AltWeeklies Wire

Mikhail Gorbachev Visits Floridanew

The former Soviet President was at the Hard Rock Live, a guest of the Seminole Indian Tribe. He addressed an audience that had come to see the former communist leader and Louis Vuitton pitchman cashing in on a trip to the land where the grotesqueries of capitalism are matched only by modern-day Russia.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Michael J. Mooney  |  04-29-2008  |  International

Walid Shoebat, the 'Former Terrorist'new

He claims that he is a former Palestine Liberation Organization terrorist turned Christian peace activist. On April 29, the University of Colorado's College Republicans are bringing Shoebat to Boulder, at a cost of roughly $30,000. But now critics and journalists are beginning to question the validity of his story and his identity.
Boulder Weekly  |  Michael de Yoanna  |  04-28-2008  |  International

Africa's Leaders Seduced by Robert Mugabe's Claim that Britain is Plotting White Recolonizationnew

The Zimbabwean president's anti-white railings have resonance for Africans who fought for independence.
NOW Magazine  |  Gwynne Dyer  |  04-25-2008  |  International

Power Outage Powers Outragenew

South African satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys (Elections and Erections) tries to be optimistic about his country's future, but he's afraid he might be whistling in the dark.
Boston Phoenix  |  Pieter-Dirk Uys  |  04-24-2008  |  International

For Dr. Amir Shervin, the Iranian Hostage Crisis Lives Onnew

An Iranian physician trying to right a 29-year-old wrong has a scrape with police and gets charged with assault by an aide to Senator Boxer.
East Bay Express  |  Greg M. Schwartz  |  04-23-2008  |  International

Fighting for Women's Rights in Pakistannew

Pakistani Muslim and feminist Shanaz Bukhari Bukhari fights to end domestic violence and wife burning.
Boulder Weekly  |  Pamela White  |  04-22-2008  |  International

China's Olympic High-Wire Actnew

If you think pro-Tibet protests in San Francisco were intense, wait till they get to New Delhi and Canberra.
NOW Magazine  |  Gwynne Dyer  |  04-11-2008  |  International

Reflections on the Escalating Situation in Tibetnew

There is no question that a shift in policy and new strategies are called for. Such change, however, requires the Chinese administration to go beyond its present perception of Tibet as an archaic and backward society, useful for tourism but little else.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Jose Ignacio Cabezon  |  04-07-2008  |  International

Iraq: Maliki's Gamblenew

The rhetoric on the Basra offensive is triumphalist, and the story-line is simple and consistent -- but the reality is less persuasive.
NOW Magazine  |  Gwynne Dyer  |  04-07-2008  |  International

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador: Mexico's Comback Kidnew

The leftist firebrand rallies Mexicans against big oil.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  John Ross  |  04-02-2008  |  International

Activists Mark 60th Anniversary of the Birth of Israelnew

Americans, if they really know their history, know May 14 as the day Israel declared independence from the British-controlled Mandate of Palestine. But over the next 57 days, some activist groups are planning to show why it is also known by many as "al-Nakba" or Arabic for "the Catastrophe."
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Will Dean  |  04-01-2008  |  International

Election Moves Taiwan and Beijing Closernew

The triumph of Ma Ying-jeou, the Nationalist Party (or Kuomintang) candidate in the presidential election in Taiwan, brings to an end eight years of rule by the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party.
The Georgia Straight  |  Frank Ching  |  03-31-2008  |  International

Taking On the New Empirenew

Tibet backers at China's Consulate show protest focus has shifted from once-mighty U.S.
NOW Magazine  |  Andrew Cash  |  03-28-2008  |  International

An Irreversible Five Years for Iraqnew

Can Iraq emerge from the ordeal of George W. Bush's invasion as a place where people lead reasonably safe and happy lives?
NOW Magazine  |  Gwynne Dyer  |  03-28-2008  |  International

What About Tibet?new

The Olympics are a glittering prize that was awarded China as an incentive to better behavior. But seen through the prism of the Tibet crisis, the games are proving to be not a source of strength but a point of vulnerability.
Boston Phoenix  |  Editorial  |  03-27-2008  |  International

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