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Year: 2025

HOW DIRTY IS YOUR PHONE?

Multiple studies over the past decade have confirmed the claim that smartphones can harbour more bacteria than a toilet seat – in some cases 10 to 20 times more. Research from organisations like the University of Arizona and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine has found that smartphone surfaces are warm and frequently touched, making them ideal breeding grounds for bacteria....
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68 Groups Urge Governments to Keep Investors’ Right to Sue Governments out of RCEP Trade Deal

Sixty-eight civil society organisations (CSOs) across a majority of the 15 Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) member countries* have signed a letter urging governments to maintain the exclusion of controversial Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) rules from the agreement. Malaysian CSOs endorsing this letter are the Consumers’ Association of Penang, Forum Kedaulatan...
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PLAN CITIES WITH CHILDREN IN MIND

In too many cities, kids are growing up surrounded by traffic, concrete, and "private property" signs – instead of parks, safe sidewalks, and green public spaces. The result? Screen time replaces play time. Movement, creativity, and social interaction take a hit. Urban design isn’t just about buildings – it’s about childhood, freedom, and the right to play. Cities must plan with children...
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A PEST-FREE GARDEN IS NATURE’S GRAVEYARD

Pesticides travel up the food chain like silent assassins. The spider eats the poisoned fly. The bird eats the poisoned spider. The nest fills with poison. Baby birds die in their shells, never knowing why their world turned toxic. Renowned nature writer, scientist and ecologist Rachel Carson – author of the book “Silent Spring”, which raised awareness about the dangers of pesticides –...
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TREES – NATURE’S AIR CONDITIONERS

A single mature tree can release up to 380 liters of water vapour per day through a process called evapotranspiration. As water moves from roots to leaves and evaporates into the air, it draws heat away from the environment, lowering temperatures and refreshing the air around it. In fact, according to a study cited by Berkeley Lab and the US Environmental Protection Agency, the cooling effect of...
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World Firefly Day: Help Keep the Sparkles Burning

Every year on the first weekend of July, an annual event is organized to celebrate the importance of fireflies in our ecosystems and to increase public awareness about the risks these luminous insects face. The theme for 2025 World Firefly Day is "Help us keep the sparkles burning," which will be held on July 5th and 6th. World Firefly Day serves to draw attention to the ongoing threats these...
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Harvard Doctor Lists 6 Cancer-Causing Foods and Their Alternatives

Cancer is one of the most feared diseases of our time. While genetics and environment play a major role, everyday food choices also quietly influence cancer risk. In a video that is going viral on social media, Dr Saurabh Sethi, a Harvard-trained gastroenterologist, highlighted 6 everyday food items that science links to cancer development and progression. Reducing or eliminating these from the...
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“Capitalism has Looted the World, Solved No Problems”

In 1991, Fidel Castro – former Prime Minister (1959-1976) and President (1976-2008) of Cuba, made the following comments about capitalism. The message is even more poignant today. “What has Capitalism resolved? It has solved no problems. It has looted the world. It has left us with all this poverty. It has created lifestyles and models of consumerism that are incompatible with reality. It...
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Tough time for urban birds

Birds in urban areas are having a tough time as shady trees are often felled to make way for shopping and housing complexes, road widening, new highways, power lines, parking lots and mobile phone communication towers that are being erected. In the last several years, hundreds of trees and bushes have been cleared to make way for road expansion projects and the concretization of large open...
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WATERWAYS IN JAPAN – Clean, Clear & Sustainable

In many Japanese cities and eco-friendly towns, streets are kept extremely clean and sustainable — not just by municipal workers but also by local residents and school children, who take pride in their surroundings. This strong sense of community responsibility and environmental awareness helps keep public spaces litter-free and safe. As a result, even during heavy rains or urban flooding, the...
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