โGalician identity and literature are deeply rooted in land,โ award-winning Galician writer explains
Galician literature not only narrates, but constructs identity. It is a form of belonging, projecting oneself and inhabiting the world.
๐ ๊ตญ์ ๊ธฐ๊ตฌ ยท "IDENTITY" ยท ์ด 4๊ฑด
ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
์ต๊ทผ 7์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค 5,637๊ฑด์ ๋ถ์ํ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ด์ค ์ฌ๋ฆฌ์ง์๋ 50.0(๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค. ๊ธ์ 0๊ฑด(0.0%)ยท์ค๋ฆฝ 5,637๊ฑด(100.0%)ยท๋ถ์ 0๊ฑด(0.0%)์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ค๋ฆฝ ๋น์ค์ด ๋๋ ทํ๊ฒ ๋์ต๋๋ค. ์ฑํฅ ์ง์๋ ์ข ํฉ 0.0(์ค๋ ๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค.
Galician literature not only narrates, but constructs identity. It is a form of belonging, projecting oneself and inhabiting the world.
"The Digital Nation is a new way to fight, adapt and protect our identity and sovereignty. It is about taking control, shaping our future and keeping our roots alive."
Countries: World, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Lebanon, Libya, occupied Palestinian territory, South Sudan, Sudan, Ukraine Source: Insecurity Insight Please refer to the attached file. Aid in Danger incidents affecting aid agencies and their staff and impact on programmes Incidents of threats and violence affecting aid workers, aid delivery and aid impact supporting aid agencies in risk mitigation and safety and security measures when implementing programmes. The incidents reported are not a complete nor a representative list of all events that affected the provision of aid delivery. Insecurity Insight continues to update data and figures may change. Updated data includes new and historic reports identified in open-sources and verified security incidents submitted by Aid in Danger partner agencies. Africa Democratic Republic of the Congo 01 May 2026: In Mwenga territory, South Kivu province, an INGO team travelling between Mwenga, Kamituga and Kitutu on a humanitarian and medical needs assessment mission was reportedly stopped at a checkpoint by Wazalendo, despite prior coordination with authorities and health actors. Wazalendo members disagreed about the teamโs identity and whether to let them proceed, causing them to open fire on each other, with the INGO team caught in the crossfire. The team were unharmed and continued their mission to Mwenga. Source: Actualitรฉ 03 May 2026: In Kalimoto rural locality, Lwindi chiefdom, Mwenga territory, South Kivu province, an INGO convoy travelling to Mwenga, Kamituga and Kitutu to assess humanitarian needs was reportedly attacked and robbed by Wazalendo militiamen during a humanitarian mission. Source: Actualitรฉ Sudan 02 May 2026: In Nyala city, South Darfur state, buildings near the offices of humanitarian organisations were damaged, and at least five people were injured, after a drone attack from an unidentified perpetrator**. Source:** UN News 04 May 2026: In Khartoum city and state, at an airport vital to humanitarian access, a drone from an unidentified perpetrator was shot down, leading to flights being cancelled. Source: UN News South Sudan 29 April 2026: In Walgak town, Akobo county of Jonglei state, food distributions were disrupted by renewed clashes in the area by South Sudan People's Defence Forces (SSPDF), and opposition groups, including the Sudan Peopleโs Liberation Army in Opposition (SPLA-IO). Source: OCHA, Humanitarian Access Snapshot As reported 12 May 2026: In an undisclosed location, the RSF-controlled Tasis Alliance coalition government stipulated that international humanitarian organisations must register with it and open their headquarters in Nyala within 30 days, to operate under its control or else lose the ability to carry out any further activities in the RSF-controlled areas. The SAF rejected the proposal. Source: Ayin Network 12 May 2026: In Dilling city, South Kordofan, an unspecified number of volunteers and humanitarian workers preparing food for displaced people were killed or injured when alleged RSF and SPLMโNorth artillery shelling hit the vicinity of a market and bus station. Source: Sudan Doctors Network Europe Ukraine 30 April 2026: In Dnipro city and raion, Dnipropetrovsk oblast, a vaccination bus of the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Center for Disease Control and Prevention, donated by the WHO, was destroyed while on its way to provide vaccination services by a Russian aerial strike. Sources: Public Health Centre of Ukraine and UN News 04 May 2026: In Dnipropetrovsk oblast, a humanitarian vehicle was damaged by a Russian forces strike. Sources: UN News 12 May 2026: In Dnipropetrovsk oblast, a WFP truck traveling in a convoy alongside two WFP armoured passenger vehicles, carrying a total of seven staff members, was struck by a Russian drone strike after successfully offloading food commodities in Zoriane and Slovianka villages. The truck driver was injured and taken to hospital. While immobilised, the truck was hit again multiple times by separate drones. All vehicles were clearly marked as UN WFP vehicles. Source: United Nations Middle East and North Africa Lebanon As reported on 12 May 2026: In Nabatieh city, district and governorate, two Lebanese Civil Defence paramedics were killed by a sequential Israeli drone strike whilst responding to a