About Me
- Judy Chaffee
- This site is the inspiration of a former reporter/photographer for one of New England's largest daily newspapers and for various magazines.
Monday, November 9, 2009
GLOBAL WARMING AS SEEN FROM BANGLADESH -- BY BJORN LOMBORG, The Wall Street Journal
Momota Begum worries about hunger, not climate change.
The following article is part of a series leading up to the December United Nations conference in Copenhagen on how ordinary people in different countries view global warming.
When the monsoon rains come, Momota Begum and her husband and children must take turns sleeping in their tiny concrete house's one bed to escape the waste and human excrement that can wash in from outside. They live in a three-decade old refugee camp in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is run for Urdu-speaking people who found themselves
CLICK TITLE OR HERE TO READ REMAINDER OF ARTICLE Sphere: Related Content
The following article is part of a series leading up to the December United Nations conference in Copenhagen on how ordinary people in different countries view global warming.
When the monsoon rains come, Momota Begum and her husband and children must take turns sleeping in their tiny concrete house's one bed to escape the waste and human excrement that can wash in from outside. They live in a three-decade old refugee camp in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is run for Urdu-speaking people who found themselves
CLICK TITLE OR HERE TO READ REMAINDER OF ARTICLE Sphere: Related Content
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