Regional networked affilates : AfricanIdol.tv , Kibera.tv ; Newswire archives: Africanidol.tv
Sustainability World's Open Debates - top 3 summer 007
http://cidaworld.tv -selections by Entrepreneur76
search sourcing webs include: AfricanIdol.tv, Kibera.tv, hubsworld.tv

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

info@worldcitizen.tv : vote for top 10 short videos africa wants world to see


Below we have a map of the social networks connecting Change Africa that I have so far discovered - can we share maps you have? I am sure there are many deeper details than I can see. I'd love to try to link your map and mine.

help us log up country by country empowerment intiatives:
Liberia- via CGI07; BET's Johnson sets up LEDF fund with initial capital of $30 mn


Crisis Media 007
At http://myidol.americanidol.com/blogs/africanidoltv we ask if American Idol Gives Back will tell the stories Africa would like 32 million Amerucan youth to see - affiliate webs http://universityofstars.tv http://africanidol.tv http://hi-trust.tv

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

africa blog

a good one - http://www.ethanzuckerman.com/blog/ - which africa blog do you find most empowering

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

At our world travel guides group, we believe that Taddy Blecher of Cida Free University is currently top of the collaboration league for empowering youth round Africa's continent. Of course we are delighted to hear of other nominations to map and interview.

If you like videos, the enclosed 8-minute one helps explain why we love Taddy's wish. Exclusively, this group's Sofia Bustamante has just completed a 5-page interview with Taddy of specific collaborations he wishes to connect. You can find it at the World Citizen Travel Guide Group http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=2344268221&topic=2504

-and if it's the sort of collaboration invitation that empowers your belief in networks please feel free to reproduce this 5-page interview anywhere your peers web. It is issued for the www commons.

Part of Taddy's hi-trust mission is that open source practice curriculum -once they have been taught to a few youth by someone central to the source - multiply as youth then teach their peers and practice. 18 years ago that is what my friends at http://24weeks.com and I believe Tim Berners Lee designed the www for.

Taddy has become Africa's connecting person for open source communal empowerment with early supporters like Richard Branson who has located his school of entrepreneurship at CIDA university and Oprah Winfrey who is donating a women's dorm so that the students at the 25 million dollar school she founded can now go a vocational university too. It is rumored that he is Mandela's nominee for next educator most likely to change the world. http://changeafrica.blogspot.com

Open has a lot of Space and Source to explore. For example, Taddy has a very clear focus on action learning that empowers and co-creates sustainability- in fact if anyone knows someone who is open sourcing a vocational practice of that kind, it is our purpose as collaboration travel guides is to ensure such connections fast track. It's TRUTH'S time to bring down degrees of separation to zero on life-critical or community empowering info.

Oh Mr Blair http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgUObRlMkPQ - Commitment Africa 2.0
Surely the London School of Economics Sir Nick Stern's 1% versus 20% sustainability investment exponentials apply to action learning truth as well as climate. Maps that Gandhi and Montessori http://cmseducation.org alumni link us to redouble our wish for schools to honor youth's trust and amazing energies opening up a lot more vocational context stuff and much less standardised theories. If Africa's http://africanidol.tv http://cidaworld.tv could start this initiative integrating every locality globally - perhaps the world could learn from African educational models in the same way that it is now learning from Bangladeshi end poverty models.

24 years ago my dad at The Economist predicted this would be the only way that the net generation becomes sustainable- forgive our scottish entrepreneurial revolution bias for believing youth's amazing grace and practical curiosity can network change in ways that big organisations alone never knew how http://www.normanmacrae.com/netfuture.html -what's your entrepreneurial or hi-trust collaboration bias?

Monday, May 14, 2007

sam

I believe you have the right idea as to the many things to do first; I find myself in many time-warps between projects that need to flow into each other

kibera is not urgent versus your own existing project work but remains probably the biggest scene of funding stories connecting Kenya and the outside world; therein lies the trap; we need to make sure that those stories are more and more grounded in the actual participants needs; I am sure that some of the glossier aid organisations circling Kibera will have large budgets to make films but once made will not sustain much empowerment around the future of Kibera; ... more generally orphanages are likely to become a fad that every American charity with work in Africa will feel it needs to have images of but which of these global aid charities actually helps systemise all the local developments that orphans need over many years will be something that locals will need to start keeping transparency's empowerment scores on- again Peter Burgess probably has more polite ways of specifying and dealing with this type of challenge if over time it becomes an issue

There's a long video relevant to kibera at http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/36 It mentions, for example, a resident photographer in Kibera whose long-standing local source of intelligence might know who's really who

Peter - Robert Neurwirth http://squattercity.blogspot.com/ appears to love in New York - any chnace you can see if you can contact him . Again this connects with Cameron Sinclair;- we have this strange game of collaboration snap to play - the 2 most famous speakers on how architecture could chnage poorworld are there in new york; the inventor with the architectural solutions Rick (solarrof) Nelson is on London , and never the three will meet! One of the offeres to make to with Cameron or Robert is if they are passing through London from Agust on we can stage an event around them in London's newest greenest 100 people debating chamber

cheers
chris macrae http://kibera.tv http://worldclassbrands.tv

greatest learningfromeachother event the internet has ever staged begins friday may 18- see http://24weeks.com

