June 2007 Archives

UNFPA - state of world population 2006

UNFPA - state of world population 2006 

Planet of the slums: UN warns urban populations set to double

Planet of the slums: UN warns urban populations set to double

By Daniel Howden, Deputy Foreign Editor

Published: 27 June 2007

The combined forces of population growth and urbanisation are creating a planet of slums, where the urban population will have doubled by 2030, according to a report released by the United Nations today.



Continue reading Planet of the slums: UN warns urban populations set to double.

Human tide: the real migration crisis

Christian Aid Society. May 2007. Human tide: the real migration crisis

Study Sees Climate Change Impact on Alaska

Study Sees Climate Change Impact on Alaska - New York Times

June 28, 2007

Many of Alaska's roads, runways, railroads and water and sewer systems will wear out more quickly and cost more to repair or replace because of climate change, according to a study released yesterday.

Higher temperatures, melting permafrost, a reduction in polar ice and increased flooding are expected to raise the repair and replacement cost of thousands of infrastructure projects as much as $6.1 billion for a total of nearly $40 billion -- about a 20 percent increase -- from now to 2030, according to the study, by the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Alaska Anchorage.

Continue reading Study Sees Climate Change Impact on Alaska .

UN issues desertification warning

BBC NEWS | Africa | UN issues desertification warning

  • Tens of millions of people could be driven from their homes by encroaching deserts, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and Central Asia, a report says.

    The study by the United Nations University suggests climate change is making desertification "the greatest environmental challenge of our times".

    If action is not taken, the report warns that some 50 million people could be displaced within the next 10 years.

    The study was produced by more than 200 experts from 25 countries.

Continue reading UN issues desertification warning.

Crude Designs: The rip-off of Iraq's oil wealth

Muttit, Greg. Platform, and Global Policy Forum. November 2005. Crude Designs: The rip-off of Iraq's oil wealth

Coping with Global climate change: The Role of Adaptation in the United States

Easterling, William E. III; Brian Hurd, Joel B. Smith. June 2004 Coping with Global climate change: The Role of Adaptation in the United States

U.S. Space Command Vision for 2020

February 1997. U.S. Space Command Vision for 2020

CLOSE TO SLAVERY Guestworker Programs in the United States

SPLC. 2007. CLOSE TO SLAVERY Guestworker Programs in the United States

Strategic Trends Programme 2007-2036

Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC). Strategic Trends Programme 2007-2036

Climate Change 2007: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability

IPCC Working Group 2. April 6, 2007. Climate Change 2007: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability</a> (Working Draft)

Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis - Summary for Policy Makers

IPCC. Feb 5, 2007. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis - Summary for Policy Makers

Impacts of Climate Change

Global Business Network. January 2007. Impacts of Climate Change

Trafficking in Women Forced Labor and Domestic Work

Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development. Trafficking in Women Forced Labor and Domestic Work - in the context of the Middle East and Gulf region</a>. Anti-slavery International Working Paper 2006.

How China's support of Sudan shields a regime called 'genocidal'


How China's support of Sudan shields a regime called 'genocidal' | csmonitor.com

Despite instability in the south and the crisis in Darfur, China continues to offer political and military backing.

(Photograph)
Scorched earth: Charred remains of a hut smolder in Darfur after being set ablaze by government-backed militia. Chinese-made military hardware has reportedly been used in past raids on civilians.
Scott Nelson/Getty Images

 






Mercenaries are scooping up contracts here. Arms dealers are flying in and out on the daily flight from Nairobi, Kenya. And the rebels, theoretically out of work, are training full time on the dunes around Juba, South Sudan's self-proclaimed capital.

Up north, in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, weapons arsenals are filling up, talk is tough, and clear signals are being sent out that the resource-rich south will never be allowed to be independent.

(Map)
Rich Clabaugh - Staff

More than two years after the north-south peace agreement, and four years before the expected southern referendum on secession - it's a matter of time, say observers, before the fragile calm blows up, reigniting the 21-year civil war that left 1.5 million dead.

"It's a lull in which both sides are regrouping for the new war," says a Canadian UN military observer stationed in South Sudan, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, the Darfur crisis that has killed more than 200,000 and displaced more than 2.5 million in western Sudan continues to rage unabated, helping Sudan earn the top spot on Foreign Policy magazine's "Failed State Index" for the second year in a row.

The Chinese are as much to blame for this situation as anyone, say critics, and not so much because of their economic policies but because of political ones.

Beijing has "a vested interest in the continuation of a low level of insecurity. It keeps the other major investors out," charges the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG) in a report. The report argues that China welcomes the absence of real peace in Sudan as enhancing its business opportunities, whatever the cost to southern Sudanese civilians: "There is [on the part of the Chinese] an almost total disregard for the human rights implications of their investments."

This is unacceptable to leaders of the semiautonomous south who say they won't sit idly by while revenue from Chinese drilling in their oil fields goes mostly to the Arab-dominated government in the north.

"This peace is ugly," says Daniel Deng Moyndit, a former rebel who now chairs the Government of South Sudan's parliamentary security committee. "They [Khartoum government officials] are not serious ... and any state is entitled to defense in anticipation of aggression."

Despite this, "China doesn't want another government in charge," adds a Khartoum-based humanitarian aid worker, speaking on condition of anonymity. "They're used to dealing with this government."

While pockets of South Sudan are seeing some economic benefits from the shaky peace, the region in general is shortchanged. The main sore point has to do with years of underdevelopment and a perception that oil revenues are not being shared fairly.

Under the peace deal between north and south, oil profits are to be shared: 50 percent to the south, 48 percent to the north, and 2 to the specific oil-producing areas. But many in South Sudan say this agreement is not being implemented fairly.


As no official information is released about how much oil is being pumped out of the south or how much is being paid for it, the amount of money transferred to the semiautonomous Government of South Sudan is left to the discretion of Khartoum.

Angelina Teny, the minister of state for Sudan's Ministry of Mining and Energy in Khartoum, says the division of oil revenues is not transparent.

"We have an oil revenue calculation committee, and every month we look at the production and sales figures and work out the figures for who takes what," says Ms. Teny, a member of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), a political party formed by rebels from the south. But the production and sales figures all go directly to the Ministry of Mining and Energy from the Chinese-run Greater Nile Production Company, without any way of checking whether the figures are accurate.

In recent months, South Sudan's share in those oil revenues has dropped by half. Between January and March, it has gone from around $80 million to less than $40 million per month, says Teny. "This is when a lack of trust comes in," she stresses. "If we have figures yo-yo like this, with sharp drops, we ask questions. This can only be answered by having a proper monitoring system."

China both buys the vast majority of Sudan's oil and is the majority partner in the consortiums extracting the oil - but refuses to open up its records or get involved in any debate on whether their payments are reaching the rightful destinations.

More worrysome for many critics, however, is that China sells Khartoum weapons and military aircraft and backs Sudan in the UN Security Council when other nations seek to condemn it for its bad behavior toward its own citizens.

