Joe Hill
As Coronavirus Spreads In Venezuela, Some Hospitals Don’t Have Soap. Or Sinks.
“My fear is that we won’t have supplies next week, when cases are expected to spike,” said Maria Eugenia Landaeta, Caracas University’s head of infectious diseases.
Fence Climbing, a Parliamentary Brawl, and Riot Police: The Latest in Venezuela's Power Struggle
Self-declared President of Venezuela Juan Guaidó broke into his own office on Tuesday after President Maduro ousted him.
‘Their Lives Are Ruined’: The Plight of Fishermen Caught Up in India And Pakistan’s Devastating Border Fight
Hundreds are arrested every year, devastating coastal communities whose livelihoods depend entirely on fishing.
Why Algeria’s Election Probably Won’t Stop Months of Protests
Many Algerians say Thursday's election is just more of the same — and even after 10 months of protests, they're not done yet.
Searching for the 80,000 Disappeared in Colombia's Brutal Civil War
“I think this country will spend the next 100 years to fulfill the identification and exhumation of all the corpses that we have”
How Foreign Donations, Poverty and Corruption Are Fueling Uganda’s Unregulated Orphanage Industry
“The people here that decide to operate a home, they get unsuspecting people to pay. And they use donated money to make themselves richer.”
This Is What It Feels Like to Be on UK's Longest Hunger Strike
The next desperate battle for the Kurds: their own bodies
Broken Faith: Inside the Catholic Church’s plan to quietly pay survivors of sexual abuse
The Church is launching private settlement programs just as states are making it possible for more child sex abuse victims to sue.
Venezuelans are stuck between two presidents
But most say they plan to stay despite the critical shortages and the mounting political crisis
How Brazil's new president is creating a healthcare crisis for his country's poor
“Mais Medicos has not ended, but at least half the doctors, who were precisely in places of greater need, have left. So for people in those areas the program is over."
These two guys from Brooklyn went to war in Syria to fight ISIS. Now, they’re back.
These two Brooklyn roommates decided to join an eccentric Kurdish militia in Syria. Now, they're back.