FEATURED PHOTOS AND STORIES

January 13, 2020

Two new flags will be flying high at the Olympic Games in Rio.

For the first time, South Sudan and Kosovo have been recognized by the International Olympic Committee. Kosovo, which was a province of the former Yugoslavia, will have 8 athletes competing; and a good shot for a medal in women's judo: Majlinda Kelmendi is considered a favorite. She's ranked first in the world in her weight class.

(South Sudan's James Chiengjiek, Yiech Biel & coach Joe Domongole, © AFP) South Sudan, which became independent in 2011, will have three runners competing in the country's first Olympic Games.

When Will Chile's Post Office's Re-open? 

(PHOTO: Workers set up camp at Santiago's Rio Mapocho/Mason Bryan, The Santiago Times)Chile nears 1 month without mail service as postal worker protests continue. This week local branches of the 5 unions representing Correos de Chile voted on whether to continue their strike into a 2nd month, rejecting the union's offer. For a week the workers have set up camp on the banks of Santiago's Río Mapocho displaying banners outlining their demands; framing the issue as a division of the rich & the poor. The strike’s main slogan? “Si tocan a uno, nos tocan a todos,” it reads - if it affects 1 of us, it affects all of us. (Read more at The Santiago Times)

WHO convenes emergency talks on MERS virus

 

(PHOTO: Saudi men walk to the King Fahad hospital in the city of Hofuf, east of the capital Riyadh on June 16, 2013/Fayez Nureldine)The World Health Organization announced Friday it had convened emergency talks on the enigmatic, deadly MERS virus, which is striking hardest in Saudi Arabia. The move comes amid concern about the potential impact of October's Islamic hajj pilgrimage, when millions of people from around the globe will head to & from Saudi Arabia.  WHO health security chief Keiji Fukuda said the MERS meeting would take place Tuesday as a telephone conference & he  told reporters it was a "proactive move".  The meeting could decide whether to label MERS an international health emergency, he added.  The first recorded MERS death was in June 2012 in Saudi Arabia & the number of infections has ticked up, with almost 20 per month in April, May & June taking it to 79.  (Read more at Xinhua)

LINKS TO OTHER STORIES

                                

Dreams and nightmares - Chinese leaders have come to realize the country should become a great paladin of the free market & democracy & embrace them strongly, just as the West is rejecting them because it's realizing they're backfiring. This is the "Chinese Dream" - working better than the American dream.  Or is it just too fanciful?  By Francesco Sisci

Baby step towards democracy in Myanmar  - While the sweeping wins Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy has projected in Sunday's by-elections haven't been confirmed, it is certain that the surging grassroots support on display has put Myanmar's military-backed ruling party on notice. By Brian McCartan

The South: Busy at the polls - South Korea's parliamentary polls will indicate how potent a national backlash is against President Lee Myung-bak's conservatism, perceived cronyism & pro-conglomerate policies, while offering insight into December's presidential vote. Desire for change in the macho milieu of politics in Seoul can be seen in a proliferation of female candidates.  By Aidan Foster-Carter  

Pakistan climbs 'wind' league - Pakistan is turning to wind power to help ease its desperate shortage of energy,& the country could soon be among the world's top 20 producers. Workers & farmers, their land taken for the turbine towers, may be the last to benefit.  By Zofeen Ebrahim

Turkey cuts Iran oil imports - Turkey is to slash its Iranian oil imports as it seeks exemptions from United States penalties linked to sanctions against Tehran. Less noticed, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in the Iranian capital last week, signed deals aimed at doubling trade between the two countries.  By Robert M. Cutler

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Thursday
Aug192010

INTERVIEW: WORLD HUMANITARIAN DAY - AN AID WORKER SPEAKS OUT

HUMNEWS’ Michael Bociurkiw has been working on and off as an aid worker for UNICEF since 2001. Here are excerpts from our interview with him on World Humanitarian Day.

 

Credit: Katie Grusovin

I have worked mostly as a Communication Officer - or spokesperson - both in emergencies and country office settings. Lately I have taken on more work in the donor relations and programmatic areas. I’ve also worked for a brief period as global spokesperson in Geneva. The 2005 Pakistan earthquake and the 2008 Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar are the two largest emergencies I’ve worked on. In both cases, the devastation was vast and millions were displaced.

UNICEF’s mission in more than 100 countries is to create a protective environment for women and children. The organization’s ability to respond quickly in major emergencies is well-known and usually focuses on health, water and sanitation, nutrition and child protection.

Previously I was a journalist, working for major media outlets in Canada and Asia. I was led to UNICEF by pure chance immediately after 9-11, when the Afghanistan emergency was taking hold. My only experience before that with UNICEF was carrying the UNICEF Trick-or-Treat box during Halloween as a kid growing up in Canada.

Most of my work has involved informing the media and donors about UNICEF’s interventions - both during emergencies and in our day-to-day work. I love working in emergencies as the needs are great and so is the adrenalin rush. It's not uncommon to work 16-18 hour days for very long periods under very trying conditions. You can feel the difference you are making. In the first few hours and days after an emergencies strikes, it's important to get the crucial details out - as well as photos and videos - to the media and donors as quickly as possible. Transparency and accuracy are paramount in our messages. We dont work alone: we work with other UN agencies, government, NGO’s, donors and others. In emergencies - such as the ongoing floods in Pakistan - we arent able to respond fully unless donations are extended and for this we normally issue an emergency appeal. UNICEF depends entirely on voluntary donations - from ordinary people, governments and corporations. (With one-fifth of Pakistan now under water, I urge donors to respond to the appeal for immediate resources).

My longest posting was in our East Jerusalem office, where I led the communication section. We worked primarily in Gaza and the West Bank and the challenges, to say the least, were daunting. I’ve also worked in Pakistan, Tajikistan, Africa, Southeast Asia - and for the Canadian and US fundraising arms of UNICEF.

It seems that, no matter where you look on the world map, the needs of women and children are great. While there are countries where some of the indices we normally track are worsening (i.e. maternal and infant mortality, HIV AIDS, nutrition, school enrollment), for the most part we are seeing quantifiable improvements. The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are due in 2015 - that’s not very far away - and there are many countries that will miss certain targets. What we are also finding is that as human development statistics are improving, there are still large groups of people - the poorest families, people in rural area, girls - that have been left behind. We often find ourselves scratching our heads, trying to find answers to vexing questions: why is it, for example, that despite free primary education, many boys and girls in rural Lesotho don't go to school?

I am often asked how I cope in emergencies - where you see some pretty gruesome scenes or where your life is often at risk. It's the encouragement and support of family and friends that keeps me going. UNICEF has no shortage of competent, well-meaning professionals and being able to work with the best in the business is a privilege.

