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MEXICO: Marching On the Capital
By Diego Cevallos
MEXICO CITY - Dozens of indigenous people walking naked along a main avenue in support of their demand for land, or thousands of stick-wielding teachers blocking main streets at rush hour, are almost daily occurrences in the Mexican capital.
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RELIGION: Atheists Take to the Streets
By Diego Cevallos
MEXICO CITY - Atheists who have built up a virtual community over the last decade will hold the "First Global Atheist March for a Secular Society" on Sunday, with the aim of defending their views and protesting that they are misinterpreted and in some cases discriminated against.
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Q&A: "Violence Is Part of the History of El Salvador"
Raúl Gutiérrez interviews PUPPET, gang leader
SAN SALVADOR - He says he has read the Bible three times and that gang members are "not only victimisers but victims of the system of violence" in El Salvador.
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BRAZIL: Urban Violence Hot Issue in Local Elections
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Crime and violence will be key issues in the October local elections in Brazil's largest cities, especially Rio de Janeiro, although public security is the responsibility of state governments rather than the municipalities.
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CENTRAL AMERICA: Violence Exacts Increasingly Heavy Toll
By Raúl Gutiérrez *
SAN SALVADOR - Violent crime costs Central America an estimated 6.5 billion dollars a year, equivalent to 7.7 percent of gross domestic product in the region, where the two least violent countries are the wealthiest -- Costa Rica -- and the poorest -- Nicaragua, according to a study carried out in El Salvador.
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BRAZIL: 'Social Circus' Turns Young Lives Right Side Up
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO - Standing on your head, walking on stilts, juggling and doing balancing acts -- life often seems like a circus metaphor. And for one Brazilian social organisation that is exactly what it is.
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BRAZIL: Militarised Election Campaign
By Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO - Rio de Janeiro will be the most fiercely contested city in Brazil’s upcoming local elections, with an average of 25 candidates for every seat on its municipal councils, and dozens of poor neighbourhoods being militarised in order to prevent violence and allow candidates to campaign safely.
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ARGENTINA: Soup Kitchens Feel Impact of Rising Food Prices
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - "It breaks my heart because I know these kids don't have anything to eat, but I can’t serve any more people," says Estela Esquivel, talking about children who have been turned away at dinnertime from the La Casita de la Virgen soup kitchen in La Cava, a slum neighbourhood on the north side of the Argentine capital.
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MEXICO: Time Running Out for Capital's Garbage
By Diego Cevallos*
MEXICO CITY - If the Mexico City government were to keep its promises, laid out in laws and plans in 2003 and 2004, the treatment of the 12,300 tonnes of garbage generated daily by this city of 19 million people would be more environmentally friendly. But instead there is a looming threat of collapse and the contaminated area remains enormous.
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ENVIRONMENT-INDIA: Green Buildings Popular With Builders, Clients
By Keya Acharya
BANGALORE - India’s energy conservation laws for buildings are voluntary but this is one area in which the country is already ‘greener’ than in many parts of the developed world.
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PERU: Small Towns Face Challenge of Using Windfall Mining Revenues
By Milagros Salazar
LIMA - Peru is enjoying a mining boom. But while some areas lacking in minerals and oil have seen very little of the windfall profits, other districts have taken in so much money that they have only been able to actually use a tiny portion of it.
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ARGENTINA: Children of Exile - Strangers Still
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - While perpetrators of human rights violations during Argentina’s 1976-1983 military dictatorship have begun to be sent to prison, a new study has shed light on a less conspicuous aspect of the regime's legacy: the problems faced by the children of former exiles who are struggling to integrate into Argentine society.
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RIGHTS-CAMBODIA: Mass Evictions May Follow Lake Grab
By Andrew Nette
PHNOM PENH - A plan to redevelop Phnom Penh’s largest remaining natural lake into a residential and shopping precinct has ignited a storm of protests and claims that it could result in the largest eviction in Cambodia’s post-war history.
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Half of the world population today lives in cities. That proportion reaches two-thirds in some countries, and urban dwellers around the globe face many of the same problems: poverty, homelessness, precarious housing, noise, inadequate sanitation and sewerage services, air and water pollution and deficient schools. Solutions cannot be achieved at the local or global levels without the active participation of city governments and residents. How do city dwellers confront their common problems? IPS tracks their pursuit of healthy and sustainable development of the urban environment, especially improving the lives of people who live in impoverished neighbourhoods.

IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of the City of Rome in realising this Bulletin 
News in RSS
CUBA: Emerging Community of Bloggers?
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NEPAL: Civil War Victims Await Compensation
ENVIRONMENT: EU Stepping Back from Cleaning Up
EAST TIMOR: Int'l Peacekeepers Not Key to Stability
RIGHTS-PAKISTAN: Civil Society United Against 'Honour' Killings
CULTURE-CAMBODIA: 'We Don't Have a Film Industry'
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  UN-Habitat
  Global Urban Observatory
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