brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

October 7, 2007

Unholy Mix of Religion, Conspiracy Theories, and Politics Keep Southern Thailand Hot

Filed under: General,global islands,government,thailand — admin @ 6:01 am

HONOLULU (May 24) –Despite the ousting of the government of Thailand’s Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his Thai Rak Thai Party (TRT) in a coup last September and the stepped up reconciliation efforts of the new government in Bangkok under Surayudh Chulanont, the killings and attacks engulfing Thailand’s southern border region, home to over a million Malay-speaking Thai Muslims, show little sign of abating.

Identifying the causes of the unrest, let alone finding a solution, is not a simple task.

Marc Askew an associate professor at Victoria University’s School of Social Sciences in Melbourne, Australia, notes, “Finding the causes and culprits of the ongoing violence in Thailand’s Muslim-majority south is a highly politicized process.” A process he points out that has been made all the more difficult over the past three years by the “confrontations generated by (ousted Prime Minister) Thaksin Shinawatra’s controversial mode of governance and policymaking.”

Askew says, “It is clear that Thaksin’s attempts to restructure the state from 2001 to 2004 … (and) extrajudicial kidnappings and murders under Thaksin’s aegis clearly played a role in alienating southern Muslims.” But he adds, “The panic and fear surrounding um kha (abduction and murder) has also been spread effectively by a militant network that employs rumor as a strategic weapon.”

“Branding Thaksin as a key culprit in sparking the current ‘fire in the south,’ though partly valid,” Askew says, “is also oversimplified.”

He notes that in 2004 and 2005, the largely-southern based opposition Democrat Party (DP) “bereft of policies with which to counter Thaksin’s populism, managed to retain its electoral heartland via a campaign that demonized Thaksin as a cause of the southern unrest, conveniently downplaying the DP’s own incapacity when in government to fully address the complex dynamics that keep the borderland volatile and vulnerable.”

Conspiracies, dirty politics, and common criminality, not only along the border but also in Bangkok, certainly are major factors in Askew’s view of the disorder.

“Efforts to comprehend the dynamics of the current violence have been informed by narratives of conspiracy,” Askew points out. “Though some of these theories are outlandish, their plausibility … derives from knowledge of the well-established and complex ways that power has been deployed in the borderland by overlapping interest groups (including politicians at all levels) and underworld networks.”

Askew notes that it is “significant that Muslim critics in the south who opposed Thaksin’s policies also argue that entrenched DP-based interest groups have been a key element in weakening the region.” Although as Askew points out, “They conveniently exclude Wadah politicians (influential Muslim politicians in the south) and their networks from the equation.”

Askew notes “a number of former military and intelligence officers emphasized that the southern violence emerged and persisted because of the inability and unwillingness of successive (national) governments to address a disorderly state that has rendered the borderland vulnerable through pervasive corruption, predation, and competition.”

According to Askew, a senior Muslim police commander in Pattani, one of the three violence-torn southern provinces, says “the borderland has been manipulated and abandoned … the border provinces have for too long been a dua prolong (testing ground, or playing field of competition) for rival political and interest groups.”

Not surprisingly, the long-standing situation has made it easy, according to Askew, “for insurgent groups to exploit the already low popular-trust thresholds and succeed in implicating officials (both local and in Bangkok) as the perpetrators of attacks.” This is despite the fact, Askew says, “that Muslim separatist groups and leaders have long functioned as another vested interest group … drawing material sustenance and advantage from instability and conflict.”

That attitude allows the conflict to be painted as a “binary portrait … such as ‘hegemonic Buddhist State vs. Oppressed Muslim Borderland’,” according to Askew. An attitude that, he says, “casts blame on a Thai Buddhist ruling apparatus rather than acknowledging a problem of corruption/criminality that crosses ethno-religious boundaries.”

Imtiyaz Yusuf, head of the department of religion at Bangkok’s Assumption University’s Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion, addresses the religious and ethnic aspects of the problems in southern Thailand, too. Although in his view religion and ethnicity have been given short shrift.

In a recent study, Yusuf notes that most commentators and analysts neglect “the role of religion and ethnicity in the crisis.” He says, “The phenomenon of ethnification of religion is very much evident in Southeast Asia where religions function along ethnic lines.” He points out, “Here a Malay is a Muslim, a Siamese/Thai a Buddhist and a Chinese either a Christian or Tao/Buddhist syncretic … ethno-religious constructs shape identities.”

