News

New Primary Schedule Brings New Challenges for Candidates

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
With the presidential election primary season beginning -- and possibly ending -- earlier than ever before, candidates face many new challenges, political experts say. With the first race in the 2008 presidential contest just two days after New Year’s Day, in Iowa, the candidates’ final days of campaigning in that state will coincide with the holiday season, which could pose a challenge for those who are running behind. The scheduling of nominating contests in 22 states on the same day in 2008 also will require that candidates carefully allocate their advertising resources and campaign staffs to win party votes.

New Primary Schedule Brings New Challenges for Candidates

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
With the presidential election primary season beginning -- and possibly ending -- earlier than ever before, candidates face many new challenges, political experts say.  With the first race in the 2008 presidential contest just two days after New Year’s Day, in Iowa, the candidates’ final days of campaigning in that state will coincide with the holiday season, which could pose a challenge for those who are running behind. The scheduling of nominating contests in 22 states on the same day in 2008 also will require that candidates carefully allocate their advertising resources and campaign staffs to win party votes.
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U.N. Climate Change Plan Seen as First Step

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
The climate change mitigation plan adopted by a U.N. conference in Bali, Indonesia, is “a good set of elements … on mitigation, adaptation, technology and finance to guide important considerations,” lead U.S. negotiator Paula Dobriansky says, adding it is a first step “in beginning an important discussion about how to achieve a truly global solution.”
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Partnership To Support Afghan Justice System Launched

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
To enhance the evolution of democracy in Afghanistan, the United States launches a public-private partnership to help improve the fledgling Afghan justice system by funding low-cost, high-impact projects that promote women's rights, access to justice, legal aid, professional legal development and other justice-related programs. "It is imperative that Afghanistan develop a well-trained, educated, and demographically representative cadre of judges to serve in courts across the country," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says.

Partnership To Support Afghan Justice System Launched

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
To enhance the evolution of democracy in Afghanistan, the United States launches a public-private partnership to help improve the fledgling Afghan justice system by funding low-cost, high-impact projects that promote women's rights, access to justice, legal aid, professional legal development and other justice-related programs. "It is imperative that Afghanistan develop a well-trained, educated, and demographically representative cadre of judges to serve in courts across the country," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says.
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Rice Urges Donors To Join in Supporting Palestinian Authority

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Nations must match their commitments to Middle East peace made at the November 27 Annapolis Conference with financial contributions for creating a future Palestinian state, says Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. “Words and promises of support are helpful, but that alone is insufficient.  Progress requires action, and it requires tangible financial assistance,” Rice says during a high-level international donors' conference in Paris, during which nations and organizations pledge $7.4 billion in assistance to the Palestinians.
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Indian-American’s Experience Drives Her Immigrant Rights Advocacy

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
When Deepa Iyer moved from India to Kentucky she was 12 years old, an awkward age for drastic adjustment. Blazing a path from there to being the executive director of the increasingly influential South Asian American Leaders of Tomorrow took a combination of hard work, timely opportunity and key influences that shaped her perceptions of democracy. According to Iyer, people made assumptions about her family’s origins and their English-language skills based on inaccurate stereotypes. Seeing other immigrants and minorities have similar experiences “shaped my desire to become part of a movement in the United States that was based on social justice and equality,” she says.

Climate Change Wrangle Goes into Overtime

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Delegates to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change conference see more than an international wrangle over a document intended to set the pace for mitigating and adapting to climate change. They also get a glimpse of American political dissent as U.S. politicians and environmental activists troop to the meeting in Bali, Indonesia, to have a say. The United States is committed to developing a post-2012 arrangement that will slow, stop and reverse global emissions in order to prevent dangerous human interference with the climate system,” U.S. Under Secretary of State Paula Dobriansky says. The Kyoto Protocol, ratified by all major developed nations but the United States, expires in 2012. The purpose of the Bali meeting is to negotiate a new framework for action.
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American Muslims Travel to Mecca for Annual Pilgrimage

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Young American Muslims, many professionals in their 20s, are traveling to the Middle East to perform the Hajj, according to travel industry experts in the United States. This is a new trend, according to one Seattle tour operator. “The Hajj is an arduous undertaking that requires physical strength, endurance and stamina,” says award-winning documentary filmmaker Anisa Mehdi, who follows three pilgrims in her film Inside Mecca. “Traditionally, older people do it because there is great motivation to complete the transcendental journey, but it is easier for people in good health and strong,” Mehdi says.
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U.S. Still Top Financial Contributor to Humanitarian Mine Action

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Casualties from land mines worldwide have dropped from around 26,000 a year four years ago to a little more than 3,000 a year today, counting both land mines and other target-activated explosives. The United States long has been the largest financial contributor to humanitarian mine action -- a broad category that covers clearance, funding for prosthetics, training of mine removers, mine risk education, and research and development for better mine removal equipment and techniques -- and since 1993 has provided more than $1.2 billion to some 50 countries in this effort.
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In Presidential Election, Americans Might Be Looking for Change

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Although recent polls show that Americans split their support among many presidential candidates, these same polls indicate there is one thing many Americans agree on: it is time for a change. Americans are looking for a leader who can change the direction in which the country is heading, NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd tells reporters in Washington.

