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Course: ECO 343, Fall 2008
School: Chester
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Online Independent Edition > Middle East HomeNewsUKCrimeHealth MedicalLegalUK PoliticsThis BritainTransportUlsterEuropeWorldWorld PoliticsScience & TechnologyAfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaMiddle EastRobert FiskBusinessBusiness NewsBusiness Analysis & FeaturesBusiness CommentSMECitywireMediaEnvironmentPeopleObituariesProfilesPandoraAppealsIndy AppealIoS AppealSportCricketFootballNewsCommentEuropeanInternationalsCoca ColaScotlandArsenalAston VillaBirminghamBlackburnBoltonCharltonChelseaEvertonFulhamLeedsLeicesterLiverpoolM anchester CityManchester UnitedMiddlesbroughNewcastlePortsmouthSunderlandTottenhamWest BromWest HamWiganWolvesGeneralGolfMotor RacingRugby LeagueRugby UnionTennisOlympicsCommentLeading ArticlesLettersCommentatorsColumnists A-LYasmin Alibhai-BrownBruce AndersonSue ArnoldTerence BlackerMichael BrownSimon CarrMary DejevskyTracey EminHelen FieldingAndrew GriceAdrian HamiltonJohann HariPhilip HensherHoward JacobsonAlex JamesDom JolyFergal KeaneMiles KingtonJohn LichfieldDavid ListerColumnists M-ZDonald MacintyreHamish McRaeDeborah OrrRowan PellingJohn RentoulSteve RichardsDeborah RossWill SelfJoan SmithMark SteelJanet Street-PorterThomas SutcliffeDavid UsborneBrian VinerAlan WatkinsAndreas Whittam SmithJohn WalshEducationNewsClearingHigherA-Z Unis & Colleges A-Z DegreesAdviceOverseas StudentsBusiness SchoolsMBAs GuideCareers AdviceA-Z CareersAerospaceEngineeringFeatured InstitutionsGap YearSuppliersGraduate OptionsFurtherSchoolsA-Z A-levelsMotoringFeaturesRoad TestsCommentMotor RacingMoneyPropertyMortgagesHomesPersonal FinanceFinancial DirectoryInvest & SaveLoans & CreditPensionsInsuranceTaxJobsTravelNews & AdviceSkiingAsiaAfricaAmericasAustralasia & PacificEuropeMiddle EastUKEnjoymentBooksNewsReviewsFeaturesFilmNewsReviewsFeaturesFood & DrinkNewsReviewsFeaturesRecipesMusicNewsReviewsFeaturesTheatreNewsReviewsFeaturesf rom The Independent & The Independent on Sunday 2 February 2006 17:29 Home > News > World > Middle East Karzai returns from conference with fraction of funds he needed By Kim Sengupta and Anne Penketh Published: 02 February 2006 The conference on Afghanistan ended yesterday with Hamid Karzai's government receiving just a fraction of what it claimed was needed to rebuild the country. At the same time there were fresh warnings over the dangers that British forces being sent to Afghanistan will face, and confusion over how to tackle the country's massive opium production. The Afghan government had said that a minimum of $20bn (11bn) was needed over five years. But the total promised aid at the end of the London summit was $10.5bn. However, since 20 per cent of that was "old pledges" on the table, the real figure was $8bn. The United States was the biggest contributor with an offer of $4bn over five years while Britain said it will give $885m. Another $1.2bn will come from the World Bank. The Foreign Office minister Kim Howells declared the conference - co-hosted by Tony Blair, the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan and President Karzai - a "great success". But the Afghan Finance Minister, Anwar al-Haq Ahady, expressed disappointment that the total amount of funding on offer fell short of his government's expectations. Mr Ahady said he was confident that all the money pledged would be delivered. But privately Afghan officials expressed concern about possible delays. One official said: "How soon the money arrives will be extremely important. We have had elections and we have to persuade the people that the democratic system works. It would be very, very bad if we now cannot deliver on our promise. "It is especially bad because we are now facing the biggest extremist [al-Qa'ida and Taliban] threat since the war." General Abdul Rahim Wardak, the Afghan Defence Minister, warned that the 6,000-strong British task force would be on the front line of the threat. The British force will be mainly deployed in Helmand province, to counter a new offensive by a resurgent Taliban and al-Qa'ida, which has seen a hundred Americans killed in the past few months - the same number as British soldiers killed in the entire Iraq conflict. In particular, there has been a rise in the number of suicide bombings - hitherto relatively unknown in Afghanistan, but a popular weapon of the insurgents in Iraq. General Wardak said: "We are facing a new phenomenon. They used to be mainly foreigners but now unfortunately there are some Afghans. They are religious fanatics. Suicide bombings are against our tradition, they are against our religious beliefs." The general said there was widespread infiltration from across the "porous" border with Pakistan. He