Category Archives: China

World: Chinese Agency downgrades US credit rating……..Really…..???; Moving x-ray bus. – US to China;

From: Judy Miriga

Folks,

What are the Chinese trying to tell us……and what is their aim in all these hot air……..???

Are they disappointed and surprised U.S. stepped out of DEBT DEFAULT…….and what are they up to by making such sneaky statements…….?

Do they think their prejudiced conspiracies against the world will grant them the next World’s Super Power…..??????

Their illegal and illegitimate dipping and licking their fingers into “honey jar” from Africa equally, does not guarantee them World’s Super Power……They have a burden of proof scandals of crimes and violations against Humanity in Africa, the reason there is excessive poverty, hunger and death, with circulation of cheap and dirty money with the distribution of drugs, the illegal harvesting of human “Top Skin”, sneaking and robbing away under cohorts and cartels, creates human sufferings through Ponzi Schemes and Hedge Funds from IMF and World Banks, manoeuvres inhuman “Intellectual Property Thieving” and take ownership and controls of Public utilities and resources without Public Mandate, ………..for which they must first get a visiting pass for cleansing from HAGUE ……..an International Treaty they signed to respect and observe ………for which in this case, The World’s Super Power will remain a smokescreen hallucination to the active Chinese Mission Agency…….

The whole world are aware and knows what these Chinese Mission Agenda, are not for the good of humanity survival but are for destruction, and are therefore against Peace and Unity of the Greater Common Good of all people of the world…….in sharing the Emerging Common Global Market conducive environment……..They are self-centred to achieve SOVIET POWER through NUCLEAR POWER……..generated from Africa……Shame….!

We cannot be fooled……..

God’s promise is True and is faithful. He will never foresake or let his people suffer from such wickedness and unrighteousness…….

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

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Chinese agency downgrades US credit rating
AP – 10 hrs ago
8/3/2011

BEIJING (AP) — A little-known Chinese ratings agency has downgraded the rating of the United States from A+ to A. The move is unlikely to affect U.S. borrowing rates but reflects the pessimism Washington’s debt battle has generated worldwide.

President Barack Obama signed emergency legislation to boost the debt ceiling ahead of a deadline to avoid an unprecedented national default.

Still, China’s Dagong Global Credit Rating Co. said Wednesday that the deal doesn’t change the fact that U.S. debt growth has outpaced its economy and fiscal revenue.

Dagong is little-known outside China but hopes to compete with global ratings agencies Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch.

Moody’s has said the U.S. will retain its highest bond rating but with a “negative” outlook.

GE moving X-ray business to China. What message is sent to U.S.?

July 27, 2011
FROM CNN’s Jack Cafferty:

Here is more evidence of the suicide mission this country is on: General Electric announced it’s moving its 115-year-old X-ray business from Waukesha, Wisconsin to Beijing, China.

The X-ray business is part of General Electric’s GE Healthcare unit, and this move is just part of a broader plan by GE to invest $2 billion in China.

This will become the first GE business to be headquartered there. A handful of the unit’s top executives will be transferred to China but otherwise, the company says, none of the 150 staffers in the Milwaukee-area facility will lose jobs or be transferred. However, GE plans to hire more than 65 engineers and a support staff at a new facility in China.

It’s the kind of news that makes you want to reach for something sharp and jab it in your eye. General Electric’s Chief Executive, Jeffrey Immelt, is one of President Obama’s advisers on… ready? U.S. job creation!

In January, President Obama asked Immelt, a self-described Republican, to head up the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. Tapping Immelt was supposed to provide the Obama administration with a business world perspective on job creation – not in China – here.

The administration also hoped it would give the president a leg up negotiating with the Republican-controlled House on deficit reduction, jobs programs, and health care. And we can all see how that’s worked out really well.

Two months after Immelt was named to the council, The New York Times reported that General Electric paid no income taxes last year… thanks to some fancy accounting footwork, even though the company earned $14.2 billion in profits last year – more than $5 billion in the U.S. alone.

Here’s my question to you: General Electric is moving its X-ray business to China. What message does this send Americans?

Tune in to the Situation Room at 6pm to see if Jack reads your answer on air.

And, we love to know where you’re writing from, so please include your city and state with your comment.

Filed under: China •U.S. Global Image •United States

China & Kenya: The Lies And The Truth Of Digital Media

from Judy Miriga

Does this means the Chinese are already controlling the Digital Global Telecommunication network, Internet & Media market through Kenya and Mumbai …?????…….

Wow….are the Chinese taking the world by surprise through Kenya and Africa……and for how long are Africans going to continue sleeping……..???????

Is this the “Free Trade Enterpreneurship” where Special Business Interests overcome and takes the role of Government which is expected to serve the Public and the Business community fairly….????………Is this the reason why there is a strong lobby for “Intellectual Property Thieving”, the reason for unscrupulous International Corporate Business investors scrumble to Africa……..the reason for Ponzi schemes to benefit the rich, the reason the poor must pay through their blood and life to the rich and powerful……???

Wake up people……Wake up the World, ………Wake up and save the world from the selfish and self-centred greedy rich………who will take take take and will not share……!

I am so disgusted sick and tired with these failed bad African leadership…….They must all be sent home for retire and inject New Leadership to take immediate control of the country…….

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

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From: chifu_wa_malindi
Subject: Kenya: The Lies And The Truth Of Digital Media

The Lies And The Truth Of Digital Media
Monday, 01 August 2011 00:05
BY JAMES KIMATHI

The furore that has greeted the award of the second digital license is welcome, because for far too long the digital migration process has been shrouded in an opaqueness that is not good for the public interest.

The Chinese, as had been expected, got the award and typical to the script, the Nation Media Group and Royal Media are screaming from the mountain tops for all to hear and accusing PS Bitange Ndemo and the CCK of premeditated bias and a lack of transparency.

First, the blame for the mess lies squarely at the door of the Ministry of Information. Ndemo and his team of bureaucrats should precipitated the crisis we are now facing. In the move to digital, the CCK, the ministry and media players held a consultative session that ended in a draft recommendation submitted to the ministry by the Digital Migration committee that two licenses be issued, the first to government broadcaster KBC, and the second to a consortium of the Media Owners Association.

The move to digital means all current TV infrastructure will be scrapped at the stroke of a pen, leaving players with millions in unusable transmission infrastructure. The idea behind the second license to media players was to allow them to form a single transmission company along the lines of the TEAMS telecom consortium to allow use of combined network.

After the recommendation was made, the Committee was disbanded and a new one formed under Ndemo’s chairmanship. The original recommendations were then immediately drastically mutilated without widespread industry consultation or concurrence. The Ndemo draft kept the award of a license by fiat to KBC and cancelled the award of the license to Kenya’s existing media owners.

Strangely, the new recommendation opted for two more licenses by open bidding. Under the new scenario, KBC and the Chinese will now be the sole people authorised to carry the signal of all the current and future TV…..??? (Digital=Telecom Transition 3 in one Signal)…….. operators in Kenya, unless a third license is awarded.

At the pre-bidders conference, industry players raised concerns about the transparency of the process especially in the light of what happened during the last election, when John Michuki against all existing laws instructed that all radio and TV stations to be shut down.

Under the current scenario, Ndemo or any government official with one word can black out all of Kenya, unless one gets a court order to stop him. The reason Michuki was unable to do that in the last election was that every media owner had their own infrastructure.

In his article in The Star, Ndemo claims that “..the ministry and the Communications Commission of Kenya have agreed to issue another license for the industry in view of the investments they made”. This is strange given that a month ago the same Ndemo and the CCK knew that industry investments needed to be protected, yet would happily tender the license to disadvantage Kenya’s media and endanger freedom of speech.

Kudos to Ndemo and the CCK for recognising the mistake in the policy and changing it. The Citizen and NMG award would have also in its own created an equally problematic duopoly. We understand they opted to go alone much against an MOA effort to present one industry bid. As a way forward, the license must now be awarded to a broad consortium of interested media industry players, to ensure that no one person can mortgage the future of press freedom in this country especially with another election coming up.

Ndemo, NMG and Citizen Media – let us put the noise behind us and as the President says get to work for the benefit of the people of this country. Enough said.

James Kimathi is a media industry analyst.

http://www.the-star.co.ke/opinions/others/34155-the-lies-and-the-truth-of-digital-media

Tanzania: CHINESE to construct another multi billion railway line in Tanzania’s mineral rich Southern region

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

TANZANIA, Africa’s third largest gold producing Africa nation has envisaged plans to construct a railway line to open up its mineral rich Northern region to boost the country’s coal and iron ore revenues.

The planned rail project is estimated to cost a colossal amount of money to the tune of USD 1.5 billion {Tshs 2.3 trillion}.

The 850 kilometer railway line whose construction is set to begin next year, will link coal and iron ore mining projects in Mchuchuma and Liganga respectively to the Mtwara port in Southern Tanzania.

The deputy Minister for Transport Athumani Mfutakamba was last week quoted in the local press as having made the announcement while in the country’s political capital, Dodoma that negotiations between the National Development Corporation and Sichuan Hongda Corporation of China over the necessary infrastructure were at an advanced stage.

The Mchuchuma iron ore and Liganga Coal reserves located in the Southern highlands have the potential to create an estimated 40,000 jobs to spur iron and steel industries in the country and boost coal exports.

The project will be the second largest single operation since the 1970s when China built the USED 500 million 1860-kilometer long Tanzania-Zambia Railway line {TAZARA} from Dar Es Salaam to Kapiri Mposhi,

Another senior government official disclosed that investor in the Liganga and Mchuchuma iron ore project has set aside Tshs 10 trillion {USD 625 billion} for the project implementation.

The Deputy Minister for Trade, Industry and Marketing Lazaro Nyalanda said the project is expected to contribute between 20 and 25 per cent of the country’s GDP.

Coal deposits at Mchuchuma which is located near the border of Malawi and Mozambique are provisionally estimated at 1253 million tones while iron ore deposits in the Liganga area are estimated to be 45 million tones. These are to be exploited jointly to stimulate an iron and steel industry that depends largely on the agricultural sector.

Transport Minister Omari Nundu in his part said the railway line will boost trade with neighboring Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia.

“The railway line will attract passenger traffic because of the huge potential in mineral and agricultural activities in the region, said Minister Nundu.

Thd Finance Minister Mustafa Mkulo reported that the government plans to spend USD 34 million in 2011.202 financial year in conducting feasibility studies and detailed design of Mtwara-Songea-Liganga railway line.

Ends

Kenya: The Ghost of corruption……..is a killing Monster……..Watch Out…..!

from Judy Miriga

Folks,

Looking at Chinese and Asia’s fast economic booster growth at the begining of 2000, likewise should remind us of the wind of change shifting to colonize Africa by Chinese in conjunction with other Asian Diaspora Community……the reason for Africa invasion.

Africa being the target of its bulk economic potential in Natural Resources and in Agriculture, is in the books of China and Indians by the International Corporate Business Community, through the IMF and the World Bank with other Multinational Financial Clearing PONZI SCHEME banks, are destined to make large scale of second face African Slavery, under Intellectual Property Thieving……

Wake up people…….wake up and take charge of your destiny……. through the eradication of corruption, graft and impunity and by implementing the New Constitution, specifically that of Devolution, the Majimbo Federal Governance……..

Each and individual is a part of the Reform Team in their own rights, do not wait to be asked to join the Civil Society Community of Activism, take charge in whichever way or form, Art and Skills, whether you have no food or no shelter, as long as you have breath, in groups or as individuals, do something to force for change…. to play a role of Reform Participation for Change………..United we are strong, devided we perish…….know your enemy and defeat him………..

God will only protect and Bless you when you take a step of faith……this is because, Thieves do not come to make you happy, but to make your life miserable, they come to steal what belong to you through infiltration smart invasion, where they take your property, they make you pay them through increased taxes in consumable commodities, through buying food, housing or shelter, through paying high cost for healthcare, through security arrangements that do not directly benefit you, through manipulating costs for education and other basic needs for survival…..including all that which belong to you… all of your resources and finally, once they are in control of your resources, through political gambling, they make you misarable and take your life, that will be a final 6 inch nail on your cofin box.

Play smart people…….do not slake…….Wake Up……..and join the force for an immediate Majimbo Federal Governance implementation……..Do not let politicians to hoodwink you for another week or month, it must be now……..block their access panya route…….

Thanks,

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

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KACC Wants Ongeri, Kiyiapi Axed

Uploaded by kenyacitizentv on Jun 14, 2011

The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission is calling on President Mwai Kibaki to dismiss education minister Sam Ongeri and his permanent secretary James ole Kiyapi, over alleged failure to control what it termed as the continuous embezzlement of funds in the ministry. KACC director Prof Patrick Otieno Lumumba says if the two do not willingly take responsibility and resign, then the president should dismiss them. This comes a day after finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta disclosed a treasury audit report’s findings that 4.2 billion shillings had been misappropriated in the ministry between 2004 and 2009. Hussein Mohamed reports.

The ghost of corruption

Uploaded by NTVKenya on May 7, 2011
http://www.ntv.co.ke
The ghost of corruption it appears is haunting the Kenya Anti Corruption boss. PLO Lumumba is asking foreign banks to help him nail corrupt individuals who have stashed money abroad. This comes barely a week after he asked government to declare corruption a national disaster.

Tobiko’s Greenlight to Extradition Process

Uploaded by kenyacitizentv on Jun 10, 2011

The bid to extradite Nambale Mp Chris Okemo and former KPLC Managing Director Samuel Gichuru to face graft charges in the UK appeared to gather momentum after Chief Public Prosecutor Keriako Tobiko constituted a team to scrutinize voluminous documents relating to the extradition request. This was after Attorney General Amos Wako forwarded the 13 volumes of documents to Tobiko, supporting the extradition request by the Attorney General of the Island of Jersey.

as okemo and gichuru get contradicted, we know to know the fate of the bribers as? well. both parties are guilty giver? and taker,
harrydre 1 week ago

All Multinational Companies operating in Kenya did not get there for free. Bribery by? Multinational Companies to gain entry into LDCs was an officially recognized aspect of special expenses, akin to marketing costs, incurred by prospective investors from Industrialized Country. Indeed to the extent that most of the? expenses on bribes by MCs n LDCs were silently transparent, they were treated as a deductible incidental expenditure during annual income tax returns. So, why these tricks from UK?
Savai333 1 week ago

Kacc & Mutula on Okemo, Gichuru extradition

Uploaded by standardgroupkenya on May 24, 2011

The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission says it will co-operate fully on the extradition of former Kenya power and lighting managing director Samuel Gichuru and Nambale member of parliament Chrysanthus Okemo. The two are accused of taking kickbacks and concealing the proceeds of crime. Meanwhile justice minister Mutula Kilonzo has asked those implicated in the scandal to step aside from any public offices they may hold until their names are cleared.

