News headlines in September 2011, page 32

  1. KOSOVO: Probes into Misuse of EU Money Stall - Part 1

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    This year the European Union plans to spend an additional 70 million euros to help Kosovo work its way towards the goal of becoming a member state. But it has no plan to dig further into the alleged misuse of European taxpayers’ money that has been unresolved for the last 10 years.

  2. WHAT LIES AHEAD FOR LIBYA?

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    According to NATO, the final chapter of Gaddafi's Libya is being written now. The scenario is very similar to the final chapter for Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the 'War on Terror': eliminate The Bad Guys, writes Johan Galtung, Rector of the TRANSCEND Peace University and author of 'The Fall of the US Empire--And Then What?'.

  3. MEDIA-PAKISTAN: Caught Between the Army and the Taliban

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Journalists covering the United States-led ‘war-on-terror’ in Pakistan’s turbulent northwest are not sure who wants them out of the way more — the Taliban or the Pakistan army.

  4. LIBYA: New Chapter Opens After Gaddafi

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Libyan children will go back to school without Muammar Gaddafi’s ubiquitous presence, despite a lack of new books.

  5. HONDURAS: Dying for Land

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The deployment of large numbers of troops in the Bajo Aguán region of Honduras is reviving the age-old conflict over land in an area torn between organised crime groups capable of undertaking armed actions, wealthy landowners and peasants demanding further land reform.

  6. CIA's Push for Drone War Driven by Internal Needs

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    When David Petraeus walks into the Central Intelligence Agency Tuesday, he will be taking over an organisation whose mission has changed in recent years from gathering and analysing intelligence to waging military campaigns through drone strikes in Pakistan, as well as in Yemen and Somalia.

  7. TRINIDAD: State of Emergency in More Ways Than One

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Ancel Roget believes he knows why the Trinidad and Tobago government imposed a State of Emergency (SOE) on Aug. 21 and used its majority in the Parliament to extend it for another three months.

  8. OP-ED: Al-Qaeda Lost the Battle Long Ago

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Osama bin Laden didn't live to see the 10th anniversary of Sep. 11. And his organisation, according to many U.S. government insiders, is on its last legs since his death at the hands of U.S. Special Forces in May. 'We're within reach of strategically defeating Al-Qaeda,' Defence Secretary Leon Panetta recently observed. Others disagree, pointing to the strength of Al-Qaeda in Yemen.

  9. Politics Clouds Efforts to Ban Nuclear Testing

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    On Aug. 29, 1949, the Soviet Union conducted the first of 456 nuclear tests in Semipalatinsk in Eastern Kazakhstan, at the site where it ultimately held over two-thirds of all Soviet nuclear tests without warning inhabitants of the region of the impact of exposure to these tests.

  10. CUBA: Summer's Legacy: Trash-Strewn Local Beaches

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    People are packed like sardines on the sand and in the water. Like every summer in Cuba, tens of thousands of Havana residents seek to escape the heat and worries of city life every day along a 12-km stretch of popular beaches to the east of the capital, known as Playas del Este.

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