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World News In Brief: Sudan Aid Update, Child Migrant Deaths At Sea, Nursing Shortages, Invasive Pest Scourge

World News In Brief: Sudan Aid Update, Child Migrant Deaths At Sea, Nursing Shortages, Invasive Pest Scourge

Scoop12-05-2025
12 May 2025
Port Sudan – the main entry point for humanitarian supplies and personnel into the country – came under attack for the ninth consecutive day. As the UN's main humanitarian hub in Sudan, drone strikes on the coastal city have gravely impacted aid delivery.
Nonetheless, UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS) flights were able to resume on 8 May, providing a continuation of a key humanitarian lifeline as the war between rival militaries for control of Sudan continues, UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric confirmed.
Targeting of civilian infrastructure has sparked panic and displacement. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported last week that 600 people were displaced within Port Sudan alone because of the attacks.
Catastrophic situation in North Darfur
The UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, warned on Sunday that the situation in the North Darfur camps of Abou Shouk 'is catastrophic.'
Although the UN and its partners continue to scale up their humanitarian response, both camps remain, in effect, cut off from aid.
Ms Nkweta-Salami issued an urgent call for a ceasefire and humanitarian pauses to allow life-saving deliveries to resume.
Call for action after deaths of migrant children at sea
Two young children, aged 3 and 4, have died from dehydration aboard a rubber dinghy found adrift in the central Mediterranean, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said on Monday.
The vessel, which departed Libya carrying 62 migrants including several children, had reportedly been stranded for days after its engine failed.
According to survivors, the children had died nearly a day before rescuers arrived.
One additional passenger is believed to have drowned earlier in the journey. Many others onboard suffered severe chemical burns caused by contact with a mixture of seawater and spilled fuel – injuries which require urgent medical attention.
All surviving passengers were eventually rescued and transferred to Lampedusa by the Italian coast guard.
'Devastating reminder'
Regina De Dominicis, UNICEF Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia, called the incident 'another devastating reminder' of the deadly risks migrants face.
She stressed the need for coordinated search and rescue missions, and greater investment in support services for migrant families.
'The central Mediterranean remains one of the most dangerous migration routes in the world,' Ms. De Dominicis said. 'Without immediate action, more lives will continue to be lost.'
UNICEF continues to call on governments to meet their obligations under international law and protect vulnerable children seeking safety.
Nursing workforce grows, but deep inequalities persist worldwide
The number of nurses around the world has increased in recent years, but a new UN report published on Monday shows that many countries and regions still face serious shortages, highlighting ongoing inequalities in access to nursing care.
Low-income countries are particularly affected, struggling with too few nurses to meet the needs of their growing populations, said the UN World Health Organization (WHO) which crunched the data.
Poor prospects at home
While these countries are training new nurses at a faster rate than wealthier nations, challenges such as rapid population growth and limited job opportunities are making it hard to close the gap, WHO added.
These imbalances in where nurses are working mean that millions still don't have access to basic health services.
This is holding back efforts to achieve universal health coverage, protect global health, and meet international development goals linked to health.
'We cannot ignore the inequalities that mark the global nursing landscape,' said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
WHO is urging governments to create more nursing jobs and ensure they are fairly distributed, especially in communities where healthcare services are lacking.
Plant pests continue to threaten global food supplies
Protecting crops from pests is key to ensuring everyone has enough to eat, said the head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) on Monday, who stressed that access to food is a basic human right.
Each year, around 40 per cent of the world's crops are lost to plant pests and diseases, causing over $220 billion in economic damage.
Invasive pests turn up the heat
Migratory pests like locusts and armyworms are among the biggest threats, especially in regions already hit hard by conflict and climate change.
Countries in the Near East and North Africa – including Algeria, Libya and Tunisia – are currently dealing with a serious outbreak of desert locusts that began in the Sahel.
These insects destroy crops and pastureland, putting food supplies for both people and animals at risk, and threatening the survival of farming communities.
'No country can face these challenges alone,' said FAO Director-General QU Dongyu, at a high-level conference in Italy marking the International Day of Plant Health.
He called for greater international cooperation and more funding to tackle cross-border pests and diseases.
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New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project
New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project

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New Book Tells The Story Of The Manapōuri Hydro Project

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Book of the day: Two takes - one fact, one fiction - on life of Roman aristocrat Fulvia
Book of the day: Two takes - one fact, one fiction - on life of Roman aristocrat Fulvia

