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January 2011 - Foreign Policy Public Health Blog
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Russian oil giant tests West African waters
The U.S. and China have been vying for West Africa's sizeable and largely untapped oil reserves for years, but less well-known has been Russia's growing interest in the region: The president of LUKoil Overseas, Andrei Kuzyayev, met Ghana's...
Published
Mon, Jan 10 2011 9:10 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Africa
,
Russia
,
Oil
Return of the Red Shirts
Yesterday, Thailand's red-shirt protest movement held its first major demonstration in Bangkok since a government state of emergency was lifted in December and the largest since the chaos of last May, during which at least 90 people were killed. Aside...
Published
Mon, Jan 10 2011 8:34 AM
by
FP Passport
Morning Brief: 23 reported killed in border clashes as Southern Sudan votes on independence
23 reported killed in border clashes as Southern Sudan votes on independence Top news: South Sudanese leaders say at least 23 people have been killed in clashes between tribespeople and Arab nomads on the North-South border as the region heads to the...
Published
Mon, Jan 10 2011 5:57 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
Friday photo: New Zealanders love David Hasselhoff!
Star of Baywatch David Hasselhoff arrives in a surf lifesaving craft during a promotion for the new 'Splice Real Fruit' ice block at Mt Maunganui Main Beach on January 6, 2011 in Tauranga, New Zealand. I also like how BP is associating itself...
Published
Fri, Jan 07 2011 2:58 PM
by
FP Passport
What will the world's newest country be called?
Andreas Markessinis has an intriguing post on the Nation Branding blog wondering just what the new country that will likely be created next week will be called: One possible option is ‘New Sudan’, but some oppose the idea as that name would associate...
Published
Fri, Jan 07 2011 2:40 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Africa
,
Sudan
Chinese to return to California's railroads... as owners
Some sweet historical irony here for China: In the 19th century, laborers from China helped build railroads spanning California and linking the U.S. coasts. In the 21st century, the Chinese may be back — not for backbreaking labor, but with financial...
Published
Fri, Jan 07 2011 9:36 AM
by
FP Passport
Prestowitz: William Daley is not a businessman
The New York Times and others are portraying the appointment of William Daley to the post of chief of staff as a matter of a widely-experienced corporate executive bringing badly needed business experience to the White House. The notion is that as a top...
Published
Fri, Jan 07 2011 7:56 AM
by
FP Passport
Morning Brief: Gilani pulls Pakistan government back from the brink
Gilani pulls Pakistan government back from the brink Top news: Pakistan's latest political crisis appears to have been resolved for now , but at the expense of economic reforms promoted by the United States and the International Monetary Fund. After...
Published
Fri, Jan 07 2011 6:26 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
The spy who bit me
Still intrigued by this morning's strange story of a woman who was arrested in Iran and reportedly claimed she had spy equipment installed in her teeth, I called up Peter Earnest , a CIA veteran and executive director of the International Spy Museum...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 1:31 PM
by
FP Passport
The return of food riots
Yesterday, the Food and Agriculture Organization announced that global food prices hit a record high last month, surpassing levels seen during the 2007-2008 food crisis. Prices of the commodities in the FAO's price index jumped 4.2 percent between...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 12:26 PM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Food/Agriculture
Belgium lumbers on
Belgium has reached another milestone of political dysfunction as the mediator assigned to resolve the crisis that has left the world's cushiest failed state without a government for the last seven months, resigned in failure : Johan Vande Lanotte...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 11:16 AM
by
FP Passport
The tooth spy
This seems to be a good week for strange spy arrests in the Middle East. Here's the latest: Iranian authorities have arrested a 55-year-old American woman on suspicion of spying, state-controlled media said on Thursday. The reports said she had espionage...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 7:46 AM
by
FP Passport
Oxfam to Bill Clinton: You're Failing Haiti
A year after an earthquake shook the small island-nation of Haiti, a mere 5 percent of the rubble has been cleared. Not even half of the donor money pledged has arrived. The government has failed to show leadership, and international NGOs are not helping...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 7:28 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Foreign Aid
Morning Brief: Moqtada al-Sadr returns to Iraq
Moqtada al-Sadr returns to Iraq Top story : The radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who led one of the most powerful militias during the worst days of the Iraq war, returned to Iraq on Wednesday. Sadr had been in self-imposed exile in Iran for nearly...
Published
Thu, Jan 06 2011 5:25 AM
by
FP Passport
Filed under:
Morning Brief
CPAC: Agent of Sharia
Turns out that the Conservative Political Action Conference, the annual right-wing gathering which will take place in Washington next month, hasn't just been infiltrated by the gay agenda , it's unwittingly furthering the Islamist takeover of...
Published
Wed, Jan 05 2011 11:40 AM
by
FP Passport
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