Yusuf is quick to point out this characterization is not set in law. While Thailand has a Buddhist majority population of 94 percent, he notes “the Thai constitution does not declare Buddhism as the official religion … and the Thai king is held as the patron of all religions.” But, he adds, Thai identity revolves around concepts of Chat, Sassana, and Pramahakasat or Nation, Religion (Buddhism) and the Monarchy. The unassimilated southern Muslims contest this concept. They maintain the identity reference should be pluralistic in spirit, it should include all religions not only Buddhism.

Yusuf says to the southern Muslims “traditionally, ethnicity, language, and religion have served as important determinants of identity … to be a Malay means to be Muslim only, just as being a Thai means being Buddhist.” They do not buy into the concept that the modern definition of the terms Malay and Thai include “religiously pluralistic identifications in terms of being identified as citizens of modern states of Thailand and Malaysia.”

Distinctive political cultures that bring their own cultural understandings of power, politics, and religion in an interconnected relationship do not make a solution to the problems in southern Thailand any simpler.

“The Thai state today,” Yusuf points out, “demands equal loyalty from all its citizens irrespective of their ethnic or religious affiliations, be they Chinese or Malay Muslims.” What this means is that Thai Muslims have to “reinterpret their Malay-Muslim political philosophy so that they can adjust to the political loyalty demands of a modernized Thai state.”

That may be easier said than done.

Yusuf says the conflict in southern Thailand “has to be understood in a cosmological and ethno-cultural context which needs more than mere political and security response to solve it.”

What both recent studies make very clear is that citing simple solutions to the ongoing conflict in southern Thailand will only add to the complexity of the problem.

October 6, 2007

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 1:35 pm

Reggaeton (also spelled Reggaetón, and known as Reguetón and Reggaetón in Spanish) is a form of urban music which became popular with Latin American (or Latino) youth during the early 1990s and spread over the course of 10 years to North American, European, Asian, and Australian audiences. Reggaeton blends Jamaican music influences of reggae and dancehall with those of Latin America, such as bomba, plena, merengue, and bachata as well as that of hip hop and Electronica. The music is also combined with rapping or singing in Spanish, English or ‘Spanglish’. Reggaeton has given the Hispanic youth, starting with those from Puerto Rico, a musical genre that they can consider their own. The influence of this genre has spread to the wider Latino communities in the United States, as well as the Latin American audience. While it takes influences from hip hop and Jamaican dancehall, it would be wrong to define reggaeton as the Hispanic or Latino version of either of these genres; Reggaeton has its own specific beat and rhythm, whereas Latino hip hop is simply hip hop recorded by artists of Latino descent. The specific rhythm that characterizes reggaeton is referred to as “Dem Bow.” The name is a reference to the title of the dancehall song by Shabba Ranks that first popularized the beat in the early 1990s.

Reggaeton’s origins represents a hybrid of many different musical genres and influences from various countries in the Caribbean, Latin America and the United States. The genre of reggaeton however is most closely associated with Puerto Rico, as this is where the musical style later popularized and became most famous, and where the vast majority of its current stars originate from.

Reggaeton lyrics tend to be more derived from hip hop than dancehall. Like hip hop, reggaeton has caused some controversy, albeit much less, due to a few of the songs’ explicit lyrics and alleged exploitation of women. Further controversy surrounds perreo, a dance with explicit sexual overtones which is associated with reggaeton music.

Filed under: Film,General,global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 6:53 am

A comparsa (conga de comparsa) is the band which plays a conga during a Cuban Carnival celebration. It consists of a large group of dancers dancing and traveling on the streets, followed by a Carrosa (carriage) where the musicians play. The Comparsa is a development of African processions where groups of devotees followed a given saint or deity during a particular religious celebration.

October 5, 2007

The amazing DIY village FM radio station

Filed under: General,india,media — admin @ 4:38 am

Inside Raghav FM Mansoorpur, a village FM radio station in India:

It may well be the only village FM radio station on the Asian sub-continent. It is certainly illegal.

The transmission equipment, costing just over $1, may be the cheapest in the world.

But the local people definitely love it.

On a balmy morning in India’s northern state of Bihar, young Raghav Mahato gets ready to fire up his home-grown FM radio station.

Thousands of villagers, living in a 20km (12 miles) radius of Raghav’s small repair shop and radio station in Mansoorpur village in Vaishali district, tune their $5 radio sets to catch their favourite station.

After the crackle of static, a young, confident voice floats up the radio waves.

