Search Results for: united nations
10 results out of 4344 results found for 'united nations'.
CANCUN SUMMIT PRE-FEATURE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
ANTI-GLOBALISATION activists will not like it, but there are signs that September’s World Trade Organisation summit in Cancun might deliver what has eluded political leaders since the WTO’s agricultural liberalisation talks began in 2000: the beginnings of a deal.…
MAINE SALMON DEATHS
KEITH NUTHALL
AMERICAN health officials have overseen the slaughter of 28,000 salmon on a fish farm in Maine, because of an outbreak of infectious salmon anaemia. Controls were imposed swiftly at the farm in Broad Cove, Cobscook Bay, because the disease ravaged the state’s fish farms in 2001.…
RUSSIA CHICKEN
BY MARK ROWE
THE LONG-RUNNING row between Russia and the United States has taken another twist with Moscow reducing the number of its approved American suppliers from 341 to 266. The Russian government cited concerns about health standards in the US poultry industry, the reason for an earlier blanket ban, which was lifted recently.…
USA OBESITY
BY PHILIP FINE
THE AMERICAN Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) says growing food portions are contributing to obesity in the United States. While it says individuals bear the ultimate responsibility for what they eat, the AICR has chided food manufacturers and the restaurant industry for distorting what constitutes an appropriate meal size.…
SMOKING BANS - USA
BY PHILIP FINE
FROM Gaudeloupe, Arizona, to Duxbury, Massachusetts, and from Helena, Montana, to Loganville, Georgia, US smoking bans have increasingly been finding a small-town
following ; 78 towns and cities in the United States have now enacted smoking bans in all workplaces and restaurants within their municipalities.…
CORRUPTION ORGANISATION
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN INTERNATIONAL Group for Anti-Corruption Coordination (IGAC) has been created by a conference staged by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. The new body will be a clearing-house for good practice and intelligence on corruption, to be shared with other UN agencies, intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations concerned with fighting corruption.…
EASTERN EUROPE FEATURE
BY MARK ROWE
IN the days of the Soviet Union, many millions of men and women had a choice of one state-manufactured brand of shampoo, toothpaste or soap. If anything, the authorities managed to limit even further access to such “indulgences” as perfume.…
GROUNDWATER REPORT
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A UNITED Nations Environment Programme report has urged governments to take better care of the underground aquifers that they plunder for drinking water supplies, warning that many countries are pumping groundwater at unsustainable rates.
The paper singles out Spain’s Segura river basin for particular concern.…
GROUNDWATER REPORT
BY KEITH NUTHALL
A UNITED Nations Environment Programme report has urged governments to take better care of the underground aquifers that they plunder for drinking water supplies, warning that many countries are pumping groundwater at unsustainable rates.
The paper singles out Spain’s Segura river basin for particular concern.…
UK OFFSHORE FEATURE
BY ALAN OSBORN
FORGET all those stories you used to hear about weak regulation and cosy financial set-ups in Britain’s offshore dependencies such as the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and the crown colony of Gibraltar. They may once have been good places to launder money but not any more they aren’t.…