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Readers Opinions

DEVELOPMENT-KENYA: Helping the Cotton Sector Turn Over a New Leaf
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - Kenya's cotton industry, once one of the country's main foreign exchange earners, declined substantially following liberalisation of the sector in 1991.
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WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: A Tale of Budget Crunches and Midnight Oil
By Joyce Mulama
NAIROBI - With just days to go before the seventh World Social Forum (WSF) kicks off in Nairobi it’s all systems go amongst the organisers, who are preparing to welcome thousands of delegates to the Kenyan capital for the Jan. 20-25 gathering.
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WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: From the Burkinabé Countryside to Italian Tomato Fields
By Tiego Tiemtoré
OUAGADOUGOU - For Mady Daboné, Europe beckons. "Staying here...is misery," the 30-year-old from the village of Begdo in eastern Burkina Faso told IPS, adding that several of his friends were already abroad. "I have about twenty of them in Italy and Spain. They have all done well, even though they suffered at the beginning."
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WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: On the Eve of the Nairobi Gathering, a Glance Back
By Almahady Cissé
BAMAKO - Almost a year ago, IPS interviewed a cross-section of people in Mali to gauge expectations for the African leg of the 2006 World Social Forum (WSF), held in Bamako. Certain interviewees were sceptical about whether the meeting could effect political and economic change; others proved more hopeful. So, were their expectations realised?
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DEVELOPMENT-BURKINA FASO: Price Snags for Cotton Farmers
By Brahima Ouedraogo
OUAGADOUGOU - Some call it "white gold"; but, the ever-falling price of cotton means that this nickname may end up being more ironic than complimentary. In Burkina Faso cotton producers are, for the first time, facing the prospect of a third consecutive drop in the price of the commodity.
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CHALLENGES 2006-2007: Angola's Oil Not Flowing for Safer Water
By Stephanie Nieuwoudt
NAIROBI - The cholera epidemic which has been plaguing Angola for nearly a year has placed the spotlight on the continuing lack of safe drinking water in that country.
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DEVELOPMENT: ACP Nations Opt for Trade on Their Terms
By Noel King
KHARTOUM - Leaders of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States wrapped up their fifth summit Friday in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum - this after two days of debate over trade relations between the ACP, a 79-member grouping that includes some of the world's poorest nations - and the European Union (EU).
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DEVELOPMENT: Trade Agreements, Darfur in the Spotlight at ACP Gathering
By Noel King
KHARTOUM - The fifth summit of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States is taking place under the theme 'United for Peace, Solidarity and Sustainability'; however, negotiations at the meeting may have a somewhat less harmonious tone.
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DEVELOPMENT: ACP States Feeling the Pinch of 2007 Trade Deadline
By Noel King
KHARTOUM - The fifth summit of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States will kick off on Thursday in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, amidst fierce speculation over the fate of trade agreements between the European Union (EU) and ACP nations.
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DEVELOPMENT-CAMEROON: NGOs to the Defence of Local Farmers
By Sylvestre Tetchiada
YAOUNDE - Cameroonian civil society groups are expressing concern at the effects of trade liberalisation on the Central African country's food security.
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HEALTH-AFRICA: The Promise and Problems of Telemedicine
By Natasha Bolognesi
CAPE TOWN - As the 11th annual conference of the International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth drew to a close Wednesday in Cape Town, South Africa, the ability of Africa to adopt and sustain telemedicine to improve delivery of health care in under-serviced rural areas came under discussion.
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Africa  in RSS Africa is typically portrayed as a victim of globalisation, hobbled by trade subsidies, and losing its best and brightest minds to the developed world. There are more than a few grains of truth to this: the continent has taken a battering from globalisation in several respects. But, international trends have also been embraced by Africans in interesting, often unexpected ways, suggesting a more complex relationship with the rest of the world than is generally supposed. Here, IPS reporters try to depict the effect of globalisation on Africa in all its facets: good, bad -- and even humorous.

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