Archive for January, 2010

Friday, January 15, 2010

Quote: Makuwerere Bwititi

[...] My stay in China taught me many things but two distinctly stand out from which Africa can draw in her pursuit for economic development. Hard work and unity of purpose.

These two personify the Chinese people and have by and large contributed to the economic success story that this country is today despite, or maybe because, of its huge population.

Says economist and writer Dr Tian YingkuiIn: “In such a diverse country with a huge population, things would be unwork­able without a unified will along with individual crea­tivity.”

He adds: “Without a uni­fied will, any government decrees and directives could not be truly carried out, and people would com­pete in (a) disorderly envi­ronment.”

[...]

To China its history plays a key role for citizens to draw inspiration and work hard to achieve the eco­nomic success that it so much cherishes.

That is why China’s his­tory is so meticulously recorded and passed on to generation after gen­eration. This is another important lesson for Africa. Countries like Namibia, which has a rich history, can draw from the Chinese handibook.

I am reminded of what President Hifikepunye Pohamba said on Au­gust 26 on the occasion of Namibia’s Heroes’ Day commemorations at Omu­gulungwoOmbashe, the launchpad for Namibia’s war of independence.

He said: “The history of this place must be told by those who were there for future generations to know.

“Let them hear the his­tory of men and women who vowed that death and slavery were the same things, and who had a vision for an Independ­ent Namibia.” [...]

Makuwerere Bwititi, Southern Times Africa, October 12, 2009

The Southern Africa Times is apparently jointly published by Zimbabwe Newspapers Limited and New Era Corporation of Namibia.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

L’Homme du Midi

Il n’y aurait une raison pour transférer le corps d’ Albert Camus du cimetière de Lourmarin au Panthéon à Paris, sauf le vouloir du président de la Republique, Nicolas Sarkozy, le petit perverti avec les grands pouvoirs. Au lieu de diriger le pays, il amenage son propre train fantôme à Paris, ou sa propre collection des babioles.

Un cadavre est seulement un cadavre. Ce n’ est plus l’ homme. Mais vers la fin de sa vie, Camus choisissait et aimait le Midi.

Il faut lire les livres. Il ne faut pas remorquer l’ écrivain. C’est la vie qui compte, notamment si on dirige un pays.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Too Evil

Google today threatened to shut down its operations in China after uncovering hacking attempts into email accounts of Chinese human rights activists, terming it as “highly sophisticated”, reports India’s Business Standard. Google’s senior vice president of corporate development and chief legal officer, David Drummond, reportedly writes in a blog post that “these attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered – combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web – have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China”.

More »

Related/Update:
A New Approach to China, Google Blog, January 12, 2010

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Killers on Amrum, but No Smoking

Amrum is a North Sea island on the West coast of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany’s northernmost federal state. Bremedia, a company from this town, produced a movie which was released on January 11. That is to say, it was broadcast by one of Germany’s two nationwide public television channels at 20:15 last night. A friend told me that it was a must-see.

So we watched it. It was a nice movie, no waste of time, and I believe it could have become a great movie. Why wasn’t it exactly great after all?

Container ship heading for Hamburg, Germany, September 2009

Container ship heading for Hamburg, Germany, September 2009

For one, it probably wasn’t really meant to be great. Just a nice bit of more or less thrilling evening entertainment. I rarely watch television, and maybe what I’ve watched on Monday night was the standard kind of movie on television here.

The story: two policemen are stationed on Amrum – an elder, and one who is several decades his junior. Life is easy, just that the junior can’t find a wife, because no young woman seems to be interested in the peaceful life on the island. All of a sudden, a wounded lady who turns out to be one of two bodyguard for a threatened witness who lives in hiding on Amrum, bursts into the police station and seeks help from the two officers. I missed some bits of the plot, but somehow, the second one of the bodyguards hiding the witness on the island has been killed already, and the second one, seeking help from the local police, was wounded in the incidence, and then she apparently succumbs, too.

So the two provincial policemen find themselves alone on duty with the witness, a young lady from Moldova who is scheduled to be deported from Germany for living here illegally. But before she is taken to the plane, she needs to testify against a well-connected Russian mafiosi, or something of that kind. That mafiosi, from detention while awaiting trial, raises hell to get her killed – all her bodyguards, next to her, and the agents somewhat more at large on Amrum and on the Schleswig-Holstein mainland, have also been killed, and there’s a mole at the Federal Office of Criminal Investigation, which is why the two slightly dorky flatfoots can’t call the Federal Office for help.

