As Sanctions Rise, China Steps Deeper Into Iran

07/30/10

Analysis by Antoaneta Becker

LONDON, Jul 30, 2010 (IPS) - The European Union’s new sanctions against Iran appear to open a new space for eager Chinese companies to expand their investments in a country viewed as a rogue player by much of the western world.

With China recently coming to light as Iran’s largest trade partner, some Chinese analysts predict a wealth of new geopolitical and business opportunities with Iran. But officialdom may still waver at the idea of Beijing seen as a “free-rider".
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Journalism’s Age of Shame

07/30/10

Eric Alterman | The Nation

The black political art of “working the refs” with constant and vociferous complaints of “liberal bias” in the media has a long and distinguished history. Few of its practitioners, however, have succeeded so frequently—and nakedly—as the ex-Drudge drudge and Arianna acolyte Andrew Breitbart. The estimable E.J. Dionne terms Breitbart to be the MSM’s virtual “assignment editor” and, indeed, it’s hard not to be impressed. Breitbart has already been exposed as a provocateur who cares not a whit for honesty or accuracy in his self-declared war on all things liberal. Yet reporters, editors and producers remain so frightened by his accusations that they continue to trumpet them as they search their souls to purge themselves of the bias that prevented them from seeing the world from a Tea Party point of view.
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Developing Countries should be paid for Eco Disasters

07/29/10

By Martin Khor*

IDN-InDepth NewsViewpoint

GENEVA (IDN) - The 20 billion U.S. dollar put aside by BP to pay for the effects of the Gulf oil spill contrasts with the lack of accountability of big firms that cause environmental harm in developing countries.

In a widely publicised move in June, the United States President Barrack Obama succeeded in getting the oil company BP to set aside $20 billion into a fund to meet claims for compensating losses arising from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
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EU-Africa: Unequal Negotiations

07/29/10

By Demba Moussa Dembele (*)

DAKAR, Jul (IPS) - Since 2002, African countries have been negotiating with the European Union (EU) a new framework of cooperation called Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs). These are supposed to replace the Cotonou Agreement, which is the current basis of the relationships between African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) countries and the EU. However, instead of negotiating with the ACP countries as a group, as had been the case in all previous agreements, the EU decided that the EPAs would be negotiated with each of the three regions of the ACP group individually.
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Gaza’s Summer Camp War

07/28/10

By Sarah A. Topol* - Slate

Kids in the Gaza Strip can spend their summers swimming, studying the Quran, or learning about Palestinian prisoners.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010, GAZA CITY—This summer in Gaza, a new war is raging: the battle of the children’s day camps. Forty-five percent of the 1.5 million people in Gaza are under the age of 16, and few organizations can resist the opportunity to mold 675,000 young minds.
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On the Football Pitch, Everyone Is Equal

07/28/10

IPS

LISBON, Jul 28, 2010 (IPS) - Football functions on so many levels. It can be big business, moving astronomical quantities of cash, with obscene salaries for owners, coaches and star players. And it can be a widely played sport, found in every park, street or vacant lot. And it can be the common ground for multicultural coexistence.
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THE UNEXPECTED POTENTIAL OF THE COCOA BEAN

07/27/10

By Mark Sommer (*)

ARCATA, CALIFORNIA, Jul (IPS) As a commodity of almost irresistible attraction, chocolate has always played contradictory roles in human life. For those consuming it, chocolate has been an exquisite experience. For those growing the cacao from which it’s made, it’s more often been excruciating. For those of us savoring its flavor, it’s the ultimate indulgence. For those struggling to survive on the pittance paid for cacao beans, it has been the ultimate indignity. Many of those who grow cacao have never even tasted chocolate.
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Pregnant with Possibility

07/27/10

By Asha-Rose Migiro*

IDN-InDepth NewsViewpoint

NEW YORK (IDN) - The news of a pregnancy should ideally be met with joy – but all too often there is justifiable fear. The African Union Summit, set to focus on the health of mothers and children, has a chance to transform this fear into hope.

