Helsinki, Finland – 8/26/2023: A view of Helsinki downtown with shoppers, taken at the intersection of Aleksanterinkatu & MikonkatuCopenhagen, Denmark – July, 2019: Copenhagen iconic view. Famous old Nyhavn port with colorful medieval houses, tourist ship and woman on a bicycle in the center of Copenhagen. Selective focus.After Trump slaps tariffs on $34 billions on Chinese goods and after China answered with tariffs on $34 billions on US products, economists fear that China and USA be engaged in a full blown trade war. Illustration picture taken in Toulouse, France on July 7th 2018. (Photo by Alain Pitton/NurPhoto via Getty Images)BAYONNE, NJ – FEBRUARY 1: Shipping containers stand on a dock at the Port Jersey container terminal in front of the Statue of Liberty and the Empire State Building in New York City on February 1, 2025, as seen from Bayonne, New Jersey. (Photo by Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)MADRID, SPAIN – 2023/08/15: A man takes photographs of the placards and the Afghan flag during the demonstration in Madrid against the abuses of the Taliban regime. A demonstration against the Taliban government was held in Madrid as it has been two years since the Taliban retook control of Afghanistan with the withdrawal of the U.S.-backed former Afghanistan government and its U.S. security forces, which ruled the country for two decades. Since the Taliban returned to power, the economy has floundered, and hundreds of thousands lost their jobs. Women’s rights have been obliterated as the Taliban has limited their access to education and restricted women from working in some industries related to education, and non-government organizations. In addition, women are prohibited from going out without a male chaperone. The rates of child marriage have also increased. Taliban’s return has wiped out the gains of the Afghan’s standard of living during the 20 years of U.S. invasion. (Photo by David Canales/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)President of Sierra Leone Julius Maada Bio speaks during the 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters in New York City on September 24, 2024. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)BEIRUT, LEBANON – FEBRUARY 23: A Hezbollah flag is waved infant of an illustration of former Hezbollah leaders, Hassan Nasrallah, left, and Hashem Safieddine, are seen at the stage for their funerals at the Sports City Stadium on February 23, 2025 in Beirut, Lebanon. Tens of thousands of people have gathered in Beirut to attend the funeral of Hezbollah’s former leader, Hassan Nasrallah, nearly five months after he was killed in an Israeli airstrike on a southern suburb of the Lebanese capital. Nasrallah founded and led the Shi’ite Muslim group for 30 years, through decades of conflict with Israel and became one of the most prominent Arab figures in generations. (Photo by Daniel Carde/Getty Images)Geneva, Switzerland – November 16, 2024: Alley of Flags leading to the Palais des Nations, a complex of buildings housing the United Nations Office in Geneva, European headquarters of the UNA view of Nasdaq headquarters in Times Square, as Nasdaq fell nearly 4 percent this morning on January 27, 2025 in New York City. European and Asian stock markets mostly slid Monday and Wall Street was forecast to open sharply lower on talk that a cheaper Chinese generative AI programme can outperform big-name rivals, notably in the United States. (Photo by Bryan R. SMITH / AFP) (Photo by BRYAN R. SMITH/AFP via Getty Images)WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 29: U.S. President Donald Trump walks into the East Room before signing the Laken Riley Act, the first piece of legislation passed during his second term in office, at the White House on January 29, 2025 in Washington, DC. Jason Riley and Allyson Philips, the parents of 22-year-old Laken Riley, a University of Georgia nursing student who was murdered in 2024 by an undocumented immigrant, attended the signing ceremony. Among other measures, the law directs law enforcement authorities to detain and deport immigrants who are accused but not yet convicted of specific crimes, if they are in the country illegally. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)Mexico City, Mexico, Terminal Central de Autobuses del Norte, bus station, Vips restaurant noodle soup. (Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)Paris, France: A woman sits alone at a sidewalk cafe looking at her phone.BURTON-UPON-TRENT, ENGLAND – MARCH 31: Millie Bright of England hugs teammate Beth Mead after arriving at St Georges Park for the England Women International Camp on March 31, 2025 in Burton-upon-Trent, England. (Photo by Harriet Lander – The FA/The FA via Getty Images)
TOPSHOT – US President Donald Trump signs an executive order for pardons on January 6 offenders in the Oval Office of the WHite House in Washington, DC, on January 20, 2025. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)RAFAH, GAZA – FEBRUARY 28: Yezen Al-Kfarna, a 10 year old Palestinian boy who suffers malnourishment due to the ongoing Israeli blockade receives medical treatment with limited resources at Abu Yusuf al-Najjar Hospital in Rafah, Gaza on February 28, 2024. Palestinians are struggling with hunger and malnutrition due to the blockade preventing humanitarian aid from entering. Many Gazan children are in danger of death due to malnutrition. (Photo by Jehad Alshrafi/Anadolu via Getty Images)SANAA, YEMEN – DECEMBER 13: A Yemeni child, suffering from malnutrition, receives treatment with limited resources in the Department of Combating Malnutrition at Sabeen Hospital in Sanaa, Yemen on December 13, 2022. Millions of people will face hunger unless urgent action is taken in Yemen, which is in the grip of a humanitarian crisis brought on by a civil war that has lasted more than seven years, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). (Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)A mother holds feet of her malnourished child as he lies in a bed receiving medical treatment at the malnutrition ward of Al-Sabeen hospital in Sanaa, Yemen, June 27, 2020. TO GO WITH « Feature: Yemen’s children suffer from lack of medicine, aid cut » (Photo by Mohammed Mohammed/Xinhua via Getty Images)SANAA, YEMEN – JULY 31: A health worker prepares food for Yemeni children suffering from malnutrition at the Malnutrition Prevention Department of Sabeen Hospital in Sanaa, Yemen on July 31, 2023. The United Nations (UN) World Food Program (WFP) announced that it will suspend its ‘malnutrition prevention program’ in Yemen due to lack of funding. (Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)Sudanese dockers unload a US aid shipment organised by the US Agency for International Development and the World Food Programme at Port Sudan on the Red Sea coast, on May 5, 2016.
