Category Archives: Technology

World: My Speech to the Finance Graduates

From: Yona Maro


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By Robert J. Shiller, 30 May 2012

NEW HAVEN – At this time of year, at graduation ceremonies in America and elsewhere, those about to leave university often hear some final words of advice before receiving their diplomas. To those interested in pursuing careers in finance – or related careers in insurance, accounting, auditing, law, or corporate management – I submit the following address:

Best of luck to you as you leave the academy for your chosen professions in finance. Over the course of your careers, Wall Street and its kindred institutions will need you. Your training in financial theory, economics, mathematics, and statistics will serve you well. But your lessons in history, philosophy, and literature will be just as important, because it is vital not only that you have the right tools, but also that you never lose sight of the purposes and overriding social goals of finance.

Unless you have been studying at the bottom of the ocean, you know that the financial sector has come under severe criticism – much of it justified – for thrusting the world economy into its worst crisis since the Great Depression. And you need only check in with some of your classmates who have populated the Occupy movements around the world to sense the widespread resentment of financiers and the top 1% of income earners to whom they largely cater (and often belong).

While some of this criticism may be over-stated or misplaced, it nonetheless underscores the need to reform financial institutions and practices. Finance has long been central to thriving market democracies, which is why its current problems need to be addressed. With your improved sense of our interconnectedness and diverse needs, you can do that. Indeed, it is the real professional challenge ahead of you, and you should embrace it as an opportunity.

Young finance professionals need to familiarize themselves with the history of banking, and recognize that it is at its best when it serves ever-broadening spheres of society. Here, the savings-bank movement in the United Kingdom and Europe in the nineteenth century, and the microfinance movement pioneered by the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh in the twentieth century, comes to mind. Today, the best way forward is to update financial and communications technology to offer a full array of enlightened banking services to the lower middle class and the poor.

Graduates going into mortgage banking are faced with a different, but equally vital, challenge: to design new, more flexible loans that will better help homeowners to weather the kind of economic turbulence that has buried millions of people today in debt.

Young investment bankers, for their part, have a great opportunity to devise more participatory forms of venture capital – embodied in the new crowd-funding Web sites – to spur the growth of innovative new small businesses. Meanwhile, opportunities will abound for rookie insurance professionals to devise new ways to hedge risks that real people worry about, and that really matter – those involving their jobs, livelihoods, and home values.

Beyond investment banks and brokerage houses, modern finance has a public and governmental dimension, which clearly needs reinventing in the wake of the recent financial crisis. Setting the rules of the game for a robust, socially useful financial sector has never been more important. Recent graduates are needed in legislative and administrative agencies to analyze the legal infrastructure of finance, and regulate it so that it produces the greatest results for society.

A new generation of political leaders needs to understand the importance of financial literacy and find ways to supply citizens with the legal and financial advice that they need. Meanwhile, economic policymakers face the great challenge of designing new financial institutions, such as pension systems and public entitlements based on the solid grounding of intergenerational risk-sharing.

Those of you deciding to pursue careers as economists and finance scholars need to develop a better understanding of asset bubbles – and better ways to communicate this understanding to the finance profession and to the public. As much as Wall Street had a hand in the current crisis, it began as a broadly held belief that housing prices could not fall – a belief that fueled a full-blown social contagion. Learning how to spot such bubbles and deal with them before they infect entire economies will be a major challenge for the next generation of finance scholars.

Equipped with sophisticated financial ideas ranging from the capital asset pricing model to intricate options-pricing formulas, you are certainly and justifiably interested in building materially rewarding careers. There is no shame in this, and your financial success will reflect to a large degree your effectiveness in producing strong results for the firms that employ you. But, however imperceptibly, the rewards for success on Wall Street, and in finance more generally, are changing, just as the definition of finance must change if is to reclaim its stature in society and the trust of citizens and leaders.

Finance, at its best, does not merely manage risk, but also acts as the steward of society’s assets and an advocate of its deepest goals. Beyond compensation, the next generation of finance professionals will be paid its truest rewards in the satisfaction that comes with the gains made in democratizing finance – extending its benefits into corners of society where they are most needed. This is a new challenge for a new generation, and will require all of the imagination and skill that you can bring to bear.

Good luck in reinventing finance. The world needs you to succeed.

Chinese Capabilities for Computer Network Operations and Cyber Espionage

From: Yona Maro

The PLA’s sustained modernization effort over the past two decades has driven remarkable transformation within the force and put the creation of modern command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) infrastructure at the heart of the PLA’s strategic guidelines for long term development. This priority on C4ISR systems modernization, has in turn been a catalyst for the development of an integrated information warfare (IW) capability capable of defending military and civilian networks while seizing control of an adversary’s information systems during a conflict.

The effects of preemptive penetrations may not be readily observable or detected until after combat has begun or after Chinese computer network attack (CNA) teams have executed their tools against targeted networks. Even if circumstantial evidence points to China as the culprit, no policy currently exists to easily determine appropriate response options to a large scale attack on U.S. military or civilian networks in which definitive attribution is lacking. Beijing, understanding this, may seek to exploit this gray area in U.S. policymaking and legal frameworks to create delays in U.S. command decision making.

