
Articles
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1 week ago |
freitag.de | Diego Menjíbar Reynés
Ein Dorf am Fuß des Berges Ololokwe, sein ganzes Leben lang wohnt John Lmakato hier. „Das war früher baumloses Weideland“, sagt er, „die Tiere liefen frei herum.“ Auch seine Rinder liefen früher hier, knapp 100 Kilometer nördlich von Nairobi, auf Futtersuche umher. Doch vor drei Jahren verlor er den Großteil seiner Herde, als sie in ein Naturschutzgebiet eindrangen, das bekannt ist für den Kampf um den Zugang zum Land zwischen indigenen und kommerziellen Viehzüchtern.
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2 weeks ago |
csmonitor.com | Diego Menjíbar Reynés |Èlia Borràs
What do you take when war knocks on your door? For Nema Musa, the answer was obvious: Besides the clothes on her back, she took her pink-and-blue notebook, two student identification cards, and two receipts proving that she had paid her university tuition. In July 2024, about 15 months after a devastating war broke out in their homeland, Sudan, Ms. Musa had to flee with her mother and two sisters.
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2 weeks ago |
csmonitor.com | Diego Menjíbar Reynés |Èlia Borràs
What do you take when war knocks on your door? For Nema Musa, the answer was obvious: Besides the clothes on her back, she took her pink-and-blue notebook, two student identification cards, and two receipts proving that she had paid her university tuition. In July 2024, about 15 months after a devastating war broke out in their homeland, Sudan, Ms. Musa had to flee with her mother and two sisters.
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1 month ago |
theguardian.com | Diego Menjíbar Reynés
“All that I did over 40 years has turned to ashes before my eyes,” says Prof Ahmed Fahal, of the destruction of his research centre in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum. His once-gleaming laboratory, where a team of white-coated expert clinicians once busied over their work, is now little more than rubble. “I built everything from scratch. I knew every corner, every brick of the building. I can’t describe the pain,” he says.
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1 month ago |
elpais.com | Èlia Borràs |Diego Menjíbar |Diego Menjíbar Reynés
La ciudad de Renk, en el extremo norte del Gran Alto Nilo, en Sudán del Sur, está situada en una de las regiones más pobres del planeta. En su mercado, sin embargo, tres naranjas cuestan 1,50 euros, un kilo de plátanos, 5,5 euros, y un pack de seis cervezas, 20 euros. Encontrar una bebida fría es casi imposible desde que, a inicios del pasado enero, la ciudad quedara prácticamente a oscuras.
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