DPP to Decide Fate of Okemo, Gichuru

Uploaded by kenyacitizentv on May 23, 2011
Attorney General Amos Wako now says the fate of Nambale Mp Chris Okemo and the former KPLC managing director Samuel Gachuri, over warrants of arrests issued on them by the Island of Jersey, lies with the Office of the Public Prosecutor. Wako says he formally received a request from the Island, which is part of the United Kingdom through the British minister for Africa, Henry Bellingham whom he met Monday. Wako also says he has received the same communication from the police.

Mutula on Okemo and Gichuru

Uploaded by standardgroupkenya on May 24, 2011
Mutula on Okemo and Gichuru

KACC Receives Requests Over Okemo, Gichuru

Uploaded by kenyacitizentv on May 24, 2011
The Kenya Anti – Corruption Commission has confirmed that it had also received a formal request from Jersey Island, in the United Kingdom, seeking assistance in the form of evidence in the money laundering investigations the Island’s authorities are conducting against Nambale MP Chris Okemo and the former Kenya Power and Lighting Director Samuel Gichuru. Attorney general Amos Wako, who has also confirmed receiving warrants of arrests issued against the two, is in the meantime, awaiting communication from the Office of the Public Prosecutor in order to proceed with the extradition cases. But what exactly does this mean for the two suspects? Willis Raburu reports.

KACC on Wealth Declaration

Uploaded by kenyacitizentv on Feb 9, 2011
The Kenya Anti –Corruption Commission now wants the law amended to enable it to subject all public servants to a thorough wealth declaration process. KACC Director Patrick Lumumba says the current wealth declaration procedure is a mere formality with gaping loopholes that were still being exploited to perpetrate the culture of corruption within the public sector. This comes a few days after a High Court ruling stopped the Commission from scrutinizing a parastatal chief’s source of wealth.

Chinese Officials Looted $120bn Public Funds In 13 Years – Report

From: Yona Maro

China‘s Central Bank has issued a report saying thousands of corrupt Chinese officials stole more than $123 billion (N192,864,003,602,519.69) and fled overseas between 1995 and 2008.

The report also said the United States was a top destination for the looted funds, the Associated Press reports.

The report, released this week by the People‘s Bank of China, says between 16,000 to 18,000 government officials and executives at state-owned enterprises smuggled about 800 billion yuan ($123 billion) out of China within the period.

The study says the officials smuggled money into the US, Australia, Canada and Holland, using offshore bank accounts or investments such as real estate or collectibles. Officials masked the thefts as business transactions by setting up private companies to receive the money transfers, according to the report.

China has launched numerous efforts in recent years to curb graft, which is often a focal point of protests by ordinary Chinese and is seen as a major threat to political stability. But corruption among Communist Party officials is still common.

The report warned that the corruption was serious enough to threaten China‘s economic and political stability.

It said that aside from punishing guilty officials, China should improve monitoring of asset transfers and revise methods of payment overseas.

Chinese prosecutors have made some high-profile takedowns in hopes of deterring graft among the rank and file. In China‘s largest recent corruption scandal, the powerful party boss of Shanghai, Chen Liangyu, was sentenced in 2008 to 18 years in prison.

http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art2011061721212046


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Africa & China: The Last Golden Land? Chinese Private Companies Go to Africa

from Yona Maro

A new dynamic presence is spreading rapidly and widely across Africa: that of Chinese private enterprises. For these firms, Africa is ‘the last golden land’ of economic opportunity. Based on the most extensive survey to date of Chinese private firms, business associations and government officials across China and sub-Saharan Africa, this paper explores the critical questions of why these enterprises are investing in Africa? What are their perspectives on Africa’s investment climate?
http://www.ntd.co.uk/idsbookshop/details.asp?id=1230

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Science and Technology News June 2011

from Judy Miriga

Now we know why someone was testing water about Nuclear Power Plant in Kenya….BUT…..Folks must stand AGAINST it all through the way……..until we humble these Chinese to a Mutual understanding of PUBLIC power in Africa……

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China interested in building nuclear plant in East Africa

BEIJING

China wants to help build nuclear power generation in East Africa, uranium mining and investment company IBI Corp said in a statement after meeting Chinese officials in Beijing, revealing China’s undimmed appetite for overseas nuclear expansion despite the Japanese nuclear crisis this year.

IBI, which has uranium-prospective land in Uganda, said its director, A.J. Coffman, held an “encouraging meeting… with the relatively new umbrella organization overseeing China’s research and development of Generation 3 and Generation 4 nuclear power plant designs.”

“At the meeting, this entity expressed an interest in pursuing nuclear power plant construction in East Africa.”

China is in the early stages of a massive nuclear power expansion to help meet the demands of its power-guzzling economy and to weaken the grip of coal as the dominant source of fuel.

Japan’s earthquake and tsunami on March 11 and the ensuing nuclear crisis have threatened to put cracks in China’s own plans, with the government ordering a halt to further nuclear approvals until it had inspected the existing reactors and construction sites.

China’s ambitious domestic nuclear expansion is widely expected to march ahead, although talk of the sector growing to 80-90 gigawatts by 2020 may give way to a target of 70-75 GW. Still, that is a giant leap from China’s existing nuclear capacity, which amounted to 10.8 GW, at the end of 2010.

Some of China’s new plants will use “third generation” reactors, using technology from France’s Areva and U.S.-based Westinghouse, part of Toshiba Corp. But later their technology will be transferred to China, enabling it to build third generation plants in its own right.

Currently there are no nuclear plants in East Africa, and only one country on the continent, South Africa, has nuclear power.

China already has some early-stage interests in uranium in Africa. The overseas arm of China National Nuclear Corp has a 37.2 percent stake in a uranium mine in Niger that began producing on December 30, 2010, as well as exploration projects in Namibia and Zimbabwe.

Another state-owned company, China Guangdong Nuclear Power Corp, earlier this month withdrew a bid for UK-listed Kalahari Minerals, which holds 43 percent of Extract Resources, owner of Namibia’s Husab project, potentially the world’s second-biggest uranium mine.

The Chinese firm, which withdrew its $1.2 billion bid after regulators refused to let it cut its offer in the aftermath of the Japanese nuclear disaster, is considering whether to come back with a fresh offer.

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Peter Bosshard, Policy Director, International Rivers
Mao, Tao and the Three Gorges Dam
05/26/11

The Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River is the world’s largest hydropower project. It has often been touted as a model for dam building around the world. Now the Chinese government has officially acknowledged the project’s serious social, environmental and geological problems. What are the lessons from the Three Gorges experience?

For many years, Chinese leaders have celebrated the mega-dam on the Yangtze as a symbol of the country’s economic and technological progress. With a capacity of 18,200 megawatts, the hydropower project is indeed a masterpiece of engineering. In spite of its daunting complexity, the government completed it ahead of schedule in 2008. The dam generates two percent of China’s electricity, and substitutes at least 30 million tons of coal per year. Its cost has been estimated at between $27 and $88 billion.

Costs and benefits

The social and environmental costs may be even more staggering than the project’s financial price tag. The Three Gorges Dam has displaced more than 1.2 million people. Hundreds of local officials diverted compensation money into their own pockets, but protests against such abuses were oppressed. Because it no longer controls the economy and land is scarce, the government was not able to provide jobs and land to the displaced people as promised. Unlike other governments, China has set up a program to provide pensions to the 18 million people displaced by dams in the past.

Damming the Three Gorges caused massive impacts on the ecosystem of the Yangtze, Asia’s longest river. The barrage stopped the migration of fish, and diminished the river’s capacity to clean itself. Pollution from dirty industries along the reservoir is causing frequent toxic algae blooms. Commercial fisheries have plummeted, the Yangtze river dolphin has already been extinct, and species such as the Chinese Sturgeon are threatened by the same fate. Due to dam building and pollution, rivers and lakes around the world have lost more species to extinction than any other major ecosystem.

Struggling with unexpected impacts

While the social and environmental problems had been predicted, government officials were not prepared for the massive geological impacts of the Three Gorges Dam. The water level in the reservoir fluctuates between 145 and 175 meters every year. This destabilizes the slopes of the Yangtze Valley, and is triggering frequent landslides. According to Chinese experts, erosion affects half the reservoir area, and more than 100 miles of riverbanks are at risk of collapsing. More than 300,000 additional people will have to be relocated to stabilize the banks of the reservoir.

Since most of the silt load from the Yangtze’s upper reaches is now deposited in the reservoir, the downstream regions are being starved of sediment. As a consequence, up to four square kilometers of coastal wetlands are eroded every year. The Yangtze delta is subsiding, and seawater intrudes up the river, affecting agriculture and drinking water supplies. An international team of scientists recently found that no less than 472 million people have likely been affected by the downstream impacts of large dams around the world, and that these impacts are often neglected during the planning of such projects.

Scientists agree that the reservoirs of high dams can trigger earthquakes. The Three Gorges Dam sits on two fault lines, and hundreds of small tremors have been recorded since the reservoir began filling. While the dam has been built to withstand strong earthquakes, the villages and towns in its vicinity have not. As global dam building increasingly moves into mountain areas with active tectonic faults, the seismic risks of reservoirs will increase.

Hydropower projects have often been proposed as a response to global warming, yet the Three Gorges Dam illustrates how climate change creates new risks for such projects. In a nutshell, past records can no longer be used to predict a river’s future streamflow. The dam operators planned to fill the Three Gorges reservoir for the first time in 2009, but were not able to do so due to insufficient rains. The current year has brought Central China the worst drought in 50 years. Like other projects around the world, the Three Gorges Dam is facing serious risks and losses due to the vagaries of climate change.

A new approach is needed

Scientists had warned of the Three Gorges Dam’s impacts throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Yet their opinions were ignored and silenced. During the construction phase, the giant project, which had originally been championed by Mao Zedong, was frequently visited by government and party leaders. It has also served as a tour stop for many visiting government delegations from Asia, Africa and Europe.

In recent years, the Chinese government has quietly toned down its enthusiasm for the project. “We thought of all the possible issues,” the secretary general of the Yangtze River Forum told the Wall Street Journal in August 2007. “But the problems are all more serious than we expected.” When the dam was inaugurated in 2008, the Chinese president and his prime minister were conspicuously absent. And on May 18, China’s highest government body for the first time acknowledged the serious problems at the Three Gorges. “The project is now greatly benefiting the society in the aspects of flood prevention, power generation, river transportation and water resource utilization,” the government maintained, but it has “caused some urgent problems in terms of environmental protection, the prevention of geological hazards and the welfare of the relocated communities.”

China’s economy is booming, and its water and energy needs are pressing. Yet the Three Gorges Dam was not the only option for replacing coal. While the dam was under construction, the country’s economy actually became more wasteful in its use of energy. According to the Energy Foundation, it would have been “cheaper, cleaner and more productive for China to have invested in energy efficiency” rather than new power plants.

A few hundred miles from the Three Gorges reservoir, the water works of Dujiangyan have irrigated the fertile Sichuan plains and prevented floods through an ingenious system of levees for more than 2000 years. They reflect the Taoist philosophy of working with the forces of nature, while the Yangtze dam symbolizes the Maoist (and Confucian) approach of subduing the natural world.

The Three Gorges Dam has been completed, but it is not too late to draw lessons for the mega-projects which have been proposed on the Mekong and the Amazon, the Congo and the Salween, in Ethiopia and the Himalayas. The Yangtze dam demonstrates that even with the greatest technical skills, our power to dominate nature is limited. It calls on us to harness our great technological progress for solutions that reduce poverty while respecting the limits of our ecosystems.

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Jatropha Revival as Viable Feedstock for Global Biofuels
China (PRWEB) May 26, 2011

From Asia, Africa to Latin America there’s renewed interest in Jatropha oil and its cultivation. CMT’s JatrophaWorld Asia on 27-28 June in Hainan Island hones in on Jatropha as sustainable feedstock option for biofuel. Armed with factual data and aided by real success stories, Jatropha practitioners, growers, investors, end-users and researchers on cultivation, processing, and supplying oil will again share their first hand and field experiences.

The conference focuses on the latest developments in effective large-scale jatropha commercialization and cultivation methods; as well as assesses how the global industry will be shaped by new sustainability standards.

Why use Jatropha?

Jatropha curcas produces seed that contain an inedible vegetable oil that is used to produce biofuel. Each Jatropha seed produces between 35 to 37% of its mass in oil.
• It is drought resistant.
• It can be grown almost anywhere – even in sandy, saline, or infertile soil.
• It adapts well to marginal soils with low nutrient content.
• It is relatively easy to propagate.
• It is not invasive or damaging.
• It is capable of stabilizing sand dunes, acting as a windbreak or combating desertification.
• It naturally repels insects and animals do not browse it.
• It lives for over 50 years producing seeds all the time.
• It is resilient against the cold.
• It does not exhaust the nutrients in the land; rather, it rejuvenates overused land.
• It does not require expensive crop rotation.
• It does not require fertilizers.
• It grows quickly and establishes itself easily.
• It has a high yield.
• No displacement of food crops is necessary.
• The biodiesel byproduct, glycerin, is profitable in itself.
• The waste plant mass after oil extraction can be used as a fertilizer.
• The plant itself recycles 100% of the CO2 emissions produced by burning the biodiesel; two mature plants can absorb 1 metric ton of carbon every year.

In his book, Hot, Flat, and Crowded, Pulitzer Prize Winning Author Thomas L. Friedman gives 4 criterion that any biofuel must meet: It must have a large positive energy input, not destroy biodiversity-rich land, must not release large amounts of carbon dioxide when grown, and must not solve one problem only to create another. Jatropha meets all of these criterion.

