This July ranking gathers countries where war or major armed conflict is deeply damaging daily life: families displaced, civilians killed or wounded, health systems strained, aid blocked, public trust weakened, and churches seeking faithfulness amid danger, grief, hunger, fear, and uncertainty.
This ranking highlights countries where active war or major armed conflict is now disrupting daily life, harming civilians, displacing families, and shaping how Christians should pray.
This is a present prayer-burden ranking, not a ranking of national worth, human dignity, divine concern, or permanent importance. Countries outside the Top Ten may still carry grave suffering and urgent prayer needs. This list identifies where active war or major armed conflict appears to be most deeply shaping national life right now.
What Changed Since the Previous Ranking
A compact movement note helps readers understand what changed, what remained steady, and why the July order differs from the June comparison.
The top five remain unchanged from June: Sudan, State of Palestine / Gaza, Ukraine, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Myanmar. Recent reporting still supports these countries as the clearest upper tier for the combined burden of active conflict, civilian harm, displacement, and national disruption.
Lebanon rises from #7 to #6. Lebanon’s rise is not because it has become more severe than the top-tier wars, but because recent reporting points to a severe war burden, large-scale displacement, thousands of reported deaths, major southern destruction, fragile diplomacy, and contested implementation around the Israel-Lebanon framework.
Iran falls from #6 to #7. Iran remains in the Top Ten because late-June strike exchanges, Strait of Hormuz tension, maritime insecurity, and fragile diplomacy still carry serious regional-war consequences. The fall is relative: Lebanon’s current burden is more displacement-heavy and territorially active, while Iran’s July burden is more centered on escalation risk, maritime pressure, and regional insecurity.
South Sudan and Burkina Faso remain #8 and #9. South Sudan remains high because renewed violence, attacks on health care, displacement, hunger, and political fracture continue to raise fears of a wider return to civil war. Burkina Faso remains high because jihadist insurgency, state abuses, territorial insecurity, displacement, and civilian-protection concerns continue to shape national life. For both countries, some of the strongest supporting reports come from earlier 2026, so the wording remains cautious while still recognizing the continuing seriousness of the conflict burden.
Mali enters at #10, while Yemen moves to the watchlist. Mali enters because recent reporting points to serious civilian abuses, coordinated attacks, insurgent pressure, and a worsening Sahel conflict burden. Yemen’s suffering remains severe and should not be treated as broadly improved. It moves outside the Top Ten only because Mali’s recent reporting is more immediate and more directly tied to active armed conflict in this July review. Yemen’s detainee-swap agreement gives a limited reason for cautious thanksgiving, not proof that Yemen’s war and humanitarian suffering have ended.
Ranking Method
A brief explanation of how this July 2026 war and armed-conflict ranking was prepared.
This ranking considers countries affected by active war, civil war, occupation-related warfare, insurgency, multi-front armed conflict, regional spillover, organized armed violence, and war-driven national disruption.
It is not a list of countries receiving the most media attention. It weighs current conflict intensity, civilian harm, displacement, humanitarian severity, national disruption, recent escalation, and the way these burdens should shape Christian prayer.
Countries considered in this July review included Sudan, State of Palestine / Gaza, Ukraine, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, Lebanon, Iran, South Sudan, Burkina Faso, Mali, Yemen, Nigeria, Haiti, Syria, Somalia, Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Central African Republic, Mozambique, Cameroon, Iraq, Libya, Chad, and Colombia.
The June 2026 ranking was used only for comparison. The July order was assessed afresh.
Working Definition
This definition explains what kind of burden is being ranked in this war and armed conflict list.
War and major armed conflict
For this ranking, a country qualifies if it is currently experiencing one or more of the following at meaningful scale: interstate war, civil war, multi-front armed conflict, large-scale insurgency or counterinsurgency, occupation-related warfare, or widespread organized armed violence that materially disrupts national life and causes major civilian harm.
A country does not qualify merely because it has political unrest, isolated terrorist incidents, ordinary criminal violence, or long-term hardship without a present armed-conflict burden.
Most affected means the ranking is based on the combined weight of violence, displacement, civilian harm, hunger, infrastructure damage, national disruption, access constraints, escalation, and the way these burdens should shape Christian prayer.
