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EUROPE: Economists Blame Germany for Mediterranean Crisis
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - Germany’s obsession with maintaining a trade surplus, in line with its mercantilist traditions, is one cause for the severe economic crisis that has gripped several Euro-Mediterranean countries, say economists.
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EAST EUROPE: Taxing Fast Foods for Health
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - Health experts have called on European governments to use a pioneering tax on fast foods to be introduced in Romania as a model for the entire continent as the battle with obesity spreads to the former communist bloc.
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ECONOMY-GREECE: Austerity Measures Unsettle Public
By Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - Xristos Kiriakou, 30, joined the Feb. 24 strike against the austerity measures announced by the Panhellenic Socialist Party (Pasok), although he has never been involved in public protests before.
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BULGARIA: Govt Forced Down on Genetically Modifed Crops
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Campaigning by environmental groups and the general public has weakened the determination of the Bulgarian government to allow the cultivation of genetically modified (GM) crops in this country.
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DEVELOPMENT: EU Countries Set to Break Promises
By David Cronin
BRUSSELS - Promises made by the European Union (EU) on increasing aid to poor countries will be broken this year, according to new data.
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ECONOMY-EUROPE: Fear of Mediterranean Contagion Grows
Analysis by Julio Godoy
BERLIN - The deep economic, fiscal, and trade crises of several Mediterranean countries in the euro zone that is threatening monetary stability in Europe with the possibility of contagion spreading to developing countries, say studies.
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RELIGION-TURKEY: Alevi Future Bleak Despite Equality Moves
By Daan Bauwens
ANKARA - A political initiative to eliminate discrimination against the Alevi, Turkey’s main religious minority, risks being stymied by the Diyanet, the country’s powerful religious body that does not recognise anything but Sunni Islam.
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/CORRECTED REPEAT*/ICELAND: Questions Hang Over EU Membership
By Lowana Veal
REYKJAVIK - Views within Iceland towards membership of the European Union (EU) are mixed. Though Iceland has officially decided to apply for EU membership this does not mean that it will join, even if invited to do so.
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RIGHTS: Chinese Dissident Wins More Backing for Nobel
By Pavol Stracansky
PRAGUE - Politicians in the Czech and Slovak republics have won wide support for a public campaign backing a Chinese dissident for the Nobel Peace Prize.
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GREECE: New Migrant Law Tough But Respects Rights
By Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - The newly elected Pan-Hellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) government's plans to move legislation, that will greatly affect migrants and refugees, have been both welcomed and criticised by rights organisations and activists.
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UKRAINE: Back Full Circle
Analysis by Zoltán Dujisin
BUDAPEST - The 2004 'Orange revolution' saw a pro-Western leadership emerge victorious in a Presidential vote that opposed them to a pro-Russian candidate accused of vote rigging. After six years of political and economic chaos, the once villain Viktor Yanukovich has reclaimed the President's post.
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EUROPE: Poland's Pension Cuts - Cue for Former Eastern Bloc
By Pavol Stracancsky
WARSAW - Poland’s pension cuts on tens of thousands of former communist functionaries and secret police officers are adding fillip to campaigns in other East European states for similar legislation.
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CLIMATE CHANGE: European Firms See Windfall in Renewable Energy
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - European governments failed to help along an international treaty to stop global warming at the United Nations climate change summit in December, but their engineering and power industries see business opportunities in renewable energy sources and their smart management.
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 Fifty years after the Rome Treaty that initiated an era of cooperation amongst warring states, 27 countries have joined the European Union and more are waiting in the wings. The EU is not intended to replace member states. But they have set up common institutions to which they delegate some of their sovereignty so that Europe-wide decisions on specific matters of joint interest can be made. Since 1993, under the Maastricht Treaty, the EU has been developing a common foreign and security policy to enable joint action when the bloc's interests are at stake. As it deals with terror, international crime, drug trafficking, illegal immigration, global issues like the environment -- and now challenges such as Kosovo's declaration of independence -- diversity remains the hallmark of the Union of half a billion people.

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POWER GAMES: IPS's coverage of Global Geopolitics
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KOSOVO REQUIRES A UNITED EUROPE... AND SO DOES EUROPE
by Martti Ahtisaari
In November 2005, the UN Secretary-General, acting on the basis of the conclusions of the Security Council that the situation in Kosovo is no longer sustainable, asked me to lead the political process to determine Kosovo's future status, writes Martti Ahtisaari, former president of Finland and UN Secretary-General Special Envoy to Kosovo.
EU SUGAR REFORM A BITTER PILL FOR POORER PRODUCERS
by David Kleimann
For more than three decades, the European Union has maintained an extremely costly supply management scheme for its domestic sugar market which insulates domestic producers from international market forces with price supports and tariffs and has resulted in domestic prices triple world market prices and a major production surplus. At the same time, the EU has granted duty free market access for guaranteed quantities to some of its former colonies at guaranteed prices, writes David Kleimann, a German expert on international law and international relations.
EU REFORM WILL AFFECT LATIN AMERICA AS WELL
by Joaquin Roy
A CRUCIAL YEAR FOR THE EUROPEAN UNION
by Joaquin Roy
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MALAYSIA: Creation of Commercial Hospital Wings a Mistake -Critics
MEXICO: Music and Dance Classes Foster Tolerance, Self-Esteem
MIDEAST: Israel Lands in Public Relations Nightmare
THAILAND: In Convoys of Red, Rural Masses Stage Historic Protest
RIGHTS-MALAWI: Country Not Safe for Homosexuals
US-ISRAEL: Tiff or Tipping Point?
RIGHTS-GUATEMALA: 'Our Lives Are Cut Short at a Stroke'
ENVIRONMENT-INDIA: Law on Forest Rights Fails to Deliver
HEALTH: U.S. AIDS Fund Flat-Lining, Groups Complain
MEXICO: Consumers on the Offensive
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