Britons to plant trees to mark Queen Elizabeth's 70 years on throne
For the 70th anniversary of her rule, Brits will be encouraged to plant trees to make local areas greener and help the environment
Pope's new cardinal in Mexico known for indigenous outreach
The 80-year-old Felipe Arizmendi, author and a regular newspaper columnist, is known for progressive views on indigenous rights and migrants
At least three people killed by flooding in Sardinia
The deaths follow flooding after heavy rain swept the region
Pope installs new cardinals, including first African-American
Wilton Gregory, archbishop of Washington, D.C, became the first African-American cardinal as the United States struggles to tackle race inequality
Over 700 gang members in Central America arrested in U.S.-assisted actions
El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras bring criminal charges in U.S.-led action targeting transnational organized crime
Macron says images of police beating Black man shameful for France
France is investigating allegations that a Black music producer was beaten by police as footage of the beating circulates online
Eight dead after cyclone hits Somalia's Puntland, spead of locusts feared
The cyclone displaced 42,000 people from their homes and may also worsen the spread of damaging locusts
Black Friday 99%-off sale sparks fears over garment workers' pay in UK
Deep discount offered by 'Pretty Little Thing' raises questions about the brand’s commitment to paying workers fairly, say critics
Low-income parents lonelier in pandemic, says British royal Kate
British royal Kate unveiled a survey showing that parents in deprived areas are most hit by loneliness in the pandemic
INTERVIEW-U.S. author Naomi Wolf condemns UK's 'moral panic' on trans issues
U.S. feminist author Naomi Wolf said she did not believe in "censorship" in debates about transgender rights