Full Coverage: Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China
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The aim of this Guide is to provide a brief introduction to human rights and sustainable development issues in China
12/04/2006
Nobel Prize Laureate and Managing Director of Grameen Bank, Professor Muhammad Yunus, announced at the ITU TELECOM WORLD 2006 opening ceremony at Hong Kong that Grameen will team up the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and other partners, including Cisco Systems, QUALCOMM and a newly formed consortium, Enclusion, to launch a virtual, global 'ICT Empowerment Network' as part of their collaboration through the Connect the World initiative.
Read moreRelated: [Bangladesh] [Capacity Building] [Poverty] [ICT] [Civil Society] Image: Mohmmad Yunus of Grameen Bank
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01/11/2006
The Hong Kong authorities are urged to drop charges - expected to be heard today - against 14 people accused of "unlawful public assembly" at the World Trade Organization meeting in December.
Read moreFrom: International Confederation of Free Trade Unions Related: [Trade] [Activism] |
12/26/2005
War on Want fights poverty in developing countries in partnership and solidarity with people affected by globalisation. It campaigns for workers' rights and against the root causes of global poverty, inequality and injustice. Read the WTOlog by War on Want's Media Officer John Coventry.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Globalization] |
12/22/2005
The National Social Watch Coalition and ActionAid India provide the latest information and news from Hong Kong. The information has been provided in the form of two newsletters in PDF - wto news5.pdf and wto news11.pdf.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Human Rights] [Globalization] |
12/22/2005
The National Social Watch Coalition and ActionAid India provide the latest information and news from Hong Kong. The information has been provided in the form of two newsletters in PDF - wto news6.pdf and wto news8.pdf.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [International Cooperation] [Trade] [Globalization] |
12/21/2005
Maailman suurin ammattijärjestö VAKL tyrmää WTO-kokouksen tulokset. VAKLin arvion mukaan Hongkongissa synnytetyn sopimuksen seuraukset kehitysmaille ovat vakavat, ja aikaansaatu sopimus on "uusi isku työllisyyttä ja kestävää kehitystä vastaan".
Read moreFrom: Suomen Ammattiliittojen Solidaarisuuskeskus Related: [Trade] |
12/20/2005
The final text salvaged from around-the-clock global trade talks here sets a deadline to end farm export subsidies by rich nations, a long-time demand by developing nations, but also binds poorer countries to more dramatically open their markets to multinational corporations.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Corporations] [Trade] Image: North Korean woman farmer © Food First / Institute for Food and Development Policy
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12/19/2005
Kansalaisjärjestöt ovat pettyneitä sunnuntaina Hongkongissa päättyneen WTO:n kokouksen lopputulokseen. Tulos jäi pettymykseksi kehitysmaille ja on Maan ystävien mukaan tuohoisa myös ympäristölle. Ulkomaankauppa- ja kehitysministeri Kiviniemi pitää lopputulosta kelvollisena pohjana jatkolle.
Read moreFrom: Kehitysyhteistyön palvelukeskus, maailma.net, Maan ystävät, Ulkoministeriö Related: [Trade] Image: Maanviljelyä Libanonissa © Shadi Hamadeh
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12/19/2005
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has condemned the police brutality and inhuman treatment of WTO protestors by the Hong Kong police. The AHRC has alleged that the police used excessive force on unarmed protestors.
Read moreRelated: [Human Rights] [Freedom of Expression] [Civil Society] [Democracy] |
12/19/2005
India on Sunday welcomed the revised draft declaration released at the sixth WTO Ministerial and said the strategy to forge a grand alliance of 110 developing countries had paid off.
Read moreRelated: [India] [Capacity Building] [International Cooperation] [Poverty] [Trade] |
12/19/2005
The Global Call To Action Against Poverty (GCAP), which is the world's largest anti-poverty alliance, has hit out at the rich nations for allowing inequities to persist in world trade and trying to seek out a better future for themselves at the cost of the world's poor.
