AFP

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  • The dark side of skin whiteners AFP - Wed Nov 11, 1:50 PM ET

    Skin whitening products are all the rage in many African nations for women seeking a paler complexion. Even though many of these cosmetics contain toxic products, they also find a market in France. A new campaign is now seeking to educate consumers about the dangers of skin bleaching.

  • A different angle on Iraq AFP - Wed Nov 11, 1:33 PM ET

    Mimi Chakarova, an American photojournalist, spent the night at a women's shelter for rape victims in Baghdad to try and show a different angle on Iraq. Her work is part of 'Iraqi Voices,' an exhibition at Washington's FotoWeek festival, which runs until Saturday.

  • Canadian paper mills close as newspapers fold AFP - Wed Nov 11, 10:58 AM ET

    The demise of North American newspapers has fatally wounded many Canadian lumber companies. One factory in Alberta illustrates the industry's hardships, as it has laid off hundreds of people, and finally closed its doors for good. Duration: 01:51

  • Venezuela-Colombia border town on high alert AFP - Wed Nov 11, 8:34 AM ET

    Tensions between Venezuela and Colombia continue to mount as Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez has urged his countrymen to "defend the homeland." This call for arms comes as Colombia signs a new military agreement with the US. On the frontline is San Antonio del Tachira in Venezuela. Duration: 01:48

  • Sesame Street cheers US army families in Italy AFP - Wed Nov 11, 5:35 AM ET

    Sesame Street's iconic characters have set up stage on the US military base at Vicenza in northern Italy, as part of a pan-European tour. For the cast and crew, it's an occasion to bring comfort to the children who grow up far from home. Duration: 01:33

  • Muppets celebrate 40th with Michelle Obama AFP - Tue Nov 10, 4:38 PM ET

    The world-famous muppets of "Sesame Street," America's longest running children's TV show, celebrated their 40th anniversary Wednesday with a special guest: Michelle Obama. 

  • On your bikes: Polo minus the horses AFP - Tue Nov 10, 2:56 PM ET

    Bicycle Polo, invented in Ireland in the 19th century and substituting bikes for horses, is enjoying a renaissance with teams sprouting up all over the world. In one Paris suburb, enthusiasts meet weekly to train for the European Championships.

  • Surfing for the disabled in Rio AFP - Tue Nov 10, 2:55 PM ET

    In Rio de Janeiro, the physically disabled get a chance to do something that might seem out of reach for many: surf lessons, courtesy of three friends who started a nonprofit that uses the ¿adaptsurf¿ method to get handicapped men and women out on the waves. 

  • Lebanon forms government of 'disunity': analysts AFP - Tue Nov 10, 2:42 PM ET

    Lebanon's new unity government will be united in name only because of unresolved deep divisions between rival parties, especially on the issue of Hezbollah's arsenal of weapons, analysts say. The new government was formed late on Monday by Prime Minister Saad Hariri following more than four months of tough negotiations with the Hezbollah-led opposition.

  • Iran's Kiarostami, Tanavoli exhibit in Dubai AFP - Tue Nov 10, 2:26 PM ET

    Art works of Iranian filmmaker and photographer Abbas Kiarostami as well as by sculptor Parviz Tanavoli have gone on display at a joint exhibition in Dubai.

  • Palestinians tear down wall, 20 years after Berlin AFP - Tue Nov 10, 5:13 AM ET

    Palestinians tore down a chunk of Israel's West Bank separation barrier on Monday in a protest staged to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the day the Berlin Wall came down. A truck was used to pull down the wall, to the cheers of an estimated 150 Palestinian activists and foreign supporters near the Qalandia refugee camp just outside Ramallah. Duration: 00:44

  • Bangkok's 'bodysnatchers' race to save lives AFP - Tue Nov 10, 5:06 AM ET

    Bangkok's so-called "bodysnatchers" race through traffic at breakneck speed. The volunteers collect victims of accidents and take them to hospitals -- for a fee. Duration: 02:02

  • Bolivians watch their glacier melt away AFP - Mon Nov 9, 4:14 PM ET

    One of the first victims of global warming has almost disappeared. By next year, experts say the Chacaltaya glacier in Bolivia will have completely melted. Overlooking La Paz, Chacaltaya was once the highest ski slopes in the world, sitting at 5300 meters above sea level. According to experts, most tropical glaciers in the Andes are doomed as the earth's average temperature rises. In Boliva, many worry what will happen when one of the city's major water sources is gone.

  • Afghanistan's helicopter force takes to the skies AFP - Mon Nov 9, 4:11 PM ET

    On a Russian-built helicopter above the fertile Helmand valley in southern Afghanistan, a US Air Force adviser tests the knowledge of an Afghan pilot. "Do you remember how to change to manual frequency?" asked Captain Tyler Rennell. An interpreter translated the conversation taking place in the cockpit of the Mi-17 taking a dozen Afghan soldiers between Kandahar and Helmand.

