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Despite the recession, a recent survey of small businesses in Ballard revealed that more than 20 entrepreneurs have opened their doors within the past two years. After overcoming the initial hurdle of securing both capital and affordable leases, new business owners now face the larger challenge of surviving in a tough economy. Reporters Aislyn Greene and Krista Staudinger enter the business world to discover how these entrepreneurs hope to win the hearts – and wallets – of Ballard locals.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Student Reporting, Poverty and Development
In 2004 a new detention center opened on the tideflats below downtown Tacoma. Owned and operated by a private corporation, it houses up to a thousand immigrants at a time while arrangements are made to deport them. Alex Stonehill takes us inside, and finds out about the controversy surrounding immigration detention.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Read, Labor and Immigration
Gold mining is a key part of the development strategy of the West African country Ghana. But as Anna Boiko-Weyrach reports, there’s growing concern about its impact on local communities and the environment.
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Categories: Ghana, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
In our final segment, producer Jessica Partnow follows the story of one family living in immigration limbo in Auburn, Washington.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Listen, Labor and Immigration
An imposing brick building on Airport Way at the edge of the International District housed detained immigrants from 1931 to 1999. It was once known as Seattle's Ellis Island. Producer Sarah Stuteville takes us to this now-empty building and uncovers dark memories of life within its walls.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, Listen, Labor and Immigration
This story takes us to Washington's border with Canada, where the Border Patrol arrests hundreds of people each year. Producer Jessica Partnow heads out on a ride along with Border Patrol and spends the night watching for smugglers.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Listen, Labor and Immigration
Pakistan gets plenty of press for bomb attacks and international terrorist threats. After two months traveling the country last year, CLP journalists found that the ongoing crisis here has its roots in a corrupt and collapsing education system that is feeding poverty, discontent and violence.
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Children in developing countries don't often get to enjoy the privilege of playing with store-bought toys. But for most of them, it doesn't matter. They'll just put together their own makeshift toys to keep themselves occupied. From Port-au-Prince, Grant Fuller brings us a portrait of Haitian kids in an earthquake displacement camp, making do with what they've got.
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Categories: Haiti, Listen, Poverty and Development
From Tuning In, the Donate column of WSJ magazine's May issue, sights and sounds recorded on the streets of post-earthquake Port-au-Prince by CLP contributor Grant Fuller.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Listen, Poverty and Development
Check out this audio slideshow on NYTimes.com. CLP contributor Grant Fuller recorded all the audio and conducted the interviews. Photographs are by Lynsey Addario. The slideshow accompanies this print article by Simon Romero.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Listen, Poverty and Development
This is the first story produced by America In 5. It was created in seven days by a Seattle-based team including a comic artist, a journalist, a radio producer and a filmmaker.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Watch, Poverty and Development
What would it take to make the Haitian people laugh in the midst of the disaster? Grant Fuller brings us a story from Port-au-Prince about a street vendor who brings joy to people, one cup of shaved ice at a time.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Listen, Poverty and Development
The first time Kristin Holland explored the Woodland Park Zoo’s Night Exhibit, she couldn’t see a thing. All the kids in her daycare squirmed outside the doors, antsy to file inside the warm, eerie building. First, there was nothing. Then, something hooted. Something hissed. Something scurried across a tree branch.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, Watch, Read, Listen, Student Reporting, The Environment
In Haiti, it's common to see vendors walking down the street with phones in their hands. That's how they advertise what they're selling: not the phones themselves, but phone calls. Since the January earthquake, though, business hasn't been easy. Reporter Grant Fuller visited a displacement camp in Port-au-Prince, and met one of these phone-call sellers.
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Categories: Haiti, Listen, Poverty and Development
Haiti's only film school, the Ciné Institute, is based in Jacmel, a city hit hard by the earthquake. In the past two months, the young students at the Ciné Institute have given up making fiction and began making documentaries covering the earthquake's aftermath. They've even received international recognition for their work. Grant Fuller visited the school and brings us this story.
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Categories: Haiti, Listen, Poverty and Development
For the girls of Haiti's Under-17 national squad, it's more than just a game. Every member of the 20-girl team was left homeless after the 7.0-magnitude earthquake ravaged their country on Jan. 12. In March, the team competed in the U-17 women's CONCACAF championship in Costa Rica, giving their fellow Haitians back home a small sign of hope and recovery in the wake of death and destruction.
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Categories: Haiti, Costa Rica, Watch, Poverty and Development
The government of Haiti has begun a massive cleanup effort, removing the thousands of piles of rubble left by from the January earthquake. A large dump site has been set up on the outskirts of town, and trucks full of debris arrive throughout the day. Reporter Grant Fuller tells the story of a man in Haiti who salvages metal from this rubble.
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Categories: Haiti, Listen, Poverty and Development
The online magazine “Intercontinental Cry” forwarded a recent article that says Denison Mines, a Canadian company, has started mining uranium on the north rim of the Grand Canyon, “In defiance of legal challenges and a U.S. Government moratorium.”
