Should the US fund health insurance or leave it to the market?

Health insurance has once again become a battleground in US politics.

With costs rising and government subsidies under pressure, Republicans and Democrats remain sharply divided over how much the government should pay for health insurance and how much should be left to market forces.

Supporters of public investment say broader coverage strengthens the economy and protects families. Critics say it drives up costs and weakens competition.

In Senegal, people are being asked to make sacrifices to help fix the debt crisis.

Gaza woman blinded in Israeli strike opens bakery to subsist and hope

A woman in Gaza blinded in an Israeli air strike has opened a bakery to make ends meet and keep her hopes for the future alive, she tells Al Jazeera.

Warda Abu Jarad, 51, is one of 170,698 Palestinians who have been wounded in Gaza since Israel began its genocidal war on the territory in October 2023.

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Abu Jarad explained that she lost her sight when her house was bombed by the Israeli military, causing debris to fall into her eyes.

“The smoke from the bombing blinded me completely,” she said.

Speaking from a tent in Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, the mother told Al Jazeera that she was still adjusting to being blind and needs someone to guide her whenever she wants to move from one place to another.

“Even when I want to move inside the tent, I wait for someone to help me cross,” she said. “I tried to enter the tent once, hit my head and fell, … so now I feel the ground with my feet to know what’s in front of me.”

Her daughter has been her biggest support, she said.

Warda Abu Jarad and others prepare baked goods [Screengrab/ Al Jazeera]

Her blindness has been hard for her to take. “The most precious thing in life is sight. Every time I struggle to reach something I need, I start crying,” Abu Jarad said.

Despite such challenges, Abu Jarad is, like other Palestinians in Gaza, trying to rebuild her life amid the ruins, ongoing Israeli bombardment, restricted aid and grief.

“I decided to open a business to provide for my family. I opened a bakery and started to grow it. I started baking ma’amoul [filled butter cookies] and bread,” she said one month into a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

“I need to keep going because the situation here is so hard,” she added.

Since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10, there have been some small improvements in daily life in Gaza, but the United Nations and NGOs have warned that the amount of aid Israel is letting into Gaza remains wholly insufficient.

Israel claims it has adhered to the truce by permitting entry to 600 aid trucks each day while Hamas says the daily number is actually about 150.

On Wednesday, Israel said it had reopened the Zikim crossing to the northern Gaza Strip.

“The opening of direct crossings to the north is vital to ensure that sufficient aid reaches people as soon as possible,” the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said recently.

“All I want in life is to have my sight restored, and I want to see my daughter as a bride in her wedding dress. This is my greatest wish from God,” Abu Jarad said.

Warda Abu Jarad, 51, opened a bakery after being blinded in an Israeli air strike
Warda Abu Jarad, 51, says she started her business to provide for her family [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Video: Iraq’s election results explained

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Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani is claiming victory for his coalition, after early election results were declared. No single bloc is expected to achieve an outright majority, raising the prospect of lengthy negotiations to form a government. Ali Hashem explains.

Non-native tree devastates Ethiopia’s ecosystems and threatens livelihoods

Once lauded as a remedy for Ethiopia’s advancing desertification, a non-native tree has transformed into an uncontrolled menace across the East African country, endangering delicate ecosystems and threatening the existence of local communities.

The prosopis, a shrubby tree indigenous to Latin America, was initially introduced to Ethiopia’s northeastern Afar region during the 1970s.

For livestock farmer Khadija Humed, it has become a source of misery.

“Because of this plant, we have become poor,” she told the AFP news agency.

Initially, prosopis seemed promising. Resistant to heat and quick-growing, it was intended to prevent soil erosion and provide cooling shade in Afar’s dry lowlands.

Today, however, it dominates the region’s expansive plains with thorny branches that reach heights of up to 10 metres (33ft).

Each tree extracts up to 7 litres (nearly 2 gallons) of water daily through its extensive root system, depleting soil moisture and devastating agriculture.

Local pastoralists also reported that prosopis harms their livestock.

“The plant has turned against us,” Hailu Shiferaw, a researcher at the Ethiopian Water and Land Resources Centre, told AFP.

“No one could have foreseen its harmful effects.”

In Humed’s village, about 200km (124 miles) northeast of Addis Ababa, she explained that the tree’s pods sicken their cattle and obstruct their mouths and stomachs, sometimes fatally. These losses have plunged the community into severe poverty, she said.

“I personally have 10 cows and more than 20 goats and sheep. But before prosopis, people here used to have 50 to 100 cattle,” she said.

“Everything has changed,” 76-year-old Yusuf Mohammed remarked, noting that the tree’s thick foliage attracts predators that prey on their livestock.

“We never had wild animal attacks before. … After prosopis spread, lions, hyenas, wild cats and foxes invaded our villages,” Mohammed said.

He added that its toxic thorns injure livestock, leaving them weakened and unable to forage effectively.

Globally, humans have introduced about 3,500 invasive species, many causing ecological damage.

These species cost economies around the world at least $423bn each year, according to a 2023 report by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. That amount is equivalent to Denmark’s gross domestic product.

Ketema Bekele, associate professor of environmental economics at Ethiopia’s Haramaya University, calculated that prosopis has cost Afar $602m over three decades – nearly quadruple its annual budget.

The plant now infests about 20,000sq km (7,720sq miles) of Afar and is “out of control”, spreading into the Amhara and Oromia regions, he noted.

By 2023, it covered 8.61 percent of Ethiopia, according to the Journal of Environmental Management, up from 2.16 percent in 2003, while pastureland diminished by more than a quarter during the same period.

The journal projected that prosopis could occupy 22 percent of Ethiopia’s 1.1 million square kilometres (425,000sq miles) by 2060.

Camels contribute to its spread by consuming the pods and dispersing the seeds through excretion.

Since 2022, CARE International has tried to halt the spread by encouraging locals to harvest the plant.

With support from the Danish fund Danida, the nongovernmental organisation also removes trees to establish fruit orchards.

Mohammed believes the invasion can be controlled but emphasises the need for additional assistance.