Ranking Criteria
The ranking weighs current conflict severity, humanitarian burden, national disruption, recent urgency, and how these conflicts should guide Christian prayer.
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Conflict Intensity 25% How active, widespread, and militarily serious is the armed conflict right now?
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Humanitarian Severity 25% How severe are displacement, civilian casualties, hunger, medical disruption, infrastructure damage, and related humanitarian consequences?
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National-Societal Disruption 20% How deeply is the conflict disrupting public order, governance, daily life, essential services, and national stability?
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Current Urgency / Escalation 20% Has the conflict worsened recently, expanded geographically, or reached a current phase that especially requires attention now?
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Effect on Christian Prayer and Ministry 10% Where appropriate, how directly is the conflict affecting church life, Christian witness, family life, endurance, mercy ministry, and the concerns Christians should bring before God?
Top Ten Countries
These ten countries carry the heaviest combined burden of active war or major armed conflict in this July 2026 review.
Sudan
The clearest global conflict burden because civil war has combined national collapse, mass displacement, hunger, atrocities, and blocked aid on an unmatched scale.
Sudan remains in a large-scale civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, with severe fighting, mass displacement, famine risk, attacks on civilians, and devastated public services. Current reporting describes at least tens of thousands of deaths, millions displaced, more than 30 million needing humanitarian aid, and grave civilian-protection concerns.
Sudan remains #1 because no other current conflict combines this level of national collapse, displacement, hunger, drone escalation, civilian-protection concern, atrocity reporting, and aid obstruction at the same scale. Amnesty International’s El Fasher findings reinforce that Sudan’s burden is not only large, but also marked by grave allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and ethnic cleansing.
Sudan remains unchanged at #1 because its national collapse, mass displacement, hunger, and civilian-protection burden remain the clearest and heaviest combined war burden in this July comparison.
Mass displacement, hunger, civilian protection, famine risk, health-system collapse, drone attacks, and communities trapped between armed forces.
Families are uprooted, communities are hungry, public services are broken, and churches must serve amid trauma, scarcity, grief, and fear.
Pray for the Lord to restrain violence, protect civilians, open aid routes, feed the hungry, strengthen churches, and bring repentance, justice, and peace.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on Sudan’s war scale and humanitarian crisis; Guardian reporting on Amnesty International’s El Fasher findings; AP reporting on U.N. / OHCHR and ACLED-cited drone escalation.
State of Palestine / Gaza
One of the most concentrated civilian catastrophes in the current war-and-conflict landscape.
Gaza remains under severe conflict conditions, with continuing violence despite a ceasefire, widespread displacement, damaged infrastructure, humanitarian constraints, and deep civilian trauma. Current reporting describes Gaza’s 1,000-day war burden, continued deaths, large-scale displacement, damaged health facilities, stalled recovery, and fragile humanitarian conditions.
Gaza remains #2 because the civilian burden is extraordinarily concentrated. Sudan’s national-scale collapse keeps it first, but Gaza remains one of the clearest cases where war has shattered daily life for almost an entire population.
State of Palestine / Gaza remains unchanged at #2 because the war remains severe, concentrated, and directly tied to civilians’ daily survival, even though Sudan’s wider national collapse keeps Sudan above it.
Displacement, insecurity, hunger, damaged infrastructure, aid restriction, health-system collapse, and deep trauma.
Families remain exposed to fear, loss, scarcity, and an uncertain future; Christian communities and all civilians need protection, mercy, and hope.
Pray for civilians to be protected, hostages and detainees to be released, aid to reach those in need, hatred to be restrained, and a just peace to become more than a pause in fighting.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on Gaza’s 1,000-day war burden; Le Monde reporting on post-ceasefire deaths, displacement, health-system damage, and OCHA-referenced humanitarian conditions.
Ukraine
A large interstate war that continues to kill civilians, damage infrastructure, and exhaust families, churches, and communities.
Ukraine remains in a major interstate war with Russia, involving front-line combat, missile and drone attacks, civilian casualties, displacement, and infrastructure damage. The July 2 Kyiv attack shows that the war remains active, lethal, and nationally disruptive.
