What’s next for the global economy in 2026?

Tariffs and a shift in economic power were at stake in 2025.

Global reordering is one of two terms that currently largely define the economy.

The tariffs that President Donald Trump has implemented have shocked global trade. This is 2025.

Major economies are redrawing alliances and rewriting their playbooks.

Countries are battling for control as their debts rise, from Africa’s mineral boom to the world’s AI race.

They are making difficult choices between climate change, spending more, borrowing more, and labor shortages.

Former football star Mario Pineida killed as violence escalates in Ecuador

According to Ecuadorian police, Mario Pineida, a 33-year-old Barcelona de Guayaquil defender and former national team player, was shot dead in an apparent attack as the country’s violence worsens.

On Wednesday, a third person was hurt in addition to the two people who police chose not to identify.

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Without providing specifics, the interior ministry of Ecuador confirmed Pineida’s death. The death of Pineida shocked Barcelona de Guayaquil’s fans, according to a statement released in a statement.

Pineida did not play in Ecuador’s qualifying for the 2026 edition despite playing eight games and earning the medals for Ecuador in 2018 and 2022.

His final appearance for Ecuador came against Brazil in a group-stage match in 2021. He attended the 2017 edition as well.

Pineida began his professional career at Independiente del Valle from 2010 to 2015. In 2016, he moved to Guayaquil, where he won two league titles. In 2022, the defender also spent a short time at Brazilian soccer team Fluminense.

The incident occurred in the Samanes region of Guayaquil, which is 265 kilometers (165 miles) southwest of Quito, according to Ecuadorian media reports.

Two motorcycle riders opened fire on Pineida, his mother, and another woman, according to Primicias, according to the digital news outlet Primicias.

Barcelona de Guayaquil’s Mario Pineida in action in the semifinals of the 2021 Copa Libertadores [Franklin Jacome/Reuters]

Ecuador, one of Latin America’s safest nations, has grown into a major transit hub for top producers Colombia and Peru and international consumers.

Numerous football players in Ecuador have been the targets of recent months of gang violence in Guayaquil, which is a hotspot for drug trafficking.

The region has seen the highest number of murders in Ecuador, with 1, 900 recorded between January and September, which is the highest toll ever recorded.

More than 9, 000 homicides are expected to be recorded in Ecuador this year, according to the Ecuadorian Observatory of Organized Crime. Last year, there were 7, 063 violent deaths, and there were 8, 248 at the previous record, 8, 248 in 2023.

In response to international drug cartel expansion, President Daniel Noboa has pledged to fight criminal organizations.

A 16-year-old Independiente del Valle football player passed away in Guayaquil in November from a stray bullet.

Three second-tier players from Ecuador’s second division, Maicol Valencia and Leandro Yepez, both from Exapromo Costa, and Jonathan Gonzalez, both of 22 de Junio, both received gunshot wounds two months prior.

Gaza doctors use 3D tech to save limbs shattered by Israel from amputation

After Israel’s genocidal war on the besieged enclave destroyed the city’s medical infrastructure, doctors in Gaza discovered a clever way to save Palestinians from losing their limbs.

The territory’s skilled physicians are using the power of the sun to power 3D printers to create medical devices for complex fractures that have become a symptom of Israeli bombing-abundant hospitals as they struggle to function amid frequent power outages.

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Dr. Fadel Naim, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon and the hospital’s acting general, reported to Al Jazeera that doctors were creating low-cost 3D-printed components to support shattered limbs to support patients who have lost their balance.

He explained how the devices can be assembled using 3D components, metal rods, nuts, and bolts, at a low cost because the types of fractures we received, especially in this war, were so complicated, so complex, that the external fixator was the most appropriate [treatment]

[Al Jazeera] Dr. Naim assembles an external fixator using 3D-printed metal rods and 3D printed components.

With the use of solar energy and fixators that would ordinarily cost more than $500 per piece, Naim and the medical solidarity organization Glia collaborated to spearhead the innovation in the enclave.

Zakaria, one of three patients whose limbs were spared amputations after receiving locally manufactured fixators, was met on Al Jazeera. He was the first patient to receive treatment using the device after his leg was shattered by shrapnel from an Israeli strike and was relocated southwards from the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza to Deir el-Balah.

Gaza doctors use 3D
Zakaria, who was met in his tent in Deir el-Balah, can walk [Screen grab/Al Jazeera] thanks to his locally produced external fixator.

“In August, I was injured, and the hospital took me there without any medical care, but after two weeks, they brought me to the operating room and used a new leg fix.” It was a Palestinian-made device, Zakaria, he said, “surprisingly, sitting in his tent.

Dr. Naim evaluated his patient and declared, “He has no pain, has no limitations in his range of motion, and he can walk.”

According to Al Jazeera’s reporter from Gaza, the ground-breaking technology is “a lifeline in Gaza where the health system is crumbling” and that it has completely lost its supply of electricity.

Palestinian doctors are still creating, resisting, and surviving in a world where everything is crumbling, she said.

Gaza doctors use 3D
The technology has proven to be a “lifeline” in Gaza, where the country’s healthcare system has collapsed [Jazeera]

12 more patients are currently awaiting treatment, according to Glia’s press release, “demonstrating both the urgent need for these devices and the life-saving impact of local production under siege.”

The organization claimed that the Gaza-led project had “global significance,” demonstrating how the technology could be applied in “extreme conditions,” and “offering a model for other conflict zones, disaster-affected regions, and climate-vulnerable communities around the world.”

Throughout the entire conflict, Israeli military operations have ravaged Gaza, with 63 percent of the hospitals still inoperable as of December 9.

