Home > Programs
> FSRN
> Nov 2006
Free Speech Radio News
11/30
Washington Advisors May Press for Troop Withdrawal; Bush and
Maliki Meet to Discuss Iraq’s Security; Lawyer Accused
in Connection to Madrid Train Bombing Finds $2-million Settlement
with Federal Government; Iowa Governor Announces Bid for Presidency;
Unrest Continues in Oaxaca on Eve of Presidential Inauguration;
Australians Demonstrate Against New Labor Laws; National Methamphetamine
Awareness Day;
11/29
Supreme Court Case Could Impact Global Warming; Bush Postpones
Highly Anticipated Meeting with Iraqi President Maliki; Rwanda
Severs Diplomatic Ties with France; A Victory for the Nation’s
Blind and Visually Impaired; Nepal’s Prime Minister
Signs Treaty with Maoist Chief; Pacifica Radio Archives Testifies
at Los Angeles Hearing; Mumia Abu Jamal Commentary: Worms
Turn;
11/28
Pilot of Downed F-16 Missing in Iraq; Bush Pressed on Iraq;
Justice Department Begins Internal Investigation; South-South
Summit Kicks Off in Nigeria; Venezuelan Voters Prepare to
Vote in Presidential Election; Struggle to Keep Urban Aboriginal
Heartland in Indigenous Hands; Kashmiris Protest Selling of
Land for Tourism;
11/27
More than 300 Dead in Baghdad Violence; Policymakers Debate
Iraq Policy; Ceasefire in Gaza; Leftist Economist Beats Banana
Tycoon in Ecuador; Oaxaca Standoff Continues; NYPD Fires 50
Shots into Unarmed Black Groom;
11/24
Nasa Resistance: Defending Land, Life and Culture;
11/23
Maoist India: The Search for Economic Justice;
11/22
Supreme Court to Hear Gender Discrimination Case; South Koreans
Hold Nationwide Protests Against Free Trade Deal with U.S.;
Space Wars and Business Ties: The U.S.-India Nuclear Deal
Moves Forward; Argentine Human Rights Groups Demand the Return
of Julio Lopez; Tourism Takes its Toll on the Galapagos Islands;
11/21
Investigators Try to Find Clues Surrounding West Bengal Train
Bombing; Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador Declares Himself New
and Legitimate President; Oaxaca’s APPO Rebuild Encampment;
Department of Defense Gathered Intelligence on Antiwar Organizing;
Immigrant Janitors Declare Labor Victory in the South; Texas’s
23rd District Race Still Undecided; Supreme Court to Take
on Historic Cases;
11/20
India-US Ink Nuke Pact; No Charges One Year After Haditha;
Iraq Deputy Health Minister Kidnapped from his Home; US-Russia
Ink Trade Pact; UN Report Finds Neighors Arming Somalia; Palestinian
Human Shields Stop Air Strikes; Solidarity Actions for Oaxaca
Worldwide;
11/17
U.S. Troops Accused of Atrocities Opt for Plea Deals; France’s
Socialist Party Chooses Royal as Presidential Candidate; Filipino
Families of Disappeared Persons Appeal for Help; Ecuador’s
Intag Community Resists Open-Pit Copper Mine Project; As Many
as 20,000 People Expected to Participate in SOA Watch This
Weekend; World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters
Wraps Up Conference;
11/16
Democrats in House Select New Leadership; U.S. Senate Debates
India Nuclear Deal; Former Justice Department Employees Say
Bush Stacked Division with Political Appointees; Could Shift
in Congressional Power Mean Environmental Policy Change?;
Jean-Pierre Bemba Contests DRC Election Results; Students
of Color Underrepresented at UCLA; Video Shows UCLA PD Repeatedly
Tasering Student;
11/15
Washington Weighs in on Iraq; Kidnaped Hostages Freed in Baghdad;
Republicans Choose Leadership as Minority Party; India and
Pakistan Resume Peace Talks; A Look at the Korean Demilitarized
