Category Archives: Telecommunication

State of Broadband 2012

From: Yona Maro

The report evaluates the roll-out of broadband around the world and tracks progress towards achieving the four targets set by the Commission in 2011 for boosting broadband affordability and uptake. It provides country rankings across up to 177 economies on affordability, national broadband policy, and connecting people and dwellings.

http://www.broadbandcommission.org/Documents/bb-annualreport2012.pdf


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World: Pictures & Public Concerns

from octimotor

I have done photography as a hobby. The tools used then were cameras using film which after shooting would be sent somewhere for darkroom processing.

In those earlier years, only a very few people might have camera on hand at the ready to capture record of developing public events. A bit later came the period for video tape recorder cameras.

Recently, though, it has become quite common for many members of the public to have, on hand at the ready, digital cameras, especially those in the form of cell phones with still or moving video recording (and also real time forwarding) features

Now this condition would, on first look, appear to offer an increased chance that Newsworthy Events could hence have a greater likelihood of being documented and circulated to better inform the public audience at large. I noticed and would approve of that kind of prospect.

However, perhaps someone else also noticed that potential, but may be intending moves to obstruct this potential, holding motives counter to the ideals of wide ranging personal liberty.

See below a forwarded article discussing newly devised techniques which could possible allow officials to possess capabilities to remotely command cell phones to not record / forward picture data at / from event locations & times which became labeled as “Sensitive”, not favorable to official policy.

-om-

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The Police State Creeps Closer
Friday, September 21, 2012 news item on unknowncountry.com

Several worrisome laws that restrict our freedom have been passed recently and now Apple has patented technology which would allow governments and police to block transmission of information, including video and photographs, from any public gathering or venue they deem “sensitive,” meaning that these powers will have control over what can and cannot be documented on wireless devices during any public event.

If this technology had been available in 1963 , the “Zapruder footage,” from which we learned so much about the Kennedy assassination (NOTE: subscribers can still listen to these shows), would never have been seen by the public.

[ . . . ]

Read full article
http://www.unknowncountry.com/news/police-state-creeps-closer

Environmental Effects of Genetically Modified Food Crops — Recent Experiences

From: Leila Abdul


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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

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Margaret Mellon, Ph.D., J.D.
Jane Rissler, Ph.D.
Union of Concerned Scientists

. . .

In the United States, the nascent agricultural industry emerged in the early 1980s—a product of two decades of dramatic advances in molecular biology research. As it became clear that the industry was contemplating a broad variety of products, including many that would be used out of doors, the Reagan administration began to grapple with questions of regulatory oversight. Even though it tended to resist regulation as a general matter, the Reagan administration eventually decided to fashion a new “regulatory framework” made up of old statutes. It explicitly rejected the option of new regulatory legislation targeted to biotechnology products, at least in part because administration policy was premised on the similarity of biotechnology to earlier reproductive technologies.

[ . . . ]

http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/science_and_impacts/impacts_genetic_engineering/environmental-effects-of.html

USA & Libya: Remarks on the Deaths of American Personnel in Benghazi, Libya

From: Yona Maro

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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
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Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Treaty Room

Washington, DC

September 12, 2012

Yesterday, our U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya was attacked. Heavily armed militants assaulted the compound and set fire to our buildings. American and Libyan security personnel battled the attackers together. Four Americans were killed. They included Sean Smith, a Foreign Service information management officer, and our Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. We are still making next of kin notifications for the other two individuals.
This is an attack that should shock the conscience of people of all faiths around the world. We condemn in the strongest terms this senseless act of violence, and we send our prayers to the families, friends, and colleagues of those we’ve lost.

All over the world, every day, America’s diplomats and development experts risk their lives in the service of our country and our values, because they believe that the United States must be a force for peace and progress in the world, that these aspirations are worth striving and sacrificing for. Alongside our men and women in uniform, they represent the best traditions of a bold and generous nation.

In the lobby of this building, the State Department, the names of those who have fallen in the line of duty are inscribed in marble. Our hearts break over each one. And now, because of this tragedy, we have new heroes to honor and more friends to mourn.

Chris Stevens fell in love with the Middle East as a young Peace Corps volunteer teaching English in Morocco. He joined the Foreign Service, learned languages, won friends for America in distant places, and made other people’s hopes his own.