In recent years, most talk of the Khartoum government's mistreatment of citizens has focused not so much on the south but on the conflict in Darfur.

President Bush calls the killings in Darfur "genocide" and accuses Khartoum of serious human rights abuses.

He is far from alone. According to a report last year by Amnesty International, Sudan is carrying out "massive violations of international human rights ... in southern Sudan and Darfur" - all with the help of Chinese ammunition, tanks, helicopters, and fighter aircraft.

In 2005, the last year such figures were made available, Sudan bought $24 million worth of arms and ammunition, as well as $57 million worth of parts and aircraft equipment and $2 million worth of parts for helicopters and airplanes, according to a recent report by Amnesty International. China has also recently delivered six K-8 advanced trainer fighter jets, which can be used for air-to-ground attacks, according to the report. All this after a UN-approved embargo was imposed on Darfur.

"We are using helicopters in Darfur, yes," says Mohamed Yousif Abed Allah, the minister of culture. "It is necessary ... as you call it, a deterrence."

Monitor correspondent Danna Harman discusses the challenges of reporting in Darfur, and in southern Sudan. (1:28)

Sudan and China boosting military cooperation

In April, China's state-owned Xinhua news agency reported that China and Sudan had vowed, "to boost military exchanges and cooperation in various sectors," during a visit by Sudan's Joint Chief of Staff Haj Ahmed El Gaili to Beijing. "Military relations between China and Sudan have developed smoothly," Chinese Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan was quoted as saying. "China is willing to further develop cooperation between the two militaries in every sphere."

Meanwhile, in its role as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, China has continuously blocked effective action against Sudan by arguing for the respect of Sudan's sovereignty. This is in line with China's overall policy to respect other nations' independence.

"China had suffered imperialist aggression and oppression for over 100 years before the founding of the People's Republic in 1949. Therefore, China regards the hard-earned right of independence as the basic principle of foreign policy," the foreign ministry states on its website.

China respects and defends Sudan's sovereignty

In light of this way of thinking, China has repeatedly used veto threats to block the deployment of a joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, significantly weakening international pressure on Sudan's government to solve the crisis.

China does diplomacy in its own way, stress officials in Beijing. Unimpressed with what it - and others - see as the West's strong-arm tactics and father-knows-best conditionality for aid and trade, China aims for a subtler, more respectful approach.

For example, while Chinese President Hu Jintao made no public statements about Darfur during his February visit to Sudan, he did discuss the issue with Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir behind closed doors, according to Zhang Dong, China's ambassador in Khartoum. China "...never interferes in Sudan's internal affairs," Zhang emphasized to the Xinhua news agency - but it does "play an essential role here" by "respecting" Sudan and "consulting with it as an equal."

"The Chinese government is very cautious," stresses Xu Weizhong, director of the department of African Studies at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, a government think tank. "If it loses influence with Khartoum, a direct confrontation between Sudan and the United States could make the situation worse."

In April, Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Zhai Jun repeated this message after a three-day trip to Sudan, which included a visit to a Darfur refugee camp, a rare move for a Chinese official. "The Chinese government is deeply concerned with the Darfur issue and has provided several batches of humanitarian assistance materials to the region," Xinhua quoted Mr. Zhai as saying - but there were no public calls for UN troops to be allowed in, or pressure to stop the killings.

But less than a week later, whether or not due to quiet pressure by China, President Bashir conceded to a deployment of 3,500 UN peacekeepers into Darfur.

Those peacekeepers have yet to deploy, but this month Bashir also agreed to an expanded force in the region, with up to 25,000 African Union and UN peacekeepers.

At times like this, even the US, which is more often than not critical of Chinese foreign dealings, admits that Beijing's cautious behind-the-scenes diplomacy might be working in concert with the US's more aggressive style.

Appearing at a Senate hearing in April, Bush's special Darfur representative, Andrew Natsios, said Beijing's "subtle diplomacy" complemented, rather than undercut Washington's sanctions-based policy.

He also said he thought China's diplomacy might have been the "critical factor" in persuading Khartoum to accept a "heavy support package" for the outgunned 7,000-strong African Union force in Darfur. "I think they may be the crucial actors. I think there has been a lot of China bashing in the West, and I'm not sure, to be very frank with you, right now it's very helpful."

Still, many critics say that China's willingness to befriend, do business with, and diplomatically protect questionable regimes does not end with Sudan.

For example, Beijing's relations with Zimbabwe, even while cooling in recent months, still include, among other things, supplying it with fighter jets.

This relationship has been a major support to the otherwise internationally ostracized President Robert Mugabe: With both human rights conditions and the economy in a free fall under Mr. Mugabe, China has in recent years sold more than $200 million of military hardware to Zimbabwe.

After Mugabe launched Operation Murambatsvina - or Operation "Drive Out Trash" - last year, in which 700,000 people had their homes or businesses destroyed in order to clear urban slums for renewal, China blocked condemnation in the UN Security Council.

'Coddling' authoritarian regimes?

"There is a perception," said Deputy Assistant Secretary of African Affairs James Swan, speaking at Columbia University in New York in February, " ... that China is willing to coddle authoritarian regimes."

Furthermore, because of its attitude that sovereignty of nations must be respected above all else, China does not tie its aid or investment to conditions such as good governance, fighting corruption, or adopting reforms - the sort of conditions that have long been mainstays for the West and international institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

This ends up being convenient for regimes that do not care to make reforms in their countries and undercuts efforts by other donors and investors to press for positive reform, say critics.

"China is doing business here - fine," says Mr. Deng Moyndit. "But it is not being careful with lives of others, which is not acceptable. [China]... is no friend of ours.'"

Staff writers Scott Baldauf and Peter Ford contributed to this report from Khartoum, Sudan, and Beijing.

   

 

US Immigration as Percent of Population - 1820-2004

US Immigration as Percent of Population - 1820-2004 From US Politics at About.com

Illegal Immigration Policy: The Current Evolution of Thought and Practice

Illegal Immigration Policy: The Current Evolution of Thought and Practice

Center for Immigration Studies

* Center for Immigration Studies

Migration Information Source - U.S. Historical Trends

Migration Information Source - U.S. Historical Trends

Historical Census Statistics on the Foreign-Born Population of the United States: 1850 to 1990

Historical Census Statistics on the Foreign-Born Population of the United States: 1850 to 1990

Leslie Page Moch: Moving Europeans. Migration in Western Europe since 1650.

Leslie Page Moch: Moving Europeans. Migration in Western Europe since 1650.

By Gunnar Thovaldsen, Norwegian Historical Data Centre.
"Migration is becoming the most important branch of demography," wrote T.-H. Hollingsworth in 1970. And sure enough, during the next decade quite a number of books and articles appeared on both historical and contemporary migration research. Even so, this vast field was far from thoroughly explored, several local studies being started and concluded during the next decade also. That extensive migration has been going on regularly in most places for several centuries, has for long been an established fact. We had, however, to wait until recently for a comprehensive historical overview of migration in Europe as a whole. Earlier attempts were either cursory attempts in model-building or sociologically oriented surveys where historical migration research played second fiddle.²

Continue reading Leslie Page Moch: Moving Europeans. Migration in Western Europe since 1650..