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Categories: USA, Blogs, The Environment
It was a sight I expected to see. Bodies, corpses, cadavers, whatever you wanna call them. From the horrific shots of dump trucks carting them off to the gruesome stories told by friends who came before me, I knew I’d see something unpleasant. But it took me almost three weeks in Haiti, until my next-to-last day here, to see one single dead person.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
I’m living in a dining room. Hotel Karibe was one of the finest hotels in Port-au-Prince. Now, its cracked-up main building is clearly unsafe for guests. But the rest of the hotel facilities (dining hall, conference center, restaurant) are in good shape. And so, for lack of a better option, they’ve emptied out the dining tables and set up 18 double beds around the perimeter of this spacious room. Welcome to the new Hotel Karibe, where privacy suddenly takes a backseat to safety.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
This 3-for-1 combo blog post is a good indication of how busy I’ve become. I only have two full days left in Haiti, so I’ve been trying to make the most of my time. At the risk of sounding like a whiny privileged foreigner, I’ll say that I’m tired. All the driving around, all the collapsed buildings, all the sad stories, all the nonstop work has started to take its toll. But then again, I obviously have nothing to complain about. So I’ll just shut up now, you’re welcome.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Poverty and Development
Hurry up and wait. That’s been the theme of my time in Haiti. Today was full of frustration as my best efforts were thwarted at nearly every turn. Even if you start at the crack-a-dawn, you can easily spend an entire day and get very little done.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
After two weeks in Port-au-Prince, I finally got a chance to see more of Haiti. I’d heard stories about places like Leogane and Jacmel. That they were completely flattened and had received an incredibly slow trickle of aid since the earthquake. I braced for the worst.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
You’ll have to excuse the excessive use of kid photos. Ever since the first couple days when I wrote that there were no children around, I’ve been surrounded by them.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
Before I came to Haiti, I had no idea what to expect. The image you get from the outside is of a completely destroyed wasteland where the most basic needs are nowhere to be found. No food and water, no electricity, no medical supplies, no nothing. Then, of course, you get here and realize the image in your head was a bit exaggerated. Yes, it’s a disaster zone and yes, people are struggling. But that suitcase full of bottled water, beans, and camping gear that I (perhaps naively) lugged over here hasn’t been the necessity I thought it might be.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
I hesitate to even mention this because it’s a story we’ve all heard a thousand times in the past month: the tragic tale of another disaster victim. And yet that doesn’t make their stories any less heartbreaking, any less powerful. So here goes.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Blogs, Poverty and Development
A Nepali journalist emailed this morning, saying that these are hard times for news media in Nepal.
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The period of mourning is over. And in my opinion, the country is better off than it was last week. I told a Haitian friend I thought it was the happiest three days of mourning I’d ever seen. She informed me that the word “mourning” wasn’t exactly the best translation. It was more like a time to hope, a time to remember.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
My first radio dispatch from Haiti hit the airwaves today on World Vision Report. Senegal offers to resettle Haitians in the land of their African ancestors. An intriguing thought, but many in Port-au-Prince aren’t ready to abandon ship just yet. Listen above. There’s also a slideshow, and an audio postcard of a church forced into the street.
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Categories: Haiti, Listen, Blogs, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development
From the dark days of the Chinese Exclusion Act to post–911 crackdowns on undocumented immigrants, immigration detention has a controversial history in both our nation and in the Puget Sound region. Between World/Behind Bars is a four-part radio series exploring immigration detention from its roots in the 1930s at “Seattle's Ellis Island" in the International District to today's privately-run Northwest Detention Center on the Tacoma Tideflats. Listen to the series on kuow.org.
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Categories: USA, Watch, Listen, Labor and Immigration
Today began three days of mourning in Haiti. Exactly one month ago, just before 5 p.m., “the event” struck this land. Finally, Haitians are taking time to honor their dead and reflect on their new reality.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Blogs, Poverty and Development
Traffic was a nightmare. Since most of my day was spent in the car, I'll give you a taste of what I saw.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Poverty and Development
This was a day for decisions. After spending all day on the UN base because of a story deadline, I decided I’m ready to get out. It’s been nearly a week, and I’m sick of this lifestyle. I go from the tent to the cafeteria to the Internet spot to the bathroom to the bank, and back again. Everything is so sterile, white-washed, without character. Sure, there are plenty of perks: free wireless, free lodging, plenty of food and water.
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Categories: Haiti, Watch, Poverty and Development
It was a pretty uneventful day. It started off in the bank line on base. Since I’m trying to keep a low profile around here, I had no idea there was a bank.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
Surprise, surprise. I saw more destruction today. A woman I interviewed gave me a driving tour of her neighborhood. The school she grew up in, gone. The church her mother forced her to attend, gone. Her friend’s home, gone.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
I called my interpreter this morning, wondering why she was running late. "I’m just waiting for the driver," she said. "I should still make it on time." That’s when I realized I’d been operating an hour ahead of Haiti for the past two days. Sigh. Definition of a boneheaded mistake. But seriously, who’d have thunk that two countries sharing the same island would be in different time zones?
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
I take back what I said yesterday about the destruction not being so bad. Or rather, I’ll take this opportunity to revise it. Downtown Port-au-Prince is a disaster, no ifs, ands or buts about it.
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
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Categories: Iraq, Blogs, The Media, Politics and Conflict
I got a late start this morning, thanks to a slight wardrobe malfunction (forgot to bring underwear).
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Categories: Haiti, Blogs, Poverty and Development
Driving outside Prestea, in western Ghana, you might wonder about the makeshift tents lining the roadside, or what the black grime on the ground is, or why there are so many women selling food in such a random-looking place. But if you went to the area’s chief and got permission to enter the camp, you would see that it’s not a shanty-town but a profitable small business, run by local entrepreneurs.
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Categories: Ghana, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development
In Spring of 2008 the Seattle Post-Intelligencer joined the ranks of collapsing American newspapers, shutting down print operations after 142 years. It's in the P-I tries to capture the confusion and disappointment of the people who worked the last few days of this Seattle institution. This short film was produced as part of the International Documentary Challenge. It was conceived and completed over the span of five days at the beginning of March 2009. It represents a collaboration between The Last Quest and the Common Language Project.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, Watch, The Media
With gold prices at record highs, many companies are trying to get in on the action and mine in Africa's second-largest gold producer, Ghana. But one Canadian company already operating in Ghana is running into problems with the local community and the government.
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Categories: Ghana, Blogs, The Environment, Politics and Conflict
Near the center of the small town of Yayaaso in Ghana's Eastern Region, Samuel Obeng stops mixing concrete to sit on a bench under a tree and tell me what he thinks of the arrival of Colorado-based gold mining company, Newmont. He wears a faded pink tank-top and gestures with his hands. "Me and my brothers will all get work. For the women, if they're vendors, they'll get more business." Samuel is pretty optimistic, but he's keeping an eye out. "If that doesn't happen when they come… and they just leave us, then there will be plenty of problems."
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Categories: Ghana, Blogs, The Environment
Ghana is one of the world's top producers of gold. And with gold's price at record highs, more companies are heading to the African country for a piece of the action. Anna Boiko-Weyrauch reports.