In the early days of the Libyan revolution, I asked Chris to be our envoy to the rebel opposition. He arrived on a cargo ship in the port of Benghazi and began building our relationships with Libya’s revolutionaries. He risked his life to stop a tyrant, then gave his life trying to help build a better Libya. The world needs more Chris Stevenses. I spoke with his sister, Ann, this morning, and told her that he will be remembered as a hero by many nations.

Sean Smith was an Air Force veteran. He spent 10 years as an information management officer in the State Department, he was posted at The Hague, and was in Libya on a brief temporary assignment. He was a husband to his wife Heather, with whom I spoke this morning. He was a father to two young children, Samantha and Nathan. They will grow up being proud of the service their father gave to our country, service that took him from Pretoria to Baghdad, and finally to Benghazi.

The mission that drew Chris and Sean and their colleagues to Libya is both noble and necessary, and we and the people of Libya honor their memory by carrying it forward. This is not easy. Today, many Americans are asking – indeed, I asked myself – how could this happen? How could this happen in a country we helped liberate, in a city we helped save from destruction? This question reflects just how complicated and, at times, how confounding the world can be.

But we must be clear-eyed, even in our grief. This was an attack by a small and savage group – not the people or Government of Libya. Everywhere Chris and his team went in Libya, in a country scarred by war and tyranny, they were hailed as friends and partners. And when the attack came yesterday, Libyans stood and fought to defend our post. Some were wounded. Libyans carried Chris’ body to the hospital, and they helped rescue and lead other Americans to safety. And last night, when I spoke with the President of Libya, he strongly condemned the violence and pledged every effort to protect our people and pursue those responsible.

The friendship between our countries, borne out of shared struggle, will not be another casualty of this attack. A free and stable Libya is still in America’s interest and security, and we will not turn our back on that, nor will we rest until those responsible for these attacks are found and brought to justice. We are working closely with the Libyan authorities to move swiftly and surely. We are also working with partners around the world to safeguard other American embassies, consulates, and citizens.

There will be more time later to reflect, but today, we have work to do. There is no higher priority than protecting our men and women wherever they serve. We are working to determine the precise motivations and methods of those who carried out this assault. Some have sought to justify this vicious behavior, along with the protest that took place at our Embassy in Cairo yesterday, as a response to inflammatory material posted on the internet. America’s commitment to religious tolerance goes back to the very beginning of our nation. But let me be clear – there is no justification for this, none. Violence like this is no way to honor religion or faith. And as long as there are those who would take innocent life in the name of God, the world will never know a true and lasting peace.

It is especially difficult that this happened on September 11th. It’s an anniversary that means a great deal to all Americans. Every year on that day, we are reminded that our work is not yet finished, that the job of putting an end to violent extremism and building a safe and stable world continues. But September 11th means even more than that. It is a day on which we remember thousands of American heroes, the bonds that connect all Americans, wherever we are on this Earth, and the values that see us through every storm. And now it is a day on which we will remember Sean, Chris, and their colleagues.

May God bless them, and may God bless the thousands of Americans working in every corner of the world who make this country the greatest force for peace, prosperity, and progress, and a force that has always stood for human dignity – the greatest force the world has ever known. And may God continue to bless the United States of America.

Thank you.

Toolkit on Internet Public Policy Dialogue: Tools for the Practitioner

From: Yona Maro

This Toolkit can be used by new or emerging public policy groups seeking to understand and support public policy dialogue with stakeholders. It is based on two central activities: the gathering of evidence to support policy recommendations, and the securing of consent among the stakeholders to be affected by policy change.
http://www.iisd.org/pdf/2012/iisd_toolkit_internet_public_policy.pdf

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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
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Digital Rights and Online Freedom: Current Status and Prospects for Transatlantic Cooperation

From: Yona Maro

As our society grows increasingly digitalized, internet users have seen the evolution of digital rights and online freedom with the introduction of new technologies and legislation. Developments in the United States, Germany, and the broader context of the European Union have illustrated similarities and differences in the approach to these issues, as well as room for transatlantic cooperation in the future. Whatever the approach, it is clear that there is a growing expectation of a minimum standard of privacy and freedom for internet users.

http://www.boell.org/web/index-993.html


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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

What Role Should the Media Play in Determining the Content of Campaign Advertisements?

