Published On 18 Nov 2025
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Published On 18 Nov 2025

A young Indigenous Embera woman travels to Colombia’s jungle to confront a suicide epidemic in her community.
Embera elders often blame malevolent spirits for the deaths of young people, having no word for suicide in their language. Ilsa Banuvi, who was raised between Indigenous tradition and modern society, spearheads organisations that seek to reinforce identity while also recognising the need to adapt.
Journeying from Quibdo city deep into the Choco jungle, Ilsa examines many challenges the Embera are confronted by and why young women are disproportionately affected. As she takes on culturally sensitive action, a football championship for Indigenous girls offers hope of unity for often isolated communities. But can Ilsa navigate the often paradoxical perspectives and help her people?


Thousands of families in Gaza are plunged into darkness every evening as they can’t access electricity. The lack of power means children can’t study and keeping tents and shelters warm is a daily challenge. The damage to Gaza’s power grid runs to more than 700 million dollars.

Dramatic video filmed on a plane carrying DR Congo’s mining minister captured the moment it crashed on landing at an airport in Kolwezi in the southeast. No casualties have been reported. The minister was travelling to the site of a recent mining disaster.

Published On 18 Nov 2025
After cutting sugar from products sold in European markets, Swiss food tycoon Nestle has started adding it to baby food to boost sales in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, according to a report from an NGO.
The report, titled How Nestle gets children sucked into sugar in lower-income nations, was released on Tuesday by Swiss-based “global justice organization” Public Eye, accuses the company of “putting the health of babies in risk for profit.”
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According to the report, added sugar was discovered in 93 percent of Nestle babyfood products sold in African, Asian, and Latin American nations, in accordance with the findings of an investigation conducted by Public Eye and the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN).
According to the study, the amount of sugar added varied widely across markets.
In Thailand, baby cereal sold under the name Cerelac contained six grams of sugar, or 1.5 sugar cubes per serving.
Babies in Pakistan consume Cerelac with a sugar content of 2.7%, compared to Ethiopia, where it has 5.2%.
Cerelac is not added sugar in Switzerland and other key European markets like Germany and the UK.
The World Health Organization advises that “no added sugars or sweetening agents” be included in all foods for children under the age of three because sugar exposure early in life can lead to a lifelong preference for sugary products, increasing the risk of obesity and other chronic illnesses.
According to Public Eye, Nestle controls 20% of the global babyfood market, which generates annual sales of nearly $70 billion, and aggressively promotes its products in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
However, it warns that the investigation “tells a different story””.
The report states that Public Eye and IBFAN “demand that Nestlé put an end to this injustifiable and harmful double standard, which contributes to the explosive rise in obesity and causes children to have a lifelong preference for sugary products.”
The investigation was deemed “misleading” by a Nestle spokesperson, which has refuted previous allegations of “double standards” regarding the nutrition of its babyfood products in various regions of the world.