6. out of 1288M total population in Africa, 50%+ (676M) have
moderate to severe food insecurity and out of which
more than 40%+ (277M) have severe food insecurity
20. increased global access of all people to the different
spheres
education
health
public services
and so on
21. act now or face the consequences because if we fail, the
impact will be felt for years
Editor's Notes
Uganda(1980)
Photography done by Mike Wells, in April 1980, shows a child in the province of Karamoja, Uganda, holding hands with a missionary. The contrast between the two hands serves as a reminder of the chasm that separates developed and underdeveloped countries. The photograph remained unpublished for years. Photographer: Mike Wells.
Uganda(1980)
Photography done by Mike Wells, in April 1980, shows a child in the province of Karamoja, Uganda, holding hands with a missionary. The contrast between the two hands serves as a reminder of the chasm that separates developed and underdeveloped countries. The photograph remained unpublished for years. Photographer: Mike Wells.
Uganda(1980)
Photography done by Mike Wells, in April 1980, shows a child in the province of Karamoja, Uganda, holding hands with a missionary. The contrast between the two hands serves as a reminder of the chasm that separates developed and underdeveloped countries. The photograph remained unpublished for years. Photographer: Mike Wells.
The Famine in Sudan (1993)
Photo published in March 1993 in the “New York Times” and responsible for the rise of Kevin Carter as a photographer. In 1994, Kevin won the Pulitzer Prize for Photography. Although the picture is impressive, the vulture was not as close of the boy as the picture suggests – a fact that continues to cause controversy among journalists and photographers. The boy in the photo was called Nyong Kong and survived the vulture, died in 2007. Kevin Carter, the photographer, was killed in 1994. Photographer: Kevin Carter.
DECEMBER 12, 2018
Global warming is a hotly debated topic these days, but photographs of melting icebergs in Antarctica prove that our world is rapidly changing.
Photo by ImaginEarth La Terre En Images on Unsplash
https://reliefweb.int/report/world/tsunamis-account-280-billion-economic-losses-over-last-twenty-years
Photo by ImaginEarth La Terre En Images on Unsplash
https://reliefweb.int/report/world/tsunamis-account-280-billion-economic-losses-over-last-twenty-years
https://inequality.org/great-divide/fighting-inequality-nations-just-pay-lip-service/
How the world would look if we sized nations by their commitment to fighting inequality, with the bright yellow nations showing the most commitment and the red the least.
a new global ranking of governments based on what they are doing to tackle the gap between rich and poor.
JUNE 10, 2010
A pelican attempts to clean off the oil from its body after the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Human activities is affecting other creatures on the earth also.
The Deepwater Horizon oil spill (also referred to as the BP oil spill, oil leak, or oil disaster; the Gulf of Mexico oil spill; and the Macondo blowout) is an industrial disaster that began on April 20, 2010, in the Gulf of Mexico on the BP-operated Macondo Prospect,[6][7][8][9] considered to be the largest marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry and estimated to be 8% to 31% larger in volume than the previous largest, the Ixtoc I oil spill, also in the Gulf of Mexico.
AUGUST 17, 2016
Omran Daqneesh, 5, of Syria sits alone in the back of the ambulance after he was injured during an air strike targeting the Qaterji neighborhood of Aleppo.