Defining Irony: Iraq Set to Take the Helm of the Arab League
March 24, 2011 2 min. read

In an unintended twist of fate, Libya’s expulsion from the Arab League has left the fragile state of Iraq at the helm of the Arab League. It remains to be seen whether they’ll be ready to lead.

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Two More Civilians Bystanders Die as NATO Targets Haqqani Network
March 24, 2011 2 min. read

Even as the world is waking up to new images of more atrocities committed by U.S. troops in Afghanistan, even as Afghans are taking to the streets, outside their villages to protest what they perceive to be American aggression against Afghan soil, two more deaths of innocent civilians have been reported, this time in the […]

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AU, Arab League and EU to meet on Libya
March 24, 2011 3 min. read

An ad-hoc panel of leaders from African Union countries is set to meet with European Union and Arab League officials tomorrow to discuss the way forward in Libya. The panel, which includes heads of state from South Africa, Uganda, Mali, Mauritania and Congo, along with AU Commission President Jean Ping and current AU Chairman Teodore […]

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Did Portugal Just Shoot Itself in the Foot?
March 24, 2011 2 min. read

So posits Teresa de Sousa, a columnist in the Portugese daily Público, anticipating yesterday’s announcement that Prime Minister José Sócrates is resigning after parliament rejected his austerity plan. De Sousa points out that the country was poised to receive favorable terms on accessing the Eurozone’s provisional rescue fund if it adopted the EU’s so-called competitiveness […]

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Economic cost of quake $300 billion, mobsters help victims
March 24, 2011 3 min. read

The economic cost of the March 11 earthquake is estimated to be between 16 trillion yen ($198 billion) and 25 trillion yen ($309 billion)–7 percent of Japan’s GDP by purchasing power parity. This estimate comes from a government report released Wednesday. According to the Cabinet Office, this could slow Japan’s growth rate to 0.5 percent. […]

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Yemen’s Revolution is on the Move
March 24, 2011 4 min. read

The Following piece is written by a Yemeni-based journalist who writes for Foreign Policy Association, and due to serious security concerns, remains anonymous. Hit by another wave of resignations and defections, the embattled Yemeni President offered to step down by January next year. He said that he was willing to leave the presidential chair at […]

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Zimbabwe: New Verse, Same as the First
March 24, 2011 1 min. read

My latest piece,  “Zimbabwe: New Verse, Same as the First,” has been posted for ISN Insights. Here is the abstract: The renewed crackdown against the political opposition in Zimbabwe sparked by fears of an Arab-style uprising illustrates how the illusion of a power-sharing government has merely served as plaster over a gushing wound. I hope […]

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Political Restructuring in China – A Template on How China can Transition from Authoritarianism to Democracy!
March 24, 2011 6 min. read

Last week, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called for political reform once again, while at the same time he rejected (again) any comparisons between his country and the autocracies now collapsing in North Africa and the Middle East.  Premier Wen is right when he says that the current socio-economic conditions in China are nothing like the […]

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The Fruits of Mediterranean Dysfunction
March 23, 2011 2 min. read

Long op-ed in La Repubblica yesterday about the failure of Europe to resolve its Mediterranean question, defined as a lack of economic integration, the ongoing immigration crisis, corruption and environmental concerns. The piece recounts the litany of declarations, conferences and organizations over the past few decades that grapple with these issues, culminating most recently with […]

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Can Putin Have it Both Ways on Libya?
March 23, 2011 3 min. read

Today’s editorial in the Moscow Times accuses Putin of hypocrisy for opposing the UN mandated operations in Libya. Putin, who rightly criticised Bush unilateralism on Iraq, should have applauded Obama’s multilateral, UN-centric approach. Instead, the paper proclaims, All of Obama’s multilateralism seems to have been lost on Putin, who has proved over the past decade […]

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Jurist Says Caretaker Governments Should Stay on to Support Democracy
March 23, 2011 2 min. read

It is a testament to the broken, intractably conflict-ridden politics in Bangladesh, that respected jurists can claim that a dictatorial move remain in place in order to allow democracy to breathe and to burn bright. Jurist Dr. Kamal Hossain argued that the the institution of caretaker governments should remain in place while parties revolve in […]

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PBS Newshour Reports on Innovative Ways to Supply Clean Water to Dhaka Slums
March 23, 2011 1 min. read

Yesterday for World Water Day PBS Newshour, in partnership with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, ran an excellent piece on new approaches to get clean water to Dhaka’s explosively numerous, and growing, slum dwelling population. Here’s the video that aired, with special correspondent Steve Sapienza: Please visit the PBS Newshour webpage dedicated to this rather excellent […]

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