Showing posts with label Global Voices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Voices. Show all posts

Thursday, June 07, 2007

G8 Summit and TED Global Updates II: G8 meets the J8, African voices at the G8 Summit, TED Global Africa closes with success

Dateline Berlin 06/07/07 – Outside the Bunker and on the streets
Updates on the close of the TED Global Conference in Tanzania; G8 world leaders meet J8 world leaders in Heiligendamm; South African journalist asks who is listening to the voice of African women at the G8 Summit


This is just a quick Heads Up post to keep my readers informed on what’s hot and what’s not at the G8 Summit in Germany today. First the good news:

G8 leaders meets J8 youth leaders in a roundtable discussion at Heiligendamm. No violence reported (yet).

Germany’s ZDF TV network televised a 1-hour roundtable discussion between all of the G8 world leaders and 9 members of the J8 Summit youth leaders. It’s about the best live TV news coverage you will see come out of the Circus Maximus 2007 where the world leaders go one-on-one with some of the finest young minds on the planet. All G8 countries were represented by a young person selected by members of the J8 (Junior 8) Summit in Wismar, Germany. A 17-year old young man from Tanzania represented his country and the continent of Africa and was paired with the European Commission boss from Portugal (what’s his name? José Manuel Barroso). Links to all of the related online websites and a 59 minute video available for free viewing at the ZDF website are listed at the end of this post.

Nobody’s listening to African women’s voices at the anti-G8 Summit in Germany

South African journalist Zihnle Mapumulo, a member of the AfricaVox 2007 news team that I wrote about in my previous post, is complaining that nobody is seriously listening to Africa’s concerns at the G8 Summit. However, this may change because it’s still early in the Circus Maximus and some world leaders and anti-G8 demonstrators may start to pay attention. Patricia Daniel writes in a post for the OpenDemocracy blog project Womens Open Summit - Women talk to the G8:

There is a team of award-winning African journalists here covering the G8 summit and the alternative summit, in collaboration with the Panos Institute, on their blog AfricaVox 2007 .The aim is to see whether the G8 are really listening to African voices, as the official press service claims Germany is doing.

I spoke to Zinhle Mapumulo, a reporter with the Sowetan in South Africa, who covers health issues and has a weekly women’s page. Zinhle was inspired to go into the media by the one black woman television presenter working during apartheid, Noxolo Grootboom. After finally opting for print journalism, she has previously covered youth issues, lifestyle and women in enterprise as well as spending two years in her native province of Kwazulu Natal as bureau chief for Sowetan news. So, what’s her particular motivation in covering the G8 this year?

“Firstly I wanted the opportunity to experience the whole sandwich – the demos, the debates – and to ask all the questions we don’t get to ask back in South Africa. Then, as a woman, I feel there’s never any in-depth coverage of women: I want to know how do the G8 contributions, how do their pledges benefit me and my 2 year-old daughter – and other African women and their children - how is this process going to help us?”

Zinhle went out on the demo at the airport when Bush arrived Tuesday evening. “I wanted to see the action. We don’t get to see this kind of confrontation now in South Africa – the violence, the police. I wanted to talk to the demonstrators.” But she came away with some concerns. “They say they want attention from the world about Africa’s problems. But when I asked them, they don’t know anything about Africa. I felt it wasn’t genuine, they’re doing it for the hype, just to be a rebel.” She told one of them: “Your struggle is not about us, it’s about you. You should be feeling some kind of spiritual connection with us.” (Read more at AfricanVox 2007 blog)


TED GLOBAL 2007 - Africa: The Next Chapter closes with success (and tears)

My friend and blogging mentor Ethan Zuckerman (EZ) of the Global Voices project mentioned in several of my earlier posts sums up the feeling of many of our fellow blogger colleagues who have had the privilege of attending the TED Global 2007 conference in Arusha, Tanzania. This is an event that was eagerly awaited and followed by the international blogger community that writes about and follows news and issues on Africa. The conference was attended by Bono and other world figures and was carefully monitored by Gemany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel as well (I think?). You see, TED Global 2007 in Arusha, Tanzania and the G8 Summit in Germany are tightly linked and are (presumably) very supportive of one another. Ethan writes in his blog on the closing day of this excellent meeting of minds:

Former Nigerian finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala is the sort of visionary African leader everyone on stage and in the crowd would wish for Africa. She’s challenged with summing up four days of discussions on “Africa, the next chapter”.

She tells us we’re seeing changes in Africa that we never thought would happen. We’ve seen annual growth of 5%, in some cases 6-7%, up from 2%. External debt has been massively reduced. Countries are building up foreign exchange reserves, shoring up their currencies. Private investment flows are increasing, remittances to Nigeria are skyrocketing, and there’s a net inflow of capital.

But Africa needs jobs. 62% of Africa’s population is under 24. We have to figure out how to make these people productive. Nigeria is now building an opinion research organization, a way of listening to citizen voices, which she notes is a rare thing on the continent. The top issue in every survey? Jobs…

Just a few years ago, she tells us, we couldn’t even talk about “the next chapter” for Africa. There was negative economic growth. There’s been an amazing transformation, and this is something that’s allowed us to have our debate about aid versus the private sector. “It has been a simplistic debate.” It needs to be about “a partnership that involves governments, donors, private sector, and ordinary Africans.” It’s not trade or aid - “what is the combination of all these factors is going to yield results?”

