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POLITICS-THAILAND: Bangkok Protesters Tap Rural Protest Strategy
By Marwaan Macan-Markar
THUNG PHRA, Thailand - Once a stronghold of Thailand’s banned communist party, this north-east rural outpost has been drawing a different kind of people railing against the political order set in the capital Bangkok.
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Q&A: "Military Commissions Are a Second-Class Justice System"
William Fisher interviews Guantanamo defence counsel DAVID FRAKT
NEW YORK - David Frakt is a professor at the Western State University College of Law and a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserve JAG Corps.
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POLITICS-SRI LANKA: Scepticism Greets Human Rights Plan
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - Pressured by the west and international groups over its human right record, the Sri Lankan government is close to finalising a roadmap on safeguarding civil and political liberties.
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CHINA: State Media Pushing for a Global Voice
By Mitch Moxley
BEIJING - Expanded overseas bureaus, more Chinese and foreign-language editorial products reaching global audiences and now, a reformatting of the country’s most widely read English-language newspaper. These are signs of the expansion of China’s state media, one that President Hu Jintao has described as an "increasingly fierce struggle in the domain of news and opinion".
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RIGHTS: JSOC Interests Snag Plan to Free Afghan Detainees
By Gareth Porter*
WASHINGTON - An initiative to revise the procedures for reviewing the cases of detainees in order to free marginal insurgents and innocent Afghans has run afoul of the interests of officers of the powerful Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) in defending their role in earlier detention decisions.
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POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
By Amelia Lawrence
NAIROBI - With less than a month to the historic multi-party poll in Africa’s largest country, Sudan, eminent African leaders are calling for a peaceful and calm election process.
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U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - The families of two prisoners who died at the U.S. Navy Base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, are asking a federal court to reconsider its ruling dismissing their lawsuit, which seeks to hold federal officials and the U.S. government accountable for their sons' torture, arbitrary detention, and ultimate deaths.
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NIGERIA: Acting President Consolidates Power Amid Unrest
By Charles Fromm
WASHINGTON - This week, acting Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan dissolved his cabinet, further securing his tenuous hold on the country's top post amidst rising unrest in the Niger Delta and flaring religious tensions in the central region of the country.
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LATIN AMERICA: Still a Long Way to Go for Black Women
By Patricia Grogg*
HAVANA - At the age of 17, Meybelin Bernárdez is clear about the future: "When I finish my studies, I'll return to help my community get on its feet," the young Garifuna woman from Honduras, who is studying medicine in Cuba, says without hesitation.
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ZAMBIA: School Policy for Teen Mothers a Partial Success
By Violet Nakamba Mengo
LUSAKA - Naomi Mulenga is determined to beat the odds by finishing her school education and becoming a nurse – despite being a teenage mother.
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KENYA: Trying to Rebuild Communities After Floods
By Mary Kiio
NAIROBI - After torrential rains and floods claimed lives in Kenya’s North Rift region, hundreds of displaced people are now in dire need of relief aid.
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Q&A: Sri Lanka Remains Defiant of U.N. Chief
Thalif Deen interviews DR. PALITHA KOHONA, Sri Lanka's Permanent U.N. Representative
UNITED NATIONS - The Sri Lankan government continues to challenge U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's right to appoint a panel of experts to advise him on the human rights situation - euphemistically called "accountability issues" – following the end of a protracted conflict against a secessionist group widely considered a terrorist organisation.
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MEXICO: Kidnapping - A Growing Risk for Central American Migrants
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - The increase in kidnappings of Central American migrants crossing Mexico on their way to the United States will be brought up at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) current session next Monday.
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POLITICS-BURMA: A Poll, Yes, But Not Political Change
By IPS Correspondents
RANGOON - In teashops and markets, the national election due this year in Burma is the talk of the town, so much so that Thuzar, who did not take part in the 1990 poll, is quite eager to cast her vote this time.
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IRAQ: Seculars Gain as Religious Parties Lose Ground
By Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - Iraq's largest secular bloc appears to be the biggest surprise of the parliamentary elections at a time when some of the most well-known religious groups and figures have sustained great losses, preliminary election results so far indicate.
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KENYA: State Insists Counterfeit Law’s No Threat to Right to Life
By Suleiman Mbatiah
NAIROBI - Kenya’s Constitutional Court heard on Mar. 18 from counsel representing the government that the Anti-Counterfeit Act of 2008 does not threaten the importation or manufacturing of cheap generic medicines and therefore does not deny Kenyans their constitutional right to life.
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MEDIA-ASIA: Exiled Radio Plays A Cat-and Mouse Game
By Lynette Lee Corporal
BANGKOK - For exiled journalists working on shortwave radio programming aimed at Burmese and Tibetan listeners, dodging the ‘enemy’ in the name of freer speech is often a cat-and-mouse game.
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EDUCATION-MALAWI: Local Language Dictionary Released
By Charles Mpaka
BLANTYRE - The thickest book on secondary school teacher Hellen Ndalama’s desk is her indigenous language dictionary. It is also her most-used book.
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WEST AFRICA: Stopping the Polio Virus
By Brahima Ouédraogo
OUAGADOUGOU - The World Health Organisation (WHO) and its partners hope to eliminate the circulation of the polio virus in West Africa as soon as June by launching the first round of national synchronised immunisation days against the debilitating disease.
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CLIMATE CHANGE: The U.N.'s Boys' Club
By Selina Rust
UNITED NATIONS - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's decision to appoint a 19-member, all-male high-level advisory group on Climate Change Financing (CCF) has triggered strong protests from women's groups and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) outraged by the composition of the panel.
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DEVELOPMENT: 'Aid Industry is Part of the Problem'
By Ida Karlsson
STOCKHOLM - Aid organisations perpetuate humanitarian disasters. That is one of the conclusions made by war correspondent Linda Polman in her latest book as she describes the world of humanitarian aid.
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Human Rights - News in RSSOne world, one humanity, now one court to defend its rights. Another step towards universal human rights, but not remotely a step far enough. The United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights more than half a century ago, but that has done little to stop violations the world over, just as the Geneva Convention has not protected prisoners of war enough. Democracy itself and the freedom it presupposes has not been protective enough. This is the century to move from politicisation of human rights towards humanising political ways. IPS keeps an eye on that difficult path.

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News in RSS
POLITICS-THAILAND: Bangkok Protesters Tap Rural Protest Strategy
Q&A: "Military Commissions Are a Second-Class Justice System"
POLITICS-SRI LANKA: Scepticism Greets Human Rights Plan
CHINA: State Media Pushing for a Global Voice
EAST AFRICA: Impatient EU Pushes for Progress on EPA Trade Deal
RIGHTS: JSOC Interests Snag Plan to Free Afghan Detainees
POLITICS-NEPAL: Statesman’s Death Leaves Worries About Peace Process
POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
ECONOMY: Greek Crisis Impacts the Balkans
U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
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Tribune des Droits Humains /  Geneve 2006
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