Earlier in the past decade, the PLA adopted a multi-layered approach to offensive information warfare that it calls Integrated Network Electronic Warfare or INEW strategy. Now, the PLA is moving toward information confrontation as a broader conceptualization that seeks to unite the various components of IW under a single warfare commander. The need to coordinate offensive and defensive missions more closely and ensure these missions are mutually supporting is driven by the recognition that IW must be closely integrated with PLA campaign objectives.

http://www.uscc.gov/RFP/2012/USCC%20Report_Chinese_CapabilitiesforComputer_NetworkOperationsandCyberEspionage.pdf


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Where do good ideas come from?

From: Yona Maro

One of our most innovative, popular thinkers takes on-in exhilarating style-one of our key questions: Where do good ideas come from?

With Where Good Ideas Come From, Steven Johnson pairs the insight of his bestselling Everything Bad Is Good for You and the dazzling erudition of The Ghost Map and The Invention of Air to address an urgent and universal question: What sparks the flash of brilliance? How does groundbreaking innovation happen? Answering in his infectious, culturally omnivorous style, using his fluency in fields from neurobiology to popular culture, Johnson provides the complete, exciting, and encouraging story of how we generate the ideas that push our careers, our lives, our society, and our culture forward.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=NugRZGDbPFU


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United Nations E-Government Survey 2012: E-Government for the People

From: Yona Maro

The United Nations E-Government Survey 2012 finds that many have put in place e-government initiatives and information and communication technologies applications for the people to further enhance public sector efficiencies and streamline governance systems to support sustainable development. Among the e-government leaders, innovative technology solutions have gained special recognition as the means to revitalize lagging economic and social sectors.

The overall conclusion that emerges from the 2012 Survey in today’s recessionary world climate is that while it is important to continue with service delivery, governments must increasingly begin to rethink in terms of e government – and e-governance – placing greater emphasis on institutional linkages between and among the tiered government structures in a bid to create synergy for inclusive sustainable development. An important aspect of this approach is to widen the scope of e-government for a transformative role of the government towards cohesive, coordinated, and integrated processes and institutions through which such sustainable development takes place.

http://unpan1.un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/un/unpan048065.pdf


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UN: Commission on Science and Technology for Development, fifteenth session

From: Yona Maro

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Palais des Nations, Geneva

The Commission will review progress made in the implementation of and follow-up to the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) outcomes at the regional and international levels, including on improvements to the Internet Governance Forum (IGF).

The Commission will address the following priority themes:

Innovation, research, technology transfer for mutual advantage, entrepreneurship and collaborative development in the information society.

Open access, virtual science libraries, geospatial analysis and other complementary information and communications technology and science, technology, engineering and mathematics assets.

In addition, the national science, technology and innovation policy reviews of El Salvador and Peru will be officially presented.

http://www.unctad.org/en/Pages/CalendarMeetingDetails.aspx?meetingid=47

World: Let Chernobyl ring alarm bells on nuclear pursuit

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

Environmental protection and policy is not a one-man or two to rule. It is a whole Nation affair. Public must get involved in matters of Nuclea and the Law demands that as well. Information must be made available to public as and whenever is necessary for updates.

Nuclea Plant in Kenya seems to be working behind the curtain and majority Kenyans have no idea what is going on……..

Wake-up people and begin to demand, engage and participate in matters that are likely to affect population livelihood. It is public and human rights……..

Thank you all,

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Let Chernobyl ring alarm bells on nuclear pursuit

Published on 26/04/2012

A disturbing trend is manifesting itself in developing countries – the uncalled for craving for nuclear energy.

Its equation with economic and industrial revolution in the third world is a smack in the face of environmental and grave safety concerns.

Hearing Energy Minister Kiraitu Murungi say solutions to Kenya’s energy shortfalls lie in nuclear power, one is confronted with the enormity of knowledge gaps around the technical setbacks associated with this intricate technology.

As the world marked the 26th anniversary of the worst nuclear disaster yesterday, some 4,000 people will lose 13 years of their total life expectancy in the former Soviet Union, thanks to effects of the Chernobyl nuclear accident.

The accident occurred on April 26, 1986, when a reactor burst at the Lenin Atomic Power Station at Chernobyl due to an operational error, spilling radioactive waves.

A radius of 30km was declared an exclusive zone and more than a hundred towns overlooking the Belarus/Ukraine border evacuated.

Victims are today as sad as they were 26 years ago after the accident, blamed on human error and imperfect technology. Today, researchers fear at least 4,000 people will die of cancer from the accident.

While Britain, Germany, France and other large economies contend with plans to phase out nuclear power, the Chernobyl shadow and the recent Fukushima nuclear crisis in Japan are a stark reminder of the core dangers of radioactive energy.

begging question

Germany has recently announced plans to close all its 17 nuclear reactors by 2022, a signal of loss of faith in the technology.