said the Pakistani government had claimed to have deployed 70,000 troops along the frontier but there appeared to be large swaths of the country that were beyond government control. The Afghan government had reported a steady stream of foreign nationals, allegedly linked to al-Qa'ida and the Iraq insurgency, infiltrating across the border. Yesterday Afghan forces reported the arrest of an Iraqi and three Pakistanis at Zaranj, the capital of Nimroz province in the south. Earlier this week, five Bangladeshis were arrested in the same area. The provincial governor, Ghulam Dushtaqir Azad, said they had links with the Taliban . The British Government has announced that British troops will be engaged in tackling Afghanistan's opium crop - the largest in the world. But the British troops will be under a Nato mandate, which does not include eradicating poppies. An international think-tank, the Senlis Council, has appointed a team of lawyers to ascertain whether British forces engaged in destroying poppy fields would be in breach of international law. The Armed Forces minister Adam Ingram said yesterday that British troops will not engage in directly eradicating poppy fields, but they would support Afghan anti-drug operations. He said eradication without providing sources new of livelihood for the farmers would "breed resentment and anger towards Nato and the Afghan government. It will create conditions for greater resistance and insurgency with the warlords exploiting real grievances for their own malign advantage." The conference on Afghanistan ended yesterday with Hamid Karzai's government receiving just a fraction of what it claimed was needed to rebuild the country. At the same time there were fresh warnings over the dangers that British forces being sent to Afghanistan will face, and confusion over how to tackle the country's massive opium production. The Afghan government had said that a minimum of $20bn (11bn) was needed over five years. But the total promised aid at the end of the London summit was $10.5bn. However, since 20 per cent of that was "old pledges" on the table, the real figure was $8bn. The United States was the biggest contributor with an offer of $4bn over five years while Britain said it will give $885m. Another $1.2bn will come from the World Bank. The Foreign Office minister Kim Howells declared the conference - co-hosted by Tony Blair, the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan and President Karzai - a "great success". But the Afghan Finance Minister, Anwar al-Haq Ahady, expressed disappointment that the total amount of funding on offer fell short of his government's expectations. Mr Ahady said he was confident that all the money pledged would be delivered. But privately Afghan officials expressed concern about possible delays. One official said: "How soon the money arrives will be extremely important. We have had elections and we have to persuade the people that the democratic system works. It would be very, very bad if we now cannot deliver on our promise. "It is especially bad because we are now facing the biggest extremist [al-Qa'ida and Taliban] threat since the war." General Abdul Rahim Wardak, the Afghan Defence Minister, warned that the 6,000-strong British task force would be on the front line of the threat. The British force will be mainly deployed in Helmand province, to counter a new offensive by a resurgent Taliban and al-Qa'ida, which has seen a hundred Americans killed in the past few months - the same number as British soldiers killed in the entire Iraq conflict. In particular, there has been a rise in the number of suicide bombings - hitherto relatively unknown in Afghanistan, but a popular weapon of the insurgents in Iraq.General Wardak said: "We are facing a new phenomenon. They used to be mainly foreigners but now unfortunately there are some Afghans. They are religious fanatics. Suicide bombings are against our tradition, they are against our religious beliefs." The general said there was widespread infiltration from across the "porous" border with Pakistan. He said the Pakistani government had claimed to have deployed 70,000 troops along the frontier but there appeared to be large swaths of the country that were beyond government control. The Afghan government had reported a steady stream of foreign nationals, allegedly linked to al-Qa'ida and the Iraq insurgency, infiltrating across the border. Yesterday Afghan forces reported the arrest of an Iraqi and three Pakistanis at Zaranj, the capital of Nimroz province in the south. Earlier this week, five Bangladeshis were arrested in the same area. The provincial governor, Ghulam Dushtaqir Azad, said they had links with the Taliban . The British Government has announced that British troops will be engaged in tackling Afghanistan's ...