For those of us in the communications business, I think what helps keep us going is that, as a spokesperson, you get in front of millions of viewers at a time and share with them what you are seeing, what we are doing as aid workers. We explain what people are going through, how many are affected, what the needs are and what UNICEF is doing to alleviate their suffering and keep them alive. It’s an important role to play and, in this 24-hour news cycle, you are often called upon anytime of day and night. Honesty and accuracy are crucial when you are on the air, and I think most people can tell if you are being evasive or are exaggerating. I've worked on many occasions with CNN, BCC, CBC and Al-Jazeera. CNN and CBC have been especially good to us - with air time and informed interviewers. I am glad that aid workers, journalists and technology people are now coming together to think up new, innovative ways to better cover the uncovered parts of the world - what HUM calls the "geographic gap" in news coverage.

Have I ever faced danger? Yes - I have fallen off a helicopter, been in the cross-hairs of snipers, searched at gunpoint on a Jerusalem highway, threatened by a gun-totting farmer in the Gaza Strip and sustained a bloody head injury in the desert in northern Nigeria. But my brains and limbs are still intact - and my heart is still in this!

Thankfully I havent lost any close colleagues, but we feel it deep down when anyone in the UNICEF family - or in the aid business for that matter - dies in the line of duty. I think about my compatriot and colleague,Chris Klein-Beekman died at the age of 32 in the bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad. Credit: UNICEFChristopher Klein-Beekman, who at 32-years-old, died in the line of duty in the 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad. His parents live near me on Vancouver Island and I really choked up when I met them for the first time. The recent killing of aid workers in northern Afghanistan - an area I am familiar with - was horrific and shocked many of us to the core.

On World Humanitarian Day, I think of people like Chris and his parents. I think of the young Pakistani women near Mansehra, cradling her terrified child after losing everything to the South Asian earthquake. I think of the farmers in the Irrawaddy Delta in Myanmar, their land inundated by salt water brought by an unforgiving Cyclone Nargis. And I think of the teenage girl I met in Kano State in Northern Nigeria, her limbs rendered lifeless because she didn't receive a polio vaccination.

We are often prevented from reaching beneficiaries by washed out roads, bad weather, road blocks, lack of air transport or heavy lift capacity, or violence started by state or non-state actors. It's important for us to be seen as neutral actors and to convince those in positions of power that we are there for one simple reason: to save lives. All kinds of live-saving materials pass through the cargo holds of airplanes we've managed to borrow, through the trucks we've leased and - ultimately through our hands and the hands of our partners: insecticide-treated bed nets, blankets, tents, water purification tablets, water pumps, high energy biscuits, syringes and medicines - you name it.

All-in-all, this career has exceeded my expectations by far. I count myself as extremely lucky and feel I have one of the best jobs in the world. On top of that I get to help people in need, help find solutions to their pressing problems. I am learning new things all the time, see the word and get to work with an awesome and diverse group of professionals!

 

Tuesday
Aug172010

EXCLUSIVE PHOTO ESSAY - Devastation in Pakistan - By Asad Zaidi

Pakistan faces an unprecedented humanitarian crises due to flash floods triggered by torrential rains that began three weeks ago. The floods have killed about 1,500 people, left approximately 20 million homeless and inundated 1.7 million acres (700,000 hectares) of wheat, sugar cane and rice crops, raising the prospect of food shortages in the coming months in the already-poor nation. The crisis could yet worsen, as authorities warn that the swollen Indus River may burst its banks again in the coming days. Freelance journalist and photographer Asad Zaidi brings to us a look at the devastation from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

 

A young boy stands in front of his destroyed house that was collapsed by heavy monsoon rains in Khwas Koorona village, Union council Pir Sabaq of Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

 

A man sifts through his belongings of his flood destroyed home in Pushtoon Garhi in Pabbi Union council of Nowshera district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan  

A young boy leads his donkey as he carries belongings retrieved from his home that was collapsed by heavy monsoon rains in Khwas Koorona village, Union council Pir Sabaq of Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

Young girls and boys sitting in their makeshift shelter located on the roadside after having abandoned their flood-destroyed homes in Pabbi Union council of Nowshera district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan

A resident walks past destroyed home that was collapsed by heavy monsoon rains in Sheenky village, Union council Mirza dher of Charsadda district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.  

A family walks through a flood affected street in Khwas Koorona village, Union council Pir Sabaq of Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.

Abbas Shah (2 years old) with his father in Khwas Koorona village, Union council Pir Sabaq of Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. They have lost everything when their house destroyed by heavy monsoon rains.

A young girl and her father sort out blankets salvaged from his flood-destroyed home in Pabbi Union council of Nowshera district, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.  

Pakistani flood affected girl waits in a crowd to receive donated food in Khwas Koorona village, Union council Pir Sabaq of Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan

 

- Source, HUM files, UN News  - Photography Asad Zaidi

 

Monday
Aug162010

REFLECTING ON RAMADAN IN CAIRO (PERSPECTIVE)

by Michael Bociurkiw in Cairo

(HN, August 16, 2010) - It's always a joy to return to Cairo during the holy month of Ramadan, which debuted last Wednesday and continues into September.

The streets seem calmer, without the usual impossible traffic and choking fumes. In the moments leading up to iftar - the meal that marks the end of the daily fast - a frenetic atmosphere takes hold as people rush to set up dining areas for impossibly large feasts.

This is a time for large, festive gathering of families and friends - with tables groaning under the weight of traditional dishes. Into the late hours of the night, many companies treat their employees and partners to large, elaborate, pre-dawn receptions known as Suhoor. One that I attended by the telecommunications giant, Mobinil, on the banks of the Nile River, even had a small shooting gallery to keep guests entertained!A Palestinian man prepares the traditional Ramadan sweet katayif in the West Bank town of Bethlehem. (Haythem Othman, Maan Images)

With all the family and corporate gathering in Egypt, it is said that the country is the only spot on the map in the Muslim world where people actually gain weight during the holy month of fasting!

I will remember this year’s Ramadan for an iftar I shared with a dear Egyptian friend at the El Sit Hosneya Restaurant in Cairo’s Dokki district. Aside from the food being outstanding, there was so much served that I took the leftovers to my friends at my next destination - it was enough to feed three adults and one toddler!

When I think of the Ramadan table I think of energy-packed dates, a milk drink filled with dried fruits and almonds, lentil soup, kubbe, moutabel, fattoush, babaganoush, hummus, labaneh, fresh salads and stews, falafel - and of course freshly-baked bread and kataiaf - or filed pancakes.

