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Presidential Campaigns Focus Efforts on Early Primary States

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
With the first primaries and caucuses in the 2008 presidential race right around the corner, the candidates are focusing on states that hold the earliest contests. USINFO surveys the political terrain in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.

Presidential Campaigns Focus Efforts on Early Primary States

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
With the first primaries and caucuses in the 2008 presidential race right around the corner, the candidates are focusing on states that hold the earliest contests. USINFO surveys the political terrain in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.
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Nigerian President’s Visit Represents Start of New Relationship

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
The visit of Nigerian President Umaru Yar’Adua to the White House represents the beginning of a “new relationship” that will signal closer bilateral relations between Nigeria and the United States on a broad range of important issues. U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Todd J. Moss previews the visit and considers the U.S.-Nigeria relationship in an interview with USINFO.

Nigerian President’s Visit Represents Start of New Relationship

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
The visit of Nigerian President Umaru Yar’Adua to the White House represents the beginning of a “new relationship” that will signal closer bilateral relations between Nigeria and the United States on a broad range of important issues. U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Todd J. Moss previews the visit and considers the U.S.-Nigeria relationship in an interview with USINFO.
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Turning Point Reached in Developing Alternative Fuels Plan

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
A plan by the United States, Brazil and other countries to develop alternative fuels from organic matter is said to be at a “turning point” that will help the participating nations lower their dependence on foreign oil. State Department official Dan Sullivan tells USINFO that “major diplomacy” at a recent conference helped push forward a broad U.S.-Brazil biofuels partnership with these other countries and organizations.  A second element of the plan, he says, involves the United States, Brazil, the European Union, China and India developing industrywide standards and codes that could lay the groundwork for a global biofuels market.
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Avian Flu, AIDS Figure in U.S. Health Assistance to Bangladesh

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Cyclone Sidr’s deadly landfall wreaked havoc in southern Bangladesh November 15, killing thousands, displacing hundreds of thousands, and adding pain and desperation to a nation whose population of 133 million already struggles with poverty and disease. To help with the latest crisis and meet longer-term health challenges, the U.S. Agency for International Development has committed $19.5 million to relief efforts since the cyclone, Kent Hill, the agency’s assistant administrator for global health, tells reporters in Dhaka, Bangladesh.  The agency also plans to contribute $115 million for health programs in fiscal year 2008 -- an increase of $39 million over fiscal 2007.
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Agriculture in Mozambique Advancing Through Joint U.S.-U.N. Efforts

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Food security in Mozambique and the nutrition of people affected by HIV/AIDS are improving, thanks to close cooperation between U.S. and U.N. agencies, says U.S. diplomat Gaddi Vasquez. The collaboration also is helping establish an early flood warning and response system, Vasquez, the U.S. representative to United Nations food agencies, tells USINFO at the end of a four-day December visit to the country. Mozambique frequently is hit by Indian Ocean cyclones that cause severe flooding. The coordinated responses of agencies to Mozambique's problems "is some of the best I've seen," says Vasquez, a former Peace Corps director.
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New Film on America To Be Shown at U.S. Consulates, Embassies

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Visitors to U.S. consulates and embassies soon will be able to watch a short film, I Am America, that introduces them to America’s people and landscapes, conveying the simple message that America is a diverse, interesting and friendly place.  “People overseas think we’ve been barricading ourselves” since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, “but it’s not true,” says Cari E. Guittard, executive vice president of the nonprofit organization Business for Diplomatic Action, which commissioned the film as a gift to the U.S. government.  “We want people to come here.”
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Efforts To Expose Atrocities in Burma Win U.S. Envoy Recognition

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
She may not have had the power to stop the brutality of the Burmese regime against peaceful demonstrators, but Shari Villarosa, chargé d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Rangoon, ensured that the world, as well as the citizens of Burma, was aware of the injustices against pro-democracy demonstrators in late August and September. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice notes Villarosa’s efforts at a ceremony December 10 at the State Department in Washington, where Villarosa was named runner-up for the first Diplomacy for Freedom Award. The award honors U.S. diplomats for outstanding efforts to advance human dignity, end tyranny and promote democracy.

State Department Links Violence Against Women, Human Rights

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
U.S. embassies around the world organized 16 days of activities focused on the problem of violence against women to draw a symbolic link between the International Day Against Violence Against Women -- November 25 -- and International Human Rights Day -- December 10. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, in her directive to all U.S. embassies, called for engagement with host country governments, civil society and media.