From: Yona Maro

That the media is an essential tool in any functioning democracy is not in doubt. What are the motives behind the various contents contained in the media? This question of motives becomes more pronounced during the electioneering period as is the case in Kenya.

Has the media in Kenya considered analyzing the content of campaign adverts to gauge their motives apart from selling the politicians’ and political parties’ manifestos? Could the content of these campaign adverts generate some sort of indicators that could be used to sound alarm bells on whether they are promoting peace and harmonious coexistence or fuelling violence? This is critical given that adverts enable individuals and groups to say what they want to say the way they would want their audiences to receive the information.

Indeed, it is no secret that persons with political ambitions set up media outlets. They depend on them for constant positive coverage and visibility. There is a direct link between the quest for political office and the quantity of media clout, presence or manipulation that a candidate commands. While this might be the case, the nation comes first and the content that is printed and/or broadcast should promote peace and harmony.
http://www.comminit.com/policy-blogs/content/what-role-should-media-play-determining-content-campaign-advertisements


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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

Little Data Book on Information and Communication Technology 2012

From: Yona Maro

The Little Data Book on Information and Communication Technology 2012 illustrates the progress of this revolution for 216 economies around the world. It provides comparable statistics on the sector for 2005 and 2010 across a range of indicators, enabling readers to readily compare economies.

This book includes indicators covering the economic and social context, the structure of the information and communication technology sector, sector efficiency and capacity, and sector performance related to access, usage, quality, affordability, trade, and applications. The Glossary contains definitions of the terms used in the tables.

http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/material/LDB_ICT_2012.pdf


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Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

The Gambia shuts independent radio station

Forwarded by : Chak Rachar

New York, August 15, 2012–Gambian national security agents summarily shut an independent radio station early this morning without providing an explanation, according to news reports. Authorities have censored Taranga FM at least twice before in retaliation for its exclusive news review program, according to news reports.

Officers of the Gambian National Intelligence Agency stormed Taranga FM studios in Sinchu Alhagie village, southwest of Banjul, the capital, and forced it off the air, according to news reports. The officials also took the station’s license as well as the contact information of its board members, local journalists said. The officers told the station staff only that they had received “directives from above,” news reports said.
[ . . . ]

http://www.cpj.org/2012/08/the-gambia-shuts-independent-radio-station.php

USA: Damaging information

From: Justin Ruben, MoveOn.org Political Action

Dear MoveOn Member,

Last week, even prominent Republicans were calling on Mitt Romney to release his tax returns—but Romney still refuses. Just days ago, his wife told ABC, “we’ve given all you people need to know.”1

But that’s just not true.

The American people deserve to know the truth about Romney’s tax-evading schemes. We deserve to know just how much he’s profited from the loss of America’s middle class jobs. Frankly put, we deserve to know what Mitt’s hiding.

A recent poll shows that a whopping 44% of Americans believe that Romney’s hidden tax returns would “include damaging information.” 2 When an election can turn on just a few percentage points, that’s a pretty astounding number. But there hasn’t been enough pressure yet for Romney to release his returns.

And that’s where we all come in. As serious as this issue is, the sheer secrecy of Romney’s campaign is almost comical. So, to get the word out, we’re creating a shareable list with the funniest things Mitt Romney could be hiding (think David Letterman Top 10 list—except we’ll do it in five).

The funnier it is, the better it will share, so we need your clever, absurd or outlandish theory about what Mitt’s hiding to make it happen.

Submit your best answer, or see and rate others.

Ratings by MoveOn members will determine the five best theories to make a graphic we can all share with our social networks. There’s been enough news to know we’re dealing with a really tricky Mitt—and polls show that a growing number of Americans are on to his games.

If we can keep spreading the word about Romney’s secrecy now and press him to release those potentially damaging returns, we’ll have an even better chance to stop him from reaching the White House.

A funny graphic is just one way to keep this relevant online and there’s no better way to find the funny than by tapping into the wit and humor of MoveOn’s 7 million engaged members. Submit your answer today and vote for
the funniest things Mitt Romney could be hiding:

www.TrickyMitt.org

Thanks for all you do.
–Justin, Stefanie, Amy, Wes, and the rest of the team
Sources:

1. “Ann Romney: We’ve ‘given all you people need,'” Politico, July 19, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=277880&id=46957-21095459-s2TvY9x&t=1
2. “Poll: Most say Romney should release additional returns,” USA Today, July 19, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=277922&id=46957-21095459-s2TvY9x&t=2
Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 7 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.
Presented BY MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee.