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Categories: Ghana, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development
Peshawar, PAKISTAN--Rows of adolescent boys kneel in an open marble courtyard, dwarfed by the oversized, yellowing Arabic texts opened before them. Murmuring under white knit prayer caps, their small bodies sway in rhythm with their hafiz (memorization of the verses of the Koran by rote). The entryway is adorned by a faded poster of Mulana Sami al-Haq, the owner of the sprawling grounds of the Dar al-Haqqania Madrassa and Principle Administrator to its 3000 students. Shrouded in green, he holds a Koran in one uplifted arm and a Kalashnikov in the other.
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For years, Pakistan's religious schools have been identified as breeding grounds for terrorists. But they're also the only opportunity millions of poor Pakistani children have to get an education. In this video, reporter Alex Stonehill goes inside madrassas to find out whats really being taught.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Education, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Innovations in digital technology and the global economic crisis have fueled a need for independent reporting through the use of multimedia. This video by CLP Water Wars Intern Julia Marino tells the behind the scenes story of reporting on water issues from Ethiopia and Kenya on a shoestring budget.
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Categories: Kenya, Ethiopia, Watch, The Environment, The Media, Poverty and Development
Like India, Pakistan has its share of call centers, offering everything from customer service and tech support to health insurance and home security systems. Jessica Partnow takes us through a night in the life of Ali Jaffri, a professional telemarketer in Lahore.
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Categories: Pakistan, Listen, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development
Dark clouds swarm on the horizon and the wind carries approaching rain. It is not a smell or a feeling that drifts across the land, though the nostrils are suddenly thrust free of dust and the air is lighter and cooler against the skin. It is a taste, a saturated sweetness on the tip of the tongue, a quenching of the thirst by particles unseen that blow, for the first time in over a year, across the bare earth, scarred trees, and broken imaginations of northern Kenya.
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Categories: Kenya, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development
Life in Cerro de Pasco - a gritty mining town high in the Andes - has always been hard. But after a century of corporate mining that has left the soil saturated by toxic waste, safe drinking water scarce, and rancid fumes floating in the thin air, it has become unlivable.
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Categories: Peru, Watch, Listen, Blogs, The Environment, Human Rights, Poverty and Development
Journalist Alex Stonehill discusses the pollution of the Yamuna River in India and the World Water Forum.
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Categories: India, Watch, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
East Africa is in transition; a drought that has lasted over a year in many parts of the region has just broken with the onset of rains. Many say that this period without rain has the been the worst that anyone can remember, the majority of livestock dying, crops failing and refusing to sprout, perennial rivers drying up for the first time, and power and water rationing taking place in urban areas. In the rangelands of northern Kenya, and similar landscapes throughout the region, land degradation and resource scarcity has provoked conflict, political maneuvering along ethnic lines, and left at least 20 million people lacking food security. Now, with the onset of El Nino rains, the region is poised on the edge of extremes, fearful of the damage that too much water will cause in a degraded and fragile land.
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Categories: Kenya, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health, Politics and Conflict
I recently got a grant from The Nation Institute's Investigative Fund to cover gold mining in Ghana - in particular I'll be looking at the relationship between large mining companies and the communities in which they operate.
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As the first notes of the Quran, sung by a diminutive imam in an embroidered prayer cap, fill the Westin Bellevue's ornate Grand Ballroom, a sea of hands moves to cover heads.
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Categories: Pakistan, USA, Read, Education, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development
BUGNA, Pakistan — Thirteen-year-old Humiera Kausar's oversized sneakers hurry over piles of granite boulders and through scrubby pines bristling with last night's rain. A headscarf and pink shawl are wound tightly around her small frame to protect against the thick mist that has settled over her high mountain village.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Listen, Education, Gender, Poverty and Development
Journalists Sarah Stuteville and Alex Stonehill spent six weeks crisscrossing Pakistan to report on the country's growing education crisis. Both are funded by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, and spoke recently with iWitness from Karachi about their experience. Watch the interview and find out why they believe Pakistan's religious schools get an unfair rap from the West, and how so-called "ghost schools" are at the heart of the state's failings. The two also talk with a Swat resident in Karachi who has just fled the fighting, and why his presence in the city is causing new tensions.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Blogs, Education, Human Rights, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
September 20, 2009: Story updated with radio feature and photo slideshow. Despite ankle deep garbage, charcoal-scribbled graffiti of machine guns and the scorched remains of squatters' fires, the dusty green chalkboard still reads "December 2, 2006," the last day that classes were held in the primary school wing of Mirza Adam Khan, a government-run compound of schools in the poor and violence plagued Karachi neighborhood of Lyari.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Read, Listen, Education, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
KARACHI, Pakistan - At first glance this is not a colorful city. An aerial view of Karachi reveals a sprawl of squat markets and utilitarian high-rises set among sparse vegetation and dull industrial public art, a landscape of stucco corroded by salty sea air and looming cement structures coated in urban grime.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Read, Listen, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development
KARACHI, Pakistan - Sher Shah is a hard-working neighborhood — a confusing knot of cramped lanes offering up a riot of rattling power looms, puttering motors and booming furnaces. This rough suburb, with its garment factories, machine shops and scrap metal smelters far from the imposing cement skyscrapers of the city center, forms the industrial gut of Karachi.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Listen, Education, Human Rights, Poverty and Development
Brides and grooms looking for ethical ways to celebrate their marriage can find lots of fair trade items for their weddings and receptions, from flowers and rice to wine and coffee. But when it comes to their rings - it's harder to be a responsible consumer.
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Categories: Ghana, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
The Yamuna River, which flows through the heart of India's capital city, New Delhi, is one of the holiest Rivers in Hindu mythology. Its also one of the most polluted rivers in the world absorbing over 200 million gallons of sewage from the city each day. This video takes us to the banks of the Yamuna, where some still eke out a living from a river that others are fighting to bring back to life.
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Categories: India, Watch, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
No matter how frenzied the exhaust-coated sun-saturated day is in Karachi—this city really lives at night.