Read moreRelated: [International Cooperation] [Poverty] [Trade] [Civil Society] [MDGs] Image: WTO meet, Hong Kong
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12/18/2005
"An outrage"..."This situation is worse than medieval"..."abuses of fair and transparent negotiating process" - Peter Hardstaff of the World Development Movement reports from the the trade negotiations in Hong Kong.
Read moreMore coverage from OneWorld Partners: + 'A sense of calm anticipation' + 'New draft gives little cause for hope' + EU, US steer talks towards disaster + EU backtracking on subsidies + Leaked UK media strategy shows 'political cowardice' on trade + WTO draft text on agriculture reflects interests of rich nations + US cotton market access offer as 'empty promise' + WTO talks in stalemate + Developing Nations Push Back at WTO Meet + OneWorld South Asia From: Consumers International, World Development Movement, Oxfam Great Britain, OneWorld UK, Christian Aid, War on Want, CAFOD, Inter Press Service Related: [Trade] Image: Trade concerns
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12/15/2005
OneWorld South Asia's Dr Nilay Ranjan, who is currently attending the World Trade Organisation meet at Hong Kong has sent in snippets from the city. Read on about the Indian stand on subsidies, Korean farmers, globalisation and a UNDP meet on services trade.
Read moreRelated: [India] [Agriculture] [Business] [Trade] [MDGs] |
12/15/2005
The success of this week's trade talks in Hong Kong hinge on the willingness of the US, Japan and the European Union to cut their $1 billion a day agricultural subsidies. But, wonders Mark Engler, is market access really the answer to poverty?
Read moreFrom: TomPaine.com Related: [Poverty] [Trade] Image: Make Poverty History rally, London, 2005 © Peter Armstrong
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12/15/2005
On the second day of the World Trade Organisation talks in Hong Kong, discussions on scrapping agricultural subsidies appear to have stalled as a result of political wrangling. However, the European Union, the United States and China did urge the 149 member countries to push further liberalisation of global trade forward.
Read moreRelated: [Poverty] [Business] [Trade] [Globalization] |
12/15/2005
India on Wednesday called for a multilateral trade negotiation process that does not disrupt the growth strategies of developing countries. Indian Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath said that development was not adjunct to the global trading system but intrinsic to every aspect of the ongoing negotiations under the Doha Development Round.
Read moreRelated: [India] [Development] [Agriculture] [Trade] |
12/14/2005
Arriving in Hong Kong from 12 countries across Asia, The People’s Caravan for Justice began a week of protests against the World Trade Organisation’s ministerial meeting by calling for people to be put at the heart of international trade rules.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Trade] [Globalization] [MDGs] |
12/14/2005
The charity Christian Aid has cited leaked documents to say that the European Union (EU) will push developing nations to privatise services such as water, healthcare and banking at the trade ministers meeting in Hong Kong this week.
Read moreRelated: [Western Europe] [Poverty] [Business] [Corporations] [Trade] [Globalization] |
12/14/2005
In a bizarre waterborne protest yesterday, hundreds of South Korea's notoriously militant farmers stripped off to their boxer shorts, donned orange lifejackets and leapt into Hong Kong harbour in a back-door attempt to sink the world trade talks.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [Poverty] [Trade] [Globalization] [MDGs] Image: North Korean Farmers Work for Self-Sufficiency © Food First / Institute for Food and Development Policy
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12/14/2005
Ministers from the World Trade Organisation's 149 member nations are holding talks in Hong Kong aimed at reducing global trade barriers. The ministers will try and reach agreements abolishing import tariffs and national subsidies for agriculture, industry and goods and services. At the Doha conference, four years ago, it was agreed that subsidies and import tariffs would be abolished by the end of next year.
Read moreRelated: [Agriculture] [International Cooperation] [Trade] [Globalization] [MDGs] |