(The Summit concludes on July 27, 2010.)
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UN expert targets Maori disadvantage

07/26/10

The New Zealand Herald

Monday Jul 26, 2010. Extreme social and economic disadvantage faced by Maori (1) has been highlighted as an ongoing concern by a United Nations indigenous human rights expert during his visit here.
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U.S.-China Tensions Loom in South China Sea Disputes

07/26/10

Analysis by Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Jul 26, 2010 (IPS) - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s recent passage through South-east Asia saw Washington close ranks with its former adversary Vietnam, sending a warning to Asian heavyweight China that its assertive foreign policy in the region will be challenged.
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U.N. Chief Defends Himself Against Attack on Leadership

07/23/10

Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Jul 22 (IPS) - A sharp-witted newspaper columnist once remarked that in Washington DC the ship of state always leaks at the top.The United Nations is perhaps no better – judging by the circumstances surrounding the leaking of a confidential 51-page document in which Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is politically crucified by one of his own senior officials.
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They Break Taboos But Don’t Go the Whole Hog

07/23/10

By Ramesh Jaura

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

BERLIN (IDN) - A huge funding gap threatens to torpedo efforts by the international community to cope with critical global development and environmental challenges. At least $324 billion will be required each year between 2012 and 2017 – a reason pressing enough for a Committee of Experts to break taboos and explore innovative financing sources.
(more…)

Prevention Is Weakest Link in AIDS Fight

07/22/10

By Daniela Estrada*

SANTIAGO, Jul 22, 2010 (IPS) - Many Latin American countries have made strides in legislation and policies that promote sex education and health services for young people, which are essential for fighting AIDS. But implementation has been slow and often faces opposition, warn experts.
(more…)

Asia-Europe Bridges are Now Built by People

07/22/10

By Shada Islam*

IDN-InDepth NewsViewpoint

BRUSSELS (IDN) - Times change. Foreign relations used to be the exclusive domain of governments. Foreign ministries operated behind closed doors. Diplomats met other government officials, attended receptions and once in a while hosted a “cultural event” showcasing national folk music and dance.
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Spies Among Us: Modern-Day Espionage

07/21/10

by McKay Coppins - Newsweek

Long after the Cold War’s end, nations still send secret agents across borders. But corporations, terrorists, and private investigators are also part of the sleuthing underground.

July 21, 2010. The startling discovery of an undercover Russian spy ring last month no doubt shocked many Americans who assumed that international espionage was mostly a product of the Cold War and, these days, Hollywood.

But intelligence experts weren’t the least surprised. “We forget that states like Russia have been conducting espionage for centuries,” says Peter Earnest, a former member of the CIA who is now director of the Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. “It didn’t stop with the Cold War and start again recently. It simply continued.” Of course, diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Russia have improved in recent years, and Earnest says the two governments work together with an unspoken understanding that they are still spying on each other. “It’s just the cost of doing business,” he says.

While professional spying was once about nation-states looking over other governments’ shoulders, today it’s largely about tracking terrorists’ activities and monitoring public communications for suspicious chatter. In fact, intelligence experts say espionage of all shades has actually increased since the Cold War, amplified by new technology and soaring demand for information in the public and private sectors. Just this week, The Washington Post reported that “some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security, and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United States” as part of the paper’s report on the top-secret world created by Washington after 9/11.

Here’s a look at who’s spying on whom, circa 2010:

OTHER NATIONS

When it comes to state-backed espionage, experts say the U.S. has focused much of its recent spying on Iran, North Korea, and China. And these countries, it appears, are returning the favor.

Earnest says the U.S. is the recipient of “hundreds of thousands” of cyberattacks every day, many of which emanate from Beijing. “They want to find out if they can penetrate our firewalls and actually learn intelligence. We believe a good deal has been learned.”

