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Thursday, March 18, 2010   22:36 GMT    
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EDUCATION-MALAWI: Communication Made Easier with Local Language Dictionary
By Charles Mpaka
BLANTYRE - The thickest book on secondary school teacher Hellen Ndalama’s desk is her indigenous language dictionary. It is also her most-used book.
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ECONOMY-SENEGAL: Small and Medium-sized Businesses Cannot Access Bank Credit
By Koffigan E. Adigbli
DAKAR - Despite the financial sector boom in Senegal, small and medium sized businesses (SMBs), which represent over 90 percent of the industrial fabric of the country, struggle to access funding for their development, their representatives claim.
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WEST AFRICA: Stopping the Polio Virus
By Brahima Ouédraogo
OUAGADOUGOU - The World Health Organisation (WHO) and its partners hope to eliminate the circulation of the polio virus in West Africa as soon as June by launching the first round of national synchronised immunisation days against the debilitating disease.
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CLIMATE CHANGE-BRAZIL: The Threat Posed by Livestock
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - The livestock industry has less economic clout than the oil industry, but ranchers say it has better arguments to defend itself from accusations regarding its share of responsibility for global warming.
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DEVELOPMENT: 'Aid Industry is Part of the Problem'
By Ida Karlsson
STOCKHOLM - Aid organisations perpetuate humanitarian disasters. That is one of the conclusions made by war correspondent Linda Polman in her latest book as she describes the world of humanitarian aid.
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DEVELOPMENT: Bad Water More Deadly Than War
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - Bad water kills more people than wars or earthquakes, declares Anders Berntell, executive director of the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI).
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Q&A: Tapping Women's Enterprise to Topple Rural Poverty
Paul Virgo interviews YUKIKO OMURA, new vice president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development
ROME - Employees at the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) may have cause to fear for their jobs after Yukiko Omura was appointed vice president of the United Nations' rural poverty agency in February.
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VIETNAM: Salinisation, Drought Bring Worries to Mekong Delta
By Tran Dinh Thanh Lam
MEKONG DELTA, Vietnam - He has worked this land for half of 64 years and is known among his fellow farmers in Kien Giang province here in the Mekong Delta as ‘lao nong’, or the old master of rice.
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PAKISTAN: Attacks Bring Humanitarian Work to Virtual Halt
By Ashfaq Yusufzai
Mar 18 - Bomb attacks and threats to non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have brought development work to a virtual halt in the lawless, volatile environment that is the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), located near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan.
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HAITI: Recovery Bill Estimated at 11.5 Billion Dollars
By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - Two weeks before a major donors conference, the Haitian government has estimated that the country will need some 11.5 billion dollars over the next three years to recover from the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake.
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POLITICS-RWANDA: Woman Vies for Top Job
By Stanley Kwenda
KIGALI - On average women constitute 18.8 percent of representatives in parliaments across the world according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU). This gender imbalance has been subject to much feminist criticism and many campaigns for change have been staged to address the status quo. The situation is however different in Rwanda.
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SOUTHERN AFRICA: Unexpected Low Custom Revenue Causes Budget Shortfalls
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - Plummeting revenues from the Southern African Customs Union (SACU) could cause severe financial difficulties in the region, economic experts warn. To make matters worse, the organisation is split over the future of its tariff pool that largely bankrolls the national budgets of its poorer members.
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LATIN AMERICA: NGOs Demand Transparency, Reforms in IDB
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - Dozens of civil society organisations in the Americas are demanding greater transparency and accountability as well as structural reforms in the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), ahead of the multilateral lender's annual meeting of governors that starts Friday in the Mexican resort of Cancún.
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DEVELOPMENT: Spain’s New Drive to Extend its Interests in Africa
By Stanley Kwenda
PRETORIA - Spain is breaking new ground in its relations with Africa through an ambitious programme which has seen it increasing its development funding to the continent more than six-fold from 2004 to reach 1,4 billion euros in 2008.
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ENVIRONMENT: Blame on Chinese Dams Rise as Mekong River Dries Up
By Marwaan Macan-Markar
BANGKOK - As the water level in the Mekong River dips to a record 50-year low, a familiar pattern of fault-finding has risen to the surface. China, the regional giant through which parts of South-east Asia’s largest waterway flows through, is again at the receiving end of verbal salvoes from its neighbours.
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ENERGY-LATIN AMERICA: Moving Towards Renewables
By Marcela Valente*
BUENOS AIRES - Argentina is building its first solar energy park in the northwestern province of San Juan. The project calls for the manufacture of photovoltaic panels to supply the rest of the country and the other member countries of the Southern Common Market (Mercosur).
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EDUCATION-SIERRA LEONE: Government Ignores Demands for Additional Teachers
By Lansana Fofana
FREETOWN - Ismail Conteh has been teaching for the past year-and-a-half at a primary school in Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown – without receiving a single cent. He is one of hundreds of teachers recruited by schools to match the ever-growing number of pupils.
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PAKISTAN: In More Ways Than One, Bollywood Dancing Creates Waves
By Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI, Pakistan - Saleha Firdaus, a mother of two teenage children, has been moving to the Bollywood beat at a dance studio for over a year now and "loves every moment" of this personal time. For her part, 22-year-old Maheen Jafri was a "bedroom dancer" until she discovered a Bollywood and hip-hop dance studio and "shed my inhibitions totally."
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NAMIBIA: "If You Kiss for Five Minutes You Get It"
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - "At home we have a bar," says grade seven learner David Bravo* (14). "When my mother puts on the music I cannot concentrate on (my) schoolwork anymore. Sometimes, in the middle of the night, I just sit there and watch the people."
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Development News in RSSLarge parts of the world's population suffer from poverty; inequality remains high. Current development orthodoxy is focused on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), committing the international community to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger, achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality, empower women, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, combat diseases such as HIV/Aids, ensure environmental sustainability and develop a global partnership for development.
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News in RSS
EDUCATION-MALAWI: Communication Made Easier with Local Language Dictionary
ECONOMY-SENEGAL: Small and Medium-sized Businesses Cannot Access Bank Credit
WEST AFRICA: Stopping the Polio Virus
CLIMATE CHANGE-BRAZIL: The Threat Posed by Livestock
HEALTH-US: Maternal Deaths on the Rise
CLIMATE CHANGE: The U.N.'s Boys' Club
DEVELOPMENT: 'Aid Industry is Part of the Problem'
DEVELOPMENT: Bad Water More Deadly Than War
PERU: Priest on Campaign Trail Defrocked by Church
MIGRATION-US: Mixed-Status Families Face Hard Choice
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