Efforts To Expose Atrocities in Burma Win U.S. Envoy Recognition

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
She may not have had the power to stop the brutality of the Burmese regime against peaceful demonstrators, but Shari Villarosa, chargé d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Rangoon, ensured that the world, as well as the citizens of Burma, was aware of the injustices against pro-democracy demonstrators in late August and September. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice notes Villarosa’s efforts at a ceremony December 10 at the State Department in Washington, where Villarosa was named runner-up for the first Diplomacy for Freedom Award. The award honors U.S. diplomats for outstanding efforts to advance human dignity, end tyranny and promote democracy.
Categories: News, US, USInfo.State.Gov

State Department Links Violence Against Women, Human Rights

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
U.S. embassies around the world organized 16 days of activities focused on the problem of violence against women to draw a symbolic link between the International Day Against Violence Against Women -- November 25 -- and International Human Rights Day -- December 10.  Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, in her directive to all U.S. embassies, called for engagement with host country governments, civil society and media. Unfortunately, violence against women is accepted in many cultures that regard such behavior as “a private family matter,” says Andrea Bottner, the senior coordinator for the U.S. Department of State’s Office of International Women’s Issues.
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Zimbabwe Human Rights Lawyers Fight State-Sanctioned Violence

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
A group of dedicated Zimbabwean lawyers that defends victims of politically motivated persecution in Zimbabwe is honored by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice with her first Freedom Defenders Award. Lawyer Arnold Tsunga, who fled his country after learning that he was on a government hit list, accepts the award on behalf of the nongovernmental organization Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights at a special ceremony in Washington.
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Support for Mideast Peace Goes Beyond Annapolis Conference

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Expect continued intensive diplomacy from Washington as Palestinian and Israeli leaders build on the success of the U.S.-sponsored Annapolis Conference, says a top U.S. diplomat. "There are a lot of historical reasons to be skeptical, but we see this as an unprecedented moment of hope and opportunity for Israelis and Palestinians," Thomas Goldberger, director of the State Department’s Office of Israel and Palestinian Affairs, says in a USINFO webchat.
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Religious Leaders Condemn Terrorist Acts

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Muslim, Jewish and Christian leaders in the United States join together in an interfaith peace-building effort to condemn terrorism and the violence it causes.  In supporting this initiative, the Fiqh Council of North America -- the highest judicial body in the Muslim community in the United States -- issues a fatwa, or religious edict, saying "there is no justification in Islam for extremism or terrorism."
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Rural Nicaraguan Areas Are Model for Electrification System

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
For many who live in rural areas throughout the world, the basic technologies necessary for education, public health and economic development are not feasible because of a lack of electricity.  But in Nicaragua, a U.S.-based nonprofit company, blueEnergy, is developing a model for low-cost, sustainable electrification of remote rural communities that can be replicated around the world.
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Broad U.S.-China Dialogue Advances Toward Long-Term Goals

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
A comprehensive economic dialogue has helped the United States and China broaden their perspectives on bilateral relations and deepen their understanding of each other’s concerns, according to U.S. experts. The U.S.-China Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) was launched in 2006 by President Bush and President Hu Jintao to deal with the complexity of the U.S.-China economic relationship. The SED is conducted through twice-a-year, Cabinet-level meetings and follow-up engagement. “There is no question the dialogue has provided a mechanism for much more serious, high-level consideration of big issues than ever before,” Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, tells USINFO.
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Congress Sends Peru Free-Trade Pact to President

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice hails Congress’ passage of a U.S.-Peru free-trade agreement. “Peruvian access to the U.S. market, which had to be renewed by Congress periodically, will become permanent. This permanent access will help build a more efficient and effective economic engine to create growth, jobs and economic opportunities both in Peru and in the United States,” Rice says in a statement. The U.S. Senate December 4 voted 77 to 18 in favor of the free-trade agreement with Peru, clearing the pact for final action by the president.
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Morocco’s Mohamed Benaissa Awarded U.S. Honorary Doctorate

USInfo.State.Gov - US - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
The weather was freezing in Minnesota, but Mohamed Benaissa was happy to be back in that snowy northern state for a visit that he called “very emotional, very moving.”  A former foreign minister of Morocco and former Moroccan ambassador to the United States, Benaissa is also a graduate of the University of Minnesota, and he returned on December 4 to receive the highest honor the university can bestow: an honorary doctor of laws degree for public service. In accepting the honor, Benaissa said the United States and Morocco are a good example of “mutual respect between diverse cultures.”
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Young Americans Paying Close Attention to Presidential Race

USInfo.State.Gov - International - Tue, 2024-11-26 18:34
Young Americans are paying attention to the 2008 presidential race, and many are ready to help their preferred candidate achieve victory, a poll by Harvard University’s Institute of Politics shows. Young Americans share many of the concerns of those in other generations, with the war in Iraq and health care as their top concerns, the poll indicates.
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