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Despite Karachi’s decades-old reputation as Pakistan’s most violent city, over the last year this urban economic hub has remained a haven from the bombings and violence reverberating through the rest of the country. But a flaring of ethnic clashes in recent weeks, exacerbated by a the arrival of thousands of refugees from the violence in northern Pakistan, has many worried that instability has returned to the streets of this massive port city on the shores of the Arabian Sea.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Listen, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
The CLP team takes a break to reflect on the first half of the Pakistan: Hearts and Minds reporting project.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Blogs, The Media, Politics and Conflict
The day is closing in Jellozai and children run along the narrow dusty rows of UNICEF-stamped tents trying to squeeze a little more play time out of the dying evening. Some 43,000 people live in this refugee camp just outside of Peshawar, after fleeing violence in the tribal regions not far from here.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Pale columns of smoke are rising from a sea of blue tents stretching into the distance of the flat khaki plain that is Jellozai, a refugee camp eight miles outside of Peshawar, home to an estimated 43,000 people fleeing violence in the tribal regions not far from here.
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Categories: Pakistan, Blogs, The Media, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
The release of a grainy video showing a girl being flogged for adultery by the Taliban in the Swat valley has created an uproar in Pakistan. In this video-blog journalist Alex Stonehill discusses why, amidst all the violence in Pakistan, this particular video has evoked such a reaction.
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Categories: Pakistan, Watch, Blogs, Human Rights, Gender, The Media
In the gray light of my first morning in Pakistan, the thick salty smell of sulfur introducing me to the seaside city of Karachi, the streets were full of men. With few exceptions it was men congregating in front of the still dark airport, men piled onto buses carnival decorated with Technicolor and chrome and men weaving through the thickening traffic on motor bikes and rickshaws.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Blogs, Education, Human Rights, Gender, Politics and Conflict
I’ve become terrified of my email. I’ve always been a little skittish of the inbox, never knowing what that first login might bring to my day - an outraged critique of a recent article, a facebook request from a long lost ex-boyfriend - but in the weeks leading up to our departure my crowded inbox has set my stomach lurching in newly anxious ways as I sift through daily accounts of the chaos that has touched down in Pakistan.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, Pakistan, USA, Read, Blogs, Education, The Media, Politics and Conflict
An estimated 35,000 people died last week as the 5th World Water Forum convened in Istanbul, Turkey. If you didn’t hear the news, don’t be surprised; the 35,000 deaths the week before, and the week before that didn’t grab any headlines either.
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Categories: Turkey, Blogs, The Environment, The Media, Poverty and Development
The CLP's latest investigative feature hit the newsstands – er internets – last night. The punch-drunk Seattle PI posted on the Tacoma Immigration Detention Center as a web-only feature about 25 headlines below the lead story about who has a heavily anticipated art opening in Greenwood tonight.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Blogs, Labor and Immigration, The Media
NORTHWEST DETENTION CENTER, Tacoma -- Arms poking stiffly from an oversized blue jumpsuit, Vitaliy Budimir recounted his crimes in a hesitant voice that barely revealed his Russian origins.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Watch, Read, Listen, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration
2009 promises to be another tough year for the journalism industry, and it looks like it’s our turn to take a beating here in Seattle. The imminent closure of the Seattle Post –Intelligencer, the city’s oldest and second largest newspaper was announced last week, just a few months after the second round of major staff cutbacks in 2008 went down at our other major newspaper, the Seattle Times.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Blogs, The Media, Politics and Conflict
It is dawn and the camels move past the truck like shadows. They seem too tired to talk, their heads bent down as they plod on along the dirt track. The only sound they make is the light thud of their feet hitting the white sand. Perhaps they are embracing the morning in silence; watching the last few rebellious stars disappear as the pink sky turns the acacia trees to silhouettes. Or, and this is much more likely, they are quiet because they are walking through a graveyard and do not want to wake the dead.
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Categories: Kenya, Read, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
An 83km-long electrified fence has been completed to keep elephants separate from humans in central Kenya. The controversial solution to the age-old problem of human elephant conflict was initiated and managed by the Laikipia Wildlife Forum and the Kenya Wildlife Service after other methods of deterring the species from cropraiding, such as chilli fences and noise guns, had failed to resolve the issue satisfactorily.
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Categories: Kenya, Read, Listen, The Environment, Global Health, Politics and Conflict
Most people know the familiar refrain reduce, reuse, and recycle. Many of us are even compelled to sort our paper and metal into bins, or to reuse all our scratch paper. But in developing countries recycling is often less of a luxury. In one of the world's poorest countries, Mali, West Africa, producer Kira Neel came upon an ingenious form of recycling.
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Categories: Mali, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development
We arrive at the police station -- half a dozen or so iron sheet structures. We are led into one of the structures where the officer on duty is seated on a bed in front of a table leaning backward.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, Poverty and Development, Global Health
The sky is just beginning to lighten over Lake Victoria and the hacking of machetes echoes along the Kenyan coastline. Fishermen, stripped to their underwear in the already rising heat, are chasing silvery baby fish through the thick grass that chokes the lake shores, in defiance of laws against fishing in these delicate breeding grounds.
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Categories: Kenya, Watch, Read, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health, Politics and Conflict
DUBLUCK, Ethiopia — On a warm January afternoon in southern Ethiopia, thousands of ill-tempered livestock stand in groups with the pastoralists who have guided them for dozens of miles to drink. The animals dot an expansive field of Acacia trees, severed bits and pieces of dead grass and dust. Earlier in the day thousands of young goats, sheep and calves took turns to have their fill of water. And the show will not end with the cattle; camels are still waiting in line. For being the best able to resist drought, now they will be last.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Watch, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health, Politics and Conflict
They spoke of poverty and of being expected to feed and take care of themselves by their early teens. Many described turning to theft almost immediately, well aware that even the lowest paying factories of Kisumu wouldn't hire them--they came from the wrong neighborhood, none of them had finished school and anyway around here any available job, no matter how menial, was filled before the help wanted sign could even go up.
