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.

Ecuador defender Pineida killed in shooting

Images courtesy of Getty

Mario Pineida, a defender for Ecuador, was shot in Guayaquil, and passed away at the age of 33.

Pineida was reportedly shot on Wednesday by two motorcyclists who opened fire on him, his mother, and another woman outside a north-of-the-city store.

Ecuador’s interior ministry announced the establishment of a special police force to look into the situation.

With 1, 900 murders recorded between January and September, Ecuador’s highest number, there has been gang violence and drug trafficking.

Between 2014 and 2021, Pineida won nine caps for Ecuador.

He started his professional career at Independiente DV before transferring to Barcelona SC in Guayaquil in 2016.

Additionally, he interned on loan at El Nacional and Fluminese.

On social media, Independiente and Fluminese praised Pineida, while Barcelona SC wrote, “This unfortunate news makes all of us who are part of this institution deeply dismayed.”

related subjects

  • Ecuador
  • Football

More on this story.

    • August 16
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

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.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

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.

England should resist wholesale change – Vaughan

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

  • 403 Comments

Former England captain Michael Vaughan believes that even if their anticipated Ashes defeat is confirmed, they shouldn’t alter their starting lineup.

After falling to 213-8 on day three of the third Test, 158 runs behind, Ben Stokes’ side look set to once more lose the series in Australia at the earliest opportunity.

A defeat in Adelaide would set the tone for a fourth straight series defeat for Australia and end the nation’s 18-test winless streak.

Major ashes series defeats abroad frequently signal a significant change in English cricket.

However, Vaughan cited his own success as a member of the England team that finished the 2002-2003 campaign with a 40-0 record before winning the fifth Test in Sydney.

The 51-year-old said that having that experience helped him form a winning team in the infamous return contest in 2005.

Vaughan told the Ashes Debrief on BBC iPlayer, “English cricket frequently works in four-year cycles, home and away Ashes series.”

“Some players need to leave because they aren’t good enough at this level,” according to one or two players, but some have enough talent.

In four years, they will be fine if they are properly coached, managed, and given the right kind of preparation.

Stokes, 34, would seem highly unlikely to make the next tour of England’s squad in 2029-30 while currently playing in Australia. Another question is probably brewing about Batter Joe Root, who will turn almost 39 in four years.

Ben Duckett, the opener, is the next oldest of the 14 players, with Ben Duckett as the next oldest. When the next Ashes tour begins, the left-hander will be 35.

Vaughan, who played 82 Test matches for England between 1999 and 2008, said, “There are a lot of players in this England side that should still be coming in four years’ time.”

“A few of the senior pros might pass away, and one or two will fall by the wayside.”

What I don’t want English cricket to do is to believe that “all these players have failed, we’ll put them in the bin and start again.” You want to make playing in these conditions harder for more players.

In faultless batting conditions, England only fell to 42-3 and 71-4 after defeating Australia for 371 on the second morning of the third Test at the Adelaide Oval.

From 151 balls, Stokes’ defiant 45 ensured England were not bowling again by the end.

A defeat in Adelaide would set up England’s third straight away Ashes series, which had lost by three games.

The series moves on to Melbourne for its fourth Test on Boxing Day before arriving in Sydney in the new year.

” I look back to 2002-03, we were 4-0 down and won in Sydney. After winning that one game, I learned a lot, Vaughan said.

What data are gathered from this quiz?

related subjects

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Australia
  • The Ashes
  • Cricket

More on this story.

    • October 27
    • last 4 hours
    Ben Stokes and Jamie Smith discuss the decisions with the umpires
    • last 4 hours
    Ollie Pope looks disappointed

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.

A ‘novice’ who can ‘punch a bit’ – how good is Paul?

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Jake Paul has spent years demanding to be recognised as a “real” boxer.

He has called out the likes of Saul ‘ Canelo ‘ Alvarez, while at the same time picking opponents ranging from retired MMA fighters and faded ex-champions to reality TV personalities and even a grandfather.

But on Friday in Miami, that sideshow collides with boxing’s top tier as Paul faces two-time heavyweight world champion and Olympic gold medallist Anthony Joshua.

Some give Paul, the Disney-actor-turned-YouTuber-turned-boxer, credit for daring. Others question his sanity. Almost nobody gives him a chance.

“I worry about Jake’s health”, trainer Joe Gallagher tells BBC Sport.

