Interview with Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch division on the subject of US-Asian Pacific trade: Click here for the broadcast version or the web-only version.
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Interview with Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch division on the subject of US-Asian Pacific trade: Click here for the broadcast version or the web-only version.
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Headlines Package - March 20, 2008
Thu, 03/20/2008 - 14:30
Glacier Report Holds Grave Predictions for World Food Supply The new study says that the rapid melt rate of glaciers in the Himalayan Mountains and on the Tibetan Plateau will cause the most important rivers in India and China to run dry in the warm season by mid-century. Shrinking glaciers in the Himalayas are endangering the health of India's Ganges River, which supplies water to 400 million people and is the source of irrigation for much of the area's crops. China's Yellow and Yangtze rivers are also facing a similar threat as ice packs in Tibet recede along with rising temperatures. But these predictions don't just effect residents of China and India. When combined, the two countries produce more than half of the world's supply of wheat and rice. Much of this production lies in areas where irrigation depends on these three rivers. Lester Brown, environmental economist at the Earth Policy Institute: (clip) "In an integrated world food economy, where the development of food shortages any one country can affect the entire world. We depend on the enormous amount of water stored in those glaciers to help China and India to produce their wheat and rice crops." Brown says that the pending food crisis creates an urgent need to reduce carbon emissions by 80 percent by 2020. For FSRN, I'm Leigh Ann Caldwell. China admitted for the first time today that anti-Beijing protests have spread outside of the Tibetan region as it rushed more troops to the restive area and its nearby provinces. The Chinese authorities also announced the arrest of two dozen Tibetan protesters in Lhasa and claimed that nearly 200 others have turned themselves in to the authorities. The Tibetan Government in exile has expressed concern over the situation in Lhasa and called for international intervention to resolve the crisis. Tibetan spiritual Leader and head of the exiled government the Dala Lama called on Tibetans to reject violent means of protests and seek peace with China. The Dalai Lama says he is ready to talk to Chinese leaders once the violence in Tibet subsides. He reiterated today that he is not demanding independence for Tibet, but rather greater autonomy under Chinese rule. But his conciliatory approach to China is not shared by many Tibetans - including a sizable number of exiles living in India - who want an independent homeland. Meanwhile, protests in solidarity with the Tibetans continued today in India's Dharamshala town and in parts of neighboring Nepal. For FSRN, this is Bismillah Geelani from New Delhi. UT System Reaches Settlement with DHS Over Border Fence Ama Sumani was only 39 years old when she died in a hospital in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The mother-of-two was deported from the UK last January, despite a campaign organized by human right groups. British immigration officials removed Sumani from a hospital in Cardiff, Wales - where she was receiving kidney dialysis and treatment for cancer - because she had overstayed her visa. She was sent back home even though she did not have means to pay for her treatment in Ghana and the drug she needed to prolong her life - thalidomide - is not available in the country. After she arrived, donations paid for her medical treatment, although her condition worsened. Family and friends were about to apply for an emergency visa to allow her to return to the UK for treatment. The Archbishop of Wales, Dr Barry Morgan said her death was on the nation's conscience, and an article in the respected medical journal The Lancet described the deportation as an "atrocious barbarism". In London, Natalia Viana for Free Speech Radio News. Share this page! »
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