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Categories: Kenya, Read, Blogs, Education, Poverty and Development
Africans’ struggles for water inevitably read to American audiences as happening “over there” in a chaotic and distant world. Connecting them to a looming global trend requires a prescience that doesn’t hold up to the exacting principles of print journalism. This is especially true because developments on the ground often outpace the scientific community -- in many neglected areas, for example, the only way to find out if rainfall has been declining is to ask a subsistence farmer, because the formal scientific data simply doesn’t exist.
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Categories: Kenya, Ethiopia, Read, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
Ethiopia has been a dominant force in long distance running for decades. Despite a shortage of training infrastructure, athletes have excelled thanks to hard work, the high altitudes in their home country and the purity of the ancient sport, where whoever runs the farthest and the fastest, wins. Alex Stonehill's photo slideshow offers a taste of training in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Watch, Poverty and Development, Global Health
NAIROBI, Kenya--The long rainy season in Kenya has begun and sudden storms regularly burst over Nairobi. Many welcome the downpours, which signal the end of another dry summer and wash the steamy crowded capital clean each morning. In Kibera, a massive slum of rusty tin roofs and makeshift homes spreading out from the southwest of the city, the rain is turning the twisting dirt roads and alleyways to thick red mud.
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Categories: Kenya, Watch, Read, Poverty and Development, Global Health
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia—Dawn in the Merkato breaks over a tangle of streets jammed with shouting hawkers and towering pyramids of ripe produce from Ethiopia’s fertile countryside. Today it is a popular destination for sunburnt foreign tourists, expensive cameras poised to capture lively scenes from one of Africa’s largest open-air markets.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Read, The Media, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Recently a short piece I wrote about the personal conflict I felt when comparing my water-wasteful lifestyle in the United States with the stories I'd reported of water shortages in rural Ethiopia--specifically the story of one father that had lost four children to waterborne diseases--was classified by one reader as just another "guilt trip."
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Categories: Kenya, Read, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
ADDIS ABABA—Chala Ahmed, 26, hit the jackpot eight years ago when he won the US visa lottery in the bustling eastern Ethiopian town of Haramaya. His first thought was that he would build his mother a big beautiful house. His next thought was that the new home, painted a rosy pink behind a high white gate, should be erected on the shore of Lake Haramaya, the huge stretch of placid water that gave his hometown its name.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Watch, Read, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – "Just breathe," I comforted myself as I shuffled slowly through the dusty gravel. "One breath with each step," I repeated raggedly as fifty pounds of brackish water sloshed rhythmically against the sides of the muddy yellow jerry can strapped to my back.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Watch, Read, Listen, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia – It's early morning and a dozen westerners, mostly Seattleites, were getting ready to leave the capital for a three-day visit to water development projects in Oromia, one of this country's largest, rural states. As they set out – a caravan of five land rovers moving through the dense traffic – many of them were still quietly coming to terms with the parting words of Adane Kassa, Executive Director of Water Action, the Ethiopian NGO that coordinates the projects they'll be visiting.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Watch, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
We stood in the pre-dawn glow of the streetlamps, greeted by intoxicated heckles from the previous night’s most diligent drinkers. A battered, extended cab Toyota Hilux pickup pulled up, carrying a mound of mysterious goods under a green tarp and bearing faded Ethiopian Red Cross decals on its doors. Seeing that there were already three passengers inside, I almost threw in the towel right there and sent my colleagues Ernest and Julia on without me, motivated as much by the practicalities of fitting so many people into such a tiny space as I was by the thought of my still warm bed waiting for me just down the block.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment, Politics and Conflict
When our four-wheel-drive pickup truck vroomed off the town of Negele I knew I was in for a giant adventure. Well, I must quickly clarify that I was not here for adventure; Negele is of course not one of those places you go site-seeing. I was here to work, following stories on water scarcity and how it had impacted the people of Southern Ethiopia.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment, Global Health
After being stranded in the middle of the elusive bush, and experiencing the morning nap in the dusty room in Arero, we were all fantasizing about a clean bed, and more importantly -- a shower. Hot, warm, frozen, it wouldn't matter. At the advice of our handy Lonely Planet, we pulled into the Yabello Motel, a place the book described as "clean and comfortable." Although the toilet and the shower were outside, it was nice to finally find a place to unpack and unwind.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment
The word travel traces back to the Middle-English word travailen, meaning to journey, labor, strive and most importantly, to torment. Much of traveling does feel a little like torment and as the strange bug bites, desperate trips to the bathroom and embarrassing cultural misunderstandings mount (who knew that blowing raspberries was one of the rudest things you can do in traditional Ethiopian culture?) I often wonder how I’ve found myself so far away from home.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment
Part 5 of the CLP's multimedia blog series "Heading South": an audio blog by Jessica Partnow on the challenges of reporting on the impoverished southern Ethiopian community of Dillo. Especially while Celine Dion is blasting in the background.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Listen, Blogs, The Environment
Addis Ababa, ETHIOPIA —The water in our new house in Addis has been turned off for days and my back is so sore I’ve been squirming around on our dirty couches all evening begging for a position that doesn’t hurt.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Global Health
According to Ethiopia's unique calendar, the year 2000 started last September. Christmas was two weeks ago, on January 7th, and this weekend, at the end of the twelve days of Christmas, the country's 33 million Ethiopian Orthodox Christians celebrated Timkat, or Epiphany, a commemoration of the baptism of Christ. CLP Audio Producer Jessica Partnow brings us this report from the nation's capitol, Addis Ababa.
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ADDIS ABABA--Close to 40 hours after leaving Athens, Ohio, I arrived to my destination in Addis. My Emirates flight was not exactly that long...I had two stopovers - four hours in Hamburg and 12 in Dubai. It is the kind of thing you have to contend with when you make a decision to fly cheap.
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Categories: Ethiopia, Blogs, Poverty and Development
Meru, KENYA-- Raila Odinga is brave to be holding a campaign rally here. This PNU (Party for National Unity) territory, and Raila represents the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) – the opposition party in December’s elections. Kenyan politics are both colorful and violent – and venturing into another party or politician’s territory can be dangerous.
