News headlines in May 2009, page 8
MIDEAST: Egyptians Too Hit by Israeli Strikes
- Inter Press Service

Residents along Egypt's border with the Gaza Strip are still awaiting compensation for property damaged by air strikes during Israel's recent onslaught against the Hamas-run enclave.
MIDEAST: Palestinians Scoring Own Goals
- Inter Press Service

While the U.S. appears to be optimistic about Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, inter-Palestinian rivalry, a recalcitrant Israeli government, and an international community with its own agenda could well scuttle a settlement.
U.S.: Drive for Sanctions Likely in Wake of North Korean Test
- Inter Press Service

Sunday's underground nuclear test by North Korea drew strong condemnation here Monday from U.S. President Barack Obama who suggested that Washington will seek strong international sanctions by the U.N. Security Council and possibly impose tough unilateral measures of its own.
MIDEAST: Showdown Looming Over Settlements
- Inter Press Service

A showdown over Israeli settlements in the occupied West bank is looming between Israel and the United States barely a week after the encounter at the White House between U.S. President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. What's becoming increasingly clear is that the May 18 encounter was no friendly 'getting-to-know-you' meeting between a new President and a new Prime Minister of the Middle East's most enduring alliance.
MIGRATION-BOLIVIA: Women’s Remittances Come at High Cost
- Inter Press Service

The income earned by Bolivian women migrants in Spain, which enables them to support the families they left behind and build a nest egg, comes at a high price: low wages, long hours, no benefits and few or no days off.
EGYPT: Financial Crunch Squeezes Suez
- Inter Press Service

At the Suez Canal, one of Egypt's fiscal mainstays, the threat of Somali piracy pales in comparison with the potential knock-on effects of the global economic depression.
EUROPE: Victims of Trafficking Need More than Words
- Inter Press Service

A flawed political and economic order that has failed to create effective migration policies is behind the rise of trafficking in persons and the difficulties in tackling it effectively, leading campaigners say.
INDIA: No Place to be Disabled In
- Inter Press Service

India passed a law for equal opportunities and rights for persons with disabilities in 1995, but in spite of taking more steps than some other developing countries, its 60 million physically challenged population remains hugely disadvantaged.
TRADE-US: Green Groups Say E-Waste Bill Is Too Lax
- Inter Press Service

Environmentalists are expressing discontent over recently introduced legislation regarding the U.S.’s exporting of electronic waste, or 'e-waste'.
INDIA: Cheapest Car Rides on Govt Subsidies
- Inter Press Service

India’s Tata Motors, makers of the ‘cheapest car ever made’, say they have received more than a million bookings for the first batch of cars said to roll out of its factory in a few months.
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