Ukraine remains #3 because its conflict is large, sustained, militarily intense, and nationally disruptive. It ranks below Sudan and Gaza because the humanitarian collapse and civilian exposure in those cases remain even more extreme, but Ukraine continues to carry one of the world’s largest active war burdens.
Ukraine remains unchanged at #3 because the war remains large, active, and nationally disruptive, with continuing missile and drone attacks, civilian casualties, infrastructure damage, and long-war exhaustion.
Civilian casualties, drone and missile attacks, front-line devastation, displacement, trauma, infrastructure damage, and long-war exhaustion.
Long war can harden hearts, make revenge feel righteous, and make despair feel reasonable. Ukrainian Christians need prayer not only to survive the war, but to remain faithful in it.
Pray for civilians to be protected, for families to endure without despair, for believers to resist revenge and hatred, and for churches to speak truthfully and show mercy without excusing evil.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on the July 2 Kyiv attack; Guardian reporting on the July 2 Kyiv attack; Guardian reporting on AOAV civilian-casualty analysis used only as background context.
Democratic Republic of the Congo
A long-running eastern conflict with mass displacement, civilian harm, regional involvement, and severe protection risks.
Eastern DRC remains affected by armed conflict involving M23 and other armed groups, with Rwanda’s alleged role remaining central to the regional crisis. Current reporting on DRC’s ICJ case against Rwanda supports the regional and civilian-protection dimension, including allegations of massacres, sexual violence, extrajudicial killings, and forced displacement.
DRC remains #4 because its conflict burden is severe, long-running, regionally entangled, and deeply harmful to civilians. This ranking does not rest on the ICJ filing alone. It also weighs eastern DRC’s armed-group landscape, conflict-disrupted humanitarian work, drone escalation around Goma, aid-worker risk, displacement concerns, and civilian-protection dangers.
DRC remains unchanged at #4 because eastern conflict, regional involvement, civilian-protection dangers, displacement concerns, and humanitarian-worker risk remain severe enough to keep it in the upper tier.
Eastern conflict, civilian attacks, displacement, sexual violence, regional tension, resource-linked armed-group financing, disease-response disruption, and long-term instability.
Communities in eastern DRC live with repeated displacement, fear, grief, and fragile access to protection, health care, and aid.
Pray for civilians to be defended, armed groups restrained, churches strengthened, women and children protected, and truth and justice pursued without more violence.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on DRC’s ICJ filing and the M23/Rwanda regional dimension; Guardian reporting on Goma drone escalation and humanitarian-worker risk.
Myanmar
A nationwide civil war marked by military air attacks, displacement, fear, and severe civilian suffering.
Myanmar remains in civil war after the 2021 military coup, with junta airstrikes, resistance offensives, ethnic armed conflicts, humanitarian disruption, and widespread civilian fear. Current Myanmar-specific reporting describes intensified paramotor and gyrocopter attacks on villages, schools, hospitals, religious sites, and residential areas, with ACLED data and U.N. displacement figures cited in that reporting.
Myanmar remains #5 because the conflict is national in scope and continues to affect civilians through air attacks, displacement, restricted aid, and fear. Its burden remains below DRC because DRC’s regional spillover and eastern displacement crisis are especially acute, but Myanmar’s countrywide civil war keeps it firmly in the Top Ten.
Myanmar remains unchanged at #5 because its countrywide civil war, aerial attacks, displacement, restricted aid, and fear continue to make it one of the clearest global conflict burdens.
Air attacks, displacement, village destruction, hunger, fear, blocked humanitarian access, and attacks on villages, schools, hospitals, religious sites, homes, and other civilian areas.
Families live under sudden bombing threats; churches and Christian communities need endurance, protection, and wisdom amid fear and state violence.
Pray for civilians under air attack, for displaced families, for believers to endure without hatred, and for mercy to reach people cut off by war.
Key current sources used: Guardian reporting on Myanmar’s aerial campaign, with ACLED data and U.N. displacement figures cited inside the report; AP reporting on Fortify Rights findings about paramotor and gyrocopter attacks; AP reporting on Amnesty aviation-fuel concerns as supporting context.
