News headlines in 2011, page 37

  1. TURKEY: Erdogan Apologises to Kurds for Mass Killing

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has issued the first official apology for a bloody military campaign that killed thousands of Kurds in southeast Turkey in the late 1930s.

  2. Belo Monte Dam and Hunters Endanger Amazon Turtles

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Luiz Cardoso da Costa was horrified as he watched the Amazonian manatee, a large docile beast, bleeding out from the knife wound he had dealt it, yet greedily gulping down grasses as if eating could somehow stave off death.

  3. CUBA: Violence against Women Out of the Closet

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The story of Saúl, a violent husband, and Odalys, an abused wife, has been on Cuban TV screens for several weeks now, bringing the touchy and often silenced issue of violence against women into millions of homes. It may cause shock or repulsion, but few can escape the controversy or discussion.

  4. Radical Change Needed at Durban Conference, Experts Say

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Global leaders will gather next week in Durban, South Africa to determine how to cap global warming at two degrees Celsius. This limit would entail de facto agreement to a global carbon budget of no more than 660 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions between now and 2050, climate science says.

  5. MEXICO: Activists Want President and Drug Lords Tried for War Crimes

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Activists are hoping that the International Criminal Court (ICC) will take up a case against Mexican President Felipe Calderón, government officials and drug traffickers and indict those responsible for the violence wracking the country. But this is likely to be a complex and lengthy process.

  6. THE FUTURE OF THE WORLD TRADING SYSTEM

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The relative dynamism of emerging economies over the past several years has meant that these countries, many of them in Asia, have come to play an ever-growing role in the world and to account for a larger share of economic activity. Adjusting politically and organisationally to shifts in economic power takes time. As we work towards a new equilibrium in international cooperation, new relationships and leadership patterns will inevitably emerge, just as they have throughout history.

  7. CLIMATE CHANGE: Making a Hot Cup of Rooibos Tea Unaffordable

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    South Africa’s Rooibos tea has become a popular drink all around the globe. But prices of the herbal brew could shoot up within the next decade, as the Rooibos plant can only grow in one small region in the world — which is severely affected by climate change.

  8. Aid Not Effectively Reaching Africa’s Poor

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Kenyan tea and coffee farmers remain disgruntled about the minimal profits they make selling their cash crops, the country’s leading foreign currency earners, as the government receives millions in funding for training and subsidies that most of these farmers are yet to see materialise.

  9. CLIMATE CHANGE: Shale Gas Emerges as a Burning Issue

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    The issue seems rather similar to that of unconventional oil and has already sparked a major controversy in the West. But its implications for the debate on climate change are hardly known in countries of the Global South.

  10. Q&A: ‘Close to Breaking Point’

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    Who speaks for the Chinese people? With the advent of the blogosphere in China, the Communist party is no longer the uncontested spokesperson for the Chinese nation. A myriad of voices are vying for space and attention, but most of those, according to one of the country's most famous bloggers Wang Xiaofeng, are just 'letting off steam' and indulging a penchant for rant long suppressed in traditional media by the party's ruthless censors.

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