Nations work to update draft of WHO's proposed pandemic treaty
The treaty takes aim at the huge inequalities in health care and access to products that the COVID-19 pandemic brought into sharp focus.
The treaty takes aim at the huge inequalities in health care and access to products that the COVID-19 pandemic brought into sharp focus.
WFP's leader represents a seemingly bygone era of bipartisanship as both a close political ally of Joe Biden and widow of John McCain.
The number of children without basic social protections is increasing worldwide, UNICEF and ILO say in a new study.
The U.N.'s special envoy to Syria says an effective response to the earthquake "was hampered in part" by the war.
The U.N. emergency relief coordinator's office set a $4.3 billion target to help people suffering in the war-torn nation.
The global demands for peace grow as humanitarian aid workers emphasize the war's devastating effect on children.
As the largest shareholder in the World Bank, the U.S. traditionally nominates candidates for a five-year term as president.
Putin said Russia will not withdraw from the treaty but will no longer allow NATO countries to inspect its nuclear arsenal.
Women and girls still don't get the support they need, the U.N. chief said, and African nations cannot develop with "one hand tied behind their backs."
U.S. and Chinese diplomats met for the first time since the U.S. shot down what officials called a Chinese surveillance balloon.
The agreement emerged from high-level political talks among 85 countries on the sidelines of an international summit.
The U.N. health agency says it updated its plans based on China's response but there's been "no quiet shelving of any plans" for investigating.
As Russia's war in Ukraine nears the one-year mark, the U.N. again calls on donors to step up with billions more in aid.
The move reflects the Ukrainian president's request for vastly more heavy weaponry and ammunition to launch an expected spring counteroffensive against Russia.
The tiny island nation made the case that more attention must be focused on the threat of rising sea levels and gaps in international law about loss of land.
The death toll from the earthquakes rose to more than 36,000 people as the search continued despite a closing survival window.