(July 4, 2008) United Nations: Last fall the General Assembly produced a new treaty that many would say was long overdue – the U.N. Convention Against Corruption.
Other News Sources
The Chixoy dam and the massacres at Rio Negro, Agua Fria, Xococ, and Los Encuentros
Princeton University report on World Bank Accountability and the Rio Negro massacres.
The divine power of profit
A dam near the source of the White Nile would obliterate the Bujagali Falls: a spiritual site for Uganda’s 2.5 million-strong minority Busoga, who believe their tribe’s spirits reside in the churning water; and a tourist river-rafting destination.
CHINA: ‘Within a generation Beijing will cease to exist’
(July 1, 2008) According to a newly published report by Probe International, Beijing’s 200 or so rivers and streams are drying up and many of the city’s reservoirs are nearly empty.
Stress changes from the 2008 Wenchuan earthquake and increased hazard in the Sichuan basin
(July 1, 2008) An article published recently in the journal Nature provides in-depth details about the area where the Wenchuan earthquake hit and particularly the state of stress in the crust of the Earth in the area.
Electricity of Vietnam: ADB finances 156-MW hydro dam near Lao border
(July 1, 2008) The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved funds for the Song Bung 4 hydropower project in Vietnam.
Tough line on graft in Georgia
(June 30, 2008) The presumption that one is not guilty until the court decides so is violated in many cases. If methods of the new government are the same as the old one’s, then what was the meaning of the revolution?”
PUC’s final answer is no to electricty rate increase
(June 30, 2008) Belize’s Public Utilities Commission has turned down Belize Electricity Limited’s (BEL) application to increase electricity rates, reports 7 Newsbelize.
China to keep looking for likely extinct dolphin
Beijing: Chinese scientists will continue to search for a rare freshwater dolphin unique to the Yangtze River, although it is possibly extinct after a 38-day search failed to find any, Xinhua news agency said on Sunday.
Three Gorges opens floodgates to feed thirsty Yangtze
Beijing: China’s Three Gorges Dam, the largest hydropower project in the world, has opened its floodgates to ease water shortages not seen along the Yangtze River since the Qing Dynasty, state media said on Thursday.
Three Gorges dam opens floodgates to ease water shortages in the Yangtze
The Three Gorges Dam in central China’s Hubei Province Thursday has opened its floodgates to ease the severe water shortages along the Yangtze River.
One third of fish species in Yellow River believed extinct
Xinhua January 16, 2007 One third of all fish species in China’s second largest river are believed to be extinct due to human encroachment and scant rainfall, the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) […]
Read what experts are saying about China’s May 12 earthquake
(June 30, 2008) This Chinese geological expert had raised the possibility of a dangerous earthquake in the area in 2007.
One third of fish species in Yellow River dead
Human encroachment, pollution, overfishing and dam-building have killed one third of fish species in the Yellow River, China’s second-longest waterway. Its increasingly desperate plight is also threatening economic growth.
Three Gorges Project set up goals of ensuring quality and safety
Three Gorges Project Corporation set up goals of ensuring quality and safety in the year of 2007, and to secure flood safety and put the first group of units on the right bank into production and generate electricity in the first quarter in 2007.