With the special dishes that fill a traditional Ramadan menu, it’s easy to see why people cant resist over-eating. But many say people have gone overboard.

Said an editorial in Egypt’s Al -Ahram: “Public consumption dramatically rises during Ramadan...it poses a huge financial burden on the average citizen and forces him sometimes to borrow to be able to buy the goods he wants, and satisfy the consumption culture which now controls our behaviour in Ramadan.

The consumption culture in Ramadan is not only in consuming more food, but also in wasting time and forgetting that Ramadan is the month of virtue and worship. It should not be the time for amusement and spending time in matters that distort the minds of our nation.”

Local observers say this year, Ramadan has been more subdued as families cut back on festivities due to the spiraling cost of meat and other products. Some critics say that opportunistic food traders deliberately raise prices during Ramadan as they know families have an obligation to feed their friends and the poor. Basic commodities such as sugar, rice and eggs are reportedly up by more than 40 percent over the past year in Egypt.

Combine sticker shock at the markets with unbearable heat, lack of power and growing disenchantment with government officials and you get some seriously unhappy people.

Spiraling costs have also reportedly forced soap opera producers - who vie for the peak viewing hours of Ramadan - to dump first tier talent for less expensive stars. For example, Donya Ghanem and Maged El-Kadwani will co-star in El-Kebir Awi (The Biggest of All) - a comedy about a village mayor who marries and American woman who gives birth to twins. It features humorous encounters between the two, one brought up in Upper Egypt and the other in America.

Also a surprise for visitors coming to Cairo this month is that huge swaths of the city are darkened at night due to electricity load management by the power authority. Due to a record-setting heat, the surge in demand for power has put a huge strain on the Egyptian capital’s creaky power system. The new system means that there are far fewer fanouss - or Ramadan decorations - to be seen in the middle of alleyways or by the doors of businesses in Cairo.

The lack of power will undoubtedly darken the TV screens of millions of television addicts who flock to their sets during Ramadan to watch the hundreds of hours of extra programming laid on by Arab terrestrial and satellite TV channels. Egyptian columnist Mohamed Sultan says that for one person to watch the 120 Egyptian and Arab TV series scheduled for the month, he would need 2,500 watching hours - leaving not much time for prayer and reflection.

Speaking of prayer - Egypt’s Minister of Endowment introduced measures this year to unify the five-time-a-day call to prayer by the start of Ramadan - by linking all of Cairo’s 4,500 mosques by a call transmitted from a radio station. The move is designed to reduce noise pollution but some see it as running against tradition.

Another change this year was brought about by a controversial, last minute move by the Government to ease the strain of fasting on the faithful - and on the electricity grid - by introducing a special one-month time change. The move was done to make Iftar - the traditional breaking of the fast - an hour earlier during the most hot and humid time of the year.

Al-Ahram columnist Youssef Rakha criticized the move, saying that once Eid al-Fitr - the feat that marks the end of the holy month - comes, Egypt returns to summer time for 20 days only, before switching again to winter time. “Who came up with this brilliant plan, nobody knows,” wrote Rakha.

In past Ramadans - whether here or in Jerusalem - I have sympathetically observed friends and colleagues struggle to adjust to the new sleeping and eating schedule. The faithful awake before daybreak to dine before beginning their daily fast. The first few days of Ramadan are difficult for those who work regular hours as their bodies adjust to the new regime.

Three years ago, during a visit to the Egyptian port city of Alexandria, a recall listening to a radio talk show where the manager of a large factory chastized his staff for using Ramadan as an excuse to decrease their output. While the manager said he sympathized with their plight, he stressed that it hurt his company’s standing with overseas buyers. Some offices - including many UN offices in the region - deliberately shorten the workday during Ramadan to allow those with families more time to prepare for iftar.

HUMNEWS' Michael Bociurkiw is Founder and Editor of Savvy Traveller - a member of the HUM CSR Co-op

Monday
Aug162010

HUMNEWS HEADLINES - August 16, 2010 (Africa and the Middle East)

AFRICA

African immigrants gravitating to China

The land rush doesn’t have to end in a poor deal for Africans

ALGERIA

Evangelization campaign: Foreign languages and visas to lure Algerians

Siddiqui: (commentary) De-encrypting hypocrisy of BlackBerry issue

Cuba’s cash-for-doctors program (opinion)  

ANGOLA

President highlights Congo’s contribution to national liberation

Chevron spends USD 20 million on social projects

“Angola key to understanding earth history”

Oil profits: Transparency should be strictly adhered to (commentary)

Lovers of African cinema remember Rui Duarte (entertainment)

BENIN

NAPTIP to prosecute 3 for human trafficking

BOTSWANA

Botswana will not deploy troops to Somalia

Takeover bid for African diamonds

BURKINA FASO

East Africa is under the spotlight as explorers search for mineral wealth  

CAMEROON

Public screenings of games in Ghana, Cameroon a big hit (sports)

DJIBOUTI

Translator’s Tales

EQUATORIAL GUINEA

POSCO ICT to manage water and sewage systems in Equatorial Guinea

Equatorial Guinea and Chile advance (sports)

ERITREA

Exiled Eritreans hail Ethiopia’s out-of-camp policy shift

Milking fog: the science of collecting drinking water  

Sinai traffickers gun down four migrants

GABON

Gabon to get $4.5bn Asian investment

GHANA

Will Ghana choose China over ExxonMobile for Kosmos’ jubilee stake?

Ghana: Kufuor’s ‘secret children’, new youth policy dominate Ghana media

Selective justice in Ghana – says Nana Darkwah the Seer (commentary)  

LESOTHO

Every reason to be proud (sports)

LIBERIA

Liberia: A nation of receivers (opinion)

Liberians confident of 3rd appearance in CFA’s finals (sports)

CBL Inaugurates banking institute  

Bad roads affect sub-regional economic growth

LIBYA

Libya: BP to start drilling by October

Nigeria, Libya mend diplomatic ties

Libya: new oil well found  

MALAWI

197 people died from measles in Malawi since January

Kamwendo quits Flames (sports)  

MOZAMBIQUE

Mozambique’s Central bank to pay fuel imports

Phone glitch reported in central, northern Mozambique

Portugal’s Portucel plans on second factory in Mozambique

Germany supports Mozambican education sector

NIGER

Niger gets tough on ‘pure water’ producers  

NIGERIA

Unlike the Gulf, Niger Delta oil spills have no end in sight

QATAR

Qatar cuts key deposit rate to boost economy

WOQOD – Qatar fuel achieves 34% increase in net profit

SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE

Commercial importance of existing hydrocarbons in Sao Tome and Principe to be known in due time

