Storm Iota breaks up over El Salvador but leaves major flood risk
Weakened storm's remnants could still trigger life-threatening floods and mudslides across parts of Central America through Thursday
Stateless young woman breaks barrier for Shona community at Kenya university
Economics student Nosizi Reuben Dube is the first woman from Kenya's stateless Shona community to be admitted to university
White fragility? UK supermarket advert sparks online racism row
A Christmas advert for Sainsbury's supermarket featuring a Black family prompts some social media users to threaten a boycott, saying they feel unrepresented
Kenya makes hospital arrests as it probes child trafficking ring
Kenyan child trafficking syndicates - from street clinics to a government-run hospital - were stealing babies from vulnerable mothers to be sold for as little as $400
Evacuated amid COVID-19, Canadian First Nation waits for clean water
Faced with an unclean water supply, Canada's Neskantaga First Nation was forced to evacuate breaking the protective bubble they had tried to build during the pandemic
FACTBOX - Fossil fuel-based vehicle bans across the world
As Britain announces its 'green industrial revolution' and bans the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030, here's a roundup of other countries' plans
UK stimulus for green jobs should also curb inequality, analysts say
Using COVID-19 recovery cash to create climate-smart jobs could help Britain move towards its net-zero goals - and more fairness
Britain to ban new petrol cars by 2030 on road to net zero emissions
'Green revolution' plan will mobilise $16 billion of government money, with far more coming from private sector, and create and support 250,000 green jobs by 2030
'First line of defense': COVID-19 prompts rethink in role of buildings
As cold weather sets in and COVID-19 spikes, U.S. architects are designing healthier buildings to help people feel safe indoors
From 'haves' to 'have-nots': how COVID-19 is swelling UK's subprime ranks
Thousands of Britons could begin 2021 as "subprime" borrowers if they have had more than six months' of relief from COVID-19 debt woes