ARCHIVE OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION - "Changing patterns and parameters in EU immigration policy"

ARCHIVE OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION - "Changing patterns and parameters in EU immigration policy"

East-West Migration in the Context of an Enlarging European Union: New Opportunities and New Challenges

East-West Migration in the Context of an Enlarging European Union: New Opportunities and New Challenges

Mariyana Radeva

Mariyana Radeva recently completed her undergraduate degree at Tufts University, Boston, MA, USA, and will be continuing her education at the Diplomatic Academy in Vienna, Austria.

Introduction

The first of May 2004 marked an important date in the history of Europe as a political, geographic, and social entity. Ten European countries joined the European Union, bringing in their potential and expectations, adding a total population of 75 million people and a territory of 738,000 square kilometres. The EU-25 has 452 million citizens.



Continue reading East-West Migration in the Context of an Enlarging European Union: New Opportunities and New Challenges .

Slavery in the UK

* Slavery in the UK Independent


This is the story of Somalatha, who is from Sri Lanka. It is not her real name - you are about to find out why. It is a story that most people will disbelieve could occur in modern-day Britain. Sadly, it is true. It happened very recently

Published: 27 December 2006

Somalatha arrived in Britain when she was 29 with a family for whom she had been working in Jordan. Her job was to be a maid. She had to work 16 to 18 hours a day, for which she was paid £200 a month. In the first two years, she was not given one day off.

She was not allowed to eat with the family and had to wait for leftovers. If there were none, she was advised to eat onions and potatoes. If any food was missing, she was automatically blamed for it, or even punished.


Continue reading Slavery in the UK .

Migrants 'shape globalised world'

* BBC NEWS | Special Reports | Migrants 'shape globalised world'

By David Loyn
Developing world correspondent, BBC News

For a look at what the new world of migrants really means, take a walk around the old town in Doha any Friday afternoon.

Near the Wind Tower, an original desert house designed to draw cooling air through its mud walls, thousands of men gather to meet, sit, walk and talk.

They wear their best clothes, filling every available space on the marble avenues and squares that are the preserve of shoppers the rest of the week.



Continue reading Migrants 'shape globalised world'.

WEST AFRICA: From Desertification, to Migration, to Conflict

WEST AFRICA: From Desertification, to Migration, to Conflict IPS


Fulgence Zamblé

TABOU, Jan 4 (IPS) - It has been three years since Brahima Ouédraogo, a small-scale farmer from Burkina Faso, arrived in a little village in the Tabou region of south-western Côte d'Ivoire with his family, in search of arable land.

Initially residents of Klotou gave the newcomers a warm welcome. But, this warmth has since died away; in fact, some would even like to see the Ouédraogo family leave.

"When you enter our forests, they are all being used by the immigrants with no concern for preservation of the environment," says Marc Kallé, who lives in Klotou.

He complains that Burkinabé and other West African farmers set up camps in the forests and make fires to hunt animals: "In these conditions, there will probably be nothing left in a few years. There is no more land to share here. Come the right time, each one will be asked to go home."


Continue reading WEST AFRICA: From Desertification, to Migration, to Conflict .

The flower farms where immigrants prove their value to the economy

The flower farms where immigrants prove their value to the economy Independent

Terri Judd

 For as far as the eye could see, thousands of daffodils in uniform rows protruded from the boggy ground. At a flower farm in deepest Cornwall yesterday, each stem awaited a flower picker to bend, cut it, bunch it and place it carefully in a tray, one of hundreds of blooms to be transported to Marks & Spencer or Sainsbury's. Shoppers may not be aware of the Bulgarian, Romanian, Russian or Ukrainian labouring over their flowers. But for Ivan Dimitrov, a tall young man contemplating the field through a veil of rain, this will be his life for the next five months.

Continue reading The flower farms where immigrants prove their value to the economy .

How richest fuel global warming - but poorest suffer most from it

How richest fuel global warming - but poorest suffer most from it Independent

By Philip Thornton, Economics Correspondent Published: 09 January 2007

By the end of tomorrow the average Briton will have caused as much global warning as the typical Kenyan will over the whole of this year, according to a report.

The findings highlight the glaring imbalance between the rich countries that produce most of the pollution and the poor countries that suffer the consequences in the forms of drought, floods, starvation and disease.

The World Development Movement (WDM), a poverty campaign group, has drawn up a "climate calendar" showing the dates when the UK will have emitted as much CO2 gas as other countries will in a year.

Unsurprisingly, the poorest counties such as Chad, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo produce virtually no carbon emissions. Even populous countries such as India will be overtaken in its emissions by the UK in a month's time. In fact, 164 countries in the world have a smaller carbon foootprint than the UK, while just 20, mainly including the major oil producers as well as the US, have a larger one.

By the end of tomorrow the average Briton will have produced 0.26 tonnes of CO2 emissions.



Continue reading How richest fuel global warming - but poorest suffer most from it .

Life at America's bottom wage

Life at America's bottom wage CSM

from the January 09, 2007 edition

(Photograph) A $6-AN-HOUR JOB: John Hosier, who works at the Salvation Army's thrift store in Muskogee, Okla., struggles to pay his family's bills.
JENNIFER LYLES/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR

Life at America's bottom wage

The House is to vote Wednesday on a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour.

| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
- It's the kind of December evening when the Hosier family might want to stay home.

At work all day, John Hosier has been resting on the living-room couch. Tina, his wife, has had her hands full taking care of their two young children. Yet, here they are, rolling 18-month-old Rose in a stroller with 5-year-old Donald tagging along, on a half-mile walk to the Salvation Army Church in Muskogee, Okla.



Continue reading Life at America's bottom wage .

In officially colorblind France, blacks have a dream – and now a lobby

In officially colorblind France, blacks have a dream – and now a lobby | csmonitor.com


| Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
- Patrick Lozès has a dream: One day France's black citizens will enjoy the equality granted them under law.

"To be black and proud - that's not being anti-French," says Mr. Lozès, whose vision challenges France's colorblind model of assimilation. "It's simply theliberation of a people who don't see themselves reflected in their country's public life - in its theater, television, medicine, and universities - except in negative images."


Continue reading In officially colorblind France, blacks have a dream – and now a lobby.

Globalisation and the rise of inequality

Globalisation and the rise of inequality | Rich man, poor man | Economist.com

Rich man, poor man

Jan 18th 2007
From The Economist print edition

A poisonous mix of inequality and sluggish wages threatens globalisation


James Fryer

GLUERS and sawyers from the furniture factories in Galax near the mountains of Virginia lost their jobs last year when American retailers decided they could find a better supplier in China. At the other end of the furniture industry Robert Nardelli lost his job this month when Home Depot decided it could find a better chief executive in his deputy. But any likeness ends there. Mr Nardelli's exit was as extravagantly rewarded as his occupation of the corner office had been. Next to his $210m severance pay, the redundant woodworkers' packages were mean to the point of provocation.