Sao Tomean Premier praises Angola’s role in sub-region  

SIERRA LEONE

Sierra Leone and the white shoppers’ burden

SUDAN

Darfur kidnappers file demands to release Jordan’s peacekeepers

Egypt, Sudan urged to sign Nile pact

Sudan claims Ugandan land, halts construction  

SWAZILAND

Swaziland’s press proves loyal to the king

We need to have pride in our system (commentary)

UGANDA

Trauma needs serious address by the government (commentary)

YEMEN

Yemen, World Bank fighting QAT addiction among youth

Obama’s multigenerational shadow war (opinion)

US admits military involvement in striking al-Qaida in Yemen, embarrassing Yemen gov’t

Yemen says new gas discoveries in several oil sectors to mull investment  

Monday
Aug162010

HIV Rising Fastest in Eastern Europe; Central Asia: UNICEF

(HN, August 16, 2010) - Confirming what has been observed for quite some time, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) has identified the Eastern Europe and Central Asian regions as Ground Zero of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.Young people are disproportionately impacted by HIV AIDS in the region. Credit: UNICEF Ukraine

In a 68-page report titled Blame and Banishment, the authors blame drug abuse, high-risk sex and social stigma for increasing the incidence of HIV/AIDS.

The region has 3.7m drug users, nearly a quarter of the global total, an over 1 million street children, according to the report, which was released at the XVII International AIDS Conference in Vienna last month.

"Eastern Europe and Central Asia are the only parts of the world where the HIV epidemic remains clearly on the rise. Increases of up to 700 per cent in HIV infection rates have been found in some parts of the Russian Federation since 2006," says the report.

In the region, young people disproportionately bear the brunt of the epidemic: one third of new HIV infections are among the 15–24 age group and more than 80 per cent of people living with HIV are under 30 years old. Women now account for some 40 per cent of new cases compared to just 24 per cent under a decade ago,

Access to treatment is an enormous problem in the region. Only 24 percent of those in need of treatment In Eastern Europe and Central Asia receive it - the world's second lowest ratio of treatment coverage, said UNICEF Executive Director Tony Lake as the report was being released.

HIV and AIDS is growing faster in Ukraine and Russia than anywhere else outside Africa. According to UNAIDS, Ukraine has the most severe AIDS epidemic in Europe. If progress isn't stepped up soon, the adult prevalence rate could reach a staggering 3.5 per cent by 2014.

Friday
Aug132010

(HUMMONEY) - (Carolina’s Library) – (A BOOK REVIEW) 

(VIA: Amazon)

Your Credit Score: Your Money & What’s at Stake by Liz Pulliam Weston

(FT Press, May 2009)

It’s been said that love makes the world go ‘round. Well, actually, it’s credit.

We live in a global economy that depends on credit in order to make things work. Those of us in the business also refer to this as leverage. Not only are private enterprises, municipal and federal governments, and all of our large banks built on the foundation of leverage; individuals require it in order to buy the goods and services deemed both necessary and simply desirable.

And while we could talk ad nauseam about what caused the current credit crisis—not to mention what to do about it—the bottom line for the individual investor is that your personal credit score holds the power to shape your financial future. Period. Whether you call FICO a four-letter word because it has meant the demise of your financial life as you once knew it, or you savor its three-digit number because it has allowed you to move towards financial freedom: your credit score can literally determine your long-term success as an investor and as one seeking financial independence and freedom. This is heavy stuff.

This was the major takeaway I gleaned from Liz Pulliam Weston’s Your Credit Score: Your Money & What’s at Stake. I had never before fully respected and appreciated its value. Fearing that a book written entirely about credit scores might have the emotional appeal of sawdust, I was most pleasantly surprised to learn both the facts about credit scores and as importantly, the myths about scores, and how separating fact from fiction has the potential to impact one’s long-term financial future. This book is particularly needed today! Weston states: “Although most people had heard of credit scores, I’d found relatively few really understood the pervasive impact these numbers have in our financial systems and our day-to-day lives.”

Of course, pre-credit Crisis, most of us took our credit scores for granted. During the go-go years, we pretty much bought whatever we wanted, whether we needed it or could afford it. Or not. Our credit score was just one more piece of information woven into the fabric of our financial quilt. Other facets of our lives were examined with the same degree of intensity: our professional job titles, our income, assets, liabilities and long-term prospects for prosperity. But in today’s world, our credit scores can make or break us, literally, allowing us to live out the life we had imagined or depriving us from that dream entirely. For a poor credit score wipes out options, leaving us holding the leftovers of our hopes and dreams instead of the fullest possible package imaginable.

Consider that in 2007, before the Crisis, auto lenders approved two out of three borrowers with poor credit scores. By mid-2008, they were approving less than one in four applications from potential buyers who simply had bad credit. Mortgages became difficult to acquire as well. Today, home equity lines of credit, or HELOC’s, have all but disappeared. No bank wants to assume the liability, even for people with great credit. The rules of engagement have changed, and you need to learn how to participate to your best advantage.

Weston has enthusiasm for this subject area and desires to help you understand why your credit score matters, how it is calculated, how you can use it to buy the goods and services that you desire, and how you can repair yours should it need a major revision. If you’ve suffered through a credit disaster, Weston will lead you down the path towards reconstruction. If you’ve had your identity stolen, as I have along with the estimated nine to ten million people per year who have fallen prey to this crime, you will learn how to go about re-building your good credit and protecting yourself from further fraud. In fact, Weston’s chapter titled “Identity Theft and Your Credit” was one of the most practical; anyone who has endured the frustrating and time-consuming pathway towards restoration will learn the exact steps needed in order to make things right again.

Lastly, Weston debunks the ten most commonly-held myths about credit scores, surprising readers like me who assumed that, as financial service professionals, we really understood these things.

  • Does closing out credit card accounts help or hurt your score?
  • Do you raise or lower your score by asking your credit card company to lower your limits?
  • What’s the truth about checking your own credit report and its effect on your score?
  • Does shopping around for the best rate affect your score?
  • Do you need to use credit in order to get a good score?
  • Do you need to pay interest to get a good score?
  • If you have an unresolved dispute with your lender, does sending in some of your sample writing help or hinder your score?
  • Do you need to edit your closed accounts with verbiage in order to not get whacked on your score?
  • Which is worse for your score: credit counseling or bankruptcy?
  • Can you ever fully recover from bankruptcy?

This is recommended reading not only for investors who are looking into making a major purchase in the near future and who might be overly concerned with scoring; this is recommended for every investor who wants to learn and understand the truth about credit in order to better plan for long-term financial empowerment. Thumbs up to Liz for enthusiastically pointing us all in the right direction.

