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Headlines - May 12, 2007


5:02 minutes (4.61 MB)
  • CHINA EARTHQUAKE
  • PAKISTAN’S COALITION GOV’T TO CRUMBLE
  • SUDAN BREAKS TIES WITH CHAD
  • HIGH COURT SITS OUT APARTHEID CASE
  • TAX SHELTERS ROB DEVELOPING NATIONS
  • OBIT – IRENA SENDLE

Dial-Up Monday, May 12, 2008: 13 Meg Version


29:00 minutes (13.28 MB)

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008


Dial-Up Monday, May 12, 2008


29:00 minutes (6.64 MB)

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008


Beirut's Tense Calm


4:58 minutes (4.55 MB)

There is a relative calm in west Beirut today – after clashes between pro- and anti-government forces claimed the lives of at least 58 people, wounding 189. Government troops are now controlling checkpoints that Hizbullah took over Friday, although fresh conflicts between Hizbullah and US-backed pro-government forces broke out Monday. FSRN Anchor Aura Bogado spoke with Beirut correspondent Jackson Allers, who has been following the conflict.

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008


Serbian Election Results


4:16 minutes (3.91 MB)

Results from yesterday's elections in Serbia show a close-call victory for President Boris Tadic's pro-European Union bloc. As FSRN's Amy Miller reports from Belgarde, if Tadic's acceptance speech is any indication, the new government will have to struggle to create a coalition government – which will likely hinge on the question of Kosovo's independence.

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008


Racial Disparities in US Health Care


3:21 minutes (3.07 MB)

A new report says that health disparities in the US are growing. Here are some examples: nearly half of Latinos are uninsured, and seven out of ten African Americans are overweight. Authors of the findings say that universal health care must be central to addressing the disparities. FSRN's Leigh Ann Caldwell reports.

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008


Immigrant Rights March in Phoenix


4:49 minutes (4.41 MB)

Joe Arpaio, the sheriff of Maricopa county Arizona, made a name for himself in the 1990s with his tent city prisons in the desert. Inmates there wore pink underwear and were provided with only the bare necessities. Over the last few years, the so-called "toughest sheriff in America" has focused on arresting undocumented immigrants; with law enforcement style that many believe violates basic civil and human rights of the area's large Latino community. As FSRN's Andrew Stelzer reports, racial tension may be on the rise in the Phoenix area, but so is resistance and organization in the community.

Back to Newscast Monday May 12, 2008