Best U.S. High Schools Travel Different Roads to Academic Success

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
In ranking the 100 best public high schools in the United States, the magazine U.S. News and World Report found a common denominator in their unwavering commitment to excellence -- but widely divergent ways in which they achieved their outstanding results in the classroom.
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United States, Nigeria Renew Ties

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
After a White House meeting with Nigerian President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, President Bush praises the Nigerian leader for being “committed to democracy and rule of law.” Bush describes Yar’Adua as “very articulate in his desire to make sure that the people of Nigeria understand that their government will be fair and transparent, and will be a government of the people.” The two presidents describe their Oval Office meeting as a “good visit.”

United States, Nigeria Renew Ties

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
After a White House meeting with Nigerian President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, President Bush praises the Nigerian leader for being “committed to democracy and rule of law.” Bush describes Yar’Adua as “very articulate in his desire to make sure that the people of Nigeria understand that their government will be fair and transparent, and will be a government of the people.” The two presidents describe their Oval Office meeting as a “good visit.”
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Donors' Conference Can Reinforce Palestinian-Israeli Efforts

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
The December 17 international, high-level donors' conference in Paris is an opportunity for the global community to reinforce its support for a resolution of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and an opportunity for the Palestinians to show their genuine desire for statehood, according to senior U.S. officials.
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Nature Conservancy Benefits from Business Alliances

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Nongovernmental organizations such as the World Wildlife Fund are realizing they cannot address problems such as climate change, deforestation and diminishing biodiversity without the involvement of companies that have an impact on the environment. At the same time, corporations are becoming more likely to cooperate with conservation groups because of increasingly tough environmental and biodiversity standards in their host and home countries. USINFO talks with some participants in these public-private partnerships.
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Argentine Success Can Anchor Regional Democracy and Stability

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Argentina’s new president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, is sworn in as the country’s first female leader, calling for new government reforms and an acceleration of human rights investigations into abuses carried out during former military leader Jorge Videla’s regime. In Washington, U.S. officials call for Argentina to resume its active role in international organizations such as the United Nations, the Organization of American States and Interpol. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Thomas Shannon tells reporters that Argentina’s involvement in global efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation and terrorism and resolve the Middle East conflict is welcome and very important. “[I]n the region, a successful Argentina is an anchor for democracy and a promoter of stability. It can play a very important role in the Andean countries,” Shannon says.

Argentine Success Can Anchor Regional Democracy and Stability

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
Argentina’s new president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, is sworn in as the country’s first female leader, calling for new government reforms and an acceleration of human rights investigations into abuses carried out during former military leader Jorge Videla’s regime. In Washington, U.S. officials call for Argentina to resume its active role in international organizations such as the United Nations, the Organization of American States and Interpol. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Thomas Shannon tells reporters that Argentina’s involvement in global efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation and terrorism and resolve the Middle East conflict is welcome and very important. “[I]n the region, a successful Argentina is an anchor for democracy and a promoter of stability.  It can play a very important role in the Andean countries,” Shannon says.
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Better Education for Youth Cuts Crime in Central America

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
A comprehensive approach that includes better education for at-risk young people is needed to cut high crime rates in Central America and the Caribbean, according to experts, who say crime in Central America and the Caribbean has become worse, despite anti-crime programs by the region’s governments. Attendees at a conference in Miami share information and strategies for addressing income inequality, easy access to guns and a young underemployed or unemployed population -- all triggers to the region’s increasing crime rates.

Better Education for Youth Cuts Crime in Central America

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Sat, 2024-05-11 23:18
A comprehensive approach that includes better education for at-risk young people is needed to cut high crime rates in Central America and the Caribbean, according to experts, who say crime in Central America and the Caribbean has become worse, despite anti-crime programs by the region’s governments. Attendees at a conference in Miami share information and strategies for addressing income inequality, easy access to guns and a young underemployed or unemployed population -- all triggers to the region’s increasing crime rates.
Categories: News, US, USInfo.State.Gov
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