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Full Coverage: Gabon

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Libreville taxi
12/17/2004 Gabon's taxi drivers have been enlisted in the campaign to raise awareness about HIV and AIDS.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [HIV/AIDS]
01/28/2004 Four days of rioting by secondary school students in Libreville highlighted a growing frustration with education cutbacks in Gabon, a country that grew rich on oil, but which is now struggling to cope with a steady decline in production.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [West Africa] [Education] [Poverty]
09/06/2002 A full 10 percent of the landmass of Gabon will be set aside for a system of national parks, the government announced this week.
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From: Environment News Service (ENS)
Related: [Land] [Environment]
12/13/2001 Gabon has appealed for international help to cope with an outbreak of ebola fever about 700 kilometres north of the capital, Libreville.
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From: allAfrica.com
Related: [Health]
07/06/2001 Tens of thousands of refugees who have sought safety from Sierra Leone and Liberia are still falling prey to serious abuses in Guinea, according to a new report.
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From: Human Rights Watch
Related: [Liberia] [Sierra Leone] [West Africa] [Human Rights] [Conflict]
07/06/2001 Tens of thousands of refugees who have sought safety from war-torn Sierra Leone and Liberia are still falling prey to serious abuses in Guinea, according to a new report.
Read more
From: Human Rights Watch
Related: [Liberia] [Sierra Leone] [West Africa] [Human Rights] [Conflict]
06/15/2001 Gabon police have arrested a man suspected of chartering a Nigerian-registered ship found carrying dozens of children into slavery in April.
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From: Anti-Slavery International
Related: [Children] [Human Rights]
05/02/2001 A boat which left the port of Cotonou, Benin, in mid-March was carrying children to work as domestics and labourers in Gabon and Cameroon, Benin government and United Nations officials have confirmed.
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From: United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Network
Related: [Cameroon] [Benin] [Children] [Labor]
Carrying water in Niger
04/30/2001 Rather than insist on the cancellation of all their debts that may bankrupt the IMF and the World Bank, African ministers said Saturday that they would prefer an increase in the flow of other resources from developed countries to their countries.
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From: allAfrica.com
Related: [Niger] [Sierra Leone] [Tanzania ] [Debt]
Image: Carrying water in Niger © Josh Estey/CARE 2001 / CARE USA
04/16/2001 There was growing concern about the fate of a group of children held on a slave ship that has gone missing off the west coast of Africa. The vessel was reportedly transporting the children from Benin to work on plantations in Gabon but was turned away from two ports when its cargo was discovered.
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From: Guardian Unlimited
Related: [Benin] [West Africa] [Children] [Labor] [Human Rights]
12/18/2000 Hundreds of Bangladeshi women sent to work as home helpers in Gulf nations each year are abused and exploited by unscrupulous employers, say rights groups.
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From: Inter Press Service
Related: [Bahrain] [Bangladesh] [Kuwait] [Qatar] [Saudi Arabia] [United Arab Emirates] [Labor] [Migration] [Gender]
06/19/2000 European and Asian demand for timber is stripping large swathes of the world's second largest tropical forest which spreads across Cameroon and Gabon, warn two new reports.
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From: Inter Press Service
Related: [Cameroon] [Forests]
04/28/2000 Refugees who fled the Republic of Congo for neighbouring Gabon when fighting flared last year are staying put in spite of a ceasefire brokered in December.
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From: Newslink Africa Ltd
Related: [Congo] [Refugees] [Conflict]
06/25/1999 Several thousand disabled squatters in Gabon have occupied empty government buildings to raise the profile of problems faced by homeless people.
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From: Inter Press Service
Related: [Shelter & Housing] [Disability]



 
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