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IPS Inter Press Service News Agency

U.S. Election Fever May Delay Doha Talks
Analysis by Aileen Kwa
GENEVA - A busy negotiating schedule is lined up for this year at the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The question remains whether negotiators will have to continue passing the time as the powers-that-be in Washington are consumed by pre-election politics, or if the technical solutions which they have been working on could, in fact, lead to a conclusion of the Doha Development Round.
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Internal Problems Worry Iranians More
By Kimia Sanati
TEHRAN - While Iranians have legitimate worries that their country may suffer a military attack by the United States or become a victim of more sanctions for its nuclear policies, analysts say that the real dangers in 2008 are internally generated ones.
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Tectonic Upheavals Await Ruling LDP
Analysis by John Feffer
WASHINGTON - The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has ruled Japan for all but one of the last 53 years. But the LDP's unpopularity, the rise of a strong second party with a charismatic leader and a limp economy may combine to upend Japanese politics in 2008.
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Wounded Vets Trade One Hell for Another
By Aaron Glantz
SAN FRANCISCO, California - Last year, the United States woke up to the reality of hundreds of thousands of soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan - and began to grapple with what to do about it.
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The Green House Effect
By Enrique Gili
SAN DIEGO, California - Environmentally-friendly buildings have evolved from hippy habitats to office towers and shopping centres, becoming a far more commonplace presence in city skylines and communities throughout the United States, as well as overseas.
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Stagnating Under 'Clean' Interim Government
By Farid Ahmed
DHAKA - Bangladesh's military-backed interim government faced hard challenges on the political and economic fronts as it stepped into its second year on the weekend.
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U.N. Remains Impotent as Captive of U.S.
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - As Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon begins his second year in office, he has refused to claim any tangible successes during 2007, nor has he laid out any clear-cut strategy to meet the political and economic challenges facing the United Nations in 2008.
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Cuban Economy in Need of Nourishment
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Increasing food production is the main challenge to be faced by the Cuban economy this year, to improve people’s quality of life. It was one of the recurrent themes raised at the popular debates convened on the government’s initiative in the second half of 2007.
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Terror Prosecutions Shed More Heat Than Light
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - The U.S. government's spotty record in obtaining convictions of people charged with providing "material support" to terrorist organisations is adding new impetus to the efforts of prominent constitutional lawyers to seek substantial changes in the law.
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Brazil Seeks Formula for Continued Growth
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - The Brazilian economy is finally coming close to the dream of creating the "broad mass consumer market" announced in 2002 as a campaign promise by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. But several hurdles still lie ahead.
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New Year Begins Unhappily In What Was Home
Analysis by Dahr Jamail
WASHINGTON - The end of 2007 produced a telltale indication of what the New Year seems likely to bring to Iraq.
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CHALLENGES 2005-2006 in RSSFrom the seemingly intractable tragedies of war, to efforts to build an alliance of civilisations; from global solidarity, to narrow world views; from people and their communities, to the halls of the UN, working towards the Millennium Development Goals; from the expanding fight against climate change, to deep-rooted energy interests; and from dictatorship and repression, to freedom, human rights and democracy, IPS has brought you facts and insight into the pressing issues that will define our complex globalised world -- and will continue to do so.

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A WIN-WIN PLAN FOR ICELAND, BRITAIN AND THE NETHERLANDS
  By Hazel Henderson
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