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Overseas news archive

January 2007

31.01.2007 A call has been made for the immediate release of Karim Amer, the first Egyptian blogger to be tried for writing blogs criticising Egypt's al-Azhar religious authorities, President Husni Mubarak and Islam.
more...
From: Amnesty International UK
Related topics/regions: [Egypt]
AIDS ribbon
31.01.2007 A promising trial of a drug aimed at preventing HIV transmission in women has been abandoned prematurely because of a high number of infections, a move described as a "disappointing and unexpected setback in the search for a safe and effective microbicide".
more...
Image: AIDS ribbon
28.01.2007 Celebrating Guineans took to the streets of Conakry on Saturday night after the ending of an 18-day nationwide general strike that paralysed business and administrative activities.
more...
From: allAfrica.com
Related topics/regions: [Guinea]
27.01.2007 Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis must drop its controversial court case against India which begins in Chennai on 29 January, Oxfam urged. The case challenges India's patent law designed to promote cheaper generic medicines for poor patients.
+ MSF urges Novartis to drop its case
more...
From: Oxfam Great Britain
Related topics/regions: [India]
26.01.2007 Biofuels produced from "energy crops" such as sugarcane, corn and soybean oil could create help developing nations to alleviate poverty and slow climate change - but could cause more problems than they solve, warns a report published today.
more...
From: International Institute for Environment and Development
26.01.2007 Freedom of expression groups have condemned a bid to exempt Parliament and its members’ correspondence from the Freedom of Information Act, dubbing it a “serious attack on the public’s right to know”.
more...
From: Index on Censorship
Related topics/regions: [United Kingdom]
Tuna for sale at the Tokyo Fish Market, Japan © WWF-Indonesia / Lida Pet-Soede
26.01.2007 Government members of the world’s five tuna regional management organisations have failed to agree an action plan to help reverse the decline in tuna stocks and stop the plundering of these valuable species, says a global conservation group.
more...
From: WWF International
Related topics/regions: [Japan]
Image: Tuna for sale at the Tokyo Fish Market, Japan © WWF-Indonesia / Lida Pet-Soede
26.01.2007 A spate of privatisation of national government assets and low levels of taxation for international firms has meant poor countries are not reaping the rewards from owning most of the world’s valuable mineral and oil and gas deposits, says a new report.
more...
From: Christian Aid
25.01.2007 A global call to urgently address problems caused by competition for natural resources such as oil, gas, timber, diamonds and gold has been made at the World Social Forum in Nairobi.
more...
From: CAFOD
International Labour Organization
25.01.2007 The number of people unemployed worldwide remained at an historical high last year despite strong global economic growth, the International Labour Office said in its annual Global Employment Trends released today.
more...
Image: International Labour Organization
24.01.2007 "Massive environmental damage" and "serious human rights abuses" by the mining industry in The Philippines are condemned today in a new report that warns expansion plans are set to make the problems worse.
more...
Related topics/regions: [Philippines] [United Kingdom]
24.01.2007 The Sri Lankan government has been accused of complicity or willful blindness in the abduction and forcible recruitment of children for combat in the fight against secessionist guerrillas.
more...
Related topics/regions: [Sri Lanka]
24.01.2007 The deployment of large numbers of Indonesian soldiers to the Punkak Jaya region of West Papua in response to the killing of two soldiers has caused an estimated 5,000 tribespeople to flee into the jungle.
more...
From: Survival International
Related topics/regions: [Indonesia]
24.01.2007 Tuna are fast disappearing, with important stocks at high risk of commercial extinction due to weak management, warns a leading wildlife protection group as members of the world’s five tuna management organisations hold their first meeting.
more...
From: WWF International
24.01.2007 The world must not lower its guard against the threat of a "bird flu" pandemic, Dr Margaret Chan, the head of the World Health Organization, warned this week. "Almost no country with large outbreaks in commercial or backyard flocks has successfully eliminated the virus", she pointed out.
more...
From: United Nations
23.01.2007 Wildlife lovers and photographers are being urged to submit images that highlight the damage caused to wildlife by oil and gas companies, including Shell, to the 2007 Shell Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.
more...
From: Friends of the Earth International
The Stop TB Strategy
23.01.2007 Tough isolation measures are justified to contain a deadly, highly contagious, drug-resistant mutant strain of tuberculosis and to prevent “a potentially explosive international health crisis”, warn experts.
+ Dilemma of a deadly disease
+ Healing camps undermine fight against tuberculosis
more...
Image: The Stop TB Strategy
Soccer, Kenya
23.01.2007 Trade unions and labour rights activists today launch a global campaign to promote decent work in world football, focusing initially on the construction sector, in the build-up to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
more...
From: International Confederation of Free Trade Unions
Image: Soccer, Kenya © Peter Armstrong
Blood Diamond: general release from 26 January
22.01.2007 Red is for the carpet that the stars will tread for Tuesday's London premier of Blood Diamond, starring Leonardo DiCaprio. Red is also for the blood that campaign groups say is spilled to get diamonds from Congo, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and Angola. Ahead of the UK launch of the film, Amnesty International and Global Witness call on the diamond industry to clean up the trade.
+ Stars become a diamond's best friend in row over warzone film
+ A call for 'Blood Diamond' proceeds to benefit ex-child soldiers in Sierra Leone
* Diamond mining photo exhibition; screening of Blood on the Stone, which chronicles how, despite industry claims, illicit African diamonds are still being smuggled and sold, OneWorld Events page
more...
From: Amnesty International UK
Image: Blood Diamond: general release from 26 January
21.01.2007 An Indian law intended to promote economic development is causing environmental damage and harming the livelihoods of some of the nation's poorest people, according to a report released today.
more...
From: International Institute for Environment and Development
Related topics/regions: [India]
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ANALYSIS/OPINION
Throne of arms
Dick Olver and the BAE Board should ask themselves whether it is possible to be an ethical company and operate in the arms business, argues Andrew Feinstein.

Related topics/regions: [United Kingdom] [Ethics & value systems] [Corruption & transparency] [Corporations]
Image: Throne of arms © Gabrielle Hamm
Why do some people continue to hold Rachel Carson responsible for millions of malaria deaths, ask John Quiggin and Tim Lambert.
From Prospect magazine
Related topics/regions: [United States] [Malaria] [Agriculture]
The aviation industry is exempt from the Kyoto protocol
A study by the world's leading experts has revealed that airlines are pumping 20 per cent more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than estimates suggest.
From: The Independent
Image: The aviation industry is exempt from the Kyoto protocol
President Bush asked last week that the United States give $770 million in emergency food aid to afflicted regions, but this only amounts to an imperfect first step to confront the global food crisis, says economist Arvind Subramanian.
From: Center for Global Development
Related topics/regions: [Japan] [United States] [Aid] [Emergency relief] [Food] [Governance]
Chinese flag in front of Tibet's Potala Palace
The West is projecting not only its own spiritual fantasies on Tibet, but its own economic fears on China, imagining a power struggle quite different from that which has actually happened in Tibet. We have to learn to look at Tibet as it is – and China too, says Slavoj Zizek.
From: Le Monde Diplomatique/ Il Manifesto
Related topics/regions: [Tibet] [China] [Geopolitics]
Image: Chinese flag in front of Tibet's Potala Palace © Tibet Information Network
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