Refugees – and forests – benefit as Kenya's herders torch an invader
Can charcoal made from pest thorn trees help keep refugees warm and fed?
ANALYSIS-Could new slavery numbers complicate efforts to end the global crime?
About 40 million people were trapped as slaves last year
Going to school? Unlikely if you're a girl in South Sudan, report says
"Over 130 million girls are still out of school - that's over 130 million potential engineers, entrepreneurs, teachers and politicians whose leadership the world is missing out on"
New group launched in US to set nation's own long-term goals to fix ills
America's Goals are meant to be a non-partisan guiding framework to right the course in U.S. politics
One in three Latin Americans have paid bribes to public employees, report says
"Bribery represents a means for enrichment of the few, and a significant barrier to accessing key public services, particularly for the most vulnerable in society"
U.N. assisting thousands of migrants in Libyan smuggling hub
Sabratha has been the most common point of departure for mostly sub-Saharan African migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean by boat from Libya
Militants attack east Congo bases, killing two U.N. peacekeepers
Congo's army has been battling militants this weekend for control of a stretch of road linking the area to Uganda
Vampire scare prompts UN pullout from southern Malawi
Belief in witchcraft is widespread in rural Malawi, one of the world's poorest countries
U.S. EPA chief to sign rule on Clean Power Plan exit on Tuesday
"Here's the president's message: The war on coal is over"
'Hell to pay' over water, food deliveries, Puerto Rico governor warns
"If there is a place, a locality that is not delivering food to the people of Puerto Rico that need it, there's going to be some hell to pay"