Nowhere to go: Nigeria's crowded camps fuel disease fears from open defecation
Open defecation in crowded camps puts people at risk of waterborne diseases from cholera and diarrhoea to typhoid
FEATURE-Zimbabwe's street vendors use card payments, cars to stay ahead
Street trading is a lifeline for hundreds of thousands in Zimbabwe, but they must be resourceful to cope with a cash shortage and police harrassment
Cheap solar ambulances to speed into service in rural Bangladesh
"I thought if researchers can develop a solar racing car, there is potential to develop a solar ambulance," says one the developers
Child sex trafficking victims need services, not punishment, say advocates
"We peel the onion, we look behind the charge"
US scientists develop new way to measure crop yields from space
"Improving agricultural productivity is going to be one of the main ways to reduce hunger and improve livelihoods in poor parts of the world"
UK law that forces landlords to check passports increases racism - charity
Report says 51 percent of landlords said they would be less likely to rent to a foreign national under UK's Right to Rent scheme
FEATURE-Nigeria's spiralling herdsmen-farmer violence fuels fears of humanitarian crisis
27,000 people in Kaduna have been forced to flee their homes due to violence between Muslim herdsmen and largely Christian farmers which has killed at least 800 people
Top UK aid contractor pressured recipients to give positive reviews: inquiry
Britain lost 3.2 million pounds through fraud in its overseas aid programmes in 2015-16
Stranded in snowy Serbia, Cuban migrants dream of a new life in Spain
168 Cubans living in Serbian reception centres, stranded after below-freezing temperatures and closed borders halted their journeys
FEATURE-Young Indian farmers spice up market for organic Himalayan crops
The tiny Himalayan state of Sikkim has been declared 100 percent organic, but farmers need help to transport and sell their produce