---The author is Carolina Fernandez, vice president of investments at Source Capital Group and founder of the SHEeo network at The Cornell Club.

Thursday
Aug122010

HUMNEWS HEADLINES - August 12, 2010 (The Caribbean) 

ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA

Wendy’s chain to expand into the Caribbean

Nicaragua finds huge patron in Venezuela’s Chavez

BAHAMAS

Over 500 illegal immigrants nabbed in two weeks

Discrepancy between FBI, Bahamas police over ‘Barefoot Bandit’ reward

Medical tourism has landed in the Bahamas

Mixed fortunes for Ja at Carib Volleyball (sports)

Tar heels light up in the Bahamas (sports)

Tigers learning who’s got game in the Bahamas (sports)  

Bahamas government in talks for regional Judo training center (sports)

BARBADOS

T&T teams tackle Barbados (sports)

West Indies Cricket Players Association slam board (sports)  

Shropshire man in plea for help to open garden safe

BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS

LIME makes US$100m investment

Digicel sponsored rugby team performs creditably in Caribbean tournament (sports)

Willock & Parker no longer part of BVIEC tendering process  

CAYMAN ISLANDS

Farming to be third leg of the economy

Fund director stole $19m

PPM opposes sixth minister

Airports Authority conducts emergency drill  

GRENADA

LAIT settles with Grenada workers

JAMAICA

Jamaica’s renewed trade policy

MARTINIQUE

Dengue : le risque d'épidémie en métropole reste faible

NETHERLANDS ANTILLES

Family denied permission to homeschool in Curacao, Netherlands Antilles

PUERTO RICO

VoIP Innovations launches origination in Puerto Rico, Hawaii

Rowdies tie Puerto Rico 1-1 in US soccer federation division 2  

SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS

PM Douglas points out benefits of VAT

SAINT VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES

Women legislators of the Americas meet in Ecuador

 

Wednesday
Aug112010

THE POST WORLD CUP MOOD IN SOUTH AFRICA (Perspective)

By Roxy Marosa

(HN, August 11, 2010) -- Many South Africans seem to be proud of the upbeat mood generated by the World Cup 2010. After all, it was the first time that the world’s most watched sporting event was hosted on African soil. It was also a coming out party of sorts for cool South Africa, for a post-apartheid country yearning to shake off years of being seen an ostracized state.

South African President Jacob Zuma said the World Cup is "the single greatest opportunity we have ever had to showcase our diversity and potential to the world."

National and regional governments spent an estimated 40 billion rand ($5.2 billion) to host the games. When all is said and done it could boost economic growth in South Africa by as much as 0.5 percentage points this year.

On the first day of the World Cup on June 11, many companies closed early allowing for their employees to join in the festivities. Some people described this day to be more festive than Christmas or New Year’s day.

A white Afrikaner friend, Sandra Barr, who owns a modelling agency, said she and her husband, James, did something June 11 they’d never contemplated doing before. They travelled by train from their safe suburb of Bellville - about 20kms west of Cape Town - to one of the main fan parks in the city. Sandra says the mood on the train was surprising, with people chatting amicably.

Even though they were of a different race and colour, the camaraderie on the train got everyone interacting with each other. This is something they had not witnessed in years, given South Africa’s racial historical background.

Arriving in Cape Town, Sandra and James walked through the streets, taking in the festive mood. They even treated themselves to a traditional Cape Malay meal – Vetkoek (a traditional Afrikaner pastry) and curry mince, and ate while walking in the street – all unusual to them. They felt safe and later took the train back to Bellville.

Being enthusiastic rugby fans who always have season tickets, Sandra said they rarely watched soccer games from home. Many rugby fans not keen on soccer say that during the World Cup, they actually enjoyed the soccer more than the concurrent rugby games. Some say that they are still surprised at their newfound curiosity and love for a game that has been traditionally embraced by black South Africans.

In the immediate aftermath of the World Cup, one could still hear the vuvuzela’s been blown as pedestrians were walking in the streets. Of course this happened a lot during the eight weeks the World Cup was being played in our country. 

Even though it’s now been almost a month since Spain’s Andres Iniesta scored his victorious goal over the Netherlands in Johannesburg’s Soccer City, many people say that they are still recovering from the hectic socialising and outdoor life of the World Cup. I have spotted some cars still driving around with the South African flag, a patriotic symbol that was commonly seen during the games period. Yet some people miss the ‘vibe’ and the mood. In the streets, the improvements are visible and many people are glad to be enjoying the roads, train links, new signage and other upgrades that brought our cities up to world class standards. 

Though not everyone had smiles during this euphoric period. Some businesses took a knock, and one of the activities forced to cease during this time was filming in public areas. That meant the film industry - which employs 30,000 people and has an annual turnover of more than R2.65 billion - and especially production of commercials, took a painful hit. Sandra said her agency had little to no work coming in for her models and talents. Some agencies are said to have closed down. Fortunately, the challenges she experienced in the years previous running her business were great lessons for her to manage in this challenging time. 

Clearly, the socialising and the hustle and bustle of the World Cup encouraged many people to spend a lot of money during this time. The street dwellers also seem to have benefited from people’s generosity, although they are still living in the streets. 

In short, the World Cup was a badly-needed shot in the arm for a country mired in tough economic times. It also demonstrated that a once-divided South Africa can come together. 

As retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu said during the World Cup: “Yet again we've been shown just how we are a rainbow people..that we are there for one another."

---Cape Town-based Roxy Marosa is host of the Roxy Marosa Show and runs several projects assisting people affected by HIV and Aids in South Africa

Tuesday
Aug102010

(HUMMONEY) - THE DEVALUATION OF KNOWLEDGE (Perspective)

“Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”  - Winston Churchill

We just finished the worst decade ever for stock market performance. What did you learn from it? What changes have you made? Before you answer these questions you probably should be able to answer the most basic question: Why did it happen? With that knowledge in hand maybe then you can answer the prior two questions and plot a new more profitable future.

There has been a lot of coverage and opinions about why the last decade’s investment performance was historically terrible. The reasons given cover all the traditional topics such as debt levels, politics, policy, war, terrorism, excessive risk taking, etc. These all have a place but in our assessment are terribly incomplete. We say this because if you look back at many different market cycles, combinations of these factors were always present and never did they result in such calamitous results. So what was unique to this period of time that could have made the financial performance so much worse than all the previous market cycles?  We believe that it was the change in the market place itself that was the cause of the poor performance. We are referring to the explosion of information, instant access, available to everyone everywhere 24/7.