And as Kenya champions plans to go nuclear, which Kiraitu believes will offer lifeline to the economy, a quick reassessment of the dream is crucial, given that the technology Kenya and other developing countries are pursuing is not dissimilar to what established economies are running away from.

Nuclear Electricity Project Committee chairman Ochillo Ayacko last month said Sh252 million would be spent on training Kenyan personnel on the technology before it is rolled out. Some Kenyans, he says, are already undergoing training in South Korea while others are studying locally on the legal and regulatory frameworks for nuclear power.

But the begging question is whether Kenya’s nuclear ambitions will be productive, given the country’s inadequate financial and technological standing.

There is also the global view that nuclear technology as a power source has lost cost advantage over renewable sources and therefore not ideal for a developing country.

Recent research findings are clear. According to a research by Mark Cooper of Vermont Law School’s Institute for Energy and Environment, estimates of construction costs of $3 billion per a nuclear reactor eight years ago have risen to $10 billion today and the figures are likely to go up.

The Government estimates a pre-feasibility study on the viability of a nuclear power plant alone will cost Sh254 million in just two years.

It plans to invest $5 billion in an initial nuclear power plant with capacity to generate 1,000 MW of electricity by 2022.

The most unfortunate but striking reality is that whenever such projects suffer cost overruns, the taxpayer bears the burden.

Already, Government stands accused of giving lip to renewable options such as solar, wind and geothermal despite the country’s vast potential for alternative sources. While the cost of renewable energy sources such as solar and wind has been declining, that of nuclear has been rising in the last decade.

Despite disapproval by United Nations Environmental Programme Executive Director Achim Steiner and the Parliamentary Energy Committee, the development of nuclear energy is ranked third in the Government development priorities listed in Vision 2030.

disposal issues

France and Finland, credited as the most successful countries in nuclear exploitation, have had their fair share of challenges ranging from quality control problems and cost overruns. There are doubts as to whether Kenya will succeed where economic powerhouses have failed.

Issues have also been raised over Kenya’s ability to handle the disposal of nuclear wastes in the absence of requisite laws.

Kenya has a long way to towards fulfilling the milestones required by the International Atomic Energy Agency for the development of infrastructure for nuclear power.

As the world marks another anniversary of the Chernobyl reactor incident, a reassessment of nuclear power plans in Kenya and elsewhere would be in order

World: The Global Cleantech Innovation Index 2012

From: Yona Maro

Only 20% of the world’s proven fossil fuel reserves can be burnt by 2050 if we are to have an 80% chance of staying below 2 degrees of global warming. We know this at a time when the value of global fossil fuel subsidies are approximately US$700 billion per year whilst IEA estimates that renewable subsidies are approximately US$57 billion. We can no longer continue down this path of unsustainable economics and perverse incentives.

This report investigates the global state of cleantech innovation in entrepreneurial start-up companies. Denmark topped the index, with its unique combination of a supportive environment for innovative cleantech start-ups, evidence of those start-ups emerging as well as a strong track-record of companies commercialising their cleantech innovations and scaling them up to widespread market adoption, particularly in wind.

China and India placed 13th and 12th respectively, but stand out as having a strong potential to rise through the ranks in the coming years. While not currently creating innovative cleantech companies in great numbers relative to the size of their economies, they are already strong centres for cleantech production, and have increasingly supportive governments, large sums of private money ready to be invested, and massive domestic markets.

http://awsassets.panda.org/downloads/coming_clean_2012.pdf


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Japan: Nuclear plant workers before and after Fukushima

From: Yona Maro

Before the earthquake and nuclear reactor meltdown in March 2011, about 30% of the country’s electricity needs were provided by Japan’s 54 main nuclear reactors, and this was expected to increase to at least 40% by 2017. Much of this information was reported after Japan’s disastrous earthquake and tsunami in March 2011, which not only created hundreds of thousands of refugees but also damaged nuclear reactors, especially Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station.

At Fukushima Daiichi, workers are still required to clean the garbages of the disaster so as to reduce the harm to the rest of the country and the world. It is a Faustian bargain, yet the bargain is made by the corporation, while workers work in danger out of compulsion of their economic necessity. Those lacking work are ‘willing’ to face the deadly work environment of nuclear rubble to earn for their families.

While working in a nuclear power plant seems to be a unique job, not comparable to other industries, in fact there is a simple common denominator with all those who do dirty, dangerous and demeaning jobs all around the world – insecurity or plain lack of work, and thus inability to subsist without wage work, forces workers to accept compromises to their health and safety as a precondition of their work. It is in fact a false ‘choice’ if the workers are beholden by the industry to keep their jobs.

http://www.amrc.org.hk/node/1230


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World: Significant Cyber Events 2012

from Yona Maro

A list of significant cyber events since 2006. Last modified on March 16, 2012. Significance is in the eye of the beholder, but it focus on successful attacks on government agencies, defense and high tech companies, or economic crimes with losses of more than a million dollars.
http://csis.org/files/publication/120316_Significant_Cyber_Incidents.pdf

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Surveillance and security: securing whom?