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Chester - ECO - 343
Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, February 10, 2006 GMT 02:48AFGHANISTAN: Listen to the Farmer Sanjay Suri For the last two years he has grown no poppy, and his family have begun to feel the pinch. This yea
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Afghanistan welcomes debt cancellations
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Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, February 17, 2006 GMT 05:55AFGHANISTAN: Women Stay Vulnerable to Violence Sher Ahmad Haidar - Pajhwok Afghan News* GHAZNI CITY, Feb 8 (IPS) - 'My father-in-law locked me in
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A brain drain threatens Afghanistan's future - Print Version - International Herald Tribune A brain drain threatens Afghanistan's future Obaid Younossi International Herald Tribune THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2006 WASHINGTON On the eve of the Soviet invasi
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No alternative to opium, say farmers .
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Mounting concern over Afghanistan | csmonitor.comfrom the February 14, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0214/p01s02-wosc.html Mounting concern over Afghanistan Cartoon protests are part of an impatience with the problems of drugs, jobs, co
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OneWorld South Asia - UK helpless as Afghan drug crop doubles OneWorld South Asia Home > In depth > Development > Aid UK helpless as Afghan drug crop doubles Satyavir Chakrapani The enormity of the problems in tackling Afghanistan's massive opium cro
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WSJ.com - Afghanistan Made Some Gains In Fighting Drug Trafficking March 1, 2006 4:50 p.m. ESTDOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, client
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Opium Cultivation Rising In Afghanistan
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Hasty poppy eradication in Afghanistan can sow more problems | csmonitor.comfrom the March 23, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0323/p09s01-coop.html Hasty poppy eradication in Afghanistan can sow more problems Peasant farmers left without
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Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, March 31, 2006 00:58 GMTAFGHANISTAN: Women, Socially Bound and Officially Neglected Zarghona Salihi and Habiburahman Ibrahimi - Pajhwok Afghan News* KABUL, Mar 27 (IPS) - W
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A dark season in Afghanistan | csmonitor.comfrom the March 28, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0328/p13s02-bogn.html A dark season in Afghanistan The Taliban may no longer rule, but a writer finds little relief for Afghan women. By Marjor
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'Kabul in Winter,' by Ann Jones - The New York Times - Book Review - New York TimesApril 5, 2006 Books of The Times | 'Kabul in Winter' Lowly Status of Women in a Land Struggling to Rise By WILLIAM GRIMES In December 2002, Ann Jones flew to Afghani
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia Afghan Turkmen suspicious of modern medical treatment Date:21-04-2006 08:20 Country: Turkmenistan Source:TCA<> Author:By Muhammad Tahir*PRAGUE, April 21 (TCA). Rozgeldi was 53 when he found out he ha
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Terraviva EUROPEWednesday, 26 April 2006 AFGHANISTAN: FARMERS FIGHT BAN ON POPPY GROWING by Ahmad Ihsan Sarwaryar, Nadeem Kohistani and Zubair Babakarkhel KABUL (IPS) - Agitated poppy farmers in western Herat province say they will not destroy thei
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Afghanistan facing 'major health crisis' SearchFront Page News . . . Politics Economy Election Human Rights Drugs Sport Refugees Have Your Say Headlines About Us AdvertiseQuick Vote Security situation is detoriating in Afghanistan. Yes N
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Afghanistan facing 'major health crisis' AfghanNews.net -Investment climate improving World Bank 27. Februaryy 2006, 16:34 KABUL (IRIN) - A World Bank report released on Saturday said that the investment climate in Afghanistan was improving, but ide
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Contact l SitemapWAR PROFITEERSAfghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative ReportFariba Nawa, an Afghan-American who returned to her native country to examine the progress of reconstruction, uncovers some examples of where the money has (and ha
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CorpWatch Afghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative ReportContractors in Afghanistan are making big money for bad work A highway that begins crumbling before it is finished. A school with a collapsed roof. A clinic with faulty plumbing. A farmer
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia Afghanistan among top ten failed states Date:03-05-2006 12:35 Country: Central Asia Source:Inter Press Service<> Author:WASHINGTON, May 3 (Inter Press Service). Despite receiving some billion a month
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia AFGHANISTAN KAZAKHSTAN KYRGYZSTAN TAJIKISTAN TURKMENISTAN UZBEKISTAN CENTRAL ASIA News Catalog Classifieds Search Subscribe F.A.Q Country Guide > Get Free Newsletter: Contact us | Advertise | About TCA
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Afghanistan: Mortality Rates Remain High For Mothers, Newborns - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | L