let's interface at www.facebook.com

Saturday, May 5, 2007

nelson mandela speech on opening of Oprah Winfree School to start Africa 007

SPEECH BY FORMER PRESIDENT NELSON MANDELA AT THE OPENING OF
THE OPRAH WINFREY LEADERSHIP ACADEMY
TUESDAY 2 JANUARY 2007
Ladies and Gentlemen
My staff usually make me say that although I am retired the occasion that I am
attending is one of such importance that I had to make an exception.
Today I can truly say that out of my own accord. I have been resting in Maputo,
but really found it necessary to be at this occasion to pay tribute to Oprah
Winfrey for what she has personally done to make this project possible and see it
to its fruition.
On one of Oprah's previous visits to South Africa we related to Oprah what the
South African business community as well as some international companies
were doing to enrich our youth by contributing to the building and improvement of
schools and other educational facilities. We shared our conviction with Oprah
that the gains of our democracy would be nullified if we did not properly educate
our children and youth. She obviously recognised the potential in our youth and
consulted with our then Minister of Education, Professor Kader Asmal, about the
establishment of the school whose opening we are celebrating today.
It is estimated that she spent some 200 million rand on the school. This is
unprecedented in South Africa and we should thank her for providing these
young girls with not only specialized education but life skills that will ensure that
they become the best in whatever they choose to do with their lives. We hope
that the school will become the dream of every young South African girl and that
they will study hard, aiming at qualifying for the school one day. Oprah has
shown us that no matter what your background, how impoverished or
2
underprivileged you were, you can become anything in life if you work and study
hard.
Oprah, apart from the unbelievable amount of money you have invested in this
project, it is the personal effort and time that you have put into it that is so special
and inspiring. This is not a distant donation you made but a project which clearly
lies very close to your heart. South Africans should not only be grateful to you but
should take a lesson from you about what personal commitment means.
It can be said that there are four basic and primary things that the mass of people
in a society wish for: to live in a safe environment, to be able to work and provide
for themselves, to have access to good public health and to have sound
educational opportunities for their children. Currently we as a society may be
struggling in each of those four areas, but we must remain confident that with the
personal commitment of each and every one of us we can and will overcome the
obstacles towards development. Oprah has in her own magnificent way shown
us what commitment means.
We salute you as a friend and a role model. South Africa is proud of its
association with you. You have given so much of yourself to our society over the
years.
I am sure everyone joins us in wishing this school, its students, teachers and
staff well. May it grow into one the shining stars on our educational firmament.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Subject:
can we develop a web page introducing our most urgent empowernent projects to Nick Stern?
To:

CC:


}
Dear Geeta - trust Oxford is lovely this summer

Could you have a look at http://kibera.tv

I would like us to edit content on this page before a phone call is made to Sir Nick Stern guiding him round some of the connections that London's deepest collaboration entrepreneurs are trying to connect in meetings large and out of London this summer. -Tav is showing how any city can use the web to connect 1 million concerned citizens across hemispehers through 24 days of challenges webbed out of a huge building at one end of Brick lane; Rick's greenest 100 person ampitheatre ever built opens for use in September but will earlier become highly visible landmark on the SouthBank alongside the Queen Elizabeth Hall

It would be wonderful to find out whether any of these projects connect with any of Sir Nick Stern's priority areas now that he's own person at London School of Economics.

Kibera in Kenya is a case Sir Nick used to plea that the world bank changed everything to do with ethe economics of development aid in the last president's talk that Wolfensohn sponsored.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3gJq--TEkA

Kibera is also now the most discussed location in Africa among 35 million youthful Americans thanks to the British creatives (Bono, Curtis or Red Nose Day, 2 simons...) invasion of American Idol

Kibera is also in Sam Kongere's home city - a teacher of extraordinary empowering ways http://kibera.tv/_wsn/page2.html

I welcome any and every editing suggestion to make the online guide of http://kibera.tv clearer before a supporting telephone call.

The first guiding trip to kibera seeks to quickly flow through :
a child's voice out of Africa's fastest growing slum asks you to take a journey through the transformational collaborations of enterprising solar architects, education entrepreneurs, development economists and truth-searching media can celebrate by i9ntegrating community-rising wishes of the most vital kinds

; question to you_ how ca we help link such hi-trust citizen networks and their local hubs worldwide -you can hear me now? you can youtube with me now?? You can collaborate with me now? .ideas welcome

There's space where we raise the question of what other types of experts could collaborate where it would be good to add something at D) about City Montessori or Gems but I am currently conuised as to what to feature. Something that I can paste from an existing web-link is probably best in the compact space that one page permits

My next mail across Africa tries to introduce networkers to another home county networker for Africa, Pamela, whose main adopted country for educational, health and youth employment empowerment is Nigeria. It is Mandela's wish as far as mapmakers can see that Africa becomes an empowerting continent for learning experiments... http://changeafrica.blogspot.com

all the best everyone
chris macrae usa 301 881 1655
http://economistclub.tv http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=670257246 http://oxbridge.tv
http://kibera.tv http://macrae.tv http://universityofstars.tv http://africanidol.tv

PS sofia and I are about a week away from going to print on the travel guide to learning 2007- is there a phone number that I can try contacting Sunita at?

Saturday, January 27, 2007



Charter for The Worldwide’s Directory of HUBS

In helping to connect this directory, we passionately want to help promote any space that sustains urgent progress for a vibrant humanity, world citizenship and cross-cultural integration of healthy societies.

Typically HUBs are community centres owned for any by citizens. This form of ownership aims never to catch bureaucratic syndromes that governing over a community is perpetually at risk of compounding. Conversely, the emotional and social energies that people invest in a hub is unlikely to be rewarded if the HUB’s ownership aims to extract profit out of the community. In the language of social entrepreneurship, a HUB is often constituted to be no loss so ensuring sustainability and freedom to serve its ideals in exponentially better ways.






