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Thursday, September 02, 2010   20:46 GMT    
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SRI LANKA
Anger Rises Over Torture Case, But Solution Unclear
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - The ordeal of a Sri Lankan domestic worker whose Saudi Arabian employer allegedly drove nails and metal wires into her body has sent alarm bells ringing among government officials and activists, but how such abuses can be stopped remain far from clear.
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SOUTH AFRICA
"Xenophobia Simmering Just Below Boiling Point"
By Kim Cloete
CAPE TOWN - "Xenophobia is part of life. We do not live easy here. We only survive," says Somali shopkeeper, Abdinasir Shaikh Aden, looking tense.
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Fisheries Can Play Key Role in Africa
Davison Makanga interviews MARI-LISE DU PREEZ, forests, fisheries and governance expert
CAPE TOWN - Fisheries contribute at least $10 billion dollars to African economies every year. In countries such as Angola, Egypt and Namibia, fisheries are vital economic drivers.
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EGYPT
Military Court Sentences Civilian Workers
By Cam McGrath
CAIRO - An Egyptian military court handed down sentences Monday in the trial of eight civilian factory workers who led a protest against deteriorating safety conditions in an army-owned factory. Rights groups say the trial should never have taken place.
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JAPAN
Househusbands Giving Birth To More Gender Equality
By Suvendrini Kakuchi
TOKYO - Since their first child was born 16 years ago, Hiroyuki Ozaki has taken care of the household, relinquishing his traditional role as the main breadwinner while his wife held on to her career in the travel industry.
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MINING-CHILE
Make Good on Concern for Worker Safety, Say Unions
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - While efforts get underway to try to rescue the 33 miners who are trapped 700 metres underground in a mine in northern Chile, trade unions are calling on the country's political leaders to tackle the underlying problems of worker safety.
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HAITI
Scraping by on Mud Cookies
By Wadner Pierre
PORT-AU-PRINCE - At six in the morning in Cite Soleil, the poorest zone of Haiti's capital city, the sun is already up. It's the start of another workday for Lurene Jeanti, making cookies from mud, butter and salt. She's been mixing the ingredients on the side of the road to sell to her neighbours for the past eight years.
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SOUTH AFRICA
Public Health Strained by Nurses' Strike
By Chris Stein
JOHANNESBURG - Striking health workers have continued their work stoppage despite accusations that it endangers patients' lives. They are part of a nationwide strike by public sector workers that has some observers concerned that rising wage demands could harm South Africa's economy.
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CHILE
Forestry Industry Sows Poverty, Study Says
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - The poverty rate in the districts of southern Chile where the logging industry is the main economic activity is nearly twice the national average, a new study shows.
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SOUTH AFRICA
Teachers' Voices Heard in Public Sector Strike
By Marshall Patsanza
JOHANNESBURG - South African teachers - along with other public service employees - have embarked on an indefinite strike over wages. The unions are demanding an 8.6 percent wage increase. Government says it cannot afford to offer 1.3 million striking public servants any more than seven percent.
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THAILAND
Sweeping Support Sought for Domestic Workers’ Rights
By Sutthida Malikaew
BANGKOK - "My male employer was a womaniser and he liked to touch me and told me not to tell his wife. I felt so uncomfortable," says Chompoo, who was just 15 years old when she served – and suffered abuse – as a domestic worker here in the Thai capital.
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WORLD
Fair Trade Is Growing But Africans Lag Behind
By Hilaire Avril
PARIS - Despite its minuscule share of world trade, fair trade is a booming business, importing certified foodstuffs and products from all over the world to Northern supermarkets. But there is increasing concern that this growth is yet to benefit poor countries in Africa.
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ECUADOR
Small Farmers Sell to Government in "Inclusive Markets"
By Gonzalo Ortiz
QUITO - The powerful middleman threatened them: "I hope it lasts for you. I hope the government buys your beans forever, because I don't want you ever coming back to me!"
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RIGHTS-CHINA
Doubts Simmer Around New Labour Rules
By Michael Standaert
FOSHAN, China - Faced with strikes in recent months, China’s southern Guangdong province is crafting revisions to labour regulations that would allow workers to negotiate pay increases and elect representatives to bargain on their behalf.
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CUBA
Expansion of Self-Employment Poses Challenges for Socialist Model
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The announcement of a plan to expand the practice of self-employment in Cuba as an alternative for the "excess" workers who are to be slashed from the public workforce presents several challenges to the socialist model that the government is seeking to modernise.
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World at Work  in RSS A global common denominator is the need for a decent job. The economic realities of each country determine just how difficult it is to find one. Despite the labour movement's achievements, serious challenges persist: gender discrimination, child labour, worker migration, the digital divide, evaporating pensions, unsafe workplaces, corporate pressure against union organising, negative impacts of trade agreements, and the precariousness of informal employment, among many others. IPS follows the world's workers as they confront these challenges - their setbacks and their successes.

News in RSS
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MIDEAST: Pessimistic About Peace, Yet…
U.N. Lagging on Water and Sanitation Development Goals
Environmental Forensics for BP Gulf Spill
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ARGENTINA-BRAZIL: Nuclear Safeguards System an Example for the World
RIGHTS-INDIA: Law to Restrict Foreign Funding Alarms NGOs
PHILIPPINES: Criminal Ban, Stigma Drive Unsafe Abortions
SRI LANKA: Anger Rises Over Torture Case, But Solution Unclear
Further Victims Identified in DRC Mass Rapes Case
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