Lebanon
A severe regional-war burden with mass displacement, fragile diplomacy, and unresolved Hezbollah-Israel conflict.
Lebanon remains deeply affected by the Israel-Hezbollah conflict and wider regional war dynamics. Current reporting describes thousands of deaths, large-scale displacement, extensive damage, a fragile framework agreement, and unresolved Hezbollah disarmament and accountability concerns.
Lebanon rises above Iran because the current burden includes intense recent fighting, mass displacement, infrastructure destruction, contested security arrangements, Hezbollah’s rejection or resistance to implementation, and fragile diplomacy. It does not rank higher because the conflict burden is severe but more geographically concentrated than the top-tier national collapses and large-scale wars above it.
Lebanon rises from #7 to #6 because the July evidence shows a severe recent war burden, large-scale displacement, extensive damage, fragile diplomacy, and contested implementation around the Israel-Lebanon framework.
Displacement, continuing insecurity after recent fighting, fragile diplomacy, Hezbollah disarmament tensions, damaged communities, Israeli military-security concerns, and unresolved regional power struggles.
Churches and families must navigate fear, grief, political uncertainty, sectarian strain, and the need for mercy toward displaced and wounded neighbors.
Pray that current diplomatic efforts would help restrain further violence, that displaced families would be protected, that churches would serve with courage, and that peace would be rooted in justice and truth.
Key current sources used: Axios reporting on the Israel-Lebanon framework agreement; Financial Times reporting on casualties, displacement, and implementation risk; Guardian reporting on legal accountability concerns and Hezbollah rejection.
Iran
A major regional-war burden whose current risk remains serious even as diplomacy and de-escalation efforts continue.
Iran remains affected by recent direct strikes and the wider regional consequences of the 2026 conflict. Current reporting supports the danger of renewed escalation, late-June strike exchanges, Strait of Hormuz tension, maritime insecurity, and fragile diplomatic efforts.
Iran remains in the Top Ten because the war has included direct strikes, civilian casualties, maritime tension, regional military consequences, economic disruption, and fragile diplomacy. It falls behind Lebanon because Lebanon’s current burden is more displacement-heavy and territorially active at this review point.
Iran falls from #6 to #7. The fall should not be read as proof that Iran’s burden has become light. Rather, Lebanon’s current burden is more displacement-heavy and territorially active, while Iran’s July burden is centered more on escalation risk, maritime pressure, and regional insecurity.
Civilian casualties from earlier strikes, fragile de-escalation efforts, maritime insecurity, fear of renewed escalation, and regional military risk.
Iranian civilians are grieving and afraid, while believers need wisdom, courage, wise caution where public faith could bring danger, and hope in Christ amid political and military turmoil.
Pray for mourning families, restraint by governments and armed actors, protection of civilians, and Iranian Christians to endure with wisdom, courage, and hope.
Key current sources used: Guardian reporting on late-June U.S.-Iran strike exchanges; AP reporting on Strait of Hormuz tension and maritime-security concerns; AP reporting on Hormuz-related claims and maritime-risk caution.
South Sudan
Renewed violence threatens to pull a fragile country back toward wider civil war.
South Sudan remains affected by renewed fighting, displacement, humanitarian access restrictions, attacks on health care, and fears that the country could slide back toward full civil war. Current 2026 reporting describes hospital destruction, large displacement, hunger, and escalating violence.
South Sudan remains #8 because the violence is serious and politically dangerous. Earlier 2026 reporting described large displacement and a risk of renewed civil war; FAO/WFP hunger-hotspot reporting quoted through AP also places South Sudan among countries of highest concern for acute hunger, reinforcing the conflict-linked humanitarian burden.
South Sudan remains unchanged at #8 because renewed violence, attacks on health care, displacement, hunger, and political fracture continue to raise fears of a wider return to civil war.
Renewed clashes, displacement, fear of wider civil war, humanitarian restrictions, hunger, attacks on health care, and political instability.
Families already burdened by poverty, flooding, hunger, and returnee flows now face renewed fear of violence and displacement.
Pray for restraint, local protection, humanitarian access, churches to serve displaced families, and leaders to choose peace over renewed civil war.