The oil content is 25 to 30% in the seed with cover. Without cover it is 50 to 60% in the kernel. The oil contains 21% saturated fatty acids and 79% unsaturated fatty acids. There are some chemical elements in the seed, Cursin, which are poisonous and render the oil not appropriate for human consumption.

Jatropha curcas is a small, perennial shrub that grows 3-5 meters in height. It was originally native to Central America, and grows well in the tropics. It has many uses, among them biofuel, cosmetics, and fertilizer.
Medicinal plant : The latex of Jatropha curcas contains an alkaloid known as jatrophine, which is believed to have anti-cancerous properties. It is also used as an external application for skin diseases and rheumatism and for sores on domestic livestock. In addition, the tender twigs of the plant are used for cleaning teeth, while the juice of the leaf is used as an external application for piles. Finally, the roots are reported to be used as an antidote for snake-bites.

Raw material for dye : The bark of Jatropha curcas yields a dark blue dye which is used for colouring cloth, fishing nets and lines.

Soil enrichment : Jatropha curcas / Castor oil cake is rich in nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium and can be used as it is as organic manure for plantations.

Leaves : Jatropha leaves are used as food for the tusser silkworm.

Insecticide/ pesticide : The seeds are considered anthelimintic in Brazil, and the leaves are used for fumigating houses against bed-bugs. Also, the ether extract shows antibiotic activity against Styphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli.

Alternative to Diesel : It is significant to point out that, the non-edible vegetable oil of Jatropha curcas / Castor has the requisite potential of providing a promising and commercially viable alternative to diesel oil since it has desirable physicochemical and performance characteristics comparable to diesel. Cars can be run with Jatropha curcas oil without any change in design.

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Taking the Waste out of Nuclear Waste
Jun 02, 2011

While spent nuclear fuel continues to pile up by the ton across the United States, UC Irvine’s Mikael Nilsson says the solution is clear: recycle it at the commercial nuclear power plants that create it.

More than 96 percent of the waste – namely uranium and plutonium – can be used again, says the assistant professor of chemical engineering and materials science, and plants in Europe and Asia are doing just that. Nilsson’s laboratory research is focused on how to recycle or destroy the remaining 3 to 4 percent.

“Some people call it nuclear waste, but we’ve stopped using that term,” he said. “That implies it’s useless, and we don’t think that’s true. It can still be used.”

Currently, about 65,000 metric tons of commercial spent nuclear fuel is stored at 75 sites in 33 states, and the amount is growing by about 2,000 metric tons a year, according to federal records, some of it with a half-life of millions of years. There have been decades-long battles over the construction of a central repository under Nevada’s Yucca Mountain and the transport of such waste through American communities.

Nilsson is from Sweden, where nuclear generation accounts for nearly half of all electricity, and he sees it as key to the future of energy in the U.S. At UCI since 2009, he’s heartened by developments under President Obama, including a blue-ribbon commission set up to examine future options for nuclear energy, such as recycling. An initial report is expected in July. In addition, UCI is joining six other universities and four federal laboratories in a new consortium organized by the National Nuclear Security Administration to explore matters related to the prevention of security breaches.

“I’m a believer in nuclear power, because coal has its own issues, and solar doesn’t always work if it’s nighttime or you’re in Seattle,” Nilsson said. “Any technology can be misused. Nuclear gives you a lot of power 24 hours a day, seven days a week, without any release of carbon dioxide. And we have large amounts of uranium and other natural resources available, if they’re used and reused right.”

Albert Yee, chair of the chemical engineering & materials science department, says: “It’s fabulous having Mikael in our department” because unlike many, he’s not put off by the thorny legal and environmental challenges associated with nuclear energy research.

“Mikael looks at it and says, ‘OK, it’s a problem. But it’s a problem we won’t have if we do something about it.’ For example, what do you do with the waste we have to live with, thanks to the advent of nuclear power? We’re just putting it off, literally burying it, and here we have a young professor who’s tackling it head-on. So he’s very courageous, very timely, and I think he will do a lot of great science.”

Nilsson notes that it was American researchers at Tennessee’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory who discovered in the late 1940s that plutonium and uranium – both key ingredients in nuclear fission – could be separated from other poisonous elements and returned to production.

Reprocessing has long been done in France, the United Kingdom and Russia – more recently in Japan and India. There has been hot debate in the U.S. and elsewhere about the practice, centered on accidental and controlled radioactive emissions into air and water and concern about the potential theft of plutonium by terrorists.

President Ford suspended commercial plutonium recycling in 1976 due to fears the material could be stolen for nuclear weapons proliferation. President Carter banned all commercial reprocessing a few months later. President Reagan lifted the ban, but no public subsidies were granted for costly start-ups. That may be changing.

But U.S. regulations allow no radioactive emissions from reprocessing plant smokestacks, which Nilsson calls a “zero tolerance” policy. In England, by contrast, controlled releases of some elements are allowed in amounts that quickly disperse in air or ocean water. Nilsson and other scientists believe the releases are well below dangerous levels. He also notes that there have been no thefts of plutonium from spent fuel stockpiles – but adds that it’s safer to get these radioactive materials back into production than let them sit.

At his security-conscious laboratory, Nilsson and his graduate students are attempting to isolate dozens of remaining elements in nuclear waste and simulate their effects so that they can be recycled or destroyed. Some, such as neptunium and other so-called “daughters of americium,” are among the most toxic and have very long half-lives. The elements are especially hard to recycle because they’re miniscule and mimic each other’s properties, making them extremely difficult to separate.

“We’re down to very small things, so it becomes more complex,” Nilsson said. He and his fellow researchers use a glove box outfitted with long, black hands to reach into an enclosed area and handle radioactive objects – which, he says, are all low dosage and not a major risk. But Nilsson and his team are careful. The laboratory doors are always locked, there are no seams in the floor that could trap material, and everyone uses a hand and foot sensor each time they exit to see if they’ve inadvertently come into contact with radiation.

“I’m not worried,” Nilsson said. “I see opportunities, not problems.”

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The Tiger And the Dragon in a Hot Race to Woo Africa New Delhi Offers $5 Billion
East Africa News online: 29 May 2011

East African nations have become the latest target of the battle heating up between India and China for control of Africa’s economic landscape.

The region raked in a huge chunk of the $5 billion from New Delhi last week as a loans package to finance key infrastructure projects.

While India has lagged behind its Asian rival China in bagging deals and projects in Africa, the funding deal announced in Addis Ababa has awakened many observers to the fact that the former is harbouring a grand agenda for the continent.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh who announced the funding was on a six-day trip to Africa, attending the India-Africa summit in Addis Ababa Ethiopia as he sought to deepen economic ties with African nations.

With the support of their government, Indian firms are increasingly making more and strategic entries into East Africa and the Continent in general, targeting the expected windfall in telecoms, mineral extraction, engineering and consumer goods markets, a field Chinese firms have previously dominated.

“Its clear India like China has realised Africa is the next frontier for their growth. What we are seeing is a competition for new markets and resources between the two, ” said Kuria Muchiru, Senior Partner and Country Leader for Kenya at audit firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).

“There is a lot of investor interest in Africa by Indian firms, ” said Mr Muchiru.

Trade figures have been telling of the strengthening ties between India and Africa, a co-operation 16 African Heads of State agreed to support in the coming years, as they turned to South-to South relations to grow their economies. Statistics show total bilateral trade between India and African countries stood at $46 billion in 2010, up from the $3 billion in 2000 and it is estimated to clock $70 billion by 2015.

Comparatively China’s bilateral trade with Africa stood at about $200 billion back in 2009.

The new funding will be disbursed as credit to countries, in addition to the $5.4 billion that India offered Africa at the first India-Africa summit in New Delhi in 2008, said Singh.

Among the key projects to have received a boost is the proposed Ethiopia-Djibouti railway to be contracted at a cost of $300 million. The African Union mission in Somalia would also benefit from the financing with a pledge of $2 million while African airlines will get increased access to Indian cities in what Singh said was a unique partnership between the two regions. Singh said India would offer an additional $700 million for new institutions and training programmes.

India is not hiding its intentions. “The people of Africa and India stand at the threshold of a historic opportunity. There is a new economic growth story emerging from Africa. Africa possesses all the prerequisites to become a major growth pole of the world,” Singh told African Union leaders in Ethiopia.
“The India-Africa partnership is unique and owes its origins to history and our common struggle against colonialism, apartheid, poverty, disease, illiteracy and hunger. But African states do not only expect from India, but we believe we are able to give back. India is able to count on the support of Africa,” said Singh.
Leading Indian technology companies including Bharti Airtel, Mahindra Satyam, Infosys and Tata are among the firms ramping up efforts in Africa to increase their presence in the region. Bharti has presence in 15 African countries, after it acquired the African assets of Kuwait’s Zain mid last year at nearly $10 billion. This has delivered rivalry to the doorsteps of European mobile telephone giants, Vodafone and Orange which have previously dominated the market.

African countries have also been reaching out to Indian investors as they seek to boost their economies. In October last year, Rwanda sent a 25-member business delegation to India scouting for partners and investors to give a boost to the soft and physical infrastructure sectors back home.

Rwanda’s interest

Several Indian firms have shown interest in investing in Kigali promising to start big projects worth millions of dollars in information technology, mining, agro-processing, education, pharmaceuticals and energy. Rwanda Development Board (RDB), a government agency created to facilitate investments says at least 26 Indian companies–including Essar Group, Tata Group and Karox Company–had shown interest towards the end of last year.

“The whole world is looking at India, China and Brazil. Even American investors want to go to India,” RDB chief executive John Gara said. In November, Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping visited South Africa, Angola and Botswana signing deals worth millions of dollars to build a power plant, solar panel factory and to increase South African exports to China.

Chinese state-owned firms led by China National Offshore Company (CNOOC) have of late been major players in the oil exploration business in EAC region. In Kenya for example two Indian-based companies — Gleen Investment and Sanghi Cement– were given a green light to construct cement plants in Ortum and Sebit area in Pokot respectively. Sanghi cement of India which manages one of the world’s largest single stream cement plants–producing over 20 million tonnes annually–is to invest over $80 million in its cement plant in Kenya, giving it a footprint it plans to use to supply the region market such as in South Sudan.
Gleen Investment, a unit of conglomerate Mehta Group plans to put up a 1.2 million-metric tonne cement plant in West Pokot, to cost about $200 million in a programme that will be scaled up depending on the available limestone deposits. Indian Reliance Group associated with the Ambani brothers together with Bharti Airtel and the Tata Group had bid for a 51 per cent stake in monopoly Telkom Kenya but lost out to France Telecom’s Orange. Indian second largest mobile phone service provider Essar Group has already made one foray in Africa with the launch of the Yu brand in Kenya in 2008. Essar Energy which owns a 50 per cent stake in Kenya’s oil refinery in Mombasa, having invested $600 million is said to be looking for opportunities in Uganda following recent discovery of oil reserves in the Lake Albertine rift basin.
India – Tanzania

Indian companies and businesses in Tanzania are valued at about US$1.3 billion, creating about 32,000 jobs through direct investments and joint venture projects. In total, the India-Tanzania bilateral trade stood at US$1.1 billion up to the end of 2010.

This year, Tanzanian Industry, Trade and Marketing minister Cyril Chami said at least seven Indian companies are expected to build factories at a cost of $250 million and create over 6,000 jobs.

Mr Singh held discussions with President Kikwete on various protocols aimed at strengthening India-Tanzania co-operation in various economic and social sector projects. Last year, Tanzania’s exports value to India stood at $132.5 million while imports hit $596.7 million.

CHINA & KENYA: CHINA OVERSEAS ENGINEERING GROUP COMPANY LIMITED (COVEC) SUCCESSFULLY DELIVER YET ANOTHER AIRPORT PROJECT

Dickens Wasonga.

The lake side city of Kisumu finally has good news.

In most occasions what is churned out of the city home to over a half a million people has just been negative stuff.

Usually it is the violence related stories or bad politics that we associate our beautiful town with.

Things however are set to change and so is the image of Kisumu which is the headquarters of Kisumu county.Now it is celebrating a successful completion of an international airport which is set to transform the region into a travel hub, south and east of Africa.

Three years ago, the Kenya government in collaboration with the World Bank set out on a journey to upgrade the facility at a cost of sh.3b.

After a competitive bidding and rigorous search for a contractor , the airport project was awarded to the multinational Chinese Overseas Construction Engineering company COVEC whose proven competence in delivering timely , cost effective and magnificent projects earned itself international recognition.

With its newly acquired status, Kisumu International Airport which is the third busiest airport facility after Moi International Airport in Mombasa will now be able to handle direct flights within Africa, Europe and even Asia.

The upgraded project whose implementation was done by COVEC under the able leadership of Mr. Yang Liuyin ,the Project Manager will boost economic en devours between Kenya and countries within the great lakes region including the southern Sudan.

The Chinese experts used their professional acumen to give their clients KAA a product worth the amount the government invested into the project and residents of Nyanza are already preparing to make good use of the modern facility by transforming it into an income generating venture.

At the greater Nyakach and the fertile farmlands of Nyando, horticultural farmers have already put under cultivation several acres of land in the wake of the good news about the completion of the airport.

Business in the town has been boosted with many private and public entities such the Kenya Wild Life Service, Kenya tourist board, Kisumu city council and numerous hotels operating in the region embarking on aggressive marketing campaigns to popularize the Western Kenya tourist circuit where the new airport is located.

The good work carried out by the COVEC team and a group of experienced engineers from KAA and the NACO consultants which ultimately saw Kisumu realize the ambition of both the government and the people of Western Kenya in having an international airport can not be underestimated.

The Chinese work ethics where skills is combined with serious dedication to handwork and good behavior truly demonstrated that the country was getting a brake from a past which was synonymous with shoddy and uncompleted jobs.

Such projects which remained white elephants after gobbling up hard earned public funds gave the government’s poorly implemented and supervised works a blot. This is what COVEC and its team worked tirelessly to disapprove.

When the project began , there was a lot of resistance especially from a section of the community who felt they would lose their land to the airport project but those fears were soon addressed by a competent KAA management and the project implementing teams.

Constant consultation and continuous dialogue gave a boost to the project and found favor with the locals with all the affected families receiving money as land compensation from the government.