Zone; Civil Rights Groups, Lawyers Challenge City’s
Anti-Immigrant Ordinance;
11/14
International Attorneys Charge Rumsfeld with War Crimes; Bush
Interprets Military Commissions Act; Democrats Choose Senator
Harry Reid as Majority Leader; Critics Say New Anti-Terrorism
Act Will Target Free Speech; U.S. Voters Move on Anti-Immigrant
and Anti-Affirmative Action Initiatives; French Airport Purges
Muslim Workers; Immigrant Hotel Workers Say they Face Retaliation
for Organizing;
11/13
Bush Meets with Iraq Study Group; Democrats Debate Iraq; Independent
Film-maker on the Iraq War; Bush Meets Israeli Leader; Protests
Continue in Oaxaca; Tensions High Amid Voting in Congo; Australia-Indonesia
Sign Trade Treaty;
11/10
Democratic Progressives Set Post Election Agenda; Bush Will
Seek Senate Confirmation for Ambassador Bolton; Democratic
Majority May Not Prompt Changes in Iraq War; Ohio Candidate
Insists on Full Vote Count; 11 Years Anniversary of Ken Saro-Wiwa’s
Execution: Shell Oil Moves to Return to Ogoni Land; Texas
Death Row Inmates End Nearly Four Month Strike; Ontario’s
Coalition Against Poverty Demonstrates to Secure Housing for
the Poor;
11/9
Allen Concedes to Webb: Democrats Take the Senate; Bush Nominates
Gates to Replace Rumsfeld; International Community Condemns
Attacks on Beit Hanoun; Anti-War Faith-Based Group Targets
Politicians who Supported Military Commissions Act; Women’s
Lives May be the Cost of Nicaragua’s Total Abortion
Ban;
11/8
Rumsfeld Resigns, Bush Nominates CIA Former Director as Replacement;
US Election Results Lead to Democratic House Control; Suicide
Attacks Kills 42 Pakistani Troops; Future of Global Seafood
Supply Threatened; Pressure Mounts on Oaxaca Governor; US
Supreme Court Hears Significant Reproductive Rights Cases;
Maoists Will Join Nepal's Government;
11/7
Problems Cited at the Polls; Progressive Anti-War Democrats
Could Win Big in Connecticut Congressional Races; Negative
Campaigns Define New Mexico Congressional Race; Seattle's
Longtime Republican House Seat in Jeopardy; Grassroots Movement
to Increase Access to Non-citizen US Residents; Supreme Court
to Hear Case Further Limiting of Abortion Rights;
11/6
What A Democratic Victory Would Mean For The Left; Saddam
Hussein Sentenced To Death; Sandanistas Look To Return To
Power In Nicaragua; Hundreds Of Thousands Flood The Streets
Of Oaxaca; Ibero-American Summit In Uruguay; China-Africa
Summit Gets Underway;
11/3
Oaxaca’s Popular Movement Retains Radio Station after
7 Hour Battle with Troops; Iraqis Consider U.S. Foreign Policy
Ahead of Tuesday’s Election; The Effects of the Felon
Voting Ban; Trouble at the Polls: Electronic Voting Machines
Still Facing Problems; Beit Hanon Remains Scapegoat of Israeli
Attacks; Critics Say Law Enforcement Not Properly Tackling
Child Abuse;
11/2
Federal Troops Surround Oaxaca’s State University; Government
Agencies Open Investigations in Global Warming Cover-Up; Israel
Approves Largest War Budget to Date; Panama Becomes Consensus
Candidate for UN Security Council Seat; Fallen Migrants Honored
on Day of the Dead;
11/1
Supreme Court Decision May Impact New Environmental Laws on
Old Power Plants; Civil Liberties Groups Keep an Eye on Voter
Suppression for Midterm Elections; OAS Tells Washington to
Butt Out of Nicaraguan Elections; Violence Continues in Iraq
as PM Calls for an End to Sadr City Blockade; Hundreds Demonstrate
After Executed Death Row Inmates Are Proven Innocent; South
Korea Not Too Worried About North’s Nukes;
[top]
|