World News Desk – September 5, 2008

Posted/Updated: 2008-09-08 09:24:47

INTERNATIONAL
The World in Review

A snapshot of events around the world | Updated each Friday

1. Canada:

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2. United States:

3. Paraguay: In a historic reversal of foreign policy, President Fernando Lugo will no longer recognize Taiwan or support it in voting to admit it into the United Nations. Paraguay has recognized Taiwan since 1957.

4. United Kingdom:

5. Belgium: By 2015 the European Union’s birth rate will officially be surpassed by the death rate of Europe’s population, according to a Eurostat report. The study revealed large variations between the birth rates in each country and showed evidence of an aging population.

6. Netherlands: The Dutch intelligence agency AIVD reported it would discontinue an espionage operation conducted against Iranian weapon production facilities, due to AIVD’s assessment that a U.S. attack upon the facilities is imminent.

7. South Africa: Public Enterprises Minister Alec Irwin stated a desperate need for one trillion rand’s ($125 million USD) worth of investment in the country’s power infrastructure. Suffering from massive blackouts that have crippled business and industry across the nation, South Africa has struggled to keep up with increasing energy demand. (See related article: “African Continent Handcuffed by Power Shortages”)

8. Russia: The Russian Navy is expanding to the size it was during the Cold War. Increased revenues from the high price of oil have allowed Moscow to begin building new ships and to refit old ones with new technologies. Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov said, “We are already building practically as many ships as we did in Soviet Times” (G2 Bulletin). (See related article: “Unveiling the New Russia”)

9. Iran: Owing to the sharp drop in the price of crude oil from July’s high of $147 dollars per barrel to this week’s low of $105 dollars, Iran and Venezuela are demanding that all OPEC member nations cut production by at least half a million barrels per day.

10. Pakistan: An unknown gunman fired upon the motorcade of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, hitting the driver’s side window twice. The attack represents a large gap in security measures for the Pakistani government.

11. Thailand: Prime Minster Samak Sundaravej faced protestors against his regime in the streets of Bangkok after declaring a state of emergency. Violence ensued between demonstrators and government supporters, resulting in one death and dozens injured.

12. Japan: Five groups of Nagasaki atomic-bomb survivors asked six member nations of the Nuclear Suppliers Group to oppose a U.S.-India civilian nuclear cooperation pact. The deal would allow the United States to transfer uranium fuel and nuclear technologies to India, which has not signed the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. (See related article: “India—A Superpower in the Making?”)

13. Australia:

08/09/05