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Mitt Romney refuses to release more than two years of tax returns and everyone’s asking—what’s he hiding? It’s time to answer the question. Submit your clever or outlandish answer today and we’ll share the best ones nationally.
http://www.trickymitt.org/?id=46957-21095459-s2TvY9x

Because Beef-a-Romney has given “you people” all your going to get. Period !
. . .

Kenya: IIEC caught up in vested interests needs help

From: PETER KAMAKIA

From frying pan to fire. That is IIEC for you as we speak.

Earlier rigging of voting was carried out by by stuffing ballot boxes. Now this time around the enemy is not stuffed boxes but technologically savvy techs stuffing digital votes for non existent voters using a laptop or a smart phone.

The drama at IIEC is sad to say the least. And i am really questioning the ability to provide free and fair elections to the Kenyans population?

What “electronic observers” has IIEC put in place to ensure the integrity of the system cannot be compromised. What guarantee is there that the providers of smart voting systems, the ones quarreling over tenders, have no political interests and cannot be bought with the billions of shillings that our lords of politics command.

IIEC continued sidelining of Kenyan programmers and computer experts to audit their systems has not only ensured the most expensive voting expense in the history of Kenya but a very serious possibility of a bungled election exercise as the powers that be would definitely want to be in control of voting machinery.

I pray our politicians, who are easily spotted when their interests are crossed, will arise to the occasion and seriously assist out the IIEC.

Peter Kamakia
Mitambo ICT Company
P.O.Box 25365-00100
Nairobi
Kenya

Tel: 0720219320

USA: These ads will define Mitt Romney

From: Justin Ruben, MoveOn.org Political Action

Dear MoveOn member,

In 2004, MoveOn made an ad about George Bush that was one of the most covered political ads, for the least money, in history—meaning, tens of millions more people saw it than we paid to show it to.1

Two weeks ago I asked our creative team to do it again—to give me the very best ideas they had for ads or videos to show that Mitt Romney would be great for the 1%, but terrible for the rest of us.

I just got the scripts back, and I’m totally blown away—I was hoping for one breakout hit, but there are at least six that are memorable, hilarious, and devastating—each one as good as or better than our ad in 2004.

Now we’re in a pickle because we didn’t budget for that many ads. So I’m coming to you for help.

It’s hard to overstate how crucial it is for progressives to define Romney. He’s gaining in the polls, and the election looks increasingly daunting. Last month, the Romney campaign hauled in $106 million, blowing away the Obama campaign for a second month in a row. If this keeps up, President Obama could be the first presidential incumbent to be outspent in modern history—and that doesn’t even count the Super PACs.2

We can’t compete with that directly—we don’t have $9 million to drop in one day on attack ads like the Kochs do3. But we can make and air these ads for $600,000, and I think they’re powerful enough to generate tens of millions of dollars worth of media coverage, spreading our message exponentially and making your contributions really compete with big money donors. We just need to raise the money to do it.

Can you chip in $5 to make these devastating ads about Mitt Romney?

The weakness of the economy means that President Obama faces an uphill battle. A Romney victory would be a catastrophe—he’s promised to slash vital programs like Medicare, Social Security, and environmental protection, and repeal Obamacare, while giving a huge round of tax breaks to the 1%. He’d also be in a position to nominate up to three Supreme Court justices in his first term, skewing the court further to the right for a generation.

But the more voters learn about Romney’s history with Bain Capital, and policies favoring the very rich, the less they like him. That’s why it’s so urgent to get the message out.

The right ad can swing an election—that’s what the Swift Boat veterans did to John Kerry. Theirs was a lie, while ours are just as powerful—but true.

We just need to raise the money to get these ads made and on the air while there’s still time to define Romney. Please help!

Click here to donate $5.

Thanks for all you do.

–Justin, Laura, Emily, Victoria, and the rest of the team

Sources:

1. “Censored at the Super Bowl,” Newsweek, January 29, 2004
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=277117&id=45883-21095459-gr4rcTx&t=4

2. “Romney raises more than $106 million in June,” CBS, July 9, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=277095&id=45883-21095459-gr4rcTx&t=5

3. “Koch-backed group launches $9 million ad campaign against health law,” The Hill, June 29, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=277118&id=45883-21095459-gr4rcTx&t=6

Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 7 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in

We have six brilliant ad scripts that expose Mitt Romney as the candidate for the 1%. We can create an ad campaign that generates tens of millions of dollars in media coverage for a fraction of that cost. But we have to set the budget today—can you chip in?