  • Huge crowds celebrate Berlin Wall anniversary AFP - Mon Nov 9, 4:03 PM ET

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel joined former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev Monday on the bridge where many East Germans had their first taste of freedom, as tens of thousands toasted the Berlin Wall's fall 20 years ago.

  • Fighting at Yemen-Saudi border AFP - Mon Nov 9, 2:33 PM ET

    Shiite rebels in northern Yemen caught between a deadly government onslaught and air raids from across the border on Monday alleged Saudi warplanes were using phosphorus bombs against them. A Saudi government adviser rejected the claim, saying what the rebels saw was merely flares. According to a provisional Saudi toll, three soldiers and four other Saudis have now been killed in the fighting that began on November 4.

  • Leaders to fete fall of Berlin Wall at giant bash AFP - Mon Nov 9, 10:48 AM ET

    World leaders past and present on Monday gathered for the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, with 100,000 people expected at celebrations to toast a free and united Europe. Chancellor Angela Merkel is hosting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French and Russian presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and Dmitry Medvedev and representatives from across the European Union as well as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of German unity. Duration: 01:07

  • Turkish Kurd refugees hoping to return from Iraq AFP - Mon Nov 9, 10:38 AM ET

    Fifteen years after bloodshed drove them out of southeast Turkey, some 12,000 Kurdish refugees still languish in the Makhmour camp in northern Iraq. They dream of returning home, but say they will not move unless Ankara grants extensive political and cultural rights to Kurds. Duration: 02:33

  • Berlin wall a canvas for East German artists AFP - Mon Nov 9, 9:59 AM ET

    As the world marks the fall of the Berlin Wall on Monday, sections of that infamous barrier are on display in Bordeaux, in the south of France. Shortly after the wall was first breached in November 1989, artists on the eastern side wanted to take up their paint brushes and unleash their pent up emotions on the wall. And they did so with the help of a French businessman. Duration: 01:39

  • French milk farmers ally with local supermarket AFP - Mon Nov 9, 5:43 AM ET

    Ailing European dairy farmers have been promised financial aid by the European Union for 2010 but, until then, some have found solutions of their own. In southwestern France, local milk producers have sealed a deal with a local supermarket that is paying a little more than usual. Duration: 01:50

  • China pledges 10 billion to Africa at summit AFP - Sun Nov 8, 7:56 PM ET

    Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiaobao pledged 10 billion dollars in concessional loans to Africa on Sunday, at the start of a two-day Forum on China-Africa Cooperation. He also pledged to cancel debts of African countries to boost his country's role in the continent. Beijing has been pouring investments into oil and other raw materials on the resource-rich continent to fuel China's booming economy.

  • Victim's memory of East Germany's feared Stasi prison AFP - Sun Nov 8, 7:17 AM ET

    Berlin-Hohenschönhausen was the prison used by the infamous Stasi, East Germany's secret police service. Though Mario Röllig spent a traumatic three months there after being caught trying to escape to the West, he still returns, in order to teach the youngest generations about life behind the Iron Curtain. Duration: 02:08.

  • 20 years after Berlin Wall fell, Nicosia remains divided AFP - Sun Nov 8, 5:56 AM ET

    For the past 20 years Berlin is a city reunified. But another European capital, Nicosia, remains cut in two. UN troops oversee security on the so-called Green Line dividing the Greek Cypriot republic in the south from the Turkish-backed statelet to the north. Since a UN-backed reunification plan was scrapped in 2004, the island has remained in a state of limbo. Duration: 02:20

  • Obama wins big as House approves health care overhaul AFP - Sun Nov 8, 5:26 AM ET

    The US House of Representatives approved the broadest overhaul of US health care in four decades late Saturday, handing President Barack Obama a hard-fought victory for his top domestic priority. The bill amounts to a 10-year, trillion-dollar plan to extend coverage to some 36 million Americans who lack it now. Duration: 0:42                       

  • China's Communist Party maintains firm grip on power AFP - Sat Nov 7, 4:51 PM ET

    China's Communist Party has experienced tumultuous times over the past 60 years but has managed to maintain its grip on power throughout a massive famine, the Cultural Revolution, pro-democracy protests on Tiananmen Square and recent ethnic tensions. Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall -- and the ensuing demise of Communism throughout Europe -- the regime remains strong, buoyed, many say, by Beijing's impressive economic success. Originally filed on 103009.

  • Statue park reminds Lithuanians of Soviet past AFP - Sat Nov 7, 4:45 PM ET

    They're a throwback to a bygone era, but the Soviet statues in Lithuania's Gruto Park still draw a crowd. While for the younger generation, the huge busts of Lenin and Stalin are something of a novelty, for the older park visitors, they're a reminder of 45 years of Soviet occupation. Originally filed on 020709.

