One thing leads to the other. A deal here with Apartheid South Africa on "Dialogue", the first African president to sign the discredited Economic Partnership Agreement with the EU, even though an overwhelming majority of Africans called the deal a neo-colonialist sell-out. The first African president to sign this bogus deal was Kufour! In a situation where our colonial occupational forces continue to point out to us, who are leaders ought to be, nothing surprising here. As far as May, 2000 Amnesty International reported: "In May John Kufuor, leader of the NPP, and three visiting Italian politicians from the Forza Italia party were detained overnight at police headquarters. The authorities said that they were suspected of breaching immigration regulations.
The victims said they were arrested as they were leaving the country, held for 15 hours without food or drink, and questioned in detail about their activities in Ghana. The NPP said that the government was seeking to deter its legitimate contacts with foreign political leaders and businessmen." (Amnesty International Report 2001, Covering events from January - December 2000, GHANA.) Considering the zeal with which this corrupt/elitist-NPP Kufour had been in the driving seat in leading Africa to sign away AGOAs, EPAs, the right of US soldiers, even if they are wanted for crimes against humanity, including genocide, to pay us 'visits' without the threat of being arrested and tried by the international criminal court! Why should it surprise anyone that the UNIcef ambassador against hunger, who believes only the lazy people starve, is once more back home after a sell-out,, as usual!
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Comment: WHAT A PATHETIC WRITER!!!
Feature Article of Sunday, 27 June 2010
Columnist: Damptey, Daniel Danquah
Is Mills a Principled President? No, Never!
Comment: WHAT A PATHETIC WRITER!!!
Friday, June 25, 2010
Comment: PRIVITIZATION OR ANOTHER A.W.A.M.?
Comment: PRIVITIZATION OR ANOTHER A.W.A.M.?
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-25 09:51:51
Comment to: Ghana Sits on Borrowed Money & Borrowed Time
Great article, except that the bit about the Continental Hotel or the Golden Tulip makes me sad.
THE ARTICLE STATES:
”To assert his reformist credentials, the former Czar recounted another story –this time about Continental Hotel - which while in government’s hands was so run down government had to commandeer a wing and refurbish it, with fresh curtains, linens and towels, before the hotel could receive important state guests. Now privatised, the same hotel strives to match global standards, and pays so much in VAT that government would be compensated many times over even if no dividends are declared for the entire life of the investment.”
MY COMMENT:
How do you claim that the state must not do business and so you are going to sell the state properties only to sell them to another state to do the same business and make so much profit? The argument that the state (Ghana) can only make money by selling her assets to another stae (in this case, Libya) is excessively silly. The Libyan Arab African Investment Company owns 65.5% on behalf of the state of Libya for paying us a paltry $3,578,125. All in the name of ideology. This is the height of stupidity. I hasten to add that this was the handiwork of the Rawlings ”Team A”!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment: GRANDSON, TELL YOUR STORY WALKING!!!
Comment on Ghanaweb General News of Thursday, 24 June 2010, Source: GNA, Mills leaves for South Africa
Comment: GRANDSON, TELL YOUR STORY WALKING!!!
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-25 07:05:03
Comment to: When Will You Ever Use Your Brain......?
Bravo, grandson! Clap for him! This is at least original! There are talents even in stupidity! And this our dear son of Flecknoe, who never deviates into sense, whose darkness admits no ray, like Dryden's Shadwell, has to all abundantly displayed! Are you such a mental midget that you do not even seem to know what you want to say? First, it was: ”11 days ago, you were in South Africa...What talks do you want to hold with the South African govt that you couldn't do so when you were there 2 weeks ago?” This, in spite of the fact that Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, accompanied by his wife Ana, was in Accra on Sunday 20th June on the three-day state visit. He left two days ago! I do not play football with idiots who are constantly changing the goal post!
As they say in Australia, Tell your story walking!!!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Hi grandson,
Do you have a problem with basic comprehension? It is written in black and white that ”the trip followed from the visit of Angolan President Eduardo Dos Santos, and matters that had arisen out of the visit leading up to the AU Summit scheduled for Kampala, Uganda, from July 24-27.”
Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, accompanied by his wife Ana, was in Accra on Sunday 20th June on the three-day state visit. He left two days ago.
Have I convinced you that what you just wrote was nothing but complete and utter nonsense?
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Comment: Re: Going For Medical Care In South Africa ?
