(August 3, 2005) The United States has frozen the US assets of 26 Zimbabwean entities it said are controlled by key members of President Robert Mugabe’s government, accusing them of undercutting democracy in Zimbabwe.
Other News Sources
G8 debt relief could lead to new borrowing
(August 2, 2005) A leaked document by anti-debt campaigners shows the World Bank is considering extending additional loans to countries eligible for the G-8 debt cancellation, which would make the write-off plan fundamentally different from the initial proposal.
Vigilance special team to probe SNC-Lavalin case
(August 2, 2005) The government has decided to constitute a Vigilance special team to complete the probe into the SNC-Lavalin corruption case involving CPM state secretary Pinarayi Vijayan.
Special team to probe SNC Lavalin deal
(August 2, 2005) Six-month deadline for panel to submit report.
3 S Newsletter
(August 1, 2005) Covering dam affected communities on the Sesan, Srepok and Sekong Rivers in Northeastern Cambodia.
The dictator debt catch
(August 1, 2005) A US-brokered deal to forgive billions in Iraqi debt is causing other countries to say "me too," even as some Iraqis wish they’d said "no thanks."
KSEB contract for SNC-Lavalin
(July 31, 2005) With charges of political corruption and kickbacks in the SNC-Lavalin deal mounting against it, the Kerala CPI (M) Secretary is on the defensive.
Acres Incorporated now Hatch Acres
(July 29, 2005) As of August 1, 2005 energy consulting firm Acres Incorporated and most of its operating subsidiaries will be known as Hatch Acres. The new name reflects the fact that Acres is a wholly owned subsidiary of Hatch with access to its systems and services.
Ghana: Make Poverty History 2005 … what next?
(July 28, 2005) Aid basically undermines autonomous thinking and the confidence to rely on domestic ideas and domestic sources of development finance," writes GhanaHomePage columnist, Samuel Sawyer.
Iraqi commercial debt settlement terms announced
(July 27, 2005) Iraq has announced its settlement terms for Saddam-era commercial debt prior to August 1990. It is estimated that the total debt in this category may be $20 billion, of which about 85% will be eligible for settlement.
Paris Club hands over list of looters to Nigeria
(July 27, 2005) In exchange for partial debt relief, the Paris Club of creditor nations have handed Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo a list of well-placed Nigerians to go after and prosecute for allegedly stealing and stashing public funds in overseas bank accounts.
Driving Mr. Mugabe
(July 26, 2005) The likely beneficiaries of any new African aid program: the continent’s Mercedes-Benz dealerships.
Iraq health update: Summer 2005
(July 26, 2005) An update of a report by UK-based charity organization Medact has found growing evidence of corruption and a lack of transparency within Iraq’s Coalitional Provisional Authority.
Guatemalan Maya, forced from homes, demand World Bank compensation
(July 26, 2005) Thousands of indigenous Maya people from Guatemala protested at the World Bank Tuesday demanding compensation for being driven from their ancestral lands by the blood-soaked construction of a bank-funded dam.
Iraq announces terms of commercial debt settlement offer
(July 26, 2005) The Republic of Iraq today announced its intention to offer to settle outstanding Saddam-era commercial claims against Iraq and Iraqi public sector obligors through a cash buyback.


