Associated Press coverage filming the effects of the volcanic eruption in Indonesia.
November 5, 2010
Associated Press coverage filming the effects of the volcanic eruption in Indonesia.
November 5, 2010
Associated Press raw footage of recent flooding within Haiti.
September 9, 2010
The Associated Press is reporting new Romanian legislation “where witches and fortune tellers would have to produce receipts, and would also be held liable for wrong predictions”. Evidently this is to increase government financial resources after the past financial storm left Romania in a “severe economic downturn”.
To learn more about the present economic state of Romania I visited Radio Romania International where an article entitled THE ROMANIA-IMF RELATION was released earlier today stating how the government of Romania “promised the IMF it would levy taxes on high incomes and extend criteria to defend the taxable income, so that all non-exempt profits be taxed.” in addition to receiving “a new payment of the loan, worth more than 900 million euros.” While cooperation is essential in the current financial climate, interest in helping Romania is by no means at an all time low. On the contrary, actmedia, a Romanian news agency, is reporting in an article entitled “World Bank, interested in new projects in Romania” that “the World Bank (WB) wishes to continue the ongoing projects in Romania and identify new cooperation possibilities with the Romanian authorities” in an attempt “to draw investments”. Hopefully Romania will be one flower that will blossom as these projects are finalized, proving that cooperation with global groups could open doors previously thought invisible.
September 8, 2010
The Los Angeles Times has recently released an article entitled Mexico, Central America struggle through deadly rainy season detailing how “heavy seasonal rainfall has set off deadly mudslides and widespread flooding across Central America and Mexico’s southeast, killing more than 50 people and displacing more than half a million.”
Just as Guatemala has been stricken by landslides and floods so too has Mexico become blanketed under the torrential rain resulting in widespread insecurity. According to an article released earlier today by the Associated Press, “tens of thousands of people have abandoned their homes across southern Mexico to escape flooding from weeks of torrential rains, and forecasts are predicting even more rainfall.”
Floods are starting to be a recurring event in parts of Mexico like Tabasco, which a BBC article reminds it’s readers “was the scene of devastating floods three years ago.” Yet hope is significant when it comes to learning from the past to minimize damage the future has to offer, and with widespread reports of “the worst to come” as the BBC quoted Tabasco Governor Andres Granier as saying, hope might the driving force affected by the flooding.