African entrepeneur Mo Ibrahim dreams of the moment when Africa is giving aid. “But we’re already doing it - the UK and the US could not have been built without African aid. The resources - including human resources - have made those countries what they are today.” So when those countries are willing to give something back, we need to take it, but we need to use it effectively.

Okonjo-Iweala tells a story about growing up during the Nigeria-Biafra war. Her father was a brigadeer on the Biafran side, and her family was doing very badly, eating a single meal a day. When she was 15, her mother was ill, and her three-year old sister was deathly ill from malaria. She put her sister on her back and walked 10 kilometers to a clinic, where she’d heard there was a good doctor. When she arrived, there were a thousand people outside, trying to break down the door. She went to the side and climbed in through the window. The doctor told her she’d barely saved her sister - she gave the girl a shot of chloroquine, put her onto rehydration and within hours, she was back to health. “The ten kilometers home with her on my back, that was the shortest walk of my life.” The point of the story: “When someone is saving a life, you don’t care that it’s aid - you want the person to be alive.”
(Read more at Ethan’s blog on Madam Okonjo-Iweala’s powerful address at TED.)

That’s it for today folks. The weather has finally improved considerably here in northern Germany and my Staropramen pilsner is getting a bit too warm down at the local pub. I gotta go because I’m really thirsty. Auf Wiedersehen, bis Übermorgen. Ciao Bella...Mama mia!

Related articles and online resources

ZDF TV – Heute (daily news program) G8 Spezial
G8 in Minutentakt - G8 trifft J8 (multimedia plus 59:00 min streaming video)
J8 Gipfel in Wismar: “Wir wollen gehört werden” (ZDF feature article)
J8 Youth Summit in Wismar, Germany -Official J8 Summit website


G8 Summit 2007 at Heiligendamm official website (lots of stuff here boy)

OpenDemocracy blog – Women’s Open Summit - Women talk to the G8
Who is really listening to African women’s voices? by Patricia Daniel

AfricaVox 2007 – African voices at the G8 Summit in Heiligendamm
AfricaVox 2007: “We need the G8’s help in the fight against poverty and HIV”
Articles by South African journalist Zihnle Mapumulo

TED Global 2007 Conference in Arusha, Tanzania – TED Blog
TED Global bloggers look back at worldchanging days, 06/07/07
TED Global in Africa: Day 4, reports from the bloggers, 06/07/07
TED Global 2007 aggreagated articles from bloggers-in-residence

Ethan Zuckerman (Global Voices Online – Harvard)
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala with the last word on aid, 06/07/07


P.S. And what about the Bad News? There is no “Bad News” to report today. Think positive. Ciao y’all.


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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Debating (and blogging) Darfur: a Reuters Live Newsmakers event

Important (updated) post about the Darfur Crisis

Reuters News Service and Reuters AlertNet is holding a LIVE Newsmaker Event “Debating Darfur” at 15:30 Central European Time (09:30 Eastern North America Time). If I have understood correctly online video of the event will be available for viewing later in case you missed the LIVE webcast. Featured on the Reuters Debating Darfur expert panel will be the following personalities:

Ann Curry, NBC News anchorwoman (U.S.A.)

Mia Farrow, ex-actress and UN Goodwill Ambassador (U.S.A.)

Heidi Annabi, Assistant Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations (U.N.)

Lauren Landis, Senior Representative to Sudan, U.S. Department of State

Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad, Sudanese Ambassador to the U.N. (Sudan)

John Prendergast, Senior Advisor International Crisis Group, ENOUGH Project to Abolish Genocide and Mass Atrocities (U.S.A., Belgium)

Read more about this LIVE web event at the Reuters Newsmakers website:
Dealing with Darfur – what’s next?
______________________________________

O.K., what’s wrong with this lineup of international personalities? Well for one thing, it is not international in scope. Where are all of the journalists and diplomats and politicians and crisis experts and TV & film stars from the rest of the world? Isn’t the Crisis in Sudan an international problem and not just a U.S.A. vs. the Republic of Sudan problem? Where is Germany’s representative, China, Pakistan, The U.K., Malaysia, the Arab League representatives, and so on and so forth?

Let’s see what happens. At least the participation from CJ’s (Citizen Journalists) and online media publishers and blog authors and readers from around the globe should give some international perspective to this debate. In the meantime the refugees trying to survive in the desert heat, filth and squalor, and fear in the camps of Darfur and Chad keep waiting and waiting and waiting and dying and dying and dying while we debate the topic. Ich bitte Dich! Wirklich. Muss dass sein?

