News and Views: November 2005
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- Life Goes On in Fallujah's Rubble (Dahr Jamail, Inter Press Service)
- Timely Demise for Free Trade Area of the Americas (Laura Carlsen, IRC Americas Program)
- ...Global Number of People Living with HIV Continues to Rise (UNAIDS/WHO 2005 Report)
- Mildewed Police Files May Hold Clues to Atrocities in Guatemala (Ginger Thompson, The New York Times)
- The US used chemical weapons in Iraq - and then lied about it (George Monbiot, The Guardian)
- Guatemala: UN appeals for urgent funds to feed 285,000 hurricane victims (UN News)
- U.N. Food Expert Condemns U.S. Tactics in Iraq (Eulàlia Iglesias, Inter Press Service)
- The Threat of Hope in Latin America (Naomi Klein, The Nation)
- U.N. Blasts Practice of Outsourcing Torture (Thalif Deen, Inter Press Service)
- Gaza revival battles Israeli controls (BBC News)
- The Bush Effect: U.S. Military Involvement in Latin America Rises, Development and Humanitarian Aid Fall (Frida Berrigan and Jonathan Wingo, World Policy Institute)
- The day George Bush came face to face with Latin America's revolt (Naomi Klein, The Guardian)
- AMERICAS: Counter-Summit Celebrates Rollback of US Influence (Marcela Valente, Inter Press Service)
- Month after hurricane, 50,000 Central Americans still homeless, funds short (UN News)
- PERU: Veteran Soldiers, Police Recruited for Iraq by U.S. Contractors (Ángel Páez, Inter Press Service)
- Security Council urges protecting women in war, empowering them as peacemakers (UN News)