But, of course, computers and satellites can do only so much. Secret agents, like the ones recently deported to Russia, still play a significant role in international spy games, though Earnest says the number of “illegals” currently undercover in the U.S. is unknowable. “The problem with counting spies is that their nature is not to be counted,” he says.

Even longtime strong allies may spy on each other. An Israeli report in 2008 documented a long history of American spying on Israel, particularly in regard to Israel’s secret nuclear program. And there have been several known instances of Israel spying on America, including the famous case of Jonathan Pollard, a U.S. intelligence analyst sentenced to life in prison after an espionage conviction.

TERRORISTS

Many Americans are under the false impression that “cave-dwelling terrorists” are too primitive to support effective intelligence operations, Earnest says. The most dangerous spies, however, are often the ones not working for recognized governments (which are bound, at least theoretically, by diplomacy and international law).

Independent terror networks have proved adept at the art of deception and intelligence gathering. The 2008 attack on Mumbai, says Earnest, “required a tremendous amount of planning as well as some relatively low-tech, but well-used, technology.” And this January, a double agent of Al Qaeda successfully infiltrated a CIA base in Afghanistan and killed seven agents in a suicide bombing, temporarily crippling America’s intelligence operations in the country.

MAJOR CORPORATIONS

Spying isn’t just the stuff of war and international politics. While researching his 2010 book Broker, Trader, Lawyer, Spy: The Secret World of Corporate Espionage, journalist Eamon Javers uncovered the dealings of private-sector spy firms employed by companies to detect deception in negotiators, surveil competing investors, and glean intelligence that could give them an edge in their dealmaking. Espionage has become so ubiquitous in the corporate world, Javers says, that billion-dollar merger-and-acquisition deals are almost never made these days without highly skilled spies getting involved.

Using some of the most sophisticated technology in the world (like a laser that can record conversations from a kilometer away by picking up the slightest vibrations on an office window), these firms are staffed almost entirely by former military and intelligence officials, from the U.K.’s MI5 to Russia’s KGB. The CIA even has a policy that allows its analysts to “moonlight” for major corporations. And there’s no shortage of demand. One hedge-fund executive told Javers he used corporate spies to keep tabs on the entire board of directors for every company he invested in. “There is even a whole network of people who do nothing but track corporate jets,” Javers says.

It’s not only competitors snooping around these major corporations. Both Earnest and Javers say foreign governments regularly spy on U.S. companies. “The Chinese have an extremely elaborate intelligence network aimed at penetrating defense and technology firms,” Javers says. “Every piece of technology they steal is a piece they don’t have to invent for themselves.”

PRIVATE INVESTIGATORS

The advent of the Internet transformed the private-eye industry, shifting its focus from background checks (which can now be completed for a small price on myriad Web sites) to surveillance.

Skipp Porteous, president of New York–based Sherlock Investigations, says much of his business is derived from spouses who suspect infidelity. “A lot of times we get calls from a wife whose husband is coming to New York, usually on business, and she’s afraid he’s going to fool around,” Porteous says. “So she hires us and we get the goods.” (Incidentally, Porteous says women are right in their suspicions about 90 percent of the time; when men think their wives are cheating, they’re usually wrong.)

Sherlock dispatches teams of two licensed private investigators, experts at blending into crowds and going unnoticed, to follow the suspected cheater and snap photos. In one case, a woman from Bermuda hired Sherlock to follow her husband while he was in New York. Investigators took pictures of him with six prostitutes (at once) and e-mailed them to their client before her spouse returned home.

Additionally, since the Internet has enabled people to easily purchase illegal audio and video transmitters, Sherlock has seen a boom in “bug sweep” business, especially among celebrities who believe the paparazzi have infiltrated their homes or cars. As new technologies emerge, experts expect intelligence and counterintelligence methods to grow in sophistication, and generate even more job opportunities for a new generation of supersleuths.