Prior to the year 2000 broadband penetration of US households was approximately 3%. In the following 5 years penetration climbed to 60% and now is above 80%. The standards for 3G wireless communications were not even established until 1999, and the first 3G phone was introduced in Japan in October 2001. The first Blackberry 2- way pager was brought to market in 1999 and their first smart phone arrived in 2002. And we are all familiar with the pace of wireless adoption that followed these and many other 3G wireless devices to come. So the primary tools used in the ubiquitous distribution of rich media and content - broadband for the internet and 3G wireless phones - arrived just at the start of the decade and rapidly expanded in the following years.

Wall Street is a market place where knowledge is sold for profit. Since profits in this arena are black and white the price a client had been willing to pay could be quite handsome. When it comes to knowledge its value is inversely proportional to the number of people who share it: the fewer that share useful information the more valuable it is. And this is how the internet hijacked Wall Street. The old model relied on in depth research into companies, industries and markets to generate insight, but now the internet makes it virtually impossible to limit the distribution of the knowledge product to just those willing to pay.  Information now finds its way to the net and then explodes exponentially. As it does it depreciates rapidly in value. Therefore, if you can’t charge a reasonable price for your efforts, why invest money and resources in generating the product? In my way of thinking, knowledge has been devalued and in exchange we now produce and distribute information (facts and figures with a thin layer of opinion spread on top), which has very little investment value. As my father told me, you get what you pay for. The natural response of Wall Street and the investors they service is to try to capitalize on the more modest value of information through rapid fire high volume trading. Now the process in pursuit of profit is trying to capture pennies versus the old model which focused on dollars.   

A second by-product of the post internet environment is that Wall Street is now both servicing investors and competing with them. Not only are they in the business of collecting fees and commissions but in a move to capitalize on the post knowledge revolution they have become amongst the biggest traders of securities for their own account.  Now you pay the house while you compete with the house in a game where you are chasing pennies in timeframes measured in seconds. And you wonder why returns disappeared for the past decade. My advice, find a new casino…fast.

So investors must now decide if they will choose to learn from history or be doomed to repeat it.

---The author, HUMMoney editor Greg Lewin is currently a General Partner at TLF Capital, an investment management firm. He also is founder of Wall4Main, a financial information website dedicated to helping investors help themselves. During the past 26 years he has been a senior money manager or partner in Wall Street firms including Neuberger Berman, Charter Oak Partners and Sailfish Capital.  

Monday
Aug092010

(HEADLINES) - Asia and the Pacific - August 9/10, 2010 

American Samoa

Spending outweighs revenue in American Samoa

Bhutan

A Fresh Start: refugees from Bhutan arrive in the UK

The Housing Problem – A Public-Private Solution (Perspective)

Brunei Darussalam

Four Bruneian women honoured for achievements at the “Womens’ Forum”

Big or small, a business must have a conscience (Perspective)

Cocos Island

Regulator tightens rules on remote-island fuel demands

Cook Islands

Fiery end to Parliament session

Cook Islands: On island time in paradise

East Timor

Indonesia, Portugal to step up ties, assist Timor Leste development

A barbed-wire election campaign in Australia and the “East Timor” solution (Perspective)

Fiji

Fiji splits Pacific region (Analysis)

Fiji to chair UN committee on Pacific Island Representation

French Polynesia

Assessing the Pacific Islands Forum Outcomes For French Polynesia (Analysis)

Guam

Fena Reservoir Low; Navy Declares Water Conservation Level 3

Laos

Laos speeds up construction of power plants

Vietnamese youth volunteers visit remote areas of Laos

Macau

Work on Macau light railway to start at beginning of 2011

Macau records 778 new companies in Q2

Maldives

Maldives almost ended up without its Supreme Court

Maldives keen to import Bangladeshi sands

Marshall Islands

Republic of Marshall Islands Sign Pacific Petroleum Project MoU

Micronesia

Micronesian leaders launch green energy initiative

New Caledonia

Lagoons of New Caledonia 

Don't miss: Melanesian Arts Festival

NIUE Island

Niue declared a republic in Shanghai Expo gaffe

Norfolk Island

Fishers sore over restricted zones in Coral Sea

Norfolk Island: Where time stands still

North Korea

Floods hit North Korea

Northern Marianna Islands

Small reactor a nuclear solution for Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands

Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands librarians learn how to make libraries relevant to the times

Palau

Palau wins support for whale sanctuary

Papua New Guinea

PNG working on sewage issues to tackle cholera

West Papua Longing for Freedom (Perspective)

Pitcairn

Economy thriving on Pitcairn Island

Samoa

Pacific nation media owners set up new body

Students help deliver Samoa's presence at the World Expo

Solomon Islands
Tribute to Solomon Islands women – a high cost in the rise to the top

Former Solomons’ rebel wins seat as lawmaker after serving prison term for his violent past

Upsets throw Solomons’ election wide open, leading to questions of next prime minister  

Tokelau

Airstrip not a priority

Studies show coconut oil good for the heart; Tokelau islands derive 35% dietary fat from coconut oil

Tonga

NZ parliamentarians in Tonga to explain democracy

Tonga’s PM says further steps needed to protect regional fish stocks

First anniversary of Tonga ferry sinking

Tuvalu Island

Mass migration as a result of environmental changes

Vanuatu

PIF: Vanuatu stands alone on West Papua human rights violations

Wallis and Futuna

Wallis and Futuna authorities say electricity crisis resolved

Sunday
Aug082010

HUMNEWS - Photo's of the week - August 8, 2010 

 Pakistan Floods: An estimated 13 million Pakistanis affected by the worst floods in the country’s history are bracing from more misery as heavy rains further bloat rivers and streams. Many aid agencies have already begun to respond to the situation. Approximately 1600 people have died. (SOURCE: Irish Times)

Mongolian neo-Nazis: Anti-Chinese sentiment fuels rise of ultra-nationalismAlarm sounds over rise of extreme groups such as Tsagaan Khass who respect Hitler and reject foreign influence. (SOURCE: The Guardian)

 

 

 

 

Russia fires: The capital city of the Russian Federation is covered in thick smog, based on reports from Moscow. The problem is reportedly causing several businesses and schools to close down due to health risks. Moscow has a population of some 10 million people, about the same as the entire population of Hungary. A thick blanket of smog was allegedly caused by uncontrollable ongoing peat fires burning just outside the capital. The problem is also disrupting air traffic at major airports. Television coverage showed how commuters and residents wear masks and ambulances and paramedics are reportedly also on alert as summer temperatures reached 40C. At the same some 700 wildfires are raging in various parts of the country due to the severe drought. (SOURCE: The Budapest Report)

 

 

 

