RefBan

Referral Banners

Yashi

Friday, June 1, 2012

Around the Globe | 01.06.2012, 16:00 UTC

If you cannot view this message correctly, please click here.
 
DEUTSCHE WELLE facebook   twitter   fwd  
Elections
The great divide
The battle for the White House is developing into a bitter and divisive feud and shows how fragmented US society is, writes Volker Depkat for DW's Transtlantic Voices column.
Armed Conflict
'Taliban are Pakistani military without uniform'
In the wake of the first anniversary of Osama Bin Laden's killing by American elite troops, DW takes a closer look at Pakistan's "other" war in a rare interview with a prominent Baloch leader.
Africa
Tuaregs' ties with Libya linked to Mali's crisis
Tuareg soldiers from Mali fought for Moammar Gadhafi in Libya until his regime fell in 2011. Returning to Mali, they rejoined a long-standing rebellion against the government. Now, Malians blame their crisis on Libya.
Human Rights
China still prefers a great wall around the press
China's expulsion of the pan-Arab Al-Jazeera news network's only English-language reporter in China highlights the country's deep-rooted sensitivity about the foreign media. Its anxiety is echoed in other parts of Asia.
Society
Rapper Shahin Najafi rejects criticism
Iran's grand ayatollah has issued what many have interpreted to be a fatwa against the rapper Shahin Najafi, who has lived in Germany for the past seven years. In an interview, Najafi gives DW his take on the situation.
United States
US veterans return home to a difficult future
The war in Afghanistan has been going on for over 11 years. More than 2.2 million Americans have been deployed there to date. 360,000 of those returning require psychological assistance - and the tendency is growing.
Holocaust
Exhibition documents German help for Jews
Hans Rosenthal survived the Second World War hiding in a Berlin garden. The author Valentin Senger survived with fake papers. These are the fates of two Jews documented in a new exhibition in Frankfurt.
Computers
Electronics of the future may thrive on bacteria
Researches in the UK and Japan have turned to nature (read, magnetic bacteria) to help produce electronics on a nano scale. They say the bacteria could help us make better hard drives and faster internet connections.
More DW
Dossier from Qantara: Uprisings in the Arab world
The anger of the Tunisians and Egyptians towards the regimes in their countries has triggered a revolt in the Arab world. The dossier provides insights into the factors that led to the current developments.

  Unsubscribe   Personal Data   Feedback   Imprint © Deutsche Welle 2012  
 

No comments:

Yashi

Chitika