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Title: EDGE Spring Presentation


1
EDGE Spring Presentation
  • Peace or war in Middle East
  • The World Bank
  • Russia making friends in Mid East
  • Nigeria Update
  • International Efforts to relieve Poverty
  • Latin America
  • International Cartels, Sae-Wong
  • India Economic Emergence, Olsen
  • MAGREB Rural Economic Investment, Bekka

2
Cheney's choices Egypt PerspectiveOminously back
in the region, the US vice-president, running out
of time in Washington, may well roll the dice for
another military misadventure, writes Hassan
Nafaa The writer is a professor of political
science at Cairo University
  • .. May 23, 2007
  • Today, in order to show how serious he is about
    getting the negotiations ball rolling again, he
    will give some play to the Arab peace initiative.
    But play is about as far as it will go firstly,
    because Cheney is mostly interested in playing
    for time and, secondly, because an acceptable
    settlement has never been more out of reach than
    it is at present. So probably the most we will
    see will be some preliminary talks while
    preparations are put into place for a strike
    against Iran, which could take place much sooner
    than many imagine and probably no later than
    October or November. It was not just for show
    that Cheney climbed aboard an American aircraft
    carrier in the Gulf and shouted threats at Iran.

3
KUWAIT TIMESWolfowitz departure challenges US
leadershipPublished Date May 20, 2007By Carol
Giacomo Lesley Wroughton
  • The ouster of Paul Wolfowitz as World Bank
    president in the face of bitter European
    opposition poses an unprecedented challenge to
    the United States' global financial leadership.
    Weakened by chaos in Iraq, low popularity and his
    lame-duck status, President George W Bush was
    unable to prevent Wolfowitz's departure - the
    first ever of a World Bank president - after
    weeks of resistance and public acrimony over his
    promotion of a companion.
  • Some US officials and experts expressed alarm
    that the controversy could force the United
    States to give up its World Bank pre-eminence and
    long tradition of appointing the president,
    perhaps creating an opening for rising power
    China. Others argued that a radical overhaul of
    the system of selecting the president and bank
    lending policies is the only way for the
    institution to regain credibility. "There is
    growing discomfort with this idea that the United
    States should hand pick the World Bank president
    with no consultation," said Kenneth Rogoff,
    former chief economist at the International
    Monetary Fund.

4
Russian Orthodox Church Reunites
  • Russian Orthodox Church Mends Global
    SchismOverseas church that refused Soviet
    control formally reunites with homeland hierarchy
    in Moscow.By David Holley, Times Staff Writer
    Los Angeles Times, May 18, 2007
  • MOSCOW The Russian Orthodox Church on Thursday
    formally ended an 80-year global schism triggered
    when overseas exiles refused to accept the
    church's subservience to the Soviet state.
  • In a ceremony at Christ the Savior Cathedral,
    which was rebuilt in the 1990s after it had been
    torn down decades earlier by Soviet dictator
    Josef Stalin, leaders of the domestic and
    overseas Russian Orthodox hierarchies signed an
    act of "canonical communion."
  • The document provides for the full restoration of
    religious unity under the Moscow patriarchate
    while maintaining autonomy for the church abroad
    in organizational and economic matters.
  • "A historic event has taken place, which has been
    awaited for many, many years," Patriarch Alexei
    II said during the religious service marking
    reunification.
  • "Confrontations in society inherited at the time
    of the revolution and civil war are being
    overcome. The church is being strengthened. Our
    fatherland is being revived," he said.

5
Spotlight on Russian ties Gulf Daily News
Vol XXX  NO. 61 Sunday 20th May 2007
  • MANAMA The Bahrain-Russia Business Council will
    hold a two-day meeting to discuss investment
    opportunities in finacial, commercial and
    industrial sectors, including the Arab-Russian
    Bank project.
  • The meeting, which starts tomorrow, is being
    organised by the Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and
    Industry (BCCI) in collaboration with the
    Arab-Russian Business Council and Arab Commerce
    and Industry Chambers Federation.