 

  Kashmir flash floods: At least 115 people confirmed dead and about 412 injured in flash floods near Leh on Thursday night news has also come in that 25 Army jawans in the area are missing after their posts and houses were washed away, Army sources said. (SOURCE: Indian Express/ PHOTO: Video Grab - PTI/Doordarshan)

 

 

 

 

Jamaica Dengue fever: Health Minister Rudyard Spencer told journalists at a press briefing at Jamaica House in Kingston this week that of the 77 cases, seven have been confirmed as of the more severe form of the illness -- the dengue haemorragic fever. Spencer, however, said no cases of dengue shock syndrome have been reported so far nor any related deaths. The health ministry, said Spencer, is on high alert in light of the growing number of cases of dengue fever and dengue haemorragic fever in the country and region. Consequently, he said, all parishes have intensified their fogging and oiling activities. Fogging is being carried out in approximately 800 communities across the island. (SOURCE: The Jamaica Observer)  

Kyrgyzstan protests: The authorities in Kyrgyzstan's southern city of Osh have prevented a mass protest against the deployment of an international police force in the Osh and Jalal-Abad regions, RFE/RL's Kyrgyz Service reports. Sonunbek Junusbaev, one of the activists who planned the protest, told RFE/RL that the Osh commandant ordered the removal of a yurt -- the traditional Kyrgyz nomadic dwelling -- from in front of a local theater on August 4. The protest organizers had set up the yurt earlier this week as a symbol of their protest. The 52 unarmed international police are expected to arrive in Osh and Jalal-Abad in early September to accompany police on patrols, engage in training and advising local police, and to monitor the human rights situation. The OSCE and the Kyrgyz government decided to send the police mission in an effort to restore order after clashes between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz killed at least 356 people and uprooted hundreds of thousands more in June. International human rights groups have reported that Kyrgyz police and other security forces are arbitrarily detaining ethnic Uzbeks and also beating them.The OSCE police are to stay in the southern regions for four months (SOURCE: Radio Free Europe)

  Aura Borealis: NASA announced the discovery of a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) on August 1, 2010. The CME resulted from a class C3 solar flare and was aimed towards Earth. The coronal mass ejection should reach Earth on the night of August 3/4, 2010. The CME will cause a higher than normal possibility of aurora, also called northern lights, activity on the evening of August 3 and the morning of August 4. During a CME the Sun releases high energy charged particles, protons and electrons. When these particles, particularly the electrons, interact with atoms in Earth's upper atmosphere they cause northern and southern lights, which are more properly called the aurora borealis and the aurora australis. Earth's magnetic field causes the auroral displays to be more easily visible near the north and south magnetic poles, but in extreme cases aurora can be visible at lower latitudes. (SOURCE: Examiner.com)

Africa broadband: The East African Submarine System (EASSy) undersea cable, which now has an upgraded 3,84-Tb/s design capacity, has entered commercial operation, ahead of schedule and about 10% below its budgeted $300-million in capital expenditure.Dr Angus Hay, the chief technology officer of Neotel – one of the consortium of investors in the cable – on Thursday announced that the undersea cable had started commercial operations on July 30.The launch of the EASSy cable follows a year after the 1,28-Tb/s Seacom cable, which also runs along Africa’s East Coast, went live on July 23, 2009.The EASSy cable, which has a 25-year life, connects South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, Djibouti and Sudan with multiple other submarine cable networks from Europe, Asia, the Middle East and the Americas. (SOURCE: Engineering news)

Cluster bomb ban: Effective Aug.1, an international treaty bans the cluster bomb, one of the world’s worst hazards for millions of farmers. To date, 108 countries have signed and 38 have ratified the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans the production, use, stockpiling or transfer of cluster bombs. No country suffers the hazards of cluster bombs more than Laos. Per capita, it’s the most heavily bombed country on earth. Up to 30 percent of all bombs dropped on Laos did not detonate. They remain in the soil today, deadly as ever. (SOURCE: The Faster Times)

 

 

Salvador Dali moves to Andorra: The Salvador Dali sculpture, the ‘Nobility of Time’ has been placed in Andorra’s capital city, in the Piazza Rotonda Andorra la Vella. It was donated to the Andorran government by Enric Sabater, who was Dali’s agent, collaborator and confident between 1968 and 1982. The stunning five meter high sculpture has been placed in the city’s most prestigious and historic square, in the towns oldest quarter which dates from the twelfth century. The bronze sculpture is one of the melted watch series of sculptures which was created by Dali to symbolise the passage of time. The soft melting watch is draped around a tree trunk; atop the watch face is a crown, symbolising time’s master over humanity. Beniamino Levi, President of the Stratton Foundation and curator of over eighty Dali exhibitions worldwide, has expressed his approval of the donation and is delighted that the sculpture is now the main artistic attraction in Andorra la Vella. “It is going to be one of the major attractions of the capital and of the country”, pointed out the town’s parish minister Antoni Armengol, who described the donation as akin to ‘a Christmas present in the summer’. Andorra’s minister of Education Culture and Youth, Susanna Vela agrees that the sculpture is certainly , ‘a great point of attraction’. The sculpture ‘ Nobility of Time’ has also been displayed in other European locations such as London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna and most recently Courcheval, France.  (SOURCE: artdaily.org)

 

Friday
Aug062010

HUMNEWS HEADLINES - August 6, 2010 (North and South Oceans) 

Thursday
Aug052010

HUMNEWS HEADLINES - August 5, 2010 (The Americas) 

Wednesday
Aug042010

UNESCO Names New Heritage Sites in Marshall Islands, Tajikistan and Kiribati

The 34th session of the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO ended yesterday in Brazil. A total of 39 sites were considered for inscription on the World Heritage List.
It inscribed sites in Saudi Arabia, Australia, India, Islamic Republic of Iran and, for the first time, a site in the Marshall Islands to the UNESCO World Heritage List. A cultural site was added in Tajikistan, and a new natural site was added in Kiribati.

Bikini Atoll (Marshall Islands)© UNESCO/Eric Hanauer, Bikini Atoll

In the wake of World War II, in a move closely related to the beginnings of the Cold War, the United States of America decided to resume nuclear testing in the Pacific Ocean, on Bikini Atoll in the Marshall archipelago. After the displacement of the local inhabitants, 67 nuclear tests were carried out from 1946 to 1958, including the explosion of the first H-bomb (1952). Bikini Atoll has conserved direct tangible evidence that is highly significant in conveying the power of the nuclear tests, i.e. the sunken ships sent to the bottom of the lagoon by the tests in 1946 and the gigantic Bravo crater. Equivalent to 7,000 times the force of the Hiroshima bomb, the tests had major consequences on the geology and natural environment of Bikini Atoll and on the health of those who were exposed to radiation. Through its history, the atoll symbolises the dawn of the nuclear age, despite its paradoxical image of peace and of earthly paradise. This is the first site from the Marshall Islands to be inscribed on the World Heritage List.