man who was killed after an Israeli drone hit his rickshaw near the Civil Defence centre. Sources: CBC, Middle East Eye and Quds News Network Libya On 11 May 2026: In international waters approximately 55 nautical miles north of Libya, the Sea-Watch 5 NGO vessel was fired at approximately 16 times by the Libyan coast guard after rescuing around 90 people. They gave no warnings prior to the shots and threatened to take the boat and the crew back to Libya. Source: EU Observer Occupied Palestinian Territory As reported 05 May 2026: In an undisclosed location, humanitarian facilities came under fire by unidentified perpetrators in two separate incidents. Source: UN News As reported 05 May 2026: In an undisclosed location, a UN warehouse was struck by an Israeli airstrike. Source: UN News As reported 05 May 2026: In an undisclosed location, relief vehicles were damaged when an unidentified perpetrator threw stones. Source: UN News Gaza Strip 29 April 2026: In international waters, about 1,111 km from Gaza, the Global Sumud Flotilla carrying food and supplies from Barcelona to Gaza was intercepted by Israeli naval forces at around 2100, using speedboats to encircle the humanitarian convoy and military lasers and weapons to subdue activists on board. Overnight and into the morning of 30 April, Israeli forces seized at least 15 of the 58 vessels and reportedly disabled the engines of several boats and abandoned them, leaving hundreds of people stranded. Source: Quds News Network 12 May 2026: In Beit Lahia city, North Gaza governorate, the area near an MSF team struck by two shells from an Israeli tank, injuring at least 12 people. The impact occurred around 400m from Al Tayeb Clinic. Source: MSF East Africa The Americas Haiti 10 May 2026: In Citรฉ Soleil and Croix-des-Bouquets, West department, a security guard at an MSF hospital was injured by gunfire during armed clashes involving multiple unidentified armed groups. More than 40 people with gunshot wounds were treated there and over 800 displaced people sought refuge around the hospital. MSF suspended operations and evacuated its hospital following the violence. Source: MSF
Countries: Haiti, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico Source: International Committee of the Red Cross In places where armed violence is rife, health-care workers may be harassed or subjected to physical or verbal abuse. Ambulances face even greater risks when transporting patients, struggling to do so safely. Health-care facilities are often damaged during clashes and their operations frequently disrupted. Meanwhile, patients are unable to access health care, either out of fear or because of security risks or difficulties in reaching health-care facilities, or simply because services have been shut down. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and other members of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement have observed that these issues are becoming increasingly common in many of the affected communities across Latin American and the Caribbean. โWhile acts of violence against health-care services are widespread, it is in Colombia, Mexico, Haiti and Ecuador where serious incidents linked to armed violence are most frequently reported. It is communities that suffer when health-care workers and the health system are jeopardized. Safeguarding their proper functioning is essential to ensure people can access health-care services,โ explains Gabriel Mayorga, regional adviser for the ICRC on protection issues and respect for health care. Far from being isolated incidents, these events reflect a worrying pattern of violence that is affecting the provision of health-care services in places across the region where armed conflict and other situations of violence are widespread. According to figures from the National Medical Mission Board,* a total of 282 acts of violence against health-care services related to non-international armed conflicts were recorded in Colombia in 2025, indicating breaches of international humanitarian law. Incidents include threats and murders, with health-care workers and wounded people who are no longer taking part in the hostilities targeted, either in ambulances or in health-care facilities. Furthermore, in the areas most affected by armed conflict, communities are having their movements restricted, limiting their ability to access health-care services in a timely way. In some cases, the consequences are deadly. โI remember the case of a woman from an indigenous community who suffered pregnancy complications. The dynamics of the armed conflict resulted in movement restrictions. Unable to get to the nearest health centre, both she and her baby died,โ says a member of the ICRCโs health team in Colombia. In these situations, the ICRC maintains a bilateral and confidential dialogue with all parties to the conflict to remind them of their obligation under international humanitarian law to respect and protect health care. Even in countries not experiencing armed conflict, health-care services still suffer the consequences of violence. In Mexico, the ICRC documented more than 190 serious incidents affecting health-care services and patient care between 2024 and 2025, based on primary and publicly available information. These incidents include attacks against โ and sometimes the murder of โ health-care staff, patients and their