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Categories: Kenya, Read, Blogs, Politics and Conflict
Some of my toughest times growing up in Kenya were those spent on my way to and from the village river. I call it the village river because it was by and large the only source of water for my village. Never mind the fact that the river was four miles away and was shared among scores of villages along its course.
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Categories: Kenya, Ethiopia, Blogs, The Environment, Poverty and Development
In the Winter and Spring of 2006 I set off across Asia with The Common Language Project in hopes of challenging some of the stereotypes about other countries that dominate the mainstream American press. As expected, Islam was an ever-present force in the places we visited, which not only prompted worried emails from family members back home, but also provided us with a chance to learn a lot about the religion firsthand. While we encountered mosques, headscarves and skepticism for American foreign policy in all of the Muslim countries we visited, the similarities stopped there. Stereotypical images of Islam tend to portray a monolithic, homogeneous religion of fundamentalist believers conforming to strict, unified codes of conduct. But I found myself struck by the diversity of believers in Islam, the nuances of their interpretations of the faith and the varying intensity of religion's role in their lives.
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Categories: Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Jordan, Palestinian Territories, Turkey, Watch
Tacoma, WASHINGTON--It’s visiting day at the Northwest Detention Center. The facility, opened three years ago to hold undocumented people awaiting deportation, is set among a tangle of industrial roads near downtown Tacoma. A distant midday sun reflects new spirals of razor wire circling the low grey building as a middle-aged Sikh man and a frightened looking Hispanic family approach the line of police armed with plastic handcuffs and padded gear, here to guard the entrance against today’s planned protests.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Watch, Read, Listen, Labor and Immigration
Not too long ago, I found myself on the balcony of the youth radio station in Thimphu, Bhutan. I was having a discussion with a new radio host at the station, 13-year-old Tenzin “Sora” Tshewang. The skater shoe and hoodie-clad young man spoke impeccable English and had just begun volunteering as a DJ for the station’s popular call-in request show ‘Youth Unplugged’.
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Categories: Bhutan, Read, Blogs, The Media, Politics and Conflict
Lola Akinmade's photo essay offers a vivid view of every day life in Lagos, Nigeria.
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Categories: Nigeria, Watch, Poverty and Development
In the past 150 years, the Duwamish estuary has been home to a tranquil Native American community, Seattle's first white settlers, gold miners enjoying 24–hour saloons, one of the country's busiest ports and cutting edge companies like Starbucks, Boeing and Amazon.com. Life on the Duwamish explores the history, culture, and neighborhoods around the Duwamish waterway, a historical center of industry in Seattle, Superfund Cleanup site, and a focal point of communities in South Park and Georgetown.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Watch, Listen, The Environment
Yakima, WASHINGTON--Wisit Kampilo's sparse black hair ruffles in a gust of March wind. Standing in a patch of dry yellow grass off a remote road in the Yakima Valley, he pulls a secondhand Oakland Raiders bomber jacket around his thin frame and looks back at the dingy three-bedroom manufactured home where he and 32 other Thai guest workers were housed together in the fall of 2004.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Watch, Read, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration, Politics and Conflict
Sydney, AUSTRALIA--A young woman leaves squeaky footprints in the sand as she carries her fiberglass short-board towards the surf in a yellow string bikini. It is late afternoon and her elongated shadow drifts past the blue hijab of another woman lying on the beach with her children.
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Categories: Australia, Read, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration, Politics and Conflict
Koh Kong, CAMBODIA--1974. For Americans, the long Indochinese nightmare is finally over, but war rages on across the rice fields of Cambodia. Corrupt officials receive tons of bombs and millions of dollars in military assistance from the United States, but battle hardened remnants of the Khmer Rouge tighten control over the countryside and threaten the capital of Phnom Penh. Amid the suffering, tens of thousands of families abandon their homes and take refuge across the border in Thailand.
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TOKYO, Japan--Nestled among the towering half constructed apartment frames that fill the skies of the Koto-ku section of Tokyo leans a squat building with crumbling walls, propped up on one side by a tangled assortment of metal pipes. This is the Edagawa Chosen School, one of a number of ethnic Korean schools run by Chongryon – The General Association of Korean Residents in Japan – a group that also serves as North Korea’s unofficial embassy in Tokyo.
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Categories: Japan, Read, Education, Politics and Conflict
There’s some pretty powerful propaganda out there romanticizing my profession.
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When Abdenasser "Sammy" Ennassime returned home to visit his family in Morocco six years ago, he could brag of a bustling coffee shop, a baby son, and an American wife to show for his more than two decades in the United States. In this light, Ennassime's suggestion to bring his adolescent niece, Lamyaá, to his home in Tacoma to help with the new baby - in return for enrolling her in school and guiding her toward U.S. citizenship - was seen as the magnanimous gesture of a generous uncle.
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Categories: Pacific Northwest, USA, Morocco, Read, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration
War resisters, Vietnam vets, and teenage punks all joined together to protest the Iraq War and shut down a military recruiting center in Seattle's Central District. This audio slideshow explores anti-war protest tactics and their impact on the US's presence in Iraq.
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Categories: USA, Watch, Politics and Conflict
Khon Kaen, THAILAND--"Let's go!" shouts Mannee Boonrod over the cries of barking dogs and the thundering of the monsoon rains on the corrugated tin roof of the temple. This kindly looking lady in her sixties has become something of an activist in recent years, known for her eloquent, forceful speeches and unwavering passion for this community's struggle. She's energetically retelling the story of the day three years ago when she and a pack of angry women charged toward 300 of then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's personal guards.
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Categories: Thailand, Read, The Environment, Human Rights, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Nai Lai, THAILAND--Halima Singkala, 49, and her neighbors were repairing fishing nets when thirty soldiers marched into their village on a bright March morning two years ago. Residents were still recovering from the massive tsunami that had struck just three months prior, but these officials brought guns, not relief, to the southern Thai fishing village of Nai Lai. Singkala and her neighbors were ordered to vacate the property immediately: according to the soldiers, their newly constructed homes were built on land they no longer owned.