 

Sarazm (Tajikistan)© UNESCO/Ainura Tentieva, Sarazm

Sarazm, which means “where the land begins”, is an archaeological site bearing testimony to the development of human settlements in Central Asia, from the 4th millennium BCE to the end of the 3rd millennium BCE. The ruins demonstrate the early development of proto-urbanization in this region. This centre of settlement, one of the oldest in Central Asia, is situated between a mountainous region suitable for cattle rearing by nomadic pastoralists, and a large valley conducive to the development of agriculture and irrigation by the first settled populations in the region. Sarazm also demonstrates the existence of commercial and cultural exchanges and trade relations with peoples over an extensive geographical area, extending from the steppes of Central Asia and Turkmenistan, to the Iranian plateau, the Indus valley and as far as the Indian Ocean.

 

Phoenix Islands Protected Area (Kiribati)© UNESCO/Gregory Stone, The Phoenix islands

The Phoenix Island Protected Area (PIPA) is a 408,250 sq.km expanse of marine and terrestrial habitats in the Southern Pacific Ocean. The property encompasses the Phoenix Island Group, one of three island groups in Kiribati, and is the largest designated Marine Protected Area in the world. PIPA conserves one of the world’s largest intact oceanic coral archipelago ecosystems, together with 14 known underwater sea mounts (presumed to be extinct volcanoes)  and other deep-sea habitats. The area contains approximately 800 known species of fauna, including about 200 coral species, 500 fish species, 18 marine mammals and 44 bird species. The structure and functioning of PIPA’s ecosystems illustrates its pristine nature and importance as a migration route and reservoir. This is the first site in Kiribati to be inscribed on the World Heritage List.
- Staff, UNESCO
Tuesday
Aug032010

“Broadband Liberation” (PERSPECTIVE) 

--- by Shashi Tharoor

NEW DELHI – In July, I was among 30 men and women from around the world – government ministers, bureaucrats, technologists, and strategic thinkers – who gathered at the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) in Geneva to discuss how broadband can transform the world for the better. This “Broadband Commission” met under the Chairmanship of Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and the Mexican communications mogul Carlos Slim.

The ITU, a United Nations body, established the Commission in partnership with UNESCO, and the joint chairmanship was no accident. The UN recognizes that if the information revolution is to advance further, it will take a public-private effort. As ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré has put it, “In the twenty-first century, affordable, ubiquitous broadband networks will be as critical to social and economic prosperity as networks like transport, water, and power.”

The Swiss writer and playwright Max Frisch once dismissed technology as “the art of arranging the world so that we need not experience it.” Today, however, technology is essential to effective participation in our world. And, although mankind cannot live by technology alone, the information revolution has liberated millions of people.

Information is liberating in the traditional political sense of the term: the spread of information has had a direct impact on the degree of accountability and transparency that governments must deliver if they are to survive.

It is also liberating economically. Information technologies are a cost-effective form of capital. Estonia and Costa Rica are well-known examples of how information-access strategies can help accelerate output growth and raise income levels.

Some of the least developed countries, such as Mali and Bangladesh, have shown how determined leadership and innovative approaches can, with international support, connect remote and rural areas to the Internet and mobile telephony, thereby helping to liberate subsistence farmers who were previously tied to local knowledge and local markets. Likewise, mobile networks are delivering health services to the most remote areas of India.

One successful UNESCO initiative is the creation of multipurpose community telecenters throughout the developing world, providing communication and information facilities – phone, fax, Internet, computers, audio-visual equipment – for a wide range of community uses. India’s Unique Identification Number project, under the capable stewardship of information-technology pioneer Nandan Nilekani, will enable access to government, banking, and insurance services at the grass-roots level.

There is no doubt that the Internet can be a democratizing tool. In some parts of the world – and certainly in most of the West – it already is, since large amounts of information are now accessible to almost anyone. But the stark reality of today’s world is that you can tell the rich from the poor by their Internet connections.

Indeed, economic development nowadays requires more than thinking only of the poverty line; one must also think of the high-speed digital line, the fiber-optic line – indeed, all the lines that exclude those who are not plugged into the possibilities of our world.

But the digital divide is no immutable gap. On the contrary, the technology gap between developed and developing countries, measured by levels of penetration by personal computers and information-technology and communications services, has narrowed markedly over the course of the past decade, with rapid growth in mobile phone and Internet use. The average level of Internet and mobile-phone penetration in the rich world in 1997  – 4.1 Internet users and 10.7 mobile phones per 100 inhabitants – was reached in developing countries only five years later.

By contrast, the average level of fixed-line telecommunication penetration in developing countries is nearly 50 years behind the levels of the West. Not surprisingly, it was in Africa – not Europe or America – where the cell phone first overtook the housebound handset. More Africans have become telecommunications users in the last four years than in the entire twentieth century.

The Indian story is even more remarkable. When I left India in 1975 for graduate studies in the United States, the country had roughly 600 million residents and just two million land-line telephones. Today, India holds the world record for the number of cell phones sold in a month –20 million – and for the most telephone connections made in a single month in any country in the history of telecommunications.

The growth in mobile-telephone technology demonstrates that the digital divide is shifting, and the focus of development efforts must change with it. India, for example, has 525 million mobile phone users and fewer than 150 million people with Internet access, so using mobile-phone technology as a tool of e-governance has become vital. This calls for creative means of effecting information transfer and making and receiving official payments by telephone.

Security is a key area of concern today in e-governance – both physical security, in an age of terrorism, and cyber security. Using technology to deliver security will become even more important in areas such as information sharing, disaster management, and data-privacy standards.

Information and communications technology is a powerful tool to address underdevelopment, isolation, poverty, and the lack of political accountability and political freedom. But people need access first and foremost. High-speed broadband Internet access can improve everything from transport management, environmental protection, and emergency services to health care, distance education, and agricultural productivity. Delivering these benefits to ever more people will require resources, international cooperation, and political will.

--- The author is a former Under Secretary General of the UN and former Minister of State for External Affairs in the Government of India. An award-winning novelist, he is currently a member of the Lok Sabha, India’s parliament.

Copyright:  Project Syndicate, 2010.  www.project-syndicate.org

For a podcast of this commentary in English, please use this link:  http://media.blubrry.com/ps/media.libsyn.com/media/ps/tharoor22.mp3