News headlines in June 2015, page 13

  1. Native Communities in Mexico Demand to be Consulted on Wind Farms

    - Inter Press Service

    MEXICO CITY, Jun 03 (IPS) - "It hurts us that our land is affected, and the environmental impacts are not even measured. Wind farm projects affect streams and hurt the flora," said Zapotec Indian Isabel Jiménez, who is taking part in the struggle against the installation of a wind park in southern Mexico.

  2. The Neglected Street Vendors of India

    - Inter Press Service

    NEW DELHI, Jun 02 (IPS) - For the past nine years, 27-year-old Jignesh has been hawking bed sheets on the bustling pavements of Janpath, a major throughway in India's capital, New Delhi, as kamikaze traffic swirls around him.

  3. Despite Setbacks, Global Sanitation Makes Progress, Says Fund

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, Jun 02 (IPS) - When the United Nations hosted a panel discussion last year urging its partners to "break their silence" on open defecation, Singapore's deputy permanent representative Mark Neo was outspoken in his characterisation: "Open defecation is a euphemism. What we are talking about is shitting in the open."

  4. Newly-Recovered Ship Contains Rare Remnants of Slave Trade

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    NEW YORK, Jun 02 (IPS) - A Portuguese slave ship that left Mozambique in 1794 bound for Brazil had hardly rounded the treacherous Cape of Good Hope when it broke apart violently on two reefs only 100 yards from shore.

  5. Jamaican Gov't Sees IMF Successes but No Benefits for the Poor

    - Inter Press Service

    KINGSTON, Jun 02 (IPS) - For Jamaicans like Roxan Brown, the Caribbean nation's International Monetary Fund (IMF) successes don't mean a thing. Seven consecutive tests have been passed but still, the mother of two can't find work and relies instead on the kindness of friends and family.

  6. Prolonged Drought Leaves Caribbean Farmers Broke and Worried

    - Inter Press Service

    CASTRIES, Jun 02 (IPS) - St. Lucian farmer Anthony Herman was hoping that next year he'd manage to recoup some of the losses he sustained after 70 per cent of his cashew crop withered and died in the heat of the scorching southern Caribbean sun.

  7. Africa Primed to Take Advantage of Internet Opportunity

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    TUNIS, Jun 02 (IPS) - There has been robust growth in Internet access and usage over the past few years and Africa is now primed to take advantage of the social and economic opportunities that Internet can bring to people across the continent, according to Kathy Brown, President and CEO of the Internet Society.

  8. Opinion: Why the US-Iran Nuclear Deal May Still Fail

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    NEW DELHI, Jun 02 (IPS) - The euphoria that spread though the world after the Iran nuclear agreement reached in Lausanne in April this year with the United States, Russia, China, France, United Kingdom and Germany, plus the European Union, is  proving short-lived.

  9. Growing Mobilisation Against Introduction of Fracking in Spain

    - Inter Press Service

    MALAGA, Spain, Jun 02 (IPS) - Thousands of people in Spain have organised to protest the introduction of "fracking" – a controversial technique that involves pumping water, chemicals and sand at high pressure into shale rock to release gas and oil.

  10. Indigenous Voices Ignored in Financing Panamanian Dam Project

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    AMSTERDAM, Jun 02 (IPS) - Indigenous people who would be directly affected by the impact of a hydroelectric project in Panama were not consulted despite national and international human rights obligations to obtain their free, prior and informed consent, according to a just-released report.

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