“Good morning! Welcome to Raghav FM Mansoorpur 1! Now listen to your favourite songs,” announces anchor and friend Sambhu into a sellotape-plastered microphone surrounded by racks of local music tapes.

For the next 12 hours, Raghav Mahato’s outback FM radio station plays films songs and broadcasts public interest messages on HIV and polio, and even snappy local news, including alerts on missing children and the opening of local shops.

Raghav and his friend run the indigenous radio station out of Raghav’s thatched-roof Priya Electronics Shop.

Ingenious

The place is a cramped $4-a-month rented shack stacked with music tapes and rusty electrical appliances which doubles up as Raghav’s radio station and repair shop.

I just did it out of curiosity and increased its area of transmission every year
Raghav Mahato
He may not be literate, but Raghav’s ingenuous FM station has made him more popular than local politicians.

Raghav’s love affair with the radio began in 1997 when he started out as a mechanic in a local repair shop. When the shop owner left the area, Raghav, son of a cancer-ridden farm worker, took over the shack with his friend.

Sometime in 2003, Raghav, who by now had learned much about radio mechanics, thought up the idea of launching an FM station.

It was a perfect idea. In impoverished Bihar state, where many areas lack power supplies, the cheap battery-powered transistor remains the most popular source of entertainment.

“It took a long time to come up with the idea and make the kit which could transmit my programmes at a fixed radio frequency. The kit cost me 50 rupees (just over $1),” says Raghav.

The transmission kit is fitted on to an antenna attached to a bamboo pole on a neighbouring three-storey hospital.

A long wire connects the contraption to a creaky, old homemade stereo cassette player in Raghav’s radio shack. Three other rusty, locally made battery-powered tape recorders are connected to it with colourful wires and a cordless microphone.

Raghav FM Mansoorpur station in Bihar
The radio station is a repair shop and studio rolled into one
The shack has some 200 tapes of local Bhojpuri, Bollywood and devotional songs which Raghav plays for his listeners.

Raghav’s station is truly a labour of love – he does not earn anything from it. His electronic repair shop work brings him some two thousand rupees ($45) a month.

The young man, who continues to live in a shack with his family, doesn’t know that running a FM station requires a government licence.

“I don’t know about this. I just began this out of curiosity and expanded its area of transmission every year,” he says.

Local hero

So when some people told him sometime ago that his station was illegal, he actually shut it down. But local villagers thronged his shack and persuaded him to resume services again.

It hardly matters for the locals that Raghav FM Mansoorpur 1 does not have a government license – they just love it.

Raghav Mahato
Raghav makes his living from repairing electronic goods
“Women listen to my station more than men,” he says. “Though Bollywood and local Bhojpuri songs are staple diet, I air devotional songs at dawn and dusk for women and old people.”

Since there’s no phone-in facility, people send their requests for songs through couriers carrying handwritten messages and phone calls to a neighbouring public telephone office.

Raghav’s fame as the ‘promoter’ of a radio station has spread far and wide in Bihar.

People have written to him, wanting work at his station, and evinced interest in buying his ‘technology’.

“But I will never share the secret of my technology with anyone. This is my creation. How can I share it with somebody who might misuse it?” he asks.

“With more powerful and advanced chips and equipment I can make a kit which could be transmitted up to 100km or even more.”

A government radio engineer in Bihar’s capital, Patna, says it is possible to use a homemade kit to run a FM radio station.

Radio listener in Bihar village
The station is a rage with listeners in the area
“All it needs is an antenna and transmitting equipment. But such stations offer no security. Anyone can invade and encroach such locally made transmitters,” says HK Sinha of India’s state-run broadcaster All India Radio (AIR).

But people in Mansoorpur are in awe of Raghav’s radio station and say it gives their village an identity.

“The boy has intense potential, but he is very poor. If the government lends him some support, he would go far,” says Sanjay Kumar, an ardent fan of his station.

But for the moment Raghav FM Mansoorpur 1 rocks on the local airwaves, bring joy into the lives of the locals.

October 4, 2007

Nicaragua’s Sandinistas Scaring Investors, Group Says

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 5:58 am

Nicaragua’s Sandinista government, in power since January, is scaring away U.S. investors by seizing land and buildings and punishing opponents with fines, the president of the country’s largest foreign business group said.

Since August, Daniel Ortega’s government has seized an Exxon oil facility, scrapped government contracts with a business owned by a leader of an opposition party and fined Nicaragua’s largest newspaper for failing to pay back taxes. Critics say the actions were politically motivated.

