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RIGHTS-US: Decision on 9/11 Trials Sparks Praise, Anger
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - The U.S. government's decision to bring five high-profile terror suspects to the United States to face trials in a civilian court has drawn reactions ranging from praise to condemnation to confusion.
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GENDER: "Truly Exciting If the U.S. Could Ratify CEDAW" - Part 2
Miren Gutierrez* interviews INÉS ALBERDI, executive director of UNIFEM
ROME - CEDAW or the U.N. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Violence Against Women (CEDAW) was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 1979.
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GENDER: Laws, Budgets and Pigeonholes - Part 1
Miren Gutierrez* interviews INÉS ALBERDI, executive director of UNIFEM
ROME - The fight for women's rights came about hand in hand with the struggle for democracy, civil rights and national liberation in different countries and periods, says Inés Alberdi, executive director of UNIFEM.
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US-MIDEAST: Baseball Team Urged to Cut Ties with Israeli Group
By Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - A coalition of 11 U.S., Israeli and Palestinian groups are calling on the New York Mets baseball team to cancel a fundraiser by the "violent and racist" Israeli Hebron Fund which is scheduled to be held at the Mets' stadium, Citi Field, on Nov. 21.
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SRI LANKA: Hopes High for Fresh Leadership as Election Looms
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - Political developments are rapidly unfolding as the public eagerly awaits the President’s announcement on Sunday of the date for the next presidential or parliamentary polls—an event widely expected to bring about a new leadership that could bring to fruition the people’s collective yearnings for a return to law and order as well as discipline.
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CHINA: Simmering Issues Boiling Up in Run-up to Obama Visit
By Antoaneta Bezlova
BEIJING - His victory speech is a smash hit on Internet sites; his image vies for popularity with those of communist China’s founding father Mao Zedong, and his book is a runway bestseller in this country’s big cities. But as China prepares to welcome him as the first black president of the United States, keen anticipation is mixed with unease.
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U.S.-HONDURAS: Washington Stresses Urgency of Unity Govt
By Jim Lobe*
WASHINGTON - In a renewed effort to save a U.S.-sponsored accord to resolve the five-month-old political crisis in Honduras, the U.S. State Department Friday called on both sides to create a government of national unity "without delay" and on the Honduran Congress to "swiftly" consider the restoration of ousted President Manuel Zelaya.
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RIGHTS: U.S., Somalia Still Opt Out of Children's Treaty
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - When the U.N. children's agency (UNICEF) commemorates the 20th anniversary of its landmark international treaty protecting the rights of children next week, there will be two countries skipping the celebrations: the United States and Somalia.
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POLITICS-NAMIBIA: The Struggle Does So Not Continue
By Servaas van den Bosch
WINDHOEK - They are called the "born frees", the children of Namibia’s Independence, and they will vote for the first time this month. Struggle credentials mean zip to them, and they have a serious beef with politicians.
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RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: Less Torture, More Impunity
By Helda Martínez
BOGOTÁ - The number of cases of torture attributed to the armed forces in Colombia increased 80 percent from 2003 to 2008, in a context of near total impunity for such crimes. However, the number of documented torture cases overall fell 43.5 percent, compared to the 1998-2003 period.
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UGANDA: "Mount Elgon Eviction Has Reduced Us to Beggars"*
By Wambi Michael
MOUNT ELGON, Uganda - "We have been reduced to begging from relatives and to migrate to urban areas where life is not safe. We were living in the mountain for more than 200 years. Transferring us means burying us, completely. We want to stay in our area and develop."
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SOUTH-EAST ASIA: Much at Stake for Thai Premier over Cambodia Row
Analysis by Marwaan Macan-Markar
BANGKOK - Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva faces his toughest foreign policy challenge as his first year in office draws to a close. At stake is this South-east Asian kingdom’s standing in a regional bloc.
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EL SALVADOR: More Troops on the Streets to Fight Crime
By Edgardo Ayala
SAN SALVADOR - José, a 46-year-old street vendor in the Salvadoran capital, says he is happy that the leftist government of Mauricio Funes decided to put more army troops on the streets to help fight the soaring levels of crime.
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Q&A: Civil Society to Lose Major Supporter
Christi van der Westhuizen interviews GARA LaMARCHE and GERALD KRAAK of The Atlantic Philanthropies
CAPE TOWN - Human rights and democracy are causes that are never completely won, which is why civil society needs the support of philanthropists.
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DEVELOPMENT: More Promises to Eat
By Paul Virgo
ROME - Next week's United Nations food security summit is in danger of becoming a massive missed opportunity, experts and non-governmental organisations say. Fears mount that top leaders will not show up, and binding new commitments will not materialise.
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RIGHTS: State of India’s Children: An Unsettling Reality
Analysis by Neeta Lal
NEW DELHI - Here is a sobering thought on the eve of Children’s Day celebrated across India on Nov. 14. Despite the country’s impressive economic growth trajectory and growing geopolitical heft, the benefits of that prosperity are not percolating down to its children who constitute a sizeable 30 percent of the country’s 1.2 billion population.
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AUSTRALIA/SRI LANKA: Untangling the Knotty Issue of Human Smuggling
By Amantha Perera
COLOMBO - It is a story that spans three islands, across the breadth of the Indian Ocean. That is, of hundreds of boat people sailing the rough seas in unseaworthy vessels, risking life and limb in their desperate attempt at a new lease of life.
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SWAZILAND: Help Sex Workers - Senator
By Mantoe Phakathi
MBABANE - It is one of the world's oldest professions, dating so far back that it is even mentioned in the Bible. But in the deeply cultural and religious country of Swaziland, Senator Thuli Msane stirred a hornet's nest when she publicly challenged a new strict bill opposing prostitution.
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MEXICO: DNA Tool to Trace Missing Kids
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - Andrea C. was eight years old when two unidentified women took her from her home in a neighbourhood on the north side of the Mexican capital, in September 2005. Four years later, she is still missing.
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MIDEAST: Gaza Graduates Search for Vitamin W
By Mohammed Omer
THE HAGUE - "We fast a long time," says Gaza graduate Mona Ismail, 23. "Only to break our fast on a piece of onion."
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POLITICS: Cambodia Raises Stakes, Ties with Thailand Plummet
By Marwaan Macan-Markar
BANGKOK - Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is known for his brash and earthy vocabulary even when, as he did in early April, he talks about himself. "I am neither a gangster nor a gentleman, but a real man," the politician who has led his country for 25 years said in a fit of rage.
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Human Rights - News in RSSOne world, one humanity, now one court to defend its rights. Another step towards universal human rights, but not remotely a step far enough. The United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights more than half a century ago, but that has done little to stop violations the world over, just as the Geneva Convention has not protected prisoners of war enough. Democracy itself and the freedom it presupposes has not been protective enough. This is the century to move from politicisation of human rights towards humanising political ways. IPS keeps an eye on that difficult path.

Bitter Pill - Obstacles to Affordable Medicine
Roxana Saberi Charged With Spying
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Guns and Roses: IPS's Reporting On Global Armed Conflicts and Resolution Efforts
The Dark Side - IPS's coverage of terrorism
Cluster Bombs
Women: Leading the Way
Children Under Siege
Dictatorships Meet Justice, Decades On
Development Deadline 2015
Religion in the News
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Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
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PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
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GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
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LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
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Tribune des Droits Humains /  Geneve 2006
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