Continue reading Globalisation and the rise of inequality .

War in Iraq Propelling A Massive Migration

War in Iraq Propelling A Massive Migration - washingtonpost.com

Correction to This Article
A Feb. 4 article said that about roughly a third of Jordan's population of 5.9 million are Palestinian refugees. The proportion includes Palestinian refugees and their descendants.

Wave Creates Tension Across the Middle East

Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, February 4, 2007; Page A01

AMMAN, Jordan -- Inside his cold, crumbling apartment, Saad Ali teeters on the fringes of life. Once a popular singer in his native Baghdad, he is now unemployed. To pay his $45 monthly rent, he borrows from friends. To bathe, he boils water on a tiny heater. He sleeps on a frayed mattress, under a tattered blanket.


Continue reading War in Iraq Propelling A Massive Migration.

Bangladesh: At the mercy of climate change

Bangladesh: At the mercy of climate change - Independent

The Sundarbans nature reserve in Bangladesh's south-west is one of the last untouched places on Earth - and home to the largest population of tigers left in the wild. But the trees in the Sundarbans have suddenly started dying. And not just that: they have started dying in a way nobody has seen before, from the top down.

Continue reading Bangladesh: At the mercy of climate change .

Pakistani doctor's suicide highlights plight of unemployed immigrants

* Pakistani doctor's suicide highlights plight of unemployed immigrants


By Jonathan Brown and David Langton

Published: 19 February 2007

Imran Yousaf was already a qualified doctor when he said goodbye to his family in their village outside Lahore and headed for Britain to start a new life.

Like generations of other young medics from the Indian subcontinent, he thought he was desperately needed in the UK to shore up an NHS critically short of trained staff.

But two years later, having used up all his family savings and borrowed heavily from friends, Dr Yousaf, 28, was unemployed. Not that he had been idle in the meantime, having paid for and passed with flying colours the exam to practice in Britain. He was also studying for the finals of a Royal College of Physicians post-graduate qualification. Friends recalled how he wrote hundreds of letters each week to UK hospitals and applied for thousands of posts since setting up home in Burnley.


Continue reading Pakistani doctor's suicide highlights plight of unemployed immigrants .

Life on the Burma-Thai border

BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Life on the Burma-Thai border


In the first of a series of articles from the Thai-Burma border, the BBC's Kate McGeown looks at the thousands of political and economic migrants who flee Burma for Thailand every year.

If you did not know that the town of Mae Sot was in Thailand, you would probably assume it was in Burma.

Burmese script is written on almost every shop front, most of the men walk round town wearing longyis (sarongs) and traditional Burmese teashops are on every corner.

The presence of so much that is quintessentially Burmese is unsurprising, given that Burmese nationals in this border town now outnumber Thais by more than two to one.


Continue reading Life on the Burma-Thai border.

Low Pay and Broken Promises Greet Guest Workers

Low Pay and Broken Promises Greet Guest Workers - New York Times


Published: February 28, 2007

To a rice farmer from Thailand making $500 a year, the recruiter's pitch was hard to resist -- three years of farm work in North Carolina that would pay more than 30 times as much as he earned at home.

Skip to next paragraph
Barbara P. Fernandez for The New York Times

Pradit Wiangkham, right; Chinnawat Kompeemay, center; and Worawut Khansamrit, behind Mr. Kompeemay, were recruited from Thailand.

The pitch was so persuasive that the farmer, Worawut Khansamrit, put his farm up as collateral to pay the recruiter $11,000 to become a guest worker. "The amount of money they promised was very attractive," said Mr. Khansamrit, a slight, soft-spoken 40-year-old with a 15-year-old daughter he wants to send to college.

But after he arrived in North Carolina with 30 other Thai workers, he found there was only about a month's work. He was then taken to New Orleans to remove debris from a hotel damaged by Hurricane Katrina -- work he says he was never paid for. This month, he and other Thai workers filed a federal lawsuit asserting that they were victims of illegal trafficking.


Continue reading Low Pay and Broken Promises Greet Guest Workers.

Migrants: Globalization's Junk Mail?

Foreign Policy In Focus | Migrants: Globalization's Junk Mail?

Laura Carlsen | February 23, 2007 The titles that Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attaches to its operations reveal a great deal about the logic behind current U.S. immigration policy. Among the most suggestively titled is the ongoing Operation "Return to Sender," one of the largest such operations in U.S. history. The program, supposedly designed to target "fugitive aliens," has resulted in the indiscriminate round up of over 13,000 undocumented migrants in cities throughout the United States. The cynical name given to this even more cynical operation implies a sender, a receiver -- and an object. The object, or rather objects, are migrant workers and their families. Operation Return to Sender is an instrumentalist policy that ignores the humanity of migrant workers. It refuses to recognize that migrants have hopes and dreams, that they have a legitimate need to eat and think and act. It denies family ties and affective relationships. It also ignores the central role that undocumented workers play in the U.S. economy and the factors that brought them to the country in the first place. In short, Operation Return to Sender acts on the premise that the millions of undocumented workers in the United States today are little more than globalization's junk mail.

Continue reading Migrants: Globalization's Junk Mail? .

Migrant workers stand to lose their rights

Migrant workers stand to lose their rights


news.independent.co.uk

    • By Nigel Morris, Home Affairs Correspondent

      Published: 02 March 2007

      Migrant workers who come to Britain as cooks, cleaners and nannies could become virtual slaves in their employers' homes under new immigration rules, campaigners are warning.

      Ministers faced charges of hypocrisy as Labour campaigned on the issue in opposition, highlighting accusations of sexual abuse, physical assault and poverty pay regularly faced by foreign domestic staff.

      It legislated as a priority, a year after Tony Blair's first election victory in 1997, to give extra rights to thousands of such workers.


Continue reading Migrant workers stand to lose their rights.

Global Migration and Human Mobility - MacArthur Foundation

Global Migration and Human Mobility - MacArthur Foundation



ESRC Society Today - Global Migration

* ESRC Society Today - Global Migration

Good migration overview with charts

EUROPE | Global migration reaches record high

* BBC News | EUROPE | Global migration reaches record high

Migration has reached its highest level ever, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

The Geneva-based organisation says there are now about 150 million migrants worldwide - just under 3% of the world population. That is 30 million more than 10 years ago.



Continue reading EUROPE | Global migration reaches record high .

Global Warming Could Boost Illegal Immigration

Global Warming Could Boost Illegal Immigration, Expert Says -- 09/20/2006


By Randy Hall
CNSNews.com Staff Writer/Editor
September 20, 2006

(CNSNews.com) - Global warming might cause an increase in illegal immigration as people "flee storm-ravaged or sun-parched regions" to find refuge in the U.S., according to an expert who addressed a gathering on climate change in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday.

"Large-scale climatic disruptions in nearby nations, such as Mexico or Caribbean Island nations," may result in "spillover effects on the health system in the U.S.," said Devra Lee Davis, director of the Center for Environmental Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, in an abstract on the subject, "Changes in Severe Weather and Climate: Implications for Human Health."