“There is no trust of the government,” Cesar Zamora, the president of the American Chamber of Commerce of Nicaragua, said in an interview in Managua. “The companies that are already here fear they’re going to owe the government `favors.”’

Foreign investors, lured by inexpensive beachfront property, are transforming parts of Central America’s poorest country into gated communities, and textile makers such as Cone Denim have set up plants to take advantage of low labor costs. Investments by foreigners, which rose 18 percent last year to $282 million, may be threatened by Ortega’s policies.

Zamora said that U.S. investment, Nicaragua’s largest foreign source, has dropped since Ortega returned to power, without providing specific figures. It may fall further if the administration seizes more property and assets, he said.

“There are practical people in the government and others who are more radical,” said Zamora, whose group promotes U.S. business opportunities in Nicaragua. “The radical side is winning at the moment.”

1979 Revolution

Ortega, whose revolutionary Sandinista party imposed a state-run economy and nationalized thousands of properties after seizing power in 1979, has said that he welcomes outside investment as a way to eradicate poverty.

“Foreign investment will help reduce our unemployment problem,” he told investors gathered at his Managua home on Oct. 5, a month before he was elected president.

Ortega’s previous stint as president ended in 1990 after a decade-long civil war that devastated the economy. He ran last year on a platform of reconciliation and fighting poverty.

Vice-president Jaime Morales has repeatedly said that the administration respects private property and welcomes foreign investment from all countries. Still, he told reporters on Aug. 28 that “no private interest can be put ahead of the national interest.”

Tourism Industry

Foreign investors spent $282 million in Nicaragua last year, compared with $238 million in 2005. The growing interest is mainly tied to the burgeoning tourism industry, with hotel construction and other tourist-related services attracting the majority of capital, according to Nicaragua’s Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Promotion.

Nicaragua’s Central Bank said on Aug. 10 that foreign investment has slowed during the first six months of 2007, with an estimated growth of 2.5 to 3.4 percent.

Tourist spending rose 31 percent to $240 million in 2006, exceeding coffee sales, the country’s traditional top income earner, according to Nicaragua’s Institute for Tourism. The prime Pacific coast area, where 120 luxury housing developments are either completed or under construction, is poised to lure about $495 million in foreign investment, according to Calvet & Associates, a Managua-based consultant.

Yet even as construction begins, disputes are escalating over land ownership, an issue clouded by shoddy records, local demands and shifting government policies.

At least three battles in which local residents lay claim to developers’ land have boiled over on the Pacific coast in recent months, causing one $88 million project near the Costa Rican border to temporarily shut down.

`Getting Slammed’

Armel Gonzalez said that his development is in danger of being halted permanently after a judge on Sept. 28 confiscated homes and construction equipment on his property for failing to pay members of a cooperative who have long challenged its sale.

“We’re getting slammed,” said Gonzalez, a native of Nicaragua who fled to the U.S. after the 1979 revolution and is now considering moving to Panama to build resorts there. “This is political payback.”

Foreign developers are lobbying against a bill proposed by lawmaker Gerardo Miranda that would put new restrictions on coastal development and turn over all islands to the government.

“We can’t help this country grow if people are scared to buy,” said Kirk Hankla, a Coldwell Banker real estate agent and former California resident who offers properties on Nicaragua’s coast.

Raul Calvet, the president of Calvet & Associates, says that property sales have dropped by 50 percent and home sales are down 25 percent this year due in part to the “Ortega effect.”

“The government doesn’t want to harm investment,” said Calvet. “It would be suicide for them if they did.”

October 2, 2007

Bolivia’s Evo Morales Wins Hearts and Minds in US

Filed under: General,global islands,government — admin @ 6:19 am

While Iranian President Ahmedinejad stole the headlines during the United Nations meeting last week in New York, Bolivia’s President Evo Morales – a humble coca farmer, former llama herder and union organizer – stole the hearts of the American people. At public events and media appearances, Bolivia’s first-ever indigenous president reached out to the American people to dialogue directly on issues of democracy, environmental sustainability, and social and economic justice.

Morales appeared at a public event packed with representatives of New York’s Latino, labor, and other communities, speaking for 90 minutes – without notes – about how he came to power, and about his government’s efforts to de-colonize the nation, the poorest in South America. At first, he said, community organizations did not want to enter the cesspool of politics. But they realized that if they wanted the government to act in the interest of the poor Indigenous majority, they were going to have to make alliances with other social movements, win political representation democratically, and then transform the government.

