The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile
The New Humanitarian

@newhumanitarian

Journalism from the heart of crises.

Newsletter 📥👉 thenewhumanitarian.org/subscribe
Join 🤝👉 thenewhumanitarian.org/membership

ID: 16308922

linkhttps://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/ calendar_today16-09-2008 10:02:31

120,120K Tweet

129,129K Followers

7,7K Following

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The need for mental health and psychosocial support during and after displacement crises is crystal clear, but it often gets “thrown to the bottom of the barrel” in aid responses. buff.ly/m5vPIya

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After Sudan’s army regained control of Khartoum, journalist Mohammed Alamin returned back to his city. Read the second of his two-part series: ⬇️ buff.ly/37xARMH

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“We searched every corner – but found nothing. Still, parents were screaming: ‘Where are the children?’" Read this on-the-ground report of two days spent with Gaza's first responders, by Ghada Abdulfattah: buff.ly/LVMcbjI

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

On the surface, life in the world’s largest refugee camp complex appears to be ticking along as usual. But looming on the horizon are funding cuts that will soon dramatically change conditions for the more than one million people who live in camps near Cox’s Bazar in southern

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🗞️ In the latest Inklings aid policy newsletter: Gaza Humanitarian Foundation omnishambles, why there’s chatter on pooled funds, and who gets a say on reforms. Sign up here ⬇️ buff.ly/Pm9foGF buff.ly/XhphNqu

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Challenged by a spreading insurgency that is employing new tactics and equipment, the Nigerian military has lost control of a string of bases in the northeast. buff.ly/ldI2vU9

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NEW: Private firms are taking contracts for humanitarian work as the global aid system falters. In South Sudan and beyond, it’s raising red flags, report Joseph Falzetta & Joshua Craze buff.ly/2JQvSHo

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Building on insights from the recently published Lebanon Displacement Diaries, we convened an online discussion to explore the deprioritisation of mental health and psychosocial support needs in places like Lebanon – where around one million people were displaced at the height of

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Read the second of two first-person stories from journalist Mohamed Amin, who recently returned to his hometown of Khartoum after the Sudanese army ended a two-year occupation by the Rapid Support Forces. buff.ly/MNgQzaV

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🗣️ “If this sector does not change now, then when?” Humanitarianism’s reboot searches for the right script. buff.ly/8jfeZHz

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We pay tribute to a Palestinian journalist, Hajar Harb, a valued contributor to our coverage of Gaza who recently passed away. buff.ly/ng9f4Ai

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The protest movement in the United States is growing, but so is the global authoritarian playbook it’s up against. buff.ly/Agkw7ZW

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fogbow, a for-profit US company with a mission to facilitate humanitarian access in some of the world’s most challenging environments, is coordinating food drops in South Sudan that critics say support the government’s counter-insurgency efforts against opposition militias.

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Building on insights from the recently published Lebanon Displacement Diaries, we convened an online discussion to explore the deprioritisation of mental health and psychosocial support needs in places like Lebanon – where around one million people were displaced at the height of

The New Humanitarian (@newhumanitarian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After Sudan’s army regained control of Khartoum, journalist Mohammed Amin returned back to his cityJ to document the human cost of the two-year war. Read the second of his two-part series: buff.ly/MNgQzaV