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500,000 Pregnant Women at Risk in Pakistan Floods
By Aprille Muscara
UNITED NATIONS - Aid groups and U.N. agencies are raising the alarm over the vulnerability of pregnant women and babies in flood ravaged Pakistan.
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MIDEAST
Netanyahu Ignores President, and Wife
By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler
TEl AVIV - Thousands of Israelis have protested in a central park here demanding that their government revoke its decision to deport 400 children of migrant workers.
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SPAIN
Puppet Marathon for Building School in Bolivia
By Tito Drago
MADRID - The 17th Titirilandia (Puppetland) Festival will conclude with a marathon puppet show, to be held Sunday Aug. 29 in Spain's capital city in aid of a school in the remote Bolivian mining province of Potosí.
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MIDEAST
This Math Class May Figure Out Israel
By Eva Bartlett
AL ZAHARA, Central Gaza Strip - In a bright and spacious classroom, with plants overflowing in the courtyard outside, six students lean forward at their desks looking at the 10-digit addition they are asked to make. One student stands before the numbers on the chalkboard and a red and yellow-beaded abacus. But her attention is on the abacus she visualises in her mind.
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MEXICO
Junk Food Regulations in Schools Fall Short, Consumer Groups Say
By Emilio Godoy
MEXICO CITY - What was initially announced as a government ban on sales of junk food in schools has failed to keep fried and sugary foods out of the classrooms to which Mexico's 25 million primary and secondary students returned Monday after summer break.
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Niger Facing Growing Food Crisis
By Ousseini Issa*
NIAMEY - In April, the United Nations World Food Programme estimated it would need 190 million dollars to respond to a food crisis threatening more than 7 million people in Niger. By July, the WFP had revised the amount needed upwards to $371 million: a month later, the U.N. agency has been forced to scale back aid for lack of funds.
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SOUTH SUDAN
Children Too Hungry to Return to Civilian Life
By Zack Baddorf
SOUTH SUDAN - When Timothy was forced into the southern Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) at age 11, the first thing they did was beat him. Then they took him to a military base where his tasks were to carry other soldiers’ bags, wash their clothes, collect firewood for them, and cook their food.
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ECUADOR
All-Out Offensive Against Child Malnutrition
By Gonzalo Ortiz
QUITO - The Ecuadorean government aims over the next five years to eradicate chronic malnutrition among children under one -- 10 percent of whom are now undernourished -- and reduce the rate among children under five from the current 22 percent to seven percent.
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Trial of "Child Soldier" Opens at Guantanamo
By Megan Iacobini de Fazio
UNITED NATIONS - Omar Khadr was only 15 when he was captured by U.S. forces in 2002 in Afghanistan. Now, eight years later, the 23-year-old is on trial in Guantanamo Bay, in the first military commission trial since the beginning of the Barack Obama administration.
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MALAWI
Vaccination Foiled by Divine Intervention
By Claire Ngozo
LILONGWE - Dowa, central Malawi: medical staff struggle to vaccinate frightened children clinging to their parents, as an armed policeman stands guard.
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Few Govts Answer U.N. Queries on Peacekeeper Scandals
By Genevieve Marie Ilg
UNITED NATIONS - As the U.N. investigates new allegations of sexual abuse by peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, most troop contributing countries continue to evade accounting for how they handle disciplinary actions.
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FILM
Music for a New Abolitionist Movement
By Amanda Bransford
NEW YORK - Musician Justin Dillon had been reading about human trafficking before he went on tour to Eastern Europe. In Russia, his young female translator told him about offers she was receiving to move west for jobs that seemed too good to be true - and with no paperwork to back them up.
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Mexican Govt Turns a Blind Eye to Orphaned and Disabled Children
By Daniela Pastrana
MEXICO CITY - A baby hits the floor when his father, who was holding him in his arms, is murdered in Mexico. A two-year-old watches from her stroller as six drug addicts are killed in a rehabilitation centre, including her mother. The mother of another three-year-old never makes it to collect him from his nursery.
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News in RSS Around the globe, 30,500 children die each day from largely preventable diseases; 200 million remain malnourished; another 1.2 million are living with HIV; more than 11 million have been orphaned by AIDS; and 130 million school-age children -- over two-thirds of them girls -- are deprived of the right to education. According to U.N. estimates, there are also 250,000 to 300,000 child soldiers worldwide.

The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child provides a universal framework for protecting and realising children's rights. People of faith have joined together as the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC) to do their part. In May 2008 an international Forum in Hiroshima focused on three themes: promoting ethics education to stop violence against children; putting children first in human development; and empowering children through ethics education to protect our planet.

Guns and Roses: IPS's Reporting On Global Armed Conflicts and Resolution Efforts
News in RSS
EDUCATION UNDER ATTACK - RECLAIMING SCHOOLS AS ZONES OF PEACE
by Helene-Marie Gosselin
Amongst the many casualties of conflict, education seldom makes the headlines, but students, teachers, administrators, and education officials are also on the front lines of battle, writes Helene-Marie Gosselin, director of the UNESCO Office to the United Nations.

HARNESSING RELIGIONS ADVANCES WELL-BEING OF CHILDREN
by Kul C. Gautam
Though all the world's major religions consider childhood sacred and needing special protection, they do not use their power and influence adequately to advance the well-being of children, writes Kul C. Gautam, former assistant secretary-general of the United Nations, and deputy executive director of UNICEF.

Global Network of Religions for Children
UNICEF
International Save the Children Alliance
Global Movement for Children
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Third Forum of the Global Network of Religions for Children

LEARNING TO SHARE

Values, Action, Hope
Hiroshima May 2008
IPS gratefully acknowledges the support provided by the
Arigatou Foundation in Japan