Now having been elected to office, they have a clear mandate based on the urgent needs of the majority: to organize a Constitutional Assembly to rewrite the Constitution (controversial with the traditional elites, but well on its way), engage in a comprehensive program of land reform and decriminalize the production of coca for domestic use (in progress), and reclaim control over the oil and gas industries (mission accomplished.)

While other heads of state were meeting with bankers and billionaires, Morales asked his staff to set up a meeting with U.S. grassroots leaders so he could learn about our struggles and how we could work together. The meeting included high-ranking labor leaders, immigrant organizers, Indigenous leaders, peace activists and environmentalists. “I’ve lived in New York during a lot of UN meetings, and I’ve never seen a president reach out to the labor community like Evo did today,” remarked Ed Ott, Executive Director of the New York City Central Labor Council.

The President listened patiently while U.S. organizers talked about efforts to stop the war in Iraq, injustices in the prison system, organizing efforts of low-wage immigrant workers, struggles for Indigenous rights and the difficulties of getting the Bush administration to seriously address the crisis of climate change. “For a farmer to become President, that is a dream come true!” commented Niel Ritchie, president of the League of Rural Voters. “Listening to President Morales, it’s so easy to see how our current trade model has wreaked havoc on farmers in the U.S. as well as in Bolivia.”

His most widespread outreach, however, was on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, who also seemed captivated by this Indigenous farmer-turned-president. Speaking through an interpreter, Morales told millions of Americans how his government’s policies have brought hundreds of millions of dollars for the nation’s poor – that would have gone to foreign corporate coffers – through the nationalization of oil and gas. Revenues from hydrocarbons, mostly natural gas, have increased from $440 million in 2004 to over $1.5 billion in 2006 – a significant amount in Bolivia’s economy, as it is an increase from 5 percent of GDP to over 13 percent of GDP. This year revenues will likely top $2 billion, he said. With a twinkle in his eye as he made a measured critique of the Bush administration’s policies, he said that in this new century, armies should save lives through humanitarian aid, not take lives.

Throughout Morales’ media appearances (including a lengthy segment on Democracy Now!), official speeches at the United Nations, and public meetings, he focused on three main points. The most salient was on the urgency of the need for comprehensive solutions to climate change while simultaneously improving the lives of the poor. “We have to be honest about the causes of this global warming. Overconsumption in the developed countries. Overpollution in the developed countries.” At the same time, he argued that the poor still need more access to energy: “Just like we fought to make water a human right, we need an international campaign to make access to energy a human right.”

These sentiments resonated with Brent Blackwelder, President of Friends of the Earth US, who participated in the meeting with Morales. “We need to find solutions that will reduce carbon dioxide emissions in the countries of the global north, while fighting for clean energy and poverty reduction in the global south.” Van Jones, Founder of Green for All agreed. “We’re fighting for social justice and climate solutions within the U.S., and we can join forces with and learn from our allies, like President Morales, with the same vision globally.”

Morales also emphasized the importance of the struggle for the right to life, which in Bolivia refers to the fight against corporate globalization and for access to water, food, education, and health care. Specifically, before Morales was elected, Bolivia suffered tremendously under two decades of programs of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, including the privatizations of water services and the hydrocarbon industry. Bolivia has now had much of its debt cancelled and is no longer bound by an IMF agreement, thanks to the anti-debt movement and a lot of help from Venezuela.

Although Bolivia is rich in natural resources, the Indigenous majority has rarely benefited from their exploitation, and the country remains vastly unequal and majority poor. The Bolivian government’s efforts to ensure a more fair distribution of the natural resource wealth has resulted in their being sued by foreign multinational corporations for “future expected profits” from their investments.

Under international trade and investment agreements, these cases are adjudicated – not in Bolivian national courts, as would be the case for national companies – but through the World Bank’s International Center for the Settlement of Investment Disputes, ICSID. (This is similar to the “rights” given to foreign investors to sue sovereign governments in bilateral and regional trade agreements, called “Chapter 11″ investor-to-state provisions in the North American Free Trade Agreement.) ICSID does not have the transparency, checks and balances, or openness of a real judicial system, yet its findings are binding.

This past May, the Bolivian government announced it would withdraw from ICSID. Although most Americans are unaware of ICSID, it is regularly used by U.S. and European corporations to counter efforts by developing countries to re-nationalize natural resources and the provision of public services like water, according to a major report by the Institute for Policy Studies and Food and Water Watch. During his talks, Morales called on the international community to support their efforts for “an ongoing global campaign against this type of investor rule.”

