Global perspective Human stories

Interviews

Obese people more likely to smoke, says new gene research: WHO

New research indicates that people who are genetically prone to being overweight have a higher risk of being a smoker, and they are likely to smoke more than average, according to a World Health Organization agency whose study has identified for the first time around 70 genes that could explain this behaviour.

Dr. Paul Brennan from the International Agency for Research on Cancer spoke to Daniel Johnson.

Audio
3'58"
OCHA/Mustafa El Halabi

Gaza hospitals, already under pressure, struggle to absorb wounded demonstrators

UN agencies and their partners are supporting hospitals and health centres in Gaza as they struggle to treat scores of people injured on Monday during demonstrations at the border with Israel.

Jamie McGoldrick, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, who spent most of that day at a major hospital, told Dianne Penn that hospitals were “overwhelmed” by the numbers in need of emergency treatment.

Audio
7'9"
UN News/Fatima E. Mendez

FAO Official: Youth and civil society are 'change agents' for restoring forests

It’s up to young people and civil society groups to reverse the long-term trend of deforestation around the world.

That’s the view of Hiroto Mitsugi, Assistant Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) Forestry Department, discussing how deforestation can be stopped worldwide, in line with the Sustainable Development Goal 15  target date, of 2020.

Audio
9'25"
WFP/Saikat Mojumder

30,000 Rohingya refugees moving to raised land, to escape floods: WFP

With monsoon rains threatening to flood Rohingya “mega camps” in Bangladesh, the World Food Programme (WFP) is leading a UN-wide effort to relocate around 30,000 refugees to higher ground.

Shelley Thakral, WFP Spokesperson in the Bangladeshi city of Cox’s Bazar, explained to Fatima E. Mendez how WFP and other agencies were turning hilly land donated by the government, into usable camp ground.

Audio Duration
12'33"
UNICEF/Fati Abubakar

Cholera vaccination drive targets two million people in five African nations

An “unprecedented” response to a spate of cholera outbreaks across Africa is under way but vaccinations alone will not be enough, UN health experts and partner agencies said on Monday.

Between now and June, some two million people will benefit from an inoculation drive across five countries.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) Michael Ryan, told Daniel Johnson that effective as vaccines are, access to clean water and sanitation are just as important.

Audio
5'5"
UN Photo/Evan Schneider

‘Once in a lifetime opportunity’ for Asia-Pacific to build resilience against disasters

It has been 10 years since more than 200,000 people lost their lives in two major deadly natural disasters in the Asia-Pacific region.

Loretta Hieber-Girardet of the UN office that works on disaster-risk reduction, UNISDR, talked to Julia Dean about lessons learned since Cyclone Nargis and the earthquake in Sichuan province in China.

Audio
6'29"