Christian Science Monitor
World - The Christian Science Monitor

Cuba under Raúl: Creeping toward capitalism?

Wed Jul 23, 5:00 AM ET

Havana - A handful of Cubans are taking turns doing bicep curls and pedaling on stationary bikes. At first glance, there's nothing extraordinary about this nameless gym in the basement of a Havana apartment complex.

  • Obama tries to balance solidarity and neutrality Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    Ramallah, West Bank - US Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama visited Israel and the Palestinian Authority on Wednesday, seeking to send signals of support to both sides of the conflict.

  • Egypt's child protection law sparks controversy Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    Cairo, Egypt - Since June, Egypt's government and Islamist opposition parties have been trading barbs over a new law designed to protect the rights of children. Reforms instituted by the law touch on issues ranging from children's legal status to personal health issues.

  • Indian government's unstable win Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    New Delhi - India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh, scored one of the biggest victories of his political career when he won a knife-edge confidence vote in parliament Tuesday. But the triumph comes with strings that may weaken his government's prospects in upcoming general elections, expected to occur by May 2009.

  • Florida rancher: Havana will be Hong Kong of Caribbean Wed Jul 23, 5:00 AM ET

    John Parke Wright wants to provide Florida's best restaurants with the finest steaks around, and he wants to do it from a ranch in Cuba.

  • After Bush: A new Cuba policy? Wed Jul 23, 5:00 AM ET

    What changes might a new US administration make to its Cuba policy?

  • File photo shows grains of organic coffee are seen in Caranavi in the northern region of Los Yungas, some 170 km (105 miles) from La Paz, Bolivia. (Jose Luis Quintana/Reuters)
    Berliners welcome Obama as they did JFK Thu Jul 24, 5:00 AM ET

    Berlin - The centerpiece of Barack Obama's overseas tour comes Thursday in Berlin when the Democratic presidential candidate gives the only public foreign policy speech of his trip to an Obama-mad crowd of Germans who see him as another John F. Kennedy. He's in a country and a continent making no secret it is ready for change.

  • This Cuban library lends DVDs about state torture Thu Jul 24, 5:00 AM ET

    La Demajagua, Cuba - Carlos Serpa Maceira's ramshackle home on the outskirts of a rural town on an island that once served as a prison for Fidel Castro is not easy to find. And that's how he likes it.

  • Why women now lead the dissident fight in Cuba Thu Jul 24, 5:00 AM ET

    Campo de Florido, Cuba - In the past year, Nereida Rodriguez Rivero says she has been punched in the mouth, almost thrown from a moving bus, and stabbed on the street in her otherwise sleepy rural hometown.

  • Indian government survives no-confidence vote Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    New Delhi - – Amid uproarious scenes, India's government avoided collapse Tuesday when it won a perilously close vote of confidence in parliament. The win means India can now focus on pushing through a much-vaunted, long-delayed nuclear deal with the United States.

  • Israelis see worrying pattern in bulldozer attack Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    Jerusalem - Just hours before US Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama was due to arrive in Jerusalem, a Palestinian went on a bulldozer rampage in downtown Jerusalem – just down the road from the legendary King David Hotel, where Senator Obama is to stay.

  • Karadzic arrest boosts Balkans, international justice Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    Paris - The arrest in Belgrade of Radovan Karadzic, political mastermind of the Bosnian genocide, is a clear indication of new Serb president Boris Tadic's intent to integrate his state with Europe, stabilizing an isolated and difficult country and a fragile region, experts say.

  • Holy man, secular plan: clean up the River Ganges Tue Jul 22, 5:00 AM ET

    VARANASI, INDIA - Most mornings, as the sun steals over the Ganges, Veer Bhadra Mishra takes a dip in India's holiest river. As high priest of a Hindu temple, it is his solemn duty. But as a scientist, the ritual is profoundly discomforting.

  • Ethnic Chinese find a voice in Indonesia Tue Jul 22, 5:00 AM ET

    As the final power chords of the song fade out, Sushe Lie leans into her microphone and begins her usual on-air patter: the name of the singer, what's up next on the station, and the latest gossip from the tabloids.

  • Why Thai-Cambodian temple dispute lingers Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Bangkok, Thailand - Senior security officials from Thailand and Cambodia failed Monday to defuse a border dispute centered on a 10th-century temple that has seen hundreds of troops mobilized on both sides and claims by Cambodia of incursions by Thai soldiers.

  • Obama talks to U.S. commanders and Iraqi officials Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Baghdad - Following criticism from Republican presidential candidate John McCain that his rival had not spent enough time in Iraq, Democratic candidate Barack Obama made his second trip to Iraq Monday, meeting with American military commanders and upper-level Iraqi officials.

