ENVIRONMENT: Open Pit Disasters in Mexico and Peru

Emilio Godoy*

TLALPUJAHUA, Mexico, Jul 24 2009 (IPS) – Mariana Rangel is filled with nostalgia as she gazes at the abandoned installations of the Dos Estrellas mine, where she worked as a secretary for six years. Those were years of prosperity; this is all there is left, she tells IPS, pointing to what used to be the local hospital.
Open pit mine in Cerro de Pasco, Peru Credit: Milagros Salazar/IPS

Open pit mine in Cerro de Pasco, Peru Credit: Milagros Salazar/IPS

The old mining town of Tlalpujahua, a picturesque colonial hill town 160 km from the Mexican capital, is a symbol of the il…

Q&A: Knowledge Barriers Key Factor in Sanitation Crisis

Nergui Manalsuren interviews sanitation expert Duncan Mara

UNITED NATIONS, Aug 17 2009 (IPS) – Despite longstanding promises by world leaders to halve, by 2015, the number of people without basic sanitation, 2.5 billion still lack access to basic sanitation, and 1.2 billion don t have any form of sanitation at all.
Duncan Mara Credit: University of Leeds

Duncan Mara Credit: University of Leeds

I don t think that the MDG (the U.N. s Millennium Development Goals) sanitation target can be achieved, says Duncan Mara, a professor of civil engineering at University of Leeds who has been working on low-cost sanitation in de…

HEALTH: Dutch Rethink Mixing Cannabis With Coffee

AMSTERDAM, Sep 22 2009 (IPS) – Along with canal and dyke , young people visiting this city will learn some other interesting words in a very short time words such as cannabis , bong , and marijuana . The words are hard to avoid, especially in the tourist area that boasts a museum devoted to hash .
A hash museum in Amsterdam. Credit: Djavan De Clercq/IPS

A hash museum in Amsterdam. Credit: Djavan De Clercq/IPS

But mere words are the least of a parent s worry here.

Residents are increasingly concerned that school-age children are being harmed by the long-standing policy of tolerance towards limited use of soft dr…

FRANCE: Top Designers Make Dolls to Fund Darfur Vaccinations

PARIS, Nov 9 2009 (IPS) – Designer rag dolls, the concept couldn t sound more frivolous. But dolls made by top fashion designers such as Armani and Prada are helping to fund a vaccination programme in war-torn Darfur.
From small beginnings six years ago, the Frimousses de Créateurs (Designers Dolls) project has grown to include about a hundred designers as well as prominent artists such as Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons, who are known for their provocative and controversial artwork.

Entertainers, too, have joined the cast, with French singer France Gall and outspoken actress Isabelle Adjani making dolls out of fabric and decorating them in their own fashion.

Last year, the doll project, coordinated by the United Nations Children s Fund (UNICEF), financed polio vaccina…

HEALTH-BAHRAIN: Men Bring HIV Home

Suad Hamada

MANAMA, Dec 1 2009 (IPS) – Umbassil* is unlike other engaged women. Instead of planning her wedding she is wondering where she will have her baby. She is not pregnant but she knows that Bahrain s maternity hospitals will not admit her because she is HIV positive.
Somaya Al Jowder: Most of the women contracted the virus through sexual relations mainly with their infected husbands Credit: Sandeep Grewal/IPS

Somaya Al Jowder: Most of the women contracted the virus through sexual relations mainly with their infected husbands C…

POLITICS: U.N. Faces Its Own Major Tragedy in Haiti

Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Jan 13 2010 (IPS) – The major earthquake that struck Haiti Tuesday, causing death and destruction in the capital of Port-au-Prince, may also turn out to be a veritable disaster for the United Nations, which has over 9,000 personnel, including peacekeepers, international staffers and local civilians, scattered throughout the country.
John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, briefs journalists Jan. 13 on the latest details out of Haiti. Credit: UN Photo/Evan Schneider

KENYA: State Insists Counterfeit Law Does Not Threaten Rights

Suleiman Mbatiah

NAIROBI, Mar 19 2010 (IPS) – Kenya s Constitutional Court heard on Mar. 18 from counsel representing the government that the Anti-Counterfeit Act of 2008 does not threaten the importation or manufacturing of cheap generic medicines and therefore does not deny Kenyans their constitutional right to life.
Health rights activists protest outside the Constitutional Court in Nairobi. Credit: Suleiman Mbatiah/IPS

Health rights activists protest outside the Constitutional Court in Nairobi. Credit: Suleiman Mbatiah/IPS

Three people living with HIV and AIDS…

RIGHTS-KENYA: Court Victory Against “Anti-Counterfeit” Agenda

Suleiman Mbatiah

NAIROBI, Apr 23 2010 (IPS) – The Constitutional Court in Kenya has barred the government from implementing the Anti-Counterfeit Act of 2008 as it applies to generic medicines until a verdict is delivered in a case filed by three people living with HIV.
Activists celebrate the ruling safeguarding generics outside the Constitutional Court in Nairobi. Credit: Suleiman Mbatiah/IPS

Activists celebrate the ruling safeguarding generics outside the Constitutional Court in Nairobi. Credit: Suleiman Mbatiah/IPS

Three petitioners in July…

Are Namibian Women Being Forcibly Sterilised?*

Servaas van den Bosch

REHOBOTH, Namibia, Jun 1 2010 (IPS) – A landmark court case, alleging that HIV-positive women were forcibly sterilised in Namibian state hospitals begins in Windhoek s High Court on Jun. 1. Human rights groups claim the practice has continued long after the authorities were notified.
The operating theatre at St Mary s hospital in Rehoboth, Namibia, where women were allegedly coerced into accepting sterilisation. Credit: Servaas van den Bosch/IPS

The operating theatre at St Mary s hospital…

URUGUAY: Millennium Goal on Maternal Health in Sight

Inés Acosta

MONTEVIDEO, Jul 26 2010 (IPS) – Uruguay is on the point of reaching the Millennium Development Goal for reducing the maternal mortality ratio, but it is still behind in other aspects of maternal health, like providing integrated sexual and reproductive health care, fighting syphilis and checking on mothers and babies during the postpartum period.
These targets are still far off and there is no exemption just because maternal mortality is low, said Lilián Abracinskas, head of the non-governmental organisation Mujer y Salud en Uruguay (MYSU, Women and Health in Uruguay).

She told IPS that public campaigns to promote mother-and-child health policies are also needed.

This country has been successful in lowering maternal mortality and is on track to m…