Loophole Gives Burma’s Junta Room to Go Nuclear in Secrecy

07/21/10

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Jul 21, 2010 (IPS) - Thanks to a loophole in the international regime to control the proliferation of nuclear weapons, military-ruled Burma could very well carry out its reported intent to go nuclear behind a veil of secrecy, free of scrutiny from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
(more…)

No Need to Despair on Biodiversity

07/20/10

By IDN Environment Desk

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

(IDN) - Humankind will suffer annual losses of ‘natural capital’ valued at between 1.3 to 3.1 trillion Euros, if ‘business as usual’ deforestation and land use change continue, according to United Nations’ latest estimates. These stupendous figures exceed the total financial capital lost to Wall Street and City banks during 2008, their worst year in history.
(more…)

Intellectual Property Rights Remain A Barrier to Drugs

07/20/10

By Isolda Agazzi

GENEVA, Jul 20, 2010 (IPS) - Intellectual property (IP) rights are a key reason for high medicine prices, rendering such medicines unaffordable and therefore out of reach for poor people. While mechanisms exist to circumvent IP, poor countries have been browbeaten into adopting stringent IP laws.
(more…)

Children Suffer Most from Forced Return to Kosovo

07/19/10

By Thomas Hammarberg*

IDN-InDepth NewsViewpoint

STRASBOURG (IDN) - Several thousand persons have been forcibly returned to Kosovo by west European states in the last few years, mainly from Austria, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland. Among the returnees have been persons belonging to minorities, and in particular Roma, Ashkali and Egyptians. For them these deportations have not had a happy ending.
(more…)

UN’s Big Five Facilitate Arms Transfers to Rights Violators

07/19/10

By Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Jul 19, 2010 (IPS) - The five permanent members of the Security Council - the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China - are accused of facilitating the transport of conventional weapons and cluster munitions to countries where they could be used to commit human rights violations and war crimes.
(more…)

The African Union Summit and the Future of Sudan

07/16/10

By Wangari Maathai (*)

NAIROBI, Jul (IPS) The African Union has declared 2010 the Year of Peace and Security in Africa, and will soon launch the African Decade of Women. What better opportunity to act on these pledges than at the 15th African Union Summit, being held later this month in Kampala, Uganda? The upcoming referendum in Sudan gives African leadership an opportunity to demonstrate its commitment to improving the lives of women on this continent by ensuring that they actively and freely participate in the referendum.
(more…)

Buying the Press

07/16/10

By Eva Golinger*

Documents reveal multimillion-dollar funding to journalists and media in Venezuela

US Thursday, Jul 15, 2010.State Department documents declassified under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) evidence more than $4 million USD in funding to journalists and private media in Venezuela during the last three years. This funding is part of the more than $40 million USD international agencies are investing annually in anti-Chavez groups in Venezuela in an attempt to provoke regime change.
(more…)

An ecological design for democracy

07/15/10

Leonardo Boff*

Democracy surely is the highest ideal that historically social coexistence has developed. The principle underlying democracy is: «what is of interest to everyone must be considered and decided by everyone.»

It has many forms: direct democracy, as it is experienced in Switzerland, where the entire population participates in decisions, by means of plebiscites.
(more…)

The World Social Forum and a New Politics

07/15/10

By Chico Whitaker (*)

SAO PAOLO, JuL (IPS) The World Social Form (WSF), which turned ten in January, is holding a series of forums throughout the year inspired by its well-known motto, “Another World is Possible".

In its creation of a series of “open spaces” and civil society networks from the grass-roots to the planetary level, the WSF process
is working at three levels.
(more…)

Electricity Trumps Biodiversity for Xingú River

07/14/10

By Mario Osava*

ALTAMIRA, Brazil, Jul 14, 2010 (Tierramérica) - Herculano Porto de Oliveira, of Brazil, said he felt forced “to live in hiding on my own land, though I never fought with anyone or stole anything,” just for making a living from the biodiversity of the Amazon’s Xingú River Basin, where he was born 66 years ago.
(more…)

