Yangtze boat operators who have been helping to clear debris from the Three Gorges reservoir say they are shocked by how much floating garbage has suddenly appeared since the water level was raised an additional four metres last month.
Yangtze boat operators who have been helping to clear debris from the Three Gorges reservoir say they are shocked by how much floating garbage has suddenly appeared since the water level was raised an additional four metres last month.
(November 14, 2003) I have no wish to make an argumentum ad Eminem against Bono, who is due to speak on Third World development at this evening’s coronation of Paul Martin. There is no reason why the lead singer of Irish rock group U2 should not, at least in theory, present viable ideas on the topic. We should have no more a priori skepticism about his analysis than about the expectation that, say, Milton Friedman might be a dab hand with a Stratocaster. If anybody were to attack Bono, it should be on the basis of his ideas. So here goes. But first a few personal details.
(November 14, 2003) The White House and Downing Street should formulate a joint position on the Iraqi debt question, calling for the forgiveness, not restructuring, of Iraq’s international debt.
(November 14, 2003) The basis of the [odious debt] argument is not just moral and political: it is grounded on a century-old international legal doctrine that has been revived recently to deal with increased accountability for creditor complicity in shady lending practices.
(November 13, 2003) Ex-IM president announces a $500m credit facility with the new Trade Bank of Iraq: "In order to have physical security and political stability, we must do something to enable Iraqis to realize their wealth more quickly."
(November 13, 2003) Business Day reports that Saddam Hussein owed 159.4 million rand ($24m) to the Export Credit Insurance Corporation of South African Limited, according to the Minister of Finance, Trevor Manuel.
(November 11, 2003) It was arguably economic pressure brought by sanctions that eventually brought down the racist apartheid system; but by the same token, it was economic support from the outside including loans from multinational banks which kept the system going.
(November 11, 2003) French-based Schneider calls itself one of the world’s leading manufacturers of equipment for electrical distribution, industrial control and automation. It boasts operations in 130 countries.
(November 10, 2003) We’re not going to make the issue of war reparations something that embitters relations and causes hatred between our two peoples.
(November 9, 2003) The International Monetary Fund is still assessing how much of Iraq’s debts should be forgiven and what level of debt would be sustainable for the country scarred by years of war and isolation.
(November 8, 2003) Thailand’s electricity authority signed an agreement committing itself to buying five billion dollars worth of electricity from the much controversial Nam Theun II hydro-electric power project in Laos.
After almost half a century of study, a decision on the design of the world’s biggest shiplift at the biggest dam has been made, the Three Gorges Project Daily (Sanxia gongcheng bao) reports.
Construction of the Three Gorges shiplift, which will be the largest in the world both in terms of height and hoisting capacity, is scheduled to start in 2005 and be completed in 2009, the newspaper said.
(November 7, 2003) Celebrated water engineer Zhang Guangdou has for the first time publicly called for the disastrous Sanmenxia dam on the Yellow River, which he helped design in the 1950s, to be shut down.
(November 7, 2003) It provides about $20 billion for Iraq in the form of a grant, despite earlier calls by members of Congress that the funds be given to Iraq in the form of a loan.
(November 7, 2003) The group aims to reach an agreement with Baghdad by the end of 2004, the deadline of its official moratorium on Iraq’s payments, a person close to the Paris Club told Friday’s Wall Street Journal.