Typically a HUB is concerned with the flows between vital services and needs, filling lifelong learning gaps and actualisation of franchises designed transparently around a crucial but previously unsatisfied social and human demand.


By mapping how to connect the flows of collaboration entrepreneurs and hi-trust , HUBs search out how to openly replicate franchises they conceive to cities or localities with similar crucial needs. They see networking technology as crucial opportunity to integrate every locality into a globalisation that can unite the pride of humanity and connect cultures in that respect grounded in passionate exploration of diversity

WHERE ARE HUBS EMERGING BRILLIANTLY THIS SEASON?






Bookmark tour round above picture http://www.the-hub.net http://www.catcomm.org - Dublin links to come...

Please mail info@worldcitizen.tv with sightings so that we can code entries into the directory. Please tell us whether or not the HUB spotted sees itself as having one of these particular patterns that appear to be part of the species DNA.


Technical footnote : the idea of a charter (for a wish or open source franchise) begins with open spacing (http://top10s.tv/_wsn/page3.html ) a question transparently through all participants – what would your world uniquely miss if HUBs do not exist? Empower all to see the MissList and then commune around ensuring nothing vital is missed the way HUBs emerge.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

... thanks to all for your exciting questions/challenges; I hope they have stimulated an open response from me worth sharing

-names such as ChangeAfrica do not worry me a lot; for example every sustainability and entrepreneurial movement that I have ever encountered is linked by wanting to change globalisation to empower every community rising instead of just to plan from global top down;which popular speak often calls change world http://changeworld.net ; and within that change regions;one of the great advantages of a blog or web is once you have some interesting html you can replicate it to another name

-primarily the http://changeafrica.blogspot.com ( a baby that is about 3 hours old in elapsed time) started up as just a few of my working notes as a mapmaker ; it would be great if one day a few others would coe-dit their mapping notes too; which people openly interconnect future rising for Africa, how, when, why? More than any other competence, I am interested in mapping systemic entrepreneurial connections; once you have a map that starts to have enough connections you can ask people to add their own deeper ones; zoom in or out depending on whether your are interested in deepest local action teams or what knowledge and social networking needs to flow across them

-a particular perspective of this changeafrica blogspot is to openly survey what is best for world change that is happening out of africa by starting with a list of the people worth trusting most around specific contexts

ABC of CHANGE AFRICA IN 2007
of course who to trust sustainability most to is a question to keep on asking and get ever more diverse answer to but there are some pretty exciting Africa coordinates in 2007 which connect a compound opportunity for progress all round Africa unlike any in my historical experience; if we encourage everyone to celebrate it, believe now is the time to connect goodwill and energise empowerment networks

A Being Gandhian (system mapper and open integrator of be the change at micro inter and macro levels) in many of my beliefs , the greatest living Gandhian in terms of Satyagraha communal practice (centenary this year http://peacecentury.tv ) is Mandela; so I am interested in mapping anyone who connects around him; Branson has done a far better job than I ever can because he's actually asked Mandela to name his favourite people to trust the future of S Africa and the region to on what and formed a network around them; Taddy and his free university CIDA is one of them; one picture of my changeafrica blog showed how I survey people on what 360 degrees connections for change do they see spiralling round Mandela; of course if you see another dimension, I don’t know about yet I would love to know; at least online stuff is dynamic, easy to update as long as you have a mapping structure to pin more and more updates to. If you are american you may recall that Richard Branson also hosted the first Apprentice for Philanthropy reality tv show and its winner an Atlanta lady http://herstory.tv has been linking into CIDA and Branson's school of entrepreneurship collecting case studies. And you may know that Oprah Winfree has picked up the baton is now developing reality tv philanthropy contests as well as planting her school for African women.So travel guides to learning are the biggest new entry into change world this year with even Clinton's Initiative including education into its themes. Some of you may know Sofia in London who has been coordinating learning change guide journalism with special assists from people like Jonathan at the Islington hub and Tav and espian with their million cultural creative challenge and 24 day event starting soon. Of course both Mandela-Rhodea and Gandhi-Montessori head the allcomers open education hall of fame, with Montessori and Florence Nightingale more deeply pioneering the womens league unless you have other nominees.

B Wangari Maathai is another favourite coordinate of people I explore green with as well as a women's Nobel Laureate; whenever I want to check in grassroots up sense on climate or clean energy, food, clean water, I would love to check her views and who networks around her. London networks of which I am a part probably are changing more around green world than any other movement out of London right now. If you don't agree let's swap knowledge; I am excited to hear that London is stirring something unique to the world beyond green whilst perhaps you do not know all the coming green revolutionaries actions about to roll out around London this summer

C Martin Fisher of Kickstart who I know next to nothing about is worth exploring because he is one of Jeff Skoll's top 5 to invest in and so far Skoll has made more world changing investments with his billions than other billionaire philanthropists; kickstart is something to do with inventing the smallest machines that Africans might need locally especially for cooperative agriculture and local energy

D Several huge wishes relating to Africa have been multiplied by www.ted.com; Bono's wish linked to make poverty history at soon American Idol; Clinton's wish to benchmark Rwanda as an example of a sustainable health care system in rural Africa using Paul Farmer type empowerment models of serving medical needs from each community rising; that's also why ted.com's first ever meeting out of Africa Tanzania is exciting. (I assume that Clinton will really uses much more of BRAC's knowledge but to fundraise out of America, Farmer is the current password, or maybe more)

