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<title>UnMundo América Latina - OneWorld Latin America/Español/Explore los contenidos por temas:/Derechos Humanos/Género</title>
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<title>Bamboo water</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160571/1/1691</link>
<description>Lacking support from the government, a group of tribal women from a remote district in Orissa in eastern India, devised a unique way to get rid of water scarcity. By using bamboo pipes to carry stream water to the villages, these women have benefited hundreds of people.</description>
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<title>Women's groups want end to gender bias in world economies</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160551/1/1691</link>
<description>Ever since it was first introduced in 1984 by the Australian government, the concept of gender-sensitive budget has spread far and wide with more than 50 countries embracing it, including India and Bangladesh. Women’s groups now want it to be extended to more countries.</description>
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<title>The Bride Price</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/83723</link>
<description>A photoessay including award-winning photographs depicts the lives of girls in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, and Nepal who marry as children.</description>
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<title>Up close and personal: Female suicide bombers</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160536/1/1691</link>
<description>A documentary film titled My Daughter the Terrorist chronicles the lives of two female Tamil Tigers, taking a close look at war and its tragic consequences. The film has been acclaimed globally but the Sri Lankan government is upset saying it glorifies the act.</description>
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<title>Better a Small Fish</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/160530/1/1691</link>
<description>Across Bangladesh, poor rural women are building up their country's fragile democracy by methodically and discreetly eliminating the small inequities of their daily lives. 
From: Ms. Magazine</description>
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<title>Mothers Making a Difference</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/83714</link>
<description>Fatima Ahmed from Sudan, Yanar Mohammed from Iraq, and Robitalia Moreno Díaz and María del Rosario Moreno Díaz from Colombia all link their experience of motherhood to their drive to work for social justice.</description>
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<title>UNICEF’s helping hand for Nepalese families living with HIV</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160487/1/1691</link>
<description>In Nepal, many women and children live with HIV/AIDS passed on to them by their husbands and fathers. UNICEF is helping them by taking care of their treatment and arranging for education of their children.</description>
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<title>‘My work is a necklace of hot burning coals,’ says Daud Sharifa</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160442/1/1691</link>
<description>Durgabai Deshmukh Award winner Daud Sharifa Khanam from southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu provided Muslim women a platform to challenge the oppressive patriarchal system. For this, she has had to face the ire of Muslim clerics. She was hated, abused and threatened but she never gave up the fight.</description>
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<title>Radio brings education to girls in Mozambique</title>
<link>http://www.digitalopportunity.org/article/view/160439/1/1691</link>
<description>Erive Community Radio is bringing a change in the lives of young girls in Maganja da Costa. The UNICEF-supported station has led to a rise in enrollment in primary schools through its programmes promoting girls’ education. The station is run in partnership with Mozambique’s Social Communication Institute.</description>
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<title>Women Bridging Borders to Beat Violence</title>
<link>http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/160421/1/1691</link>
<description>NEW YORK, May 6 (OneWorld) - Women's rights advocates in the United States have launched a novel global initiative aiming to help millions of women across the world who face violence at the hands of men.</description>
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<title>Women in governance: ‘Men need to understand the value of partnership’ </title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160402/1/1691</link>
<description>Indian government has decided to table the contentious Women’s Reservation Bill in Rajya Sabha on May 6. Earlier in an interview with OWSA, Dr Ranjana Kumari, Director, Centre for Social Research spoke on the whole gamut of issues concerning the need for women in governance.</description>
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<title>Women’s reservation bill to be introduced in Indian parliament</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160388/1/1691</link>
<description>Initially introduced in 1996 and subsequently in lapse; snatched and torn up in 1999, the contentious Women’s Reservation Bill is finally set to be tabled in Rajya Sabha on May 6. The Bill seeks to provide 33% reservation for women in state assemblies and the parliament.</description>
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<item>
<title>Women in governance: ‘Men need to understand the value of partnership’ </title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160387/1/1691</link>
<description>Indian government has decided to table the contentious Women’s Reservation Bill in Rajya Sabha on May 6. Earlier in an interview with OWSA, Dr Ranjana Kumari, Director, Centre for Social Research spoke on the whole gamut of issues concerning the need for women in governance.</description>
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<title>Indian sex workers get insured</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160333/1/1691</link>
<description>In a major victory to get their profession legally recognised, sex workers in eastern India have been granted a life cover by the country’s largest insurance company. The move is being hailed as a significant breakthrough in efforts to help them fight poverty and discrimination.</description>
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<title>A unique way to fight AIDS</title>
<link>http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/160306/1/1691</link>
<description>For N.Nandadevi, a dedicated health activist in Manipur in north-eastern India, mere counseling on HIV/AIDS is not enough to tackle the fatal disease. A believer in pragmatic solutions, she distributes disposable syringes among drug users to prevent transmission through shared needles.</description>
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