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-24 22:38:34
Comment to: Going For Medical Care In South Africa ?
Hi grandson,
Do you have a problem with basic comprehension? It is written in black and white that ”the trip followed from the visit of Angolan President Eduardo Dos Santos, and matters that had arisen out of the visit leading up to the AU Summit scheduled for Kampala, Uganda, from July 24-27.”
Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, accompanied by his wife Ana, was in Accra on Sunday 20th June on the three-day state visit. He left two days ago.
Have I convinced you that what you just wrote was nothing but complete and utter nonsense?
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Comment: ROUTINE MENTAL CHECK-UP RECOMMENDED!!!
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-25 06:49:26
Comment to: Ooh My God ! !
Good day, Don Blunt!
You will have to be careful and respect yourself the next time you address me. Talking about using your brains, charity begins in your own skull. My comment is clearly in response to the related post by Jato Julor (J.J.) Rawlings: ”11 days ago, you were in South Africa...What talks do you want to hold with the South African govt that you couldn't do so when you were there 2 weeks ago?” Who is not using the grey matter? Go and think and come again. I stand by my response: ”Angolan President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, accompanied by his wife Ana, was in Accra on Sunday 20th June on the three-day state visit. He left two days ago.” I would rather believe in an official statement from the NDC government than a Ghanaweb comment by any Tom, Dick, and Don Blunt!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Comment: Where are Calvin Dzang, Joy Amedume and Steve Obimpeh?
Comment: Where are Calvin Dzang, Joy Amedume and Steve Obimpeh?COMMENT ON:
Cocroaches, flies take over Ghana's naval ships
Myjoyonline.com, Last Updated: Thursday, 24 June 2010, 21:57 GMT
Story reads:
”Owusu-Peprah noted that the GNS Sebor is the fastest of the ships owned by the Ghana Navy, seconded by the “tortoise speed” GNS Achimota.”
My Question:
Unless we are really talking about ships and not boats, I find this news item is very misleading in terms of speed and the ability of our navy to move faster on the sea than we are being told here. So what happened to the three naval speed boats from the United States of America (USA) to boost the capacity of the Ghana Navy in protecting the country's territorial waters? Those of us with a good memory remember that on the 27th of October, 2008, the NPP government in the heat of the electoral pressure from the fisher folks fell upon the US to support its naval patrol with speed boats. Here is the story:
“Government has taken delivery of the first batch of naval speed boats from the United States of America (USA) to boost the capacity of the Ghana Navy in protecting the country's territorial waters.
The three boats provided by the US government under the African Partnership Station project, were handed over to the Western Naval Command in Sekonndi by the Minister of Defence, Mr Albert Kan Dapaah, on Saturday... The boats are valued at USD1.7 million and are named after Calvin Dzang, Joy AmedUme and Steve Obimpeh.“ (See: US assists Ghana to combat offshore drug trade and piracy
27/10/2008, © Ghana Broadcasting Corporation.)
Where are Calvin Dzang, Joy AmedUme and Steve Obimpeh?
Was the NPP throwing dust into our eyes? Was it a staged up show? A lie? How come they are not even among the fastest
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
See also ModernGhana.com for reactions to comment here
Comment: TO: COMRADE KOLA, PROPER MAIN LONDON
Comment: TO: COMRADE KOLA, PROPER MAIN LONDON
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-24 03:51:58
Comment to: THE AKRONFUORS MUST BE PROSECUTED
Hi Kola,
Good day, my brother. I like you a lot, but I think it is very important to show some respect to the most brilliant and honest president Ghana has ever had since February, 1966. We must all condemn corruption. I agree with you that the NPP is the most corrupt and stupid government after the Busia Administration, but the human rights records of the Rawlings regime stinks to the highest heavens. The Rawlingses think they have protected their glass houses with indemnity clauses and so they can throw stones. This is self-delusion. Do not fall for it.
I have a very important message for you. Please give me a follow on Twitter and I shall send you a direct message. Have a nice day.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
READ ARTICLE: Ghanaweb, General News of Thursday, 24 June 2010,
Source: The Independent
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Comment: Kufour has lost ALL credibility!!!!!!
Comment: Kufour has lost ALL credibility!!!!!!
