PBS and Saima Mohsin's Heart-Wrenching Story on Young Victims of the Flood
September 7, 2010 1 min. read

Per usual, the PBS Newshour with Jim Lehrer has provided, far and away, the best reportage on the flood in Pakistan.  Working with Saima Mohsin of the English-language channel Dawn News, the Newshour has aired some of the most arresting stories on Pakistan’s crisis.  The piece you will find below is no different. Mohsin lays […]

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Did Time Go Too Far?
September 7, 2010 3 min. read

On its latest cover, Time magazine makes the startling assertion that Israel does not want peace, all in the midst of peace talks in Washington between President Obama, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. On the face of it, this assertion is meant to de-legitimize Israel as not a partner in […]

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Did You See Secretary of State Clinton's Message for Increasing Donations to Pakistan's Flood Victims?
September 7, 2010 2 min. read

I suggest, my readers, that you pass on this note to all your friends and loved ones: Please donate the small, though value of $50 to the flood relief effort in Pakistan.  Consider that private pledged donations to Pakistan’s flood victims are 1/40th the dollar value pledged for the victims of the Haiti earthquake and […]

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At a Crossroads: Unionism in Post-Independence Namibia
September 5, 2010 4 min. read

The National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW), an umbrella body of affiliated Namibian workers unions in public and private sector, is winding down its national congress in the capital under the theme of “Back to Basics.” Back to basics is a befitting theme because the congress is taking place at a time when Namibia’s largest […]

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PM Reiterates Promise for Free Higher Education for Children with Needs
September 4, 2010 2 min. read

The government of Bangladesh has made secure moves toward greater equality of opportunity, particular in education of the young children of Bangladesh.  This move is partly explained by the fact that the young stand for the greatest–certainly the largest– generation in the country.  And the politics of the country will sway in whichever direction the […]

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Turkish Geopolitical Ascendancy and the Iranian Decline
September 4, 2010 10 min. read

With the global economy struggling to re-surface from a deep and self-inflicted recession, the international geo-political order is locked in a lengthy transformation for what appears to be a multi-polar world. In this new and yet-to-be-shaped global geo-political order, there are emerging economies that aim to leverage their rising economic power and turn them into […]

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Calm Follows Storm
September 3, 2010 1 min. read

Calm has followed chaos in Mozambique. Whether it is going to last we don’t know. But the more salient question is whether or not food shortages across the world are going to lead to similar uprisings. Much of the worst of the global economic crisis has actually missed Africa, in part, at least, because of […]

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Mozambique in Crisis
September 3, 2010 1 min. read

A significant hike in the price of bread and other commodities led to mass protests in Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, which in turn led to trigger-happy police opening fire on crowds of people. The official stance of the state appears to be the the protests were illegal, which in addition to being absurd in and of […]

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Potemkin Putin and his Lemon Lada
September 3, 2010 3 min. read

Perhaps Prime Minister Putin is more attuned to Western criticism than he lets on. For example, two years ago the British motoring show Top Gear rather harshly called the Lada Kalina – the newest model from Russia’s much maligned firm – a poor copy of  a mid 90s Fiat, made out of turnips. Yet when […]

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BNP Bleats on About Ousting the Government, Again
September 3, 2010 3 min. read

I’ve never quite understood the BNP leader’s use of the term oust, when she bleats on about ousting the sitting Awami League government “because its activities go against the interests of the people and the country”. Does Begum Zia mean that she will force Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s resignation from power?  Alternatively does she intend […]

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So Maybe I Was a Bit Premature . . .
September 2, 2010 1 min. read

Yeah, about the end of the South African public sector strike? Not so fast.

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