families, armed raids on health-care facilities, and the theft of data and supplies, among others. Beyond the statistics, these incidents have a profound impact on the lives of health-care workers. Fernanda,* a psychologist from southern Mexico, went from being a provider of mental-health care for health-care workers affected by violence to being a victim of violence herself. โBeing a mental-health professional does not protect us from violence and its consequences. We have received threats and our lives have been in danger. In my case, I had to move away. I left behind my home and my support network, and the health centre where I worked had to close for more than a year. I still have nightmares and feel very anxious whenever I think about the centre reopening at some point and having to go back. Iโve had to have psychotherapy and medical treatment to be able to cope with it,โ she recounts. * Name has been changed to protect the personโs identity. The ICRC is also very concerned about the situation in Haiti. The escalation of armed violence since 2024 has put out of action more than 70 per cent of health services in the capital, Port-au-Prince. Most health-care facilities have been affected, preventing people from accessing them safely. Emergency services, care for pregnant and breastfeeding women, and other medical specialisms have collapsed. Furthermore, many patients with chronic conditions have no access to medical care at all. In Haiti, the ICRC uses various channels to remind people of their obligation to respect health-care workers. This banner in Haitian Creole reads: โHospitals, health-care workers and ambulances must not be targeted. Every life counts!โ Against this backdrop of violence, which is significantly affecting and restricting peopleโs access to health-care services, the La Paix University Hospital is now the only major state-run hospital still operating in Port-au-Prince. But it faces a whole host of challenges. โWe donโt have enough beds for all the patients coming to the hospital โ we have to treat and resuscitate some patients on the floor,โ says Dr Myriam Gousse, head of the hospitalโs emergency department. Staff are also under pressure. โSometimes patients come in who are armed; they pull out their weapons to force the staff to treat them. We are seeing more incidents like this,โ adds Dr Gousse. Ecuador is another country facing a worrying escalation in armed violence, and it is having an impact on its health services, particularly in the most conflict-affected areas. The situation has created significant challenges in managing health facilities in these areas, leading to the temporary suspension of certain services and making it more difficult for people to access health care. โIn light of this situation, the Ecuadorian Red Cross, together with members of the Movement, has stepped up its efforts to promote respect for health services and to provide support to the Ministry of Health, medical units and health-care staff, as well as affected communities. Our actions uphold the right of health-care professionals to carry out their work in an environment free from pressure and threats,โ explains Jhonny Garcรญa, security coordinator for the Ecuadorian Red Cross. How do we address this issue? Dialogue with weapon bearers and strengthening legal frameworks In Port-au-Prince, Haiti, the ICRC talks with weapon bearers about their obligation to respect the work of health-care staff and humanitarian principles. . During our bilateral and confidential dialogue with armed actors, we remind them of their obligation to respect health-care staff and facilities, as well as humanitarian workers. We use these talks to stress that health services must always be protected from attack. Together with public health authorities and other organizations, we promote prevention and we help to strengthen the response to violence against health-care services. We also provide technical support to the authorities to help them formalize and strengthen regulatory frameworks that effectively recognize and address the threat of violence against health-care facilities, while establishing the rights of and protections for health-care staff and patients in situations of violence. Capacity-building in the health-care sector We support health-care systems at different levels to prevent, mitigate and manage the effects of violence. In Haiti, throughout 2026, fierce armed clashes have been affecting people in the capital, Port-au-Prince. For months, the ICRC has been providing medical supplies and first-aid training to community health workers. In the areas most affected by violence, we provide training and workshops to ensure that health-care staff and facilities are better prepared and more resilient when it comes to responding to and recovering from violence. In addition, we work collaboratively to promote safety protocols and contingency plans for health-care teams working in high-risk environments. Regional cooperation Since 2024, the ICRC โ together with the regionโs National Red Cross Societies, partner National Societies and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) โ has stepped up its regional cooperation to ensure a coordinated response to address the issue of violence. We provide technical support to other Movement teams in the region, as well as training, events and knowledge-sharing for those most affected.