HARD NUMBERS

300,000: Syrian government forces, backed by Russian air strikes, have recovered large portions of the strategically vital Deraa province near Jordan and Israel in the past three weeks. This offensive has forced more than 300,000 people from their homes, the single largest displacement of the war. Israel and Jordan have refused to allow in refugees.

300: Some 300 anti-government protesters have been killed in Nicaragua since April, according to human-rights groups, almost all of them by paramilitary thugs loyal to Daniel Ortega. Today, the private sector is planning a one-day general shutdown, with support from the Catholic Church, to put pressure on the government to meet a set of their demands.

94.8: Of the 154,557 murders committed in Mexico from 2010 to 2016, 94.8 percent remain unpunished. Compare that figure with 52 percent in Asia and 20 percent in Europe.

17: Seventeen of the 23 players on France’s World Cup team are children of first generation migrants. Once again, the white-hot politics of migration, citizenship, and national identity are making their way onto the pitch ahead of the World Cup final on Sunday.

5: Venezuela’s latest shortage? Banknotes, most of which are imported. The central bank’s own printer produces less than 5 percent of the country’s cash. Given an annual inflation rate now estimated at 46,000 percent, it’s also hard to keep workers, who are paid with the same worthless notes they’re hired to print.

More from GZERO Media

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Democratic Republic of the Congo's Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner and Rwanda's Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe on June 27, 2025.
REUTERS

On June 27, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda signed a US-mediated peace accord in Washington, D.C., to end decades of violence in the DRC’s resource-rich Great Lakes region. The agreement commits both nations to cease hostilities, withdraw troops, and to end support for armed groups operating in eastern Congowithin 90 days.

What if the next virus isn’t natural, but deliberately engineered and used as a weapon? As geopolitical tensions rise and biological threats become more complex, health security and life sciences are emerging as critical pillars of national defense. In the premiere episode of “The Ripple Effect: Investing in Life Sciences”, leading experts explore the dual-use nature of biotechnology and the urgent need for international oversight, genetic attribution standards, and robust viral surveillance.

A woman lights a cigarette placed in a placard depicting Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, during a demonstration, after the Hungarian parliament passed a law that bans LGBTQ+ communities from holding the annual Pride march and allows a broader constraint on freedom of assembly, in Budapest, Hungary, on March 25, 2025.
REUTERS/Marton Monus

Hungary’s capital will proceed with Saturday’s Pride parade celebrating the LGBTQ+ community, despite the rightwing national government’s recent ban on the event.