From: Yona Maro

It is common knowledge that surveillance technologies keep us safe. But this common knowledge is based, at best, on shaky evidence. In the face of dangerous situations, emotions tend to trump logical decision making; reasoning goes that if even a single attack is prevented, the technology is worth having. Such reasoning is quite ill founded. Not only does surveillance technology not necessarily keep us safe, in many instances, surveillance technologies decrease our security.

Building surveillance tools into communications networks enables simpler forms of “insider” attack. In Italy, 6,000 judges, politicians and celebrities were illegally wiretapped between 1996 and 2006. During this period, one in every 10,00 Italians was wiretapped; no major political or business deal was ever private. For ten months in 2004-2005, 100 senior members of the Greek government, including the Prime Minister, were spied upon when the wiretapping capabilities of a Greek Vodafone switch were turned on by unknown parties.

The technologies revealed today by Privacy International – the hacking tools that allow an investigator to download spyware onto a target’s computer, the interception tools that allow instant automatic search for “communications of interest” the data mining tools that allow profiling of a user – build a picture of a surveillance industry gone wild – an industry that seeks to provide tools without understanding the huge potential for harm.

https://www.privacyinternational.org/opinion-pieces/surveillance-and-security-securing-whom-and-at-what-cost


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Technology Transfer and Innovation

From: Yona Maro

As the world gears up for the Rio+20 Conference, the vital role of innovation and technology transfer in addressing the most pressing sustainable development challenges of recent years must be widely recognized.

In that regard, this information note highlights the most salient proposals for action on technology transfer and innovation in country submissions to the Rio+20 process. Identifying key priority areas in proposals – namely mechanisms, innovation, enabling environments, capacity building, intellectual property and financing – could potentially contribute towards a tangible outcome at Rio.

http://ictsd.org/downloads/2012/04/technology-transfer-and-innovation-key-country-priorities-for-rio-20.pdf


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Kenya: Death apointment – pioneer woman farmer in Kasipul Kabondo constituency

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Oyugis Town.

DEATH has occurred of a prominent and pioneer woman farmer in Kasipul-Kabondo who in her life tie had pioneer and embraced the new method of farming technology in the region.

Mrs Dorcas Akeyo J.Oyugi-Ogot who together with her late husband Mr James Oyugi Ogot had introduced the latest ultra modern farming technology in their mixed farm, which is located near Mikaye/Ober market next to the main Oyugis Kisumu road died on Saturday after along illness.

The family medium size mixed farm in Kakelo/Dudi Location in Rachuonyo South district within Homa-Bay County has remained a role model in the region for well over three decades.

They were the first couple to introduce graded dairy animal in the region in the late 1960s. He husband James Oyugis Ogot a top educationist who taught as a school teacher and later rose to the rank of a District Education Officer {DEO} in Siaya where he retired ten years ago before he a succumbed to his death about eight years ago.

However, Mama Dorcas Oyugi continued with her farming effort, which made her a role model in the region. The farm used to be the center of agricultural activities and had attracted the attention of the government and particularly the Provincial Administration. It has become the site for the annual Field Agricultural Day where farmers from all over Nyanza Province used to converge every year for training new method of farming.

Mrs Oyugis a mother of eight children all grown up with several grand children. After her husband’s death, she has continued with her farming activities under the guidance of her eldest son Dr. Kenneth Kambona a top agronomist who is working as regional consultant with the UNDP.

Top politician in the region have sent their condolences to the family of the pioneer farmer. Among the them Kasipul-Kabondo MP Joseph Oyugi Maguwanga, Karachuonyo MP Eng James Rege, an aspirant who is a candidate for the Homa-Bay Conty women representative Mrs Roselyn Onyuka, a former PDE Nyanza, former Kasipul-Kabondo MP William Oloo Otula, an aspirant for the Homa-Bay County governor Cyprian Otieno Awiti, another aspirant for the newly created Kasipul constituency Ong’ondo Were, civic leaders and members of the farming fraternity in the region.

A staunch member of the SDA church, Mrs Ouis was also a church leader and she had inspired many young Christians and members of the farming fraternity in the region.

Ends

World: Global report on the financing of nuclear weapons producers

From: Yona Maro

Each year, the nine nuclear-armed nations spend a combined total of more than US$100 billion on their nuclear forces – assembling new warheads, modernizing old ones, and building ballistic missiles, bombers and submarines to launch them. Much of this work is being carried out by private companies.

By lending money to nuclear weapons companies, and purchasing their shares and bonds, banks and other financial institutions are indirectly facilitating the build-up and modernization of nuclear forces, thereby heightening the risk that one day these ultimate weapons of terror will be used again – with catastrophic humanitarian and environmental consequences. Divestment from nuclear weapons companies is an effective way for the corporate world to advance the goal of nuclear abolition.

