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The World: Latest Stories

The World: Latest Stories
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Host Marco Werman and his team of producers bring you the world's most interesting stories that remind us just how small our planet really is. The World, the radio program, is heard each weekday on over 300 public stations across North America.
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When the Intercontinental Hotel first opened its doors in Kabul in 1969, Afghanistan was embracing modernity. In the decades that followed, it kept those doors open through a Soviet occupation, civil wars, a US-led invasion and the rise, fall and rise again of the Taliban. Journalist Lyse Doucet follows the lives of the hotel’s staff as they navigate decades of change in her new book "The Finest Hotel in Kabul: A People's History of Afghanistan."
Northern parts of Afghanistan were hit with a strong earthquake overnight Monday. At least 20 people were killed and many injured, according to local officials. This is the second time since August that the country has been hit with a strong earthquake. The World’s Shirin Jaafari speaks with Host Marco Werman.
Today in a ceremony hidden from public view Tanzania swore in Samia Hassan for a second term as president. She won with a landslide 98% of the vote in an election that has sparked nationwide protests, and that many international observers are concerned was rigged. Host Marco Werman learns more from Daniel Paget, a specialist in Tanzania's elections and an assistant professor at the University of Sussex in the UK.
When Hurricane Melissa hit Jamaica as a Category 5 storm, it tore through the country's agricultural center, demolishing crops and killing livestock. Now, as aid flows into the country, concerns are rising about the country's food security moving forward. The World's Host Carolyn Beeler speaks with Linda Roth from World Central Kitchen about what she's hearing from farmers.
Game 7 of the World Series stretched past midnight into Sunday in Toronto, and has passed into baseball lore as one of the greatest endings of one of the greatest World Series ever.Japan's attention — and everyone else's — was already on the Dodgers' pitcher and slugger Shohei Ohtani. But Yoshinobu Yamamoto stole the show. Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman have the details.
Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman highlight some global headlines you might have missed.
One year after a deadly railway station disaster in Serbia that killed 16 people, families of the victims are still waiting for accountability. Tens of thousands took to the streets of the city of Novi Sad on Saturday, where the tragedy happened, to mark the anniversary. The disaster sparked the country’s largest student protest movement in decades. Students say protests will not stop until early elections are held. The World’s Europe Correspondent Orla Barry reports.
The Trump administration has decided to cap refugee admissions to a record low of 7,500 resettlement slots, prioritizing white Afrikaners from South Africa. Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, head of Global Refuge, tells Host Carolyn Beeler that the change in policy will dismantle a program that for decades has assisted individuals from around the world fleeing conflict and persecution.
The Maldives becomes the only country to adopt a law banning tobacco sales to people born after a specific date. The measure went into effect over the weekend, and means that anyone born after Jan. 1, 2007, will never be able to buy tobacco in the Maldives. Host Carolyn Beeler has more.
India has a long tradition of stories involving well-known ghosts and monsters. In this favorite Halloween interview from Halloweens past, Kolkata-based reporter Sandip Roy talked to Rakesh Khanna about the illustrated guide he'd just written — back in 2021— to help people understand the cast of ghostly, ghoulish and monstrous characters.
Before it was destroyed in 2018, the Yarmouk camp near Damascus was home to Palestinians displaced during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. During the Syrian civil war that started in 2011, government forces laid siege to the camp, creating dire humanitarian conditions inside. Today, the camp is slowly starting to come back to life, as residents return and rebuild. The World’s Shirin Jaafari reports.
Letters written on Aug. 15, 1916, by two Australian soldiers serving in France during World War I have been discovered more than a century later. One of the letter-writers survived the war; the other died a year later. The World's Host Carolyn Beeler has the story.
The West African nation of Mali, one of the countries comprising the Sahel region to the south of the Sahara Desert, has been fighting extremists for years. But a coalition of al-Qaeda and ISIS fighters, known as JNIM, have begun blowing up oil-tankers en route by road from Senegal, the Ivory Coast and other countries. This could spell disaster for landlocked Mali, which depends on such imports. Similar fighting, political instability and a rejection of Western military assistance across the Sahel has people worried for the region. The World's Gerry Hadden reports.
Mexicans are celebrating "Día de Muertos," an annual holiday where families honor deceased ancestors. One popular character always shows up: La Catrina, a fancy skeleton lady wearing an elegant dress and a flowered hat. Last year, The World’s Tibisay Zea went to a big parade in Mexico City, to get the story behind La Catrina's starring role in the seasonal festivities.
In many ways, Koichi Kitabatake is just like any other runner preparing for Sunday’s New York City Marathon produced by New York Road Runners. He’s nervous for the big race but plans to draw energy from crowds of spectators to keep pace. At 91 years old, though, the Japanese runner is the oldest of all 55,000 runners registered for this year’s race. The World’s Bianca Hillier has his story.
Some Halloween costumes transform ordinary people into fantasy characters. But a social media trend in Japan has people trying instead to capture mundane situations from everyday life. So, instead of "princess" or "two-headed monster" you could be "person standing in line at the security checkpoint of an airport" or "man who keeps getting mistaken for a store employee." The World's Host Carolyn Beeler has more.
The announcement came yesterday: Prince Andrew will no longer be "prince." He's now Andrew Mountbatten Windsor. The decision came in response to mounting allegations of sexual predation, and ties to American sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. The World's Europe Correspondent Orla Barry speaks with Host Carolyn Beeler about the significance of this moment, for the Royal family, as well as for survivors and their families.
Timor-Leste, once a UN-administered post-conflict state, has been accepted into ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. It's a diplomatic coming-of-age moment for the tiny nation. It means the country will help shape consensus on trade, security and diplomacy in the region. Naina Rao explains what took so long, and why it matters.
A few thousand people have arrived at the Tawila refugee camp in Sudan, after escaping harrowing violence in the RSF-controlled city of el-Fasher. Many of those reaching the camp are unaccompanied children. The World's Host Carolyn Beeler gets the latest from Shashwat Saraf. He's the country lead on Sudan for the Norwegian Refugee Council.
The nation currently known as Turkey sits where Europe meets Asia. That land was once known to Europeans as part of the Levant. National Geographic Explorer Paul Salopek walked across Turkey on foot in 2014. He looks back on the experience of traversing that ground, in conversation with Host Carolyn Beeler.





If you are a Christian conservative with a soft spot for other Abrahamic religions , this podcast, disguised as current news snippets is for you. Example: Recent podcast on Vatican corruption covered by a reporter from Ireland ( Catholic majority country), interviewees: 1. Jesuit priest 2. Professor at Villanova ( Catholic University) 3. Catholic News website. Key takeaways: Grey shades where the Vatican is concerned. Francis is good, he is really trying. Innocent till proven guilty. Standards for covering news about Hindus, Budhists, Jains - GUIlTY as charged. In the past few years, have heard multiple stores that portrayed these religions solely negatively. If there is a negative story to be covered you can rest assured that Marko and team are on it. Recent stories about beheading of a Hindu engineer by Islamists in Pakistan, lynchings of.a Hindu by Sikhs were ignored by Marko and team. A Kashmiri Muslim from a region where Hindus have been targeted for their religion since 194
hunters laptop?
sounds like some technical difficulties in today's show.