E The first ever world social forum out of Africa could have changed some connections beyond what ted.com does; I am desperately surveying anyone who I can find who went to Nairobi in January yo see what networks are emerging that would never have happened if these 50000 people had not met in Kenya; the world socila forum is a very strange beast; it seems to change what other worldwide meeting happen whilst not always globally rewarding those who actually go there; or maybe I just have not found how to map its inner social networks yet; but knowing how strange much big media is, I suspect WSF is a mixed blessing, but then so much activist politics is judged from transparent entrepreneurial models of how to empower great works

F We are eighteen months into Peter Eigen who founded Transparency International (and is an expert sponsored by Bill Gates' Africa Progress panel) saying that we had 2 years to change transparency all over Africa; this does not seem to be working at this speed but we must find every way we can continue to plant this because very little social entrepreneurship replicates or sustains in corrupt countries; at least not with then positive flows that it can multiply where corruption is not at risk of killing you off. In parallel Mo Abrahim has launched the world's largest annual prize- whose the most transparent retiring African president of them all. Mo is interesting because he made his money being Mr Mobile for much of Africa. Transparency's ethical nets cannot be moved on without a mention for the superb Mary Robinson at http://eginitiative.org also keynoter at the 2003 http://collapsingworld.org (vested intererest by accident I remain volunteer W. Europe newletter links person for that though by far the most junior of reconciliation hosts in London/Europe)

G There are those out of London like Sir Nick Stern who are challenging the world bank and other global aid NGOs to end the white man planners burden and get serious about mapping empowerment community-rising models; there are some key applications of this; Malaria for example only really exists because we have perpetuated global trickle down use of aid in this area rather than empowering truth know-how flows; at the same time mobile networks have for the first time changed how easy it can be to flow truth knowledge if we can but map youth and other who want to act on it. If collaborating for Africa is truly your number 1 mission in life I would love to be told of all the projects and events you are linking in at the stage when you want more people to interact with them be this volunteers, new localities to extend the project franchise to, other influencers in the noisy process of whose idea is best ready to replicate;

This is a somewhat random list; if I pointed my mind at say 20 people in my inbox who spend every day questioning local change in Africa doubtless I would have come up with other deeper heroines and change themes. Similarly you can look through many hundred African Social entrepreneurs around Africa at www.ashoka.org and spot which mosaics are ready to ripple all around Africa beyond their initial start up points; or you can tell us another web that catalogues local projects so that we can connect patterns around it and whatever change issue you want to spent your marginal time on most
What is exciting about open source mapping shared amongst world citizen networks http://worldcitizen.tv and those who want to empower communities rising everywhere is not my A to G though I can promise you I will keep exploring and connecting all; the above but what are your similar A to G for Africa; and when I say you can we survey co-workers in each of pioneers favourite networks or hubs; what's particular great is if we have some epicentres in common and some extra ones that way we can keep on making the map of potential quests for change activism both entrepreneurially greater and deeper

You know there is one thing about collaboration entrepreneurs that many people get very angry with me about; once you have told me as a volunteer that a search issue like how to stop one girl dying from malaria every minute exists and therefore urgently matters (needs an open source worldwide reconciliation network), I am delighted if open people keep posting better and better experiments around that change gravity; if whomever we say today is the biggest change agent for making malaria history does not like to find a better way and to partner around it then they are not the number 1 collaboration entrepreneur for that issue even if they are the world’s greatest expert. I am tired of "experts" –and a defensive type of brand marketing - who draw their own competitive boxes around everything; in our networking age it is entrepreneurially possible to enjoy a great dynamic between open collaboration and competition but all the valuation methods 20th c management used do not map that system change dynamic truly ; as a mathematician I seek to change that before such a system errors compounds the lot sustainability of all of us

chris macrae us 301 881 1655
if you want to expore whether what some of what I tried to say makes sense
I urge you to join www.ted.com and tell me; this http://up200.tv/_wsn/page12.html may illustrate why
To remember how you may connect with hundreds of others I find http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=670257246 a great aide memoire

if at any future time you have a story for http://africanidol.tv tell us how we can start whispering it around the net- the marketing practice for this is called brand seeding -the lowest cost ways to do global branding and zap degrees of separation - which I helped to coin in the early 1990s when trying to reform the ad industry - oh foolish me, what must I have been unplanning! unconerfencing! what's your favourite un....

http://economistclub.tv

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

I am happy to send $1000 to samwel for him to spend in Kenya on his malaria teams or his info-tech or mobile developments of a school or other hub for connecting grassroots up knowhow

exactly what recipient address do you suggest I use via Western Union

Please note I know very little about malaria or installing info-tech/mobile

any questions on malaria best go to Peter at http://www.immconsortium.org ; any info-tech questions via tav who is linking up a million activists through tech and out of London over the next 90 days

any questions on conflicts, cross-cultural stuff might best go to sofia or Modjtaba who often mentor me in these sorts of areas

I am not sure that any of these people want their emails widely yahoogrouped etc so please ask them first if you have questions beyond the above specifics; as far as I know we all believe in opening up transparency maps but many of us cannot cope with getting drowned in email

two other things that I amost curious about in Kenya involve how to connect with any close friend of Wangari Maathai (because London's green movements love her, and Stern empowerment economics -be-the-world-bank-change- began in two grassroots localities - Kenya tea markets and India village economics of the 1970s) and how to understand whether we need to love what www.kickstart.org does ( Jeff Skoll identifies this Kenyan-based org as a leader of grassroots chnage and its never a good idea to neglect a Jeff Skoll truth-bearer); I am also most curious about what goes on in this Tanzania meeting - in the event that anyone knows someone who is going I would be prepared to pay a few hundred dollars for some reporting of what collaboration projects or network start up here http://www.ted.com/index.php/pages/view/id/61 in July

cheers
chris macrae
if your time permits, urge you to join www.ted.com and tell me; this http://up200.tv/_wsn/page12.html may illustrate why and asking deep questions here may be a first ted intervention worth doing http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/91 -how collaboration capable for africa the saintly Novogratz sisters are? I do not have the context knowledge to beging to know if building the largest manufacturer of nets out of Tanzania is smart aid , stupid aid or bandaid but I would like to see the questions raised