BY MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee.

Gordon Teti Interview on Peace & International Security

From: gordon teti

Hello:

Visit the link for the full interview on my interview on Peace & International Security:

http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC42E41A5FFCC6748

Regards,
Gordon Teti

– – – – – – – – – – –

Gordon Teti Interview
by Agents of Peace

1

0:17

Who is Gordon Teti?
by PeacefulAgents 171 views
2

1:12

Gordon Teti: What is peace?
by PeacefulAgents 150 views
3

1:38

Gordon Teti: What are the obstacles to peace?
by PeacefulAgents 107 views
4

1:18

Gordon Teti: How do you live your peace?
by PeacefulAgents 80 views
5

0:49

Gordon is an agent of peace
by PeacefulAgents 86 views

These numbers do work … Let us restore Kenya

From: gordon teti

These numbers do work …let us restore kenya
Abdirahman, H.Ali – Wajir South – KANU – 0721-724746 / 0722-144999 ahassan@tradeandindustry.go.ke
Chiaba, Mohamed Abu – Lamu East – PNU – 0722-410177
Bahari, Abdul Ali – Isiolo South – KANU – 0733-289501
Balala, Mohammed Najib – Mvita – ODM – 0733 333500 /0724 – 650000 najib@mombasa.co.ke
Bifwoli, Wakoli Sylvester – Bumula – PNU – 0733-865323 Wakolib@yahoo.com

Chepkitony, Lucas Kipkosgei – Keiyo North – ODM – 0733-635894 / 0722816064
Ethuro, David – Turkana Central – PNU- 0722-526370 dethuro@yahoo.com
Gesami, James Ondicho – West Mugirango – ODM- 0733 826090
Gisuka, Machage Wilfred – Kuria – DP – 0733-451806/0725834575
Kajembe, Ramathan Seif – Changamwe – ODM – 0721 609777 Langoni@swiftmombasa.com
Kajwang’, Gerald Otieno – Mbita – ODM – 0722-882787

Kamama, Asman Abongotum – Baringo East – PNU – 0731-583303
Karua, Martha Wangari Gichugu – PNU – 0721 623 342 / 0733-747551
Kenneth, Peter Gatanga – PNU – 0722 512996 andykenneth@hotmail.com
Kenyatta, Uhuru – Gatundu South – KANU – 0722 463 891
Keter, Charles Cheruiyot – Belgut – ODM – 0722 530555
Khalwale Boni – Ikolomani – NEW FORD-K – 0721 318722
Khaniri, George Munyasa – Hamisi – ODM – 0722-859341
Kilonzo, Julias Kiema Mutito – ODM-K – 0722-513605 kilonzo@wananchi.com
Kilonzo, Charles Mutavi – Yatta – ODM-K – 0734-621593 ckilonzo@crystalvaluers.com
Kimunya Amos Muhinga Kipipiri PNU – 0722518801 / 520936 kipipiri@wananchi.com
Kinyanjui, Lee Maiyani – Nakuru Town – PNU – 0722 842653
Kiunjuri, Festus Mwangi – Laikipia East – PNU – 0721 600 305
Kuti Mohammed Abdi – Isiolo North – NARC-K – 0733 235914
Lesirma, Simeon Saimanga – Samburu West – ODM – 0722-719946
Magara – James Omingo – South Mugirango – ODM – 0722 911274 jomingo45@yahoo.com
Katoo, Ole Metito J – Kajiado South – 0721-640175
Midiwo, Washington Jakoyo – Gem – ODM – 0721 504 040 / 0733 421277/ 0722 935761
Mohamed, A.H.M – Mandera West – ODM – 0722-779942
Mohammed, Haji Yusuf – Ijara – KANU – 0722-709395
Mugo, Beth Wambui – Dagoretti – PNU – 0722-205753 bmugo@kenyaweb.com
Mungatana, Danson Buya – Garsen – NARC-K – 0722-411971 mungatana@wanainchi.com
Munyes, John Kiyonga – Turkana North – PNU – 0721-339094 johnmunyes@yahoo.com
Murungi, Kiraitu – South Imenti – PNU – 0721-240863 waziri@kenyaweb.com
Musila, David – Mwingi South – ODM-K – 0722 571117 davidmusila@yahoo.com
Musyoka, Stephen Kalonzo – Mwingi North – ODM-K – 0722 523 872 / 0735 161 588

