How do islanders think about becoming climate migrants?
Many islanders are thinking of moving - but for better opportunities, not because of climate change
FACTBOX-Donors' aid pledges for Sierra Leone after deadly mudslide
Dozens of houses were engulfed by mud when a mountainside collapsed in the town of Regent, on the edge of Freetown
Nigeria's freed Chibok girls to return home 'fully recovered'
"All the 106 girls are now fully recovered, ready for re-integration with their families and the larger society, and to go back to school"
Boko Haram ramps up attacks on refugee camps in northeast Nigeria - aid agency
"Armed groups in this conflict are pushing people from one hell into another"
Rising migrant flow to Spain could become "big emergency" - UN
"We understand from our experts in the field that Spain now is going through something like what Greece saw in the beginning of 2015 or Italy even earlier"
Syrian city's rebel districts still in ruins years after Assad victory
Homs was one of the earliest centres of the rebellion against Assad, and the first city where it was put down with overwhelming force
Police evict thousands of migrants from Paris sidewalks for second time since July
"These illegal camps present a security and public health risk for both the occupants and local residents"
FACTBOX-Space age spuds, menstrual beans and melon gold: Do you know these five rare foods?
In the 1400s the Incas used a freeze-dried potato product called chuño to feed officials, soldiers and labourers in their empire
Combating `sextortion’ in the digital age
Utah, Arkansas and Alabama have enacted the first pieces of legislation in the US that criminalise `sextortion’, a form of extortion where the currency of the bribe is sex or sexual images.