6
Shaikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa
7
(No Transcript)
8
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    global trade

9
Developing states seek G8 help to fight poverty
  • SHUNEH, Jordan A summit of G11 developing
    countries yesterday agreed to push for
    co-operation with G8 industrialised nations and
    boost multilateral ties in a bid to lift millions
    of people out of poverty.
  • "Our two organisations have a vital shared goal,
    to strengthen prosperity and peace in the 21st
    century, Jordan's King Abdullah II told G11
    heads of state and officials on the sidelines of
    a Middle East World Economic Forum.
  • The G11, launched last September by King
    Abdullah, groups Croatia, Ecuador, El Salvador,
    Georgia, Honduras, Indonesia, Jordan, Morocco,
    Pakistan, Paraguay and Sri Lanka.
  • Progress by the 11 in forging ahead with reforms,
    building their economies and alleviating poverty
    rests on "having the budgetary space to continue
    to invest in development and economic growth,"
    the king said.
  • "It is vital that the international community
    support our continued progress," hampered by high
    debt, rising oil prices and other challenges, he
    told delegates.
  • The presidents of Croatia, El Salvador, Georgia
    and Sri Lanka attended the nearly two-hour summit
    alongside senior officials from the other G11
    countries. Representatives from G8 members
    Germany and Japan were also present.

10
Annan calls for investment to heal wounds of
slaveryPress Association Tuesday May 8, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
  • Former United Nations secretary-general Kofi
    Annan called today for a "bold investment" in
    poverty relief in Africa to heal the past wounds
    of slavery. In a rare address to both houses of
    parliament to mark the bicentenary of the
    abolition of the slave trade, Mr Annan said
    slavery was a "stain on human history" from which
    hardly any part of the world was exempt.
  • "The trade whose abolition we commemorate today
    was an abominable practice taken to its most
    abominable extreme," he said. In a rare address
    to both houses of parliament to mark the
    bicentenary of the abolition of the slave trade,
    Mr Annan said slavery was a "stain on human
    history" from which hardly any part of the world
    was exempt.
  • "The trade whose abolition we commemorate today
    was an abominable practice taken to its most
    abominable extreme," he said.
  • "And today we should ask ourselves not only why
    Britain abolished it 200 years ago, but why it
    was tolerated for so long."

11
  • Mr Annan said many Africans believed that history
    had still not repaired the past wounds for
    slavery, driving a demand for reparations.
  • But he said that, at a time when Africa might be
    the only region of the world which would not
    achieve the majority of the UN's millennium
    development goals by 2015, the issue was best
    dealt with through investment in poverty relief.
  • "In order to build on our common rights and
    values, we must be conscious of our intertwined
    fate," he said.
  • "A bold investment in addressing poverty in
    Africa, as promised by the G8 in Gleneagles,
    would be the best way to heal the wounds of the
    past and turn the page."
  • Mr Annan said that with thousands of women and
    children around the world being sold and
    exploited every day, slavery has still not been
    consigned to history.
  • "In a perverse commercialisation of humanity,
    they are used like products and then thrown away.
  • "Slavery cannot be relegated to the annals of
    history so long as men, women and children are
    still being coerced, drugged, tricked, and sold
    to do dangerous and degrading work against their
    will."

12
  • YarAdua and one week test of will
  • In the past, one week, YarAdua has been exposed
    to long grueling hours of performing state
    functions. He wakes up early enough every day to
    prepare for the tough schedule of receiving and
    attending to unending batches of visitors who
    were on same mission of expressing solidarity for
    his incoming civilian government. YarAdua had
    received