To remember how you may connect with hundreds of others I find http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=670257246 a great aide memoire

Sunday, December 31, 2006

007's biggest worldwide adventure

Safari The Economist - can citizens find an economist in each city who wants to join the parties of http://economistclub.tv please send your nominations in to info@worldeconomist.net

Monday, June 5, 2006

Why is there still a controversy about malaria. Places around the world (eg Florida) got rid of malraia 50+ years ago- so why's it still Africa's biggets child killer. One of these 2 folks must be plain wrong as far as i can see. Which do you vote for and why don't organsiations like UNICEF vote 100% unambiguously?
4 June 007 - Letter to Washington Times
DDT is unsafe
I was very disturbed to see the recent column promoting the widespread use of DDT to control malaria in Africa ( "A deadly legacy," Op-Ed, Thursday). Angela Logomasini's attack on the life work of "Silent Spring" author Rachel Carson must be somehow politically motivated, as it is certainly not based in fact.
The truth is, DDT's impacts on human health are well documented and new studies continue to show evidence of harm. Recent science shows lower sperm counts among men in South Africa where DDT is being used for malaria control, and China's DDT-based malaria control programs are now linked to higher miscarriage rates among women.
Mrs. Logomasini also badly misrepresents the World Health Organization's position on DDT. WHO recently affirmed its serious concern about the health affects of the pesticide, as well as its commitment to help countries reduce their reliance on DDT for malaria control as required under the international Stockholm Convention. This treaty, now supported by 142 countries and hundreds of environmental health groups around the world, allows for careful use of DDT in the short term in emergency situations while countries shift to safer -- and more effective -- malaria control solutions.
Yes, more effective. In the vast majority of cases, spraying with DDT is not the best way to control malaria. What we need in Africa are proven, community-based programs that include a range of tools such as bed nets, education, better health care, water drainage and improved sanitation.
It is time to move beyond the false and distracting debate over DDT. I invite Mrs. Logomasini and her DDT-promoting allies to join us in calling for effective and safe solutions to the crisis of malaria, here in Africa and around the world.

ABOU THIAM
Director
Pesticide Action Network Africa
Dakar, Senegal
Response to Thiam's letter

Abou Thiam’s June 4 letter helps explain why a million African children still die needlessly every year from a readily preventable disease. His facts are wrong and his policy prescription was a disastrous failure during the three decades it was employed. Billions got malaria, and millions died who would likely have lived if their countries had been able to use DDT.

The World Health Organization reinstituted DDT for malaria control, because it recognized that no other chemical – indeed, no other intervention of any kind – does so much, for so long, at so little cost. Sprayed in small amounts on the walls of wattle or cinderblock houses, it repels mosquitoes, keeps the few that do enter from biting, and kills any that land, for up to a year.

Some within WHO are unhappy with this policy change, but it is supported by science, WHO health directors and the Stockholm Convention – which specifically permits DDT for disease control (and not only in emergencies) until equally effective alternatives are readily available. Thus far there are none.

DDT is not a silver bullet, but it plays a vital role in controlling malaria and other killer diseases. Unlike anti-pesticide activists like Mr. Thiam, we in the “DDT-promoting” community recognize that every weapon must be used against malaria: nets, education, sanitation, modern drugs, larvacides, insecticides and spatial repellants like DDT.

We also know chemotherapy drugs cause anemia, diarrhea, increased infection risk, birth defects and hair loss. Anti-malaria drugs can cause severe vomiting, lung and liver damage, and other harm. Bednets are impregnated with pyrethroid insecticides. All must be used carefully, but their benefits clearly outweigh their risks.

DDT is the most studied chemical in history. Decades of research have found no proof that DDT directly harms human health, says professor of tropical health Donald Roberts, one of the world’s foremost authorities on malaria and DDT. Some studies have found possible “links” between DDT and various minor health issues; others found no such connections.

“There is extensive evidence, however, that DDT reduces disease and saves lives,” Roberts emphasizes. “Unfortunately, Pesticide Action Network is so focused on speculative risks of using DDT that it ignores the horrific dangers the chemical prevents.”

Uganda’s Diana Komuhendo has lost many relatives to this disease and just received her degree in public health. “These activists are more concerned about birds and hypothetical health effects than about children’s and parents’ lives,” she says bluntly. “That is immoral and wrong.”