Continue reading Global Warming Could Boost Illegal Immigration.

GLOBAL MIGRATION PERSPECTIVES

* GLOBAL MIGRATION PERSPECTIVES

39 page pdf report No. 16 October 2004 Migrants, labour markets and integration in Europe: a comparative analysis Rainer Münz Senior Fellow Hamburg Institute of International Economics rainer.muenz@hwwa.de Global Commission on International Migration 1, Rue Richard Wagner CH-1202 Geneva Switzerland Phone: +41-22-748-48-50 E-mail: info@gcim.org Web: http://www.gcim.org

Leading British institutions gripped by racism rows

Independent Online Edition Leading British institutions gripped by racism rows


Three British institutions are engulfed by race rows - but the protagonists all deny any charges of bigotry

By Robert Verkaik

Published: 09 March 2007

Britain's institutions stand accused of fostering a climate of casual racism after a series of race rows yesterday provoked clashes between MPs, academics and leaders of the black and Asian communities.

In the most high-profile case, David Cameron, the Tory party leader, was forced to sack his frontbench spokesman on homeland security, Patrick Mercer, because he suggested that being called a "black bastard" was part and parcel of life in the Army for ethnic minority soldiers.


Continue reading Leading British institutions gripped by racism rows.

Immigration, population and the environment

Immigration, population and the environment


by The Weeden Foundation
The United States has been described as the world's most overpopulated country because we are the only one with massive population, massive growth and massive per-capita consumption.

No doubt, it is critical our society lower drastically the average American ecological footprint of 24 acres per person (a level far exceeding our nation's resources). But if the United States adds yet another 100 million residents during the next few decades as projected, any gains in reducing per-capita consumption - or promoting smart growth, or better managing water resources - are likely to be negated.


Continue reading Immigration, population and the environment .

Rising Sea Levels Threaten Indian Islands

Rising Sea Levels Threaten Indian Islands

 By Bappa Majumdar
    Reuters

    Sunday 18 March 2007

    Sheikh Alauddin, like hundreds of other residents living on West Bengal's Moushuni island, has never heard the term "global warming." But he is living with its consequences.

    "At night we just pray to God, and hope the sea does not drown us," the 60-year-old told Reuters in Poilagheri village on the sparsely-populated island, part of the Sunderbans national park and the world's largest mangrove forest.



Continue reading Rising Sea Levels Threaten Indian Islands .

Agents fleece Bangladeshi migrants

Al Jazeera - Agents fleece Bangladeshi migrants

By Tony Birtley in Dhaka





 


On the outskirts of Dhaka, adults and children pick
through the city's biggest rubbish dump
Millions of migrant workers from developing countries travel abroad each year to jobs they hope will bring money and security to their families, but many end their journey in prison, despair and financial ruin.

Construction and manufacturing industries in the growing economies of the Middle East and Asia could not survive without the migrant workers who travel from some of the world's poorest countries.

They often have to work long hours for little pay, enjoy few rights and often endure poor living conditions.



Continue reading Agents fleece Bangladeshi migrants .

Antarctic Melting May be Speeding Up

Antarctic Melting May be Speeding Up - CommonDreams.org - Breaking News and Views for the Progressive Community


by Michael Byrnes

HOBART (Australia) - Rising sea levels and melting polar ice-sheets are at upper limits of projections, leaving some human population centers already unable to cope, top world scientists say as they analyze latest satellite data.

A United Nations report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in February projected sea level gains of 18-59 centimeters (7-23 inches) this century from temperature rises of 1.8-4.0 Celsius (3.2-7.8 Farenheit).
Continue reading Antarctic Melting May be Speeding Up.

Iraq, Iraq-Syria: Call for aid as Iraqi refugees' misery compounds

Iraq, Iraq-Syria: Call for aid as Iraqi refugees' misery compounds


www.reliefweb.int


    • [This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

      DAMASCUS, 25 March 2007 (IRIN) - Life for Ahlam al-Mulla, her husband and three children was meant to get easier after they fled their home outside Baghdad for the safety of Syria.

      In July 2004, the 42-year-old Sunni was kidnapped on her way to work for the Iraqi Help Centre - a US-sponsored welfare organisation. The militia men who took her accused her of being an agent of the US occupation. They beat her for eight days, she said.

      "My husband had to pay US $50,000 to get me released, otherwise I would have been killed," Ahlam told IRIN in her bare living room in Damascus. "I was absolutely terrified."


Continue reading Iraq, Iraq-Syria: Call for aid as Iraqi refugees' misery compounds .

Disappearing world: Global warming claims tropical island

Disappearing world: Global warming claims tropical island - Independent Online Edition > Environment


For the first time, an inhabited island has disappeared beneath rising seas. Environment Editor Geoffrey Lean reports

Published: 24 December 2006

Rising seas, caused by global warming, have for the first time washed an inhabited island off the face of the Earth. The obliteration of Lohachara island, in India's part of the Sundarbans where the Ganges and the Brahmaputra rivers empty into the Bay of Bengal, marks the moment when one of the most apocalyptic predictions of environmentalists and climate scientists has started coming true.

As the seas continue to swell, they will swallow whole island nations, from the Maldives to the Marshall Islands, inundate vast areas of countries from Bangladesh to Egypt, and submerge parts of scores of coastal cities.


Continue reading Disappearing world: Global warming claims tropical island.

By 2020, 12 more Sunderban islands set to go under water

By 2020, 12 more Sunderban islands set to go under water


By IE
Monday October 30, 03:19 PM

If sea water level rises at present pace...
An annual 3.14 mm rise in sea level at Sunderbans due to climate change is eating away 12 islands on the delta, says a study by a group of scientists from Jadavpur University.

The review says around 70,000 residents of Sunderban delta may turn into "environmental refugees" in the next 14 years unless the government initiates counter measures right away.

The findings, carried out by a team of scientists from Jadavpur University's School of Oceanographic Studies, are part of a vulnerability assessment project.

Continue reading By 2020, 12 more Sunderban islands set to go under water.

Vanishing islands Displaced Climate casualties Underlying truth

The Telegraph - Vanishing islands Displaced Climate casualties Underlying truth

Rising sea levels are playing havoc across the Sundarbans -- two islands have already been submerged. More islands are facing the same fate, reports Subhra Priyadarshini
Losing ground:Land area in the Sundarbans islands is shrinking.

They saw the shore pushing in closer every day. Yet, Shamila and her mother never thought the sea would completely devour their tiny island of Lohachara in the Sundarbans. And then one day, it did. The family of four was forced to pack its modest belongings and head for Sagar, the largest island in west Sundarbans. In the late 1990s, more such families followed suit.

"There's nothing any more where our island once was. It's just a huge stretch of sea where vessels ply," says Shamila's father Seikh Abdullah, among the first batch of envirogees (environment refugees) who have now settled in Sagar. Nearly 7,000 of his former island mates are his neighbours again.



