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<title>OneWorld United States - South Asia</title>
<description>South Asia</description>
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<title>Up close and personal: Female suicide bombers</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160536/1/</link>
<description>A documentary film titled My Daughter the Terrorist chronicles the lives of two female Tamil Tigers, taking a close look at war and its tragic consequences. The film has been acclaimed globally but the Sri Lankan government is upset saying it glorifies the act.</description>
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<title>Indian industrial house assures environment-friendly power plant</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160526/1/</link>
<description>Allaying the fears of adverse environmental impact, Tata Power says its proposed 1,000 MW thermal power unit in eastern India will use the latest technology to keep the air, water and noise pollution well below the statutory limits. The company also intends to offer fair price to landowners.</description>
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<title>Throwing the baby out with the bath-water</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160523/1/</link>
<description>David Dickson, Director, SciDev.Net, presents the critique of a recent report on the future of modern agriculture. Even as we fight the current needs of a hungry world in an environmentally sustainable way, the contributions of science and technology deserve recognition and not merely blame, he asserts.</description>
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<title>Combating malaria in Assam</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160522/1/</link>
<description>It rains on an average 200-250 days in a year in India's north eastern state of Assam. Home to more than a hundred species of mosquitoes, a fifth of all malarial deaths in the country are reported from here. This season, however authorities claim they are prepared.</description>
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<title>Indian zoo management set to go global</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160519/1/</link>
<description>Indian zoos will soon be globally connected thanks to an agreement with the US-based International Species Information System. The world's largest online database on zoo animals has historic data for several thousands of species, enables better collection and sharing of information and makes animal exchange easier.</description>
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<title>Indian zoo management set to go global</title>
<link>http://www.digitalopportunity.org/article/view/160518/1/</link>
<description>Indian zoos will soon be globally connected thanks to an agreement with the US-based International Species Information System. The world's largest online database on zoo animals has historic data for several thousands of species, enables better collection and sharing of information and makes animal exchange easier.</description>
</item>
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<title>Sri Lanka not fit for Human Rights Council, says UN</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160512/1/</link>
<description>Sri Lanka’s dismal human rights record has obstructed the country’s bid for a place in the UN Human Rights Council. In a letter to the UN, more than twenty national and international NGOs have criticised the country’s failure to meet the Council’s membership standards.</description>
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<title>Global convention on climate change</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160502/1/</link>
<description>World Environment Foundation in association with World Council for Corporate Governance is organising an international convention on climate change from May 30-June 1, 2008 at Palampur, India. The event will be a unique platform for business leaders, policy makers, NGOs and environmental experts to share ideas on developing clean technology.</description>
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<title>Nobel laureates appeal for the release of Indian rights activist</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160501/1/</link>
<description>Twenty-two Nobel Prize winners have written a letter to Indian prime minister and president for the release of Dr Binayak Sen, a public health and civil rights activist. There will be protests in several cities of India and the world to mark the first anniversary of his detention on May 14.</description>
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<title>WWF-India calls for measures to save rhinos</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160500/1/</link>
<description>Lax enforcement and profitability have emboldened rhino poachers in India and Nepal. The situation has left WWF-India extremely worried about the protection of this endangered species of large mammals. It has suggested a slew of measures to take on the criminal gangs engaged in the trade.</description>
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<title>Reviving community-based farming </title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160499/1/</link>
<description>A small village in rural Kerala has successfully dealt with the onslaught of globalisation. Farmer groups and a distribution and retail network by the local community have helped producers get maximum returns for their farm produce and traditional products. The farmers are now happy with the elimination of middlemen.</description>
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<title>Stubborn military causing miseries in Myanmar</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160498/1/</link>
<description>Experts warn that non-availability of fresh drinking water, tardy relief work and health care measures are pushing the cyclone-hit Myanmar towards a major public health catastrophe. Inflexibility of military in not allowing most foreign aid workers is only adding to the woes of affected people.</description>
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<title>Decades on, no shelter for flood-displaced </title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160497/1/</link>
<description>Displaced by devastating floods more than two decades ago, residents of Bihar in eastern India have been forced to live on a century-old British constructed levee. Living in abject poverty and in fear of criminals, these landless farm workers have not seen any government official in the last 25 years.</description>
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<title>UNICEF’s helping hand for Nepalese families living with HIV</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160487/1/</link>
<description>In Nepal, many women and children live with HIV/AIDS passed on to them by their husbands and fathers. UNICEF is helping them by taking care of their treatment and arranging for education of their children.</description>
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<title>Jittery Myanmar keeps foreign aid workers at bay</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160486/1/</link>
<description>Even though unofficial sources are claiming a hundred thousand deaths and many more rendered homeless in Myanmar from last week’s cyclone, the military junta is reluctant to allow foreign aid workers. People say the authorities do not want foreigners around when the country goes for referendum on May 10.</description>
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