solidarity supporters groups from many states of
the federation beginning from last Monday. The
list is endless. What made the visitations
striking was the demonstration of instant support
from state governors from across the federation.
In each entourage were state governors,
traditional rulers, state executive members,
legislators and indeed, governors-elect and their
deputies. For instance, against the backdrop
of heavy condemnation of the electoral victory of
the Katsina State governor in the presidential
election, the Ambassador of the United States to
Nigeria, Mr. John Campbell, led his counterparts
from other countries to pay the President elect,
a solidarity visit.In the North, a support for a
cause by the council of Ulamas is considered a
blessing and a good omen. That YarAdua now has
them in his support speaks volumes. Meanwhile,
the leader of the Ulamas had disclosed that it
was the President-elect who encouraged their
coming to Abuja. That was understandable. The
Northern branch of Christian Association of
Nigeria (CAN) led by Peter Jatau also paid a
solidarity visit to YarAdua. Like the Ulamas,
they shared a session of prayers with him and
urged him not to derail from his resolve to
transform Nigeria and reduce the high poverty
level in the country.
13
Ecuadors Correa, the continents leader with
most support
  • Ecuadors president Rafael Correa is the
    Latin-American leader with most support in the
    continent while his counterpart in Guatemala
    Oscar Berger ranks in the opposite end, according
    to a report published by the Mexican public
    opinion consultants Mitofsky.
  • Correa took office last January 15 and according
    to the latest opinion poll in Ecuador has a 76
    support, ahead of all other American leaders.
  • The second most popular leader, by a slight
    margin, is Colombias Alvaro Uribe with a 75
    support last April in spite of being five years
    in office.
  • Mexican president Felipe Calderón who took office
    last December follows with 65 approval, the same
    as Venezuelas Hugo Chavez who has been in office
    for eight years. President Evo Morales from
    Bolivia has 64 support.
  • At the other end figure Guatemalas Berger with
    20 approval Panamas Martin Torrijos, 24
    United States George Bush, bashed by the Iraq war
    with 36 and Dominican Republic Leonel Fernandez,
    38.
  • The middle ground is occupied by Nicaraguas
    Daniel Ortega, 61 Uruguays Tabare Vazquez,
    60 Argentinas Nestor Kirchner 57 Honduras
    Manuel Zelaya, 57 Antonio Saca from El
    Salvador, 56 Costa Ricas Oscar Arias, 55
    Paraguays Nicanor Duarte, 54 and Chiles
    Michelle Bachelet, 51.
  • Below 50 are, Brazils Lula da Silva with 49
    Perus Alan Garcia, 49 and Canadian Prime
    Minister Stephen Harper, 45.

14
Bolivia to hike mine tax to 50 20/05/2007 1746
  • La Paz - Bolivia plans to hike taxes on mining
    companies to 50 of profit, from 35 now, as
    leftist President Evo Morales strives to reap
    more benefits from the country's mineral wealth,
    a mining official said. After taking office as
    the country's first president of indigenous
    descent in January 2006, Morales drastically
    raised taxes on natural gas operations and
    nationalised reserves of the fuel.
  • He has repeatedly pledged to carry out similar
    reforms in the mining sector.
  • "They (mining companies) are taking 65 of
    profits ... and the government only collects
    approximately 35. We want that percentage to be
    more equal, so they take 50, and we take 50,"
    the head of the mining ministry commercialisation
    and investment unit, Freddy Beltran, told
    Reuters.
  • Bolivia hosts some major global mining companies,
    including US-based Apex Silver Mines and Coeur
    d'Alene Mines Corp.
  • Both companies are due to start production at
    large silver mines over the next year, and are so
    heavily invested in the country that pulling out
    because of the tax is not a likely scenario,
    Beltran said.

15
Chavez urges Pope to appologize Sat, 19 May 2007
210729
  • Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez demanded Pope
    Benedict apologize to Indians in Latin America
    for comments on the superiority of Catholicism.
  • Chavez, who had not directly criticized the Pope
    before, accused the Pontiff on Friday of ignoring
    the "holocaust" that followed Christopher
    Columbus's 1492 landing in the Americas.
  • "With all due respect your Holiness, you should
    apologize because there was a real genocide here
    and if we were to deny it, we would be denying
    our very selves," Chavez said at an event on
    freedom of expression.
  • In a speech to Latin American and Caribbean
    bishops at the end of a visit to Venezuela's
    neighbor Brazil, the Pope said the Church had not
    imposed itself on the indigenous people of the
    Americas.
  • Indian leaders in the region were outraged by the
    comments since millions of tribal Indians are
    believed to have died as a result of European
    colonization backed by the Church, through
    slaughter, disease or enslavement.
  • Chavez spoke only days after Venezuelan media
    interpreted other comments from the Pope as
    singling out Chavez as a danger to Latin America
    when he warned of autocrats in the region.
  • Chavez, who regularly criticizes world figures
    such as US President, describes himself as a
    Christian who grew up expecting to become a
    priest and says his socialist policies have roots
    in the teachings of Jesus Christ, Reuter's
    reports.

16
Alternative bank project advances Noticias
Aliadas.  May 16, 2007
  • Finance ministers from Argentina, Bolivia,
    Brazil, Ecuador, Paraguay and Venezuela May 3
    accepted a proposal by Venezuelan leader Hugo
    Chávez to create the Banco del Sur, or Bank of
    the South, a financial body aimed at reducing the
    regions dependence on multilateral lending
    institutions.The Bank of the South will have
    funds from member countries foreign
    reserves.One of the aims is to strengthen the
    Latin American Reserve Fund to which Bolivia,
    Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela
    contribute. The proposal is to support the
    countries members payment balances by issuing
    credits or guaranteeing loans to third parties
    and contribute to the harmonization of exchange,
    monetary and financial policies.The bank will
    finance local and regional infrastructure and
    development projects.

