World
In Argentina, soup kitchen sees rise in hungry families as inflation increases
A week ago, 44 pounds of pasta was enough to feed the dozens of families who visit the Sal de la Tierra soup kitchen in Villa Fiorito, a poor Buenos Aires suburb beset by the economic crisis ravaging Argentina.
But with monthly inflation topping 20%, the number of hungry residents has soared. This week, the soup kitchen, which relies on private contributions and volunteer work, had to prepare 30 kilograms of pasta.
“There’s less and less to give and more and more hunger,” said Maria Torres, a volunteer cook with the charity, who is currently unemployed. Today there are around 70 families to feed, up from 20 families a few months ago, she said.
COMMUNITY KITCHEN STRUGGLES AS INFLATION PUSHES MORE FAMILIES INTO POVERTY IN BUENOS AIRES
“These people are in a financial situation where if they don’t go to a soup kitchen, they don’t eat,” she added.
Hunger in Argentina continues to be an issue as one soup kitchen is fearing closure due to inflation. (REUTERS/Martin Cossarini)
Inflation, which hit 211% in 2023, doubled month-over-month in December after the inauguration of libertarian President Javier Milei, who quickly devalued the peso currency, cut public subsidies and loosened some price controls.
Official inflation figures for January will be released on Wednesday. A Reuters poll of economists pegged the monthly figure at 20.5%, a slowdown from 25.5% in December, when it hit the highest level since the country’s hyperinflation crisis in the early ’90s.
Milei’s government sees inflation gradually falling over the coming months, although poverty, which currently tops 40%, could skyrocket before the economy stabilizes.
Economists polled by Reuters in January said they expect inflation to remain high in Argentina throughout the first half of 2024, cooling only toward the second half of the year as a burgeoning recession is likely to slow further increases.
The IMF foresees Argentina’s economy shrinking by 2.5% in 2024.
“It hurts me. I’m ashamed of what we’re going through,” said Mercedes Insaurralde, another unemployed volunteer at the soup kitchen. “I can go hungry, but the children can’t.”
World
UK asylum seekers could have to pay government $13K before applying for settlement
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People granted asylum in Britain could have to repay the government about £10,000, roughly more than $13,000, for accommodation and basic living support before they can become eligible to apply for settlement, officials announced on Monday.
This comes as immigration has become one of the most important issues in British politics, consistently ranking among voters’ top concerns in polling.
Under the proposed rules, the government says repayments would be means-tested and limited to adults above an income threshold. Officials say safeguards would be included to prevent people from being pushed into extreme poverty, though key details of the threshold and enforcement mechanism have not yet been published.
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Asylum seekers in Britain could have to repay the government more than $13,000 before they can become eligible to apply for settlement. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
The rules would not be applied retrospectively and children would not be subject to the payments.
“Receiving asylum support is a right, but it is also a responsibility,” Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said. “Once people can contribute and repay the generosity of the British people, we expect them to do so.”
Mahmood explained that her latest reforms aim to reduce the burden on taxpayers’ wallets.
The government would only charge adults who can afford to pay. (Geography Photos/Universal Images Group)
The Home Office also said over the weekend that it aims to remove 45,000 more people with no legal right to remain and foreign criminals within the next decade, in addition to the tens of thousands already being removed on a yearly basis.
The center-left Labour Party has increased efforts to curb both legal and illegal immigration as it seeks to counter the rising popularity of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party, which has vowed to deport up to 600,000 asylum seekers and other people whose claims or appeals have failed.
“Mass migration has changed this country, certainly in many of our cities, literally beyond recognition,” Farage told Fox News Digital last week. “We’ve not been selective about who’s been able to come into the country. That is a major contributory factor.”
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Shabana Mahmood, Britain’s home secretary, said the reforms aim to reduce the burden on taxpayers’. (Getty Images)
Refugee advocates and migration researchers have criticized the proposal, arguing it could punish people who fled persecution and questioning whether many refugees would earn enough to repay the proposed sum. Critics have also warned that tying repayment to settlement could create uncertainty for people trying to rebuild their lives in the UK.
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The Labour Party has faced internal divisions over how tight its immigration policy should be, and the party is up against further overall uncertainty after its leader, Prime Minister Keir Starmer, announced last week that he will resign.
Reuters contributed to this report.
World
DR Congo says 1,307 Ebola cases confirmed, including 377 deaths
Outbreak spreads to a fourth province, Haut-Uele, bordering South Sudan and the CAR, according to a media report.
Published On 30 Jun 2026
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) says confirmed Ebola cases in the country have reached 1,307 and include 377 deaths.
In an update issued late on Monday, the country said the confirmed cases have been recorded in three provinces – Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu.
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The announcement comes as the AFP news agency reported that a case has been detected in a fourth province. A source at the DRC’s National Institute of Biomedical Research (INRB) quoted by AFP said the viral haemorrhagic fever has spread to Haut-Uele, which borders South Sudan and the Central African Republic.
The source said the case there was detected after an infected person travelled from Bunia, Ituri’s capital, to Haut-Uele.
That person has since died, another health source told AFP.
Authorities are now trying to trace the chain of transmission and identify contacts.
Its spread to Haut-Uele means the DRC’s entire northeast, home to about 15 million people, is now affected.
The conflict-hit province of Ituri is the epicentre of the country’s latest Ebola outbreak, its 17th, which started in May.
In many cases, the virus has spread at funerals, where the highly infectious bodies of Ebola victims are handled.
For weeks, aid workers, facing mistrust among local communities, have struggled to plan safe burials in affected areas to prevent contact with the dead.
In the DRC, funerals often last several days, during which family members and friends touch the body of the deceased.
Reporting from a treatment centre in Rwampara in Ituri province, Al Jazeera’s Catherine Wambua-Soi said health workers often lack sufficient equipment.
“These centres have been attacked several times. Last month, tents here were set on fire by an angry mob. Some Congolese still distrust those trying to help,” she said.
“They need more of everything: protective gear, medicines, rapid test kits … and body bags.”
On Saturday, the government issued a ban on public gatherings in four provinces, including the country’s capital, Kinshasa, as it continues to battle the spread of the outbreak.
That order was issued before a planned protest in Kinshasa on July 8 against constitutional reform, and opposition figures have called the ban “politically motivated.”
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