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Afghan reporters focus on roots of insurgents' unrest | csmonitor.comfrom the May 18, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0518/p04s02-wosc.html Afghan reporters focus on roots of insurgents' unrest By David Montero | Correspondent of The Chri
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Broken Promises: Foreign Aid Squandered in Afghanistan News | Polls | Association | Directory | Advertising Services | Events | AwardsHome/News By Ethnicities African African American Asian South Asian European Indigenous Latino Middle Eastern Spec
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Afghanistan: Saffron Could Help Wean Farmers Off Opium Poppies - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | L
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Eurasia Insight - Afhanistan and its Future Eurasia Insight: AFHGANISTAN AND ITS FUTURE Ahmed Rashid: 6/26/06 A EurasiaNet Commentary Five years after Western countries promised Afghans to rebuild their country, Afghanistan is on the brink, facing it
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Afghanistan's Future, Lost in the Shuffle - The Archive - The New York Times NYTimes Go to a Section - Arts Automobiles Books Business Cartoons Classifieds Corrections Crossword/Games Dining & Wine Editorials/Op-Ed Education Fashion & Style Health Ho
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BBC NEWS | South Asia | UN warns over Afghanistan drought UN warns over Afghanistan drought By Mark Dummet BBC News, Kabul The United Nations in Afghanistan says that millions are facing hunger this year because of drought and that it does not have t
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Paris Club Agrees Afghan Debt Relief Deal - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | Listen | RFE/RL Langua
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A Voice From Kandahar - Sarah Chayes - Opinion - New York Times Blog - Times SelectHome Page My Times Today's Paper Video Most Popular Times Topics Opinion All NYT OpinionWorld U.S. N.Y. / Region Business Technology Science Health Sports Opinion Edit
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odiousdebts.orgodiousdebts.org July 31/2006 Analysis: Afghanistan at the Paris Club by Eurodad On July 19th 2006 the Paris Club of creditor nations granted Afghanistan the so-called 'Naples Terms,' with a 67% cancellation (US$1.6 billion) of its arre
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Transitions Online: Afghanistan's Stock Rises TRANSITIONS ONLINE: Central Asia: Afghanistan's Stock Rises by Stephen Blank 7 August 2006 If stability ever comes to Afghanistan, the country could become a significant player on the regional energy mark
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WSJ.com - Keeping the Faith August 11, 2006 TASTE DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool at
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Afghan Opium Cultivation Hits a Record - New York TimesAugust 16, 2006 Afghan Opium Cultivation Hits a Record By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 3:06 p.m. ET KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Opium cultivation in Afghanistan has hit record levels - up by mor
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Afghan News Network - Printer Friendly VersionAfghanNews.netAfghanistan: economic activity more important than military action 26. August 2006, 17:17 AFP - Economic development in Afghanistan is more important than military action, with the efforts
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The News Tribune - Record opium year in Afghanistan (print) Tacoma, WA - Thursday, August 17, 2006 < Back to Regular Story Page Record opium year in Afghanistan FISNIK ABRASHI; The Associated Press Last updated: August 17th, 2006 01:20 AM (PDT) KABUL
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Print Story: UN to announce 'significant increase' in Afghan opium crops: US on Yahoo! NewsBack to Story - Help UN to announce 'significant increase' in Afghan opium crops: US by P. Parameswaran Thu Aug 31, 6:11 PM ET The United Nations is expected t
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Printing.http:/www.atimes.com Why it's not working in Afghanistan By Ann Jones Remember when peaceful, democratic, reconstructed Afghanistan was advertised as the exemplar for the extreme makeover of Iraq? In August 2002, US Secretary of Defense Dona
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Alarm in Washington over deepening disaster in AfghanistanWorld Socialist Web Site www.wsws.orgWSWS : News & Analysis : Asia : Afghanistan Alarm in Washington over deepening disaster in Afghanistan By James Cogan 30 August 2006 Back to screen versi
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FT.com / Comment & analysis / Analysis - Afghanistan on course to failureSkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.comCOMMENT & ANALYSIS AnalysisSubscription pageCloseAfghanistan on course to failure By Rachel Mor
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Scotsman.com News - Latest News - Making every drop count, Coke opens in AfghanistanPlease note: Your browser has been unable to load the stylesheet that accompanies this page. The page is still readable. [Accessibility statement] [Skip to navigation
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Afghan News Network - Printer Friendly VersionAfghanNews.netThe risks of childbirth in Afghanistan 10. September 2006, 09:50 By Jane Elliott, BBC News For women like Rabia, giving birth is a very risky business. Not only did she discover she had a
