Plus: 'wrongly' adopted Bangladeshi children; alleged sex trafficking via Meta
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Global Dispatch
Reporter's note
Minutes after crew from the Italian NGO Emergency announced that we’d be disembarking the search-and-rescue vessel in the port city of Livorno in Tuscany, most of the 69 people who had been rescued from the Mediterranean were excitedly hovering over a map of Italy.

It was a moment of relief for each person who had braced the dangerous crossing, fleeing war-torn countries like Syria and Sudan. There were smiles, hugs, even dancing, but also grief: for most, the decision to leave home hadn’t been easy, but necessary.

During my week onboard the rescue missions, I got to spend a lot of time with the women, men and children who had stepped into dangerous, unseaworthy boats in order to find safety in Europe. We sat in the sun together, chatting about Europe and about the lives they had left behind. We shared meals, stories, smiles.

I spoke to Hanan Muhanned, 33, and her daughter Qala, three, who was born with an undiagnosed condition where she is unable to walk or speak.

I sat with a man who only referred to himself as “Abu Sheikh Ahmed” – the father of ‘Sheikh Ahmed’, his two-year-old son he cried over ceaselessly during our journey. He wanted to bring him to Europe, but had been too afraid that the little boy might drown. “I’m going ahead so I can bring him one day,” the father told me, showing me dozens of pictures of his smiling little boy.

This year, more than 16,000 people have already arrived in Europe by sea, but as the continent is further shifting to the political right, immigration policies are tightening. What this means for people who increasingly have no choice but to leave home – whether that be due to the effects of the climate crisis or war spreading across the Middle East – has yet to be seen.
Stefanie Glinski, an Istanbul-based journalist covering the Middle East
Spotlight
‘I was willing to risk it all, or die’  
A week onboard a rescue vessel in the Mediterranean Sea
A week onboard a rescue vessel in the Mediterranean Sea
Top picks
Myanmar  
Huge and secretive prison expansion revealed by satellite images
Huge and secretive prison expansion revealed by satellite images
‘Deeply alarming’  
Sevenfold increase in sexual attacks in Darién Gap, says MSF
Sevenfold increase in sexual attacks in Darién Gap, says MSF
Bangladesh adoptions  
Investigation launched into children ‘wrongly’ adopted overseas
Investigation launched into children ‘wrongly’ adopted overseas
FGM  
Three girls die after initiation rituals in Sierra Leone
Three girls die after initiation rituals in Sierra Leone
Rights and freedom
Social media company is the world’s ‘single largest marketplace for paedophiles’, says New Mexico attorney general
Meta  
Social media company is the world’s ‘single largest marketplace for paedophiles’, says New Mexico attorney general
Raúl Torrez is taking the company to court and expects further details to emerge about its knowledge of child sexual exploitation on its platforms
‘If Instagram didn’t exist, it wouldn’t have happened’  
A mother’s search for her trafficked daughter
Bribes  
UN to investigate claims of corruption in Iraq aid project
‘I can’t face how much she suffered’  
Argentina femicides at record high as Milei dilutes protections
Opinion
As an abused child, my success is the exception not the rule
As an abused child, my success is the exception not the rule
Southern frontlines
Big mining companies circle as El Salvador prepares to reverse ban
Gold fever  
Big mining companies circle as El Salvador prepares to reverse ban
Legislation passed in 2017 put a halt to industrial mining, but as the central American country goes to the polls, the government has hinted at its return
Low-carbon milk to AI irrigation  
Tech startups powering Latin America’s green revolution
Fair Access
The mothers helping fight cervical cancer in Malawi
‘I wish I’d had someone like me to talk to’  
The mothers helping fight cervical cancer in Malawi
The country has one of the world’s highest death rates from the disease but a campaign led by young mothers is ensuring girls have access to the HPV vaccine
South Sudan  
Flooding hampers efforts to contain hepatitis E outbreak
What we're watching
Yellow is Bafta-nominated short film written and directed by the London-based Elham Ehsas. Set in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, a woman walks into a chadari store in Kabul to buy her first full-body veil and faces an uncertain future.
Yellow (dir. Elham Ehsas)  
Yellow is Bafta-nominated short film written and directed by the London-based Elham Ehsas. Set in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, a woman walks into a chadari store in Kabul to buy her first full-body veil and faces an uncertain future.
In case you missed it
‘I was told I could visit. Then she went missing’  
The Bangladeshi mothers who say their children were adopted without consent
The Bangladeshi mothers who say their children were adopted without consent
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