2025-02-21
9 分钟Hi, I'm Josh Haner and I'm a staff photographer at the New York Times covering climate change.
For years, we've sort of imagined this picture of a polar bear floating on a piece of ice.
Those have been the images associated with climate change.
My challenge is to find stories that show you how climate change is affecting our world right now.
If you want to support the kind of journalism that we're working on here on the climate
and environment desk at the New York Times,
please subscribe on our website or our app.
From the New York Times, it's the Headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Friday, February 21st.
Here's what we're covering.
Funding for vital health programs around the world remains frozen despite a federal judge's order
that the Trump administration stop dismantling usaid.
The Times has spoken with people on the ground who work on the aid programs,
and they say that the freeze is having life threatening consequences.
They say children in Kenya who may have tuberculosis can't get tested.
There's no clean drinking water at refugee camps in Nigeria and Bangladesh.
And people are traveling almost 200 miles in search of HIV medications in Ethiopia
because they're no longer available at clinics the US Was funding.
The Trump administration initially froze all foreign aid,