17
Camino al Banco del Sur y al Fondo del Sur
18
Mapuche Hope for Indigenous Rights
  • SANTIAGO, May 17 (IPS) - In the next few days,
    President Michelle Bachelet will throw all her
    political weight behind the motion for Congress
    to finally ratify the ILO convention recognising
    the collective and individual rights of
    indigenous people. Bachelet will make the draft
    ratification law an urgent priority, obliging the
    Senate to vote on it within 10 days. This measure
    is part of the new indigenous policies announced
    by the government in the last few weeks, which,
    however, do not fully satisfy the Mapuche people,
    Chile's largest native ethnic group. "The draft
    law to ratify ILO (International Labour
    Organisation) Convention 169 will be passed if
    the government manages to get the two further
    votes it needs from the (rightwing) opposition
    alliance," Nancy Yáñez, co-director of the
    Observatory of Indigenous People's Rights, told
    IPS.

19
Connvention (No. 169) concerning Indigenous and
Tribal Peoples in Independent CountriesAdopted
on 27 June 1989 by the General Conference of the
International Labour Organisation at its
seventy-sixth session
  • . This Convention applies to
  • (a) Tribal peoples in independent countries whose
    social, cultural and economic conditions
    distinguish them from other sections of the
    national community, and whose status is regulated
    wholly or partially by their own customs or
    traditions or by special laws or regulations
  • (b) Peoples in independent countries who are
    regarded as indigenous on account of their
    descent from the populations which inhabited the
    country, or a geographical region to which the
    country belongs, at the time of conquest or
    colonisation or the establishment of present
    State boundaries and who, irrespective of their
    legal status, retain some or all of their own
    social, economic, cultural and political
    institutions.
  • 2. Self-identification as indigenous or tribal
    shall be regarded as a fundamental criterion for
    determining the groups to which the provisions of
    this Convention apply.
  • 3. The use of the term "peoples" in this
    Convention shall not be construed as having any
    implications as regards the rights which may
    attach to the term under international law.

20
  • Article 2
  • 1. Governments shall have the responsibility for
    developing, with the participation of the peoples
    concerned, co-ordinated and systematic action to
    protect the rights of these peoples and to
    guarantee respect for their integrity.
  • 2. Such action shall include measures for
  • (a) Ensuring that members of these peoples
    benefit on an equal footing from the rights and
    opportunities which national laws and regulations
    grant to other members of the population
  • (b) Promoting the full realisation of the social,
    economic and cultural rights of these peoples
    with respect for their social and cultural
    identity, their customs and traditions and their
    institutions
  • (c) Assisting the members of the peoples
    concerned to eliminate socio-economic gaps that
    may exist between indigenous and other members of
    the national community, in a manner compatible
    with their aspirations and ways of life.
  • Article 3
  • 1. Indigenous and tribal peoples shall enjoy the
    full measure of human rights and fundamental
    freedoms without hindrance or discrimination. The
    provisions of the Convention shall be applied
    without discrimination to male and female members
    of these peoples.
  • 2. No form of force or coercion shall be used in
    violation of the human rights and fundamental
    freedoms of the peoples concerned, including the
    rights contained in this Convention.
  • Article 4
  • 1. Special measures shall be adopted as
    appropriate for safeguarding the persons,
    institutions, property, labour, cultures and
    environment of the peoples concerned.
  • 2. Such special measures shall not be contrary to
    the freely-expressed wishes of the peoples
    concerned.
  • 3. Enjoyment of the general rights of
    citizenship, without discrimination, shall not be
    prejudiced in any way by such special measures.
  • Article 5
  • In applying the provisions of this Convention
  • (a) The social, cultural, religious and spiritual
    values and practices of these peoples shall be
    recognised and protected, and due account shall
    be taken of the nature of the problems which face
    them both as groups and as individuals
  • (b) The integrity of the values, practices and
    institutions of these peoples shall be respected
  • (c) Policies aimed at mitigating the difficulties
    experienced by these peoples in facing new
    conditions of life and work shall be adopted,
    with the participation and co-operation of the
    peoples affected.

21
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