Mwangi, Onesmus Kigumo – PNU – 0722-778581 kiharamwangimp@yahoo.com
Mwatela, Andrew Calist – Mwatate – ODM 0733 719 871
Mwiria, Valerian Kilemi – Tigania West – PNU – 0733-657562 kilemimwiria@africanonline.co.ke
Ndambuki, Gideon Musyoka – Kaiti – ODM-K – 0720-384553/0734-758567 gndambuki@wananchi.com
Githae, Robinson Njeru – Ndia – PNU – 722514837

Nkaisserry, Joseph Kasaine – Kajiado Central – ODM – 0721-356786 nkaisserry@wananchi.com
Nyong’o, Peter Anyang’ – Kisumu Rural – ODM – 0733 454 133 pan@africaonline.co.ke
Odinga, Raila Amolo – Langata – ODM – 0733 620 736 railaaodinga@yahoo.com
Oginga, Oburu Bondo – ODM – 0733 818517/ 0724-105493 oburu_oginga@yahoo.com

Odeke, Sospeter Ojaamongson Amagoro – ODM – 0733 967345 / 0722 813819
Ojode, Joshua Orwa Ndhiwa – ODM – 0722- 514830 Ojode7@hotmail.com
Okemo, Chrysanthus Nambale – ODM – 0733-608895 Chrisokemo@yahoo.com
Olweny, Patrick Ayiecho – Muhoroni – ODM – 0722-734187/0733-784633
Onyancha, Charles – Bonchari – ODM – 0722-248190 jonyancha2002@yahoo.com
Oparanya, Wycliffe Ambetsa – Butere – ODM – 0722 521856

Osebe, Walter Enock Nyambati – Kitutu Masaba – N LP – 0722 724 556
Poghisio, Samuel Losuron Kacheliba – ODM-K – 0722-520663 / 0734-200836 poghisio@wananchi.com
Ruto, Samoei William K. – Eldoret North – ODM – 0722 517 997 info@williamrutto.com
Shaban Naomi Namsi Taveta KANU 0722 814 412
Shitanda, Peter Soita – Malava – NEW FORD-K – 0721-341241 soita-shitanda@yahoo.com

Sugow Ahmed Aden Fafi KANU 0721-596726
Twaha, Yasin Fahim – Lamu West – NARC-K – 0722-925108
Wekesa, Noah Muhlanganga – Kwanza – PNU – 0722-774374 noahwekesa@hotmail.com
Were, David Aoko Matungu – ODM – 0722 707548/0733 569180 scorpionwere@yahoo.com
Wetangula – Moses Makisa Sirisia – PNU – 0722 517 302 / 806 363 mwetangula@hotmail.com

ATTORNEY GENERAL OF KENYA
Amos Wako 0722 772 453

These are the Phone numbers for the MP for Baringo North
Name: Hon William Kipkiror Cheptumo, LLB, MP, Assistant Minister for Ministry of Justice & National Cohesion
Tel numbers 0711696756; 0722716103.

Energy for a Shared Development Agenda: Global Scenarios and Governance Implications

From: Yona Maro

This report combines a global assessment of energy scenarios up to 2050, case studies of energy access and low-carbon efforts around the world, and a review of the technological shifts, investments, policies and governance structures needed to bring energy to all.

http://sei-international.org/mediamanager/documents/Publications/SEI-ResearchReport-EnergyForASharedDevelopmentAgenda-2012.pdf


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

Technology, Media, and Telecommunications Predictions 2012

From: Yona Maro

This annual publication presents Deloitte’s view of key developments over the next 12-18 months that are likely to have significant medium-to long-term impacts for companies in technology, media & telecommunications (TMT) and other industries. The aim with Predictions is to catalyze discussions around significant developments that may require companies or governments to respond.

http://www.deloitte.com/assets/Dcom-Peru/Local%20Assets/Documents/pe_TMT_Predict_2012.pdf


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

World: My Speech to the Finance Graduates

From: Yona Maro


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By Robert J. Shiller, 30 May 2012

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Chinese Capabilities for Computer Network Operations and Cyber Espionage

From: Yona Maro

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

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

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

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


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

Kenya: Interview at Radio Umoja 101.5FM

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

We will be interviewed at Radio Umoja 101.5FM tomorrow morning- Tuesday the 22nd May 2012 from 7.15am about The Clean Kenya Campaign- TCKC.