Continue reading Vanishing islands Displaced Climate casualties Underlying truth.

Retreating Himalayan Icefields Threatening Drought in Bangladesh

Retreating Himalayan Icefields Threatening Drought in Bangladesh


Retreating Himalayan Icefields Threatening Drought in Bangladesh

by Justin Huggler

Notorious for its annual floods, Bangladesh may seem the last place in the world to worry about a drying up of the rivers that flow from the Himalayas. But the country is as much at risk from drought as it is from flooding. Already farmers who used to grow rice have turned to farming prawns because the water in their fields has turned so salty nothing will grow there.

0329 04Bangladesh is the front line of global warming, with rivers drying up, and increasingly common freak weather conditions that include out-of-season tornadoes and tides that have stopped changing. The entire country is one huge delta, formed by the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers. Flooding may seem to be Bangladesh's greatest enemy, but in fact the rivers are its lifeline. They are the main source of fresh water for a country where agriculture represents 21 per cent of the economy. And environmentalists fear that if the Himalayan glaciers melt, the rivers' flow will reduce drastically.

Most people tend to think the main risk in Bangladesh is a catastrophic flood from rising sea levels. But the country has a defense against that: a series of dikes along the coast which should be able to withstand predicted rises in the sea level. There is no defense against drought.

Professor Ainun Nishat, one of the country's leading climate experts, says it is the melting of the Himalayan glaciers that worries him most - more than rising sea levels or changing local weather patterns. "At the moment, we're probably seeing a slight increase in the river flow because of [the glaciers melting]," he says. "But what happens in two to five years when the glaciers are gone?"

The north-west faced an unprecedented drought last year, after the annual monsoon rains failed completely. Farmers had to resort to pumping ground water to survive, but they fear the ground water will dry up if the rains fail again.


Continue reading Retreating Himalayan Icefields Threatening Drought in Bangladesh.

Wars of the world: how global warming puts 60 nations at risk

Wars of the world: how global warming puts 60 nations at risk - Independent Online Edition > Climate Change


As scientists deliver a detailed report on the impact of climate change this week, an 'IoS' investigation shows it will spark a major rise in conflicts

By Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor

Published: 01 April 2007

Scores of countries face war for scarce land, food and water as global warming increases. This is the conclusion of the most devastating report yet on the effects of climate change that scientists and governments prepare to issue this week.

More than 60 nations, mainly in the Third World, will have existing tensions hugely exacerbated by the struggle for ever-scarcer resources. Others now at peace - including China, the United States and even parts of Europe - are expected to be plunged into conflict. Even those not directly affected will be threatened by a flood of hundreds of millions of "environmental refugees".


Continue reading Wars of the world: how global warming puts 60 nations at risk.

Whose Oil Is It, Anyway?

Whose Oil Is It, Anyway? - New York Times


Published: March 13, 2007

San Francisco


Jacob Magraw-Mickelson

TODAY more than three-quarters of the world's oil is owned and controlled by governments. It wasn't always this way.

Until about 35 years ago, the world's oil was largely in the hands of seven corporations based in the United States and Europe. Those seven have since merged into four: ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and BP. They are among the world's largest and most powerful financial empires. But ever since they lost their exclusive control of the oil to the governments, the companies have been trying to get it back.


Continue reading Whose Oil Is It, Anyway?.

Poor Nations to Bear Brunt as World Warms

Poor Nations to Bear Brunt as World Warms - New York Times


Joao Silva for The New York Times

A woman harvesting corn in Malawi, an African country that is already prone to drought and faces grim prospects under global warming.

Andrew Revkin  4/01/07

The world's richest countries, which have contributed by far the most to the atmospheric changes linked to global warming, are already spending billions of dollars to limit their own risks from its worst consequences, like drought and rising seas.


Continue reading Poor Nations to Bear Brunt as World Warms.

Global Warming Could Bring Hunger

Global Warming Could Bring Hunger - FOX6 San Diego


OSLO (Reuters) - Global warming could cause more hunger in Africa and melt most Himalayan glaciers by the 2030s, according to a draft U.N. report due on Friday which also warns that the poorest nations are likely to suffer most.

The U.N. climate panel, giving the most authoritative study on the regional impact of climate change since 2001, also predicts more heatwaves in countries such as the United States, and damages corals including Australia's Great Barrier Reef.


Continue reading Global Warming Could Bring Hunger.

Climate Report Maps Out 'Highway to Extinction'

Climate Report Maps Out 'Highway to Extinction'


Climate Report Maps Out 'Highway to Extinction'

by Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON-A key element of the second major report on climate change being released Friday in Belgium is a chart that maps out the effects of global warming, most of them bad, with every degree of temperature rise.There's one bright spot: A minimal heat rise means more food production in northern regions of the world.


Continue reading Climate Report Maps Out 'Highway to Extinction'.

Global Warming - Reports From Four Fronts - Malawi, India, Netherlands, Australia

Global Warming - Reports From Four Fronts - Malawi, India, Netherlands, Australia - New York Times


April 3, 2007
The Climate Divide

Over the last few decades, as scientists have intensified their study of the human effects on climate and of the effects of climate change on humans, a common theme has emerged: in both respects, the world is a very unequal place.

In almost every instance, the people most at risk from climate change live in countries that have contributed the least to the atmospheric buildup of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases linked to the recent warming of the planet.


Continue reading Global Warming - Reports From Four Fronts - Malawi, India, Netherlands, Australia.

Sea's Rise in India Buries Islands and a Way of Life

Sea's Rise in India Buries Islands and a Way of Life - New York Times


Published: April 11, 2007

Sea's Rise in India Buries Islands and a Way of Life

J. Adam Huggins for The New York Times

A landscape of Ghoramara Island, seen during low tide, on the sea side of an embankment that is all that stands between the residents and the rising waters that threaten their homes.


Continue reading Sea's Rise in India Buries Islands and a Way of Life.

Global Warming Could Spur 21st Century Conflicts

Global Warming Could Spur 21st Century Conflicts - CommonDreams.org


Global Warming Could Spur 21st Century Conflicts

by Alister Doyle

OSLO - Droughts, floods and rising seas linked to global warming could spur conflicts in coming decades, experts said on Monday, the eve of a first U.N. Security Council debate on climate change.And the poor in tropical regions of Africa and Asia are likely to suffer most, perhaps creating tensions with rich nations in the temperate north which are likely to escape the worst effects of warming widely blamed on use of fossil fuels. 0416 05

"Global warming increases the potential for conflict," said Janos Bogardi, head of the U.N. University's Institute for Environment and Human Security in Bonn.

"The most imminent effect is probably desertification and land degradation," he told Reuters. His group has projected that climate change might force hundreds of millions of people from their homes in the long term.

Bogardi said the conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan, where 200,000 people have died, was "probably the most prominent example" of a conflict partly caused by land degradation.

In the longer term, rising seas caused by melting icecaps and glaciers could swamp large tracts of countries such as Bangladesh, forcing millions to migrate and raising the chances of conflicts over shrinking land.