In the enclave, where 1.5 million Palestinians are still displaced, 282, 000 housing units were reported last month by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

US aid cuts force Rohingya girls into marriage, children into hard labour

In Bangladesh, crucial child protection programs have been severely hampered by President Donald Trump’s drastic cuts to foreign aid, along with those made by other donor countries.

The effects are severe: girls forced into marriage, girls forced into hard labor as young as 10 years old, and some girls forced into prostitution as young as 12 years old.

The Rohingya have received more than $ 182 million in aid since Trump took office, citing improved efficiency and shared donor responsibility, but the reality is still terrible on the ground.

In the most unlikely instances of solitude, Hasina, 17, weeps for the school that once provided her with a place to escape from an otherwise merciless world in between beatings from her husband.

Since Myanmar’s military killed her father in 2017, school had provided her with protection from camp predators and the threat of forced marriage. Then, when Hasina was 16 years old, her teacher announced that the school’s funding had been reduced. The institution was closing. Her education and her early life both vanish in a flash.

Hasina and hundreds of other underage girls quickly married off after their educational opportunities were cut short and their families were concerned about the worsening circumstances caused by aid reductions. Many women have experienced domestic abuse from their husbands, including Hasina.

Hasina softly admits, “I dreamed of being something, of serving the community.” To protect her from her husband’s retaliation, The Associated Press news agency has changed her full name. My life has been destroyed.

Hasina fumbles her pink phone case, which reads “Forever Young,” in a sweltering building close to her cramped shelter. Although she is still in her early years of adulthood, she was forced by the aid cuts. Soon after getting married, her husband began physically and sexually abusing her. She had a constant desire to study English and pursue a career as a teacher. She is currently largely confined to her shelter, performing domestic chores, and dreading the upcoming assault.

If she could, she would try to flee, but she would be unable to. With the military still in charge of her homeland after the 2017 genocide, it is impossible to go back to Myanmar. Even though she no longer sees a future, her husband now has control over her future.

She claims, “I wouldn’t be trapped in this life if the school hadn’t closed.”

The 600,000 children living in these overcrowded camps are now in greater danger of harm. According to UNICEF, child crimes have increased significantly this year, with cases of kidnapping and abduction more than quadrupling to 560 in comparison to last year. 817 children were among the 817 reported reports of armed groups recruiting children.

Drone strike plunges Sudan major cities into darkness as civil war rages

Following drone strikes at a significant power plant in the east of Sudan, major cities like Khartoum and Port Sudan, including the capital and the coastal city, have been rendered gloomy.

In the ongoing civil war that has torn the country apart, a facility in Atbara, River Nile state, was attacked by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which are controlled by the government-aligned Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF). On Thursday, flames and smoke erupted from the facility.

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Al Jazeera has verified the footage that is circulated on social media showing the power plant ablaze.

Power plant officials reported that two civil defense personnel were killed while attempting to extinguish the fire that broke out after the first strike. They also claimed that rescue workers were hurt when a second drone struck as they battled the flames.

Residents of Port Sudan, according to Al Jazeera correspondent Mohamed Vall, discovered a routine power cut that had been caused by incidents in Atbara, which is located about 320 kilometers (roughly 230 miles) north of Khartoum.

He added that Sudan’s war has gotten worse of these strikes.

“This has been repeated throughout the entire year and the last year. Because they believe it is necessary to weaken the government and demonstrate to the population that they cannot be protected by this military government, Vall said, the RSF drones are flying thousands of kilometers across Sudan.

At least 104 civilians have been killed in Sudan’s Kordofan region since early December as a result of the latest escalation in a devastating drone campaign. In Kalogi, South Kordofan, the most deadly strike killed 89 people, including eight women and 43 children.

When drones struck their base in Kadugli on December 13 and sent shockwaves to six Bangladeshis, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that killing peacekeepers “could constitute war crimes under international law.”

At least six people were killed and 12 were hurt when the Dilling Military Hospital was attacked a day later, many of whom were medical staff members.

In recent months, the SAF and RSF have both used drones extensively.

In 2024, 484 drone strikes were carried out across 13 African nations, with Sudan accounting for 264, more than half of the total, according to the US-based think tank Africa Center for Strategic Studies. The SAF claimed to have shot down more than 100 drones in just ten days, adding to the intensity by March 2025.

Sexual violence is “escalating alarmingly”

In April 2023, a power conflict between the SAF and RSF sprang into open combat. More than 100, 000 people have died in the war, according to some estimates, but the exact number is still undetermined.

More than 14 million people have been displaced and at least 30 million people need urgent assistance, according to the UN, making this the largest humanitarian crisis ever. More than 40, 000 people have fled North Kordofan alone, while unrest continues among the population in besieged cities.

Sudan topped the International Rescue Committee’s Emergency Watchlist for the third year in a row, thanks to a 50% drop in global humanitarian funding. Sudan was deemed the most neglected crisis in the world by a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of 22 aid organizations in 2025.

More than 1, 600 people have died in 65 attacks on medical facilities in Sudan this year, according to WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who made the revelations on Wednesday. He claimed that “each attack strips more people of their medicines and health services.”

Additionally, Seif Magango, a UN Human Rights office spokesperson, stated on Wednesday that women were the ones who were most affected by the conflict. He said women are “attempting to flee from killing and bombs” while also being “gang raped in El-Fasher, which he described as particularly horrifying.

Darfur’s central regions, where the country is sandwiched between the RSF and SAF, are now where the heaviest fighting is now occurring.

M23 fighters withdraw from key DRC town of Uvira

NewsFeed

M23 fighters are voluntarily kicking off in the strategic town of Uvira in the Democratic Republic of Congo. At the request of international mediators, they are leaving. As troops and military convoys left Uvira, Al Jazeera’s Alain Uaykani was there.