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‘Antisemitism fuelled the Holocaust and didn’t end’ 75 years ago, says education expert

Some were workers, some teachers, some neighbours. Many ordinary people enabled the Holocaust simply by doing their jobs. Some made the choice to help, while others decided to join in with the persecution, betraying Jewish friends and classmates.

But what “fuelled the Holocaust was antisemitism” which didn’t end with the defeat of the Nazis, and “continues today”, affecting all of society.

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8'52"
FAO/Yasuyoshi Chiba

East Africa locust outbreak could provoke humanitarian crisis: UN food agency

The Desert Locust outbreak in the Horn of Africa could provoke a humanitarian crisis, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has warned.  

The invasion is the worst in decades to strike Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, and has destroyed hundreds of thousands of acres of crops.  

As swarms of the pest continue to migrate and devastate crops in its path, the UN agency is calling for urgent international support to fight the worsening upsurge.   

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5'19"
Matt Wells, UN News

‘If cities don’t develop sustainably, neither will the world’

The challenges facing cities, in an age of climate change and technological innovation, will be highlighted at the World Urban Forum, held in Abu Dhabi between February 8 and 13.

Before he left for the UN’s annual conference on the urban environment, Haoliang Xu, Director of the UN Development Programme’s Department of Policy and Programme Support, sat down with Matt Wells from UN News.

Mr. Xu revealed that there is a growing trend of city leaders looking to the UN to help solve an increasingly complex set of problems.

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8'28"
UN Photo/Evan Schneider

‘Time for justice for Roma’, Senior expert urges on Holocaust Remembrance Day 

An estimated half a million people from the Roma minority perished in Europe during the Holocaust, but their persecution under Nazi rule is still widely ignored today, according to an expert on the issue.  

Dan Pavel Doghi, Senior Adviser on Roma and Sinti issues for the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) says the Roma people should finally receive the justice they deserve. 

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11'39"
UN Photo/Loey Felipe

‘Default male bias’ makes for generations of ‘invisible women’, author tells UN audience

Although women make up half the global population, they are often disregarded in the increasingly important world of big data: from measuring economic growth, to disaster response and recovery, or key public transportation planning, an award-winning author said at the United Nations on Friday. 

Caroline Criado-Perez shared some of the findings from her book Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men, during a presentation at the UN Bookshop in New York, following a morning retreat with senior leaders focused on gender equality. 

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11'7"
United Nations/Reem Abaza

Quality education: ‘Key to life’

All societies are undermined without quality schooling for all said the President of the UN General Assembly (PGA), in an interview just ahead of the International Day of Education.

Tijjani Muhammad-Bande has convened a high-level meeting to mark the day on Friday, and he firmly believes education “helps strengthen self-esteem”.

The leading Nigerian academic and diplomat told Liz Scaffidi that nobody should be left without access to a quality education in the classroom.

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7'50"
United Nations/Video Capture

Policing a 50-year rift: the UN Mission in Cyprus

The United Nations has been involved in the divided island of Cyprus for more than half a century, policing and monitoring a buffer zone between the Republic of Cyprus and the so-called Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.

The mission is headed up by Elizabeth Spehar, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Cyprus, and is the first to have an all-women leadership team, in charge of the mission, military forces, and the police component.

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11'47"
© UNICEF/Santiago Arcos

State of Our World: Elliott Harris, Marta Roig and Dawn Holland in conversation

Climate-induced fires, rising inequalities, political unrest and a bleak economic forecast; last year was a very turbulent one. How can we make sense of it?
The UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs recently released two major reports on the global economy and inequality.
Hear the UN Chief Economist Elliott Harris and lead authors Marta Roig and Dawn Holland discuss the solutions to get us back on the right track.

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16'40"
UN Photo/Sylvain Liechti

‘Comprehensive response’ needed to protect civilians in eastern DR Congo

Following a rise in attacks on civilians allegedly committed by the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) armed group in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), coupled with attacks against Ebola workers, an independent assessment of the UN peacekeeping response by the MONUSCO Mission, was established last December.  

The independent assessment found that in the months of November and December alone, more than 260 civilians, mainly women and children, were killed, by presumed ADF combatants in brutal attacks, mostly at night.  

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