Author:
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.Date:
2010-06-21 10:21:30Comment to:
Kufuor to address international conferences on PeaWhy Kufour did not win the Mo Ibrahim Award does not baffle me. What baffles me is when he is invited by his owners who are clearly behind his mischiefs, and we are expected to applaud. President Kufour is not going to say anything different from the fact that it is the fault of the poor to remain poor, because they are lazy individuals. The rich in society must be empowered to discipline them. Freedom and Justice must be the monopoly of the rich, otherwise there can be no progress. Slaves must obey their masters with fear and trembling for the sake of productivity and staying competitive. Kufour is going to speak for his slave masters, not for Africa. He has always done this, and must be systematically ignored if we want genuine peace and social progress.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
General News of Monday, 21 June 2010
Source: GNA
Kufuor to address international conferences on Peace-Keeping and Poverty
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Comment: ARE YOU MENTALLY CHALLENGED?
Comment: ARE YOU MENTALLY CHALLENGED?
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-20 16:02:05
Comment to: NPP IS NOT A DIRTY POLITICAL PARTY
“For most of the time Ghana has been ruled by P/NDC/CPP/NLC, who are of the same stock, if you scrutinise the membership: They have ruled for 49 YEARS. So please do not insult NPP and blame Ghana's woes on them...“
COMMENT:
Johnson, you are only good at heaping insults. Just concentrate on that and stop pretending to write sense. Everybody knows the CPP was removed by the Danquah-Busia inspired NLC which is the present day NPP, so you are only fooling yourself alone.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment: Re: Great move
Comment: Re: Great move
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-20 15:37:07
Comment to: Great move
It is interesting how the press could get involved. There was hardly any report in the media concerning the United Nations Conference of Parties on Climate Change in Copenhagen last year. The main concern is how the leading polluters are seeking to give us a raw deal and the arm-twisting involved in getting poor countries by-pass the route of free, open and democratic discussions about the very survival of our entire planet as we know it. It is a shame.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment on: General News of Sunday, 20 June 2010
Source: GNA
Journalists and Scientists to discuss climate change at Global Media Forum
Read Article
I agree with you. Here is a Ghanaian who openly confeses that "I am glad that, finally, the Ivorians are beginning to assert their right of access and enjoyment of Ghana’s purportedly new-found oil wealth... It also didn’t quite make a lot of sense to me that an oil find that lay so dangerously close to Ghana’s border with Côte d’Ivoire would also have been so [godlessly] uncharitable as to neatly parcel itself out for the exclusive benefit and enjoyment of Ghanaians while the war-seasoned Ivorians continued to languish in penury." - "Who Are These “Parliamentarian Drivers”? By Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D., Feature Article of Tuesday, 16 March 2010.
That such an idiot even pretends to influence policy baffles me.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment: Re: To: Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jnr. /1
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-20 14:06:20
Comment to: To: Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jnr.
I agree with you. Here is a Ghanaian who openly confeses that "I am glad that, finally, the Ivorians are beginning to assert their right of access and enjoyment of Ghana’s purportedly new-found oil wealth... It also didn’t quite make a lot of sense to me that an oil find that lay so dangerously close to Ghana’s border with Côte d’Ivoire would also have been so [godlessly] uncharitable as to neatly parcel itself out for the exclusive benefit and enjoyment of Ghanaians while the war-seasoned Ivorians continued to languish in penury." - "Who Are These “Parliamentarian Drivers”? By Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., Ph.D., Feature Article of Tuesday, 16 March 2010.
That such an idiot even pretends to influence policy baffles me.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment: MAKE AN EFFECTIVE ARGUMENT, PLEASE...
Comment: MAKE AN EFFECTIVE ARGUMENT, PLEASE...
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-20 13:36:59
Comment to: Why I pray for Prof. Frimpong- Boateng to be Pres
Patrick, there is hardly any grey matter left in your skull deserving of a PH.D. What happened? Is your skull leaking? It is not enough to pontificate platitudes and simply tell us "Ghana can go back to the teething stage and attempt one more time and the person rightly positioned by destiny to lead that charge is Prof Frimpong-Boateng." If he is already positioned by destiny, why do you pray, as the title of your article seems to suggest? A contradiction of terms that eludes Patrick Kobina Arthur (PhD)?