Former world champion and Team GB coach Richie Woodhall says Joshua is the “hardest puncher” he has ever had on the pads.

Liverpool’s two-division champion Natasha Jonas calls the whole event simply “wild”.

That tension with boxing’s old guard irritates Paul. In fight week, he bristled at the mention of criticism, describing detractors as a “peanut gallery that doesn’t exist” and insisting the question of whether he belongs no longer concerns him.

On paper, Paul-Joshua is the biggest mismatch to headline a boxing event.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

Inside Paul’s camp with heavyweight sparring

Getty Images

Paul has built the kind of operation only someone with serious finances – and intent – could assemble. Even sceptics acknowledge the graft.

“He’s not one of these people who say it but don’t live it. He takes it seriously”, Jonas says.

He trains out of a £3m converted warehouse in Puerto Rico, a full-time base with recovery suites, a strength and conditioning centre and high-end equipment used by elite professionals.

Conditioning coach Larry Wade, who has worked with world champions such as Shawn Porter and Badou Jack, oversees his physical work.

Sparring has matched the investment. Former cruiserweight world champion Lawrence Okolie spent time with Paul and, according to the Londoner’s trainer Gallagher, returned “impressed by how much better Paul was than people think”.

Cuban heavyweight Frank Sanchez and American puncher Jared Anderson are also sparring partners.

American heavyweight Cassius Chaney – who shared 13 rounds with him early in camp – says the work was real.

“The guys haven’t taken it easy on him”, he says.

“Everything is intact. From the first day to the second day of sparring, Jake has definitely got better”.

Paul himself points to tangible progress.

Novice? British title level? How good is he?

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Paul has beaten names casual fans recognise, but rarely when their boxing ability has carried weight.

The win over Mike Tyson generated headlines, the reality was a 58-year-old whose best nights belong to another century. Julio Cesar Chaez Jr had pedigree but lacked commitment.

And when Paul faced a legitimate boxer, Tommy Fury in 2023, he was outboxed and outpointed.

Team Paul point to first-round knockouts of Ryan Bourland and Andre August as proof of progress. Both had respectable records on paper but little standing inside the sport, and neither has boxed since.

Useful as development markers, they do not indicate anything beyond novice level.

“Would he win a British title? No, he’s probably like an area-level type of fighter”, Jonas says.

For Woodhall, the gap is vast. “My Team GB amateurs would send him into the next universe. They’d box his head off”.

Gallagher draws a comparison with Conor Benn – another fighter who built a profile without climbing the traditional ladder.

What are Paul’s strengths and weaknesses?

Those who have shared rounds with Paul acknowledge he offers more than the caricature suggests.

“He’s athletic, he has an IQ and he works hard. Those qualities alone are big”, Chaney says. He describes Paul’s power as “twitchy… the kind where you think, ‘ oh, he’s caught me there'”.

Gallagher feels the unconventional nature of Paul’s style could be his biggest asset.

“He’s not your textbook fighter that has come through an amateur system, where he has to put together the basics”, he says.

“There’s an awkwardness to him and his record shows he can punch”.

Paul’s conditioning has sharpened, but money can’t buy time in boxing and ring craft can only be forged through years of competitive rounds.

“Even experienced journeymen know how to take a shot, run the clock down. Jake doesn’t have that experience”, Woodhall says.

Jake Paul v Anthony Joshua

How does he approach a challenge like Joshua?

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Chaney – originally earmarked to be Joshua’s next opponent – expects Paul to try to steal small moments rather than commit to anything sustained and believes Joshua may be cautious early.

“No fighter wants to get caught by Jake Paul”, he says.

Gallagher believes fans will have the “stopwatch” out to see how quickly Joshua finishes it, though he still predicts a clinical end. Jonas “wouldn’t be surprised if it’s over in 10 seconds”.

For all the Netflix build-up and celebrity gloss, though, Woodhall sees real danger.

“Jake better just keep his hands up and keep really low. If he’s going to make a fight of it he has to have a go – and if he has a go, he will get completely blown away”, he says.

Recent history backs that fear. When Joshua last faced a non-elite opponent, Francis Ngannou – a former MMA heavyweight champion – was flattened by a single, chilling right hand.

Related topics

  • Boxing

5 Live Boxing podcast with Bunce in Miami

More boxing from the BBC

    • 16 August
    BBC Sport microphone and phone