China could reap the soft-power advantage, but like Western governments, the country is cutting back on aid. Philanthropies say they cannot replace the United States.
DAR ES SALAAM: In recent years, Tanzania has emerged as a trailblazer in leveraging nuclear technologies to enhance its ...
Earlier this month President Samia Suluhu Hassan made history as the first African leader to receive the prestigious Global ...
The leading pharmaceutical company in the Baltics, Grindeks, continues to strengthen its global presence by entering new ...
Trump issued executive orders that withdrew the US from WHO and halted USAID funding, which also keeps people uninformed of ...
Trump and his billionaire cronies are assaulting the poorest and most vulnerable. These actions — dismantling the U.S. Agency ...
The UNDP’s policy brief highlights the urgent need to accelerate clean cooking access for 2.1 billion people still relying on ...
Cutting off money for programs that help get medicine, food, and other necessities to the world's most vulnerable people ...
Her leadership journey has been shaped by various initiatives, including the development of two pediatric surgery theatres at ...
I’m no foreign policy expert, but I have an advantage over most Americans trying to understand the shutdown of the U.S.
With the U.S. significantly reducing its $12 billion global health aid, an urgent question arises: who will fill this gap? China, the Gates Foundation, and the World Bank are potential players, yet ...
At USAID, Trump’s commissars leave a trail of suffering in their wake.