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Comment On Ghanaweb Feature Article of Sunday, 20 June 2010
Columnist: Arthur, Patrick Kobina
Why I pray for Prof. Frimpong- Boateng to be President of Ghana
Comment: Re: WE NEED MORE NOBLE MEN LIKE HIM !!!!!!! Read Article: Kufuor to address two international conferences on Peace-Keeping
Read Article: Kufuor to address two international conferences on Peace-
Why Kufour did not win the Mo Ibrahim Award does not baffle me. What baffles me is when he is invited by his owners who are clearly behind his mischiefs, and we are expected to applaud. President Kufour is not going to say anything different from the fact that it is the fault of the poor to remain poor, because they are lazy individuals. The rich in society must be empowered to discipline them. Freedom and Justice must be the monopoly of the rich, otherwise there can be no progress. Slaves must obey their masters with fear and trembling for the sake of productivity and staying competitive. Kufour is going to speak for his slave masters, not for Africa. He has always done this, and must be systematically ignored if we want genuine peace and social progress.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
General News of Saturday, 19 June 2010,Source: Frank Agyekum, Spokesperson, Office of former President JA Kufuor
Comment: Re: WE NEED MORE NOBLE MEN LIKE HIM !!!!!!!
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-20 08:46:29
Comment to: WE NEED MORE NOBLE MEN LIKE HIM !!!!!!!!
Why Kufour did not win the Mo Ibrahim Award does not baffle me. What baffles me is when he is invited by his owners who are clearly behind his mischiefs, and we are expected to applaud. President Kufour is not going to say anything different from the fact that it is the fault of the poor to remain poor, because they are lazy individuals. The rich in society must be empowered to discipline them. Freedom and Justice must be the monopoly of the rich, otherwise there can be no progress. Slaves must obey their masters with fear and trembling for the sake of productivity and staying competitive. Kufour is going to speak for his slave masters, not for Africa. He has always done this, and must be systematically ignored if we want genuine peace and social progress.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Pan-African PerspectiveQuotes from Kwame Nkrumah |
|
"History has shown that where the Great Powers cannot colonize, they balkanize. This is what they did to the Austro-Hungarian Empire and this is what they have done and are doing in Africa. If we allow ourselves to be balkanized, we shall be re-colonized and be picked off one after the other...." "By far the greatest wrong which the departing colonialists inflicted on us, and which we now continue to inflict on ourselves in our present state of disunity, was to leave us divided into economically unviable States which bear no possibility of real development...." "...We must unite for economic viability, first of all, and then to recover our mineral wealth in Southern Africa, so that our vast resources and capacity for development will bring prosperity for us and additional benefits for the rest of the world. That is why I have written elsewhere that the emancipation of Africa could be the emancipation of Man." Speech OAU Summit Conference Cairo 7/19/64 can be found on pages 282-4 of Revolutionary Path More... |
Do we not need a team? COMMENT ON: Ghana Sits on Borrowed Money & Borrowed Time
READ ARTICLE: Ghana Sits on Borrowed Money & Borrowed Time
Franklin Cudjoe, Bright B. Simons and Kofi Bentil, thank you very much for this report. This is an extremely nourishing food for thought. It is very rare to read the works of such good journalism. Competent and very effective. It is remarkable to put up such a good report in such a short time. I particularly like this aspect of the report:
”As the discussions took this turn, of participants making bold recommendations that required, foremost, a reform of worldview rather than “institutions”, and the complex and unavoidable bureaucracy the latter entailed, one couldn't help the feeling that there was a tacit recognition of the gross limitations of the World Bank's effectiveness in our affairs. Indeed, by the time the gathering reached the session on Social Accountability, and jumped into the fray of how standards for Civil Society Organisations may be promoted and enforced (so that “the watchmen can be watched”), the unstated but palpable feeling was that we as Africans and Ghanaians were the alpha and omega of our development. Institutions like the World Bank can only be incidental.”
Fellow Africans, the ball is once again, at the same place. It has not moved. It is in your court, not in our court. It is up to each individual to give it a kick and score a goal, or pass it to someone who can score the goal, or pass it to someone who can pass it to another to score the goal. Do we not need a team? Food for thought, and fuel for action:
“We in Africa who are pressing now for unity are deeply conscious of the validity of our purpose. We need the strength of our combined numbers and resources to protect ourselves from the very positive dangers of returning to colonialism in disguised forms. We need it to combat the entrenched forces dividing our continent and still holding back millions of our brothers. We need it to secure total African liberation. We need it to carry forward our construction of a socio-economic system that will support the great mass of our steadily rising population at levels of life which will compare with those in the most advanced countries” - Kwame Nkrumah, "Africa Must Unite!", 1960.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro
Blogs:
Feature Articles: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com
Comments: theodikro.blogspot.com
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Group warns critics of Rawlings' family
Source: myjoyonline - Myjoyonline.comPolitics | 2 hours ago
Ransford Vanni-Amoah, founder of the group, has however denied the group is pushing for Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings to contest the 2012 elections.
