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Asia
8:00 am
Sun February 12, 2012

Aung San Suu Kyi's Improbable Campaign

The main opposition leader in Myanmar, Aung San Suu Kyi, is campaigning for a seat in parliament in her constituency outside Rangoon. It's a scene that seemed impossible only a few months ago, before the military-backed government began a process of change. Host Rachel Martin speaks with NPR's Anthony Kuhn from Rangoon.

The Salt
6:55 am
Sun February 12, 2012

Battling The Bottle: Students And Industry Face Off Over Water

Credit Humbolt State University
Latin America
6:19 am
Sun February 12, 2012

'Who Rules In Honduras?': A Coup's Lasting Impact

This is the second of a two-part series about the roots of violence in Honduras.

Honduras is a major stop for drug traffickers, and corruption is rampant. Many experts say things got markedly worse after the 2009 coup that ousted democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya. The fallout of that coup continues today.

'What Is This?'

When it comes to coups and dictators, Latin America has a difficult past. Today the region is largely democratic. Dictators and coups are supposed to be a thing of the past.

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The Picture Show
6:16 am
Sun February 12, 2012

What Greek Austerity Looks Like

Credit Eirini Vourloumis
Nurse Stella Trivizaki stands in an abandoned locker room at Asklypeio Public Hospital in Athens, Greece.

Originally published on Wed May 23, 2012 11:02 am

Half-Greek and half-Indonesian, photojournalist Eirini Vourloumis moved back to her hometown of Athens, Greece, in 2010 to cover the economic crisis. She found her country unrecognizable.

For one thing, she was struck by the surge of immigrants.

"When I was growing up it was very rare to see a non-Greek anywhere," she says.

Once-docile areas in Athens now seethe with crime, yet Vourloumis says the most dramatic shift for Greeks has been psychological.

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Politics
6:14 am
Sun February 12, 2012

Obama's Budget First Salvo In Expected Political Fight

Credit Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP
Copies of of President Barack Obama's fiscal 2013 federal budget are readied for shipment, Thursday, Feb. 9, 2012, at the Government Printing Office in Washington.

When President Obama unveils his budget Monday, it will project a $1.3 trillion deficit this year, and just under $1 trillion in 2013. It would increase spending on education, research and development and transportation. It would also increase taxes on the wealthy and cut spending, including on defense.

Presidential budgets are almost always aspirational documents. They lay out a vision, not what the president actually thinks will happen.

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Presidential Race
2:37 am
Sun February 12, 2012

Romney Edges A Victory In Maine Caucuses

Credit Robert F. Bukaty / AP
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney greets supporters at a caucus in Portland, Maine, on Saturday.

Stung by a series of defeats earlier this week, Mitt Romney got a much-needed boost Saturday with a win in the straw poll of the Conservative Political Action Conference and a victory in Maine's nonbinding caucuses.

Yet Romney walked away without delegates and tallied fewer votes there than he did four years ago. This time, he barely beat rival Ron Paul.

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Europe
9:28 pm
Sat February 11, 2012

Old Money Helps Spanish Village Stay Afloat

Credit Miguel Riopa / AFP/Getty Images
A poster reading "The Peseta is back" and displaying pictures of pesetas notes is pictured in Salvaterra de Mino, northwestern Spain. Some areas in Spain are returning to the former currency to weather Europe's debt crisis.

Villamayor de Santiago, population 2,500, is a small village just south of Madrid, Spain.

It's famous for three Manchego cheese factories and a windmill that stopped turning decades ago. More than one-third of the town is unemployed.

After Christmas, shopkeepers here decided to jumpstart their economy.

"We realized there's no money here — well, no euros anyway — in the pockets of our customers," says Luis Miguel Campayo, head of the local merchants' association.

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Economy
5:22 pm
Sat February 11, 2012

N.C. Regulator Tapped To Handle $25B Mortgage Deal

There was one little-noticed part of this week's announcement about the $25 billion national mortgage settlement. North Carolina's banking commissioner, Joseph Smith Jr., will take over a new role and serve as independent monitor. He'll oversee the five banks which agreed to new mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure standards.

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Anti-Government Protests Roil Egypt
4:44 pm
Sat February 11, 2012

A Year After Mubarak, Where Does Egypt Stand?

Credit Mahmud Hams / AFP/Getty Images
Protesters gather for a demonstration to demand the ouster of the country's military rulers at Cairo's Tahrir Square on Friday.

Originally published on Sat February 11, 2012 5:23 pm

A year ago today, tens of thousands of Egyptians gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square and celebrated a previously unimaginable achievement: the toppling of Hosni Mubarak.

But one year later, Egypt is far from stable and far from the democratic utopia many activists imagined. Is the nation better off?

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Europe
8:00 am
Sat February 11, 2012

Euro-Courts Blasted Over Al-Qaida Suspect's Release

Britons are in an uproar over a judge's decision to release a Muslim preacher suspected of al-Qaida links. The British government wanted to deport him to Jordan, where he's been convicted on terrorism charges, but European courts won't allow that because the convictions were based on evidence obtained by torture. NPR's Phil Reeves tells host Scott Simon that the case has stirred up resentment.

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