The report lists financial institutions that have been substantively involved in financing the selected nuclear weapons producers by means of share issues, shareholdings, bond issues, bondholdings and bank loans since 2008. More than half are based in the United States, and one-third in Europe. The rest are primarily from Asia (including Australia) and the Middle East. Most have significant investments in one or two of the nuclear weapons companies, while some invest in several. Among the banks and other financial institutions most heavily involved are Bank of America, BlackRock and JP Morgan Chase in the United States; BNP Paribas in France; Deutsche Bank in Germany; and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial in Japan.
http://www.dontbankonthebomb.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/DivestmentReport.pdf


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Human Security vs Scientific Freedom: How Bird Flu has Provoked an Overdue Debate

From: Yona F Maro

Experiments conducted by two groups of scientists last year, one in
the US and the other in the Netherlands, have provoked a policy
imbroglio in most parts of the world that is destined to fester
through 2012. The experiments, funded by the National Institute of
Health in the United States, were aimed at determining how the bird
flu virus could be made transmissible between mammals. The result was
a deliberately created “bird flu” strain that may be capable of
passing from human to human.

Much coverage in the mainstream and scientific press in the developed
world has focused on the dispute over whether or not to publish the
studies as some fear they could provide recipes for criminals or
terrorists. However,  bigger issues are at stake such as questions
about how the international community should oversee particularly
risky types of infectious disease research? What, if any, research
should be impermissible? Who can make that call? And what should the
role of the World Health Organization (WHO) be in this tricky field
that mixes issues of public health and security? Despite the important
international implications of this debate, little attention has been
paid to it in Africa.

On one side are advocates of “scientific freedom” who offer no
apologies for the deliberate creation of these extremely dangerous
bugs. They say the experiments are important to prepare responses to a
future influenza pandemic. On the other side are a more heterogeneous
group of safety and security advocates who are dismayed at the lack of
oversight of the laboratories where such experiments occur. They argue
that the risks posed by such experiments outweigh the benefits and
that they should never have been performed. They argue that the
research contributes little to development of vaccines, and are
concerned about the potential for laboratory accidents that may have
far reaching negative health consequences.

Many critics of the research also want new procedures to review
security aspects of dangerous experiments before they happen. Some in
this group additionally want details of some experiments kept secret
from those considered America’s political enemies.

The US government, which both funded the experiments and is trying to
coordinate a response to the security concerns they have raised, has
ended up broadcasting mixed messages. The health ministry, which is
amenable to the interests of big science, tends toward the “scientific
freedom” position, while other officials are more likely to advocate
action to reign in risks. So the health ministry blandly promises new
biosecurity advice to laboratories, a project that has lingered undone
for nearly a decade. This guidance will likely be nonbinding and
unambitious, and have effect only in the US. Others meanwhile press
for mandatory measures that would create layers of local, national,
and international review for the small set of experiments deemed
highly risky.

Caught in this messy situation is the WHO, whose past successes have
often stemmed from its ability to bypass political rivalries – such as
its eradication of smallpox in the midst of the Cold War. If a new
international system to review especially risky infectious disease
research is to be developed, there is no question that WHO would need
to be, at some level, involved.

Yet such a system has the potential to be poisonous to the WHO and its
goals to promote public health interests over political rivalries.
What happens, for instance, if the US goes to the WHO to stop research
results from being provided to a rival such as Iran?

This is a less hypothetical problem than you may suspect. Some leading
US biological security voices appear to believe that WHO should be
bent to serve American security interests. They find it reasonable
that WHO would manage a two-tiered system of access to research
information, dividing nations between those deemed (by the US amongst
others) trustworthy and those that are not. Much as the Non-
Proliferation Treaty has divided the world into those who may, and
those who may not have nuclear weapons.

Compounding the difficulty for the WHO is that in May 2011 it adopted
a new international Framework agreement on sharing influenza viruses
and research data. This agreement is the culmination of a negotiation
that was largely divided along North-South lines.  Developing
countries, led by Indonesia, sought to reform WHO’s influenza
surveillance network, which plays a critical global role in influenza
diagnostics and vaccine selection.

Influenza vaccines are made from influenza viruses, and developing
countries rightly criticized the WHO for collecting viruses in the
name of public health and then gifting those viruses to the
pharmaceutical industry that used them to develop proprietary
commercial vaccines. Moreover, the industry is uninterested in
producing and selling influenza vaccines to developing countries, at
the prices that they could afford. At the centre of H5N1 outbreaks,
Indonesia found itself unable to buy vaccines made from the viruses
that it gave to the WHO, and which the WHO gave to industry.

The Framework promises to change this with a commitment from vaccine
makers to provide benefits to developing countries in return for
access to the viruses. These viruses include those that were used in
the experiments that kicked off the present controversy, which were
collected by the WHO system from Indonesia and Vietnam.

Ironically, in the negotiation of the Framework, the staunchest
advocate for the unrestricted sharing of influenza viruses between
nations was none other than the United States, which feared that
Indonesia or other countries would become so frustrated that they
would abandon the WHO system by making bilateral deals with vaccine
companies – cutting others out of the loop.

Now, however, the United States is making an abrupt change of course.
Concerned that the H5N1 experiments could offer its geopolitical
opponents a map to create a particularly nasty biological weapon, the
US doesn’t want these engineered viruses and key details of the
research freely shared.

