brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

May 31, 2006

Good Hindus be temple priests, forget caste: Empowering Karunanidhi style

Filed under: india — admin @ 5:18 am

Can the establishment succeed in imposing reforms in religious institutions? Is it in keeping with the secular nature of the establishment? Is it ethical to single out a particular religion for such reforms? Is there a mandate for it? Is it one of the priorities of the administration especially when the solemn promises made during the run-up to the polls are so many that one full term of 5 years is not enough for implementation?

The atheist Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Muthuvel Karunanidhi will have no answer to these questions when he has ordered, within days of his taking over the reins of the administration in the conservative state of Tamil Nadu, that the priesthood in all the 36,000-odd temples of the state will be open to “qualified” people of all castes.

On the face of it, the order appears to be noble in its professed intentions in removing social inequities, especially in the majority community that is hopelessly divided on castelines. It is also quite logical to think that such a move would help fostering unity and social upliftment of the castes oppressed for centuries. It can also be argued that the caste system, scourge of Hindu society, may also go away in one stroke, if not in stages.

May 29, 2006

Anti-graft group: Bribery in Kenya grows in 2005

Filed under: kenya — admin @ 4:48 pm

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyans paid more bribes in 2005 compared with 2004, especially when dealing with law enforcement officers and buying basic services like health care, according to a report released by an anti-graft group on Monday.

The study, the Kenya Bribery Index, compiled by the Kenyan chapter of graft watchdog Transparency International, said Kenyans encountered bribery in 47 percent of their interactions with officials in 2005, compared with 34 percent in 2004.

“To us it seems that Kenyans have accepted bribery as a way of life. We find that Kenyans live with bribery everyday, every minute,” Evelyn Mungai, chairperson of Transparency International Kenya, said at the launch of the index.

The report said the majority of bribes were paid to the police, followed by state-owned companies and local authorities.

“I’m not proud to come here year in year out to tell you that our vital public institutions are rotten,” said Mwalimu Mati, Transparency International Kenya’s executive director.

“What we are calling petty bribery is not as small a problem as we might imagine. Our country is bleeding from corruption.”

The study showed that Kenya’s fight against graft was losing steam. In 2003 Kenyans encountered bribery in just over 40 percent of their dealings with officials.

“Clearly the enthusiasm that was there, that proactive efforts by wananchi (citizens) dissipated at some point,” David Ndii, a research adviser at TI-Kenya said.

“Also the government’s zero tolerance platform has been dealt very serious credibility blows.”

President Mwai Kibaki’s government came to power in late 2002 with a pledge to fight graft, but Kenyans are becoming increasingly doubtful of its ability to win, given its failure to prosecute senior officials accused of involvement in dubious procurement contracts.

Kibaki’s government is grappling with graft scandals linked to a procurement racket, dubbed Anglo Leasing, in which state contracts worth some $200 million went to a phantom company.

The scandal, along with another called Goldenberg, in which $1 billion was looted from state coffers through fictitious diamond and gold exports in the early 1990s, forced three ministers to resign.

Filed under: belize — admin @ 4:28 pm

May 25, 2006

Beware! Kenya Postal Crooks!

Filed under: General,kenya — admin @ 12:10 pm

Kenya Post cannot be trusted! After paying 200 ksh for a customs-form(!), and paying exorbitant postage rates for slow (3-4 months to USA!) surface package delivery… your insured package will not arrive — stolen by postal employees! Queries regarding the theft do not get a response!

(Email-me for comments on Wildebeeste Workshop accommodation.)

May 13, 2006

‘Wonder fish’ caught in Kenya…

Filed under: kenya — admin @ 7:49 pm

Published: 14 May 2006

MOMBASA: A tuna fish caught in the Indian Ocean has excited Kenyan Muslims who are flocking here by the hundreds to see a Quranic verse apparently embedded in its scales.

Dubbed the “wonder fish” by locals in this port city, the 2.5kg tuna has attracted so much attention it has been placed in the custody of the National Fisheries Department for safekeeping.