Berlusconi’s Cronies

07/14/10

Frederika Randall | The Nation

For the people of L’Aquila, the worst was not the earthquake that struck on the night of April 6 last year, killing over 300 people and destroying much of the city center. Worse was to learn that at 4 AM on that same fateful night, two well-connected builders were already rubbing their hands with glee about the fat contracts to rebuild the city, which they planned to get from their friends in the government.
(more…)

Shaping the Post-Crisis Order without a Silver Bullet

07/13/10

By Gregory Chin*

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

TORONTO (IDN) - During the summer of 2010, it would be understandable if interested observers of global affairs are swept up in summit fever. The twin G8/G20 summits in Canada late June and the meeting of the G20 proper which is to commence in South Korea in November 2010 have understandably turned the attention of international analysts to global summitry.
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Turks Let Kurdish Forests Burn

07/13/10

By Jake Hess

SIRNAK, Turkey, Jul 13, 2010 (IPS) - The Turkish General Directorate of Forestry claims to devote the bulk of its resources to combating forest fires, but it is passively observing the Turkish army ignite forested areas in the country’s predominantly Kurdish southeastern region.
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Widening Tax Bases “Key to Development and Democracy”

07/12/10

By Julio Godoy

PARIS, Jul 12, 2010 (IPS) - African countries should deepen their tax bases to collect more revenues to finance their development, build state institutions and to improve national dialogue and, more generally, their social contracts with citizens.

These are some of the conclusions in two new studies on the taxation systems in Africa.
(more…)

Kudos and Corrective Advice for British Aid

07/12/10

By Jaya Ramachandran

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

PARIS (IDN) - A new report has praised Britain to the skies for its profound commitment to helping countries in dire need of money and a wide range of resources vital for economic and social development, but cautioned that there is ample scope for doing things better for the benefit of the taxpayer at home and the poor abroad.
(more…)

Rendezvous with Planet Earth

07/9/10

By Ramesh Jaura

IDN-InDepth NewsViewpoint

BERLIN (IDN) - 2010 is the International Year of Biodiversity. And we all have a rendezvous with Planet Earth this year. In order that as many of us as possible feel encouraged to make it to the venue at the right point in time, the United Nations has launched some of the most innovative initiatives.
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China Moves from Aid Recipient to Aid Donor

07/9/10

By Mitch Moxley

BEIJING, Jul 9, 2010 (IPS) - When Britain announced it would stop giving public money to China as part of a plan to direct financial aid to countries in greater need, it was symbolic of China’s shift from aid receiver to aid giver.
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How US Intelligence Became Big Business

07/8/10

Jeremy Scahill | The Nation

July 7, 2010. Few who have seen the dramatic privatization of US intelligence operations from the inside ever speak about the role private contractors play in covert operations–certainly not in public. In late June, however, the CIA’s former top counterterrorism official, Robert Grenier, participated in a rare public discussion on issues ranging from the incredible extent to which the US has relied on contractors to fill sensitive national security positions; to battlefield contractors in Afghanistan; to allegations of contractor involvement in “direct action” (lethal) operations, as well as commenting on Blackwater owner Erik Prince’s reported involvement in a secret CIA assassination program. The former spy also criticized what he called attempts by the US military to “overstep their bounds” by conducting intelligence operations that traditionally have fallen under the purview of the CIA.
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HIV Vaccine Advances Made Ahead of Global Conference

07/8/10

By Matthew O. Berger

WASHINGTON, Jul 8, 2010 (IPS) - In 1984, then-U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Margaret Heckler famously declared, “We hope to have such a vaccine ready for testing in approximately two years.” The vaccine in question would prevent AIDS and the goal Heckler set has been missed by over 26 years.