Thus, having just fixed virus-sharing problems with the Framework, the
WHO now must deal with one of its weightier members wanting to revert
to a system that collects all the viruses but does not equitably share
the benefits. This time, the forces auguring for disparity are related
to security, rather than economic interests.

With advances in biotechnology enhancing the dangerous potential of
engineering viruses that transmit from human to human, it makes a
great deal of sense for specific types of research to be pre-screened
and more tightly overseen.  Some experiments, especially those
intended to increase the danger a disease poses, may be too risky to
allow at all. Also, because some such diseases can quickly spread
around the world, it stands to reason that an international review
should be required in cases where the most extreme danger is posed.

But this is no simple task. In fact, the potential political obstacles
to an international review system may be insurmountable – at least if
governments want to protect the independence of the international
public health agency. Governments that look to the WHO to implement
their national security policy would best look elsewhere. If a
depoliticised international research review system could be
established with countries on equal footing, however, it may help
ensure that we are less often confronted with dangerous surprises such
as the recent flu experiments. Given that any worldwide pandemic is
likely to hit the African continent harder than others, we should
prepare a response that upholds public health interests by ensuring
that influenza research goes forward that is well considered and
properly overseen, to improve public health outcomes.

Dr. Edward Hammond is Director of Prickly Research
(www.pricklyresearch.com) and an advisor to the Third World Network.
Dr. Chandre Gould is a senior researcher in the Crime and Justice
Programme of the ISS


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World: Heroes & Character; Civilization and Rights Struggles

From Octimotor

A Web Head Celebrity

The 3rd of the spider man film depicts a number of action packed conflicts. It also evokes maters of emotion and personsons’ character.

In it we see Black Suit vs. Red Suit spider guys duel. The Goblin Junior, and Spider Man clash. A Sandman turns out to be the killer of Peter Parker’s beloved uncle – – although that man motivated is now shown to have been motivated to grab bank money to buy his daughter’s survival of a serious medical condition.

Success and public acclaim can go to a celebrity’s head.

Never the less, any person will always have choices – – about whether to do wrong, or instead to do the right thing.

The subtitle to Spider man III states, “Every hero has a choice.”

Secondarily, as a science and engineering side note, effects shown in this movie also makes me think about nanotech, as also did the remake of “the day the earth stood still” film, and “Starman” film.

(You might refer to book by Eric Drexler, _Engines of Creation_, as a source for nanotech ideas, eespecially if that term is a new one to you.)

Chris. Hedges speaks on rebels vs. civilization crisis

Link TV, midnight thru 1 edt mon19mr2012 EDT showed a presentation by Christopher Hedges. He is author of _Death of the liberal class_ .

Readers should Look up the poem by Shelly, “Osimandius”. He quoted it during his description of how we too are now resembling the possible passing away of a mighty civilization.

‘The only Place left is “On The Street”,’ he said.

You decide which of several meanings apply: a., being economically destitute, even homeless; b. being an active participant in a civil disobedience movement.

He tells us that acts of rebellion are done, not because they are likely to succeed, or have utilitarian value. Rather, they are done because they are RIGHT[ious].

Acts of Resistance are confirmations of Life. A key to striving to be an ethical, free individual, is open rebellion against injustice and oppression.

‘Hope has 2 siblings – – anger and courage’.

Chris Hedges speaks of resources depletion and eco-ruination.

Well, that may bite us HARD! That is, I would say it might, unless counteracted by our assuring that sufficient investments would be made, aimed toward developing better future ways for how we operate agriculture, energy supply, transportation, and manufacturing activities.

-om-

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Chris Hedges: ‘Death of the Liberal Class’ – Book Excerpt – Truthdig
www.truthdig.com/arts…/the_death_of_the_liberal_class_20101029/
Oct 29, 2010 – In a traditional democracy, the liberal class functions as a safety valve. It makes piecemeal and incremental reform possible. It offers hope for …
http://www.truthdig.com/arts_culture/item/the_death_of_the_liberal_class_20101029/

In a traditional democracy, the liberal class functions as a safety valve. It makes piecemeal and incremental reform possible. It offers hope for change and proposes gradual steps toward greater equality. It endows the state and the mechanisms of power with virtue. It also serves as an attack dog that discredits radical social movements, making the liberal class a useful component within the power elite.

But the assault by the corporate state on the democratic state has claimed the liberal class as one of its victims. Corporate power forgot that the liberal class, when it functions, gives legitimacy to the power elite. And reducing the liberal class to courtiers or mandarins, who have nothing to offer but empty rhetoric, shuts off this safety valve and forces discontent to find other outlets that often end in violence. The inability of the liberal class to acknowledge that corporations have wrested power from the hands of citizens, that the Constitution and its guarantees of personal liberty have become irrelevant, and that the phrase consent of the governed is meaningless, has left it speaking and acting in ways that no longer correspond to reality. It has lent its voice to hollow acts of political theater, and the pretense that democratic debate and choice continue to exist.

Kenya: The Nuclear Centre’s Compliments to KCDN

From: odhiambo okecth

Dear Dave,

We also much appreciate the work you and your Team are doing at The Nuclear Centre in Nairobi- I hope I have it right.

