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Aiming at NATO, Hitting Afghans
Ashfaq Yusufzai
A blockade of NATO supplies to Afghanistan by
cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan’s party has ended up hitting
Pakistan’s legal trade with its neighbour, say local traders and
truckers.
They say the agitation by Pakistan Tehreek Insaf (PTI) is hurting the
common people of Afghanistan as the ...
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Uganda’s First Female Funeral Director – From Taboo to Mainstream
Amy Fallon
Uganda may have the third-highest fertility rate in the world but where
there is life, death is inevitable. And it is a certainty that Regina
Mukiibi Mugongo made the most of when she became this East African
nation’s first ever funeral director almost two decades ago.
But in a country where a ...
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GM Crop Could Migrate Dangerously
Ranjit Devraj
Food security activists who secured a moratorium on introducing
genetically modified brinjal (aubergine) into India fear that their
efforts are being undermined by the release of GM brinjal in
neighbouring Bangladesh.
"India and Bangladesh share a long and porous border and it is easy for
GM ...
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‘Business Is Business, Moses Is Moses’
Pierre Klochendler
As civil war paralyses Syria’s transit routes and political flux in
Egypt may affect security at the Suez Canal, Israel is busy
repositioning itself as a transhipment hub and trade gateway to the
Middle East.
With the government initiating massive infrastructure reform, Israeli
businesses are ...
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The Other Rearguard of Colombia’s FARC Rebels
Humberto Márquez
The presence of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) is
evident in Venezuela’s Amazon region, where the guerrillas can be seen
on speed boats, in camps, or interacting with local indigenous
communities.
“We see them once in a while passing by in a boat in the evening,
dressed in ...
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Spring Bursts Among the Toubou in Libya's Desert
Karlos Zurutuza
"Can there possibly be anything more satisfying than teaching your own
language to your own people?" Abdel Salam Wahali remarked to IPS. He is a
teacher of Tebu, an ancient language which is experiencing a boom in
post-Gaddafi Libya.
"Lessons start at 5:00 PM and finish at 7:30 PM because the ...
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Almost 20 Years On - International Justice Still Fails Rwandans
Adam Bemma
"There is a saying that all Rwandans believe in. You can't forgive if
you forget, but when you remember, you know what harmed you and you can
forgive and move forward," Honore Gatera tells IPS as he walks through
the grounds of the Kigali Memorial Centre in Rwanda’s capital.
The museum was ...
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Taking Efforts to Fight Prejudice in Cuba to the Barrios
Patricia Grogg
From a very young age, Irma Castañeda has braided her curly hair and
cared for it with natural recipes inherited from her mother, ignoring
the widespread conception that black women’s hair is “ugly” or “bad”.
Gently, with skilful hands, she aims to chip away at something much more
complex: the ...
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Lebanon’s Splintered Law Wrecks Lives
Rebecca Murray
Married women in Lebanon who suffer abuse at home remain at the mercy of
the country’s multitude of religious courts, because the hard-fought
civil law against domestic violence has been stalled for a vote in
parliament since the summer.
One woman demanding a divorce and custody rights is Aisha, ...
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A Google for India’s Poor
Keya Acharya
Deep in the forests of central India live the Gond tribals, an almost
forgotten lot, neglected as much by the state as by mainstream media.
Many cannot read or write. But thanks to a new technology, and the rapid
spread of mobile phones through India, they are now picking up their
cell phone and ...
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Murders, ‘Protection Payments’ Mark Elections in Honduras
Thelma Mejía
The capital of Honduras, one of the world’s most violent countries, has
turned into a huge cage, where people lock themselves into their homes
behind barred windows and iron doors along the steep winding, narrow
streets of the city.
And in the poor areas of Tegucigalpa, a city of 1.6 million, ...
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Friday, November 29, 2013
The Week with IPS
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