by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
The military administrator of Kano state discusses the impact of the International Monetary Fund’s structural adjustment programs.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
The chairman of the Manufacturing Association of Nigeria calls for the United States to change its policy.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
Mr. Gundiri is the head of the Hadejia Jamaare River Basin Development Authority in Kano state.
by Lorenzo Carrasco
Cardoso Will Face Money Crisis.
by Rainer Apel
Disturbing Green Signals from Germany.
The Legacy of Carroll Quigley.
by Paul Gallagher
Scarcity or Abundance: A Debate on the Environment, by Norman Myers and Julian Simon.
by Richard Freeman
The ghost of Friedrich von Hayek haunts the American corridors of power. What will be left of the economy, once the budget-cutters are finished?
by David Ramonet
by Allen Douglas and Joseph Brewda
The evil agenda of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna was interrupted by two correspondents from EIR.
by Rosa Tennenbaum
Lester Brown of the WorldWatch Institute complains that Chinese want to eat food, just as Americans do.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke report, the first in a series based upon a visit to Nigeria.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
An interview with Col. Muhammad Abdullahi Wase.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
An interview with Alhaji M.S. Umoru.
by Lawrence Freeman and Uwe Friesecke
An interview with Marcos Gundiri.
by Carlos Wesley
Around the world, the British royal family is going all out to prevent EIR from disseminating its Oct. 28 special report on “The Coming Fall of the House of Windsor.”
by Javier Almario and Valerie Rush
by Mark Burdman
The film “The Maltese Double Cross” created an uproar after its showing in the British House of Commons.
by Mary Jane Freeman
by Susan Welsh
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Katherine Kanter
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
by Jacques Cheminade
Exposes the limits of the terms of the political debate in this pivotal nation.
by Christine Schier
by Mel Klenetsky
But, Gingrich and company should think again if they believe that Americans have really bought their fascist programs.
by H. Graham Lowry
by Suzanne Rose
by Marianna Wertz
The American Legislative Exchange Council’s “Report Card on Crime and Punishment” is a prescription for more crime, not less.
by Linda Everett
On page 52 of our Nov. 4 issue, the view expressed by Prof. Marc Gijdara at an Oct. 17 conference on “Balkan Unity” in the French National Assembly, was mischaracterized, due to an editorial error. Professor Gijdara did not recommend that certain regions of former Yugoslavia now in Serbian hands, become autonomous.