Iraqi Christian children from Mosul, who fled from violence with their families in their country, get food from a worker (R) at Latin Patriarchate Church in Amman August 21, 2014. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have fled their homes since the militant Islamic State group swept through much of the north and west of Iraq in June, threatening to break up the country. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed (JORDAN - Tags: POLITICS RELIGION FOOD CONFLICT CIVIL UNREST)

-
Asian nations struggle to lower deaths in childbirth
-
Boy Scouts of America to allow girls to join
-
Man who lived on tree for two years in India given land
-
One man, one city, three evictions: the human cost of Rio's growth
-
Saudi women unite to inspire next generation
-
Red Cross vow to continue aid after workers killed in Nigeria
-
Federal appeals court upholds Texas abortion restrictions
-
Johnson’s girls' education event must deliver more than cocktails
-
Access all areas? Using data to help the disabled navigate cities
-
Conditions in Rohingya refugee camps 'very poor': Myanmar minister
-
Pesticide bans are too simplistic to solve the pollination deficit
-
Rescued from slavery, Indian workers unite to stop bonded labour
-
Japan carbon capture site shows promise for industrial use
-
Hundreds flee homes as quake strikes Indonesia
-
Afghans make long trek west before Turkey secures border
-
Gates backs gene technologies in fight to end malaria
-
Driven from home, Philippine indigenous people long for their land
-
Colombians flee homes amid fresh violence, lockdown by rebels
-
British firms boost spending on businesses doing good
-
New asylum-seekers free to travel from Greek islands
-
Europe takes major step to tackle billion-dollar food waste
-
Emboldened by #MeToo, women take spotlight at Cosby retrial
-
Soup-er cooking contest spotlights Britain's homeless
-
London's skyline soars with more than 500 skyscrapers in pipeline
-
Refugees in Syria short of food and medicine amid shelling
-
Malawi can eradicate HIV infections: doctor who discovered AIDS