Paul Driessen, Senior policy advisor, Congress of Racial Equality
Fairfax, VA ,Telephone 703-698-6171




further references: http://immconsortium.org

Saturday, April 14, 2001

Hi Jonathan
I gather that Sofia is out of communications reach for a retreat in Los Angeles. I am very excited to hear that you will be sharing your views on how people can connect around the-Hub to change the world when Sofia returns to finish her interviews on Hubs, Free Universities and citizens other open learning spaces. Also the possibility that this blends with tav's 24 days, and Rick Solaroof Nelson's new 100-space green theatre on the South Bank opening August can make London a world collaboration centre of a kind needed if citizens are going to solve sustainability crises in time.
A lot seems to have happened since the inaugural hosting of TheCooperation at The Hub oct 2005 http://thecooperation.blogspot.com/
Is there such a thing as a next quarters events listing that The-Bub network wants the world to link around- we would love to feature such an announcemnt log at http://thecooperation.tv/
chris macrae us 301 881 1655chris.macrae@yahoo.co.ukhttp:/changeafrica.blogspot.com http://africanidol.tv

Monday, January 31, 2000

AfricanIdol.tv Newswire Archives- all the world service news for Africa we can find and mass media does not

INTRODUCTION : we began Spring 007
AfricanIdol.tv stated up as a peoples media web when 35 million people were fund raised from by Bono & Richard "Red Nose" Curtis and teh 2 simons on American Idol Gives back. The most memorable story was kibera chikd - one ten year old orphan's story of being all alone in a milion person slum except for looking after his 7 year old sister. Unbeliecably after fundrainsing nearly 50 million dolars for Africa - the bono and the nose and the simons appear not to have allocated 1 cent back to empowerment work at Kibera. This leads us to conclude that Africans need to own their grassroots stories from now on, and Londoners (the home of world service broadcasting) must start challenging these serial do-gooders to go beyond advocacy for global aid down which hasnt improved most African's lots over a generation and Sir Nick Stern chalenges as the systemically wrong way round to support Africa's child