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Categories: Thailand, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development
I was in Pakistan for a little over a month last year reporting on the issue of bonded labor and debt slavery in the country. Though Pakistan was only one of the ten countries I visited in an eight-month tour, it looms the largest in my memory. I was fascinated by this country so at odds with itself: as feudal as it is modern, as isolated from as it is harassed by the international community, as hospitable as it is hostile. But the real reason Pakistan is still on my mind is because America won’t let me forget it.
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Kira’s piece explores her experience working with women seeking abortions at a Rhode Island clinic after surviving rape while crossing the US-Mexico border illegally.
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Categories: Mexico, Listen, Gender, Labor and Immigration, Poverty and Development, Global Health, Politics and Conflict
Amman, JORDAN--Mohammad reached across the bar and handed me his mobile. He told me to press start and play the video on hold.
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Categories: Jordan, Iraq, Read, Blogs, The Media, Politics and Conflict
Su Fan'gs audioslideshow explores the hidden lives of Beijing's Min Gong.
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Categories: China, Watch, Listen, Human Rights, Labor and Immigration, Global Health
Two years after Ohio's disputed presidential elections, Ohio University journalism students Liz Gray, Meghan Louttit and Julia Marino asked Ohio voters if the state was ready for the 2006 midterm races.
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Categories: USA, Watch, Listen, Politics and Conflict
On September 11th, I flew back to Seattle after almost a year reporting in Asia and the Middle East for independent media.
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Categories: USA, Blogs, Politics and Conflict
I found out last night at 11PM that there was a military coup here in Thailand yesterday. The military’s top general (Songthii) led tanks into Bangkok, declared a coup, and took power from Thaksin, the now former Prime Minister, with the support of the Thai military. They also took over all of the television stations, preventing Thaksin from communicating with the people, and issued their own referendum.
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Categories: Thailand
RAMALLAH, West Bank - The administrative headquarters of Ruwwad Youth Empowerment Project, housed in a newly constructed office tower on the outskirts of Ramallah, sparkle with disuse in the fluorescent overhead light. A skeleton crew of employees looking for ways to busy themselves are scattered around the offices, separated by a grid of vacant cubicles that serve as a reminder of what this project was meant to be.
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Categories: Israel, Palestinian Territories, Watch, Read, Listen, Education, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
I didn't always know that there are different definitions of democracy. Studying for my Masters at Birzeit University, I learned that there are many, and that each one serves a certain ideology, a certain vision and certain interests. It's as if each definition is working to legitimize its own ownership of the concept of democracy which others must recognize and abide by.
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Categories: Israel, Palestinian Territories, Blogs, Politics and Conflict
In the heat of a street protest in The United States the most popular chant that will rise out of the crowd is the impassioned cry, "This is what democracy looks like!" I use this example not to reiterate the tired cliche that Americans are proud of their democratic ideals, but to underscore how the term democracy has become so omnipresent in American political rhetoric that its meaning is now beginning to elude us.
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Categories: Israel, Palestinian Territories, Blogs, Politics and Conflict
As I woke to the muezzin’s wails straining through a riot of church bells in my cramped hostel room in Old Jerusalem, excerpts of the previous night’s angry conversations were already working their way through my mounting hangover. Shouts of, “how can you call them terrorists?” and “there aren’t two sides to this story!” and, of course, “What are you looking for anyway?!” pierced the headache I had earned over hours of politically charged debate and a steady stream of warm red wine. I rolled out of my narrow bed and groaned, cursing another day of reporting in this enraged and bitter country.
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Categories: Israel, Palestinian Territories, Blogs, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
The collapse of the Soviet Union is my earliest memory of politics. The sense of relief and of victory that I felt around me was overwhelming, and I became fascinated with the idea that events on the other side of the world could mean so much in my own home. Televised images of East Germans taking sledgehammers to the Berlin Wall or Boris Yeltsin speaking from atop a tank in Red Square became the very definition of freedom in my ten year old mind, and even as I grew older and learned of the theories behind communism and the Cold War missteps of the CIA, this picture of humanity breaking free of oppression by sheer will stuck with me.
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Categories: Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Watch, Listen, Blogs, Human Rights, Politics and Conflict
Almaty, KAZAKHSTAN—The sounds of construction are ubiquitous in Almaty. Pounding jackhammers, whining saws and lumbering bulldozers are at work on almost every block of this green, mountain-rimmed Central Asian city. This breakneck development takes place alongside the expensive bistros and Mercedes dealerships that cater to a new generation reveling in the riches of recently discovered oil and gas reserves, giving this city—once considered a sleepy Soviet outpost—a powerfully wealthy and cosmopolitan veneer.
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Categories: Kazakhstan, Read, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Lahore, PAKISTAN—On the night of October 1, 2005 in the tiny town of Jannat, one hour outside of Lahore, Shoukat Masih, 35, was fast asleep. He and his extended family had pulled their rusted charpoys out into the courtyard of their one room home in order to enjoy the cool air and a night’s rest before returning at dawn to another twelve hours of hard labor in the neighboring brick kilns. Around 11:00 pm a group of men armed with pistols and sticks entered the courtyard and yanked Masih to the ground, shouting, “Are you the one making statements on the television?!” His wife was in a neighboring village visiting family, but his father, children, nieces, and nephews, all looked on in terror as he was beaten to death on the packed clay earth.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Labor and Immigration
Tomorrow morning we will leave Pakistan, heading back over the border to India to catch our onward flight to Kazakhstan. When we first arrived here I was full of nerves and expectations, and now, a month later, I am leaving the country still confused and newly disheartened. Pakistan is probably the most interesting country I’ve ever visited, but I can’t wait to leave.
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Ayubia, PAKISTAN—Ten year old Fazia Reza was in English class when she felt the ground starting to move. She watched in terror as the walls of the school began to tremble and crack, obeying her teacher’s shouts to run outside and start praying just in time to see the roof collapse and the walls cave in. Her father, one of 40 people injured in this tiny village of just 145 families, lost his leg, and two others died in the October 8, 2005 earthquake. Almost all of the town’s buildings were destroyed.