The third point highlighted by Morales relates to bilateral relations with the United States. The U.S. government, through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) currently operates an Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) in Bolivia. (OTI offices are usually designed to help enable Washington-favored regime change; the only other one in Latin America is in Venezuela.) The Bolivian government has accused the United States of using USAID money to build opposition to the new government and its political party, the MAS, something the U.S. had done in the past. According to the Associated Press, “A declassified 2002 cable from the U.S. Embassy in La Paz described a USAID-sponsored ‘political party reform project’ to ‘help build moderate, pro-democracy political parties that can serve as a counterweight to the radical MAS or its successors.’”

But Evo’s main argument was regarding the former president, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, commonly known as Goni. During the “gas wars” of 2003, troops fired on protesters, killing 67 and wounding over 300 people. Days later, Goni abdicated the presidency and flew to Washington, DC, where he now resides. The Bolivian Supreme Court is seeking extradition of Goni, and two of his former ministers, not for revenge, according to Evo, but “so that they can be held accountable for their crimes by standing trial in Bolivia.”

While it seems unlikely that the United States would consent to the extradition, considering their lack of cooperation with the Venezuelan government’s request for the extradition of terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, the recent agreement of the Chilean government to extradite former Peruvian president Alberto Fujimori to face trial in Peru does set a precedent that will be hard for the United States to ignore. The Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns has worked to educate the public about this issue, and the Center for Constitutional Rights just announced a new major lawsuit against Goni and former Minister of Defense Jose Carlos Sánchez Berzaín for compensatory and punitive damages under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) and the Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA) on behalf of families of the victims.

After decades of politicians who robbed the country’s coffers and left the people in poverty and despair, Bolivia now has a leader who is known to be honest, sincere and trustworthy. Bolivia also has a leader who inspires hope in the Indigenous population. This hope is now embodied, worldwide, in the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, a brand-new declaration approved in the United Nations this September, after a 25-year struggle. At the grassroots meeting with Morales, Tonya Gonella Frichner, President and Founder of the American Indian Law Alliance, highlighted Bolivia’s helpful role in the passage of the declaration, and both she and Morales agreed that “the next step is ensuring that the declaration is implemented.”

Morales, anxious to apply Indigenous wisdom to solve the global climate crisis, is calling for the United Nations to convene a world indigenous forum to “foster a new approach to economic relations based on an appreciation of natural resources and not their exploitation.”

The world has much to learn from the sustainable lifestyles of Indigenous people and from the grassroots movement that has come to power in Bolivia. At a time when our planet is crying out for leadership with vision and integrity, Evo Morales and the Bolivian example should give hope to us all.

Mestizo vs Indigena

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 5:21 am

“Don’t touch those tennis shoes!” is the command said directly or otherwise implied. By this command, Fourth World peoples are directed to stay as their ancestors were and not live as modern human beings. This has been the way of the settler descendants to keep indigenous peoples from claiming their powers and rights.

Descendants of settler populations control the economic and political power in the modern state; and the peoples on top of whom the state was formed–the indigenous people–are supposed to be content with being social artifacts–powerless and satisfied with settler castoffs. The original peoples of lands the world over are stratified into the lowest level of social identity in the modern state.

In South Africa, the original peoples of that land remain, despite the African National Congress rise to power in the last ten years, socially, politically and economically at the bottom of the social pile. They suffer the greatest health and economic problems and lack the power to change the circumstances.

In Chile, the Mapuche have been assigned the lowest rank in Chilean and Argentine society and they suffer constant threats and attacks for lack of social and political power.

The Sammi of Norway, Sweden and Finland also suffer from this social stratification that will deny the more than 60,000 indigenous peoples of Scandinavia political power.

In much of the western hemisphere the language of powerlessness is used by state authorities, academics, politicians, business people and the every day settler descendant to eliminate or otherwise obscure the distinctive identity of specific indigenous peoples. With the expectation of perfecting a “homogeneous state” the descendants of settler populations who largely rule and control the state power structures in Spanish occupied states have used the word mestizo to suggest that an individual has a social standing above a “mere Indian”–that category being of lower social status. Mestizo is accepted by many individuals who are Indígena in an effort to avoid being assigned a lower social status in the state. As Guillermo Bonfil Batalla observes in his México profundo (edited by Philip A. Dennis) the process of “de-indianization” of rural Mexican populations has been underway since before the formation of the Mexican state. Its goal? The elimination of the original peoples of the land.

