For Sudan, Breaking Ties with Its Radical Past Is a ‘Delicate Balancing Act’
A new de-radicalization program provides a window into Sudan's efforts to fight extremism, while maintaining legitimacy with its Islamist base.
A new de-radicalization program provides a window into Sudan's efforts to fight extremism, while maintaining legitimacy with its Islamist base.
Like many journalists in Somalia, they have been targeted by Al-Shabab. But despite the dangers they face at home, under the EU-Turkey agreement they face likely deportation back to Turkey.
Climate scientist Gordon Hamilton died in Antarctica recently when his snowmobile plunged into a deep glacial crevasse. His research in Antarctica and Greenland focused on the relationship between melting ice sheets and rising sea levels.
In Ukraine, substance abuse has been an epidemic for the past two decades—about 1 percent of all adults are intravenous drug users—the leading cause of HIV transmission in the country.
A detention center established by the EU to process refugees arriving in Europe was destroyed in a recent fire.
Joshua Kucera explores the border between Europe and Asia, reporting here from Azerbaijan.
A new report from the Women’s Refugee Commission documents deteriorating conditions for refugees trapped in Greece. Host Jeb Sharp speaks with reporter Jeanne Carstensen in Lesbos.
Persecuted by ISIS, chased out of Iraq, the Yazidis have suffered a lot. And that was before they got to Greece, where other refugees, mostly Muslims, are still persecuting them.
Misha Friedman speaks to PRI's The World about photographing women living with HIV and tuberculosis in South Africa.
The unusual things you'll see while touring the lavish estate of Ukraine's ex-president.
Ukrainians vowed to turn their ex-president’s estate into a "Museum of Corruption." But it’s something else now.
The face of Ukraine's 2014 revolution has a new goal: rooting out corruption in Odessa's customs service.