Story by Joy News/Myjoyonline.com/Ghana
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah
Date: Sat, 19 Jun 2010 23:10:00
Date: Sat, 19 Jun 2010 23:10:00
'Vaulting ambition which o'erleaps itself and falls on the other'!!! What can make anyone even believe that this woman has a dog's chance of success? Is this a way of ensuring an NPP victory? Wonders will never end. By the way, why are they still hiding this open secret? They even look more dishonest than the average politician.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
Comment: CLARIFICATION ACCEPTED, BUT...
Read Article:
I think that Professor Kwesi Yankah himself did not help matters when he came out prematurely, i.e., before the Committee appointed to investigate 13th March 2010 incident, also deliberating on how to prevent the “rowdy, ritualistic behavior and hooliganism of students of Commonwealth Hall”, had submitted its report. In a news item, “Old Vandals accuse Kwesi Yankah over Commonwealth's 'Boys & Girls' controversy“:
“We have it on authority that the chairman of the residence board in the person of Professor Kwesi Yankah, the Pro-Vice Chancellor of the university had sadly enough, stated that the matter was meant only for information and implementation and not for discussion at the residence board meeting,” Mr John Mbroh told the press on Monday, 10 May 2010.
He alleged that Prof Yankah had long pronounced on Radio Universe that the Commonwealth Hall would be turned into a mixed gender hall. Myjoyonline.com/Ghana News :: Old Vandals accuse Kwesi Yankah over Commonwealth's ...Last Updated: Monday, 10 May 2010, 15:27 GMT.
The clarification is useful, but it does not answer why the university did not wait for the investigating committee report, neither does it justify the use of a mixed hall as a means of collective punishment.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: http://nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheOdikro
Ghanaweb General News of Saturday, 19 June 2010, Source: GNA
University of Ghana debunks media reportage singling out Prof. Yankah
Comment: CLARIFICATION ACCEPTED, BUT...
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-19 08:53:09
Comment to: University of Ghana debunks media reportage singli
I think that Professor Kwesi Yankah himself did not help matters when he came out prematurely, i.e., before the Committee appointed to investigate 13th March 2010 incident, also deliberating on how to prevent the “rowdy, ritualistic behavior and hooliganism of students of Commonwealth Hall”, had submitted its report. In a news item, “Old Vandals accuse Kwesi Yankah over Commonwealth's 'Boys & Girls' controversy“:
“We have it on authority that the chairman of the residence board in the person of Professor Kwesi Yankah, the Pro-Vice Chancellor of the university had sadly enough, stated that the matter was meant only for information and implementation and not for discussion at the residence board meeting,” Mr John Mbroh told the press on Monday, 10 May 2010.
He alleged that Prof Yankah had long pronounced on Radio Universe that the Commonwealth Hall would be turned into a mixed gender hall. Myjoyonline.com/Ghana News :: Old Vandals accuse Kwesi Yankah over Commonwealth's ...Last Updated: Monday, 10 May 2010, 15:27 GMT.
The clarification is useful, but it does not answer why the university did not wait for the investigating committee report, neither does it justify the use of a mixed hall as a means of collective punishment.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: http://nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheOdikro
Friday, June 18, 2010
COMMENT ON: Dick Cheney Breaks Silence, Blames Obama for Oil Spill
COMMENT: Dick Cheney Breaks Silence, Blames Obama for Oil Spill
READ STORY IN NEWSWEEK:
The former Vice President, often blamed for setting the stage on which the BP oil disaster played out, had been mysteriously silent as critics rallied against him. He finally responded in a speech.
Last night he addressed a capacity crowd of 1200 at the Manufacturer and Business Association convention in Erie, Pennsylvania, according to ThinkProgress. The Erie Times-News reported that guests paid $185 per head, or up to $1500 for a table to watch Cheney speak. More...
Nana Akyea Mensah
Here is a dramatic irony., but far more than that, it is a sign that the US democracy has a long way to go in convincing those of us who are sensitive to justice and fair play. If instead of punishment, what we see is impudence and impunity of this kind, hope may run through the window. Fortunately, I am incensed enough by these comments to know that I cannot simply be alone. I have confidence in humanity and our collective sense of decency. First, let the oil slick get cleared and the victims made whole. The rest shall be history. There is no reason to rush. The anvil of Justice grinds slowly, but it grinds fine.
