Sudan’s brutal war is now in its second year—and it’s slipped from the news. But the fight hasn’t stopped. It’s moved west, into Darfur, where the damage is getting worse every day.
This summer, Southern Europe got slammed by a brutal heatwave. It didn’t just mess with daily life—it exposed how shaky the region’s power systems really are. From late May to early July
Court Tightens GripBrazil’s Supreme Court hit Jair Bolsonaro with house arrest today. Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the former president to wear an ankle monitor, hand over his phones, and cut off
Hamas says it’s willing to let food and medicine reach hostages in Gaza—but only if Israel stops airstrikes during aid deliveries and opens permanent routes for humanitarian supplies. The statement comes as
Russia just passed a law that takes online control to a new level. Signed by President Putin, it makes it illegal to search for anything the government calls “extremist.” Not post it.
Lesotho, a small mountain nation in southern Africa, just got a break: the U.S. cut its punishing tariff from 50% down to 15%. But the damage is already done. Factories have shut
Ukrainian intelligence has found hard evidence: Russia is abducting Ukrainian children and relocating them deep into its territory. It’s not random. It’s organized, large-scale, and ongoing. What Was Found Hackers broke into
July 30, 2025 — A powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula, just over 126 km southeast of Petropavlovsk‑Kamchatsky at a shallow depth of about 19 km—making it the strongest quake in
A powerful 8.8‑magnitude earthquake struck offshore Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula on July 29–30, 2025, at a shallow depth of ~19 km, triggering tsunami waves and widespread alerts across the Pacific. Devastation in Russia The town
11 million workers by 2030, as warned by Russian Economic Development Minister Maxim Reshetnikov in a meeting with President Vladimir Putin Russian boys being conscripted into the russian military Aging Workforce– Russia’s
Follow