WHO Appeals for $1 Bn for World’s Worst Health Crises in 2026

 Displaced Palestinian children gather at a tent camp in Gaza City, February 3, 2026. (Reuters)
Displaced Palestinian children gather at a tent camp in Gaza City, February 3, 2026. (Reuters)
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WHO Appeals for $1 Bn for World’s Worst Health Crises in 2026

 Displaced Palestinian children gather at a tent camp in Gaza City, February 3, 2026. (Reuters)
Displaced Palestinian children gather at a tent camp in Gaza City, February 3, 2026. (Reuters)

The World Health Organization on Tuesday appealed for $1 billion to tackle health crises this year across the world's 36 most severe emergencies, including in Gaza, Sudan, Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The UN health agency estimated 239 million people would need urgent humanitarian assistance this year and the money would keep essential health services going.

WHO health emergencies chief Chikwe Ihekweazu told reporters in Geneva: "A quarter of a billion people are living through humanitarian crises that strip away the most basic protections: safety, shelter and access to health care.

"In these settings, health needs are surging, whether due to injuries, disease outbreaks, malnutrition or untreated chronic diseases," he warned.

"Yet access to care is shrinking."

The agency's emergency request was significantly lower than in recent years, given the global funding crunch for aid operations.

Washington, traditionally the UN health agency's biggest donor, has slashed foreign aid spending under President Donald Trump, who on his first day back in office in January 2025 handed the WHO his country's one-year withdrawal notice.

Last year, WHO had appealed for $1.5 billion but Ihekweazu said that only $900 million was ultimately made available.

Unfortunately, he said, the agency had been "recognizing ... that the appetite for resource mobilization is much smaller than it was in previous years".

"That's one of the reasons that we've calibrated our ask a little bit more towards what is available realistically, understanding the situation around the world, the constraints that many countries have," he said.

The WHO said in 2026 it was "hyper-prioritizing the highest-impact services and scaling back lower-impact activities to maximize lives saved".

Last year, global funding cuts forced 6,700 health facilities across 22 humanitarian settings to either close or reduce services, "cutting 53 million people off from health care", Ihekweazu said.

"Families living on the edge face impossible decisions, such as whether to buy food or medicine," he added, stressing that "people should never have to make these choices".

"This is why today we are appealing to the better sense of countries, and of people, and asking them to invest in a healthier, safer world."



Former Ecuadoran Top Diplomat Enters Race for UN Chief

Maria Fernanda Espinosa, the Ecuadorian candidate seeking to oust actual Organization of the American States Secretary General, Luis Almagro, is seen before an interview with AFP journalists in a Washington, DC hotel on February 6, 2020. (AFP)
Maria Fernanda Espinosa, the Ecuadorian candidate seeking to oust actual Organization of the American States Secretary General, Luis Almagro, is seen before an interview with AFP journalists in a Washington, DC hotel on February 6, 2020. (AFP)
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Former Ecuadoran Top Diplomat Enters Race for UN Chief

Maria Fernanda Espinosa, the Ecuadorian candidate seeking to oust actual Organization of the American States Secretary General, Luis Almagro, is seen before an interview with AFP journalists in a Washington, DC hotel on February 6, 2020. (AFP)
Maria Fernanda Espinosa, the Ecuadorian candidate seeking to oust actual Organization of the American States Secretary General, Luis Almagro, is seen before an interview with AFP journalists in a Washington, DC hotel on February 6, 2020. (AFP)

Ecuadoran former foreign minister Maria Fernanda Espinosa has become the fifth candidate to enter the race for the next head of the United Nations, the UN General Assembly spokesperson told AFP on Tuesday.

Espinosa was nominated by Antigua and Barbuda, and joins four other candidates already nominated to succeed UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who stands down at the end of the year.

"We received materials from Antigua and Barbuda yesterday (Monday) afternoon," said the spokesperson, La Neice Collins.

The Ecuadoran, who was also her nation's defense minister, served as president of the General Assembly from September 2018 to September 2019.

The other contenders to become the next UN chief are Chile's Michelle Bachelet, Argentina's Rafael Grossi, Costa Rica's Rebeca Grynspan and Senegal's Macky Sall.

Those four were publicly interviewed by member states in April, and any new candidate will also undergo this process.

Following a tradition of geographical rotation that is not always observed, Latin America is in line to provide the next UN chief.

Many states are also advocating for a woman to hold the position for the first time.