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Friday, January 1, 1999

http://www.worldbank.org/wbi/lectures/speech-africa.html

Africa Is PeopleDr. Chinua Achebe (37:36)
It is generally not a good sign when someone begins to quote himself, but the title I have chosen for this event may sound peculiar to some of you, and the best way I can explain what it's all about is to quote myself.
An Invitation Arrives
I believe it was in the first weeks of 1989 that I received an invitation to an anniversary meeting—the-twenty-fifth year, or something like that—of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris. I accepted without quite figuring out what I could possibly contribute to such a meeting/celebration. My initial puzzlement continued right into the meeting itself. In fact it grew as the proceedings got under way. Here was I, an African novelist among predominantly European and American bankers and economists; a guest, as it were, from the world's poverty-stricken provinces to a gathering of the rich and powerful in the metropolis. As I listened to them—Europeans, Americans, Canadians, Australians—I was left in no doubt by the assurance they displayed that these were the masters of our world savoring the benefits of their success. They read and discussed papers on economic and development matters in different regions of the world. They talked in particular about the magic bullet of the 1980s, structural adjustment, specially designed for those parts of the world where economies had gone completely haywire. The matter was really simple, the experts seemed to be saying; the only reason for failure to develop was indiscipline of all kinds, and the remedy was a quick, sharp administration of shock treatment that would yank the sufferer out of the swamp of improvidence back onto the high and firm road of free market economy. The most recurrent prescriptions for this condition were the removal of subsidies on food and fuel and the devaluation of the national currency. Yes, the experts conceded, some pain would inevitably accompany these measures, but such pain was negligible in comparison to the disaster that would surely take place if nothing was done now.
Then the governor of the Bank of Kenya made his presentation. As I recall the events, he was probably the only other African at that session. He asked the experts to consider the case of Zambia, which according to him had accepted, and had been practicing, a structural adjustment regime for something like 10 years, and whose economic condition was now worse than it had been when they began their treatment. An American expert who seemed to command great attention and was accorded high deference in the room, spoke again. He repeated what had already been said many times before: "Be patient, it will work in time, trust me," or words to that effect.
Insight Dawns
At that point I received something like a stab of insight. It suddenly became clear to me why I had been invited, what I was doing there in that strange assembly. I signaled my desire to speak and was given the floor. I told them what I had just recognized. I said that what was going on before me was a fiction workshop, no more and no less! "Here you are, spinning your fine theories to be tried out in your imaginary laboratories. You are developing new drugs and feeding them to a bunch of laboratory guinea pigs and hoping for the best. I have news for you. Africa is not fiction. Africa is people, real people. Have you thought of that? You are brilliant people, world experts. You may even have the very best intentions. But have you thought, really thought, of Africa as people? I will tell you the experience of my own country, Nigeria, with structural adjustment. After two years of this remedy we saw the country's minimum wage fall in value from the equivalent of 15 British pounds to 5 pounds a month. This is not a lab report; it is not a mathematical exercise. We are talking about someone whose income, which is already miserable enough, is now reduced to one-third of what it was two years ago. And this flesh-and-blood man has a wife and children. You say he should simply go home and tell them to be patient. Now let me ask you this question. Would you recommend a similar remedy to your own government? How do you sell it to an elected president? You are asking him to commit political suicide, or perhaps to get rid of elections altogether until he has fixed the economy. Do you realize that's what you are doing?"
I thought I could read astonishment on some of the faces on the opposite side of the huge circular table of the conference room, or perhaps it was just my optimistic imagination. But one thing I do know for certain. The director-general (or whatever he was called) of the OECD beside whom I was sitting, a Dutchman and quite a giant, had muttered to me, under his breath, at least twice: "Give it to them!"
I came away from that strange conference with enhanced optimism for the human condition. For who could have imagined that in the very heart of the enemy's citadel a friend and ally might be lurking, like that irreverent Dutchman happy enough to set my cat among his own pigeons!
I therefore came to this Presidential Fellows Lecture of the World Bank with expectations rather than puzzlement. And I thank President Wolfensohn for his vigorous engagement with Africa's problems and for giving me the privilege of addressing this very distinguished and strategic forum, Tariq Husain for arranging the details with such care and consideration, and my young friends Tijan Salla and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for persistently encouraging me to come.
Examining the Reality of Africa
Africa Is People may seem too simple and too obvious a statement for such a reflective opportunity as this, but I have found that the most simple things can still give us a lot of trouble, even the brightest among us, especially in matters concerning Africa. One of the greatest men of the 20th century, Albert Schweitzer—philosopher, theologian, musician, medical missionary—failed completely to see the most obvious fact about Africa, and so went ahead to say: "The African is indeed my brother, but my junior brother." Now, did we or did anyone we know take Dr. Schweitzer up on that blasphemy? Oh no. On the contrary. He was admired to the point of adulation and Lamberene, the very site on African soil where he uttered his outrage, was turned into a place of pilgrimage.
Or let us take another much admired 20th century figure, the first writer, as it happens, to grace the cover of the newly founded Time magazine. I am talking, of course, about that extraordinary Polish-born, French-speaking, English sea captain and novelist, Joseph Conrad. He recorded in his memoir his first experience of seeing a black man in these remarkable words:
A certain enormous buck nigger encountered in Haiti fixed my conception of blind, furious, unreasoning rage, as manifested in the human animal to the end of my days. Of the nigger I used to dream for years afterwards.
My attention was first drawn to these observations of Conrad’s in a scholarly work, not very widely known, by Jonah Raskin. Its title was the Mythology of Imperialism, and it was published in 1971 by Random House. I mention this because Mr. Raskin’s title defines the cultural source out of which Conrad derived his words and ideas. Conrad’s fixation, admitted so openly by him in his memoir and conspicuously present in his fiction, has gone largely unremarked in literary and scholarly evaluations of his work. Why? Because it is grounded quite firmly in that mythology of imperialism which has so effectively conditioned contemporary civilization and its modes of education. Imperial domination required a new language to describe the world it had created and the people it had subjugated. Not surprisingly, this new language did not celebrate these subject peoples nor toast them as heroes. Rather it painted them in the most lurid colors. Africa, being European imperialism's prime target, with hardly a square foot escaping the fate of imperial occupation, naturally received the full measure of this adverse definition. Add to that the massive derogatory endeavor of the previous three centuries of the Atlantic slave trade to label black people, and we can begin to get some idea of the magnitude of the problem we may have today with the simple concept: Africa Is People.
James Baldwin made an analogous point about black people in America, descendants of Africa. In his essay "Fifth Avenue, Uptown" he wrote:
Negroes want to be treated like men: a perfectly straight forward statement containing seven words. People who have mastered Kant, Hegel, Shakespeare, Marx, Freud and the Bible find this statement impenetrable.
The point of all this is to alert policymakers in such institutions as the World Bank to the image burden that Africa bears into the 21st century and make them recognize how that image has molded contemporary attitudes, including perhaps their own, to that continent.
Do I hear in my mind's ear someone sighing wearily: there we go again; another session of whining and complaining! Let me assure you that I personally abhor and detest whiners. Those who know me will already know this. To those who don't, I recommend a little pamphlet I wrote at a critical point in Nigeria's troubles. I called it The Trouble with Nigeria, and it is arguably the harshest statement ever made about that unhappy country. It is so harsh that whenever I see one of the many foreign critics of Nigeria quoting from it I want to strangle them! No, I am not an apologist for Africa's many failings. And I am hard-headed enough to realize that we must not be soft on them, must never go out to justify them. But I am also rational enough to realize that we should strive to understand our failings objectively and not simply swallow the mystifications and mythologies cooked up by those whose goodwill we have every reason to suspect.
