News and Views: September 2005
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- U.S. has sanctioned torture for too long (Jennifer K. Harbury, Newsday Editorial)
- Roars and Whispers, Gender and Poverty: Promises vs. Action (Social Watch Report 2005)
- In Mexico's Murders, Fury Is Aimed at Officials (Ginger Thompson, The New York Times)
- 10th AWID International Forum on Women’s Rights and Development (October 27-30 in Bangkok)
- The Price of Going to Market (Laura Carlsen, Americas Program, International Relations Center)
- Bush Jihad Against UNFPA Enters Fourth Year (Jim Lobe, Inter Press Service)
- Bring Them Home Now Tour: Cindy Sheehan in New York, September 18-20
- Women Under Siege, At Home and Abroad (Katherine Stapp, Inter Press Service)
- Ending Tyranny, The Bush Way (Frida Berrigan, AlterNet)
- Poverty Fight May Be Subverted at U.N. Summit (Thalif Deen, Inter Press Service)
- Dire conditions unacceptable only in the United States? (Lois Melina, Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
- Rapes in New Orleans Chaos Were Avoidable (Nancy Cook Lauer, Women's eNews)
- UN Spells Out the Stark Choice: Do More for World's Poor or Face Disaster (Larry Elliott, The Guardian)
- UN marks International Literacy Day as key to sustainable development (UN News)
- Thousands of Latin American Immigrants Among Katrina's Victims (Diego Cevallos, Inter Press Service)


