News headlines in 2009, page 136
CLIMATE CHANGE: Survival Means Anticipating and Adapting
- Inter Press Service

Imagine being able to know months in advance when and where floods or droughts may occur. That is what over 150 countries participating in the third World Climate Conference, which concluded last Friday in Geneva, pledged to achieve through the creation of a Global Framework for Climate Services.
MEXICO: Priests Targeted in Drug-Related and Other Violence
- Inter Press Service

The priesthood has joined journalism as one of the most dangerous occupations in Mexico, according to a report by the Roman Catholic Bishops' Conference.
RIGHTS-AFRICA: Uganda Court Asked to Declare Bride Price Unconstitutional
- Inter Press Service

Deborah Awori could not stop her husband from selling their 14-year-old daughter away in marriage using the time-honoured tradition of asking for 'bride price'.
DEVELOPMENT-BHUTAN: ‘GDP Fuels Consumerism’
- Inter Press Service

A tiny kingdom located at the eastern end of the Himalayas and bordered by China and India used to be one of the most isolated countries in the world until it became a full-fledged democracy in 2008.
RIGHTS-US: Ashcroft Liable for Wrongful Detention
- Inter Press Service

In what is being hailed as an unprecedented ruling, a federal appeals court has concluded that the George W. Bush administration's first attorney general, John Ashcroft, can be held personally responsible for the wrongful detention of an innocent U.S. citizen.
RIGHTS-INDIA: HIV-Positive Women Get User Rights to Till Land
- Inter Press Service

Till four months back, 33-year-old Mugil hardly ventured out of her parent’s home, preferring to stay indoors and tend to the household chores.
MIDEAST: Business Seeks Ways Past Political Impasse
- Inter Press Service

Business between the Palestinian Authority and Israel is growing despite the political impasse over Israel's refusal to cease illegal settlement building in East Jerusalem and the Palestinian West Bank.
TELL ME WHAT YOU READ AND I'LL TELL YOU WHERE YOU'RE FROM
- Inter Press Service

It was a news item that naturally filled me with admiration: one of the world's busiest and most overworked men, US president Barack Obama, was taking a week-long vacation on the island of Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts. But his rest would be that of an active and intelligent man: it included 2000 pages of reading. The authors on Obama's list shared a common feature: they are all American, writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban writer and journalist whose novels have been translated into a dozen languages.
CUBA: Raising Awareness about Racial Discrimination
- Inter Press Service

Intellectuals and artists concerned about continued racial discrimination in Cuba are attempting to revive the Cofradía de la Negritud (CONEG), a 'brotherhood' or association of black people aimed at raising awareness of the problem.
WOMEN-PAKISTAN: Domestic Violence Bill Draws Mixed Reactions
- Inter Press Service

A historic bill seeking to punish domestic abuse still raises doubts about its ability to meet the goal it sets out to do: end violence against women.
Global Issues