The same spirit of working in harmony was soon to be adopted by the Chinese workers who gave themselves total commitment to deliver the project timely and at the same time ensuring quality of work was never compromised.

COVEC which floored giant and equally reputable organizations both locally and internationally in the the road and airport construction circles however did not disappoint.

Before it was awarded the Kisumu airport project, the company which is an affiliate of China Railways Cooperation had been implementing a number of successfully delivered projects within the African continent such as in Angola, Morocco,Botswana, Mauritias, Zambia,Mali amongst others .

In Botswana, for example, COVEC implemented a housing project for over 424 affordable housing units which was financed through a concessional loan provided by the Chinese government.

In 2006 in Angola, the reputable company completed a US dollar 8 million hospital project in a record 15 months.

The Luanda General Hospital project built a facility which could hospitalize 100 patients and handle 800 daily.

While implementing the Kisumu airport project and several others mentioned above , COVEC had already curved out for itself a prominent place in the sector once dominated by the South African and European firms.

During the project period, the Chinese reconstructed the dilapidated 2 kilometers by 30 meters runway to an ultra modern 3.3 kilometers by 45 meters runway which now can bigger aircraft than was being handled before.

They also constructed a state of the art two floors terminal building and other associated works like air field ground lighting, sewerage systems, air side access roads, a unique and high security fence amongst others.

Other services includes a dedicated 4 inch pipe water from Kisumu water and sewerage company (KIWASCO) and dedicated power services from Kenya Power Lighting Company .

An access road from the Kisat junction to Kisian has also been constructed.

The implementation of the project was a boost to the locals many of whom were and still are employed at the project either as skilled or non skilled staff by COVEC and their sub contractors.

The locals some of whom were non skilled benefited immensely .They worked hand in hand with the Chinese technicians who in turn were able to impart knowledge in them.

Many were able to acquire expertise in areas such as usage of modern equipment, tools and techniques especially in building construction.

ENDS.

China AIDS: China’s brutal repression

From: WanYanhai

By Kate Krauss

Just before the Beijing Olympics in 2008, a group of young Chinese activists was evacuated to the United States for safety reasons. Chinese officials were harassing and detaining people they thought might embarrass them during the Olympics. Three of the activists flew to Philadelphia that summer and slept on mattresses on my dining room floor.

Ironically, they brought Olympic souvenir chopsticks as gifts. “We’re not against the Olympics; they are a great thing for China,” one of them said very seriously. “We’re against the oppression by the government.”

One of my guests in particular was especially excited about visiting America. Chang Kun, an AIDS activist and online organizer, was thrilled to see Philadelphia, try American food, meet American girls and exchange ideas with other activists.

Chang has a giant online following. He writes with exclamation points and pure outrage. His visit to the United States made a deep impression; he was moved by what he described as an atmosphere of freedom, tolerance and cultural exchange. When he returned home to Anhui province in eastern China, he established the AIBO Youth Center, a small community organization with a free library and free Internet access, a place where young people could learn about the wider world.

Recently, during a conference at the youth center, in front of scores of activists, thugs broke into the room where Chang was speaking, knocked him from the podium and beat him severely. Police did nothing to stop the assault, which left him hospitalized. He is slowly recovering.

I wish I could say I was surprised. But after working with Chinese activists for nine years, I recognize the government’s treatment of Chang Kun as routine. In fact, China deploys human rights abuses on a massive scale — beatings, torture and imprisonment of activists and critics, broad censorship of the news, and the increasingly effective blocking of independent channels of communication. These are not mistakes or areas for improvement; they are the fundamentals of the government’s power. Negotiating for small concessions on rights cannot change this equation.

In 2009 and 2010, in response to an uprising by Muslims facing harsh discrimination, the government cut off Internet access to the vast Xinjiang region for 10 months. Now it is slowly strangling the Internet for everyone in China, blocking access to Web sites it can’t control and intensifying online surveillance.

The human cost of this repression is steep. In recent months, Chinese security forces have detained scores of activists, reportedly tortured to death three Falun Gong members, publicly arrested the architect-activist Ai Weiwei (who, ironically, designed the Olympic Bird’s Nest stadium in Beijing), detained hundreds of Christian worshippers (while they prayed) and even broke up their Easter Sunday service.

The State Department, which is holding an annual human rights dialogue with China this week, recently released a report that describes “black jails” throughout China where activists, their families and others who oppose the government are punished. Many detainees are beaten and tortured.

Chinese leaders have been in power so long that we may forget that no one elected them. Their regime is no more legitimate than those of Libya or Yemen. If elections were held tomorrow, the leaders might all be swept away. But there are no elections on the horizon. For decades, the U.S. government has aided the regime by supporting China’s economic aspirations, including permanent normalized trade relations, which have allowed it to reap huge profits — enriching the Central Committee and the unelected elite.

Many observers believe that China is becoming an economic powerhouse that has no intention of becoming a democracy. In 20 years, China may be emboldened even further to violently repress its own people.

Given this record, at what point do we stop seeing China as a flawed but dynamic nation on the road to democracy and start seeing the Chinese government as a violent, destabilizing, and autocratic regime on the order of, say, Iran?

Where do we, the American people, draw the line?

We have to stop deluding ourselves. China is governed by a violently repressive regime. And the United States, through its economic policies, is helping it stay that way.

The writer is executive director of the AIDS Policy Project and has organized campaigns for the release of detained health rights activists in China.

Africa, USA, China: When a Lie is Repeated Often Enough it Turns to Be The Truth…..

Folks,

Trumps accusations against President Obama holds no water, and have no pinch of truth in it, and these false personal attacks are not healthy in the long run. He should drop it and change cause……

I am concerned why he did not bring this type of accusation before Obama became the President. It is now too late, which can only cause division which is not good.

Two, I worry why such measures were not preferred on Bush or other former Presidential leaders

Three, to attach sitting president in this manner, is causing serious dent to the stability of this great Nation to the outside world…..and it becomes a laughing stock, when China is on our back, assertively trying to steal and transfer wealth from both Africa and America…..instead of focusing on the Assault by China, we are busy bringing ourselves down, so China has a blank check, running wild with it.

Four, if we supported past leaders to achieve, why do we not give President Obama full support and join with him to support building America together….? He can make it when we all give a helping hand…….each and everyone get engaged positively…….it can be done in Love…..for Unity……

Fifth, Trump is not only unfair to President Obama, but he is to the whole public and the Nation’s stability, but we must stay on course and put destructive failing politics aside ……otherwise, we are loosing strategic focus to achieve……China is on Aggression to divide and bring America and Africa down, yet Africa is the backbone of the whole world’s success……..

Sixth, America will not find it easy to succeed without Africa and Africa will equally not succeed without America, but China is smarter than the two……..they are running with the mantle…..while we are left squabbling……..and destroying each other……

Seventh, one thing is true of Trump though, that Paul Ryan’s Budget Proposal is a Wasteful Healthcare balloon that may harm the Elderly in a valueless non-sufficing Voucher plan, but increase wealth to the wealthy.

China bribe their way cheaply and gains 100 folds……they are not fair in their business deals to the rest of the world……

People, America holds the future to the world, we cannot afford it to be brought down by China, we must challenge and compete on higher levels and maintain our standing by being positive and staying focused……

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

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Trump: Obama wasn’t qualified for Ivy League

By BETH FOUHY, Associated Press Beth Fouhy, Associated Press – Mon Apr 25, 5:27 pm ET

NEW YORK – Real estate mogul Donald Trump suggested in an interview Monday that President Barack Obama had been a poor student who did not deserve to be admitted to the Ivy League universities he attended. Trump, who is mulling a bid for the Republican presidential nomination, offered no proof for his claim but said he would continue to press the matter as he has the legitimacy of the president’s birth certificate.

“I heard he was a terrible student, terrible. How does a bad student go to Columbia and then to Harvard?” Trump said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I’m thinking about it, I’m certainly looking into it. Let him show his records.”

Obama graduated from Columbia University in New York in 1983 with a degree in political science after transferring from Occidental College in California. He went on to Harvard Law School, where he graduated magna cum laude 1991 and was the first black president of the Harvard Law Review.

Obama’s 2008 campaign did not release his college transcripts, and in his best-selling memoir, “Dreams From My Father,” Obama indicated he hadn’t always been an academic star. Trump told the AP that Obama’s refusal to release his college grades were part of a pattern of concealing information about himself.

“I have friends who have smart sons with great marks, great boards, great everything and they can’t get into Harvard,” Trump said. “We don’t know a thing about this guy. There are a lot of questions that are unanswered about our president.”

Katie Hogan, a spokeswoman for Obama’s re-election campaign, declined to comment.
Trump, a wealthy businessman and reality TV host, has risen to the top of many polls in part by his outspoken call for Obama to release his long form birth certificate. The state of Hawaii has released a certificate of live birth indicating Obama was born there on August 4, 1961, but that has not quelled critics who believe Obama was born outside the United States and is therefore not qualified to be president.

The so-called “birther” controversy has dominated the early stage of the 2012 GOP nominating contest, with Trump leading the charge.

“I have more people that are excited about the fact that I reinvigorated this whole issue,” Trump said, adding “the last guy (Obama) wants to run against is Donald Trump.”

Trump is scheduled to travel to the early primary states of New Hampshire and Nevada this week and said he will make a final decision about a presidential bid by June.

Also in the AP interview, Trump:

• Said Republicans had made a mistake by embracing a budget proposal crafted by Wisconsin GOP Rep. Paul Ryan that included deep cuts in Medicare. “The seniors are afraid. The plan Paul Ryan put forth has made the Democrats so happy,” Trump said.

• Declined to disclose his net worth, saying he’ll do so if he decides to run. “You’ll see what it is, possibly, very likely, in the next 4 weeks. I don’t want to say because I don’t want to ruin the press conference,” he said.

• Expressed surprise that the 2008 GOP nominee, John McCain, had suggested Trump’s effort was a publicity stunt. “I congratulate him for getting the attention he’s getting,” McCain told NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday.

Trump said he had been a big supporter of McCain. “I would find it hard to believe he would say anything bad because I raised a fantastic amount of money for him,” Trump said.

China: Invitation to GFO survey

from Kun Chang

From: GFO Newsletter

Dear reader of Global Fund Observer (GFO),
We need you to complete a 10 minute survey. This is to help maintain funding for the service we provide and to improve the quality of what we do.
We really need a high response rate, so as a small incentive, all respondents can enter a lucky draw where ten winners will receive book vouchers worth $50 each.
Please click on the following link to open the survey: www.surveymonkey.com/s/aidspan
Remember – it will take no more than 10 minutes of your time. We need your help by May 2nd 2011.
Thank you
Bernard Rivers, Executive Director (bernard.rivers@aidspan.org)
Aidspan – an independent watchdog of the Global Fund, and publisher of Global Fund Observer
P.O. Box 66869-00800, Nairobi, Kenya
www.aidspan.org

China & Kenya: China is Playing Dirty tricks to gain foothold in Kenya – AU Conspicously Absent from London meeting

Folks,

PM Raila and Team is in the USA to fool American Government, while Kibaki was busy meeting and signing Memorandum of Agreement with Visiting Chinese Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan They are eating both ways and pooling money for their League…..without following the New Constitution spirit of laid down obligations.

In which case, they both abandoned public mandate for Democracy and the just rule of law. They are both taking easy money from the Chinese, so the Chinese interests root down into Kenya’s economic value flight to China/Asia. They are dealing with Chinese International Corporate Special Interest based in the USA and Canada, the reason PM Raila in exchange was representing Uhuru, the reason PM Raila traversed with the likes of Saitoti, Kimunya nakadhalika…….

All the activities they came to do in the USA is soliciting to illegally transfer US public tax-payer money with other special US Politicians and from other special group in the US Chamber of Commerce, on behalf of Chinese Economic Power……

We have many American Chinese migrant workers, Vietnamese, etc, legal and illegal who work in top positions in Millitary, Federal Government, Non-Governmental and Faith Based, as well as ran small business and Dollar stores who are not genuine in their activities…….and are Agents working in Cohort with Special Interest Corporate Business community……coordinating with their fellows all over the world and are also hold up in all African Nations to build economic power for China and Asia………the reason there is insurgency situation where US Politicians have been bought to destroy and kill the Economic Power and Stability of American Base in a hurry, the reason there was looming appetite to have Federal Government Shut-down….the reason PM Raila and Team are in the US Partying and Celebrating, shuttling all over the place in the US in solidarity with Special interest, the reason special interest politicians do not want to build economic base for US Middle-Class and support Social Welfare of the Public Citizens of America, the reason they are fighting to Lock Out Workers Union to represent workers interests, the reason they lock the Government from accessing sufficient amount of money to run the Government programs and welfare as well as be able to work with legitimate African business individuals and social groups for Africa/America Partnership for Development, the reason Ambassador Ranneberger and other African Envoys are miandering, doing the opposite of what they should to serve the mission call of duty……as seen in Amb. Ranneberger activities in diverting funds to groups of Eugine Wamalwa, Kalonzo Musyoka and Uhuru in pretense of funding Youth Agenda, but instead he is supporting and strengthening the Mungiki Sect who are working in cohort with the Chinese Prisonners trained Army who are holed in rural countrysides of Kenya, awaiting to strike, speculaively, awaiting to stage a Global War making Kenya its base…….

This is no joke…….it is AWAKENING……and Extremely sad, that our African Leaders have lost it and are busy selling motherland of Africa to China and to built Economic Power of China/Asia…. If Regime Change is not done now, and African Leaders and the United Nations as well as the whole Generation of People Citizen of the World will not stand with me and stop this madness once and for all………by first helping to initiate a Transitional Caretaker Government in Kenya immediately without counting days………

I am sad and truely very very sad……! ! !

This is because, everything in Kenya for the people citizens, is now not working, people are worried and confused, contemplating, who will save them from this quagmire ????

I have stuck my nake to be a voice of reason because my heart is inwardly crying and bleeding ……the motherhood of loosing my poor people and the spirit of God in me, will not let me free.. I know and have feelings of what all these means and the consequences of destruction…..it is not going to be easy……..The Chinese are ready to wipe us all……they are set to Re-Locate to Africa and take full charge of ownership there…….

