Fighting Infant Mortality
August 6, 2008 1 min. read

Two stories from IRIN underscore one of the big public health issues in Africa today. Maternal and infant mortality is not just a problem in Congo-Brazzaville and Ghana, though those two countries are attempting, as are so many sub-Saharan African countries, to get to grips with the reality that the birth of a child is […]

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Delay, Delay, Delay
August 5, 2008 1 min. read

Jacob Zuma would like to have the corruption charges against him thrown out. Barring that, he hopes that a policy of delay will buy him time to find a way out of his crisis. He knows that in some circles among his allies and among those who have not taken sides there is a hope […]

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Elusive Abdullah
August 5, 2008 1 min. read

Well before 9/11 the terrorist bombings in Niarobi and Dar es Salaam gave indications as to the severity of the threat that the then obscure organization al Qaeda posed to the west and its allies. One of the masterminds behind those attacks, Fazul Abdullah, has proven elusive. But Kenyan authorities have arrested members of a […]

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Poppies for the Poor
August 5, 2008 5 min. read

With the Taliban showcasing great ‘tenacity‘ and ability to recruit new members from around the region to replace those lost, one must conclude that the Afghan government and its International supporters are in a fight for their lives. Hard decisions will have to made for them to win, including the eradication of the nation's poppy […]

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Cabinet Statement Adopted
August 5, 2008 2 min. read

Premier Fouad Saniora's cabinet on Monday adopted its policy statement despite reservations voiced by four ministers on a clause related to the resistance. Information Minister Tareq Mitri said the statement was adopted unanimously to safeguard “ministerial solidarity.” [Naharnet] The four ministers that had reservations were Nassib Lahoud, Tony Karam, Ibrahim Najjar and Elie Marouni. Phalange […]

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Back to Beirut
August 4, 2008 1 min. read

I took a stroll today in downtown Beirut. The tents were dismantled, summer season is on and the place looks wonderful. The shops, restaurants and cafes that were once deserted are now back in business. The political tension won't go away anytime soon. However, Lebanese people have an interesting way of dealing with trouble. They […]

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Child Labor in Central Asia
August 4, 2008 3 min. read

Gulnoza Saidazimova of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty about a month ago catalogued the child labor situation in Central Asia. Unfortunately child labor is abused in all most all Central Asian states, but in different ways and to different degrees. Saidazimova first discusses Tajikistan's use of child labor as a ‘lifeline for their families’ who are […]

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Used and Abused: Solzhenitsyn Joins Pawn Pantheon
August 4, 2008 4 min. read

Don't believe the gushing obituaries. Like Orwell and Sakharov before him, Alexander Solzhenitsyn had outlived his usefulness. Long since his art was sacrificed on the West's ideological altar, the courageous anti-Soviet dissident had become an embarassment; a Putin-friendly, anti-Semitic pan-Slavist with a Tolstoy complex. As a philistine, I’ve only ever read One Day in the […]

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Mexico's fight against AIDS in Tijuana
August 3, 2008 2 min. read

This Sunday Mexican President Felipe Calderon will host the 17th annual International AIDS conference in Mexico City.  As part of this, I wanted to highlight an article in yesterday's Washington post.  While the United States government does not support providing free needles to intravenous drug users, Mexico launched a program to provide clean needles to […]

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Crippled by lack of unity
August 1, 2008 3 min. read

Those who have met Samir Geagea talk of a clever strategist, that has a vision not only for the Christian community, but for the country as a whole. Geagea and Aoun are rivals within the Christian community, and as such, Geagea will continue to attack the unholy alliance between Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement and Hizballah. […]

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Crisis at the Attorney General's Office in Mexico
August 1, 2008 2 min. read

In the last couple of days, several sources have confirmed that a number of high-ranking officials at the Attorney General's Office will resign to their positions. The Deputy Attorney General in charge of Special Investigations on Organized Crime (SIEDO)  is among the officers who will be leaving office. It is possible that other deputies in […]

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President Bush Standing Tall and Standing Down in Central Asia
August 1, 2008 3 min. read

Yesterday, all Bush's problems seemed so far away. But now it looks as China's authoritarian government is here to stay. The Chinese are shall we say displeased about the US House of Representatives resolution requesting China to honor their IOC commitments in regard to human rights, internet blocking, and treatment of its Tibetan and Uighur […]

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