Sure, we need the various raw inputs to generate the various forms of energy, and we at KCDN have started the process. We are mobilizing all the key players, all people who can add value to the Waste Revolution in Kenya.

We did pay a Courtesy Call on The Centre for Research on New and Renewable Energy and we are impressed with the wealth of Knowledge at the Centre. This wealth of knowledge must now move from Paper to Practice, and that is our point of entry as The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign.

We are looking forward to also paying a Courtesy Call on you and the Nuclear Centre to enable us share in our experiences.

Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change we seek’- President Barack Obama of the USA. ??A Clean, Green and Litter Less Kenya at 50 is possible and achievable.

Odhiambo T Oketch
CEO KCDN Kenya,
National Coordinator- The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign
Tel; 0724 365 557
Blog; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch

Odhiambo T Oketch is the immediate former Chairman to the City Council of  Nairobi  Stakeholders Evaluation Team on Performance Contracting and Rapid Results Management. He is also Chair to the Nyamonye Catholic Church Development Fund. He was also the Co-Chair and Coordinator of The Great Nairobi Walk against Corruption that was held in Nairobi on the 22nd October 2010 in partnership with KACC and he is the National Co-ordinator of The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign in Kenya.
                         …….Moving From Talking to Tasking……..

— On Fri, 3/16/12, David wrote:

From: David
Subject: Moving from Paper to Practice; Kondele Clean up Campaign
Date: Friday, March 16, 2012, 7:24 AM

 
Odhiambo,??Say hi to my Prof. F. N. Onyango who taught me Physics in my undergraduate years. Just came from Kilifi where a sisal farmer has added dairy farming. He has taken cow dung mix it with sisal liquid and bang you have a bio-digester. He currently produces enough gas (methane) to cook for himself and farm hands, produce 180 kW of electricity from 2 engines (the only item imported) and if Kilifi town plus KPLC were willing he can supply the town with electricity. This is good and hard work which make me salute you, all who you are working with…. ??We need all the energy mix possible. Now we have hydro, geothermal and diesel. Let us add biomass, nuclear, wind, solar, coal etc.??When in need of rest…good rest,,,go to Luanda where yours truly was born and look for Big Ben, Teachers, Uncle Sam or Pumzika and just remember when the rubber hits the road sparks fly. ??

Dauuu??

— odhiambo okecth wrote:

??Friends,

??We had a meeting with the Centre for Research on New and Renewable Energy at Maseno University Kisumu Campus this morning at 9.00am to discuss the need for moving from Paper to Practice as a Nation in as far as waste management and conversion is concerned.??The meeting was chaired by Prof Frederick Onyango- the Director of the Centre and he was accompanied by;?Prof Reccab Manyala- the Deputy DirectorProf Okinda OwuorDr. Raphael KapiyoDr Alfred ManyongeMr. Charles Olang’oMr. Fredrick OtienoMr. Obange Nelson and?Mr. Phillip Lunya- all from Maseno University.I was accompanied by;Mr. David Olang’oMr. Paul Diela and ?Ms Eysdorah Lavine Nyagengo all of KCDN?

We looked at the prospects of waste management and conversion to water for irrigation, manure and gas. We will make a follow up on this and create a strong partnership on the same.?

Later at 11.00am, we joined a bigger team of Kisumu Environmental Campaigners and were really impressed with the turn out for the Kondele Clean-up Campaign tomorrow.This groups are forming themselves into a standing committee that will drive The Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign in Kisumu every Month. ??The following groups were in attendance in the meeting; The City Council of Kisumu The Provincial Administration The CBO NetworkUmande Trust?Kondele UnionManyatta Solid WasteManyatta Residents AssociationKololeni GroupKilo Health ActorsSRDC OrganizationMungaano Ya Wana VijijiBamato ProgrammeMaseno UniversityKisumu PolytechnicManyatta Development GroupKiwamaJokanyallaShepherds Rock Community DevelopmentPaulosa Cleaning ServicesGasiapoa Waste Management Services and?KCDNThis meeting was ably guided by the Director of Environment at the City Council of Kisumu Mr. John Sande and Chaired by Mr. Ben McAlaka from Umande Trust. We were also joined by Mr. Paul Diela all the way from Homa Bay, who wanted to come and see for himself how we organize the Clean-up Campaigns and Mobilizations.?We are set for tomorrow and watu wa Kisumu Mkoooo???Change will not?come if we wait for some?other person or some?other time. We are the?ones we’ve been waiting?for. We are the change?we seek’- President?Barack Obama of the USA.??A Clean, Green?and Litter Less Kenya at?50 is possible and?achievable.?

Odhiambo T Oketch??CEO KCDN Kenya,??National Coordinator- The Monthly?Nationwide Clean-up?Campaign??Tel; 0724 365 557??Blog; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com??Website; www.kcdnkenya.org??Facebook; Monthly?Nationwide Clean?up Campaign??Facebook; Odhiambo T?Oketch??