  • Ivory Coast election faces further delays AFP - Sat Nov 7, 4:26 PM ET

    The Ivory Coast's long-awaited presidential election is officially taking place on 29th November, but it's feared the poll will be delayed while the country's electoral commission sifts through almost two million potentially ineligible voters.

  • Sweden, the next truffle superpower? AFP - Fri Nov 6, 2:35 PM ET

    The Swedish island of Gotland has discovered huge reserves of Burgundy truffles whose quality matches the best of what France has to offer. Swedish chefs already prefer the local variety, even though it's more expensive. AFP goes foraging for delicacies in the newfound truffle trove.

  • Soviet reporters remember the fall of Berlin Wall AFP - Fri Nov 6, 2:34 PM ET

    During the momentous events in Berlin in 1989, they worked as news reporters for Russian media. Twenty years on AFPTV talks to two journalists who witnessed first-hand the fall of the Wall and the crumbling of the Soviet Union.

  • Chirac, in spotlight, awards prizes to Nigerians and South Korea AFP - Fri Nov 6, 2:24 PM ET

    Former French president Jacques Chirac's charity foundation gave its first award for the prevention of conflicts to two Nigerian preachers on Friday. The jury also gave a special prize to Park Jae-Kyu, South Korea's former unification minister.

  • Astro Boy gets a makeover AFP - Fri Nov 6, 2:03 PM ET

    For nearly 60 years he's been Japan’s most famous robot. Astro Boy, the celebrated comic strip and cartoon superhero first sketched by manga master Osamu Tezuka, has been given a new lease on life in a 3D Hollywood blockbuster.

  • Cyprus' golfing ambitions a washout with environmentalists AFP - Fri Nov 6, 6:50 AM ET

    In a bid to boost its flagging tourism industry, Cyprus is laying golf courses by the acre. But the manicured greens demand much irrigation and opponents say developers' plans to use water from desalination plants would be harmful to the environment. Duration : 02:16.

  • Pairing Chinese cuisine with fine wine AFP - Fri Nov 6, 4:53 AM ET

    How would you pair French wine with braised abalone? A year after Hong Kong scrapped a 40 percent tax on wine, sales are booming, and the territory is positioning itself as the wine capital of Asia. Duration : 01:56

  • Climate change explained to children in Mexico AFP - Thu Nov 5, 2:35 PM ET

    An exhibit on climate change in Mexico City¿s Papalote children¿s museum aims to raise awareness of global warning in one of the world¿s top oil producers. Although Mexico has led global efforts to combat climate change, the issue is still new at home.

  • Squatters make most of empty London homes AFP - Thu Nov 5, 2:35 PM ET

    Central London is one of the most expensive places to live on the planet. But hundreds of properties -- amongst them mansions and former embassies -- are left empty by their owners, often leaving the way open for communities of squatters to set up home. One multi-million pound property, in London's famous Leicester Square, has been taken over by an art collective offering a rent-free space to cash-strapped performers.

  • French banks to implement G20 bonus curbs AFP - Thu Nov 5, 2:34 PM ET

    French banks pledged on Thursday to stagger payment of half of all banker bonuses over three years and to pay half in the form of shares, in line with measures agreed at the G20 summit in Pittsburgh.

  • UN pulls hundreds of staff from Afghanistan AFP - Thu Nov 5, 12:46 PM ET

    The UN announced Thursday it was evacuating more than half its international staff from Afghanistan after a deadly Taliban attack on a guesthouse for UN workers.

  • Involving men in South Africa's fight against HIV AFP - Thu Nov 5, 12:22 PM ET

    More people are HIV positive in South Africa than in any other country in the world. Yet many men still refuse to face up to the problem. A new scheme in Johannesburg hopes to change that, by talking directly to guys in the bars and clubs around town. Duration: 02:21

  • Mont Blanc gets a height check AFP - Thu Nov 5, 12:14 PM ET

    Mont Blanc, the highest peak in the Alps is standing tall -- all 4,810.45 metres of it. That's only 45 centimetres less than when it was last measured four years ago, but three metres above the height French schoolchildren have long been taught. Scientists carried out new measurements in September -- and on Thursday announced some surprising finds from the top of the summit straddling France and Italy. Duration: 01:15

  • A very special drum circle AFP - Thu Nov 5, 12:04 PM ET

    Music therapy has been found to help some sufferers of Alzheimer's disease, as well as their family and caregivers. In one home for Alzheimer's and dementia patients, residents take up drumming and singing as a means of connecting to others in the midst of these isolating illnesses. Duration: 01:48

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