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Sunday, November 22, 2009   05:16 GMT    
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WATER-ZIMBABWE
: New Wells Protect Environment, Build Peace
By 
Vusumuzi Sifile
SHAMVA, Zimbabwe
 - Twenty years ago, Isaac Chidavaenzi would worry when his neighbours set up vegetable gardens on river banks, trying to get closer to water sources. The number of gardens on the rivers' banks has now decreased, but Chidavaenzi is even more worried.
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GUATEMALA: Only 10 Agents to Fight Human Trafficking Nationwide
By Danilo Valladares
GUATEMALA CITY - In spite of a new law against human trafficking in effect since March, little has been done in Guatemala to fight the trafficking of children, and child sex tourism has begun to flourish, experts warn.
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EL SALVADOR: An Indigenous Language That Refuses to Die
By Edgardo Ayala
SAN SALVADOR - "Yek shiajfikan" reads a sign hanging above the gate of the "Dr. Mario Calvo Marroquín" elementary school in the Salvadoran town of Izalco, welcoming pupils in Nawat, the language that was spoken by the area’s native communities.
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SWITZERLAND: Undocumented Migrants Run Their Own School
By Ray Smith
ZURICH - Switzerland is a tough place for asylum-seekers and undocumented migrants. In Zurich, they have been running a remarkable campaign for the past year, challenging the canton's asylum policy. Now, they have opened their own school.
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YEMEN: Children Flee Fighting
By Phoebe Greenwood*
AMRAN, Yemen - As the conflict between government forces and Houthi fighters grinds on in the mountains of Saada in northern Yemen, thousands of Yemeni civilians, many of them children, are being forced from their homes by the fighting.
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Q&A: Invest in Young People in Latin America
Daniela Estrada interviews MARCELA SUAZO, regional director of UNFPA
SANTIAGO - To fight inequality, Latin American countries must double the financial commitment they made at the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, Marcela Suazo, the regional director for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), told IPS.
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GERMANY: Muslims Targeted Again
By Julio Godoy
BERLIN - Immigrants and foreigners were again targeted through the election campaign last month by right-wing politicians looking to win votes through racist statements.
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ENVIRONMENT: India Warms Up to Copenhagen
Analysis by Neeta Lal
NEW DELHI - With the clock ticking away on the United Nations Framework for Climate Change Committee (UNFCCC) summit in Copenhagen in December, the fractiousness between the developed and the developing nations on who ought to do more to control climate change is getting increasingly strident.
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MEXICO: Black Minority Invisible in Bicentennial Plans
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - Mexico has big plans for celebrating its 200th anniversary of independence from Spain next year. But Mexicans of African descent are as invisible in those plans as they are in everyday life.
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RIGHTS-AUSTRIA: Thousands of Migrants Take to Hunger Strikes
By Pavol Stracansky
VIENNA - Human rights activists in Austria are calling for an overhaul of a detention system for migrants and asylum seekers they claim breaches human rights, following the death of a hunger-striking migrant in police cells.
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PHILIPPINES: Ban on Abortion Prevails
By Stephen de Tarczynski
MANILA - Sitting in an apartment in central Manila, 70-year-old Lydia (her second name has been withheld to protect her identity) speaks in hushed tones. A manghihilot, or traditional midwife, she is wary when talking about her experiences of abortion, an often-taboo subject in the Philippines.
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EUROPE: Failing Both Governments and Migrants
Analysis by Alecia D. McKenzie
PARIS - The police have cracked down Tuesday on makeshift shelters that migrants moved into after the immigration camp at Calais in France was razed to the ground a week back. The migrants, mostly Afghans, are now homeless again - and in search of new shelter.
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POLITICS-EAST TIMOR: ‘The Quality of Women Is Very Important’
Matt Crook* interviews IDELTA RODRIGUES, East Timor’s first secretary of state for the promotion of equality and a key government leader
DILI - For more than seven years, the men and women of East Timor have been working to rebuild their nation after a destructive 24-year occupation by the Indonesian army.
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SOUTH ASIA: Disunity Hovers over a Region Battling Climate Change
By Athar Parvaiz
KATHMANDU - As the Copenhagen Conference on climate change draws nearer, South Asia, which appears poised for severe threats from the impacts of climate change, faces a stiff challenge on two fronts.
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ASIA: Region Lags Behind in Reducing Maternal Mortality Rates
By Marwaan Macan-Markar
BANGKOK - In landlocked Laos, pregnancy brings with it the spectre of death. South-east Asia’s poorest country has recorded over 700 women dying every year due to complications during childbirth.
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The world's population is growing at a pace of some 76 million people per year (UNFPA), and problems are growing with it. The ever-increasing demand on the earth's finite natural resources makes it difficult for many to live even at subsistence levels. In the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) the population is expected to triple by 2050. The world's population is also changing as a result of ageing, high mortality rates from HIV/AIDS and infectious diseases, refugee movements and migration. According to UN-Habitat, the United Nations Programme for Human Settlements, one-third of the globe's urban dwellers live in slums or are homeless. Women and minority groups such as indigenous peoples, among others, face marginalisation and discrimination. Family planning and the promotion of sexual and reproductive health have never been more important in rendering local, regional and national population strategies effective.

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UNFPA - United Nations Population Fund
IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of UNFPA in supporting an IPS programme of work in 2009 on population, gender and reproductive health.