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Greg Dixon

Stories

  • caption: Palestinians walk through the destruction caused by the Israeli air and ground offensive in Sheikh Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City.

    A Month into the Ceasefire in Gaza, What’s Next?

    It has been a month since the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza was implemented and despite some violations the shaky truce is holding. Both sides say they’re committed to the deal. We look at how progress towards the next phase in the agreement is proceeding.

  • caption: An Israeli military outpost in Gaza overlooks destruction in the Shujaiya neighborhood on the outskirts of Gaza City.

    Our Correspondent is Finally Allowed into Gaza

    After constant requests during two years of war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, the Israeli military finally brings our correspondent into the territory to see the devastation in post-war northern Gaza firsthand. And even though he’s been covering this conflict since it began, seeing the destruction up close was shocking.

  • caption: The Cacataibo Indigenous Guard on patrol in the Peruvian Amazon.

    Fighting Drug Traffickers Deep in the Peruvian Amazon

    Isolated indigenous tribes deep in the Amazon rainforests of Peru are seeing the crop used to make cocaine spread into their lands from drug traffickers seeking more territory for cultivation. With the incursion comes deforestation and violence. We go to the rainforest and meet the self-defense force patrolling the jungle to stop the destruction. 

  • caption: Boats are pictured on the shore of La Cueva Bay, north coast of Trinidad and Tobago, on October 16, 2025

    The Impact of U.S. Strikes in the Caribbean

    The small island country of Trinidad and Tobago is in the middle of an American military buildup. The U.S. has deployed warships and attacked alleged drug boats nearby, leaving residents on edge. We hear from fishermen who see drones in the sky and go to the funeral of someone presumed to have been killed by a U.S. strike.

  • caption: A plywood board covers the window where thieves entered the Louvre museum to steal historic jewels.

    A Brazen Theft from France’s Most Famous Museum

    In just seven minutes, in broad daylight, millions of dollars worth of jewels that once belonged to French royalty were stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris. We hear about what was stolen, how the French people are reacting and what it might take to catch the thieves who did it.

  • caption: A member of the Capital Kiwi Project team holds a female kiwi to be released back into the wild after checking her weight and changing her transmitter on Tawa Hill, Terawhiti Station in Wellington, New Zealand.

    The Ambitious Effort to Save New Zealand’s Iconic Bird

    The kiwi, an adorable flightless bird from New Zealand, is disappearing, largely because of invasive species brought to the country’s islands by humans. So New Zealand has set a goal of exterminating rats, possums and other invasive animals that threaten the country’s biodiversity.  

  • caption: Pozzuoli unfolds as seen from the Rione Terra. In the background rises the Monte Nuovo, the youngest volcanic feature of the Campi Flegrei formed by the 1538 eruption.

    Is Italy’s Super Volcano Getting Ready to Erupt?

    Italy’s Campi Flegrei volcano is depicted in Greek and Roman mythology as the entrance to the underworld. Its eruptions thousands of years ago blocked out the sun, turning summer into winter. And now the volcano is stirring in a way it hasn’t for centuries. We go to the volcano outside Naples to understand its new activity.

  • caption: These barrel cacti grow extraordinarily slow. It means they are impractical and unprofitable to farm. This cactus is estimated to be 50 years old.

    Mexico’s Popular But Forbidden Edible Cactus

    In Mexico, chile en nogada is the taste of September. But one key ingredient —a candied cactus — is now illegal to buy - because its on the verge of extinction. But as our Mexico correspondent learns, traditions in Mexico are very hard to break.

  • caption: Karina Ambartsoumian-Clough at home in New Jersey on July 26. She was born in what was then Soviet Ukraine and fled to the U.S. with her family in 1996. They sought — and were denied — political asylum and discovered they were not recognized as citizens of any country.

    What is Life Like When You Don’t Have Citizenship Anywhere?

    In the United States it is estimated that more than 218,000 people don’t have citizenship — in the U.S. or any other country. This can make all kinds of mundane tasks, like opening a bank account or travelling, difficult to impossible. And with the Trump administration aggressively going after people without legal status to be in the country, many people who are stateless worry about indefinite detention or deportation to a country they have no ties to. We meet some people in this situation.