Key current sources used: Guardian reporting on South Sudan’s renewed violence, hospital destruction, displacement, and hunger; AP reporting on Akobo fighting and U.N. concern; AP reporting on FAO/WFP hunger-hotspot warnings.
Burkina Faso
A severe Sahel insurgency with widespread insecurity, displacement, civilian abuses, and shrinking public trust.
Burkina Faso remains in a major insurgency and counterinsurgency environment, with jihadist violence, state abuses, mass displacement, and large areas outside effective government control. Human Rights Watch findings reported through AP describe severe civilian harm, mass displacement, territorial insecurity, and millions needing humanitarian assistance.
Burkina Faso stays #9 because its conflict burden remains severe and deeply disruptive. Because some of the strongest displacement and territorial-control evidence comes from earlier 2026 reporting, this entry states the claim cautiously while still recognizing the ongoing security crisis and danger to civilians.
Burkina Faso remains unchanged at #9 because jihadist insurgency, state abuses, territorial insecurity, displacement, and civilian-protection concerns continue to shape national life.
Insurgency, danger to civilians, displacement, state abuses, insecurity, and humanitarian need.
Communities face violence from jihadist groups, fear of abusive security responses, village displacement, and difficulty sustaining daily life.
Pray for protection of civilians, repentance from those committing abuses, safety for churches and families, and true peace where fear has become normal.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on Human Rights Watch findings, displacement, territorial insecurity, and civilian-protection concerns; Guardian reporting on political-security deterioration and repression.
Mali
A rising Sahel conflict case after renewed coordinated attacks and serious civilian abuses.
Mali qualifies because its conflict involves jihadist groups, Tuareg separatists, Malian armed forces, and allied forces, with current reporting describing killings, drone strikes, arson, coordinated attacks, and targeted violence against civilians.
Mali enters at #10 because the July review found stronger, more recent, and more directly conflict-specific evidence for Mali than for Yemen. It does not rank higher because its humanitarian scale and national disruption still appear somewhat less severe than Burkina Faso’s broader displacement and territorial-control crisis.
Mali enters the Top Ten from the June watchlist because recent reporting points to serious civilian abuses, coordinated attacks, insurgent pressure, and a worsening Sahel conflict burden.
Coordinated armed attacks, civilian killings, drone strikes, abuses by multiple parties, people forced to flee, insurgent gains, and impunity.
Civilians live with fear of multiple armed actors, and churches need courage and wisdom amid insecurity and mistrust.
Pray for civilians caught between armed groups and state forces, for accountability, for restraint, and for churches to be safe, faithful, and merciful.
Key current sources used: AP reporting on Human Rights Watch findings and serious abuses by all warring parties; Le Monde reporting on coordinated attacks; Guardian reporting on insurgent gains and airstrikes; Le Monde reporting on Africa Corps abuses.
Near-Miss / Watchlist Countries
These countries remain serious prayer burdens even though they did not enter the Top Ten in this July review.
Yemen — Yemen remains marked by long-running war and humanitarian collapse. It stays just outside the July Top Ten because Mali’s recent reporting is more immediate and more directly tied to active armed conflict in this war-and-conflict ranking. Yemen’s detainee-swap agreement gives a limited reason for cautious thanksgiving, not proof that Yemen’s war and humanitarian suffering have ended.
Nigeria — Nigeria’s conflict burden includes jihadist insurgency, school abductions, insecurity in the northeast, and displacement. Nigeria remains outside the Top Ten because the violence is severe but geographically uneven compared with the ranked countries above.
Haiti — Haiti’s gang violence has effects similar to armed conflict, especially on public safety, health care, and daily life. It remains just outside because the violence is driven by gangs rather than a more conventional war between armies or insurgent forces, even though the damage to public health, safety, and daily life is grave.
Syria — Syria continues to live with the effects of years of war and active localized danger. It remains outside the Top Ten because the July review found its current armed-conflict conditions less nationally disruptive than the countries ranked above.
Somalia — Somalia remains deeply affected by conflict, political instability, displacement, drought, flooding, and hunger. It remains outside because its present crisis is driven by a mix of conflict, climate, hunger, and displacement, rather than by active armed conflict as centrally as the countries ranked above.