It’s been a (very) long time since I have written anything about the ongoing genocide and humanitarian crisis in Darfur, Sudan but today I read this important notice on Darfur at a fellow author’s blog, Grandiose Parlor II. Why have I stopped writing about Darfur? Because I’ve given up on the idea that the so-called “International Community” will actually do anything useful to end the conflict and do what has been so obvious to many people for the three long years of misery and suffering and death:

1. STOP THE GENOCIDE IN DARFUR BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY (Mohamad X).

2. STOP THE GOVERNMENT OF SUDAN AND ITS FINANCIAL BACKERS FROM KILLING ITS OWN PEOPLE FOR OIL AND LAND AND MILITARY SUPPORT.

3. STOP THE KILLING AND HELP THOSE MILLIONS OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN AND MEN (what’s left of the men and boys) RETURN TO THEIR LANDS.

4. STOP SUPPORTING THE GOVERNMENTS AND COMPANIES THAT ARE COMPLICIT IN THIS GENOCIDE. HOW?

a. BOYCOTT THE GENOCIDE GAMES IN BEIJING IN 2008. ATHLETES & FANS. NO GAMES FINANCED BY THE OIL FOR GENOCIDE IN DARFUR AND SOUTHERN SUDAN.


b. SEND A MESSAGE TO BEIJING AND MOSCOW AND OTHER CAPITALS SUPPORTING THE KHARTOUM REGIME THAT YOU HAVE HAD ENOUGH.

c. SEND A MESSAGE THAT EVERY GOVERNMENT FIGURE AND FOREIGN INVESTOR THAT SUPPORTS THE MURDEROUS REGIME IN KHARTOUM CAN UNDERSTAND. NO MORE MONEY FOR YOUR COUNTRY'S GOODS. NONE. ZIP. GAR NICHTS! DIVEST IN SUDAN NOW OR SUFFER THE CONSEQUENCES.

Remember, in the last century alone more than 100 million people died in violent conflicts worldwide, 60 million died at the hands of their own governments. And you know what people said? “If I had only known it was going on. I didn’t know. I feel so helpless and sad.” Well guess what, we know today, and we can stop it. Now!


BTW: What’s the deal on those Pakistani UN Peacekeepers trading “Gold for Guns” down in the Democratic Republic of Congo? Has anybody posed a question about this latest U.N. "Scandal in the Jungle" to Ms. Heidi Annabi of the U.N. Peacekeeping Ops Department? Non? Where is Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon on this scandal? Hiding under his desk, again?


Additional Resources and Related Stuff:

Reuters Darfur Newsmaker
http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/newsmakerDarfur

Council on Foreign Relations
Crisis Guide to Darfur (a powerful six-part multimedia special report)

Global Voices Online – African Voices

The Reuters/GVO LIVE Darfur Debate
Ndesanjo's LIVE blogging transcript of the Darfur Debate (Jikomboe blog)
Darfur: The Reality, The Agenda, and the Proposed Solution
Global Voices - Sudan posts (articles by global blog authors)

Black Looks
Blogging for Darfur (with perspectives from African scholars), 05/24/07

BBC News
China says Olympic boycott calls 'will fail', 05/18/07

RSF.org (Reporters without Borders - Paris)
Boycott Beijing in 2008 Campaign
(RSF is not focusing on the Sudan-China-Darfur connection, yet...)


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Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Just for Fun Meme: 5 Things About Me

There is meme going around the Africa sector of the blogosphere (and beyond?) and I’ve been invited by Fikirte at The Concoction to participate in the fun. Normally I turn these invitations down with some lame excuse but since it was Fikirte that asked I decided to go along.

Warning blogger friends and readers:
Don’t ask me to do something like this again. Pay particular attention to Item #1. Here is my response to Fikirte.


I just saw this meme reference to "Jewels in the Jungle" today Fikirte, sorry about the delay in responding. I almost never talk about myself at my blog but I am interested in giving it go with the "5 Things About Me" meme. Give me some time to buildup my courage. O.K., I'm ready.

5 Things About Me by BRE:

#1. I am a coward when it comes to some things...

#2. Hmmm, let me think. Oh yeah, I love to collect handmade art and crafts. As a matter of fact at one time I represented some of the best artists and craftspeople in Europe who created pieces from glass, wood, ceramic, and metal.

#3. I can't dance (well) even though I'm black. The girls of my younger years loved me anyway for my brains and kindness and most of all for my good lucks and my 1962 baby blue Chevy Impala convertable.

#4. I love to read books and have a fantastic collection but it takes me forever to finish a book. I read for pleasure mainly at night before I go to sleep and often lose my place while dozing off. Then I have to start all over again.

#5. I am a clean freak and everything has its place in my home but my office looks like something out of a Mad Professor film. I shop for groceries and can cook as well as a 5-star chef, I clean floors and windows and the bathroom, wash and iron, repair stuff around the house, you name it but I can't sew on a button without assistance.

Ironing clothes is my favorite form of meditation and I even iron & fold my undershorts. I guess that I'm much like the character Mr. Monk in that popular U.S. TV series by the same name when it comes to cleanliness and order but sometimes I behave like Louis Gosset Jr. in "An Officer and a Gentleman". We guys like to talk tough and be in charge, you know.

How am I doing? Want to know more? Forget it.


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