Wednesday, May 16, 2012   20:16 GMT    
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Round One to Radical Left, Round Two to Europe?
Analysis by Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - Kosmas Bitros (29) didn’t "believe in politics and in elections as a way of changing society". Still, he showed up at the ballot boxes for the first time last Sunday to cast a vote against austerity in the Greek national elections.
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Indonesia Galvanises Youth Ahead of Rio+20
By Kanis Dursin
JAKARTA - Clutching a plastic bag containing a tree sapling in his right hand and a slim notebook in his left, 11-year-old Rizki Fauzi is the picture of a young climate change expert.
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Tunisia's Revolution is Just Beginning
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - Lingering violence, intolerance and oppression in Tunisia, following the ousting of former dictator Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011, tells the revolutionaries who sparked the Arab Spring that their work is just beginning.
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Unions Urge Development Bank To "Walk the Talk" on Labour Rights
By Dennis Engbarth
MANILA - The exclusion of certified labour union delegates from the official opening ceremony of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) meeting here on May 4 revealed a wide gap between the Manila-based development bank’s promises and practices on labour rights.
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Governments Can’t Do It Alone
By Kristin Palitza
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - African countries need more support from the private sector in order to meet the United Nations Millennium Development Goals by 2015, which include important development targets like poverty reduction, and improved health and education.
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Greeks Gear Up to Cast ‘Protest Votes’ Against Austerity
Analysis by Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - Aggeliki Anagnostopoulou (30) sits in a corner of the huge room that volunteers from the new party, Independent Greeks, are using as a headquarters for their pre-election campaign in the lead up to polling day on May 6.
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Fragmented Protests Rise in Jordan
By Mona Alami
AMMAN - On a warm Friday afternoon, police cars blocked the roads around the Al Husseini mosque, where hundreds of men were kneeling for the noon prayers. At the end of the service, the crowds rose and marched in a compact protest behind a car bearing a banner for the Islamic Action Front (IAF), the Jordanian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood.
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Nazi Propaganda Gets a Makeover in Serbia
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - As the May 6 date for Serbia’s general election inches closer, two young Belgrade playwrights have capitalised on the electoral war of words between the pro-European camp and conservative nationalists to highlight the dark side of propaganda and expose the omnipotence of party membership.
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Women of the World Unite for Rights
By Jennifer Hattam
ISTANBUL - The world’s recent financial and political upheavals have not been kind to women. In Libya’s Tripoli, female suicide rates increased tenfold during the revolution, while dismal job prospects have young Greek women abandoning their career aspirations, participants in a global forum on women’s rights said over the weekend.
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‘Anti-Terror’ Laws Haunt Pakistan’s Unionists
By Irfan Ahmed
LAHORE - As International Labour Day approaches, rights groups in Pakistan are redoubling their efforts to win freedom for six incarcerated union leaders in Faisalabad, the country’s textile hub, who are currently serving a combined jail term of 590 years for supposedly violating the country’s ‘anti-terror’ laws.
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Morocco Clamours for Justice
By Abderrahim El Ouali
CASABLANCA - A government plan to reform Morocco’s dilapidated justice system, the details of which are still a mystery to the general public, has become the subject of much scepticism, especially from justice professionals around the country.
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Protest Time in Tunisia Again
By Jake Lippincott
TUNIS - Thousands of centre-left demonstrators violently clashed with police in street battles that completely shut down central Tunis last week, left scores seriously injured and underlined the persistent divisions in Tunisian society.
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U.S. Withdrawal a Blessing and a Curse for Afghans
By Giuliana Sgrena
KABUL - Though the United States’ announcement to pull its troops from Afghanistan by 2014 was celebrated by most Afghans as the imminent end of a protracted and controversial foreign occupation, there are lingering questions about the outcome of such a withdrawal.
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Europe Urges More Development Aid for Women
By A. D. McKenzie
PARIS - Though United Nations experts agree that governments should focus on empowering girls and women as a key to managing a world of seven billion people, not enough is being done for women’s rights in developing countries, aid advocates say.
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European NGOs Put IFIs Under Microscope
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - European civil society organisations continue to demand that international financial institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund apply the same standards of transparency and accountability to their internal affairs that they demand for governments across the world.
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Europe's Austerity Programme Spawns ‘Lost Generation’
By Julio Godoy
PARIS - The recent dramatic rise of youth unemployment across Europe – particularly in the Mediterranean member countries of the Eurozone most affected by the sovereign debt crisis and so-called ‘remedial’ austerity programmes – indicates that the continent is sacrificing its future on the altar of short-term budget consolidation.
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Afghan Women Victims Not Perpetrators of ‘Moral Crimes’
By Giuliana Sgrena
KABUL - Mursal, a beautiful 19-year-old girl who has run away from home to escape a mentally ill husband, is just one of many Afghan women and girls who are now considered criminals under the country’s laws on ‘morality.’
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Could Coffee Eliminate Borders?
By Sabina Zaccaro
ROME - A diverse blend of coffee is going to pervade the city of Milan in 2015. World producers will come together to show, exchange and market their coffee in a global alliance without geographical-based membership.
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OP-ED
Narcotics Watchdog Turns Blind Eye to Rights Abuses
By Patrick Gallahue*
LONDON - In a world where drug offences are punishable with the death penalty, torture or arbitrary detention, we must ask how far States can go to enforce the global prohibition on drugs.
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News in RSS Active citizens are committed to social change because they know that it is achievable. Yet, for most Africans, a shift towards elected government in recent decades has yet to translate into an effective voice in decision-making. Now, the Strengthening Citizen Demand for Good Governance using evidence based approaches - funded by DFID's Governance and Transparency Fund - seeks to raise their voices. Through its partnership with the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and CIVICUS,, IPS reporters across the continent will seek to define the extent and limits of state capability, government accountability and the responsiveness of leaders to the needs of citizens.

Media in Africa
Youth involved in Kenya's post-election violence tell Mary Itumbi they are trying to make amends.
Zack Baddorf follows Sudanese voters as they make their mark in the country's  first multiparty election in 24 years.
Brian Moonga reports on growing discontent with Zambias' poor governance record.
Wambi Michael reports on a division debate on Polygamy in Uganda.
News in RSS
The real challenge for Rio+20
  By Don de Silva
Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink?
  By Mikhail Gorbachev
Victory of Hollande a Cause for Hope in Europe
  By Mario Soares
Improving Tense U.S.-Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations
  By Johan Galtung
"Crowdfunding" 2.0?
  By Hazel Henderson
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