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BRAZIL: Water Abounds in Amazon, But Sanitation Is Scarce
BRAZIL: Environmental Impact Studies on Dams Count for Little in Amazon
Slack Oversight of Peru's Amazon Rainforest
BRAZIL: Electricity Trumps Biodiversity for Xingú River
PERU: 'Don't Minimise' Impacts of Amazon Oil Spill
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Laws No Help to Amazon Animals, or People
Brazilian Dam Would Put Peruvian Jungle Under Water
New Technique for Reducing Dumps
University Forest Expropriated
Indigenous Groups Denounce Logging in Protected Areas
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Environmental Forensics for BP Gulf Spill
By Adrianne Appel*
BOSTON - Stealthy submarine gliders slide through the depths of the Gulf of Mexico with the precision of birds of prey. Robot-like rovers search for droplets of oil thousands of metres under the surface. Powerful computerised analysers send instant results to scientists on board the ship above. All of this to assess the impact of disaster.
MORE >>
ARGENTINA-BRAZIL
Nuclear Safeguards System an Example for the World
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - A system of mutual safeguards, created nearly two decades ago by Argentina and Brazil for in-situ verification of the peaceful use of nuclear power in both countries, serves as an international model of transparency and confidence building in this highly sensitive field.
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COLOMBIA
US Military Aid Contingent on Reversal of Rights Record
By Matthew Berger
WASHINGTON - As a new administration takes over in Bogotá, some groups are hoping for change in the human rights record of Colombia - and that the U.S. will use its clout in the country to ensure that change occurs.
MORE >>
PERU
Quechua Congresswoman Fights Discrimination in Education
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - Hilaria Supa has broken down many barriers in her life. Now she has overcome another one, in an unprecedented achievement: this Quechua indigenous woman who never went to school is today chair of the congressional education committee in Peru.
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Mexico Massacre Galvanises Migrant Rights Activists
By Emilio Godoy *
MEXICO CITY - Activists in Latin America have been galvanised by atrocities like the recent massacre of 72 migrants near the U.S. border to step up their efforts on behalf of migrant rights.
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VENEZUELA
Hunger Striker Dies in Land Dispute
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - Franklin Brito, who held several long hunger strikes since 2004 to defend ownership of his farm, became the first Venezuelan to fast to the death.
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MINING-CHILE
Make Good on Concern for Worker Safety, Say Unions
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - While efforts get underway to try to rescue the 33 miners who are trapped 700 metres underground in a mine in northern Chile, trade unions are calling on the country's political leaders to tackle the underlying problems of worker safety.
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SOUTH AMERICA
Argentine Beef Overtaken by Mercosur Partners
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - South America's Mercosur trade bloc is becoming established as the top world producer of beef, with 40 percent of the international market. But while in Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay production and exports are growing, Argentina, the home of the legendary "asado" barbecue, is falling behind.
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SPAIN
Puppet Marathon for Building School in Bolivia
By Tito Drago
MADRID - The 17th Titirilandia (Puppetland) Festival will conclude with a marathon puppet show, to be held Sunday Aug. 29 in Spain's capital city in aid of a school in the remote Bolivian mining province of Potosí.
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CHILE
Coal Plants Under Fire
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - Controversial plans to build the Barrancones thermoelectric plant near a protected area in the northern Chilean region of Coquimbo were cancelled Friday, but not before reviving the debate on other projects for polluting coal-fired power stations.
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LATIN AMERICA
Wanted: Non-Punitive Approach to Drug Policy
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - Experts from 13 Latin American countries called for a shift in counter-drug policies from a punitive to a public health-based approach for users, in order to reduce drug-related violence, on the argument that the current "war on drugs" has been lost in the region.
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GUATEMALA
New Challenges for Anti-Corruption Commission
By Danilo Valladares
GUATEMALA CITY - New challenges and a long list of shocking cases involving hidden power structures are faced by the new head of the United Nations-mandated International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG).
MORE >>
MEXICO
Environmentalist Peasants Seek Justice
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - Peasant activists Rodolfo Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera hope to find, at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the justice that eluded them in their home country of Mexico, to which they hope to return to rejoin their families.
MORE >>
VENEZUELA
Opposition Hopes to Make a Comeback
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - The campaign for Venezuela's Sept. 26 legislative elections is officially on, and the opposition, which boycotted the last vote five years ago, is back in the running, hoping to win enough seats to act as a counterweight to President Hugo Chávez.
MORE >>
CORRUPTION-PERU
Gov't Tries to Track Down Millions from Convicted Officials
By Ángel Páez
LIMA - The Peruvian government will try to track down funds hidden away by former officials of the Alberto Fujimori regime (1990-2000) and others sentenced for corruption.
MORE >>
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PERU: Quechua Congresswoman Fights Discrimination in Education
NICARAGUA: Major Blow to Illiteracy Among Native Groups
CHILE: Forestry Industry Sows Poverty, Study Says
ECUADOR: Small Farmers Sell to Government in "Inclusive Markets"
Q&A: Native Women in Bolivia's Lowlands Build Leadership Skills
More >>
RIGHTS-INDIA: Law to Restrict Foreign Funding Alarms NGOs
COLOMBIA: US Military Aid Contingent on Reversal of Rights Record
Mexico Massacre Galvanises Migrant Rights Activists
CHILE: Coal Plants Under Fire
LATIN AMERICA: Wanted: Non-Punitive Approach to Drug Policy
More >>
AMERICAS: THE BATTLE OVER VENEZUELA
By Ignacio Ramonet
CUBA: STABILITY AND SECURITY
By Joaquin Roy
WE MUST UNRAVEL THE SECRETS OF NATURE TO SUPPORT LIFE AND THE PLANET
By Jose Mujica*
HUMAN RIGHTS SHOULD BE THE HEART OF THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
By Rowena McNaughton
MDGs: THE 2015 TARGET DATE LOOKS DIMMER THAN EVER
By Supachai Panitchpakdi
MORE >>
Cine independiente gana terreno en China
Violencia no cesa en RDC
SIDA-BOTSWANA: El temor de amamantar
América en bicicleta por la infancia
CUBA: La rebelión de Mavi Susel
Ver más >>
Desigualdade cai no Rio porque os ricos perdem renda
Uma indígena para democratizar a educação peruana
Água pura graças a um saquinho de chá
RUANDA: Desenvolvimento e direitos humanos por diferentes caminhos
REPORTAGEM: Leis não ajudam a fauna amazônica
Mais >>
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