All Friends of TCKC are invited to tune in and participate with us during the Interview.

This comes shortly after Kiss 100 FM called me for a Telephone Interview on Friday the 18th May 2012 at 8.30am for an interview whose impact was felt far and wide.

At The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC, besides engaging Kenyans with The Monthly Nationwide Clean-up Campaign every 3rd Saturday of the Month, we will also be engaging Kenyans with Results Oriented Activism based on Service Delivery.

We will engage positively with Public Servants who remain faithful to their oath of Office. But we will demand outright ouster of Public Servants who are lethargic and none performing.

The Game of Musical Chairs must stop, and The CIA Club at TCKC will ensure this is done.

Tune in and let us join hands for The Clean Kenya Campaign.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign- TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com

USA: The Constitution is broken

From: Robin Beck, MoveOn.org Political Action

Dear Reader:

Corporations already have so much power. But what happens to our democracy when ExxonMobil, the oil baron Koch brothers, Bank of America, and all of Wall Street can spend unlimited amounts to influence a presidential election?

We’re about to find out in our first presidential election year since Citizens United. And because the limitless spending has been protected by the Supreme Court, the only way we can stop it is by amending the Constitution to reverse Citizens United and get big money out of politics for good.

Passing an amendment isn’t easy—we need to get overwhelming support at both the state and federal levels. But we have a powerful opportunity right now, in an election year, to flex our political muscle as MoveOn members. We can use the election to help convince politicians up and down the ballot to get on board if they want to earn our votes.

So we’re starting today by launching a new petition asking every state legislator, governor, and member of Congress who hasn’t yet declared their support for a constitutional amendment to undo Citizens United and permanently get big money out of politics.

Will you add your name?

Yes, I want my state and federal lawmakers to take a stand.

The plan is to deliver the petitions to state capitols and governors’ mansions in all 50 states and to the local offices of every member of Congress who hasn’t yet joined the call for an amendment.

And we aren’t, by any means, starting from scratch. MoveOn members and our allies have been working hard ever since Citizens United to build a movement for an amendment—and there’s already a lot of grassroots momentum.

President Obama is on board, along with more than 25 U.S. senators, at least 80 members of the U.S. House, and hundreds of state-level lawmakers.1

It’s an impressive start, and this year, we have the opportunity to help massively increase those numbers. Polling shows that Americans are fed up with the 1% flooding our political system with cash and getting get lax regulation, rollbacks of workers’ rights, huge bailouts, and tax giveaways in return.2

Nearly all of the economic impacts that the 99% movement has mobilized around are tied to the overwhelming influence of big money in our democracy. So once we know who’s with us, we’re going make the issue personal, confront politicians who won’t take a stand with stories of the real-world consequences of a system run by corporations and the 1%, and demand that every last one of them chooses a side.

When President Obama announced his support for marriage equality last week, we all saw how powerful it can be when our political leaders stand behind an idea that—just a short time ago—seemed “unrealistic” or “politically impossible.”

It’s time, again, to change what’s “politically possible” in America.

Will you sign the petition and ask every one of your state and federal lawmakers who isn’t on board yet to declare their support for a constitutional amendment to reverse Citizens United and get big money out of our democracy?

Click here to sign: http://pol.moveon.org/amend/?id=41692-21095459-pPGgg7x&t=4

Thanks for all you do.

–Robin, Elena, Victoria, Emily, and the rest of the team

Sources:

1. “Endorsing Public Officials” list, United for the People, accessed May 17, 2012
http://www.united4thepeople.org/endorsers.html

2. “Survey: Money in Politics Can Drive Voters to Polls,” National Journal, May 9, 2012
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=275603&id=41692-21095459-pPGgg7x&t=5

Want to support our work? We’re entirely funded by our 7 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.

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Sent BY MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION, http://pol.moveon.org/. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee