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    <title>Global South World - survivors</title>
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    <description><![CDATA[News, opinion and analysis focused on the Global South and rising nations across the world. Delivered by journalists on the ground in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas. From politics and business to technology, science and social issues, Global South World is the first place to come for accurate and trusted information.]]></description>
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      <title>Christmas in the Global South: How communities in Africa and Latin America celebrate the season</title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/christmas-in-the-global-south-how-communities-in-africa-and-latin-america-celebrate-the-season</link>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2025 08:00:00 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>While Christmas is often portrayed through a Eurocentric lens of winter snow and pine trees, celebrations across the Global South tell a fresh and different story.</p>
<p>From the streets of Caracas, Venezuela, to the highlands of Ethiopia, communities mark the season with traditions that blend faith, culture, and local identity that have endured for centuries.</p>
<h3>Venezuela: Roller skating to Christmas Mass</h3>
<p>In Venezuela, particularly in the capital Caracas, Christmas celebrations transform city streets into festive pathways. One of the country’s most famous traditions involves  roller skating  to early morning church services in the days leading up to Christmas.</p>
<p>Historically, some neighbourhoods even tied strings to children’s toes before bedtime, believing that angels skating through the streets would tug them awake for Mass. While the custom has evolved, streets are still occasionally closed to allow safe skating. This highlights the communal nature of the celebration.</p>
<p>The tradition highlights how faith and festivity merge in Venezuelan culture, even as the country continues to navigate economic and political challenges that have reshaped daily life in recent years.</p>
<h3>Peru: Children take the nativity to the streets</h3>
<p>In  Peru , Christmas is marked by strong public participation, particularly among children. In some cities and towns, children dress as pastors or biblical figures and parade through the streets, reenacting scenes associated with the birth of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>These processions reflect Peru’s deeply rooted Catholic traditions, introduced during the colonial period but reshaped through local customs and communal storytelling.</p>
<p>According to  Peru Travel , Christmas celebrations often emphasise family gatherings, public performances, and religious devotion, making the holiday a visible part of urban and rural life alike.</p>
<h3>Ghana - Feasting and large gatherings</h3>
<p>Just like other parts of the world, Christians in Ghana start their  Christmas celebrations  from the 20th of December with Carol Services that are mostly conducted in the evenings.</p>
<p>The week before the 25th also marks a moment of vigorous shopping for the celebration ahead.</p>
<p>On the 25th, many visit the church in the morning with their best outfits to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>After the morning service, families gather to share meals with friends and neighbours.</p>
<h3>Ethiopia: Christmas marked by faith and a traditional game</h3>
<p>In Ethiopia, Christmas, known as  Ganna or Genna , is celebrated on January 7, following the Julian calendar observed by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. The holiday is deeply spiritual, beginning with an overnight church service and fasting that reflects the country’s ancient Christian heritage.</p>
<p>One of the most distinctive traditions associated with Ethiopian Christmas is a hockey-style team game also called Ganna. Played in open fields after morning worship, the game symbolises joy and communal unity following the religious observance.</p>
<p>The tradition is reported to be linked to shepherds celebrating the birth of Christ, echoing the biblical nativity story.</p>
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      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abigail Johnson Boakye]]></dc:creator>
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      <title>Why do large parts of Europe still lag behind East Germany economically?</title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/why-do-large-parts-of-europe-still-lag-behind-east-germany-economically</link>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Dec 2025 10:13:24 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Many regions across Southern, Eastern, and even  Western Europe  still record lower income levels than those of the former East Germany, more than three decades after German reunification.</p>
<p>The above, based on 2017 GDP per capita data, uses East Germany, long considered a benchmark for post-socialist economic recovery, as a reference point, set at approximately €30,300 per person. Regions shown in red fall below that threshold. </p>
<p>Following reunification in 1990, East Germany  inherited outdated infrastructure , lower productivity, and weaker industrial capacity. Since then, the German government has invested more than €2 trillion in reconstruction, subsidies, and regional development. </p>
<p>While income gaps between eastern and western Germany persist, East Germany’s GDP per capita now exceeds that of many EU regions.</p>
<p>According to Eurostat, several regions in Southern Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece,  Eastern Europe , and the Balkans continue to trail behind eastern German states in output per person.</p>
<p>The map underscores long-standing structural challenges. Many red-marked regions are affected by low industrial diversification, weaker transport links, ageing populations, and chronic underinvestment. </p>
<p>In Southern Europe, the aftershocks of the 2008 financial crisis and the eurozone  debt  crisis slowed recovery for more than a decade. In Eastern Europe and the Balkans, the legacy of post-socialist transition and limited capital inflows continues to constrain growth.</p>