NZ Herald

time6 days ago

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Book of the day: Two takes - one fact, one fiction - on life of Roman aristocrat Fulvia

Demonised: Roman woman Fulvia is remembered in this 1819 drawing by Bartolomeo Pinelli of her piercing the tongue of Cicero's severed head. Photo / Getty Images Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. Book of the day: Two takes - one fact, one fiction - on life of Roman aristocrat Fulvia Demonised: Roman woman Fulvia is remembered in this 1819 drawing by Bartolomeo Pinelli of her piercing the tongue of Cicero's severed head. Photo / Getty Images In a forthright introduction to her excellent biography of Fulvia, British classicist Jane Draycott points out that 'we have more literary, documentary and archaeological evidence' for her than for 'almost any other Roman woman during the Late Republic'. These were the chaotic decades leading up to Octavian being installed as Emperor Augustus in 27 BCE. Draycott writes that much of the evidence for Fulvia is negative in the extreme. 'Nearly all of the authors writing during her life or immediately after her death were enormously hostile towards her … Later authors took those portrayals and doubled down on them, adding spicy details that may be true or may simply be exaggerated falsehoods, designed to infuriate as well as titillate.' The cover of Fulvia: The woman who broke all the rules in Ancient Rome shows a shocking scene imagined by a 19th-century Italian painter. That's not a lover in bed with Fulvia – it's the severed head of her and her husband Mark Antony's sworn enemy, the proscribed orator Cicero, with her hairpins piercing his tongue. She is recorded as having done this (though definitely not in her bed) after his assassination, when his hands and head were cut off and publicly displayed in Rome. His ceaseless, lurid attacks had included calling her 'a thoroughly rapacious female' and 'a woman as cruel as she is greedy'. Many others, particularly Octavian, joined in. She was 'repeatedly publicly pilloried in front of the entire Roman Senate and wider Roman society for daring to step outside the confines of the domestic sphere'. This 'deliberate and systematic destruction of her reputation ensured that the allegations made against her have survived for two millennia, while most attempts at defence have faded from view'. Portrayals of her were also 'heavily influenced by the author's feelings about her husband' at the time. The Late Republic featured incessant battles of every kind, from elections and trials to gang clashes and outright war, between constantly shifting sets of rival candidates for the most powerful positions in the ruling Roman hierarchy. Elite Roman women were not supposed to play any part in these contests, despite being drastically affected by them. As soon as they started menstruating, they were expected to marry men chosen by their male elders, in a market dominated by considerations of status, wealth and alliance. They were then to suffer dutifully through the exile or death of husbands or their frequent divorces and remarriages, often to far younger women, prompted by perceived political or material advantage, when ex-wives might lose all access to their children. Yet Draycott shows a surprising number of elite women are known to have become politically involved, exerting their influence to improve the fortunes of their husbands and relatives. They included Fulvia's aunt and her future sister-in-law. Fulvia's first marriage, probably when she was 15 or 16, was unusual: her husband, Publius Clodius Pulcher, was not markedly older than her, and his acquired last name meant 'beautiful' (with golden curly hair). His family, the Claudii, was far more prestigious than hers, but he had a dodgy reputation and high debts. As an only child, Fulvia had an enormous inheritance from both sides of her family. During roughly 12 years they had a son and daughter and spent a remarkable amount of time together, in public as well as in private. After she helped Clodius fight an election, he was murdered by the henchmen of his plebeian rival Milo. Instead of holding his funeral with all due ceremony, Fulvia ensured that mobs of rioting supporters carried his bloody corpse to the Forum, where they built his funeral pyre. Two takes on the life of Roman aristocrat Fulvia. Photos / Supplied New Zealand author Kaarina Parker's stunning first novel, Fulvia: Power. At any cost, with its elegant classical cover, culminates in this scene, but she shows Fulvia herself leading the procession. As Parker frankly explains, she has deliberately varied some known details for the sake of the story: Fulvia is 18 when she meets Clodius, has sex with him before the wedding, and gives birth to her daughter before her son. Clodius's murder takes place close to Rome; after Milo is found guilty, Fulvia permits her devoted servants to slaughter him, too. Parker's writing deftly avoids the distracting pitfalls that can beset historical novels. She brings Fulvia and those closest to her vividly to life, as she convincingly invents a sequence of significant scenes that are known to have taken place but left no recorded details – especially when only women were present. Though Parker was able to consult a wide range of scholarship, Draycott's book came out too late for her novel. But it's likely to prove useful for her sequel, due next year, covering the later part of Fulvia's life from her marriage to Mark Antony around 48 BCE to her death less than a decade later. As Draycott notes, Antony's 'presence and prominence' ensured Fulvia was much more visible in contemporary sources during this period – but again, mainly through ongoing attacks because, for example, she toured the legions with him and watched rebellious soldiers being beaten to death. When Antony was declared a public enemy in 43 BCE, Fulvia and his mother Julia successfully lobbied on his behalf. In his absence, she helped build and lead an army to support his faltering cause. The year it was defeated, Antony met Cleopatra in Egypt. Fulvia, who had fled to Greece, became ill and died there alone. Draycott's account of these dramatic years is brilliantly assembled. She concludes that Fulvia's 'most serious transgression, and the one used against her again and again by her enemies, was her desire to provide for herself and her family'. All the determined attempts to 'demonise and marginalise her ultimately succeeded in transforming her into one of the most enigmatic and fascinating women of the Roman Republic'. The best way to encounter and understand Fulvia is to read both these books. And Parker's sequel is likely to be eagerly awaited. Fulvia: The woman who broke all the rules in Ancient Rome, by Jane Draycott (Atlantic, $37.99), and Fulvia: Power. At any cost, by Kaarina Parker (Echo Publishing, $36.99), are out now.

