Death toll from Kenya landslides rises to 56 as heavy rains lash country's north west
Heavy rains and floods have killed more than 50 people and forced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes across East Africa
I'd have rather died at sea than return to Libya, says rescued migrant
The migrants, mostly from Central and West Africa, had been drifting around 50 miles off the Libyan coast for nearly 24 hours when they were picked up
Greece to 'shut the door' to migrants not entitled to asylum, PM says
On Wednesday government announced plans to shut overcrowded refugee camps on islands and replace them with more restrictive holding centres
Drone firm in talks in Uganda on medical supply delivery deal
A deal could see Uganda join a small number of other African countries, such as Ghana and Rwanda, that have deployed unmanned aerial vehicles to help public health logistics
FACTBOX-Myanmar on trial for Rohingya genocide – the legal cases
Soldiers, police, and Buddhist villagers are alleged to have razed hundreds of villages in the western Rakhine state, torturing residents as they fled, carrying out mass-killings and gang-rapes
Suu Kyi to contest Rohingya genocide case at world court
More than 730,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh since a 2017 crackdown by Myanmar's military, which U.N. investigators say was carried out with 'genocidal intent'
Struggling with influx, Greece gets tough with asylum seekers
Living conditions for about 37,000 people in camps, known as 'hotspots' on five Aegean islands have been decried by aid groups as appalling
Fossil fuel polluters from U.S. to China far off climate targets - UN
Countries plan to produce 150% more coal in 2030 than would be consistent with limiting global warming to 2C, study shows
Dead-end: Rohingya in Malaysia warn against fleeing from Bangladesh
'Our future is so obvious here: we have no future. In Bangladesh you at least have your family and friends around, you speak and understand the language, you have a voice'
U.S. support for Israeli settlements renews focus on core issue in Mideast conflict
The U.N. human rights office said the settlements remain in breach of international law, echoing a position taken by the International Court of Justice in an advisory opinion in 2004