During that time, around 25 million people have died from the disease and the search for a vaccine continues.
(more…)

Afro-Brazilian Communities in the Shadow of Space Facility

07/7/10

By Vera Salles

ALCÁNTARA, Brazil, Jul 6, 2010 (IPS) - A space launch centre built in their territory has altered the way of life that members of “quilombos” - village communities originally founded by runaway slaves - have maintained for a century and a half in this municipality in the Brazilian state of Maranhao.
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Laos Burns Drugs - Criminal Syndicates Survive

07/7/10

By Taro Ichikawa

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

TOKYO (IDN) - Laos, a landlocked country in Southeast Asia, has made significant strides in combating the scourge of illicit opium production and addiction, says a new report by the United Nations, but warns of serious problems arising from the country becoming a transit route for transnational criminal syndicates.
(more…)

EU-Latin America: Close in Trade, Worlds Apart in News Coverage

07/6/10

By Mario Lubetkin (*)

ROME, Jun (IPS) While a considerable portion of economic and trade data shows that relations between Europe and Latin America are positive, reinforcing their historic cultural closeness, for some time now news about Latin America has been a low priority for the
European media, which is effecting the thinking of the leaders and citizens of the old continent and pushing Latin America in a
direction that runs contratry to European interests.
(more…)

Western Sahara Back on Radar Screens

07/6/10

By Ramesh Jaura

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

BERLIN (IDN) – Western Sahara, one of the most thinly populated territories in the world, mainly consisting of desert flatlands, is drawing renewed focus after having been consigned to mainstream neglect for years.
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‘Save Us From These Bankers, Fast’

07/5/10

By David Cronin

BRUSSELS, Jul 5, 2010 (IPS) - Besieged by bankers opposed to regulation of their sector, members of the European Parliament (MEPs) have taken an unusual step. A cross-party alliance has called for an international campaigning organisation to concentrate on remedying the flaws of the financial services industry with the same tenacity that Amnesty International focuses on victims of torture and Greenpeace on toxic chemicals and whales.
(more…)

The Chinese Aren’t Coming

07/5/10

Robert Scheer *

On Tuesday, the cold war finally ended with a historic trade agreement between China and Taiwan that will dramatically integrate the mainland’s economy with that of its claimed breakaway province. Peace has descended on the most contentious point of conflict between East and West for the past six decades—but don’t expect the folks at the Pentagon or their military contractors to celebrate. The remaining raison d’être for much of their $700 billion budget has suddenly collapsed, and with it the claim on huge profits and high-flying careers.
(more…)

U.S. Had the Last Word, But China Was the Winner at G20

07/2/10

By Mitch Moxley

BEIJING, Jul 2, 2010 (IPS) - U.S. President Barack Obama may have squeezed in the last word as the G20 summit wrapped up recently in Toronto, but it was China that came away looking like the summit’s winner.

Indeed, the U.S. president kept up the pressure many foreign governments were trying to put on China to help rebalance the world’s economy. He reminded Beijing’s leaders that the U.S. government expects the growing superpower to allow its currency, the yuan, to rise and to reduce the country’s massive trade surplus.
(more…)

Confronting the Bliss of Ignorance about Africa

07/2/10

By Ernest Corea*

IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis

WASHINGTON DC (IDN) - Somalia hit the top of the chart for the third consecutive year when the 2010 Failed States Index was recently unveiled by Foreign Policy magazine and the Fund for Peace. Several African states followed Somalia in the first 20 listed. They are considered the worst failures.
(more…)

‘No Rallies, No Slogans’ Order Shackles Parties Ahead of Poll

07/1/10

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Jul 1, 2010 (IPS) - Burma’s military regime is giving its critics more ammunition, tightening its grip ahead of a general election this year by seeing to it that independent political parties are barred from chanting slogans, marching in rallies and displaying their party flags when they campaign.
(more…)

Explosive political situation in Puerto Rico

07/1/10

Roberto Ramos-Perea

It is 5:00 of the evening of June 30, 2010, groups of students, teachers and citizens asked for entry to the House of the Laws and they were struck and tortured by the Police, there are numerous injured people, while the National Guard is mobilized towards Capitol Hill. Violent shocks are scattered over the whole zone of the Parliament and the repression continues.

A constitutional coup has just been established in Puerto Rico.
(more…)

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