Food Lifeline Fading For Millions In South Sudan Hit By Conflict And Climate Shocks
Food Lifeline Fading For Millions In South Sudan Hit By Conflict And Climate Shocks

Scoop

time22-07-2025

  • Scoop

Food Lifeline Fading For Millions In South Sudan Hit By Conflict And Climate Shocks

22 July 2025 Earlier this month, the UN agency began airdropping emergency food assistance in Upper Nile state after surging conflict forced families from their homes and pushed communities to the brink of famine. Nationwide, the picture is just as alarming, with half the country's population – more than 7.7 million people – officially classified as food insecure by UN partner the IPC platform. This includes more than 83,000 facing 'catastrophic' levels of food insecurity. 'The scale of suffering here does not make headlines, but millions of mothers, fathers and children are spending each day fighting hunger to survive, ' said WFP Deputy Executive Director Carl Skau, following a visit to South Sudan last week. The worst-hit areas include Upper Nile state, where fighting has displaced thousands and relief access is restricted. Two counties are at risk of tipping into famine: Nasir and Ulang. South Sudan, the world's youngest country, gained independence in 2011. This gave way to a brutal and devastating civil war which ended in 2018 thanks to a peace agreement between political rivals which has largely held. However, recent political tensions and increased violent attacks, especially in Upper Nile state, threaten tounravelthe peace agreement and return the nation to conflict. The humanitarian emergency crisis has been exacerbated by the war in neighbouring Sudan. Since April 2023, nearly 1.2 million people have crossed the border into South Sudan, many of them hungry, traumatised and without support. WFP said 2.3 million children across the country are now at risk of malnutrition. Crucial, yet fragile gains Despite these challenges, the UN agency has delivered emergency food aid to more than two million people this year. In Uror county, Jonglei state, where access has been consistent, all known pockets of catastrophic hunger have been eliminated. Additionally, 10 counties where conflict has eased have seen improved harvests and better food security as people were able to return to their land. To reach those in the hardest-hit and most remote areas, WFP has carried out airdrops delivering 430 metric tonnes of food to 40,000 people in Greater Upper Nile. River convoys have resumed as the most efficient way to transport aid in a country with limited infrastructure. These included a 16 July shipment of 1,380 metric tonnes of food and relief supplies. WFP's humanitarian air service also continues flights to seven Upper Nile destinations. At the same time, a cholera outbreak in Upper Nile has placed additional pressure on the humanitarian response. Since March, WFP's logistics cluster has airlifted 109 metric tonnes of cholera-related supplies to affected areas in Upper Nile and Unity states. However, the UN agency said it can currently support only 2.5 million people and often with just half-rations. Without an urgent injection of $274 million, deeper cuts to aid will begin as soon as September. 'WFP has the tools and capacity to deliver,' said Mr. Skau. 'But, without funding and without peace, our hands are tied.'

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