structurally, trusting youth with leadership and planning for local ownership from the start. Education isn't what follows survival; it's how people survive. We don't need more tool kits, we need a mindset shift. Global actors must listen more, prescribe less and embrace complexity over metrics. Only then can we build education systems that endure when everything else collapses. In 2015, a few months after a war in Gaza, I entered a shelter that had been a bustling school. A boy, no older than 10, asked: 'When will the school come back?' I didn't have an answer. Since then, I've worked across some of the world's hardest-hit areas, in Palestine, Syria Lebanon and Afghanistan . These experiences challenged many assumptions that still shape global education policy. In the years that followed, we began to understand that restoring education in crisis zones wasn't only about reopening schools, it was also about building adaptable systems. Our work began to evolve beyond emergency. We developed scholarship programmes for marginalised and refugee youth, not as charity but as strategic, long-term investments in community resilience.

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Passenger plane carrying nearly 50 crashes in eastern Russia

A Russian Antonov An-24 passenger plane carrying about 50 people crashed in the country's far east on Thursday, and everyone on board was feared to have been killed, emergency services officials said. Advertisement The burning fuselage of the plane, which was made in the Soviet era and was nearly 50 years old, was spotted on the ground by a helicopter, and rescue crews were rushing to the scene. Video shot from a helicopter and posted on social media showed the plane came down in a densely forested area. Pale smoke could be seen rising from the crash site. The plane was on a flight by a privately owned Siberian-based regional airline called Angara. The aircraft's tail number showed it was built in 1976 and was operated by the Soviet flag carrier Aeroflot before the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. The crash site. Photo: Investigative Committee of Russia via AFP The plane was en route from the city of Blagoveshchensk to Tynda, a remote town and important railway junction in the Amur region bordering China. It dropped off radar screens while preparing to land.

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