The otherwise ordinary fish caught the attention of fishmonger Omar Mohammed Awadh who pulled it out of a catch when he noticed what seemed to be Arabic writing among the scales near its tail.

Arabic scholars determined the writing was a verse meaning “God is the greatest of all providers”, said Hassan Mohamed Hassan, with the National Museums of Kenya.

“This has been confirmed as a verse from the Quran,” said Sheikh Mombasa Dor, the secretary-general of the Council of Imams and Preachers.

May 11, 2006

Thailand starts dog radio station

Filed under: thailand — admin @ 3:14 pm

BANGKOK, Thailand — A Thai entrepreneur who launched an Internet radio station for dogs this week said he hopes to reach out to the kingdom’s pooches and cheer them up.

Anupan Boonchuen, director of a dog grooming school in Bangkok, said he launched Dog Radio Thailandexternal link on Wednesday because noticed that dogs seem happier when he plays music as he grooms them.

“I have close contact with dogs every day. Dogs get in a better mood if they listen to music,” Anupan said Thursday.

Often while Anupan’s students practice grooming for the first time, they do not know how to handle the dogs. So during class, he said he plays music because it “puts the dogs in a good mood and they’re more willing to let the groomers handle them.”

The programming on dogradiothailand.com mainly consists of Thai pop music, but Anupan also plans to air programs in which the DJ will “talk to the dogs in Thai” — to which the canine listener will be encouraged to respond.

“At 9 a.m., we may have a dog greeting show, in which we’ll repeat ‘sawasdee’ (‘hello’) over and over … If we say ‘sawasdee,’ in some houses, the dog may lift both paws in response. In some houses, the dog may lift only one paw. It depends on how the dog was trained,” Anupan said.

Anupan said he had long dreamed of starting a radio station for dogs, but it always seemed too expensive. He was able to bring his project to fruition after hearing an international news story about a low-cost Internet radio station for dogs in the United States.

He hopes that the DJ will be able to communicate through the radio and that the dogs will respond.

“If we play a slow song, we may have the DJ howl … because dogs howl, too, when they hear sad sounds,” Anupan said.

April 22, 2006

Tamil Tigers

Filed under: india — admin @ 6:07 am

Tamil Tiger rebels say they will not meet the Sri Lankan government for
more peace talks because of a recent surge in violence in the
Tamil-majority areas. The already postponed talks were due to be held in
Geneva, Switzerland next week. More than 60 people have died in bombings
in Sri Lanka in the past week. The Tamil Tigers want autonomy for minority
Tamils in the north and east of Sri Lanka. More than 60,000 people have
died during two decades of conflict.

April 20, 2006

Thailand extends emergency rule

Filed under: thailand — admin @ 5:55 am

18/04/2006

# Thai PM sobs as he quits
# Thai PM claims poll victory
# Thai PM faces political storm
# Thai paper punishes itself
# Bomb explodes in Thailand

Bangkok – Thailand’s government said on Tuesday it will extend a state of emergency in violence-plagued southern Thailand as part of measures to combat a Muslim insurgency that has left over 1 000 people dead.

“The terrorist movement still has the capacity to cause danger to lives and property, so the state of emergency is needed to cope with the situation,” acting prime minister Chitchai Wannasathit told reporters.

The state of emergency covers Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat provinces.

Shortly before the announcement was made, a 24-year-old man was shot and killed by suspected insurgents on his way to work at a factory in the Yaha district of Yala province. The man, identified as Suebsak Chansupha, was shot by a man riding on the back seat of a motorcycle, said local police spokesperson Suwat Chanchao.

The insurgency has left at least 1 300 dead since it flared in 2004.

Emergency rule lets the government impose curfews, prohibit public gatherings, censor and ban publications, detain suspects without charge, confiscate property and tap telephones.

It also makes officials immune from “civil, criminal and disciplinary penalties” while carrying out acts – including killing civilians – under its provisions.

Rights activist say the emergency rule has failed to contain the growing violence, and has worsened the situation by allowing violations of constitutional rights.

Chitchai said the state of emergency, first imposed last July and extended at three-month intervals, was due to expire on Thursday.

April 12, 2006

India: A Tale of Two Worlds

Filed under: india — admin @ 6:47 am

When India’s Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram presented the government’s budget this past February, he trumpeted the country’s vault into modernity. Economic growth is 8.1% and is projected to rise as high as 10% next year. India has completed its “Golden Quadrilateral,” a multi-lane highway that links New Delhi in the north, Calcutta in the east, Chennai in the south, and Mumbai in the west. The collective wealth of India’s 311 billionaires jumped 71% in the last year.

“Growth will be our mount,” the Minister told the Parliament, “equity will be our companion, and social justice will be our destination.”

But for India ‘s rural and urban poor, the chasm between them and the wealthy only got wider and deeper. Last year, India slipped from 124 out of 177 countries to 127, according to the United Nations Human Development Index. Life expectancy is seven years less than in China , and 11 less than in Sri Lanka . Mortality for children under five, according to a United Nations Development Report, is almost three times China ‘s rate, almost six times Sri Lanka ‘s, and greater than in Bangladesh and Nepal .
Disconnect and Division

The divide is best summed up in a searing editorial by Palagummi Sainath , India ‘s leading independent journalist. In an April 1 opinion piece in The Hindu , Sainath contrasts the two worlds that increasingly make up the second most populous nation on earth.

“Farm suicides in Vldharbha crossed 400 this week. The Sensex (stock exchange) crossed the 11,000 mark. And Lakme Fashion Week issues over 500 media passes to journalists. All three are firsts. All happened the same week. And each captures in a brilliant if bizarre way a sense of where India ‘s Brave New World is headed. A powerful measure of disconnect. Of the gap between the haves and the have-mores on the one hand, and the dispossessed and the desperate, on the other.”

For more than a decade, the Mumbai-based journalist has criss-crossed India by train, bicycle and foot, chronicling the daily lives of the poor. He writes about people like Ganesh Bhimrao Thakre, a small farmer in Vidharbha who struck hard times. His daughter got cholera, his wife had an eye operation, and his son was forced to drop out of college for financial reasons. Desperate and unable to get a loan, he played Bhishi, a sort of Ponzi scheme where farmers pool money to try and win a monthly jackpot.

He lost.

So he committed suicide. Most farmers kill themselves by drinking pesticides. Thakre hung himself.

There are literally thousands like him in the countryside, where in states like Orissa, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Bihar the “average” income is considerably below the national rural poverty line of $650 a year. Stories like the death of Ganesh Thakre do not make Sainath a popular man in the corridors of power, where “India Shining” is the slogan. The government is less interested in helping the poor, as it is increasing military spending and building a “blue water” navy.

India has launched a 30-year program to build a fleet capable of projecting power into the South China Sea and Indian Ocean . It has purchased Jaguar bombers from Britain and is negotiating to purchase 66 Hawk fighter-bombers for $1.43 billion. The price of a single Hawk could supply a lifetime of clean drinking water to 1.5 million people.
Skewed Priorities

The new budget is a case study in skewed priorities.

Under the former right wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government, social support networks were systematically dismantled, and social expenditures declined from 22.9% to 19.7%.

But the center-left Congress-UPA government’s budget is only marginally better. Social expenditures will rise just 1.2%. Education will jump a paltry 0.4%, and health funding will go from 4.4% to 4.9%. According to the Finance Minister, “Growth is the best antidote to poverty.”

The “growth” formula is the so-called “Washington Consensus” of open markets and foreign investment, which has accelerated the divide between rich and poor from Terra del Fuego to West Africa . Latin America is presently in the process of dismantling much of the neoliberal “consensus” that dominated economic systems from Mexico to Argentina throughout the ‘80s and ‘90s

In India , “growth” has been restricted to a relatively narrow band of industries, like high tech. In the countryside, where 75% of the population lives, living conditions have worsened. A World Bank study in 2004 found that while the number of Indian millionaires rose so did the number of poor. According to a UN Development Report, inequality in India has grown faster in the last 15 years than in the last 50 years. The Report also found that rural poverty alleviation schemes generally ended up being used in the interests of the wealthy.

In his searing book Everyone Loves a Good Drought , Sainath exposed how the elites manipulate rural aid to enrich themselves and impoverish small farmers. Wealthy landowners used government aid during a drought to dig wells so deep that they drained off the water small farmers were using. In exchange for water, the small farmers had to grow what the wealthy farmers wanted them to grow, generally export crops like cotton and rice.

Most small farmers quickly found themselves squeezed between low prices for their crops and high prices for seed and fertilizer. Many had no choice but to turn to the local sahukar , moneylenders who charge usurious rates of 60% or higher. “Banks don’t loan money to small farmers,” says Sainath, “although you can get all you want to buy a Mercedes.”

In 1991, 26% of rural households were in debt. By 2003 that had jumped to just under 50%, although in some states, like Andhra Pradesh, four fifths of the farmers were in arrears. Tens of millions of small farmers ended up losing their land and became landless laborers. If they were lucky and had a union, they made $1 a day. If they were not, they made as little as 33 cents a day.

In contrast, each of those 311 billionaires takes in about $17.5 million a day.

Since the government has cut back on irrigation aid and dried up most of the money for small loans, more and more farmers have little choice but to use the sahukars . The lenders—who many times are big landowners—forced many farmers to sign a document “selling” their land to the sahukar . According to Sainath, many times those documents are not torn up even after the debt is paid.

While some farmers who lose their land become agricultural day laborers, large numbers migrate to the cities in search of services and jobs. But services have been cut, and the jobs are mainly for the literate and the well schooled. In rural areas, 38% of males, and 57% of women are illiterate.

The miserly increase in health spending is particularly burdensome to the rural poor. Medical care is the second most common cause of rural debt, and close to the 25% of the population do not seek medical care because they cannot afford it.

As a share of its GDP, India spends less on health care than countries like Cambodia, Myanmar, Togo, Sudan, Guinea, and Burundi. According to a UN Human Development Report, “Some of India’s southern cities may be in the midst of a technological boom, but one in every 11 Indian children dies in the first five years of life from want of low-technology, low-cost interventions.”

The medical situation is deepened by the food crisis that many Indians endure. A study by Professor Utsa Patnaik found that per person food availability is lower now than it was during the horrendous Bengal famine of 1942-43.

It is common for rural family members to alternate days when they eat. The result is that 46.7% of Indian children are underweight, and 44.9% of them are growth stunted. In comparison, in China—which also has a wide and growing gap between rich and poor—those figures are 10% and 14.2%, respectively.

Ganesh Thakre’s wife, Rekha, told Sainath that the family had reached the point, “Where when we take our household wheat to the mill, we leave it there until we can pay the miller the tiny amount it takes to grind the flour.”

Urban slum dwellers fare little better. In the same week that the fashion shows and the stock market were doing well, almost 5,000 urban shanties were torn down in Mumbai.

“In the village we demolish their lives,” writes Sainath, “in the city their homes.”

April 11, 2006

Tiny Belize strikes bubblin’ crude

Filed under: belize — admin @ 6:18 am

One partner in Belize Natural Energy has said that 75 million barrels could be under a single 1,618-hectare parcel of land.

How sweet it is, some say. But the Beverly Hillbillies-style courting of big oil companies worries others.

SPANISH LOOKOUT, BELIZE (Apr 10, 2006)

This tiny country struck oil in much the same way TV’s Jed Clampett did in the Ozarks. A few years ago, a Mennonite farmer dug a shallow well in this bucolic hamlet and up bubbled crude.

“It was just like the Beverly Hillbillies,” said government petroleum inspector Andre Cho.

Belize joined the ranks of the world’s oil exporters in January when its first shipload of crude hit the market. Production is only 3,000 barrels a day, but people in this Central American nation of 280,000 are getting a glimpse of the opportunities — and opportunists — that accompany $60-a-barrel oil.

“When you see Texans coming down here, you know that something is up,” said Belize City bartender Robert Williams at a restaurant called the Smoky Mermaid. Cho said wildcatters have been tantalized by the speed with which Belize Natural Energy– a small private firm backed by American and Irish investors — last year found the first significant deposits of oil. In contrast to the heavy, sulphur-laden stuff found in neighbouring Guatemala and Mexico, Belizean crude is so sweet and light that some local farmers are putting it raw into tractors.

The strike couldn’t have come at a better time for Belize’s debt-strapped government, which hopes to use oil wealth to reduce taxes and bolster social spending. Minister of Natural Resources John Briceno calculates that at current prices, the government’s take from even modest oil production of around 60,000 barrels a day would cover the entire national budget of Belize.

BNE officials say they don’t know the true size of the find, but one partner told a local newspaper that 75 million barrels could be under a single 1,618-hectare parcel. “If we could produce even 20,000 barrels a day, you can imagine what we could do with that. It could make a huge difference for our little country.”

For half a century, oil drillers came to Belize hoping to hit the big one. Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz spent millions of dollars chasing black gold in this Massachusetts-size nation located southeast of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. So did Texaco, Chevron and others. Studies hinted at petroleum deposits lurking beneath the jungle floor, but drilling yielded 50 dry holes in as many years.

Thus BNE made history when it struck oil on its first attempt, 25 kilometres from the spot where the Mennonite farmer first found petroleum.

Two BNE partners were key to the effort — Northern Ireland-born Susan Morrice, the company’s president and a veteran geologist with two decades of experience in Belize, and the late Mike Usher, an engineer and member of a prominent Belizean family who never gave up the dream that his nation could be an oil producer.

Usher’s 89-year-old mother, Jane, recalls her son bringing rocks to Sunday dinner, evidence that Belize was rich in petroleum. He didn’t live to see his dream fulfilled, dying in 2004 of a liver-related ailment, but she never doubted him. “Every Sunday, it was always the same. The oil thing. The oil thing,” said the mother of 10, known as Miss Jane.

With financing from Morrice’s husband, Colorado oil executive Alex Cranberg and more than 80 Irish investors, the firm used seismic technology to map unexplored territory around Spanish Lookout. They found what they believed to be a sizable oilfield under Mennonite pastureland.

The company’s roughnecks hit oil three times in as many tries, naming the wells Mike Usher No. 1, Mike Usher No. 2 and Mike Usher No. 3.

Some Belizeans fear that coaxing the long hidden oil to the surface is equivalent to opening Pandora’s box.

Belize boasts lush rainforests, delicate coral reefs, piercing blue skies and what it claims is the world’s only jaguar preserve.

Because the nation lacks a refinery, pipelines or basic petroleum infrastructure, the oil must be moved by tanker trucks along narrow roads to the docks in the southern city of Big Creek for export. “We simply aren’t prepared,” said Godsman Ellis, president of the Belize Institute of Environmental Law and Policy, who says spills and other disasters are inevitable.

Mennonite farmers on whose land the oil was discovered are also wary.

Concerns about outsiders meddling in their affairs led the conservative Christian group to flee Mexico 45 years ago for Belize. The federal government, which owns all mineral rights in Belize, has the power to force landowners to accept oil drilling on their property for a small share of the oil revenue. Other Belizeans suspect they, too, will be shortchanged.

A block from Belize’s petroleum department in the capital of Belmopan, on the campus of United Evergreen Primary School, principal Pamela Neal hasn’t a single computer for 765 students.

Neal said she would like to believe poor students would benefit from oil riches. But the experience of developing nations such as Nigeria, where multinationals and corrupt officials pocketed most of wealth, have her fearing the worst.

“We are between the devil and the deep blue sea.”

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