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Categories: Pakistan, Read, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Our reporting took us to three of Pakistan's four provinces, from northern mountain regions to lawless tribal areas and the agricultural fields of Sindh, as well as Pakistan's four major cities - Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Islamabad. Despite mainstream news coverage that depicts a one-dimensional Pakistan seen through the lens of The Global War on Terror, our travels revealed a country of incredible diversity and remarkable complexity.
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Phnom Penh, CAMBODIA – At first glance, Tumlop 2 village looks like any third world city slum: crowded huts with corrugated tin roofs are scattered along dusty dirt paths, and barefoot children mingle with freely wandering chickens and dogs. Look closer and you’ll find that this community also houses a tidy health center where local women diagnose and treat common ailments. Look even closer and you’ll see that gender relations in this poor and traditional society may be more evolved than in the more wealthy households of the teeming and ever-expanding city that surrounds them.
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Categories: Cambodia, Read, Poverty and Development, Global Health
Surprisingly, the strongest indicators of international aid presence are the words of this man, Dantali Shah, the village head here in Kakray. “We are so happy for the help of America-- please don’t be afraid of us. We welcome any more aid the Americans can offer.”
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Categories: Pakistan, Blogs, Politics and Conflict
The late afternoon sun beats down on the high-rocky landscape. Sweat runs down my face and the back of my neck–tickles my scalp underneath a long grey burka swaddled tightly around my head and shoulders, and hanging to just below my knees. My feet slip on loose pebbles as I scramble up a steep slope in the rugged foothills of Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province.
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Kolkata, INDIA – The smells of jasmine perfume, fried food, bidi smoke and liquored breath mingle in the thick humid air. Watery pink and white neon lights from Hotel Welcome, Dream House and Love Lotus shine in the eyes of women lined up in turquoise saris or red mini skirts and the customers jostling to admire them. Backlit in shadowy doorways, young girls beckon into the night with childish voices that betray their pre-pubescence, despite alluring gestures and deep purple lipstick.
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Categories: India, Watch, Read, Listen, Human Rights, Gender, Global Health
Well, we’re almost three months in with about three more to go. As I write this, I’m counting down the hours to our next train ride, which will take us to our fourth country: Pakistan. It seems that the halfway mark is a good place to stop, look around, and think about where we’ve been and where we’re going as a project, as journalists and as individuals.
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More than 20 years after the disastrous accident at Union Carbide in Bhopal, India that instantly killed more than 7,000 people, residents continue to suffer from health problems caused by exposure to the hazardous chemicals once produced at the plant. Today, the death toll has risen to more than 20,000. This slideshow explores the ruins of the chemical plant, as well as some of the work being done here to ease residents' medical trauma.
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Categories: India, Watch, The Environment
In January the Forest Development Corporation officials came and hired some men from our village to work in the forest nearby. They said they wanted to cut some diseased trees and clear naturally felled wood, but after a couple of days we knew that the officials had bigger plans. The FDC men had started cutting healthy Sal trees as well, clearing a huge area of the forest. The village men refused to go on working. They remembered what had happened to the bamboo in the forest when we were children.
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Categories: India, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
Chhattisgarh, INDIA – "Zindabad!" shouts Bindia Bai, pressing her hands together in greeting as she sits down on the hard-packed mud floor to meet with fellow village women in the sunny courtyard of her home. This revolutionary rallying cry meaning "victory" echoes throughout Batka Behra village and has been spreading across the remote tribal hills of Chhattisgarh state in recent months. A new movement challenging government corruption and resource co-option is building among these ancient people.
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Categories: India, Read, The Environment, Poverty and Development
Ahmedabad, INDIA – In a small, dimly lit room decorated with drawings celebrating Christmas, Diwali and Eid, 40 children attending Arzoo Kids Center sit with eyes closed and hands folded as if in prayer, belting out the Indian national anthem. While this may seem like a commonplace scene in an Indian after school program, it could mean salvation for the troubled city of Ahmedabad.
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Categories: India, Read, Education, Politics and Conflict
Aki Ra took CLP reporters on a demining expedition in northern Cambodia, showing off his own technique for disarming land mines – hundreds of which he laid himself as a child soldier.
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Categories: Cambodia, Watch, Global Health
When Aki Ra met Chet, he was living on the streets of Phnom Penh, shining shoes to earn money and sniffing glue because a friend had told him it would make him feel full. He’d lost his left leg in a land mine accident three years earlier and hadn’t yet gotten the prosthesis he now happily shows off.
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Categories: Cambodia, Read, Listen, Poverty and Development, Politics and Conflict
In fact, you may find yourself regretting having even tried to make a plan in the first place. Today marks our two week anniversary in Cambodia. We were supposed to have flown to New Delhi a week ago. But journalism, it seems, is mostly about waiting.
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Landmines and unexploded ordnance are not the only remnants of war in Cambodia. During the reign of the Khmer Rouge, Tuol Svay Prey High School in Phnom Penh became "Security Office 21," the central prison and interrogation center of the Khmer Rouge. From 1976 to 1979 thousands of Cambodians, at first mostly intellectuals, but later workers, farmers, officials and even Khmer Rouge soldiers themselves, all accused of opposing the Regime, were sent to S-21. They were imprisoned, had their photos and biographies recorded, and were then tortured to death or executed, often along with their children and other innocent family members. Of the 13,000 plus people who entered S-21 as prisoners, only seven came out alive. Today the compound is the Tuol Sleng (Khmer for "Poisonous Hill") Genocide Museum, which is open for public visits and remains largely in the condition it was in when it was liberated by the invading Vietnamese army in 1979.
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Categories: Cambodia, Watch, Human Rights, Politics and Conflict
Pakistan gets plenty of press for bomb attacks and international terrorist threats. After two months traveling the country last year, CLP journalists found that the ongoing crisis here has its roots in a corrupt and collapsing education system that is feeding poverty, discontent and violence.
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