UN data published on Wednesday underscores the tiny amount of cultivable land that remains in the Gaza Strip, contributing to the famine conditions now being endured by more than two million people there.
About The Author
You may also like
-
Landlocked nations ‘invisible to much of the world’: UN trade and development chief
-
Hiroshima, 80 years on: ‘Real change’ needed to end existential nuclear threat
-
‘Landlocked to landlinked’: UN summit seeks to turn geography into opportunity
-
Ceasefire in doubt as Rwanda-backed rebels kill hundreds in eastern DR Congo
-
Syria: Ceasefire under strain as violence and aid access issues persist in Sweida