Sources for watchlist countries: AP reporting on Yemen’s detainee swap; AP reporting on FAO/WFP hunger-hotspot warnings; Guardian reporting on Insecurity Insight food-related violence analysis; AP reporting on Nigeria school abductions; AP reporting on missing students and teachers in northeastern Nigeria; AP reporting on Haiti’s public-hospital crisis amid gang violence.
Final Summary Judgment
What most distinguishes this ranking from a broader list of countries facing serious suffering.
How to Pray Through This List
Use this list slowly, praying for civilians, churches, leaders, aid access, justice, and peace.
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Pray first for the Lord to restrain evil: for civilians to be protected, combatants restrained, war crimes exposed, and the violent turned back from cruelty.
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Pray for displaced families, hungry communities, the wounded, traumatized children, grieving parents, and exhausted churches.
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Pray that believers in these countries would not lose heart, and that pastors and church leaders would serve with courage and wisdom.
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Pray that mercy ministries would reach people cut off from help, and that aid routes would open where war has made access dangerous or blocked.
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Pray for wise diplomacy, truthful reporting, justice for victims, and peace that is more than a temporary pause in fighting.
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Ask the Lord to help His people keep worshiping, serving, forgiving, telling the truth, and loving their neighbors where war makes faithfulness costly.
Key Sources Consulted
These sources were used to support the July ranking, movement notes, and country-level conflict judgments.
- Sudan: AP reporting on Sudan’s war scale and Amnesty findings; Guardian reporting on Amnesty International’s El Fasher findings; AP reporting on U.N. / OHCHR and ACLED-cited drone escalation.
- State of Palestine / Gaza: AP reporting on Gaza’s 1,000-day war burden; Le Monde reporting on post-ceasefire deaths and OCHA-referenced humanitarian conditions; AP reporting on Gaza casualty and ceasefire fragility.
- Ukraine: AP reporting on the July 2 Kyiv attack; Guardian reporting on the July 2 Kyiv attack; Guardian reporting on AOAV civilian-casualty analysis.
- Democratic Republic of the Congo: AP reporting on DRC’s ICJ filing and the M23/Rwanda regional dimension; Guardian reporting on Goma drone escalation and humanitarian-worker risk.
- Myanmar: Guardian reporting on Myanmar’s aerial campaign, with ACLED data and U.N. displacement figures cited inside the report; AP reporting on Fortify Rights findings about paramotor and gyrocopter attacks; AP reporting on Amnesty aviation-fuel concerns.
- Lebanon: Axios reporting on the Israel-Lebanon framework agreement; Financial Times reporting on casualties, displacement, and implementation risk; Guardian reporting on legal accountability concerns and Hezbollah rejection.
- Iran: Guardian reporting on late-June U.S.-Iran strike exchanges; AP reporting on Strait of Hormuz tension and maritime-security concerns; AP reporting on Hormuz-related claims and maritime-risk caution.
- South Sudan: Guardian reporting on renewed violence, hospital destruction, displacement, and hunger; AP reporting on Akobo fighting and U.N. concern; AP reporting on FAO/WFP hunger-hotspot warnings.
- Burkina Faso: AP reporting on Human Rights Watch findings, displacement, territorial insecurity, and civilian-protection concerns; Guardian reporting on political-security deterioration and repression.
- Mali: AP reporting on Human Rights Watch findings and serious abuses by all warring parties; Le Monde reporting on coordinated attacks; Guardian reporting on insurgent gains and airstrikes; Le Monde reporting on Africa Corps abuses.
- Watchlist countries: AP reporting on Yemen’s detainee swap; Guardian reporting on Insecurity Insight food-related violence analysis; AP reporting on Nigeria school abductions; AP reporting on missing students and teachers in northeastern Nigeria; AP reporting on Haiti’s public-hospital crisis amid gang violence; AP reporting on FAO/WFP hunger-hotspot warnings.
- Previous comparison: June 2026 TeachTheTreasures.com war-and-armed-conflict ranking, used for month-to-month movement comparison.
Continue praying
Continue praying for the nations
Use this list as one doorway into a wider rhythm of prayer for the nations.