Dockers began unloading tens of thousands of tonnes of food from a US aid ship destined for war-torn areas of Sudan, an AFP correspondent reported. The bulk carrier Liberty Grace docked in Port Sudan with a cargo of 47,500 tonnes of sorghum, a staple food in Sudan.
/ AFP / ASHRAF SHAZLY (Photo credit should read ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP via Getty Images)Sudanese dockers unload bags of sorgham (cereal) from one of two US ships carrying humanitarian aid supplies provided by the US development agency USAID, at Port Sudan on the red sea coast on June 5, 2018. The United States is the largest single donor to the world food program in Sudan and regularly distributes food aid to the East African country. This shipment will be distributed to over a million Sudanese who are in need of assistance. (Photo by Ashraf SHAZLY / AFP) (Photo by ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP via Getty Images)US AID workers watch as relief supplies are unloaded at Manila’s international airport on October 13, 2009, donated by the United States Agency for International Development (AID) to be turned over to the UN’s International Organization for Migration which has been helping hundreds of thousands displaced by back-to-back cyclones that left over 650 dead and displaced six million people. The UN’s chief humanitarian official John Holmes said the body may have to revise upwards its flash appeal of 74 million USD for the Philippines issued last week. AFP PHOTO / JAY DIRECTO (Photo by JAY DIRECTO / AFP) (Photo by JAY DIRECTO/AFP via Getty Images)KHAN YUNIS, GAZA – NOVEMBER 08: 9 month old baby Farhana Al-Ashqar, who suffered brain atrophy due to malnutrition and lack of medication, is receiving medical treatment with limited facilities at the European Hospital in Khan Yunis, Gaza on November 08, 2024. Many babies lost their lives as a result of malnutrition and lack of treatment in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has continued its attacks and prevented aid entry since October 7, 2023. (Photo by Doaa Albaz/Anadolu via Getty Images)DRUZHKIVKA, UKRAINE – FEBRUARY 7: A view of a box of food rations from the World Food Programme ready to be distributed to local residents at a food distribution point run by the Ukrainian charity Angels of Salvation (AOS) on February 7, 2025 in Druzhkivka, Ukraine. Angels of Salvation provides a range of humanitarian assistance in frontline areas across the Donetsk, Luhansk and Kherson regions. Among the charity’s funders has been the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which has provided Ukraine with billions of dollars in humanitarian aid and financial support since Russia’s large-scale invasion in February 2022. The Trump Administration recently imposed a spending freeze on USAID and announced that most of its global staff were being placed on leave. (Photo by Pierre Crom/Getty Images)SANAA, YEMEN – DECEMBER 13: Yemeni children suffering from malnutrition, receive treatment with limited resources in the Department of Combating Malnutrition at Sabeen Hospital in Sanaa, Yemen on December 13, 2022. Millions of people will face hunger unless urgent action is taken in Yemen, which is in the grip of a humanitarian crisis brought on by a civil war that has lasted more than seven years, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). (Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)A US AID worker watches as relief supplies are unloaded at Manila’s international airport on October 13, 2009, donated by the United States Agency for International Development (AID) to be turned over to the UN’s International Organization for Migration which has been helping hundreds of thousands displaced by back-to-back cyclones that left over 650 dead and displaced six million people. The UN’s chief humanitarian official John Holmes said the body may have to revise upwards its flash appeal of 74 million USD for the Philippines issued last week. AFP PHOTO / JAY DIRECTO (Photo credit should read JAY DIRECTO/AFP via Getty Images)