We cannot sit and wait, but each and everyone who is looking for freedom from slavery, who do not wish their little underage children are not hijacked for “Masters’ Sexual Toy” and being parraded for prostitution Trade, may we all join the force to stop this madness of the Chinese along with these corrupt leaders………It is possible people and it can be done……Pray and Lets do it…..!

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA

http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

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Visiting Chinese vice premier holds talks with Kenyan president

English.news.cn 2011-03-19 17:06:32

NAIROBI, March 19 (Xinhua) — Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan held talks with Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki in Nairobi on Friday, stressing that China would like to make joint efforts with Kenya to further promote the long-term, stable and reciprocal bilateral cooperation in various fields.

Wang relayed cordial greetings of Chinese President Hu Jintao to Kibaki. During their talks, Wang expressed his satisfaction with the continuous development of bilateral relations, adding that China-Kenya relations have witnessed fruitful and comprehensive cooperation in economy, trade, investment, culture, science and technology, tourism and media. He said China attaches great importance to bilateral relations and takes Kenya as an important cooperative partner in Africa.

He also said that China and Kenya have been supporting each other and building close cooperation regarding the issues of core interests and vital concerns. China appreciates that Kenya has been resolutely sticking to the one-China policy and lending precious supports to China on major issues.

Kibaki said it was his great honor to visit China and attend the opening ceremony of Shanghai World Expo in 2010, stressing that during the visit he had productive talks with President Hu.
He noticed that Kenya is ready to work with China to further deepen cooperation in different bilateral and multilateral fields, such as trade, development of green economy, the fight against climate change and piracy to benefit the two peoples.

After the talks, Wang and Kibaki attended the signing ceremony of agreements on economy, trade, investment, financial cooperation and public health between the two countries.
In the afternoon, Wang held a seminar focusing on deepening trade and economic cooperation with African countries which was attended by a group of Chinese enterprises and organizations operating on the continent.

At the invitation of the government of Kenya, a delegation led by Wang arrived here for official visit to Kenya from Thursday to Monday, which is also the first leg of the vice premier’s three- African countries-visit followed by Zimbabwe and Angola

China Dismisses U.S. Claims Over Continent
Walter Menya
28 March 2011

Nairobi — China has dismissed as “sensational” claims by the US it was employing dirty tricks to gain a foothold in Kenya.

Leaked US diplomatic cables described Chinese firms as using bribes, cut-throat pricing strategies and coercion through senior government officials to win lucrative deals in the sector, a trend that US government officials in Nairobi saw as detrimental to the industry’s growth prospects.

Chinese ambassador to Kenya Liu Guangyuan on Monday told a continental meeting of researchers in Nairobi that some governments were getting jittery over Beijing’s increasing profile in Africa.

The theme of the conference, that ends on March 30, is Understanding China-Africa Relations.

In a hard-hitting speech that would be interpreted as responding to the US over the leaked diplomatic cables that portrayed Beijing as exploitative and using dirty tricks to win over Kenya, Mr Liu denied China was recolonising Africa.

“It is obvious that some in the world seem to be not very comfortable to see China and Africa mingling so well and are saying China is no longer a developing country, that China no longer needs Africa,” Mr Liu said.

“Some have gone so sensational as to claim that China is repeating the colonial path of exploiting Africa. Well, I shall not trouble myself to explain anything, because it is totally unnecessary,” he added.

China’s growing influence in Africa, and Kenya in particular, has caused jitters in Western capitals whose vendors have lost ground to their Chinese counterparts.

“Chinese firms selling into Kenya’s ICT sector are throwing a lot of money around, according to industry contacts. Indeed, Chinese influence may be so great that it is distorting important investment decisions in the country,” a cable from the US embassy in Nairobi dated October 2007 stated.

“Chinese influence is so great that it is actually distorting critical investment decisions in Kenya’s all-important ICT sector. For further investigation is the role of the Chinese Government.”

But Mr Liu was categorical that Sino-Africa relations were of mutual benefit.
“I believe our African friends are so wise that you can definitely judge from your own feelings to tell the right from the wrong. But I want to say that treating each other on an equal footing, mutual benefits and win-win strategy are the unswerving principle of Focac (Forum on China-Africa Cooperation),” the envoy said.

He explained that both China and Africa were committed to jointly establishing a new strategic partnership marked by political equality and mutual trust, economic win-win cooperation and cultural exchanges and mutual learning.

Medical Services minister Anyang’ Nyong’o, who was the keynote speaker at the conference, urged African governments to emulate China in implementing urban renewal and rural development, infrastructure, medicine and social discipline.

Prof Nyong’o said Kenya had a lot to learn from China on devolution.
“The Sino-Africa relation is something that should now go beyond trade and commerce,” the minister said, adding that those ties dated back to pre-colonial period.
China today maintains a heavy presence in Africa, opening Confucius Institutions in 13 countries on the continent. In Kenya, the Confucius Institutes are at Nairobi and Kenyatta universities.

In terms of trade, China-Africa relations continue to achieve new progress. Trade volumes between China and Africa reached $127 billion (Sh10 trillion) in 2010, up nearly 40 per cent.

“Both China and Africa suffered colonialist invasion and internal disorders. That’s why we value national reconciliation and social stability so much,” Mr Liu added.

China & Africa: BRICS demand global monetary shake-up, greater influence

Folks,

Ubiro yie……More surprises awaits in the offing…..!

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

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HSBC Gets CBK’s Operation Nod
Peter Kiragu

8 April 2011

CHINESE banking giant HSBC has been licensed to open a representaive office in Kenya, the Central Bank announced yesterday. It is the third international bank to be granted authority by CBK to operate a representative office in Kenya. Others are the HDFC Bank of India in June 2008 and Nedbank of South Africa in June 2010. CBK said it is also processing a fourth application from a South African bank.

The office will undertake marketing and liaison services and is restricted from mobilising deposits from the public unlike fully fledged bank branches or subsidiaries of international banks “The increased interest in Kenya by international banks is testament to the growing stature of the country as a premier regional financial services hub,” said a statement from CBK.
BRICS demand global monetary shake-up, greater influence

Reuters – (L-R) India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev, China’s …
By Abhijit Neogy and Alexei Anishchuk Abhijit Neogy And Alexei Anishchuk – Thu Apr 14, 7:32 am ET

SANYA, China (Reuters) – The BRICS group of emerging-market powers kept up the pressure on Thursday for a revamped global monetary system that relies less on the dollar and for a louder voice in international financial institutions.

The leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa also called for stronger regulation of commodity derivatives to dampen excessive volatility in food and energy prices, which they said posed new risks for the recovery of the world economy.
Meeting on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, they said the recent financial crisis had exposed the inadequacies of the current monetary order, which has the dollar as its linchpin.

What was needed, they said in a statement, was “a broad-based international reserve currency system providing stability and certainty” — thinly veiled criticism of what the BRICS see as Washington’s neglect of its global monetary responsibilities.
The BRICS are worried that America’s large trade and budget deficits will eventually debase the dollar. They also begrudge the financial and political privileges that come with being the leading reserve currency.

“The world economy is undergoing profound and complex changes,” Chinese President Hu Jintao said. “The era demands that the BRICS countries strengthen dialogue and cooperation.”

In another dig at the dollar, the development banks of the five BRICS nations agreed to establish mutual credit lines denominated in their local currencies, not the U.S. currency.
The head of China Development Bank (CDB), Chen Yuan, said he was prepared to lend up to 10 billion yuan to fellow BRICS, and his Russian counterpart said he was looking to borrow the yuan equivalent of at least $500 million via CDB.

“We think this will undoubtedly broaden the opportunities for Russian companies to diversify their loans,” Vladimir Dmitriev, the chairman of VEB, Russia’s state development bank, told reporters.

ALL DOWN TO THE BRICS

The call by the BRICS for a new monetary order are not new.

But, coming hours before a meeting in Washington of finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrial nations, the traditional power brokers of the world economy, Thursday’s communique showed the growing confidence of emerging markets.

Burdened by heavy debt, the United States, the euro zone and Japan are struggling to shake off the lingering effects of the 2008 global financial crisis. Rich countries will grow 2.4 percent this year and 2.6 percent in 2012, the International Monetary fund forecast this week.

By contrast, less well-off countries have emerged relatively unscathed. The IMF is forecasting that emerging and developing countries will grow 6.5 percent both this year and next.

“The quality and the durability of the global economic recovery process depends to a great measure on how the BRICS economies perform,” Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said.

The leaders reviewed the global role of the Special Drawing Right, the IMF’s accounting unit and reserve asset, which some experts believe could grow into a partial substitute for the dollar.

But they stepped around the issue of whether the yuan should join the SDR, saying only that they welcomed discussion of the composition of the SDR’s basket of currencies.
A member-country official said the group was split on whether China’s currency, which cannot be freely exchanged except for trade and investment purposes, met the criteria for being part of the SDR.

“There is a need for a broad-basing of the international monetary system. The SDR is an instrument to do that, but we still have no unanimity on the inclusion of the Chinese currency in the SDR as of now,” said the official, who declined to be identified.
The SDR now comprises the dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen and the British pound.
“India has said that the SDR is an accounting mechanism used by the IMF, and countries such as Brazil have also said that this (the yuan) should be convertible first,” he added.
Though keen on a more diverse global monetary order, Beijing has given no indication that it is ready to make the yuan freely tradable or to dismantle capital controls as the price for the prestige of being part of the SDR.

BROAD-BRUSH TREATMENT

Emerging economies have already won more say in the way the IMF is run, but the BRICS leaders said they were still under-represented.

“We … agreed on the need for the reform of international financial institutions in order to promote a just economic order,” South African President Jacob Zuma said.
On the hot topic of capital flows, the BRICS called “for more attention” to the risks posed by massive cross-border flows of money but went no further.

The group said the world economy, of which its members make up nearly a fifth, still faced headwinds.

“The developments in west Asia and north Africa, and the aftermath of the huge tragedy that befell Japan, have introduced fresh uncertainties in the global recovery process,” Singh said.

Swings in commodity prices are also a prime area of concern for the BRICS. China is the world’s biggest importer of many commodities; the other BRICS members are major exporters of natural resources.

China hopes the group will be able to agree on a common stance on commodity price fluctuations at the G20 summit in the French city of Cannes in November.
The main aim of the BRICS is to forge a common emerging-market negotiating stance on issues from climate change to world trade and to act as a counterweight to the West in settings such as the Group of 20 forum of advanced and developing economies.
The BRICS caucus is a work in progress. Thursday’s brief meeting, held under tight security at a beach-front hotel, was only its third summit and the first to include South Africa.

The group brings together five countries that, though frequently united in their disinclination to do the West’s bidding, are a political and economic mosaic.
“Our economic potential, political influence and our development prospects as an alliance are exceptional,” Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said.

(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard, Zhou Xin and Ray Colitt in Sanya and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Writing by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Ken Wills and Dean Yates)

China launches “charm” campaign to clean up its image

04/04/2011 13:18
CHINA

Beijing is betting on cultural and arts exchange to present itself as a peaceful power. However, the world sees the arrests of dissidents and media censorship. A survey for the BBC shows a growing popular displeasure towards China, especially in the West.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) – China has launched a “charm” campaign, promoting cultural exchanges abroad to boost its image as a peaceful power. However, a worldwide survey indicates that more than 50 per cent of people view with growing apprehension Beijing’s economic growth and policies.
China is aware that its persecution of human rights activists (see the detention Liu Xiaobo) and the widespread corruption among Communist leaders have generated “bad” publicity. However, as its economy grows, so does its ambition to be a world power and for this reason it wants to be seen favourably abroad.

Wu Fan, editor of US-based magazine China Affairs, said that China prefers cultural and arts exchanges, especially at school and university levels, because it certainly cannot promote itself by highlighting its corruption, lack of democracy, and poor human and economic rights record. For this reason, the Chinese government has set up 600 Confucius Institutes, with exchange programmes and language courses, and more.
A recent survey for the British Broadcasting Corporation World Service, among more than 28,000 people in 27 countries, shows that as China’s economy grew so did its negative image over a similar survey conducted in 2005.

Across all countries polled, an average of 50 per cent expressed a positive view of China’s economic power, whilst 33 per cent were negative. However, negative views of China’s growing economic power rose—and are now in the majority—in the US, France, Canada, Germany and Italy.

Negative views are also the result of growing economic frictions among these nations at a time of low economic growth, with each trying to protect its domestic industry against the invasion of Chinese products.

In Africa, views are more favourable, especially in Nigeria (82 per cent) and Kenya (77 per cent). In fact, for analysts, Africans are more likely to see China as a great source of development aid. However, even here, people are increasingly aware that China’s involvement in the continent is limited to buying energy and raw materials, and paying them with infrastructures built by Chinese companies.

Chinese firms open mines and exploit African workers as much as they do Chinese workers. They also flood local markets with Chinese-made goods, stifling the nascent local manufacturing sector.

The same trend is visible in many other developing nations where Chinese economic growth is seen as positive overall.

Negative attitudes are confirmed by a question about trading practices. Those saying China is unfair were above 50 per cent in Japan, South Korea, Germany and Italy. In the US, the figure was 45 per cent, compared with 24 per cent saying that it was fair.

As part of its charm offensive, Beijing has organised special courses for Communist Party leaders on how to project an image of efficiency, courtesy and fairness with foreign media.
Experts note however that actions speak louder than words. They point to the fact that, in February and March, police arrested foreign journalists covering street protests in Beijing and Shanghai.

It also goes without saying that the charm campaign applies abroad, not at home.
Hu Ping, editor of the US-based online magazine Beijing Spring, told Radio Free Asia that China was hoping to increase censorship, especially on the Internet, and extend its control over public opinion, eliminating all forms of dissent.

