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WORLD CUP: But South Africa Will Win
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
JERUSALEM - Less than a hundred days to go, and the world looks on, often more with scepticism than anticipation.
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CUBA: A Good Old Age in Old Havana
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - In the centre of Old Havana, historic buildings are being restored without neglecting the occupants who are their heart and soul. The priority is to care for elderly residents with programmes that could become a model for the rest of Cuba, whose population is ageing fast.
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MIDEAST: Palestinian Homes on 'David's Garden' Spared for Now
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
SILWAN, Occupied East Jerusalem - Outside the Bedouin-style protest tent in the heart of this Palestinian neighbourhood, the anger is palpable, but controlled.
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ENVIRONMENT-LEBANON: Coastal Pollution Threatens Fisherfolk
By Mona Alami
BEIRUT - Pollution, oil spills and difficult living conditions are some of the challenges that fishermen in this eastern Mediterranean country face daily.
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URUGUAY: A Return to Mud and Straw
By Inés Acosta*
CIUDAD DE LA COSTA, Uruguay - More and more Uruguayans are keen on building ecological homes. The problem is that there is hardly any market or specialised labour for what is known as "bio-building."
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RIGHTS-EGYPT: Families Uprooted as Sphinxes Revive
By Cam McGrath
LUXOR - Hajj Khodari lifts a defiant fist at the demolition machinery now just meters away from his front door.
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HEALTH-BRAZIL: When the City Makes You Sick
By Mario Osava*
RIO DE JANEIRO - Limiting your cholesterol through diet may not be enough to maintain cardiovascular health in polluted cities like São Paulo in Brazil: the particulates suspended in the air alter the molecular composition of LDL, popularly known as "bad cholesterol," making it even more dangerous.
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MUSIC-BRAZIL: 'Enchanted' Guitars for Social Change
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - Perfectly in tune, in spite of the off-key world of Terra Encantada ("Enchanted Land"), a shanty town in this Brazilian city, the guitars of Daniel Sant'Anna's orchestra strike up the "Ode to Joy", played by children and teenagers who are looking for a way forward in their lives.
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RIGHTS-INDIA: Commonwealth Games: No Medals for Labourers
By Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI - If medals are being given out for backbreaking labour on miserable wages and impossible working conditions, thousands of migrant workers, slaving to complete stadia and other facilities for the October Commonwealth Games in the Indian capital, will be the champions.
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CUBA: Women Knitting for Change
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - A neighbour started calling Andrea del Sol "Perseverance," and the name stuck. Since 1998, she and a small group of women from Alamar, on the outskirts of the Cuban capital, have been throwing their combined energies behind a common purpose: "changing things."
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MEXICO: Women - Casualties in Army's Counternarcotics War
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - Human rights organisations in Mexico and the United States sounded the alarm about abuses against women by the Mexican armed forces in the context of the government's all-out offensive against drug trafficking in the border state of Chihuahua.
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MIDEAST: Raze Illegal Buildings - Unless They Are Jewish
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
SILWAN, Occupied East Jerusalem - Backed by armed security men, the municipal inspectors race their jeeps through the narrow alleyways and up a hillside crowded with buildings.
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EUROPE: Privatised Services Back in Public Hands
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - After the wave of de-privatisation of water services facilities that started across the world two years ago, municipalities in Europe are now buying back the electricity utilities they sold to private investors in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
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RECESSION AND RECOVERY: Cities Going One Way, Nations Another - Part 2
By IPS Correspondents*
RIO DE JANEIRO - Some signs are emerging of a new trend shown up by the recession: local governments (and the people) are going one way, national ones another.
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CULTURE-INDIA: Globalised Ice Cream Please, Big Scoop
By Sanjay Suri
NEW DELHI - "Passport Please." That's what everyone thought they'd ask if you queued up at that exclusive new ice cream shop in one of those smart new malls of fashionable south Delhi.
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Half of the world population today lives in cities. That proportion reaches two-thirds in some countries, and urban dwellers around the globe face many of the same problems: poverty, homelessness, precarious housing, noise, inadequate sanitation and sewerage services, air and water pollution and deficient schools. Solutions cannot be achieved at the local or global levels without the active participation of city governments and residents. How do city dwellers confront their common problems? IPS tracks their pursuit of healthy and sustainable development of the urban environment, especially improving the lives of people who live in impoverished neighbourhoods.

IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of the City of Rome in realising this Bulletin 
News in RSS
POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
ECONOMY: Greek Crisis Impacts the Balkans
U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
NIGERIA: Acting President Consolidates Power Amid Unrest
CLIMATE CHANGE: A Year On, Little Change in Political Climate
LATIN AMERICA: Still a Long Way to Go, for Black Women
ZAMBIA: School Policy for Teen Mothers a Partial Success
KENYA: Trying to Rebuild Communities After Floods
IRAN: New Budget May Add to Uncertainties, Political Strains
Q&A: Sri Lanka Remains Defiant of U.N. Chief
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  UN-Habitat
  Global Urban Observatory
  Habitat International Coalition
  United Cities and Local Governments
  International Alliance of Inhabitants
  ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainabiity
  Cities Alliance, Cities Without Slums
  CHOIKE The Rights to Adequate Housing
  Shack / Slum Dwellers International

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