Population, Migration and Refugees, Reproductive and Sexual Rights - Independent News
Sunday, November 22, 2009   02:27 GMT    
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HEALTH: Activists Press for ‘People’s Property Rights’ to Medications
By Johanna Son*
BALI - Pharmaceutical firms have developed drugs that have lengthened lives and cut death rates from HIV and AIDS, but their financial clout in no way overrides their social responsibility in fighting the pandemic, a key advocate argued at an Asian conference on AIDS Wednesday.
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GUYANA: Govt Complicity With Drug Ring Aired in New York
Analysis by Bert Wilkinson
GEORGETOWN, Guyana - This small English-speaking nation, home to the Caribbean trade bloc (CARICOM), has been in the news recently due to allegations in a New York court that the government here willingly and knowingly gave surveillance equipment to a private death squad so that it could hunt down and execute more than 200 criminal suspects and opposition activists it wanted off the scene - as far back as 2002.
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Q&A: 'We Do Not Want to See The Blame Game'
Prime Sarmiento interviews Mohamed Aslam, Maldives Environment Minister
MANILA - Developing economies are vulnerable to climate change and need funds to implement much needed adaptation and mitigation measures. This is one of the key points that needs to be addressed during the next round of U.N.-led negotiations on climate change in Copenhagen, according to Mohamed Aslam, Maldives Minister of Housing, Transport and Environment.
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CLIMATE CHANGE: 75 Million Environmental Refugees to Plague Asia-Pacific
By Neena Bhandari
SYDNEY - Pacific Islanders, aiming to secure their very survival, are calling for immediate commitments from the developed world to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 45 percent by 2020.
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MIDEAST: 'Lay Not Thine Hand Upon the Boy'
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
TEL AVIV - "And He said, Lay not thine hand upon the boy, neither do thou any thing unto him: for now I know that thou fearest God" (Genesis 22:12). Not so much in fear of God as in fear of their own conscience, Israeli leaders have given temporary relief to hundreds of children of foreign workers who were facing deportation with their parents.
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EUROPE: Focus Shifts to Trafficking of Males
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - Governments and third sector organisations must raise awareness of a growing problem with male human trafficking in some of Eastern Europe's poorest countries if its victims are to get the help they need, people trafficking monitors say.
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GREECE: Zero Tolerance, Zero Concern
By Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - Increasing evidence has surfaced that a zero tolerance policy is denying due protection to people fleeing hardship, and condemning them to degrading treatment.
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MIGRATION: Abandoned Between Two States
By Apostolis Fotiadis
IZMIR, Turkey - Isabelle Caillol, an activist with the Turkish branch of the human rights advocacy group Helsinki Citizens Assembly, sent a mass email to pro-migrant activists in Greece in May seeking help to find the family of Abbas Khavari, a 14-year-old Afghan refugee born in Iran.
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COSTA RICA: Women Ageing Alone, Easy Prey to Looting
By Maricel Sequeira
SAN JOSÉ - Though América Herrera may not ever know it, she has become the poster child for a growing practice in Costa Rica, which experts define as financial or economic abuse of the elderly.
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CZECH REPUBLIC: Roma Exodus Provokes Diplomatic Conflict
By Zoltán Dujisin
BUDAPEST - Canada has imposed visas on Czechs following a year of thousands of visa applications from Roma who point to persecution in the Czech Republic. Czech officials and media put the blame on Canada.
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RIGHTS-EAST TIMOR: Women Learn the Political Ropes
By Matt Crook*
DILI - Like many women in East Timor, 34-year-old Mariquita Soares joined the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (FRETILIN) party during the nation’s 24-year resistance struggle against Indonesian occupation from 1975 to 1999.
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COLOMBIA: Displaced People Evicted From Protest Camp
By Helda Martínez
BOGOTA - Thousands of displaced Colombians living in a protest camp in a park in central Bogotá are the target of an eviction plan by the local authorities, who admit they are overwhelmed by the influx of people fleeing violence in the countryside.
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SRI LANKA: Island Faces Key Test in Upcoming Elections
By IPS Correspondents
COLOMBO - Elections in early August for local administrative bodies in Jaffna and Vavuniya, two Tamil-dominated northern towns, would be the first litmus test for the Sri Lankan government to restore normalcy in a region devastated by nearly three decades of war.
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MIGRATION: Tricky Gateway to a European Dream
By Apostolis Fotiadis
IZMIR, Turkey - Izmir has for years been luring migrants and refugees who dream of crossing into Europe.
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MIGRATION: U.S. to Admit Palestinian Refugees from Iraq
By Marina Litvinsky
WASHINGTON - Approximately 1,350 Palestinian refugees from Iraq are being considered for resettlement in the U.S. after being referred to the U.S. Refugee Admissions Programme by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
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The world's population is growing at a pace of some 76 million people per year (UNFPA), and problems are growing with it. The ever-increasing demand on the earth's finite natural resources makes it difficult for many to live even at subsistence levels. In the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) the population is expected to triple by 2050. The world's population is also changing as a result of ageing, high mortality rates from HIV/AIDS and infectious diseases, refugee movements and migration. According to UN-Habitat, the United Nations Programme for Human Settlements, one-third of the globe's urban dwellers live in slums or are homeless. Women and minority groups such as indigenous peoples, among others, face marginalisation and discrimination. Family planning and the promotion of sexual and reproductive health have never been more important in rendering local, regional and national population strategies effective.

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IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of UNFPA in supporting an IPS programme of work in 2009 on population, gender and reproductive health.