Odhiambo T Oketch is the immediate former Chairman to the City Council of  Nairobi  Stakeholders Evaluation Team on Performance Contracting and Rapid Results Management. He is also Chair to the Nyamonye?Catholic Church Development Fund. He was also the Co-Chair and Coordinator of The Great Nairobi Walk against Corruption that was held in Nairobi on the 22nd October 2010 in partnership with KACC and he is the?National Co-ordinator of The Monthly Nationwide?Clean-up Campaign in Kenya.??

                        …….Moving From Talking to Tasking……..?

USA, OH: Obama returning to Ohio 22 March 2012

from: octimotor

A worthy condition witnessed during the administration of Carter as USA president again exists. An atmosphere prevails in which it is popular, in governmental labs etc., to pursue R&D on renewable energy methods.

Indications of this could be seen during a Dayton Ohio USA street fair. It was celebrating basket ball tournaments that the President planned to visit, It featured jet fuel options founded upon Fuels from Bio-Mass. It was being promoted thru a branch of the Air Force labs located in this region. Its poster presentation included citation of a Pres. Obama speech of a few years ago in promotion of governmental support to encourage innovations in energy and other technical areas.

Now, see below, announced plans for another presidential policy speech, again favoring tech innovation.

– – – – – – – – – – –

http://www.daytondailynews.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/dayton/ohiopolitics/entries/2012/03/16/obama_returning_to_ohio_next_w.html?cxtype=feedbot

Ohio politics

Obama returning to Ohio next week

By Anthony Shoemaker | Friday, March 16, 2012, 01:34 PM

By Jack Torry Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama will make his second trip to Ohio in a week when he delivers a speech Thursday at Ohio State University on ways to conserve energy use while developing alternative renewable fuels, a White House official said.

Obama’s speech at Ohio State will be the final stop on a two-day trip in which the president will appear in New Mexico, Nevada, and Oklahoma. Except for Oklahoma, the other states are critical to his re-election in November.

The trip, which the White House describes as official, includes a stop at a solar facility in Nevada and oil and gas fields on federal lands in New Mexico. The White House said Ohio State was selected because it is “home to some of the country’s most advanced energy-related research and development.’’

On Tuesday, Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron were in Dayton to watch a NCAA college basketball tournament game.

E-Government in Transition Economies

From: Yona Maro ??

This paper deals with e-government issues at several levels. Initially we look at the concept of e-government itself in order to give it a sound framework. Than this paper look at the e-government issues at three levels, first it analyse it at the global level, second it analyse it at the level of transition economies, and finally it take a closer look on developments in Croatia. The analysis includes actual progress being made in selected transition economies given the Euro area averages, along with e-government potential in future demanding period.
http://www.waset.org/journals/waset/v53/v53-84.pdf 


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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com

World: How US diplomats promote genetically engineered crops worldwide

From: Yona Maro

Dozens of United States diplomatic cables released in the latest WikiLeaks dump in 2011 reveal new details of the US effort to push foreign governments to approve genetically engineered (GE) crops and promote the worldwide interests of agribusiness giants like Monsanto and DuPont. The cables further confirm previous reports from the Web site Truthout on the diplomatic pressure the US has put on Spain and France, two countries with powerful anti-GE crop movements, to speed up their biotech approval process and quell anti-GE sentiment within the European Union (EU).

Tough regulations and bans on GE crops can deal hefty blows to US exports. About 94 percent of soybeans, 72 percent of corn and 73 percent of the cotton grown in the US now use GE-tolerate herbicides like Monsanto’s Roundup, according to the U.S. Agriculture Department.

http://civileats.com/2011/08/30/new-wikileaks-cables-show-us-diplomats-promote-genetically-engineered-crops-worldwide/


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Buying green! A handbook on green public procurement

From: Yona Maro

Green Public Procurement (GPP) is defined in the European Commission’s Communication Public procurement for a better environment as “a process whereby public authorities seek to procure goods, services and works with a reduced environmental impact throughout their life cycle when compared to goods, services and works with the same primary function that would otherwise be procured.

This handbook has been produced for public authorities, but many of the ideas and approaches are equally relevant for corporate purchasers. It should also help suppliers and service providers – particularly smaller companies (SMEs) – to better understand the environmental requirements increasingly encountered in public tenders.

GPP may also provide financial savings for public authorities – especially if you consider the full life-cycle costs of a contract and not just the purchase price. Purchasing low-energy or water saving products for example, can help to significantly reduce utility bills. Reducing hazardous substances in products can cut disposal costs. Authorities who implement GPP will be better equipped to meet evolving environmental challenges, as well as political and binding targets for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, energy efficiency and in other environmental policies.

http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/buying-green–pbKH3011071/downloads/KH-30-11-071-EN-C/KH3011071ENC_002.pdf;pgid=y8dIS7GUWMdSR0EAlMEUUsWb0000SbuoV7XR;sid=_qr2jp7Sx1H2jtGKodVoKfz3-XnwXZkB-Hk=?FileName=KH3011071ENC_002.pdf&SKU=KH3011071ENC_PDF&CatalogueNumber=K


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com