News headlines in 2009, page 133
POLITICS-CUBA: Moderate Dissident Group Convenes Congress
- Inter Press Service

A moderate dissident group in Cuba that aspires to become a 'political majority' in the future announced Thursday that it would hold a congress in 2010.
RIGHTS-US: Some Guantanamo Prisoners Fight Release
- Inter Press Service

As 13 prisoners held at the U.S. naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba appeared set to finally win their freedom, others are asking their release to be deferred.
LATIN AMERICA: 'The More Guns, the More Violence'
- Inter Press Service

Traffic in light weapons and small arms is one of Latin America's major disarmament concerns, because they fuel urban violence, especially in countries like Mexico, Guatemala and Brazil.
COLOMBIA: Neutrality Impossible for Indigenous Groups
- Inter Press Service

The latest killings of Awá Indians in southern Colombia — 12 members of a family, including four children and three teenagers —, the forced displacement of hundreds of native villagers, and death threats against indigenous leaders and teachers are signs indicating that their demand to be considered neutral in the armed conflict is still being ignored.
CUBA: Scientists, Farmers Fighting Climate Change - Together
- Inter Press Service

Cuba is facing the challenge of boosting agricultural output under difficult climate conditions and on soils badly deteriorated by erosion, salinity and other problems. And scientists have a strategic role to play, provided they do not sit in their laboratories but get out into the fields where the action is.
BRAZIL: Artistic Energy as Antidote to Exclusion
- Inter Press Service

Putting the power of art to the test in extreme situations has become an unintended but necessary task for the Axé Project, a Brazilian non-governmental organisation (NGO) aimed at creating the conditions for street kids and other at-risk children to overcome educational, family and community exclusion.
RIGHTS-PAKISTAN: ‘The Problem Is We All Work in Silos’
- Inter Press Service

As secretary-general of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in September 1994, Nafis Sadik had described as a 'quantum leap' efforts to reinforce commitments in addressing infant and maternal mortality, education and reproductive health and family planning.
HEALTH: Asian Countries Race to Produce Vaccine for H1N1 Virus
- Inter Press Service

The race to mass-produce vaccines for the lethal H1N1 virus has attracted contenders from Asia’s developing countries, confirming a noticeable expansion of a field that has been dominated by flu vaccine production centres in Europe and North America.
Q&A: Cross-Border Links to Boost Women’s Economic Empowerment
- Inter Press Service

The Professional Women, Executives and Businesswomen’s Forum (PROWEB) organised a unique investment conference last week in Zimbabwe’s capital where businesswomen from South Africa and Zimbabwe got the opportunity to not only network but forge what may be a unique African association among businesswomen across national borders.
SRI LANKA: Women Want Better Pay, Out of Free Trade Zones
- Inter Press Service

The room is dingy and cramped. The walls are unplastered and its rough cement edges can scrape the skin easily. Furniture is strewn all over the place, plastic chairs stacked one on top of the other, boxes on top of them, handbags hanging from the wall and clothes on a rack. A small kerosene cooker is kept on the side of the room while a bicycle is parked next to the only bed in the 10-by-10-feet room.
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