Clearly the effort to eliminate the Indian population over time has failed, for as noted in Bonfil’s work: Their lives and ways of understanding the world continue to be rooted in Mesoamerican civilization–pre-Spanish societies. Perhaps 70% of Mexico’s population are in fact people rooted in the ancient civilizations. Despite this reality, social and institutional pressures heavily emphasize mestizo as an identity rather than indígena or the original identity people know themselves by.

States throughout the hemisphere and indeed throughout the world repeat this pattern. And it is the case that indigenous peoples the world over remain rooted in their ancient cultures. The indigenous population is often much larger than state records document. The concern seems to be that when indigenous peoples are recognized to be of greater numbers they will band together and compete for power with setter descendants.

That seems to be the worry among settler descendants in Bolivia where the state population of Indígena is the majority population (60% of 9.3 million). Despite this fact, the settler descendants who oppose the rise of power among the original peoples want to promote the view that this majority population is Bolivian, “mestizo” or of otherwise mixed-race heritage. By virtue of this view, it is argued, the indigenous population is considered smaller.

Indigenous peoples want to take the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples seriously. In particular Article 26 of the Declaration commands considerable attention. It is here that the UN Declaration states: Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands, territories and resources which they have traditionally owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired. This principle seems to directly threaten the settler descendant population since they basically stole most of the land on which they live. They are clearly concerned in Bolivia that those who are Indígena will no longer want to be called Mestizo and wish to claim their right to lands and self-government.

Because of the UN Declaration Indígena now means power and the choice to reclaim lands and resources for the benefit of original peoples.

For millions of peoples in the world, reclaiming land on which to grow food, build society and families has got a shot in the arm. There is great opposition to this idea by those who claim the lands and resources originally used and owned by Indígena. The struggle for one’s identity may be less difficult than the struggle to take back the lands, the resources and the power taken by those who came to occupy and replace lands and the people. In Bolivia the struggle has been raging and now will take on a new level of importance.

The war in Nicaragua between the Miskito, Sumo and Rama and the government of Nicaragua between 1981 and 1990 demonstrated that indigenous peoples will defend their lands and their way of life with success. The Zapatistas demonstrated a resurgent power in Mexico as have the Mixe in Oaxaca simply by taking the initiative and acting. The Salish peoples demonstrated their resurgent claims to the right of self-government in Canada and the United States and have begun to force a shift in political power. Fourth World nations throughout the hemisphere, and indeed throughout the world, may now reclaim their lands, resources and power to decide their own social, economic, political, economic and cultural future. In the western hemisphere, the may come that it is no longer mestizo, but Indígena that identifies the majority populations in many states.

October 1, 2007

Mass Drowning of Wildebeest In Kenya

Filed under: General,global islands,kenya — admin @ 5:26 pm

In a bizarre mishap that conservationists describe as “heartbreaking,” an estimated 10,000 wildebeest have drowned while attempting to cross Kenya’s Mara River during an annual migration. The deaths, which occurred over the course of several days last week, are said to account for about one percent of the total species population.

The drownings created a grotesque wildlife pileup, after part of the migrating herd tried to ford the Mara at “a particularly treacherous crossing point,” according to Terilyn Lemaire, a conservation worker with the Mara Conservancy who witnessed the incident. The first animals into the river failed to cross and drowned, while others continued to stampede into the water behind them, Lemaire told National Geographic News by email.

“Once they jumped into the water, they were unable to climb up either embankment onto land and, as a result, got swept up by the current and drowned,” she said.
Some 2,000 wildebeest drowned at the crossing in a single afternoon, Lemaire estimated.

“There was no unusual flooding at the time, and there seems to be no extraneous circumstances to these deaths,” she said. “The wildebeest merely chose a crossing point that was too steep.”

Drowning deaths are not uncommon during the migration, Lemaire added, but her organization has never witnessed fatalities on this scale.

“It is customary every year for the wildebeest to pick a particularly treacherous crossing point and for there to be a significant die-off,” she said, “but the number of deaths during these crossings almost never exceeds one thousand.”
The deaths occurred at Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve, as the herd was beginning its swing to the east on its way back to the Serengeti.

More than a million wildebeest undertake an epic migration every year in late summer, leaving their calving grounds in the Serengeti Plain of Tanzania to seek greener pastures in Kenya to the north. The animals, also known as gnu, journey some 3,200 km each year, often joined by thousands of zebras and Thomson’s gazelles.

