News headlines in 2009, page 124
IRAN: New Poll Finds Strong Domestic Support for Regime
- Inter Press Service

Despite persistent mass demonstrations protesting June's disputed reelection of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a new survey of Iranian public opinion released here Saturday suggests majority domestic support for both him and the country's basic governing institutions.
POLITICS: Nuclear Agency Demanding Iranian Missile Blueprints
- Inter Press Service

Iran stopped meeting with the International Atomic Energy Agency last year over Western allegations of covert Iranian nuclear weapons work because the nuclear agency was demanding access to the designs for its Shahab-3 missile and other secret military data, according to both Iranian and IAEA officials.
AFGHANISTAN: Media Outrage Over Coalition Killing of Reporter
- Inter Press Service

For many Afghans, slain Afghan journalist Sultan Munadi has become a symbol for all that is wrong with the United States-led war in Afghanistan.
ZIMBABWE: Football Fails to Feed Families
- Inter Press Service

Football was never a ticket to fabulous wealth in Zimbabwe, at least not for players who stayed in the country. But the economic situation has made it ever harder to play simply for the pride and pleasure of pulling on local team colours.
Q&A: Regional Prescriptions for Water Management
- Inter Press Service

The Orange-Senqu River has a one million square kilometre basin that covers Lesotho, South Africa, Botswana and Namibia. The water it provides is crucial to industry in South Africa, but is also relied on by farmers and domestic users.
MUSIC: Afro-Brazilians Priced Out of Back2Black Concert
- Inter Press Service

On stage, singer-songwriter Gilberto Gil highlighted Brazil's 'genetic and cultural' connection to 'Mother Africa,' to applause from a predominantly light-skinned audience at a concert that black people generally could not afford - symbolic of the country's 'veiled racism' at an international festival organised to combat it.
POLITICS: Libya's Mercurial Leader Keeps U.N. Guessing
- Inter Press Service

Libyan leader Muammar el-Qaddafi, who will be making his maiden appearance before the United Nations next week, has been described as a gadfly with a penchant for stirring up controversies.
POLITICS: Obama and Netanyahu Still Tussling over Priorities
- Inter Press Service

As world leaders prepare to gather here for the all-star 'general debate' at the U.N. General Assembly on Sep. 23, two of them - U.S. Pres. Barack Obama and Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu - are still tussling over whether to prioritise their anti-Iran campaign or the push for a Palestinian-Israeli peace.
POLITICS-AFGHANISTAN: Battle for Balkh
- Inter Press Service

Events currently unfolding in Afghanistan’s northern province of Balkh may be a preview for the future.
COSTA RICA: Media Bill Languishes in Congress
- Inter Press Service

A bill on the press and freedom of expression that has been kicking around in the Costa Rican Congress for the past eight years, which deals with questions like source confidentiality, access to public information, and libel and slander laws, was saved in late August from being permanently shelved by the legislature.
Global Issues