Articles
Zimbabwe’s capital ‘world’s 4th worst to live in’
Category: International Written by Associated Press
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP)—An independent research group says Zimbabwe’s capital is the world’s fourth-worst city to live in, based on daily hardships and political risk. Cities in war zones are excluded from the “livability” index.
The British-based Economist Intelligence Unit put Harare 137th out of 140 cities surveyed and gave it a 39.4 rating on a scale to 100 for ideal urban conditions. In its report available Thursday, Harare ranked marginally better than Lagos in Nigeria, Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea and Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:52
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France offers to pick up tab for young hires
Category: International Written by Associated Press
by Sarah DiLorenzo
PARIS (AP)—The French government wants companies to hire young people so much that it’s offering to pick up the tab.
The new Socialist president, Francois Hollande, told his Cabinet Wednesday that he wants to wage a war on unemployment and unveiled a plan for the government to pay most of the salaries of tens of thousands of young people hired next year.
Unemployment in France is 10 percent, but nearly 23 percent for those under the age of 25. That’s an imbalance that many European countries are struggling with: In Spain, youth unemployment is over 52 percent; it’s 34 percent in Italy.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:52
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Sick African leaders tout health until the end
Category: International Written by Associated Press
Associated Press Writer
DAKAR, Senegal (AP)—The rumors started to swirl around Ghana in June: President John Atta Mills was ill, maybe too sick to seek re-election, and he was going abroad to seek medical treatment. Some radio stations went so far as to prematurely report his death.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:52
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Kenyan justice slapped down after gun threat
Category: International Written by Smokin' Jim Frazier - Courier Sports Writer
by Tom Odula
| VINDICATED—Rebecca Kerubo, mother of three children, sits with her son at her house in Nairobi, Kenya on Aug. 9. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)
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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Rebecca Kerubo, a $6-a-day security guard at a Nairobi mall, is one of the city’s countless low-wage slum residents. So when she made a formal complaint that Kenya’s second most powerful judge threatened her with a gun at a security checkpoint, few thought the struggling mother of three stood a chance.
Now it appears, though, that the justice will lose her seat on the bench.
Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:52
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Diaspora: The links that bind Caribbean immigrants
Category: International Written by NNPA News Service
For New Pittsburgh Courier
It has become something of a rite of passage for Caribbean political leaders who direct the fortunes of the nations and territories that form the archipelago.
In recent weeks and months, Jamaica’s Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, Guyana’s new President Donald Ramotar, Grenada’s head of government Tillman Thomas and Mia Mottley, a former Deputy Prime Minister of Barbados, came to New York at the helm of a six member delegation of the Barbados Labor Party to meet the Diaspora. What they all did was deliver an interesting message: nationals of their respective countries must continue to play an invaluable role in the further economic and social development of America’s third border.
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MIA MOTTLEY
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Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:52
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