Full Coverage: South Asia
February 2008
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29.02.2008
More...From: Machizo Multimedia Communication Related topics/regions: [Bangladesh] [Education] [Culture] Image: Ekushey Book Fair 2008
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29.02.2008
A program in the poverty-stricken Central Terai region of Nepal seeks to improve women's and girls' health by training young people as peer educators, community activists, and counselors in the fields of health, family planning, and HIV/AIDS.
more...From: Centre for Development and Population Activities Related topics/regions: [Nepal] Image: Peer educators are trained to lead group discussions about reproductive health and HIV/AIDS to improved health. © Centre for Development and Population Activities
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29.02.2008
India has announced its budget for the next financial year. In a move to provide a major relief to the small farmers, the government has decided to cancel their entire debt. It may be noted that for past many years now the farmers have been committing suicides due to indebtedness and other related reasons.
more...Related topics/regions: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Debt] Image: A farmer / Photo credit: BBC
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29.02.2008
International non-governmental organisations in Pakistan have come under considerable pressure after an attack on a UK-based Plan International office in Mansehra near Islamabad, in which four people had died. In recent years, threats have been directed against NGOs and their staff, particularly women.
more...Related topics/regions: [Human rights] [Civil society] [Terrorism] |
29.02.2008
Two studies by the Urban Health Resource Centre talk of maternal and newborn care among the poor in central India and state of urban health in the national capital. Apart from highlighting the need for better access to healthcare facilities, the reports underline the cultural factors and prevalence of poverty as obstacles.
more...Related topics/regions: [Children] [Poverty] [Health] [Infant mortality] Image: Cover: Maternal and Newborn Care Practices Among the Urban Poor in Indore / Photo credit: UHRC
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28.02.2008
According to a recent study, around a million people will die of smoking in India alone in next two years. The country is on the threshold of a tobacco-unleashed epidemic, says Ramesh Menon, a journalist cum documentary filmmaker and recipient of the 2006 Ramnath Goenka Award for Excellence in Journalism.
more...Related topics/regions: [Health] [Disease] Image: Killer cigarette / Photo credit: Sagar Heerani / India Together
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28.02.2008
Hundreds of children who had witnessed a blast in Afghanistans Baghlan city last November are still traumatised, suffering from paranoia, dizziness, stress and sleeping disorders. Health experts are of the view that children in the conflict-affected country are at risk of suffering deep scars of war.
more...Related topics/regions: [Children] [Health] [Conflict] [United Nations] Image: Health specialists say hundreds of students affected by the bomb blast in Baghlan are suffering from mental disorders / Photo credit: Abdul Samad Nademjoo / IRIN
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28.02.2008
There are approximately 60 million persons with disabilities in India. Most of them are poor, living in rural areas. It is pity that only 1.5% of them are the beneficiaries of various poverty alleviation and welfare schemes.
more...Related topics/regions: [Poverty] [Disability] Image: Disability sign
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27.02.2008
Leading Indian politicians have outrightly rejected the idea of a U.S.-imposed deadline after a team of U.S. senators warned that a new inhabitant of the White House might quash a potential deal on the transfer of nuclear technology.
more...From: Inter Press Service (IPS) Related topics/regions: [India] [United States] Image: The U.S. president and Indian prime minister in New Delhi; March 2006. © Paul Morse - White House
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27.02.2008
Its been more than a year now since the State of Emergency was imposed in Bangladesh. More than 250,000 people have faced arrests during this period. The Asian Legal Resource Centre has documented numerous cases of arbitrary arrests, often carried out at a scale that is difficult to fathom in many other countries.
more...Related topics/regions: [Human rights] [Civil rights] [Politics] [Democracy] [Justice and crime] |
27.02.2008
When a dalit widow was appointed as cook in a government-run school in northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, no one was ready to eat the food cooked and served by her. Everyone conspired to sack her and saw to it that she was never reinstated.
more...Related topics/regions: [Children] [Social exclusion] [Ethics & value systems] Image: Phool Kumari / Photo credit: BBC
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27.02.2008
At least five Nepali gays will contest elections for the Constituent Assembly, scheduled to be held this April, to take up the issue of discrimination against their community. In a nation that treats homosexuality as illegal and immoral, this is an attempt to fight exclusion.
more...Related topics/regions: [Social exclusion] [Sexuality] [Ethics & value systems] Image: Nepali gays want their voices to be heard / Photo credit: Reuters
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27.02.2008
Centre for Science, Development and Media Studies is organising a three-day event called eINDIA2008 in New Delhi in July 2008. The event will bring together representatives of the ICT industry, government, civil society, academia and private sector from across the world to share the best practices and digital opportunities for development.
more...Related topics/regions: [Capacity building] [International cooperation] [ICT] [Civil society] |
26.02.2008
A former high-ranking official from Pakistan's "shadowy but powerful" Inter Services Intelligence admitted to having manipulated the 2002 elections in favor of President Musharraf and is now saying the organization's political activities should be laid down.
more...From: Inter Press Service (IPS) Related topics/regions: [Pakistan] |
26.02.2008
As many as half a million Sri Lankans could be affected in 2008 alone as violence between the secessionist group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam, and the government continues to intensify.
more...From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network Related topics/regions: [Sri Lanka] |
26.02.2008
The Indian Association for Womens Studies (IAWS) has appealed for the release of Dr Binayak Sen, a human rights activist and a pediatrician, who has been in jail for the past nine months. In its resolution the IAWS has also demanded the repeal of Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act.
more...Related topics/regions: [Human rights] [Civil rights] [Freedom of expression] [Activism] [Justice and crime] |
26.02.2008
Plan's operations in Pakistan have been suspended after four people - including three staff members - were killed by gunmen in Mansehra in the North West Frontier district.
more...From: Plan UK Related topics/regions: [Pakistan] |
26.02.2008
India is going to announce its annual budget for the financial year 2008-09 on February 29. Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability is organising a panel discussion on March 1 in New Delhi, where eminent panellists will present a common mans perspective on it.
more...Related topics/regions: [Economy] [Governance] |
26.02.2008
In a southern state of India, Belaku Trust offers employment alternatives to hundreds of poor women who otherwise have very little choices in their lives. Started as a health research project more than a decade ago, the trust now is involved in several sectors from education to vocational training to counselling.
more...Related topics/regions: [Capacity building] [Business] [Gender] Image: Women at Belaku Trust / Photo credit: Infochange
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26.02.2008
Amidst confirmed reports of childrens involvement in violent activities in Nepal, the UNICEF and the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights have issued stern warning to all political parties. They say that the country must take steps to keep its children away from harm and respect child rights.
more...Related topics/regions: [Children] [Human rights] [United Nations] |
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