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UN News/Daniel Dickinson

‘Fake news’ challenges audiences to tell fact from fiction

The emergence of so-called “fake news” has created “competing versions of information and the truth,” a situation which is challenging for audiences across the world; that’s according to a senior journalist who is joining a panel of experts at the United Nations on Thursday to discuss press freedom.

Farnaz Fassihi of the Wall Street Journal says that the rise of social media has made it more difficult for the average person to differentiate between verified facts and misinformation.

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13'37"
UN Photo/Manuel Elías

‘Free, informed consent’ of Indigenous Peoples over land-use, is key: forum chair

The “free, informed consent” of Indigenous Peoples over how their historic territory is used, is a key demand arising from the latest UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, which ended on Friday.

That’s according to the chairperson of the Forum, Mariam Wallet Aboubakrine, who is a medical doctor from Mali, who told Liz Scaffidi how the two-week event had gone.

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4'22"
UN Photo/Oleg Veklenko

Fallout from Chernobyl disaster still a 'very important challenge' for Belarus

The explosions at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine exposed around 8.4 million people to life-threatening radiation, and the three countries affected are still living with the consequences today.

In an interview with UN News to mark the anniversary of the disaster, which took place on 26 April 1986, the Permanent Representative of Belarus to the United Nations in Geneva, Yury Ambrazevich, told Sandra Miller that around 70 per cent of the radioactive fallout spread across his country, affecting some 2.2 million.

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8'25"
IAEA/Dana Sacchetti

A quarter of thyroid cancer cases ‘probably’ due to Chernobyl: UN scientific committee

A quarter of all thyroid cancer cases among patients who were children at the time of the Chernobyl accident 32 years ago, are “probably” due to high doses of radiation received during and after the event.

That is the conclusion of the latest study undertaken by the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), which looked at cancer rates between 1991 and 2015.

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6'9"
UN News/Matt Wells

2030 Agenda represents ‘collective decision’ to ‘change the way we live’: UN chief economist

Despite an upturn in the global economy there are “clouds on the horizon” which need to be addressed if the world it to reach the ambitious Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

That’s the view of the Chief Economist in the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA), Elliott Harris, who is also Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development.

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9'24"
FAO/Lesotho/Lechoko Noko

Invasive Fall Armyworm pest threatens food production across Cabo Verde

Africa’s Cabo Verde islands are facing a “formidable” agricultural and economic challenge in the form of an invasive pest known as the Fall Armyworm.

But now, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has joined forces with authorities there to combat the threat, without damaging the environment or farmers’ livelihoods – especially in vulnerable rural areas.

Greg Delaney has this special report from Cabo Verde.

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