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Posts archive for: June, 2007
  • Zimbabwe: 1 packet viennas (2007) = 39,880 houses (1985)

    June 27th, 2007:

    I just saw a packet of viennas for Z$997 000, yes you got it - nine hundred and ninety seven thousand dollars. If you consider that Gono(rrhea) slashed three zeros from our currency less than a year ago, that makes it in reality Z$997 million. Ok, I know that viennas have always been a bit of a luxury, but the meltdown is now nuclear reactor bubbling.

    Please note that I said I SAW the viennas, because who the hell is going to pay that?

    I just stared in open mouthed amazement. My house only cost me Z$25 000 in 1985, 4 bedrooms, garden, good location. In today’s terms that would be Z$25! So one packet of viennas today could have bought you 39,880 houses just twenty years ago!

    Yes, we can all have a giggle at the numbers while sitting comfortably at our office computers, but my fear is lurking close to the surface. What are we going to do? How will this end? Will there be violence on the street or are we going to have a nation of gaunt, starving faces?
    ________________________________________________________________________________________

    The post above is from the Sokwanele blog. Sokwanele is a movement that encompasses supporters of pro-democratic political parties, civic organizations and institutions in Zimbabwe.

    Website: www.sokwanele.com

  • Zimbabwe: The Crises Deepens

    Zimbabwe refugees in South Africa

    In the past few days there has been a flood of news coming out of Zimbabwe. None of it good I am sad to say.

    It was announced last month that the state of the agricultural sector in Zimbabwe is so bad that the government has been reduced to distributing simple ploughs and, where it can, oxen; in an attempt to stem the decline in agricultural output. Zimbabwe already has to import half of the food needed to feed the country. Eating up Zimbabwe’s ever stringing supply of Foreign Exchange (FOEX) reserves.

    All this is a very far cry from the days when Zimbabwe was called the ‘bread basket of Africa’ and agriculture was a major generator of FOEX. The collapse of the agricultural sector is largely blamed a chaotic, corrupt, ad-hoc, racialised, and politicised land reform process that saw 4000 white commercial farmers thrown off their farms.

    A few days ago the New York Times published a very interesting article about the flood of refugees coming to South Africa. The article details the experiences of these Zimbabwe refugees in South Africa as well as their motivations for leaving Zimbabwe and experiences back home. The economic hardship brought on by rampant inflation and a 70% unemployment level; the low salaries, the collapse of infrastructure and social services, the absolute political oppression, and fear of torture are cited as the main reasons for leaving Zimbabwe.

    The social pressures that this massive wave of around 3 million refugees is having on South Africa are also highlighted. There is tremendous pressure being put on South Africa’s social services to process, house, and provided basic heath care to both South Africans and recently arrived refugees. This pressure seems to be, partly, manifesting its self as an increasing xenophobic South African public.

    Some people are beginning to suspect that Mugabe actually wants a civil war to start so that he can paint his oppossion as violent and reduce the increasing moral support that the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) is getting from other African countries. This would explain why there are increasing fire bombings of government facilities with seemingly no evidence to support the Mugabe governments claims that the MDC is responsible. The MDC denies any responsibility for any violent acts committed in Zimbabwe so far and claims that the violent acts Mugabe is talking about are caused by Mugabe's own thugs in the secret police.

    Sources:

    *Media24: Zim back to ox and plough

    *New York Times: Influx From Zimbabwe to South Africa Tests Both

  • Iraq: Stories from a Persecuted Christian Community

    Iraq Christians

    Below are some of the stories coming out of Iraq’s small and ever shrinking Christian community. Some of them are quite old and some of them are more recent, they are all very depressing but informative of what is happening in the country.

    Iraq's Persecuted Christians
    Members of one of Iraq's minority faiths face new repressions and discrimination after the fall of Saddam's regime
    By CHRISTOPHER ALLBRITTON/ BAGHDAD
    Monday, Sep. 20, 2004

    When Keis Isitfan headed home from work one recent night, he had reason to watch his back. As a laundry worker for the U.S. embassy inside Baghdad's green zone, he risked being attacked by insurgents targeting Iraqis who work for the U.S. But there was another source of anxiety: Isitfan, 27, is a Christian and, like others of his faith, is facing growing hostility from hard-line Islamic groups who accuse Christians of being sympathetic to the Western occupiers.