Continue reading Global Warming Could Spur 21st Century Conflicts.

Bangladesh: A nation in fear of drowning

Bangladesh: A nation in fear of drowning - Independent Online Edition > Climate


The once lush island of Aralia is disappearing under rising waters as flooding becomes more frequent, temperatures increase and disease kills four people a month

By Ann McFerran

Published: 18 April 2007

Shamola Begum will never forget the way her son cried in the last days of his life. Nine-year-old Masuk had always been a sickly child, but before he died he'd pleaded: "Mother, I need food." But Shamola often only had a little rice to feed him; nothing more.


Continue reading Bangladesh: A nation in fear of drowning.

An altered state

An altered state Guardian


Britain has seen extraordinary rates of change through mass migration in recent years. Now we must develop strong policies that recognise this.

Jon Crudas

April 19, 2007

In the past few years many communities have experienced extraordinary rates of change through mass migration, changing patterns in the demand for labour and the dynamics of the housing market.

Such huge demographic changes have proved difficult for the state to respond to, or even to comprehend, not least because many of the people affected do not show up in any census and therefore do not even exist for the purposes of public policy making.


Continue reading An altered state.

Unskilled workers to be barred from UK

Unskilled workers to be barred from UK - Independent Online Edition > UK Politics


By Nigel Morris, Home Affairs Correspondent

Published: 19 April 2007

Lower-skilled workers from outside the European Union will not be allowed to migrate to Britain from the start of next year, under new immigration rules.

With official figures today showing net migration to this country of 185,000 in 2005, the Government signalled a new drive to control the influx. Liam Byrne, the Immigration minister, set out the timetable for a new points-based system designed to limit numbers of newcomers.


Continue reading Unskilled workers to be barred from UK.

Could global warming cause war?

Could global warming cause war? | csmonitor.com


A new report warns that conflicts over water and food could intensify as the climate changes.

For years, the debate over global warming has focused on the three big "E's": environment, energy, and economic impact. This week it officially entered the realm of national security threats and avoiding wars as well.


Continue reading Could global warming cause war?.

UK asylum detainees in epidemic of self-harm

UK asylum detainees in epidemic of self-harm | UK News | The Observer

Report claims overcrowding and staff abuse are driving asylum seekers to desperate behaviour

Jamie Doward, home affairs editor
Sunday May 20, 2007
The Observer


Hunger strikes, rioting and self-harm are now endemic in Britain's biggest detention centres as detainees become increasingly desperate about living in what they claim are deteriorating conditions.

At Yarl's Wood in Bedfordshire, more than 100 women are refusing to eat, and there have been recent reports of major disturbances at Lindholme, South Yorkshire, and at Colnbrook in Middlesex.



Continue reading UK asylum detainees in epidemic of self-harm.

Climate, Conflicts to Displace Billion

Climate, Conflicts to Displace Billion


By IOL Staff



Image

"We believe that forced migration is now the most urgent threat facing poor people in the developing world," said Davison

CAIRO -- No less than one billion people will be forced to flee their homes in the next four decades because of the effect of climate change and burgeoning conflicts, the charity Christian Aid said in a report on Monday, May 14.

"We believe that forced migration is now the most urgent threat facing poor people in the developing world," said John Davison, the lead author of the "Human Tide: the real migration crisis" report.

"We estimate that over the years between now and 2050, a total of one billion people will be displaced from their homes."

Scientists predict that average temperatures will rise by between 1.8 and 3.0 degrees Celsius this century because of greenhouse gas emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels, causing floods and famines and putting million of lives at risk.

"The impact of climate change is the great," said the report.



Continue reading Climate, Conflicts to Displace Billion .

Victim of Climate Change, a Town Seeks a Lifeline

Victim of Climate Change, a Town Seeks a Lifeline - New York Times


Published: May 27, 2007

NEWTOK, Alaska -- The sturdy little Cessnas land whenever the fog lifts, delivering children's bicycles, boxes of bullets, outboard motors and cans of dried oats. And then, with a rumble down a gravel strip, the planes are gone, the outside world recedes and this subarctic outpost steels itself once again to face the frontier of climate change.


Continue reading Victim of Climate Change, a Town Seeks a Lifeline.

Millions who risk death for a better life

Millions who risk death for a better life - Independent Online Edition > Africa


By Steve Bloomfield. Africa Correspondent

Published: 28 May 2007

Across Africa, millions are dreaming of fleeing to Europe. Families scrimp and save to find the money needed to secure a seat on a boat. Young men, often fathers, squeeze on to overcrowded, rickety fishing boats that leave Senegal, Libya or Somalia in the dead of night. They take with them nothing more than the hope that a better life lies across the sea.


Continue reading Millions who risk death for a better life.

Rules to make migrants integrate

Rules to make migrants integrate | Special reports | Guardian Unlimited

Ministers say citizenship should depend on good behaviour, passing English tests and knowledge of UK

Patrick Wintour, political editor and Alan Travis
Tuesday June 5, 2007
The Guardian


A girl holds an umbrella at St Pauls Cathedral in London
Proposals from ministers stress that migrants should be made to feel that British citizenship is something that has to be earned. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty
 


Continue reading Rules to make migrants integrate.

A Point System for Immigrants Incites Passions

A point system at the heart of the immigration bill before Congress would bode poorly for Herminia Licona Sandoval, who wants her son to come to the United States.

Published: June 5, 2007

WASHINGTON, June 4 -- Ekaterina D. Atanasova, a civil engineer from Bulgaria who lives in southern Maine, wants to bring her husband to the United States. Under the Senate immigration bill, he would get high marks -- at least 74 points -- because he too is a civil engineer, has a master's degree and is fluent in English.

Continue reading A Point System for Immigrants Incites Passions.

UN warns of five million Iraqi refugees

UN warns of five million Iraqi refugees - Independent Online Edition > Middle East


Half of displaced people have no access to food aid

By Patrick Cockburn

Published: 10 June 2007

Omar, a Sunni driver, lived in a pleasant house in a Shia neighbourhood of al-Jihad district in west Baghdad until he decided that it was too dangerous for his family to stay.

He moved with them to Damascus, but it was too expensive and he had no chance of getting a job.

He returned to his home in al-Jihad, but when he arrived his neighbours said that the Mahdi Army Shia militia had left a message for him. It said that if he ever re-occupied the house, they would kill him.


Continue reading UN warns of five million Iraqi refugees.

The true story of a refugee in Britain

The true story of a refugee in Britain - Independent Online Edition > UK Politics

 

Immigration is one of the most highly charged political issues of our time. Yet how much do we know about the lives of those arriving in Britain as refugees? In the first of a series of extraordinary personal stories, 'Dog' describes the journey that brought him here - and his struggle to survive in a cruel and indifferent world

Interview by Carole Angier

Published: 18 June 2007

I I'll tell you my story, but I won't tell you my name. People say "it's a dog's life". You can call me Dog. I come from Africa. I won't say where. My father left my mother when I was very young. I don't remember him, he never took care of me. My mother did her best. She worked selling fruit in the market, but we were poor. In Africa, if you have no money, you get no schooling, so I never went to school. Sometimes my mother would go away for a long time and would leave me with friends. They didn't treat me well. Sometimes I didn't have enough to eat. I had to beg on the street. I was only five or six years old. Young.

