More than 400 million children globally live in poverty, missing out on at least two daily needs such as nutrition and sanitation – UNICEF

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New report warns more children are at risk of falling into poverty as global funding cuts, conflict and climate threaten access to services crucial for health and wellbeing

UNICEF: The State of the World's Children 2025 Ending child poverty: Our shared imperative

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"Poverty poisons childhood. It claims the lives of children, undermines their health and development, and constrains their learning. Poverty is a denial of children’s fundamental rights. "

BELEM DECLARATION ON THE TRANSITION AWAY FROM FOSSIL FUELS

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"We, the undersigned, gathered at COP30 in Belém do Pará, reaffirm our shared determination to work collectively towards a just, orderly and equitable transition away from fossil fuels, aligned with pathways consistent with limiting global temperature rise to 1.5°C"

COP30: landmark outcomes emerge from negotiations despite unprecedented geopolitical tensions

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The conference in Belém consolidates political and technical advances. It projects Brazilian leadership and inaugurates a global mutirão (collective effort) against climate change

G20 South Africa Summit: LEADERS’ DECLARATION

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The G20 comprises 19 countries including: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Türkiye, United Kingdom, and United States and two regional bodies, namely the European Union and the African Union.

Conference: Democracy Reimagined - Advancing Democratic Resilience and Renewal

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The conference is hosted by the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance at the University of Canberra, in collaboration with the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Australia & New Zealand Foundation and the Australian National University/Australian Resilient Democracy Research and Data Network.

Saudi Arabia: Migrant workers behind the Riyadh Metro system subjected to decade of devastating abuse

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Migrant workers who travelled to Saudi Arabia to work on the Riyadh Metro project were forced to pay exorbitant recruitment fees, worked in dangerous heat and earned pitiful wages during a decade of serious abuse, Amnesty International revealed in a new report today.

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