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EASTERN EUROPE: Loans Make the Middle Class Poor
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Low-income Eastern Europeans contracting easy consumer loans in the mid- 2000s are now falling below poverty lines.
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BALKANS: Museum Speaks of Roma History, and Misery
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - The Balkans gets its first museum on the Roma, to tell a story about one of the most underprivileged ethnic groups in the region.
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BULGARIA: Migrants Denied Even Medicine
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Hasun Albaadzh, an asylum-seeker from Syria, died Oct. 6 at the Busmantsi detention centre on the outskirts of Bulgarian capital Sofia. He had been held at Busmantsi for 34 months - considerably more than the maximum legal period of detention - and had been denied proper medical care.
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Q&A: Africans Won’t Just Be on Receiving End of Arts and Culture
Christi van der Westhuizen interviews MIKE VAN GRAAN, playwright and activist
CAPE TOWN - Global initiatives have in recent years stressed the contribution that arts and culture can make to development. This has led African and European artists, bureaucrats and policy makers to increasingly confront the unequal relations in North-South cultural and artistic exchanges.
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GERMANY: East Is East
By Wolfgang Kerler
LEIPZIG, Germany - Twenty years after the Berlin Wall came down, rifts between east and west Germany remain: east Germans vote differently, are earning less money, and are more pessimistic than west Germans.
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ROMANIA: Government Collapse Deepens Economic Woes
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - Romania is heading for a week of massive protests by state employees. With the governing coalition collapsing last Friday, the new minority government will have a hard time navigating between the demands of the protesters and the austerity measures demanded by its international creditors.
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BALKANS: Ultranationalists Face Ban
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - Ultranationalist groups behind the violence in Belgrade last month face ban by the Constitutional Court of Serbia.
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RIGHTS: Castration for Polish Paedophiles Opposed
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - New legislation in Poland introducing compulsory castration of paedophiles has angered human rights groups, who claim its introduction is little more than populist posturing.
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RIGHTS: Shelters Open for Battered Husbands
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
JAGODINA, Central Serbia - One in three women is ill-treated by someone or other in family homes, survey after survey shows. And so the total of three men living in shelter in a small home for battered husbands may seem unmentionably small in comparison.
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G20: IMF Finds a New Unpopularity
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - When some Eastern European states faced economic collapse as the financial crisis took hold, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) stepped in and offered governments huge loans.
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CZECH REPUBLIC: Base Drops Out of Radar
By Zoltán Dujisin
BUDAPEST - The Czech Republic has entered election campaign period with dire warnings being sounded of falling into the Russian sphere of influence, just as the U.S. drops its plans to build a missile base in Eastern Europe.
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EASTERN EUROPE: Disabled Seek to Move In From the Margins
By Claudia Ciobanu
BUCHAREST - At 37, Dimo Kokorkov, a carpenter from Stara Zagora in central Bulgaria is "broken-hearted". Dimo says this to describe his sense of deep injustice after being systematically abused in prison because of his disabilities.
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RUSSIA: The Language of Influence Weakens
By Kester Kenn Klomegah
MOSCOW - Nearly all of the former Soviet republics have adopted native languages that were suppressed during the communist era at the expense of Russian. This is affecting Russia's influence over the commonwealth of independent states.
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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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MEXICO: Women Package the Sweet Taste of Nostalgia
POLITICS: Thai-Cambodia Diplomatic Row Bares Decades-Long Rift
SRI LANKA: Colombo’s Diplomatic Sparring Games with EU, U.S.
CLIMATE CHANGE-US: Too Little, Too Late for Copenhagen?
HONDURAS: Unilateral "Unity Government" Announced; Deal "Dead"
RIGHTS-NICARAGUA: Mudslinging Match Between Gov't, Activists
MIDEAST: Lessons from the Karine A -Déjà Vu All Over Again
AFRICA: We Are the Government
U.S.: "War Comes Home" with Ft. Hood Shootings
Q&A: Geert Wilders Gets a Big Email Hug
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