  • In this July 16, 2008 file photo, Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks to panelists at a roundtable discussion on nuclear non-proliferation at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. When Barack Obama brings his road show to Israel and the Palestinian territories this week, he'll find starstruck admirers, but also plenty of skeptical locals wondering whether this political neophyte has what it takes to finally nail down a solution to the Mideast's longest-running conflict. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
    Barack who? Arabs weigh in Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Several copies of Barack Obama's "The Audacity of Hope" are prominently displayed in Jarir Bookstore here. They have not moved in weeks.

  • Obama and McCain diverge on Israeli-Palestinian conflict Mon Jul 21, 5:00 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - When Barack Obama stops in Jerusalem and Ramallah this week – as part of an overseas trip designed to reassure the American electorate about the presumptive Democratic nominee's national security credentials – he'll be wading into the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

  • Obama's tour of Afghanistan renews debate about US role Mon Jul 21, 4:00 AM ET

    Kabul, Afghanistan - – Hopes and fears among Afghans clashed during the weekend visit of presumptive US Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama, who has vowed to send more US troops to Afghanistan if elected.

  • As Olympic glow fades, Athens questions $15 billion cost Mon Jul 21, 4:00 AM ET

    ATHENS - Sprinklers still keep the grass at Greece's Olympic softball stadium green. But four years after the 2004 Games, it sits unused in the middle of a vast, empty parking lot, patrolled by police vehicles.

  • Soaring inflation undermines sustainability of Persian Gulf region Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Cairo - Just as Persian Gulf cities such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi were becoming synonymous with excess and success, the Gulf boom is in danger of going bust.

  • Saudis host a global interfaith conference in Madrid: a 'first step' Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Madrid - More than 500 years after Spain's golden age of tolerance among Jews, Christians, and Muslims came to a definitive end, leaders of those faiths – as well as of Buddhism, Taoism, and Hinduism – are meeting at a royal palace on Madrid's outskirts in a bid to boost interreligious understanding.

  • In Israel, a nation mourns with the families of slain soldiers Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Nahariya, Israel - For Israelis, their Second Lebanon War, fought in summer 2006, came to a close only on Thursday, when the two soldiers whose capture became the cause for launching the conflict were laid to rest before their families and the eyes of a solemn nation.

  • From noses to hips, Rwandans start to redefine beauty Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Butare, Rwanda - Sandra Uwimbabazi knows runways – she's modeled for years – but she stumbled on a recent Saturday here.

  • New irrigation project a boon for Senegalese farmers Thu Jul 17, 5:00 AM ET

    Dap Dior, Senegal - D'dieme Faye's muscular arms pump energetically as she pounds millet for her family's lunch with an over-sized mortar and pestle.

  • Animals come first in an Arabian desert sanctuary Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    Al Wathba, United Arab Emirates - The parrot met an unfortunate end. "It's a bit embarrassing," said Ronel Smuts, manager of the Abu Dhabi Wildlife Center here, suppressing a smile at the curious ways of fate. "Someone left [the parrot's] cage door open, and he got out and flew toward Zulu, the lion.... The parrot became a midmorning snack, and Zulu had a blue feather sticking out of his mouth."

  • Guantánamo video, deserter case draw Canadians criticism of U.S. ties Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    Toronto - At a glance, they look like unrelated events unfolding thousands of miles apart and yet, they're both windows into Canada's passive partnership with the US in the war on terror.

  • Katherine Jeffords Schori, presiding bishop of U.S. Episcopal Church talks to the media as delegates of Lambeth Conference, Anglican Bishops and their spouses, from all around the world, and other religious leaders from different faiths gathered in London for a march to Lambeth Palace, London, Thursday July 24, 2008. The march called for world leaders to keep their promises to deliver the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)
    Boycott underscores Anglican rift Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    London - The deep fractures in the 80-million-strong Anglican church were laid bare Wednesday as the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams opened a once-a-decade summit with a quarter of bishops boycotting the event because of a festering row over sexuality and liberal interpretation of Scripture.

  • Throwing stones : Palestinian youths use sling shots to throw stones at Israeli forces during a demonstration against the construction of the controversial Israeli separation barrier in the West Bank village of Nilin near Ramallah. (AFP/Abbas Momani)
    Despite delays, prisoner swap leaves Hezbollah emboldened Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    Naqoura, Lebanon - Hundreds of jubilant Lebanese endured hours of blazing heat in the coastal village of Naqoura Wednesday to welcome home five detainees released by Israel in a prisoner exchange that Hezbollah, Lebanon's militant Shiite group, is hailing as a new "victory" over the Jewish state.