News headlines in 2011, page 38
The Screen Speaks for Suu Kyi
- Inter Press Service

Twenty years after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, and a year after being released from house arrest, Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is the subject of a sweeping film that may increase international pressure on Burma’s ruling regime to speed up tentative reforms.
GHANA: Tropical Ulcer Persists Despite Affordable Solutions
- Inter Press Service

For the past 10 years, Buruli ulcer has been eating Benjamin Essel’s leg. The skin above his ankle is totally gone, and a swollen, pulpy and reddish wound rises almost up to his knee and wraps around his calf. Even still, this is an improvement over recent years.
US-BAHRAIN: Obama Praises Report as Groups Urge Arms Delay
- Inter Press Service

The administration of President Barack Obama has praised a damning report issued Wednesday in Manama on Bahrain's crackdown on the democracy movement earlier this year, as human rights groups called on Washington to further delay delivery of a pending 53-million-dollar arms package to the kingdom.
MEXICO: Deadly Cocktail of Sexual Violence and Impunity
- Inter Press Service

Sexual violence against women in Mexico is on the rise, alongside the escalation of violence between police and soldiers and the drug cartels, women's rights activists warn.
ARGENTINA: Women Build New Opportunities in Cooperatives
- Inter Press Service

Forged in the 2001-2002 social and economic crisis, cooperatives in Argentina are becoming a fast track to women's participation in what were traditionally regarded as male spheres.
LATIN AMERICA: How to Prevent 'Femicide'
- Inter Press Service

Vanina Alderete, an 18-year-old from Argentina, is a survivor of a particularly heinous case of domestic violence: when she was 11, her father killed her mother and her two little brothers and left her seriously injured.
Bahrain Rights Report Released Amid Clashes
- Inter Press Service

The head of a special commission in Bahrain has said authorities used torture and excessive force against detainees arrested in a crackdown earlier this year.
PAKISTAN: At the Butt of a Joke
- Inter Press Service

The Butts of Punjab have become the butt of jokes after Pakistan’s telecom authorities moved to ban 'obscene' content on short messaging service (SMS) texts over mobile phones.
EGYPT: It’s January Again in Tahrir Square
- Inter Press Service

Days of clshes between protesters and security forces culminated on Tuesday evening in what was estimated to be a million-man rally in Cairo's Tahrir Square to demand an end to military rule. The new political crisis has prompted fears that Egypt's first post-Mubarak parliamentary polls, slated to begin only five days from now, could be called off.
Drastic Child Poverty Might Destroy Lesotho’s Future
- Inter Press Service

Flagging economic fortunes and a persistent AIDS pandemic have devastated Lesotho, leaving little hope it will ever be able to pull itself out of its bleak poverty trap. Three out of five of the tiny southern African kingdom’s children are living in dismal poverty. Every fourth child is orphaned.
Global Issues