News headlines in November 2010, page 9
U.N. Remains Deadlocked on Defining Terrorism
- Inter Press Service
When Israeli commandos killed nine mostly Turkish activists during a raid on a flotilla of ships carrying humanitarian aid to Palestinians last May, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the attack as a prime example of 'state terrorism'.
RIGHTS: Getting Harassment on the Map
- Inter Press Service
Less common but perhaps more useful than the tourist map is the 'harassment map' that many Cairo women are beginning to refer to.
CENTRAL AMERICA: Water as a 'Divine Gift'
- Inter Press Service
'Many people still believe that water is a gift from God.' This statement from a Guatemalan scientist alludes to Central America's neglect of its water resources - - and the subsequent impact on agriculture.
Egypt Rejects 'Interference' in Elections
- Inter Press Service
Egypt's authoritarian government ramped up its crackdown on journalists and opposition politicians ahead of the Nov. 28 parliamentary elections and rebuffed a U.S. call for international observers to monitor 'free and fair' balloting.
KENYA: A Brand New Constitution, But Can Women Enjoy Land Rights?
- Inter Press Service
Mary Kimani wishes her husband were still alive. Holding her one-year-old son in one hand and a hoe in the other, she recounts with bitterness how she and her children lost their livelihood to her husband’s family.
NEPAL: School Initiative Making the Grade
- Inter Press Service
Four years ago, Ramita Bhujel was a bit reluctant to go back her school after a year's absence. This Grade 4 student of Shree Saraswati Secondary School here had been down with pneumonia, failed to clear her nursery exams and as a consequence stayed at home.
BIODIVERSITY: Asia Acts To Pry Tigers From Jaws Of Extinction
- Inter Press Service
It is the national animal of several Asian countries, lends its name to brands as varied as budget airlines to alcoholic beverages, and features prominently in Asian mythology, including the Chinese zodiac. But unless there is a dramatic turnaround for the tiger, conservationists say, this giant feline could become extinct before the next Chinese Year of the Tiger in 2022.
South Expo Highlights Homegrown Poverty Solutions
- Inter Press Service
The Third Annual Global South-South Development Expo (GSSD Expo) opened Monday in Geneva with more than 400 delegates from over 40 countries gathered to showcase innovative solutions to poverty challenges that have been created in developing countries.
/CORRECTED REPEAT*/ETHIOPIA: First Carbon Finance Spreads Green Over Highland
- Inter Press Service
It has been decades since the people of the Humbo Woreda have been self-sufficient in food. A Clean Development Mechanism project - Ethiopia's first - is restoring the environment and sustaining livelihoods along with it.
BRAZIL: Family Farming Matters in South-South Cooperation
- Inter Press Service
Cooperation between countries of the developing South took another step forward with the recent signing of international agreements in Brazil aimed at stimulating public policies to support small farmers.