News headlines in 2014, page 104

  1. Ivorians Learn to Save Chimpanzees and Last Intact Tropical Rainforest in West Africa by Exploiting it — for Tourism

    - Inter Press Service

    TAI NATIONAL PARK, Côte d’Ivoire, May 09 (IPS) - Jonas Sanhin Touan has big dreams. As he sits under a canopy, he greets the rare tourist to Gouleako, one of the many villages near the entrance of Côte d'Ivoire's Taï National Park, with a meal.

  2. Nigeria Abductions Grab the Spotlight

    - Inter Press Service

    WASHINGTON, May 09 (IPS) - The fate of more than 200 schoolgirls abducted by the violent Islamist Boko Haram group from the northern Nigeria town of Chibok in mid-April has become something of a public sensation in the United States since the beginning of the month.

  3. Industrial Agriculture: Too Big to Succeed

    - Inter Press Service

    TORONTO, May 08 (IPS) - An estimated one billion small farmers scratching out a living growing diverse crops and raising animals in developing countries represent the key to maintaining food production in the face of hotter temperatures and drought, especially in the tropical regions, says Sarah Elton, author of the book, "Consumed: Food for a Finite Planet."

  4. Springtime Conflict Spells Winter Crisis for Ukraine

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, May 08 (IPS) - It's springtime in Ukraine, but conflict and economic threats are bringing an early chill. During these months when the country normally stores up energy reserves for winter, access to natural gas may be Russia's best weapon to influence Ukraine's new government.

  5. The 4th Century Art that Died Out Across the World and the Ethiopian Scribes Trying to Preserve it

    - Inter Press Service

    DEBRE LIBANOS, Ethiopia, May 08 (IPS) - Misganew Andeurgay changes his bamboo-made pen for another, dips it in a tiny pot of viscous liquid and, on a parchment page filled with black script, begins to trace in scarlet-red ink the Amharic word for god. 

  6. Major Report Urges Reform of U.S. Capital Punishment System

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    WASHINGTON, May 07 (IPS) - Innocent people will be executed in the United States if the country's capital punishment system is not reformed, warns a new report.

  7. New Gestures to Opposition Unlikely to Change U.S. Syria Policy

    - Inter Press Service

    WASHINGTON, May 07 (IPS) - Despite new gestures of support for the Syrian opposition, the administration of President Barack Obama is unlikely to change its longstanding policy of restraining U.S. involvement in the country's more than three-year-old civil war, according to experts here.

  8. Gaps Remain in U.N. WMD Resolution

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, May 07 (IPS) - The United Nations claims that a key Security Council resolution adopted unanimously back in 2004 has been instrumental in keeping weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) from the hands of terrorists and insurgent groups worldwide.

  9. U.N. Treaty on Corporate Rights Abuse Sees New Momentum

    - Inter Press Service

    WASHINGTON, May 07 (IPS) - Some 500 global groups are calling for action by governments next month to jumpstart the process of drafting an international treaty to address rights abuses by multinational corporations, following on a related proposal by Ecuador and others.

  10. CO2 Producing Hollow Food

    - Inter Press Service

    UXBRIDGE, Canada, May 07 (IPS) - Rising carbon dioxide (CO2) levels will make many key food crops like rice and corn less nutritious, a new study shows.

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