Kenya: Kibaki should Say Raila TOSHA for 2012

Kenyans,

We can see today that under this Kibaki`s rule the leaders have no compassion or respect for those they are supposed to serve. They are treating the Kenyan people miserably in order to satisfy their own desires, then some have the gall to ask for their names to be eliminated from the ICC. They still ask for Kibaki´s help when they find themselves in trouble. These leaders including Kibaki should just say these words: `We have done things that are wrong, and we have failed to obey the constitution. because of this, we have made Kenyan population mad, we have separated ourselves from the Kenyan laws. So there is nobody to blame a part from ourselves. ` So Me Kibaki the present Kenyan president, I have decided to declare he Raila Amolo Odinga today TOSHA. This is not a pay back or favor to what he did to me in 2002, but it is the right thing to do in order for our country to have a good person who will implement the new constitution Kenyans are now badly in need of.`

The truth is this: it will be impossible for Uhuru Kenyatta to rule Kenya, believe me or not. It will be also impossible for Ruto to rule Kenya in 2012. So why can`t Kenyans face the truth?. Why wasting time with these convicts?. Another thing is this; the mission VP Kalonza has taken has made his ways to be a Kenyan president impossible: I just do not know why Kibaki used him that badly, unless they wanted to discredit him to the international community.

What Kenyans must accept or will have to accept is this; If Kalonzo or Ruto or Uhuru Kenyatta arise to be Kenyan president in 2012 then Kenya will be a Chinese colony believe it or not. These guys have nothing to say in Washington, neither will they have anything to say in London or EU nations, neither will they have anything to say in Canada or Australia, so they will be left with only one option: SURVIVAL UNDER WHAT CIRCUMSTANCES and that is being a Chinese colony for support. Do not forget that EU or USA buy Kenyan goods more than China. Fools will see by their own eyes, but remedy is needed for Kenya not to be colonized again. Zimbabwe tried to be a Chinese colony and their currency dropped to zero: Kenya is more connected to the west that if it tries to go 100% Chinese we shall see hell in currency or economy drop. Just ask Zimbabweans if you do not believe it, EU is not going to leave the six Ocampo want to go free and with USA and Britain ready to vitto the request made by Kenya. Guys; we are in red hot soup. Investors will think 100 times before they invest in Kenya until Ocampo get his victims.

Paul Nyandoto

China & Kenya: China supports sovereignty of Kenya, says Ambassador

Ati What?

China is saying What ??????

Tell China, people of Kenya are ready to protect their Destiny.

It is China who is messing with the Sovereignty of Kenyans. Read the last attachment, and understand how and why.

They better begin to pack-off !

They have given us a reason to kick their butt off Kenya.

Tell them to read attached Document here down please.

We know they are not alone, they are with their Mafia inter-Connected Intelligence Property Thievers” the International Corporate Business Society, who have already done every manner of destroying us through slow puncture death, but they are not bigger than God. They do not have the last say, in the life of Kenya. God will save Kenya. People Pray Hard and stand united, with us to save Kenya, do not sit and wait to be slaughtered, make noise people……

Even in the ancient, God was with his people, poor David defeated Golliath.

Golliath went with all the sophisticated weaponry to destroy David, and he had confidence David was a DUDU to him, but with one sling David was no more….. Take Heart, although we are weak, with God incharge, we are strong. China must get out of Kenya NOW.

We are not playing and we are not jocking….God is incharge, and God will not let us to be destroyed by China.

Yes, China is busy taking The Ports of Kenya so they can have control in the Indian Ocean. They have sent their prisoners and Armed Forces to Kenya and are in the business of Road Construction, they are scattered everywhere, they are teamed with Museveni to Wipe-out Kenyans, so they can remain doing their business, taking Kenyans’ resources by Force. This will not happen.

Here me and here me well…….

Kenya is a failed state, Kalonzo has spilled the beans that Kibaki had sent him to lobby African Nations so Kenya quit from ICC Hague. Others are about to begin to name Kibaki even more. PNU is not a legitimate Party by all means and standards, Kenyans just exercised peace, but their Peace stance should not be read as weakness.

The people public of Kenya and PM Raila with the Legitimate Party of ODM have said No. ODM is the legitimate Party who won election, PM Raila should take charge, after-all he is the Prime Minister, and also they are sharing 50/50 powers. Kibaki has committed untold Crimes to Kenyans, he stole election and as a result killed many Kenyas for him to remain in power. It is the reason he hurriedly brought China to take over Kenya stealthily. This will not happen and will never happen.

China, kwa roho safi……please leave Kenya peacefully…….

China must not scare the Representatives of States that signed the Rome Statute, Ambassador Christian Wenaweser and Team, from flying into Kenya and doing their work. Their plan must go on undeterred.

Thanks,

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

Watch This !
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China supports sovereignty of Kenya, says Ambassador

Chinese Ambassador to Kenya Liu Guangyuan met President Kibaki today, and said China supports ‘the integrity and sovereignty” of Kenya and is opposed to interference of her internal affairs by external forces.

Below is the full statement from the Presidential Press Service:

Nairobi January 27th, 2011

The Chinese government fully supports the integrity and sovereignty of Kenya and is opposed to interference of her internal affairs by external forces, the Chinese Ambassador to Kenya Liu Guangyuan has said.

Mr Guangyuan also supported Kenya’s cause for peace and harmonious co-existence of ethnic communities observing that justice must go hand in hand with reconciliation of the Kenyan people.

The Ambassador made the remarks today when he paid a courtesy call on President Mwai Kibaki at his Harambee House office.

The Envoy expressed his government’s satisfaction with Kenya/China bilateral cooperation reassuring of China’s continued assistance in infrastructural development under the Forum for China-Africa cooperation (FOCAC).

He acknowledged the positive efforts Kenya and IGAD have made in restoration of peace and stability in the horn of Africa.

On the drought affecting parts of the country, the Ambassador expressed his government’s willingness to provide relief assistance to the affected Kenyans.

During the talks, Mr. Guangyuan conveyed to President Kibaki the China Lunar year greetings from President Jintau.

On his part, President Kibaki conveyed warm greetings and best wishes to the President of China Hu Jintao and the people of China on the memorable occasion marking the beginning of the Chinese Lunar year.

The Head of State noted,” As you celebrate this important day in your country’s calendar, it is my desire that the friendly relations existing between our two countries be further enhanced for the mutual benefit of our two peoples”.

The President noted with satisfaction the strong bond of friendship and bilateral cooperation existing between Kenya and China since independence, terming China a dependable development partner.

The talks were attended by Foreign Affairs Assistant Minister Richard Onyoka and Head of Public Service and Secretary to Cabinet Amb. Francis Muthaura among other senior Kenya and Chinese government officials.

-PPS

Why Kenya is now on the global radar

By Biketi Kikechi

The representative of states that signed the Rome Statute flies in tomorrow (Thursday), and straight into a storm set off by Kenya’s diplomatic offensive for deferral of its two cases at The Hague, and Africa’s withdrawal motion.

During his visit, Ambassador Christian Wenaweser, who is President of the Assembly of the States Parties ICC, will hold talks with President Kibaki and address an international news conference.

But his arrival will raise eyebrows, coming ahead of this week’s African Union Summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where Kenya’s lobbying for a deferral of its ICC cases is expected to take centre stage.

It also follows meetings President Kibaki held in the middle of the month with AU chairperson Mr Jean Ping, who is reported to have endorsed Kenya’s request on the basis that it is within its rights as a member state. Kenya is believed to already have the support of Djibouti, Uganda, South Africa, Burundi, Ethiopia, South Africa, Zambia, Malawi and Tanzania.

Global interest in Kenya’s guarded offensive against the ICC, which rules in March on whether cases planned against six of its prominent citizens should proceed, is reportedly rising ahead of the summit.

It is common knowledge in diplomatic circles that America’s President Barrack Obama will send a representative to the Summit, while UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will attend in person. The Heads of States Summit begins on Friday, but the ministers’ roundtable session began on Monday.

Apart from discussing the Addis Ababa Summit, where Sudan President Hassan Omar al-Bashir who has been indicted by ICC is expected, Ping also met Prime Minister Raila Odinga on January 11.

His discussions with the two leaders are said to have centered on the worsening Ivorian political crisis.

Ambassador Wenaweser arrives with a message for Kenya, which seeks to change how it relates with ICC, from The Hague court.

He will jet in as Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka, who is leading the charm offensive against ICC on the Kenyan side through the use of his old network as Foreign minister, flies to Libya and Nigeria, to lobby for AU to pressurise for deferral of Kenya’s case.

His arrival also follows that of top ICC officers who flew into the country over the weekend to attend a roundtable media conference, and to understand issues Kenyans are raising over ICC.

Sources told The Standard America and the UN, which were instrumental in Kenya’s peace deal in 2008 following the post-election violence, would lobby African states to stick to ICC as a strategy against curbing impunity and nurturing democracy and respect for the law and human rights.

Yesterday, Denmark’s Foreign Affairs Minister Lene Espersen said in Nairobi her country fully supports the ICC process, and that it was important for Kenya to attach importance to remain committed to the Rome Statute. “The decision you take will reflect on how the rest of the World looks upon Kenya,” she said.

Wenaweser’s two-day stay, beginning tomorrow (Thursday), includes consultations with Government officials, MPs, the civil society and media.

He will conclude his visit with a press conference on Friday, when AU meeting begins. The UN chief, whose first term ends in December, is expected to impress on Africa the need to stick to ICC to stave off its perennial political problems and human rights issues.

Pulling out

Sources revealed he will be concerned about African countries pulling out of the Rome Statute during his watch because that could lead to collapse of The Hague-based court whose majority party-states are from the continent.

Kalonzo has visited South Africa, Uganda, Malawi, and Ethiopia, and will also be visiting Libya and West African states before the Addis-Ababa meeting.

Yesterday, he repeated his assertion that Kenya has no intention of pulling out of the Rome Statute or the ICC process.

“Contrary to views being peddled around, Kenya is fully represented in the Court, where we have Lady Justice Joyce Aluoch on the Bench,” said Kalonzo.

He noted that with the new constitution and the on-going reforms in the Judiciary, Kenya was now better positioned to prosecute the post-election suspects locally.

“We are currently revamping our Judiciary, and very soon we will be having a new Chief Justice, Director of Public Prosecution among other reforms which we are confident will enable us have the right mechanism to try these suspects,” he added.

Speaking when he met the Danish Minister, Acting Foreign affairs minister Prof George Saitoti also discounted claims the government had discussed the possibility of Kenya pulling out of the Rome Statute.

He also clarified that the Executive had not made a decision on blocking seizure of suspects for trial by ICC, should they be indicted.

“Reports indicating that the government has been sending emissaries to various African countries asking them that we want to pull out of ICC, and that they should follow suit, is farfetched and not true,’ said Saitoti.

He explained that it was Parliament and not Executive that had resolved Kenya should move away from the Rome Statute.

“Parliament is an independent body and it has a right to deliberate on any matter it considers important, and the Executive cannot dictate it,” said Saitoti

New laws

Saitoti explained Kalonzo has been visiting African States to inform them that with the new constitution, Kenya is able to put up local judicial mechanism to deal with the post-election suspects.

“We are capable of putting up a local mechanism even if The Hague process goes on. We have to look at other crimes,” added Saitoti. Ocampo is expected to begin presenting his case to the Pre-Trial Chamber II in March, for the Judges to rule if he has a sustainable case on the six Kenyans he says hold the biggest responsibility for the violence.

The global anxiety over Ivory Coast, which will come out in Addis Ababa, lies in the fact that if it is not addressed, the elections scheduled to take place in close to 20 African States this year may likewise be undermined.

The AU provides a promising exit pad for Africa from ICC, because it has already dismissed Bashir’s indictment and called for its deferment, as well as amendment of Article 16 of the Rome Statute to enable other UN bodies to request suspension of ICC prosecutions in case of inaction by the Security Council.

AU also turned down establishment of an ICC liaison office within it. Imenti Central MP Gitobu Imanyara, Law Society of Kenya and leaders of civil society have urged the AU to tread carefully over the Kenya-driven motion.

Assistant Minister Kareke Mbiuki who supported Parliament’s withdrawal motion said: ” Even if Obama is sending a representative to AU, that will not affect its decision or Kenya’s position on the ICC. Kenya subscribes to the UN and not America.”

KENYA: CHINESE BANK GRANTS KENYA GOV’T FOR HOUSING PROJECTS.

By Agwanda JaMach

THE government has secured a grant worth Sh. 1.5 billion from the Chinese Development Bank to increase housing units in the country.

Housing Minister Peter Soita Shitanda announced that the funds will be used to put up 800 residential units in Kisumu and hostels for female students at Masinde Muliro University in Kakamega.

Shitanda says that the hostels are expected to house 3,000 female students.

He says the university has a population of 11,000 students and accommodation has been a challenge to the institution.

The minister says that currently National Housing Corporation officers are in Western Kenya laying ground for the project that will address the housing shortage being experienced in the region.

Speaking in Kisumu during a visit to Kenya Slum Upgrading Projects, Shitanda noted that the housing officers are in consultations with the municipal councils before they embark on the projects.

He announced that they are ready and waiting for the release of the funds from the financier to enable them carry out the project.

Ends.

?AIDS Rights? Chinese AIDS awareness begins at home

By Zhang Lei

He remembers like it was yesterday the night he was forced to flee the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region as officers raided his apartment-turned-office and closed down his non-governmental organization on October 18, 2006.

“I never felt ashamed,” said 27-year-old Chang Kun. “In fact, I’m still proud of what I did.”

For seven years, Chang hasn’t quit despite constant setbacks and frustrations.

As founder of the China Youth HIV/AIDS Assembly, Chang believes in what he’s doing: He has devoted his life to AIDS prevention work.

“When I fight AIDS, I never feel tired, though it’s very challenging work,” he said.

He has chosen a very different path to most of his peers from his rural hometown of Chengguan in Linquan county, Anhui Province.

As they struggle to buy apartments and make a traditional success of their lives in the bigger cities, Chang has instead returned home to Chengguan to open up a humble community youth center.

It was in early 2006 that he realized his life’s mission: to fight AIDS.

“I suddenly found this inner strength because I’d discovered what my calling was,” Chang said.

He was studying law at Xinjiang Normal University in Urumqi and already devoting most of his spare time to helping the disadvantaged.

He had started a volunteer league organizing environmental protection and disabled groups when he realized AIDS was a taboo problem neglected by most students.

A large AIDS prevention forum was launched by 20 colleges in Xinjiang in 2004, attracting attention from public and local authorities.

The forum was a hit, but Chang said he was blamed by university teachers and leaders for not sharing the limelight, for example hogging television interviews.

