Ugandan Children Experiencing Lead Poisoning

2010-07-27

Some school-age children in Uganda are experiencing high levels of lead poisoning, according to researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Children living near the Kiteezi landfill in Kampala, Uganda, have blood lead levels nearly 20 times as high as the typical lead level found in U.S. children. The data are published in the current issue of Environmental Health Perspectives. Read the complete article

Vatican Issues New Rules For Sexual Abuse Cases

Victims express anger at failure to require bishops to report abuse to police

2010-07-17

The Associate Press for The Skanner News

The Vatican issued a revised set of in-house rules Thursday to respond to clerical sex abuse, targeting priests who molest the mentally disabled as well as children and priests who use child pornography, but making few substantive changes to existing practice.
The new rules make no mention of the need for bishops to report clerical sex abuse to police, provide no canonical sanctions for bishops who cover up for abusers and do not include any “one-strike and you're out” policy for pedophile priests as demanded by some victims.
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After 50 Years, Congo Still Mired in Conflict

2010-06-30

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) -- Fabulous minerals. Magnificent music. Great cuisine. A landscape that stretches from lush rain forest to Swiss-looking mountains. And a people still mired in violence and misery a half century after independence from Belgium. Read the complete article

Taliban Remains Strong in Afghanistan Striking at Heart of US Mission

At least 52 NATO troops - 34 of them Americans - killed this month plus many more Afghans

2010-06-18

By Robert H. Reid Associated Press Writer

Rising death tolls, military timetables slowed. Infighting in the partner government. War-weary allies packing up to leave - and others eyeing an exit.
Events this spring - from the battlefields of Helmand and Kandahar to the halls of Congress - have served as a reality check on the Afghan war, a grueling fight in a remote, inhospitable land that once harbored the masterminds of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States.
The Taliban have proven resilient and won't be easily routed. Good Afghan government won't blossom any faster than flowers in the bleak Afghan deserts. Phrases like “transition to Afghan control” mask the enormous challenge ahead to make those words reality.
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Taliban Offensive Raising Death Toll in Afghanistan

Five NATO troops, 12 Afghan police and six civilians killed in attacks

2010-06-16

The Skanner News from wire reports

Five NATO service members died Tuesday from fighting in the south and east of Afghanistan, officials said, as Taliban militants ramp up attacks on Afghan and international security forces.
Authorities also said that 12 Afghan police officers and six civilians have died in attacks and bombings since early Monday.
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World Bank Urges Mideast Countries to Invest More in Poor Rural Areas

Report says big projects don't help the least privileged

2010-06-16

The Skanner News

The World Bank on Tuesday urged Mideast countries to invest more in their impoverished rural areas instead of relying on subsidies and mega-projects to alleviate inequalities in the region. The organization's recommendation, outlined in a report, underscored the shifting demographics of the region -- one where experts say rapidly expanding economies have shifted governments' focus to urban areas at the expense of the rural lands that for centuries formed the backbone of the region. Read the complete article

Violence in Kyrgyzstan Was Planned and Orchestrated Says UN Commission on Human Rights

US humanitarian aid of 6.5 million to be available immediately

2010-06-16

The Skanner Staff from wire reports

The United States is sending a senior envoy to Kyrgyzstan, where ethnic violence has killed at least 700 people and driven an estimated 200,000 people to neighboring Uzbekistan. The UN Commission for Human Rights says the wave of violence was planned in advance and orchestrated by opponents of the current government. Read the complete article

Cuba Denies U.S. Charges of Human Trafficking

Diplomat expresses anger at Cuba's inclusion on list of 13 who don;t do enough to combat problem

2010-06-16

The Skanner News

Cuba reacted angrily Tuesday to its inclusion on a U.S. list of countries that could be sanctioned for failing to fight human and child trafficking, calling it a “shameful slander” and part of Washington's efforts to justify its trade embargo.
Cuba is one of 13 countries put on notice Monday that they are not complying with the minimum international standards to eliminate the trade in human beings and sexual slavery, and could face U.S. penalties.
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Rwandan Court To Decide if Minneapolis Professor Should Be Released

Peter Erlinder violated Rwandan law by saying both Hutus and Tutsis contributed to genocide

2010-06-16

The Skanner News

A Rwandan court is expected to rule Thursday on whether a jailed law professor from Minnesota should be freed on bail for health reasons, his family said Tuesday. Peter Erlinder, a professor at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul, has been accused of violating Rwanda's laws against minimizing genocide. Erlinder was arrested May 28 while in the country to help with the legal defense of an opposition leader. Read the complete article

158 Feared Dead in Air India Plane Crash

Watch video of crash site

2010-05-22

The Skanner News

An Air India plane crashed near the southern Indian town of Mangalore Saturday morning. Of the 166 people on board 158 are feared dead. The crash occurred when the plane overshot the runway. All crew members died at the site.  

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