Now, I understand and accept the logic that if a country mismanages its resources it should be prepared to face the music of hard times. Long ago I wrote a novel about a young African man, well-educated, full of promise and good intentions, who nevertheless got his affairs (fiscal and otherwise) in a big mess. And did he pay dearly for it!
I did not blame the banks for his plight. What I did do, or try to do, was offer leads to my readers for exploring the roots of the hero's predicament by separating those factors for which an individual may justly be held accountable from others that are systemic and beyond the individual's control. That critical, analytical adventure to which the book invites its readers would not have helped the doomed hero a whole lot, but the reader can at least go away with the satisfaction of having tried to be fair and just, and with the reward, hopefully, of a little enlightenment on the human condition.
The countries of Africa (especially Sub-Saharan Africa) on which I am focusing my attention are not the only ones who suffer the plight of poverty in the world today. All the so-called Third World peoples are, more or less, in the same net, as indeed are all the poor everywhere, even in the midst of plenty in the First and Second worlds.
Like the unfortunate young man in my novel, the poor of the world may be guilty of this and that act of foolishness, but nothing they have done or left undone quite explains all the odds that seem to be stacked up against them. We are sometimes tempted to look at them as so many ne’er-do-wells we can simply ignore. But they are not our fiction; they are greater than their badge of suffering, because they are human.
Last week there was news on television about fighting in the Horn of Africa between Ethiopia and Eritrea. As I had come to expect, the news was very short indeed. The only background material the newscaster gave to flesh out the bald announcement of the fight was that Ethiopia and Eritrea were among the world's poorest nations. And he was off, to other news and other places. How much additional enlightenment did that piece of information about poverty give the viewer about the fighting or the fighters? What about telling the viewer, in the same number of words, that Eritrea was a province of Ethiopia until recently? But no. The poverty synecdoche is more attractive and less trouble; you simple reach for it from the handy storehouse of mythology about Africa. No taxing research required.
Appealing to Donors and Lenders: Do the Right Thing
And since poverty seems so important to us when we think about Africa, how much do we really know about it?
In 1960 a bloody civil war broke out in Congo soon after its colonizer, Belgium, beat a hasty retreat from the territory. Within months its young, radical, and idealistic prime minister was brutally murdered by his rivals. It is now widely accepted that the CIA played the leading role in taking him out and installing a corrupt demagogue called Mobutu, whose main attraction was presumably his claim to be an anticommunist. Mobutu set about plundering the wealth of this vast country, as large as the whole of Western Europe, and also fomenting trouble in Congo's neighboring countries, aiding and abetting the destabilization of Angola and openly cooperating with the apartheid white-minority regime in South Africa. Mobutu's legacy was truly horrendous. He stole and stashed away billions in foreign banks. He even stole his country's name and baptized it as Zaire. Today Congo, strategically positioned in the heart of Africa, vast in size and mineral wealth, has become one of the poorest nations on earth. Who are we to hold responsible for this: the Congolese people, Mobutu, or his sponsors the CIA? Who will pay the penalty of structural adjustment? Of course that question is already irrelevant. The people are already adjusted to grinding poverty and long-range instability.
Congo is by no means the only country in Africa to have foreign powers choose or sustain its leader. It is merely the most scandalous in scale and effrontery.
President Clinton was right on target when he apologized to Africa for the unprincipled conduct of American foreign policy during the Cold War, a policy that scorched the young hope of Africa's independence struggle like seedlings in a drought.
I have not gone into all this unpleasant matter to prompt any new apologies, but to make all of us wary of those easy, facile comments about Africa's incurable poverty or the endemic incapacity of Africans to get their act together and move ahead like everybody else.
I cannot presume to tell world bankers anything about public finance or economics and the rest. I have told you stories. Now let me make a couple of suggestions.
From an organization in Britain called Jubilee 2000 I have received communication lately about their noble campaign to persuade leaders of the world's rich nations (G8 countries) to cancel the debts owed them by the world's 50 poorest nations. I was made to understand that the British government was half persuaded that it should be done, and that the Canadians were possibly of the same view. But, on the negative side, I learned that Japan and Germany were adamantly opposed to the proposal. About the most important factor, America, my informant had this to say: "When asked about cancellation their tongues speak sweetly, like some of Homer's Greeks, but their hearts are closed. It needs another poet to go to them and lay siege to those hearts . . . will you be that poet?" On our flight here yesterday my wife, noticing perhaps my anxiety, showed me a passage in a book she was reading. "The fact that a message may not be received is no reason not to send it. I immediately recognized the affinity between this thought and another I knew, wearing its proverbial Igbo dress: "Let us perform the sacrifice and leave the blame on the doorstep of the spirits." That's what I have now done.
Regarding Japan and Germany, beneficiaries both of postwar reconstruction assistance, I would appeal not to their hearts, but to their memories and to their sense of irony. And for good measure I shall tell them the parable of Jesus about the servant who was forgiven a huge debt by his master, on leaving whose audience he chanced upon a fellow servant who owed him a very small sum of money, seized him by the throat, and had him tortured and thrown into jail.
A Plea for Good Governance
My second request to the World Bank goes to the very root of the problem: the looting of the wealth of poor nations by corrupt leaders and their cronies. This crime is compounded by the expatriation of these funds into foreign banks where they are put into the service of foreign economies. Consequently the victim country is defrauded twice if my economics is correct: it is defrauded of the wealth that is stolen from its treasury, and also of the development potential of that wealth.
In asking the World Bank to take a lead in the recovery of the stolen resources of poor countries, I am fully aware that such criminal transactions are not made through the World Bank. I am also aware that banks are not set up to act as a police force. But we live in terrible times when an individual tyrant or a small clique of looters in power can destroy the lives and the future of whole countries and whole populations by their greed. The consequences of these actions can be of genocidal proportions.
Herein lies the root of the horrifying statistic to which President Wolfensohn recently drew attention: "You will be staggered to know, as I was, that 37 percent of African private wealth is held outside Africa, whereas for Asia the share is 3 percent and for Latin America it is 17 percent (James D. Wolfensohn: Africa's Moment, Washington, D.C., World Bank, 1998). It would be a great pity if the world were to sit back in the face of this tragedy and do nothing, merely to preserve codes of banking etiquette and confidentiality formulated for quite other times. The world woke up too late to the inadequacy of these codes in the matter of the Nazi Holocaust gold. We have now been warned. The cooperation of the world's banks led by the World Bank Group in eliminating this great scourge will give so many poor countries the first real opportunity to begin afresh and take responsibility for their development and progress, and it will discourage future marauders of nations. It will also clear the banks of the charge of receiving stolen property and even more severe indictments.
For too long the world has been content to judge peoples and nations in distress largely on the basis of received stereotypes drawn from mythologies of oppression. In 1910, at the height of British imperial dominion, John Buchan, a popular novelist who was also a distinguished imperial civil servant, published a colonialist classic entitled Prester John in which we find the following pronouncement: "That is the difference between white and black, the gift of responsibility."
I do not believe such a difference exists, except in the mythology of domination. Let's put this to the test by giving these poor, black nations the first sporting chance of their lives. The cost is low and the rewards will blow our minds, white and black alike. Trust me!
Let me round this up with a nice little coda. Africa Is People has another dimension. Africa believes in people, in cooperation with people. If the philosophical dictum of Descartes—I think, therefore I am—represents a European individualist ideal, the Bantu declaration—umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (a human is human because of other humans)—represents an African communal aspiration.