Eventually, they still do so, very much against the advice of the Moldovian lady. They have little choice, after finding one of the murdered (more remote) federal agents dead on the beach. So the Federal Office sends another agent, who is murdered on the ferry, and dumped into the tideland. His killer then becomes the manipulator on the island and organizes the hunt for the Moldovian witness there.

There seem to be some logical flaws in the plot. For one, the junior officer doesn’t open fire as his boss is killed by the manipulator. In real life, that would have led to an investigation – but not in the movie. Then, as the junior, as the only surviving law enforcer on Amrum, makes a phonecall to the Schleswig-Holstein mainland for help, he can’t get any, because there is a whole gale on the mainland, and no ferries or helicopters can leave for the island. Nor can the coastguard. But on Amrum, there is no storm at all, and the island is less than fifty kilometers off the coast – not to be confused with Heligoland which is a truly open-sea island.

Once the storm has abated, the next scheduled ferry from the mainland comes in, but rather than help for the junior policeman, reinforcements for the manipulator arrive with it. In the end, it takes help from all the policeman’s brave friends on the island (from all those who dare to stick their necks out) to finish the gangsters off and to save the witness from Moldova.

The movie is a nice commercial for tourism here in the North. It paints a likeable, but not excessively flattering picture of us people behind the dykes and dunes.

OK, and there is still another inconsistency with real life, as I see it. Most of the protagonists in the movie drink alcohol, sometimes quite heavily. But even though I watched 94 per cent of the movie closely, I didn’t see a single cigarette there*), even though they are all the kind of people who do smoke in real life, and real life in Germany provides lots of opportunities to smoke publicly. Maybe smoking movie characters wouldn’t have made it past the tv station’s broadcasting council – the supervisors from our political parties, religious communities, labor unions etc who constitute such a council.

The influence a political class exerts on a country’s media may need to be subtle in a democratic country, but it is here. Real life probably gets distorted whereever a television camera shows up.

As for the missing cigarettes in classical situations during the movie, I’m wondering how many of the television audience even noticed their absence.

____________

Title: Mörder auf Amrum, Germany, 2009 / 2010

*) We were absent from the living room for some five minutes of smoking outside – our hosts were faithful non-smokers.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Chinese Statistics: American Companies “lose Chinese market” over Taiwan

Raytheon Company (雷神公司) “loses business in China” because of its role in arms sales to Taiwan, according to the official Chinese paper Huanqiu Shibao (Global Times) on Monday, quoted by Singapore’s United Morning News on Tuesday. The company is to sell updated Patriot Systems to Taiwan in a contract approved by former U.S. president George W. Bush in 2008, and cleared by the U.S. Department of Defense this month. Huanqiu quoted an unnamed authoritative person as saying that a British Raytheon subsidiary had tried since 2000 to participate in Shanghai-Beijing-Guangzhou air traffic control and in China’s civil aviation system’s radar and air traffic control automization projects, but that all their bids had failed. The article also suggests that Raytheon hadn’t been found in any procurement and bidding records for Chinese radar projects, and that China hadn’t imported any products made by the company since 2004. Raytheon had since withdrawn its representation office from China. Lockheed Martin had also “lost Chinese markets” (失去了在中国的市场), according to the article.

The purpose of the article seems to be to back up comments reportedly made by Chinese top military officials that China should take defensive countermeasures against companies which sold weapons to Taiwan, but also wanted to sell aircraft and other goods to China, or that European countries would not dare to risk business with China by selling arms to Taiwan.

Probably also in a reaction to the Taiwan arms deal cleared this month, Xinhua published an unspecified report about a successful test of an emerging Chinese anti-missile system.

The foreign military sales contract with Taiwan totals $1.1 billion, according to Raytheon Company’s website.

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Remotely Related:
Xu Qiliang: “A Blue Sky full of Peace and Hope”, November 6, 2009

Monday, January 11, 2010

Net Nanny Relaunched (with more Maikefengs)

Net Nanny was released from jail late last week.  The recording of a telephone conversation, tapped into by the JR Intelligence Unit (JIU) on Thursday, suggests that she had been jailed as a result of a power struggle some two weeks ago. The following is the wording of that extremely sensitive state secret phone conversation which apparently led to her release.