“I was too young to handle the complicated relationships back then,” he said. Mostly as a result of this inexperience, Chang’s league was disbanded nine months after it had been formed.

Chang began looking deeper into AIDS, as “it’s a very interesting topic, connected to many perspectives of society including politics, economy, humanity, environment and religion.”

Xinjiang was China’s fourth-most severely affected area at that time, he said. Since he had lost teacher support, he expanded his AIDS support group outside college and founded his non-governmental organization (NGO) the Snow Lotus HIV/AIDS Education Institute on March 16, 2005. He also kept a close eye on Hepatitis B issues.

The Chinese mainland has more than 500 unregistered AIDS NGOs, mostly funded by government health departments, he explained.

“Most AIDS NGOs are not registered, but tolerated and funded by government as the potential patients, such as sex workers and homosexuals, are hidden from society,” Chang said.

Chang Kun’s home in Linquan county, Anhui Province is now converted into a community center with free books and Internet access for youth. Photo: Courtesy of Chang Kun

Exit to applause

The first grass-roots NGO aimed at preventing AIDS among homosexuals was officially registered on March 22 as private non-enterprise at the district Civil Affairs Bureau in Shanghai.

“I can only say I’m a very lucky man,” Bo Jiaqing of the Shanghai Jing’an District Youth Service Center of AIDS Prevention organization told the China Philanthropy Times.

“Bo is modest in mind. Some NGOs are self-assuming and widen the distance with government,” said Gu Weimin, director of the Shanghai Jing’an District Social Organization Association.

Despite sparking an invaluable national debate over student rights, Snow Lotus was shut down on October 18, 2006 by the Xinjiang provincial government.

Ironically, the Xinjiang Economic Daily ran a front-page profile of Chang a month later, headlined “Strive for AIDS prevention for a lifetime.”

“I chose to stay in Xinjiang because I couldn’t sleep at night thinking of the problem and feel bad for people living under the threat of AIDS here,” he told the paper.

“I was unsure about what to do in the future when my friends and teachers told me I should focus more on myself and my own life,” he said.

“But after I initiated Snow Lotus, my eyes were opened. Now I’m more determined to devote myself to AIDS prevention work.”

Five days later, Chang was expelled from Xinjiang Normal University for “leaving school without permission and cutting classes.” He was forced to leave Urumqi by authorities.

Chang came to the capital city and co-founded the Beijing Yirenping Center with lawyer friends to fight discrimination against HIV/ AIDS patients and Hepatitis B carriers.

In support of the rights of 19 junior high school students with Hepatitis B to return to school on December 28, Chang’s organization launched an Internet-based signature campaign that drew 2,000 supporters including Hong Kong movie star Andy Lau.

Chang was invited to participate as a civil society representative at a UN meeting in New York on June 10 and 11 2008 to review global progress toward realizing the Declaration of Commitment on HIV/ AIDS and the Political Declaration on HIV/AIDS.

Soon after that meeting, he was invited to study in San Diego as a visiting scholar, where Chang found inspiration in California’s community centers.

“The Americans care about their own communities and are very willing to contribute,” he said.

Arriving back home January this year, Chang struggled in vain to explain to his parents how “civil rights education begins at home.”

His parents told him they would have preferred he get “a decent job,” he said. After countless arguments, the fact that his parents have finally come around to respect his choice of work comforts and inspires Chang today.

“I hope my own happiness from changing my family’s attitude can also benefit my hometown,” he said. “If I can change my parents, giving them new ideas, why can’t I change my relatives, neighbors and fellow villagers? It’s a big world, I must tell them.”

Source: Global Times
[08:36 December 01 2010]
Comments

Big city, small town

NGO workers often receive recognition and acclaim in big cities, he said.

For example, an AIDS prevention NGO from Kunming, capital city of Yunnan Province, Yunnan Parallel, is launching a dinner party calling for volunteers to dine with HIV/AIDS patients ahead of World AIDS Day today. About 100 people have applied for the 20 seats. Lots had to be drawn.

In smaller towns like his, it can be quite a different story.

Many locals regard Chang as “silly”, he admitted. His parents have come under great pressure for their son’s nonconformity, he explained. Chang is not about to back down just to please the neighbors.

“The situation won’t change overnight, or ever, if nobody challenges it,” Chang said.

The Internet is popular in Chengguan and Chang introduced e-mail and search engines to local people, who previously only used the Internet to play games, chat or watch movies.

His center also provides free legal advice and assistance in fields such as public health, anti-discrimination and other public areas. Chang hopes that health education will prevent dissemination of HIV/ AIDS, tuberculosis, hepatitis and other infectious diseases in AIDS-stricken Linquan.

He had not known that AIDS was rampant in his hometown until he left Xinjiang. So far no one has come to Chang with an HIV/AIDS problem or seeking legal assistance. “The group is often invisible,” he said. “We still need time.

“I’m not going to do something just to look good. My aim is to change people’s mind through civil education. There’s a long way to go.”

Home library

To achieve his goal, Chang’s dilapidated two-story building was renovated into the Chang Kun House, a youth center available to a county of 2.13 million people, the largest in China.

Most visitors are nearby high school students who have communicated well with lecturers Chang has invited from Japan and Hong Kong. The youngsters’ appetite for academic books is gaining each day, he said. With a collection of 2,000 books, the library attracts not only students but workers too.

The need is great: Linquan county suffers from pervasive drug use and unplanned births. A number of county officials have ended up in prison for corruption. There are no railways, highways or waterways, said Zhu Aimin, the county party secretary appointed last year.

Some officials aren’t happy with Chang’s innovations and have told him to shut up shop. Chengguan Party Secretary Ge Jinhai, for example, told the Voice of America on November 9 that illegal public libraries run by individuals would be banned.

“Thanks to a thorough interview by [Guangzhou-based newspaper] Southern Metropolis, now they left us alone,” Chang said.

Rumor has it that Chang received money from abroad and that the government wanted him to do-nate a chunk to government coffers. Chang denies this but admitted a week after opening, two officials from the county press and publication bureau inspection team went to the center to check for pirated books.

“One official was apparently drunk,” he said. “Actually they wanted me to bribe them and treat them to dinner.”

Familiar with the sight of local leaders being treated like emperors, Chang chose to take the path of most resistance, refusing to cooperate with their demands.

“It’s important local people understand the community leaders are not rulers, but voted to serve the people, and their scope of power is limited,” he said.

“They want us to close down because their interests are infringed.”

“Come what may, I’ll hang on for at least three years, during which time I believe things will get better,” he said.

He has spent 30,000 yuan on the center, mostly money from his family. Seven thousand yuan came from friends’ and strangers’ donations.

“I am motivated by the progress we’re making on a major problem that is generally ignored and marginalized,” Chang said.

“I guess it must have something to do with my rebellious nature.”

http://special.globaltimes.cn/2010-12/597940.html

Chang Kun
General Coordinator of China Youth HIV/AIDS Assembly
Board Member and Co-founder of Beijing Yirenping Center

?AIDS Rights? Global times: AIDS activist hassled over home library

from Kun Chang

http://china.globaltimes.cn/society/2010-11/591475.html
Source: Global Times

By Ge Lili

A civil rights and AIDS activist in Anhui Province said local authorities are pres-suring him to stop using his home as a public library.

Chang Kun, 25, opened his 2,000- book library to residents in Linquan county and has offered free Internet access since May 4. Authorities said they inspected the books to check for pirated copies.

Ge Jinhai, Party secretary of Chengguan township in Linquan, told the Global Times that Chang’s activities were illegal, but did not explain why.

An assistant to Linquan Party secretary Zhu Aiming said that he never heard of Chang, but added that the office will support him if he contacts them.

“My aim is to make my fellow residents learn more and improve awareness about their rights,” Chang told the Global Times, adding that about 150 people visit his home regularly.

He established a now-defunct AIDS group and was expelled from a university in 2006 after assisting students in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, who were expelled because they suffered from Hepatitis B.

Chang said he allowed everyone to use his collection of novels and books about AIDS, and said that the level of community services in the US impressed him. Most of the books were donated.

Chang said in March 2005, before opening the library, he formed an AIDS awareness group which was later forced to break up. He set up an AIDS website www.xjaids.org in 2006, which is no longer online.

Chang said several men carrying Linquan Press and Publication Bureau identifications came to his home one night to check pirated books. “Wang Zizhong, the Party secretary in the Guangming community, where the library is located, once talked to my father and asked him to close the library,” he said.

However, Wang denied he ever did so when contacted by the Global Times.

An employee at the Linquan Press and Publication Bureau, who only gave his surname as Cai, told the Global Times that it is part of their job to investigate pirated books. “We should check if there are pirated books. These are our rules. We have informed Chang to handle procedures in the local industrial and commercial bureau,” he said.

Chang is a co-founder of Beijing Yirenping Center. Cui Qingfeng, a lawyer at Chang An Law Firm, said people who lend large numbers of books to others should get permission from the local industrial and commercial bureau.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Chang Kun House AIBO Youth Center

– – –

About Chang Kun:

Chang Kun is a Human Rights activist working on HIV/AIDS, HBV and other public health issues. He also takes time to care about Civil Rights in China. On 2006, he tried to run for deputy to the local people’s congresses representing district where my university Xinjiang Normal University is located as an independent candidate because deputies to the local people’s congresses representing counties and townships are elected directly by our constituencies. That time he was a Law school student. However, because of his Human Rights actions, Xinjiang Snow Lotus HIV/AIDS Institute was banned by local authorities and he was expelled by Xinjiang Normal University on Oct,2006.He had to leave Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Regions for Beijing. Know more about Chang Kun

About Hometown:

In Chinese culture, Hometown is the most important place in every Chinese mind. There are a lot of works of art about people who are out of there hometown think of their home.

About Chang Kun House 4 Civil Rights in Hometown:

In the almost two years in the U.S, Chang Kun has been watching and studying a lot of about Civil Rights and community improvement, and he also has done many works to compare the differences between China and America or other countries. One of the most important ideas is he thinks he shouldn’t only do works in some big cities, he also should take responsibilities for changing his hometown, his community……

Chang Kun’s hometown is Linquan County

About Linquan County?

Linquan County is located in the northwestern border of Anhui Province, It is under the administration of Fuyang city.

“Linquan has a population of 2.13 million. It is the county which has the largest population in mainland China, it is also the largest county which has the most unplanned birth. Linquan is one among three major drug crime counties, the economic development of Linquan is at the bottom of Fuyang city, and even whole Anhui. Until now, it is still no railway, unreasonable highway, waterway “.(from the article that ?Activate Linquan – dialogue with the county party secretary Ai-Min Zhu?Jiangsu Economic News)

“Linquan County is located in the northwest corner of Anhui Province, with more than 200 million people, called by the county of the largest population. But, Linquan is not known for a large population, it is the drugs. Linquan, Tongxin County of the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, Guanghe county of Gansu Province, are called as the mainland’s three major drug distribution centers by the overseas media. Linquan Miaocha Town, it is the hardest drug hit areas of Fuyang City, and even a malignant tumor for the whole Central Plains region. “(from the article ?Narco-Chiu Ho shui and the destruction of the Kingdom of Linquan drugs???Democracy and Rule of Law? 2009. NO.16 report)

During to the huge population and economic pressures, the kinds of social problems explicit in particular in Linquan, the total area of 1818 square kilometers small space. In book written by Chen Guidi and Chun Tao’s “Survey of Chinese Peasants”, there’s a considerable length that describes the stories took place in Linquan. Meanwhile, Linquan is China’s first batch of AIDS prevention and control model.

Please consider a donation or help us raise the funds. Little give, help us a lot.

Contact: Chang kun

changkun2010@gmail.com cell-phone: 13,349,108,944; 13810726838

China and Africa: Corruption in Namibia

from Judy Miriga

Corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa

Gatekeepers Kenya 2009
By Stephanie Hanson
August 06, 2009

Published on the Council on Foreign Relations web site (CFR.org)

Introduction

Africa is widely considered among the world’s most corrupt places, a factor seen as contributing to the stunted development and impoverishment of many African states. Of the ten countries considered most corrupt in the world, six are in sub-Saharan Africa, according to Transparency International, a leading global watchdog on corruption. A 2002 African Union study estimated that corruption cost the continent roughly $150 billion a year. To compare, developed countries gave $22.5 billion in aid to sub-Saharan Africa in 2008, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Some economists argue that African governments need to fight corruption instead of relying on foreign aid. But anti-corruption efforts on the continent have shown mixed results in recent years, and analysts fear that major international partners are unwilling to exert leverage over African governments. An initiative for transparency in the extractive industries shows promise, but is mostly untested. Some experts suggest
African interest in attracting foreign investment will serve to spur more substantive efforts to fight corruption.

African Efforts to Fight Corruption

Corruption in Africa ranges from high-level political graft on the scale of millions of dollars to low-level bribes to police officers or customs officials. While political graft imposes the largest direct financial cost on a country, petty bribes have a corrosive effect on basic institutions and undermine public trust in the government. Over half of East Africans polled paid bribes to access public services that should have been freely available, according to the 2009 East African Bribery Index, compiled by Transparency International. Graft also increases the cost of doing business. Academic research shows that a one-point improvement in a country’s Transparency International corruption score is correlated with a productivity increase equal to 4 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). “If you attack corruption, it’s the best way to attack poverty,” Nuhu Ribadu, the former head of Nigeria’s anti-corruption commission, told BusinessWeek in June 2009. Unaddressed, endemic corruption can also foster unrest. The insurgency in the Niger Delta is fueled by claims that communities in the area do not see tangible benefits from oil extraction on their land; much of the oil revenue meant for the Delta’s citizens is siphoned off by government officials.
The prevalence of corruption also warps the political process. Experts say many public officials in Africa seek reelection because holding office gives them access to the state’s coffers, as well as immunity from prosecution. When the stakes for remaining in office are so high, candidates are more likely to buy votes or rig an election, as happened in Nigeria’s 2007 elections. These “are more reliable and less difficult ways of winning an election than trying to gain voter approval by being a good government,” writes economist Paul Collier.

