China & Africa: Imperialism, Corruption, Growing Pains
August 2, 2009 1 min. read

An article on a corruption investigation in Namibia related to Chinese investment there appeared in the NYTimes on Friday.  China is confronting the growing pains of being an “imperial” power, as this giant nation increases its FDI and access to raw materials and markets in Africa, Latin America and elsewhere.  Just like imperialists that came before, since […]

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Where have all the lawyers gone?
August 2, 2009 3 min. read

This past week was not a good one for human rights lawyers. As reported on this blog earlier this week, on Monday the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) suspended an Arab human rights group at the request of Algeria for hosting a “known terrorist” at a speaking event last year.  The “known terrorist” here […]

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Hillary Clinton and Africa
August 1, 2009 4 min. read

A major human rights group is urging US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to take a tough stance on human rights and the rule of law during her seven nation trip to Africa next week.  Her itinerary includes Kenya, where she will meet with representatives from both the Kenyan and Somali governments, and the Democratic […]

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Inspiring children, inspiring the future
July 31, 2009 2 min. read

“The greatest inspiration is often born of desperation.” -Comer Cotrell, American Entrepreneur (1931- ) In the face of hardship and disaster, one most often finds the most inspiring people you will ever come across. For many when we reach the point of desperation we find ourselves over whelmed and wanting to give up, but lucky […]

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China – Getting Closer
July 31, 2009 2 min. read

United States and China to Cooperate on Climate Change and Energy is the word from the excellent weekly, “EERE Network News,” put out by DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE).  As I noted recently here, DOE Secretary Steven Chu was in China recently and the pressure is building on the Chinese to […]

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Naming the dead
July 31, 2009 3 min. read

We build memorials to remember the dead.  Those that died in wars, in natural disasters, on the front line or the victims of stubborn and vision-less politicians.  We do so for a number of reasons, to not forgot, for some to realize the absurdity of war, for others as a symbol of pride for a […]

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South Africa: Managing the economic crisis
July 30, 2009 7 min. read

Africa’s largest economy, with US$276 billion in GDP, is the continent’s rising power.  With 48 million people, it is not the continent’s most populous, with a lower population than oil-rich Nigeria (155 million) and Egypt (80 million), the world’s most populous Arab nation.  But South Africa is richer than these countries, in spite of its more skewed […]

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A day in the life of a refugee
July 30, 2009 2 min. read

You see their faces plastered across newspapers and even catch a glimpse on the evening news, but you never really get a clear picture of what a day in the life of a refugee is like, and now you can thanks to Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), where you can take a virtual tour […]

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22,000 New ‘Green Jobs’ Outsourced to China & India
July 30, 2009 6 min. read

BUT now these companies, solely in the name of corporate profitability, reciprocate neither their loyalty, nor duty to Americans to be good corporate citizens. Here we have a case in point about GE methodically shipping their entire energy efficient lighting manufacturing operation out of Ohio to China with the primary reason being given as lower labor costs.

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Growing Human Rights Concerns in Interim Honduras
July 30, 2009 3 min. read

Honduras is just having problems these days. First its president wants to throw selected parts of the constitution out the window. Then the military throws the president out of the country. And now after a month of international diplomatic drama with the interim government, a major collection of human rights groups is accusing it of […]

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Iranian Prisoners Released — Update
July 30, 2009 2 min. read

Yesterday we posted that Iran was releasing some prisoners who were detained for protesting last month’s presidential election.  It has now come out that Shadi Sadr, a major women’s rights lawyer in Iran, was released from Evin Prison.  Her arrest, which we detailed here, brought Iran’s current detention policies following last month’s disputed election back […]

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Europe's Most Wanted War Criminal Purportedly in Law Enforcement Crosshairs
July 30, 2009 2 min. read

Serbian authorities declared this week that top war criminal fugitive, Ratko Mladic, has his days numbered. Mladic was the general in charge of the Serbian military at the massacre in Srebrenica in which 7,000 Muslims were killed. He was also the officer responsible for ordering the shelling of civilians in Sarajevo in the early 1990s […]

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