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Search Results for: United Nations

10 results out of 4207 results found for 'United Nations'.

EGYPTIAN TEXTILE SECTOR STRUGGLES ON DURING THE CRISIS



BY PAUL COCHRANE

EGYPT’S garment export industry, worth US dollars USD2 billion a year, has been struggling to cope with the political crisis in its home country, with ports closed and factories working shorter hours, if at all. But factories are still producing clothing and textiles and international clients have yet to cancel orders.…

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The Middle East: On the edge of the abyss?



By Paul Cochrane

Countless times I’ve read analysis and the blurb on the back of books that the Middle East is ‘on the brink’, a ‘tinderbox’ ready to explode due to the nepotistic nature of governments and the dire economic conditions of much of the region.…

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ECUADOR VENTS FURY ON FATF CRITIQUE, THEN QUIETLY DOES ITS BIDDING



BY PACIFICA GODDARD

FOR those doubters who claim the world’s senior anti-money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) organisation the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) does not have much clout, a look at the case of Ecuador makes instructive reading. Last February, the Paris-basedFATF issued a stinging criticism of this South American country, with a public statement officially listing Ecuador as a country with serious AML/CFT deficiencies, along with such dubious fellow travellers as Angola, Ethiopia and North Korea.…

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BHUTAN'S HYDRO-POWER SECTOR SURGES, BUT MOST VILLAGERS ARE LEFT IN THE DARK



BY KENCHO WANGDI

HYDRO-ELECTRIC power is of critical importance to the tiny landlocked nation Bhutan, hidden deep in the folds of the Himalayas, with economic and military giants China to the north and India to the south. Indeed, its government regards hydropower energy as being instrumental in shifting the country from being recognised by the United Nations as a least developed into an emerging developing country in the south-east Asia.…

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ESTABLISHED INDIA BISCUIT DOES NOT FEAR POSSIBLE PEPSICO COMPETITION



BY MINI PANT ZACHARIAH

The general manager of Indian biscuit major Parle Productsis not worried about reports that PepsiCo India is preparing to enter India’s Indian Rupees INR110 billion (USD 2.41 billion) biscuit market. Praveen Kulkarnii told just-food: "Old players will have advantage as they know consumer preferences.…

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POPPY SEED CONSUMPTION CAN SKEW HOSPITAL DRUG TESTS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

NURSES noticing a patient has tested positive for opiate consumption had better check whether they ate a poppy seeded bread roll recently. It has long been a concern that chemical trace elements from this popular bakery ingredient could show up in blood or urine tests, and an ongoing legal case in the United States suggests the issue is still a problem.…

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CANCUN CLIMATE CONFERENCE MAKES PROGRESS ON CARBON CAPTURE AND STORAGE DEAL



BY ERIC J LYMAN

ONE of the subsidiary bodies negotiating groups within the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Cancun has finalised language that takes carbon capture and storage technologies (CCS) to the brink of being included in the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).…

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CLIMATE CHANGE INCREASES SHIFTS INFECTIOUS DISEASES WORLDWIDE



BY ALYSHAH HASHAM

AS negotiators at the recent United Nations climate change conference in Cancun wrapped up their work, one problem concentrating minds enough to secure a partial deal was the spread of disease on the coat-tails of global warming. Infectious diseases are spreading to regions where they were previously absent, driven by warmer temperatures and changing rainfall patterns.…

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RICE HUSK POWER TO LIGHT UP INDIA'S REMOTE VILLAGES



BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA

HAS the world found the means to drive rapid growth of distributed power generation in the rural areas? Yes, believes a group of young entrepreneurs in India who are using the rice husk-fired gasification process to operate small generation units in off-grid remote villages.…

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PAKISTAN ACCOUNTANTS DEAL WITH MAJOR DAMAGE CAUSED BY SUMMER FLOODS



BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI

THE FLOODS that devastated Pakistan this past summer did not just destroy farmland and housing – they ruined many financial records and legal documents, making life that much harder for accountants in Pakistan. "We don’t know how to deal with the aftermath of the floods because there is still no mechanism on the part of the government or the private sector to cope with the challenges and difficulties that our accounting community is facing," said a senior chartered accountant Rafaqat Ullah Babar.…

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