<p>The European Commission has repeatedly acknowledged that regional inequality within the EU remains high, even as national averages improve. Wealth tends to concentrate in capital cities and export-driven regions, leaving rural and peripheral areas behind.</p>
]]></description>
      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abigail Johnson Boakye]]></dc:creator>
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      <title>2025 RECAP: Landmark wins for gender-based violence activism across the Global South </title>
      <link>https://www.globalsouthworld.com/article/2025-in-review-landmark-wins-for-gender-based-violence-activism-across-the-global-south</link>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 17 Dec 2025 12:58:13 Z</pubDate>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>While gender-based violence can affect anyone, it disproportionately impacts women and girls and remains a pervasive human rights violation with far-reaching social, economic, and public health consequences.</p>
<p>Despite persistent and systemic challenges, 2025 has delivered meaningful victories in the fight against gender-based violence (GBV) across the Global South.</p>
<p>Landmark legal reforms, policy shifts, regional coordination, and grassroots wins have shown that sustained advocacy and political pressure continue to yield results.</p>
<h3>South Africa</h3>
<h6>Gender-based Violence elevated to a national emergency</h6>
<p>In November 2025, South Africa reached a critical policy milestone when the government formally declared  gender-based violence a national disaster .</p>
<p>The immediate catalyst was mass mobilisation in the lead-up to the G20. Women For Change coordinated a nationwide “Women’s Shutdown,” including silent lie-down protests, deliberately timed to coincide with heightened international attention. </p>
<p>The action amplified domestic demands while placing South Africa’s GBV crisis squarely under global scrutiny, increasing political pressure on the state to respond decisively.</p>
<p>This declaration means gender-based violence issues are formally recognised as a cross-government priority. Greater public accountability for the implementation of the National Strategic Plan on GBV and Femicide, which says governments and society that respond to GBV issues have strengthened accountability and bold leadership. </p>
<p>Over one in three women in South Africa have  experienced physical violence  at some point in their lives, while nearly one in ten have been subjected to sexual violence, figures that translate into millions of women navigating daily life under the persistent threat of harm within their homes and communities.</p>
<h3>Brazil: </h3>
<h6>Strengthened Legal Protections for Survivors</h6>
<p>Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has  signed a new law  aimed at strengthening protections for women facing gender-based violence, a response to public anger over record levels of violence and a series of high-profile cases that sparked demonstrations across the country. </p>
<p>The law enhances judicial powers to protect victims by allowing judges to suspend or restrict an alleged abuser’s access to firearms, remove them from the victim’s home and impose no-contact orders. It also requires offenders subject to protective measures to wear ankle monitors, with associated technology to notify victims if the offender approaches.</p>
<p> In addition, the legislation increases maximum sentences for the rape of children under 14 and substantially raises penalties where a child is raped and killed. </p>
<p>Feminist activists have welcomed the measures as positive but have emphasised the need for greater funding for prevention, support services, and broader systemic and cultural change to reduce violence.</p>
<h3>Kenya</h3>
<h6>Historic State Compensation for Survivors of Sexual Violence</h6>
<p>In 2025, Kenya marked a historic breakthrough for gender-based violence accountability by issuing its first-ever state compensation to survivors of conflict-related sexual violence linked to the 2007–2008 post-election crisis. </p>
<p>Following a landmark High Court ruling, the government  paid a compensation  of 16 million Kenyan shillings (approx. USD $124,000) to survivors who had waited more than a decade for recognition and redress, signalling an important, if overdue, acknowledgement of state responsibility.</p>
<p>While the payments covered only part of what survivors are owed and excluded those harmed by non-state actors, the move set a powerful precedent: sexual violence in times of political crisis is a matter of state accountability, not private suffering. </p>
<p>Civil society organisations framed the moment as a partial but critical victory, renewing calls for a comprehensive national reparations framework, full implementation of victim protection laws, and broader compensation for survivors across regions and periods.</p>
<h3>India</h3>
<h6>Expanded survivor support and digital safety measures</h6>
<p>In 2025, India strengthened its  institutional response  to gender-based violence through the nationwide expansion of One-Stop Centres under the Mission Shakti framework. With more than 800 centres now operational across states and union territories, survivors of violence can access medical care, legal aid, psychosocial counselling, police support and temporary shelter through a single, coordinated entry point.</p>
<p>The scale-up reflects sustained advocacy for survivor-centred services that reduce fragmentation and barriers to justice. Fully funded by the central government and implemented at the state level, the centres also benefit from targeted capacity-building for frontline staff to improve case management and survivor care. </p>
<p>While gaps in access and quality remain, the expansion represents a significant structural win for GBV activism, embedding survivor support more firmly within public service delivery across the Global South.</p>
]]></description>
      <source url="https://www.globalsouthworld.com">Global South World</source>
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        <media:credit role="photographer">Thomas Mukoya</media:credit>
        <media:credit role="provider">REUTERS</media:credit>
        <media:title>Nationwide march titled "End Femicide Kenya" in downtown Nairobi</media:title>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abigail Johnson Boakye]]></dc:creator>
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