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Finnish Contest No More Between Right and Left
Analysis by Linus Atarah
HELSINKI - In an uncharacteristically lively election campaign in this nation of five million people, Finns head for the polls in a second round of voting Sunday to elect a new president.
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BELARUS
Political Prisoners Facing Oppression
By Robert Stefanicki
WARSAW - "I had to fight to be treated like a human, not animal," dissident Nikolai Avtukhovich wrote from prison. Last month Avtukhovich, Belarusian political activist and entrepreneur, convicted to five years in the penal colony for illegal storage of five cartridges for a hunting rifle, cut his veins.
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Romanians Discover Street Protest
Analysis by Claudia Ciobanu
WARSAW - For more than a week, thousands have been demonstrating in cities across Romania. Participants from all walks of life bring to the fore the broadest array of demands in what looks like a celebratory discovery of street protest. The main call is against lack of transparency and accountability in decision-making.
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CZECH REPUBLIC
Castration for Sex Offenders Triumphs
By Pavol Stracansky
PRAGUE - The Czech government has defied calls from international human rights groups to stop the "degrading" practice of surgically castrating sex offenders.
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EUROPE
Unrest Spreads Eastwards
Analysis by Zoltan Dujisin
BUDAPEST - Protests in Hungary and Romania are the first signs of anti-systemic mobilisation in the Eastern half of the continent. While protests in both countries indicate dissatisfaction with their governments’ authoritarian turn, their origins differ, as does the European Union’s reaction to them.
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KAZAKHSTAN
Dissent Stifled Amid Indifference
Analysis by Christopher Pala
ALMATY - President Nursultan Nazarbayev, re-elected last April with an improbable yet typical 93 percent, presided last weekend over parliamentary elections that maintained his iron grip on his oil-rich country’s parliament, and further stifled dissent.
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EUROPE
Separate Schools for Roma Challenged
By Pavol Stracansky
BRATISLAVA - A school in Slovakia has defended its decision to segregate Roma children from other students after a court ruled the practice breached equal rights laws.
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HUNGARY
Civil Society Steps in as Opposition
By Zoltan Dujisin
BUDAPEST - The massive overhaul of Hungary’s political system by the conservative Fidesz party is raising fears the country’s days as a liberal democracy may be numbered. With opposition parties powerless, it is civil society that has awakened to support a more participatory democracy.
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SERBIA
Royalty Rehabilitated in Retrospect
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - Serbia saw the first rehabilitation of a member of its royal family earlier this month, in a move by the supreme court described by historians as "deeply moral" and necessary - for generations who remember the Karadjordjevics as well as those who have learned about them from the history books.
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EUROPE
Co-ops Off to a Promising Start
By Claudia Ciobanu
PRAGUE - A small wave of consumer cooperatives is rising in Central and Eastern Europe, attempting to provide food that is locally produced and healthy, and to build conviviality.
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Reclaiming a Waste Land Called Ukraine
By Pavol Stracansky
KIEV - Ukrainian authorities are launching a massive nationwide project to transform the country’s dangerous and inefficient waste disposal network as officials admit the former Soviet state is facing an "ecological catastrophe".
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BALKANS
Fearing the ‘White al-Qaeda’
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - Mevludin Jasarevic (23) is in police custody in Sarajevo, scarcely revealing how he came to the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina and went on a shooting spree in front of the United States embassy last month.
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EU Backs Timoshenko, More Than Ukrainians
By Zoltan Dujisin
BUDAPEST - The imprisonment of former prime minister Yuliya Timoshenko has raised questions about Ukraine’s democratic credentials. But these questions are mostly being raised abroad.
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BALKANS
Who’s Afraid of Serbian Violins
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - The path of reconciliation in former Yugoslavia has taken a musical turn, as the philharmonic orchestras of Ljubljana, Zagreb and Belgrade team up for their first joint season since 1991.
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BALKANS
Serbs Turn From the State Towards Themselves
By Vesna Peric Zimonjic
BELGRADE - Dismayed by the lack of beer and chips at a football game three years ago, Dragan Stancic and Uros Petrovic, two young Belgradians, hatched a plan to take matters into their own hands.
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 Fifty years after the Rome Treaty that initiated an era of cooperation amongst warring states, 27 countries have joined the European Union and more are waiting in the wings. The EU is not intended to replace member states. But they have set up common institutions to which they delegate some of their sovereignty so that Europe-wide decisions on specific matters of joint interest can be made. Since 1993, under the Maastricht Treaty, the EU has been developing a common foreign and security policy to enable joint action when the bloc's interests are at stake. As it deals with terror, international crime, drug trafficking, illegal immigration, global issues like the environment -- and now challenges such as Kosovo's declaration of independence -- diversity remains the hallmark of the Union of half a billion people.

IPS Terraviva
POWER GAMES: IPS's coverage of Global Geopolitics
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KOSOVO REQUIRES A UNITED EUROPE... AND SO DOES EUROPE
by Martti Ahtisaari
In November 2005, the UN Secretary-General, acting on the basis of the conclusions of the Security Council that the situation in Kosovo is no longer sustainable, asked me to lead the political process to determine Kosovo's future status, writes Martti Ahtisaari, former president of Finland and UN Secretary-General Special Envoy to Kosovo.
EU SUGAR REFORM A BITTER PILL FOR POORER PRODUCERS
by David Kleimann
For more than three decades, the European Union has maintained an extremely costly supply management scheme for its domestic sugar market which insulates domestic producers from international market forces with price supports and tariffs and has resulted in domestic prices triple world market prices and a major production surplus. At the same time, the EU has granted duty free market access for guaranteed quantities to some of its former colonies at guaranteed prices, writes David Kleimann, a German expert on international law and international relations.
EU REFORM WILL AFFECT LATIN AMERICA AS WELL
by Joaquin Roy
A CRUCIAL YEAR FOR THE EUROPEAN UNION
by Joaquin Roy
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New Rule Puts Brakes on U.S. Public Housing Demolitions
ARGENTINA: Fair Trade Going Strong Amid Global Crisis
UNICEF Funding Falls Short Leaving Millions of Children at Risk
Photos of Armed Children Ignite Scandal in Venezuela
Latin America Takes a New Look at Neglected Diseases
Lawmakers, "Experts" Spin Tales of Iranian Terror in Latin America
Social Media Saved Africa's Oldest Community Station
Finnish Contest No More Between Right and Left
INDIA-PAKISTAN: Food Heals Historic Hostility
Malawi's Consumers Have a Right to Fuel and Forex Black Market
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