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Reader Responces Author: Originally Published at Peace and Conflict Monitor on: 11/01/2007 Category: Letters to the Editor Re: Buildings Walls inthe Free World Sorry, but having a border fence is not offensive. It’s just a fence. Good fences make for good neighbors, right? Seriously, there was fence that separated
Editor
- June 26, 2020
originally published by Truthout on October 9, 2007
Editor
- June 26, 2020
Paul Clifford reflects on his recent visit to Gaza, remarking on the courage and creativity with which people face their daily hardships, the hospitality he received, and the dishearteningly entrenched nature of violence in the Middle East.
Editor
- June 26, 2020
Journalists and activist opposed to the Kremlin are under political fire from the Russian government. Nevertheless independent media is unwavering and has a growing appeal of alternative truths. Floriana Fossato shines a light on two women at the center of the harassment reports.
Editor
- June 26, 2020
"Love in a Headscarf: Muslim Woman Seeks the One" Book Reviewed by Ethar El-Katatney
Editor
- June 25, 2020
Why individuals willingly participated in the Rwanda Genocide is a question that has been widely asked and widely begged by multiple books on the subject. Consisting of transcribed interviews with ten different perpetrators of the genocide, Machete Season still only brushes the heart of the matter: that "why" that historians
Editor
- June 25, 2020
"I know that Obama's election has brought great hopes to peace-loving people in the United States. But for Afghans, Obama's military buildup will only bring more suffering and death to innocent civilians..."
-- Afghan parliamentarian Malalai Joya
In an exclusive interview, the first since her party returned to power in April this year, Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga outlined her strategy to establish peace in Sri-Lanka. "Actually," she says, "We have gone about seventy five percent of the way to meet the Tigers request for the agenda."
Fifteen years after Rwandan Hutu massacred hundreds of thousands of their Tutsi countrymen, one survivor and the man who cut off her hand tell the horrible truth about the genocide and explain how, even with so much suffering between them, they eventually made peace.
Carla Ortiz reflects on the emotional ups and downs, and the tangle of red tape facing visa applicants from so-called "restricted countries".
Editor
- June 25, 2020