So my life was rough from the start. Maybe God wanted to prepare me. But he prepared me well, because my mother is a good woman. She loved me and taught me good things: work hard, don't steal, trust in God. But one day she didn't come back. I asked and asked her friends, but they didn't tell me what had happened to her for a long time. Finally, they said she had died. I was about 10 years old. I don't even know where she is buried, or who paid for her grave.


Continue reading The true story of a refugee in Britain.

India's war of the vegetables

India's war of the vegetables - Independent Online Edition > Business News

Market traders are ready to wreck a retail revolution. By Richard Orange in Mumbai

Published: 17 June 2007

"A riot will happen. In Jharkand, it was only one shop. In Mumbai, we could destroy 100 shops."

Ever since mid-May, when an angry crowd of vegetable vendors tore apart a newly-opened Reliance Fresh supermarket in India's Jharkand state, young men like Shamrao Patil at the Vashi vegetable market in Mumbai have been waiting for Reliance Industries to bring its retail revolution to town.

Continue reading India's war of the vegetables.

African dream of a better life

BBC NEWS | Programmes | From Our Own Correspondent | African dream of a better life

African dream of a better life
By Jenny Cuffe  6/16/07
BBC News

Police on Europe's southern shorelines fear a summer wave of illegal migration from Africa. Some will come from Niger where traffickers are ready to cash in on people who are desperate to leave.

Ferienetu
Ferienetu said her parents would be mad with worry and would search the world for her

The girl - she said she was 19 but I would say more like 15 - slept fitfully between bouts of coughing.

She was so small she could stretch out beside me on the back seat. The motif from her t-shirt had left a sprinkling of glitter dust on her shoulders.

Continue reading African dream of a better life.

Poverty, Strife Stanch Nigeria's Oil

courant.com | Poverty, Strife Stanch Nigeria's Oil

Amid Legacy Of Corrupt Regimes, Ogonis Use Crude As A Bargaining Chip
June 14, 2007
By EDWARD HARRIS, Associated Press
 
Protests against oil companies began here in Ogoniland, 500 square miles of oil-rich land. When villagers drove out the oil companies, that brought relative peace - but not prosperity - because there are no oil company payments to fight over. Similarly, the democratic experiment that has emboldened militants elsewhere in southern Nigeria has brought new liberties, but no framework for the peaceful resolution of grievances.
Continue reading Poverty, Strife Stanch Nigeria's Oil.

Allies Cited for Human Trafficking

Allies Cited for Human Trafficking - washingtonpost.com


  • State Dept. Adds Arab Nations to List of Worst Offenders

    Washington Post Foreign Service
    Wednesday, June 13, 2007; Page A14

    The State Department yesterday added seven countries, including four Arab allies, to its list of worst offenders in failing to suppress human trafficking and forced labor, which it called "a modern day form of slavery."


Continue reading Allies Cited for Human Trafficking.

Global Warming to Multiply World's Refugee Burden

Global Warming to Multiply World's Refugee Burden - CommonDreams.org

  • by Allistair Lyon

    BEIRUT - If rising sea levels force the people of the Maldive Islands to seek new homes, who will look after them in a world already turning warier of refugees?

Continue reading Global Warming to Multiply World's Refugee Burden.

In a World on the Move, a Tiny Land Strains to Cope


James Hill for The New York Times

Stenio da Luz dos Reis, 17, lives in Cape Verde but longs to join his mother in the Netherlands. She moved there in 2001 to find work.


By JASON DePARLE
Published: June 24, 2007 - New York Times

MINDELO, Cape Verde — Virtually every aspect of global migration can be seen in this tiny West African nation, where the number of people who have left approaches the number who remain and almost everyone has a close relative in Europe or America.

Continue reading In a World on the Move, a Tiny Land Strains to Cope.

Mountain men's life under threat

Mountain men's life under threat | World | The Observer

Shepherds of the Transylvanian peaks face EU rules that may rob them of their traditional work
Daniel McLaughlin in Piatra Craiului, Romania
Sunday June 24, 2007
The Observer

The huge white dogs are used to fending off wolves, bears and lynx, and they erupt when a stranger approaches the shepherds' camp high in the mountains of Transylvania.

The men call them off with shouts and whistles and return to milking their flock, but remain alert for one dreaded visitor - a government inspector who could end their ancient way of life at a stroke. The Transylvanian shepherds make cheese, milk and butter in the same way as their ancestors, but since Romania joined the European Union last January, time is running out for these long-held traditions.

Continue reading Mountain men's life under threat.

Global warming's huddled masses

Global warming's huddled masses
Robert McLeman, November 23, 2006

Canada has an obligation to help developing countries deal with a future in which hundreds of millions are on the move, many of whom will arrive on our doorstep

Last month the British government released a detailed and pessimistic report about the future impacts of climate change. One of the more worrying statements was that rising sea levels, floods and drought could displace more than 200 million people worldwide within the next 50 years.

Continue reading Global warming's huddled masses.

Thirstier World Likely to See More Violence

Thirstier World Likely to See More Violence - UN Security Council - Global Policy Forum
By Stephen Leahy Inter Press Service
March 16, 2007

A strong link between droughts and violent civil conflicts in the developing world bodes ill for an increasingly thirsty world, say scientists, who warn that drought-related conflicts are expected to multiply with advancing climate change. "Severe, prolonged droughts are the strongest indicator of high-intensity conflicts," said Marc Levy of the Centre for International Earth Science Information Network at Columbia University's Earth Institute in New York. These are internal conflicts, not between countries, and involving more than 1,000 battle deaths, Levy said at a press briefing in Washington last week. Such conflicts tend to occur about a year after a "severe deviation in rainfall patterns", he said. Levy and colleagues used decades of detailed precipitation records, geospatial conflict information and other data in a complex computer model that overlays all this onto a fine-scale map of the world. "Major deviations from normal rainfall patterns were the strongest predictor of conflicts," he said. "I was surprised at how strong the correlation is."

Continue reading Thirstier World Likely to See More Violence.

Darfur conflict heralds era of wars triggered by climate change, UN report warns

Darfur conflict heralds era of wars triggered by climate change, UN report warns | Climate change | Guardian Unlimited Environment

Drought and advancing desert blamed for tensions
Chad and southern Africa also at risk from warming
Julian Borger, diplomatic editor
Saturday June 23, 2007
The Guardian

The conflict in Darfur has been driven by climate change and environmental degradation, which threaten to trigger a succession of new wars across Africa unless more is done to contain the damage, according to a UN report published yesterday.

"Darfur ... holds grim lessons for other countries at risk," an 18-month study of Sudan by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) concludes.

Continue reading Darfur conflict heralds era of wars triggered by climate change, UN report warns.

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