News headlines in November 2009, page 7
TURKEY: NGOs Unite to Demand Say in Human Rights Bill
- Inter Press Service
Turkey’s new human rights bill has a flaw — not a single rights group was consulted in the drafting.
CLIMATE CHANGE: Fears Forest Proposals Are 'Human Rights Disaster'
- Inter Press Service
The clean, ultra-modern chrome and glass lines of the Bella Centre, in the Danish capital Copenhagen, is a world away from the thronging canopy suspended over the tropical forests of Uganda, or the Democratic Republic of Congo, or Cameroon.
RIGHTS-LAOS: Lapses with Labour - Part 2
- Inter Press Service
'Most workers have limited knowledge, ultimately you don’t know how many hidden killers are in your workplace. The boss knows, but he won't tell you,' Wang Fengping, an engineer who was once employed by Hong Kong-based Gold Peak batteries at their factory in Guondong, China.
CHINA: Postscript to Obama Visit: When Beijing Blinked
- Inter Press Service
The jury is still out on what Beijing and Washington achieved during President Barack Obama’s first state visit to China last week. But one trait has emerged more strongly than anything else.
MIDEAST: Settlements 'Moratorium' Still Short of Freeze
- Inter Press Service
U.S. special envoy to the Middle East George Mitchell and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton welcomed an announcement by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday that Israel will impose a 10-month 'moratorium' on settlements, but warned that the move falls short of a freeze on settlement building - a condition that has been a mainstay of U.S. policy towards Israel.
U.S.: Groups Denounce Obama Rejection of Landmine Treaty
- Inter Press Service
Human rights and disarmament activists reacted bitterly Wednesday to the decision by the administration of President Barack Obama, who will receive the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize next month, not to sign the 10-year-old treaty banning anti-personnel landmines.
Q&A: 'We Have Linked Machismo and Femicide in the Public Mind in Chile'
- Inter Press Service
More than 500 Chilean women have been killed by their partners, ex-partners or strangers since 2001. This year alone, there have been 52 'femicides', economist Gloria Maira said on Wednesday, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.
CLIMATE CHANGE: Obama to Visit Copenhagen with U.S. Targets
- Inter Press Service
After weeks of speculation, the White House announced Wednesday that President Barack Obama will stop by the climate talks to be held in Copenhagen next month en route to Oslo, where he will receive his Nobel Peace Prize Dec. 10.
BRAZIL: 'Quilombos' Keep Black Cultural Identity Alive
- Inter Press Service
A black community in the southern Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro is trying to maintain its cultural heritage on 287 hectares granted to it by the government in 1999 as part of reparations to the descendants of slaves.
ZAMBIA: Electoral Commission Accused of Bias
- Inter Press Service
The Electoral Commission of Zambia (ECZ) is once again under fire from opposition political parties and some civil society organisations, which accuse it of bias in favour of the ruling party during elections.