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March 2010 - Foreign Policy Public Health Blog
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The Happy Story of the Anatolian Tigers
Editor's note: David is in Turkey on a trip organized by the Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey. In October 1923, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk made the momentous decision to move the capital of the Republic of Turkey to the small Anatolian city...
Published
Thu, Mar 18 2010 3:25 PM
by
FP Passport
China: truth and scare
Keith Bradsher has a front-page article in NYT today on " China Drawing High-Tech Research From U.S. " As is so often the case in China-rising dispatches, there's both more and less to the story than the headline broadcasts. It's well...
Published
Thu, Mar 18 2010 1:24 PM
by
FP Passport
Cuba: U.S. diplomat joined demonstrators
Cuba's state news agency is reporting that Lowell Dale Lawton, an official at the U.S. interests section in Havana, joined a protest march by the womens' opposition group Ladies in White yesterday. The Miami Herald 's Cuba Colada blog translates...
Published
Thu, Mar 18 2010 11:25 AM
by
FP Passport
New Delhi clears the air
Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 As the world's eyes fell on Beijing during the 2008 Olympics, Chinese authorities scrambled to find a way to improve the city's notoriously low air quality. They shut down...
Published
Thu, Mar 18 2010 7:43 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Southeast Asia
,
India
Morning Brief: Clinton to talk Mideast and missiles in Moscow
Clinton to talk Mideast and missiles in Moscow Top story: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in Moscow for two days of talks, a little more than a year after famously presenting her Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov with a "reset button"...
Published
Thu, Mar 18 2010 6:13 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
Quiz: Which has the highest death rate: Germany, Iraq, or Kenya?
For those of you who don't subscribe to the bimonthly print edition of Foreign Policy, you're missing a great feature: the FP Quiz. It has eight intriguing questions about how the world works. The question I'd like to highlight this week is...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 2:43 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Africa
,
Germany
,
Iraq
,
Public Health
Turkish PM threatens to expel Armenians
In the latest development in the Armenian genocide resolution row, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has hinted at expelling thousands of Armenians from the country. The threat was made as a result of genocide resolutions progressing in the...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 2:29 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Europe
,
Caucasus
,
U.S. Congress
,
Turkey
Russia's one-man army of darkness
Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE Russia is a country that has yet to come to terms with its history. Russian public opinion is sharply divided on every one of their previous General Secretaries and Presidents, with the exception of relatively...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 1:47 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Russia
,
Eastern Europe
Global Times readers fire back!
The nationalist Chinese newspaper Global Times posted on their home page a translated summary of my Time piece on the next decade in US-China relations, " The Indispensable Axis ," as well an accompanying essay on " The Next American Century...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 12:17 PM
by
FP Passport
FP makes the prime minister's briefing in Zimbabwe
A few weeks back, I reported on the case of Georges Tadonki , a former U.N. official who claims that he was dismissed in part because he was outspoken in his warnings of a cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe in 2008 and 2009. Earlier this month, the report caught...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 11:47 AM
by
FP Passport
Netanyahu's brother-in-law calls Obama an anti-Semite
As if relations between Israel and the United States weren't icy enough lately, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's brother-in-law, Dr. Hagai Ben-Artzi, has now publicly called President Barack Obama an anti-semite on an Army Radio program: It's...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 10:40 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Israel/Palestine
Hey Thai protesters, what's up with the blood?
Thailand's red-shirt protesters not only made good on their threat to pour gallons of their own blood on Bangkok's Government House on Tuesday, they followed it up today by hurling more human blood at Prime Minister Abhisit Vejajjiva's home...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 7:58 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
East Asia
A horrid suggestion from Qaddafi
The recent violence in central Nigeria has shocked everyone for its scale and horror (there was another minor outbreak today ). But no better is a solution proposed by none other than Libya's Muammar Qaddafi : divide the country in half. Funny, that's...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 7:01 AM
by
FP Passport
Morning Brief: Irish cardinal apologizes as pope promises to address abuse scandal
Irish cardinal apologizes as pope promises to address abuse scandal Top news: Cardinal Sean Brady, the head of Ireland's Catholic Church apologized in his St. Patrick's Day sermon today for the role he played in covering up the sexual abuse of...
Published
Wed, Mar 17 2010 6:09 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
A French Bradley effect?
U.S. political junkes are well aware of the "Bradley effect," a scenario in which embarassed white voters tell pollsters they're planning on voting for a minority candidate, then vote for a white one when they get in the booth, producing...
Published
Tue, Mar 16 2010 11:21 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
France
,
Elections
,
Race/Ethnicity
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