Global perspective Human stories

Interviews

UN News/Pauline Batista

Fighting for ‘the dream of equality and justice’ for people of African descent

This week the UN hosts the 2nd Session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent – the human rights platform which brings together institutions at the UN, civil society and others, to advance equality and fight racism.  

The Forum’s Chair, Epsy Campbell Barr, said it was vital to boost investment to help the poorest of the poor, and meet “elemental demands” for basic services like clean water.

She spoke to UN News’s Pauline Batista in our studio at UN Headquarters in New York.

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14'39"
UN Geneva/ Dominika Tomaszewska-Mortimer

Stop harmful tobacco farming, grow food instead: WHO

While more than 300 million people around the world face acute food insecurity, tobacco continues to be grown in 124 countries, diverting land and resources away from food crops – even in places where people are starving.

Ahead of World No Tobacco Day on Wednesday 31 May, the World Health Organization (WHO) has released new findings about tobacco’s disastrous health impact on development in low and middle-income countries.

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4'50"
UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

Arrest of Rwanda genocide fugitive marks end of year-long ‘intense investigation’

The arrest of Fulgence Kayeshima - one of the last remaining fugitives from the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda - has been hailed as a commitment to ensuring that justice is served, no matter how long it takes.  UN News’s Anold Kayanda spoke to Serge Brammertz, Chief Prosecutor of the UN tribunal prosecuting war crimes in Rwanda, who said the arrest marked the culmination of an intense year-long process.
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6'52"
WFP

After Cyclone Mocha, how UN aid teams are helping rebuild lives

The bamboo homes of Myanmar’s most vulnerable communities were no match for Cyclone Mocha which has left people with nothing, UN humanitarians warned on Friday.

With the latest from the country and neighbouring Bangladesh, here’s the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Anthea Webb, Deputy Regional Director for Asia and the Pacific, speaking to UN News’s Daniel Johnson.

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6'29"
UN News/Srdjan Slavkovic

‘Getting our act together’ on AI, and ensuring nobody’s left behind

Since the launch of Chat GPT in November 2022, artificial intelligence (AI) has been dominating headlines, sparking excitement but also concern over the pace at which the technology is developing and driving misinformation.

The UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on Technology, Amandeep Gill, is busy working on a Global Digital Compact to be adopted at the UN’s Summit of the Future in 2024 – a “once-in-a-generation” opportunity for leaders to agree on common principles for addressing tech challenges.

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9'32"
© UNMISS/Radio Miraya

Sudan: WFP working round the clock as emergency food aid reaches 50,000 in need

The UN World Food Programme (WFP) has been able to support around 50,000 Sudanese in need in three states, amid the continuing fighting and food crisis there, which temporarily halted the agency’s aid operation after three staffers were killed.

That’s according to Leni Kinzli head of communications for WFP in Sudan, who said a total of 19 million are expected to face food insecurity during the coming lean season, and called on the international community not to take their eyes off the crisis in the country, provoked by the ongoing military power struggle.

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8'50"
UN News/Emmanuel Hungrecker

Social media and AI: Friends or foes of press freedom?

Social media has long been a boon to press freedom, allowing journalists from all over the world to make their voices heard, grow an audience, and build trust.

But rampant disinformation has increasingly eroded the space for trustworthy information online, multiplying risks for the journalists who help separate fact from fiction.

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6'52"