Hermit (yells): Shikezhunbeizhe!

Good Ganbu

Good Ganbu

Good Ganbu: Good morning, Comrade. Did you get the news that Comrade Nanny is in jail?

Hermit: Yes I did. Must be a terrible blow to that conceited ugly crow. But well deserved, anyway.

Good Ganbu: Not so fast, Comrade Hermit…

Hermit: GULP!

Good Ganbu: She didn’t read that Californian porn magazine on a public bus for the whole world to see, right?

Hermit: Hardly so. she never socializes with the masses, that much is true. Maybe she read it in the rear compartment of her Red Flag Review Car. She bought herself one in a silly attempt to look as good as our great chairman, but she isn’t working half as xinku as he does.

Good Ganbu: Actually, she didn’t buy it. Uhm… anyway, only you and I have seen her reading that decadent Californian magazine, right?

Hermit: Uhm… who knows? Someone must have handed it to her, right? What are you up to, revered old comrade? Isn’t my work 65 per cent good, and only 35 per cent bad?

Good Ganbu: Well, yes, but you see, it is still 35 per cent bad. Even excellent scientists like you can make mistakes. Your public and neimu dang’an‘s both inform me that you graduated from Shanzhai Normal University (山寨师范大学), Ledu (乐都), Qinghai province, fifteen years ago. You completed your doctoral thesis there one year later, and became a professor there in 1997.

Hermit the Scholarly Dragonfly

Hermit the Scholarly Dragonfly

Hermit: Of course! It is one of our nation’s most acclaimed universities!

Good Ganbu: Ahem… listen, Comrade: our beloved motherland is developing at an unprecedented speed. The world’s fastest trains take us to many places, and even where their victorious rails end, there are comfortable buses and Red Flag Review Cars which now take us to every corner of our motherland…

Hermit: OK, OK, what do you want, revered old Comrade?

Good Ganbu: Comrade Nanny will be released from jail tomorrow, and I expect no further anonymous letters to reach my office, with evil accusations and rumors, OK? The world is in turm0il, and us Comrades must stand together, and not allow our enemies to…

Hermit: Oh, I would never engage in schemes and …

Good Ganbu: Of course not. By the way, in future public appearances and neimu party seminars, Comrade Nanny will be afforded another maikefeng – you will continue to use only one maikefeng. Bye for now.

More maikefengs for Comrade Nanny restore Harmony and give back face to her.

More maikefengs for Comrade Nanny will restore the Harmony and give back face to her.

Hermit (yells): Shikezhunbeizhe!

[Good ganbu rings off. Hermit starts sobbing uncontrolledly.]

Monday, January 11, 2010

Rio Tinto: Case moved to Shanghai Prosecutors

A formal investigation of charges against Stern Hu, a Rio Tinto PLC executive who was arrested with three further employees, has ended and the case now moves to local prosecutors for consideration, according to the agency making the announcement, Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, in Canberra, quoted by the Wall Street Journal (WSJ). Police “handed findings to local prosecutors” in Shanghai, Australian officials are quoted.

The charges appear to be employing bribery and other illegal means to drive the multibillion-dollar mineral-sales business in China for Rio Tinto. However, the actual direction of the investigations and charges appears to be unclear.

The company’s detained employees “aren’t reachable and haven’t appeared in public”, according to the WSJ. The paper adds that the case also raises questions about how the massive Australia-China ore trade should establish pricing. Normally, Sino-Australia price talks for the following year start in October. For 2010, they haven’t begun. The company’s chief executive Tom Albanese sees a top priority in rebuilding the company’s China relationship, writes the WSJ.

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Related:
Rio Tinto employees arrested in China, July 8, 2009

Monday, January 11, 2010

JR is a China Expert

China Galaxy Securities predicted an annual growth rate of 8.6 per cent f0r 2009, in November 2008, according to China Radio International.

JR predicted 8.5  per cent growth or less, also back in November 2008. The World Bank on Tuesday cut its 2009 forecast for China’s economic growth to 7.5 percent, from 9.2 percent previously, in a report quoted by Xinhua.

If you, dear reader, are a China expert out there who made a more applicable forecast than JR in 2008, please raise your hand.

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