    As Isitfan was driving home on Sept. 7, his worst fears came true. After he left the green zone, two cars pulled up alongside, and attackers inside opened fire. Four bullets hit Isitfan, who died on the street. His family, convinced Isitfan was killed for his faith, plans to flee the country. "Christians in Iraq are weak," says his sister Layla, a translator for the U.S. embassy. "All they can do is leave here, like we will do."

    Between 10,000 and 30,000 of Iraq's 800,000 Christians have fled the country since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime, according to Christian groups in Baghdad. Although Christians make up only about 3% of Iraq's 25 million people, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees has said they account for about 20% of the refugees fleeing Iraq for Syria. They are escaping a climate of violence and a surging Islamic radicalism that have made the practice of their faith a deadly enterprise.

    The worst moment came on Aug. 1 when Islamic insurgents - most likely connected with terrorist leader Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, according to Iraqi government officials - attacked five churches in Baghdad and Mosul with car bombs, killing a dozen people. While Muslim authorities in Iraq widely condemned those attacks, local Christians say security has continued to deteriorate. Says Layla Isitfan: "If I can't go to church because I'm scared, if I can't dress how I want, if I can't drink because it's against Islam, what kind of freedom is that?"

    Like the larger insurgency targeting U.S. troops and the new Iraqi government, the campaign against Christians appears to be becoming more organized. Sa'ad Jusif, a Chaldean-Assyrian Christian, was kidnapped on Sept. 8, according to Dr. Munir Mardirosian, who heads a political party for Armenian Catholics in Baghdad. His captors showed
    him a list of 200 names, most of them Christian, and demanded to know where they lived. When he refused, he was hung from the ceiling and beaten with iron pipes. He was released only when his family paid a $50,000 ransom on Sept. 13. He left the next day for Jordan. Says Mardirosian: "If they opened the doors to America or Australia, I can say there would not be one Christian left in Iraq."

    The violence in Iraq threatens one of the world's oldest Christian communities, dating back 2,000 years. The population includes Chaldean Assyrians (Eastern-rite Catholics who recognize the Pope's authority); Assyrians, who form an independent church; Syrian Catholics; and Armenian Catholics. Under Saddam, Christians coexisted more or less amicably with the Muslim majority. Easter services were broadcast on state television, and Christians were allowed to own and operate liquor stores.

    Christians today keep a low profile. While most of the anti-Christian violence has been committed by a small group of Islamic extremists, Christians say they are encountering rising anger among their Muslim neighbors. Layla Isitfan says taxi drivers have insulted her when they realized she was Christian, in some cases saying all Christians should be shot and killed. At work, she wears a Muslim head scarf and tells colleagues that she is Muslim. Raja Elias, a Syrian Catholic in Baghdad, says that recently a neighbor began to dump garbage on her front porch. When Elias complained, the neighbor said, "You are a Christian, and I can put it inside your house if I want to."

    With so many other problems to contend with, the new Iraqi government hasn't done much to protect Christians. Businesses traditionally owned by Christians, such as liquor stores and beauty salons, have been regularly vandalized by Islamic fundamentalists who some suspect may be loyal to Shi'ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Elias, who ran a dental clinic in central Baghdad before the war, recently asked the Health Ministry to reopen it. But she was told to work in Sadr City, the seething Shi'ite slum dominated by al-Sadr's men. So her clinic remains shuttered. "I think they will come for me sooner or later," she says.
    For Iraqis like Elias, the best option is to leave. Many Iraqi Christians say their reversal of fortune has been especially disappointing given the backing the Bush Administration receives from evangelical Christians. "Why did the U.S. come here?" asks Mardirosian, the Armenian-Catholic leader. "To protect the Christians or allow others to kill them?"
    - With reporting by Samantha Appleton/Baghdad
    From the Sep. 27, 2004 issue of TIME magazine

    US support seen as 'disaster' for Christian minority in Iraq
    11, 23, 04

    Christians and ethnic minorities face the most strategic imminent danger from insurgents, according to analysts meeting in Washington DC this week. Jihadist forces aim is to eliminate from Iraq those they see as the kufr (unbelievers) from Iraq, says Middle East expert Walid Phares.

    The claim came as representatives of Iraq's largest Christian minority, the Chaldo-Assyrians, plus leaders from Iraq's smaller ethnic minorities and human rights groups met on Capitol Hill seek special recognition and protection from militants.
    James Rayis, vice-chair of the American Bar Association's International Law Section on the Middle East said that minority groups have faced ill-treatment throughout history, but the
    current attacks are because of perceived ties to the West.

    Iraq's non-Islamic minorities, which number over one million and include Chaldo-Assyrians, Mandaeans, Roma, and Yazidi have existed in the region several thousand years before the spread of Islam in CE 600.

    The occupation of Iraq by US forces and the birth of the Iraqi insurgency have led to a particularly brutal rise in attacks, murders, kidnapping and the destruction of property directed against indigenous Christian minorities, says UPI and World Peace Herald.
    Nearly 40,000 Chaldo-Assyrians have fled Iraq in the last few months, according to the US Coalition for Human Rights.

    Church bombings in Assyrian neighbourhoods of Baghdad and Mosul in August and October 2004, mortar attacks, raids against Christian homes, and forced conversions have also contributed to the unease of a community that has increasingly felt itself under siege by militants.

    At least one militant group, The Islamic Mujahideen, has demanded that all Mandaeans convert to Islam, leave country, or be killed.

    Samer Shehata of Georgetown University's Centre for Contemporary Arab Studies traces the current mistreatment of ethnic Christians to the rise over the last two decades of 'militant sectarianism' and 'Islamist politics' as Western and oppositionist vehicles for criticizing Saddam Hussein's secular regime.

    But he warns against the idea that minority groups should appeal specifically to the West. 'The US is the kiss of death anywhere in the Middle East. Obtaining help from the United States, even if your claim is legitimate, is the quickest way to discredit it', declared Shehata.

    Websites:
    * Christians of Iraq
    * New York Times: Iraq’s Christians Flee as Extremist Threat Worsens

  • India: The People that Industrialisation is Leaving Behind

    Sari weaver

    In this article some of the negative effects of rapid economic development, industrialisation and more open-markets are having on the hand-woven sari industry in India. Economists are always saying that with any economic development, whether it be from trade liberalisation to industrialisation or realignment of an economy to a more beneficial industry, society will suffer some pain in the readjustment; but that the overall gain to society vastly makes up for it. One needs to only look at the lives that people in developed countries lead as proof of this.

    But, and it’s a big “But”, the reality of this suffering is not often brought to one’s attention often enough. In developing countries, like India, where so many people live in poverty, living off less then US$2 a day, such developments can mean the difference between surviving and absolute impoverishment.

    One would like to think that in this day and age societies would have developed mechanisms to help people who fall through the cracks of rapid development in third world countries. However it seems that we do not know enough about the intriquicies of industrialisation and development to properly predict these things and deal with them. Come to think of it people are still debating how to start and maintain such economic development in the first place let alone fully understanding it when it does happen.

    I agree with the article in that the hand-woven sari industry needs a good dose of marketing but what surprises me is how the NGOs and civil society groups doing the marketing are only marketing in India. It would make good sense to expand that marketing to foreign markets in places like the US, Europe, South America, ect.

    Whilst it is doubtful that even the most successful of marketing campaigns will help all the weavers it will certainly go a long way towards mitigating the problem.

    On the other hand there is also a darker side to the industry as discussed in this BBC article. Where due to the poverty of the parents and loan sharking by loom owners children are made into “bonded labourers” and forced to work for next to nothing; further entrenching them in poverty as they do not have to time to get even a basic education.

    This part of the industry must be dealt with and the marketing of hand woven sari’s must be done in a way that does not encourage this part of the industry.

    References:
    *An Ancient Indian Craft Left in Tatters: Washington Post
    *Misery of India's child sari weavers: BBC

  • South Africa: Political Party Threatens Local Blogger (Update3)

    This article in the South African Financial Mail (a weekly magazine) is a great update on the drama and exaggeration that some political parties in South Africa are committing regarding the accusation by an anonymous blogger about the sex lives of some of the country’s politicians and celebrities. Due to this incident some in SA are calling for, what I believe, extreme censorship in an attempt to control what people can say on the net.

    Read it here.

    http://secure.financialmail.co.za/07/0601/technology/atech.htm

  • YouTube: Bush on Global Warming and some Straight Talking – Spoofs by Will Ferrell



    They are oldies, from around November last year, but they just never seem to get old and are absolutely hilarious. I just love how Bush’s lack of knowledge and respect for truth is played up in these clips.

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