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Doubts intensify over Afghanistan's future | csmonitor.com from the September 11, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0911/p06s01-wosc.html Doubts intensify over Afghanistan's future Critics say President Karzai and the West must redouble effor
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Independent Online Edition > Asia HomeNewsUKCrimeHealth MedicalLegalUK PoliticsThis BritainTransportUlsterEuropeWorldWorld PoliticsScience & TechnologyAfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaMiddle EastRobert FiskBusinessBusiness NewsBusiness Analysis & Feature
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USAID to provide small loans to thousands of farmers UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Friday 20 October 2006 AFGHANISTAN: USAID to provide small loans to thousands of farmers IRIN Weaning Afghan farmers off opium is one of the
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Taliban Rising Click here to return to the browser-optimized version of this page. This article can be found on the web at http:/www.thenation.com/doc/20061030/parenti_videoTaliban Rising by CHRISTIAN PARENTI [posted online on October 12, 2006] Afg
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Millions face hunger as drought worsens, warns aid group UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Friday 20 October 2006 AFGHANISTAN: Millions face hunger as drought worsens, warns aid IRIN Farmer, now displaced due to drought QALAT, 1
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Running Dry: the humanitarian impact of the global water crisisRunning Dry: the humanitarian impact of the global water crisis IRIN In-Depth AFGHANISTAN: Water crisis a growing human tragedy Print this reportYears of drought, armed conflict and a l
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Ask the Afghans - WSJ.com November 10, 2006 REVIEW & OUTLOOK DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Repri
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Afghan Drug Boom Fuels Child Addiction RatesVacancies Vacancies Internships Internships Reporting Reporting Research & Training Research & Training Mentor Programme Mentor Programme Safety & Security Safety & Security Current Programmes Current Pro
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Afghan Opium: A Failed Jihad?Vacancies Vacancies Internships Internships Reporting Reporting Research & Training Research & Training Mentor Programme Mentor Programme Safety & Security Safety & Security Current Programmes Current Programmes Past Pr
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WSJ.com - Singapore's Monetary Authority Selects Shanmugaratnam as Managing DirectorBusiness Fare United Airlines has changed course and will honor extremely low-priced tickets it sold last month based on a technical glitch at its Web site. Questio
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WSJ.com - Singapore's New Budget Is Filled With Tax CutsWeekend Journal Retailers push shoppers to spruce up on the small things. American caviar is bursting onto the scene. Read more in Weekend Journal. Question of the Day How do you feel about th
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WSJ.com - Singapore Plans to Reduce Its Stake in Certain Outfits Article Search Advanced Search / Help Quotes & Research Symbol(s)Name Market U.S.BrazilCanadaChileMexicoVenezuela-AustraliaHong KongJapanKoreaSingaporeTaiwan-BelgiumFinlandFranceGermany
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SEE Portal - English - Economy SEE Portal - Homepage > In depth > Country Guides > Serbia and Montenegro Economy Jacopo Giorgi The economy of Yugoslavia entered a prolonged decline in 1998. Exacerbated by international sanctions imposed in response t
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SEE Portal - English - History of Serbia and Montenegro SEE Portal - Homepage > In depth > Country Guides > Serbia and Montenegro History of Serbia and Montenegro Serbia The Serbian state as known today was created in 1170 A.D. by Stefan Nemanja, the
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SEE Portal - English - Human development SEE Portal - Homepage > In depth > Country Guides > Serbia and Montenegro Human development Although there is an increasing awareness of human rights in the society, and of them being a vital pillar of democra
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112Southeast Europe Investment Guide 2005Serbia and MontenegroSerbiaI. Economic overview 1.1. General economic indicatorsIndicators 1. GDP, USD mln 2. GDP per capita, USD 3. Real GDP growth rate, % 4. Annual inflation rate, % (retail prices)
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SEE Portal - English - Political Situation SEE Portal - Homepage > In depth > Country Guides > Serbia and Montenegro Political Situation Serbia and Montenegro (SaM) is a constitutional republic consisting of the relatively large Republic of Serbia an
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SETimes Published on SETimes (http:/www.setimes.com) http:/www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2005/0 1/12/feature-02 Serbia Implements Value Added Tax 12/01/2005 Serbia's new Value Added Tax, introduced on 1 January,
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SEE Portal - English - No Legal Framework for the Third Sector SEE Portal - Homepage > News > News:This Week's News No Legal Framework for the Third Sector DANAS Back in the days, to quote the former regimes propaganda, the NGOs were considered trait