The General Assembly, where all UN member states are represented, elects the secretary-general for a five-year term, renewable once.

But they can only do so on the recommendation of the UN's highest decision-making body, the Security Council, which is due to begin its selection process by the end of July.

Particular power rests with the council's five permanent members -- the United States, China, Russia, the United Kingdom and France -- which each can veto decisions.

Whoever is selected for secretary-general will begin their term on January 1, 2027.


Kremlin Releases Video of Putin Out and About in Moscow After Western Bunker Claims

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with media following his meeting with foreign delegations at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, 09 May 2026. Russia marks the 81 st anniversary of its victory over Nazi Germany and its allies in World War II. (EPA)
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with media following his meeting with foreign delegations at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, 09 May 2026. Russia marks the 81 st anniversary of its victory over Nazi Germany and its allies in World War II. (EPA)
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Kremlin Releases Video of Putin Out and About in Moscow After Western Bunker Claims

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with media following his meeting with foreign delegations at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, 09 May 2026. Russia marks the 81 st anniversary of its victory over Nazi Germany and its allies in World War II. (EPA)
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with media following his meeting with foreign delegations at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, 09 May 2026. Russia marks the 81 st anniversary of its victory over Nazi Germany and its allies in World War II. (EPA)

The Kremlin has released ‌a video of Vladimir Putin driving in Moscow and meeting an old school teacher in a hotel lobby, after Western media outlets cited a European intelligence report as saying the Russian president spent weeks holed up in bunkers.

The reports, which appeared in the run-up to Putin's annual May 9 appearance on Red Square to mark victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, and whose origin the Kremlin queried, suggested security around him had been sharply tightened and that he spent weeks on end directing the war in Ukraine from underground bunkers because of fears of an attempted assassination or coup.

Russian officials have dismissed such ‌scenarios as nonsense and ‌the Putin video, which was released late on ‌Monday, ⁠appeared to be a ⁠visual rebuttal of those accusations and of assertions - which have long been levelled at him by some of his critics - that he is increasingly out of touch with his own people.

It showed a relaxed-looking Putin pulling up to a hotel in central Moscow behind the wheel of a Russian-made SUV with a security guard. He is then seen going into the lobby with a ⁠big bouquet of flowers to meet one of his old ‌school teachers.

Dressed casually in jeans and ‌a light jacket, Putin, 73, is shown hugging his former teacher, Vera Gurevich, who ‌repeatedly kisses him on the cheeks and whispers something in his ear.

Putin, who ‌started school in what was then Leningrad in 1960, is then seen making small talk about the weather with an apparently random passer-by who walks into the hotel lobby with his family before Putin helps his former teacher into his vehicle and ‌drives her off for dinner in the Kremlin.

Putin had invited Gurevich to the annual Red Square parade and to ⁠then spend ⁠a few days in Moscow enjoying a cultural program, the Kremlin said in a statement.

In power as either president or prime minister since 1999, Putin - whose ratings have dipped in recent months but remain high, according to state pollsters - is two years into his current term which is due to expire in 2030.

Russia's State Duma, the lower house of parliament, is up for re-election in September at a time when growth forecasts for this year have been sharply cut back amid signs that people are unhappy about a growing Internet crackdown.

Putin said on Saturday that he thought the war in Ukraine was coming to an end, remarks that came just hours after he had vowed victory in Ukraine at Moscow's most scaled-back Victory Day parade in years.


Pentagon Says US Cost of Iran War Nearing $29 billion

US and Iran flags are seen in this illustration taken June 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
US and Iran flags are seen in this illustration taken June 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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Pentagon Says US Cost of Iran War Nearing $29 billion

US and Iran flags are seen in this illustration taken June 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
US and Iran flags are seen in this illustration taken June 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

The Pentagon said Tuesday that the cost of the war with Iran had climbed to nearly $29 billion, as President Donald Trump faced mounting scrutiny over the conflict and its impact on military readiness.

The new figure, revealed by the Defense Department during a budget hearing on Capitol Hill, is about $4 billion higher than the estimate offered by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth two weeks ago.

Hegseth and General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were testifying on a $1.5 trillion budget request for 2027 alongside Pentagon finance chief Jules Hurst III when they were asked for an update on the war's price tag.

"At the time of testimony... it was $25 billion dollars," Hurst told lawmakers, referring to Hegseth's April 29 estimate. "But the joint staff team and the comptroller are constantly looking at estimates and now we think it is closer to 29."