News headlines in February 2011, page 23

  1. U.S.: Military Intervention Trumping Humanitarian Aid

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    In the midst of a belt-tightening political climate in which pledges by prominent lawmakers to slash the United States' foreign affairs budget will likely soon be realised, some rights groups and experts are concerned about the increasingly blurry distinction between security and development in the face of shrinking resources.

  2. PERU: Government under Fire for Waiving Environmental Certificates for Dams

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The Peruvian government has been forced to offer talks with governors, the ombudsperson's office and Catholic Church leaders, to stem the outcry over two emergency decrees that waive the requirement for environmental certificates for 33 investment projects, including hydroelectric dams in the Amazon rainforest.

  3. U.S.-IRAN: Unrealistic Agenda Undermined Nuke Talks

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    No observers of U.S. relations with Iran over the past three decades were surprised when late-January talks in Istanbul failed to hint at, let alone deliver, a breakthrough that would ease tensions between the Islamic Republic and the West.

  4. Q&A: The People Need to Take Leadership

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    While the international community is now talking of a triple global crisis — food, climate and economic - a weeklong session of the World Social Forum (WSF) is coming to a close in Dakar, Senegal.

  5. ECONOMY-LATIN AMERICA: The Downside of Strong Currencies

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Latin America returned in 2010 to the strong economic growth it enjoyed over the past decade, after only a minimal slowdown during the global crisis that broke out in 2008. But the weakness of the dollar relative to local currencies is a cause for concern among governments and sectors that produce goods for export.

  6. EGYPT: Labour Unrest Feeds Growing Protests

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    With international press coverage focused almost entirely on Cairo’s Tahrir Square, few outsiders have grasped the scale of Egypt’s popular uprising, now in its third week. But massive demonstrations, and pitched battles between pro- democracy protesters and the regime’s security forces, are taking place in every corner of the country.

  7. Tourism Is Poisoning the Mexican Caribbean

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The booming tourist industry along Mexico's Caribbean coast, particularly in the area of Cancún and the 'Riviera Maya,' is polluting the world's largest underwater cave system and harming the world's second largest coral reef, a new study has found.

  8. SOUTH AFRICA: Rising Leader With Her Feet on the Ground

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Zanele Magwaza-Msibi is a woman with a mission: to serve the people of South Africa. She is poised to become leader of South Africa's newest political party, the National Freedom Party (NFP), after breaking away from the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), where she served as national chairperson.

  9. VENEZUELA: Biopiracy Leaves Native Groups Out in the Cold

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Millions of cancer patients around the world benefit from a medication called Paclitaxel (Taxol), which may begin to be produced from a new source: fungi found at the summit of Venezuela's flat-topped mountains. But the indigenous communities who have lived in that area since time immemorial will receive no benefits, and were not even consulted on the matter.

  10. PERU: At Last, Reparations for Civil War Victims

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Peru will begin to pay individual monetary reparations to victims and survivors of the 1980-2000 counterinsurgency war, with top priority put on elderly people in remote villages in the country's impoverished highlands, where most of the human rights violations took place.

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