The remains formed what she described as “pungent islands of bloated carcasses. The crocodiles, storks, and vultures have not had to worry about where to find their next meal,” she wrote.

“Those that aren’t consumed will be left and will eventually decompose in the water. These thousands of carcasses will undoubtedly affect the health of the water, but to what extent, only time will tell.”

Myanmar: Internet link remains shut

Filed under: burma,General,global islands,media,military — admin @ 5:27 am

Yangon – Myanmar’s main Internet link remained shut for a third straight day on Sunday, as the ruling regime tried to curb the flow of information on a bloody crackdown against protesters.

“I tried on Sunday morning again but it’s failed again. I haven’t been able to check my email since Friday,” said one Yangon resident.

Internet cafes in Yangon also remained closed. Over the past week, tech-savvy citizens used the cybercafes to transmit pictures and video clips of the regime’s clampdown taken on mobile phones and digital cameras.

“People inside Myanmar can’t send emails or news to outside organisations,” said Kho Win Aung from activist group Shwe Gas Movement.

“So they are losing their chance to express what’s happening in Myanmar,” the Thailand-based activist told reporters in Bangkok.

The government cracked down on protesters last week, killing at least 13 people and injuring hundreds more, in a campaign that has also intensified pressure on media operating in the country.

In the main city of Yangon, soldiers shot dead a Japanese video-journalist Thursday and beat people found with cell phones or cameras, witnesses said.

Myanmar’s military rulers always keep a tight grip on information, heavily censoring newspapers, blocking much of the Internet and rarely allowing foreign journalists into the country.

Paris-based media rights group Reporters Without Borders said that by cutting Internet access, the regime was trying to operate “behind closed doors”.

It has condemned Myanmar as a “paradise for censors” and listed the country as one of the world’s most restrictive for press freedoms.

Bangladesh on US watch list “Pirated CDs, DVDs”

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,media — admin @ 5:05 am

Sylhet – Bangladesh has been put on the USA’s watch list of countries that allow operations of some Pakistani companies producing pirated versions of multi-media compact disks (CDs), and digital video disks (DVDs) violating intellectual property rights (IPR). Due to the inclusion of Bangladesh on the list, the United States Trade Representatives (USTR) can now suggest its entrepreneurs to withdraw their investments from the country or to impose a trade embargo on the country. According to a report titled ‘Special 301′ on the adequacy and effectiveness of intellectual property rights (IPR), published by the Office of the US Trade Representatives, some pirate optical disk manufacturing plants migrated to Bangladesh from Pakistan due to the latter’s crackdown on those.

The report released on April 30, 2007 said currently six optical disc plants producing pirated products are operating in Bangladesh and are exporting to India and Europe, as well as saturating the local market. The USTR report suggested Bangladesh to introduce regulations controlling optical disc manufacturing so that the Bangladeshi authorities can issue licenses to manufacturers, and law enforcers can inspect the plants. It also suggested if any plant is found guilty of piracy, it should be closed down and its owners should be prosecuted.

The report said the harm from the practice of piracy in Bangladesh is not only to the US and other countries that have similar businesses, but is also felt keenly by Bangladeshi genuine entrepreneurs. It said the Bangladesh government’s response to the problem is inadequate in terms of results from enforcement actions taken. A high official of the commerce ministry said the country’s name had been first included on the watch list in 2004, but later USTR dropped Bangladesh from the list following the erstwhile government’s negotiation with USTR.

The official said the commerce ministry requested the home ministry and the cultural affairs ministry to investigate the allegation. Following the request, National Security Intelligence (NSI) carried out an investigation and found that two companies mainly owned by Pakistani entrepreneurs in fact did set up optical disk plants in the country. The companies are AKA World Com situated at 189/B Tejgaon, which is owned by a Pakistani citizen Solaiman Azami, and Sonic Enterprise Bangladesh Limited at Konabari of Gazipur, also owned by a Pakistani citizen Sayed Ashraf Ali. The NSI investigation found that the first company set up a Tk 2 crore worth plant which can produce 50,000 discs a day.

When asked, a joint secretary to the commerce ministry said the ministry decided to initiate lobbying with the US government in an attempt to keep Bangladesh off the ‘watch list’ for copyright violations. The decision was taken in a meeting held at the commerce ministry with additional secretary of the ministry, Golam Mustakim, in the chair on August 26. He said the ministry decided to start discussions with the US government through its embassy in Washington to make its counterpart understand that as a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) the country is exempt from any kind of IPR obligation until 2013.

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