In the past ten years, African governments have made some efforts to fight corruption. In many cases, they have been spurred by international donors pushing for transparency and good governance as well as domestic pressure to fulfill promises of reform made on the campaign trail. Experts say countries such as Liberia, Rwanda, and Tanzania have made substantive progress on reducing corruption. U.S. President Barack Obama highlighted Ghana’s strong governance record during his visit in July 2009. But many countries, including Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa, have made meager progress on fighting graft. All three countries have established anti-corruption agencies that sought to prevent, investigate, and prosecute corruption. But a 2008 paper from the UN Economic Commission for Africa says such commissions have been largely inefficient and ineffective due to their uncertain political footing. Often funded and overseen by the executive branch, anti-corruption agencies can be eliminated (as in South Africa, where the Scorpions investigating unit was disbanded in 2009), and their leaders can be sidelined or forced out of the country (as in Nigeria and Kenya).
Kenya as Case Study

The experience of Kenya demonstrates how corruption can tip a seemingly stable country into political crisis. Kenyan analysts widely agree that the violence following the December 2007 elections, in which President Mwai Kibaki claimed victory over opposition candidate Raila Odinga, was in large part caused by the zero-sum nature of Kenyan politics: Unless one’s ethnic group was in office, there were no possibilities for economic or political advancement. As South African analyst Moeletsi Mbeki told journalist Michela Wrong in her book It’s Our Turn to Eat: “What greater corruption could there be than stealing an election?” After years of “eating” the spoils of public office, Kibaki’s inner circle of ethnic Kikuyus was unwilling to relinquish power; after years of watching this graft, Odinga’s supporters, many of whom were ethnically Luo, felt it was their turn to eat. Statistics show that political patronage in Kenya’s public spending has exacerbated economic and regional inequalities (PDF). Nyanza Province,
for instance, which is majority Luo, is the poorest province in Kenya.

In fact, Kenya has a range of legislation on the books that should prevent corruption. A Prevention of Corruption Act has existed in Kenya since 1956, and procurement laws have been revised to increase transparency. Since 2002, an anti-corruption commission has been charged with the prevention and investigation (though not the prosecution) of corruption cases. Most of these efforts, however, have fallen prey to the overwhelming power of the executive branch. Forty-five constitutional amendments have strengthened the executive’s power since independence in 1963; the judiciary is effectively controlled by the president. Kenya’s newspapers regularly investigate and break corruption stories, but the exposure of graft rarely results in legal proceedings. “You get the information by hook or by crook but then nothing happens. It’s like talking to yourself,” says Catherine Gicheru, managing editor of The Star, a daily newspaper based in Nairobi.

The anti-corruption commission’s work has also languished. In 2004, its former head, John Githongo, uncovered evidence that a nonexistent company called Anglo Leasing was awarded several huge government contracts. The scandal reached the highest levels of the Kenyan cabinet and cost the country as much as $1 billion. The attorney-general must approve any prosecutions, however, and he declined to prosecute the case. The United Kingdom wanted to investigate Anglo Leasing itself, but the attorney-general prevented its fraud office from moving forward. Kenyan lawyers and civil society members who advocate for good governance agree that judicial reform is imperative. Some argue that the public must step up as well. “Citizens must put their feet down and demand things from the government,” says Job Ogonda, the head of Transparency International-Kenya.

Options for African Governments

Experts suggest a variety of methods for African governments to battle corruption, with a special emphasis on transparency and accountability. “You want to create millions of auditors in the country,” says Daniel Kaufmann, the former director of the World Bank Institute’s work on governance and anti-corruption. Anti-corruption reforms can be divided into three categories:

– Creating anti-corruption agencies. Given the barriers faced in Kenya, many experts are dubious about the utility of such agencies. According to a 2005 survey by the UN Economic Commission for Africa (PDF), only two countries, Namibia and Malawi, had watchdog groups that were deemed effective by experts. In all but a few cases, experts said these groups were not independent from the executive branch. But in some countries, including Nigeria, they have had some measure of success. Under Nuhu Ribadu, Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission recovered $5 billion in stolen public funds and secured 250 convictions. In addition, it helped pass laws that mandated competitive bidding on government contracts and public audits of the oil revenues sent to state governments (PDF).

– Strengthening existing institutions. Institutional weakness facilitates corruption, particularly imbalances between a strong executive branch and weak legislature and judiciary, experts say. “Rather than dreaming up sexy-sounding short cuts, donors should be pouring their money into the boring old institutions African regimes have deliberately starved of cash over the years: the police force, the judicial system and civil service,” writes journalist Wrong. Economist Collier recommends that government ministries overhaul their method of disbursing funds. In his book Wars, Guns, and Votes, he suggests separating policymaking; allocation of money to specific development activities, whether health services, road building, or schooling; and the supply of such activities. Ministries should be responsible for overall policy only, and a “linking agency” should disburse money on the government’s behalf to appropriate suppliers, whether NGOs, churches, or philanthropists. Collier and others also stress the importance of a strong and free press.

– Reducing dependency on foreign aid. A few economists, such as Dambisa Moyo, argue that African governments should cut off foreign aid completely. By encouraging accountability to donors instead of citizens, foreign aid encourages graft and breaks the fundamental relationship between a state and its people, she argues. For instance, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Chad, and Sierra Leone, which are on Transparency International’s top ten corruption list, receive hundreds of millions of dollars in aid. Some say reducing non-humanitarian aid would force African governments to up tax revenues, increasing accountability at the local level. Leaders such as Rwandan President Paul Kagame have stated their interest in ending dependency on foreign aid.

The Role of Global Partners

There are mixed views on how much influence outside actors can exert over African governments. Some analysts believe the United States and other Western governments have the power to force greater transparency, particularly in countries that receive significant levels of foreign aid. For instance, Kenya established its anti-corruption commission in part to unfreeze $1 billion in aid. But international watchdogs say Western governments and multilateral institutions are often hesitant to use the power they have. For instance, when the World Bank agreed to finance the controversial Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline, it claimed it would ensure the subsequent revenues were used for poverty reduction in both countries. It suspended lending in 2006, but when the Chadian government threatened to cut off oil production, it resumed lending and then relaxed its restrictions on how the government spent oil revenues. In 2008, it withdrew from the pipeline project altogether; the project continues to have private-sector funding.

The United States has attempted to discourage corruption through aid tied to performance on a series of governance indicators. The Millennium Challenge Corporation, which administers these grants, was started by President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama allocated $1.4 billion for the program in his FY2010 budget. Experts say it’s too early to evaluate whether the program has been successful, but many praise its linkage between governance improvements and access to aid dollars. As African governments continue to court foreign investors, including U.S. companies, some experts believe they will make improvements in governance that reduce corruption. The Kenyan government, for instance, is beginning to realize that its reputation for high levels of corruption is discouraging foreign investment. Foreign investment was $2.54 billion in 2008, according to the CIA World Factbook, but financial analysts say the country underperforms in attracting foreign investors.

Some Western donors express concern about the rise in Chinese investment in Africa, suggesting that China’s no-strings-attached approach to aid is undermining anti-corruption efforts. But Chinese academics and some U.S. analysts say China is a relatively new presence in Africa and it will learn that corruption negatively affects its investments. Critics suggest that China will continue to make deals with corrupt governments, such as its multibillion dollar agreement with the Democratic Republic of Congo, as long as it obtains access to prized natural resources.

Transactions and Transparency

Some analysts argue that one of the most effective ways to reduce corruption is targeting transactions related to natural resources extraction, a major source of revenue in many African countries from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Nigeria. Promoted by a number of international NGOs and watchdog groups, one set of guidelines known as the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) has gained traction throughout Africa in the last five years. Signing on to EITI is voluntary. Participating countries agree to publish the payments and revenues they receive from oil and mining companies.

Critics of the initiative charge it doesn’t go far enough. Countries do not have to include all companies and payments in their reporting, nor do they have to break down payments by individual company. EITI also doesn’t provide guidelines for determining whether a government was paid the correct amount by an extractive company. As a 2008 Revenue Watch report (PDF) on EITI notes, the initiative does not provide for the declaration of payments that are not related to production of natural resources, such as taxes on cars and salaries to expatriates. Such payments can be significant.

* Stephanie Hanson traveled to Kenya on an IRP Gatekeeper Editors’ trip organized by the International Reporting Project (IRP) in Washington, DC.

China rejects clean energy probe, calls US unfair

By JOE McDONALD, AP Business Writer Joe Mcdonald, Ap Business Writer – Sun Oct 17, 9:50 am ET

BEIJING – A senior Chinese official rejected a U.S. trade complaint about Beijing’s clean energy policy and said Sunday that Washington might be improperly supporting its own industry.

The U.S. government said Friday it would investigate complaints by a labor union that Beijing unfairly subsidizes its producers of wind and solar equipment.

“Chinese subsidies to new energy companies are much smaller than those of the U.S. government,” said Zhang Guobao, director of the Cabinet’s National Energy Administration, at a news conference. “If the U.S. government can subsidize companies, then why can’t we?”

The complaint by the United Steelworkers adds to strains between Washington and Beijing over trade in tires, steel, chicken, movies and other goods. It says Chinese producers can sell wind and solar equipment at lower prices abroad because they get subsidies that are prohibited by global trade rules.

Zhang countered that Washington might be improperly supporting its own industry. He cited what he said were rules on spending of U.S. government money for solar energy that require equipment to be domestically made.

“If what I said is right, it is the United States that should be sued, not us,” he said.

The unusually prompt, high-level Chinese response reflects Beijing’s growing confidence in rejecting U.S. pressure over trade and other issues, as well as its determination to develop high-tech industry.

The communist government is aggressively promoting wind, solar and other renewable energy to curb surging demand for imported oil and gas. It is trying to build up Chinese equipment suppliers to capture the economic benefits of a fast-growing industry.

In a statement Saturday, the Commerce Ministry said Washington’s complaint signals the U.S. does not support China’s efforts at improving the environment.

Zhang said 50 percent of clean energy equipment installed in China last year was imported and suppliers such as General Electric Co. have made substantial sales.

“Once we reveal these facts to the world, the (U.S.) complaint will be shown to be groundless, and all the American subsidies will be exposed,” he said.

If the U.S. investigation finds the union complaint true, the Obama administration could sue China in the World Trade Organization. A favorable WTO ruling would allow Washington to impose penalties on Chinese imports unless Beijing repealed any support deemed to be improper.

Foreign business groups have long complained that in wind, Beijing is improperly supporting fledgling domestic clean energy producers by restricting access to its market. They say global suppliers of wind turbines are shut out of projects paid for by the central government, which picks equipment based only on its upfront price rather than the long-term cost, which for more durable foreign equipment is much lower.

Zhang rejected their complaints: “Those foreign companies didn’t win the bid because their prices are much higher than Chinese prices.”

In solar power, China’s Suntech Holdings Ltd. is one of the biggest global equipment producers and several other companies also are major suppliers.

In wind, Chinese producers are only starting to export. Industry analysts say they lag in technology but offer prices up to 50 percent lower than foreign rivals.

One turbine maker, Goldwind Science & Technology Ltd., installed three windmills in a Minnesota farmer’s field last year in the first effort by a Chinese producer to break into the U.S. market.

Zhang questioned how such a small market presence abroad could threaten American companies.

“We’ve only exported three windmills to the United States,” he said. “What impact does this have?”

China May Reach Nuclear Capacity Aim Ahead of Schedule, Radio Cites Zhang

China may achieve its long-term plan of having 40,000 megawatts of nuclear power capacity four to five years ahead of schedule, China National Radio said, citing Zhang Guobao, head of the National Energy Administration.

The State Council, or Cabinet, has approved a plan to build 34 reactors with a capacity of 36,920 megawatts, the state-run radio station said, without giving a schedule. Twenty-five units with a capacity totaling 27,730 megawatts are already under construction, according to the report.

China must guard against overcapacity in nuclear power, the state-run radio station said, citing Zhang.

Business News
China shutters 1,355 coal mines
Published: Oct. 15, 2010 at 11:18 AM

BEIJING, Oct. 15 (UPI) — The National Energy Administration said China is ahead of its 2010 target of closing outdated coal mines in an industry the country is attempting to reform.

As of the end of September, China had shuttered 1,355 coal mines this year, Xinhua reported Friday.

The yield capacity of the closed mines is more than 124 million metric tons. The target for closure was a yield capacity of slightly more than 121 million metric tons.

The goal was set to reform the industry by closing dangerous mines and reducing carbon emissions.

Although the yield target was reached, the NEA had said 1,539 smaller mines should close.

The transition has long-range implications for China, which gets three-quarters of its electricity from coal-burning utility plants.

China & Canada: Even Kabuga could be walking around a free man

From: Eric Wabwaya Mburi

Canadian authorities were trying to determine on Friday how a man believed to be in his 20s was able to board a flight in Hong Kong to Vancouver having disguised himself as an elderly passenger

The young man, who was arrested when he arrived in Canada, boarded an Air Canada flight on October 29 wearing a realistic silicon head and neck mask that made him appear elderly, according to media reports and photographs.

A spokesman for Canada’s public safety minister confirmed the incident but declined further comment. The man requested asylum in Canada when he arrived, which prevents officials from disclosing his name or where he is from. He is now being held in custody.

The man was able to board the flight apparently without a passport or any other documents with a picture or date of birth. He carried the boarding pass of a U.S. citizen who was booked on the flight.
Although the young man is of Asian origin, the intricate disguise made him look like a very elderly Caucasian.

“It is believed that the subject and the actual United States citizen passenger, whose date of birth is 1955, performed a boarding pass swap,” according to a Canadian Border Services Agency security alert obtained by CNN.

An Air Canada spokesman said the issue was under investigation by Canadian authorities, but said there are multiple identification checks for passengers in Hong Kong – including one by the Chinese government.

Transport Canada is investigating if screening regulations were broken. It is the responsibility of airlines to verify the identity of passengers who appear to be 18 years or older before they are allowed on the aircraft.

“That means air carriers are supposed to look at a passenger’s entire face to determine if they appear to be over 18 and if so, compare their physical appearance with their travel documents,” said John Babcock, a spokesman for Transport Minister Chuck Strahl.

The man went into the airplane toilet midway through the flight and removed his disguise, according to the CBSA alert which noted the impostor did not attempt to disguise the age of his hands.

A search of the man’s luggage uncovered gloves and a “disguise kit,” according to the alert.
(Reporting Allan Dowd; editing by Rob Wilson)

Ja’kamburi