READ STORY IN NEWSWEEK:
The former Vice President, often blamed for setting the stage on which the BP oil disaster played out, had been mysteriously silent as critics rallied against him. He finally responded in a speech.
Last night he addressed a capacity crowd of 1200 at the Manufacturer and Business Association convention in Erie, Pennsylvania, according to ThinkProgress. The Erie Times-News reported that guests paid $185 per head, or up to $1500 for a table to watch Cheney speak. More...
Nana Akyea Mensah
Here is a dramatic irony., but far more than that, it is a sign that the US democracy has a long way to go in convincing those of us who are sensitive to justice and fair play. If instead of punishment, what we see is impudence and impunity of this kind, hope may run through the window. Fortunately, I am incensed enough by these comments to know that I cannot simply be alone. I have confidence in humanity and our collective sense of decency. First, let the oil slick get cleared and the victims made whole. The rest shall be history. There is no reason to rush. The anvil of Justice grinds slowly, but it grinds fine.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Did Victus Azeem really say this of the CJA?
Daily Guide: Azeem Slams Pratt |
COMMENT: Did Victus Azeem really say this of the CJA?
written by Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro, June 17, 2010
I would not be surprised if the first person to dissociate himself from this jaundiced journalism would be Vitus Azeem himself. For starters, the very words atributed to him in this story do not sound like the language of the gentleman behind the Transparency International who can not by any means claim a better claim in the fight against corruption, probity and accountability than Mr. Kwesi Pratt, Jnr. Did Victus Azeem really say this of the CJA: ”often led by Mr. Kwesi Pratt Jnr. and his cohorts”? I doubt it very much. Some of us are giving him some time for this to be brought to his attention and appropriate reaction before we make any propnouncements.
WORLD CUP: Just Before you lose your head over a goal...
TAKE A STEP BACK AND WATCH:
AMY GOODMAN: A poem from Leafdrift, could you share with us?
DENNIS BRUTUS: Right, I think it would be appropriate to read a poem which is actually about our current protest. You may know, and I think you covered it on Democracy Now!, when we were marching against Kofi Annan and Colin Powell and the World Summit on Sustainable Development, people were marching from the ghettos, from the townships, to this expensive suburb called Santon, where you had this enormous expense, you know, lavish expenditure and talk about making the world a better place, when in fact the world was becoming a worse place. So, we have a poem about it, and I’m going to read that, which is just about the march.
When we marched,
Slithered
Through slimy mud past riot-shielded cops in Alexander
(This is the ghetto.)
While children peered wild-eyed from dark windows,
For some of us these were re-runs of earlier apartheid-burdened days.
But, then, it was defiant resolution that drove our hearts and braced our feet.
Now, sadness at betrayal sat sadly on our hearts.
Our shouted slogans hung heavy over us in grimy air.
We winced at familiar oft-repeated lies
Oft-repeated lies.
- A poem from Leafdrift
June 11, 2010
"Upside Down World Cup": Raj Patel on How South Africa Has Cracked Down on the Poor and the Shack Dwellers’ Movement Ahead of the World Cup
Worldcup
As the 2010 World Cup opens in South Africa, Raj Patel looks at one of the most overlooked aspects of this year’s tournament: the ongoing struggle of tens of thousands of shack dwellers across the country. Over the past year, shack settlement leaders in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town have been chased from their homes by gangs, arrested, detained without hearing, and assaulted. As the World Cup begins, a shack dwellers’ movement known as Abahlali baseMjondolo is mounting what they call an "Upside Down World Cup" campaign to draw attention to their plight. [includes rush transcript]
WATCH
Guest:
Raj Patel, visiting scholar at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, an honorary research fellow at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. He administers the website of the Abahlali baseMjondolo shack dwellers organization at www.abahlali.org. He is also the author of The Value of Nothing: How to Reshape Market Society and Reclaim Democracy.
Rush Transcript
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* Raj Patel: "Off-Side at the World Cup"
AMY GOODMAN: Angelique Kidjo, performing before tens of thousands of people at the World Cup concert in Soweto’s Orlando Stadium in South Africa Thursday. And you can go to our website to see a full interview with Angelique that we did in Copenhagen at the climate change summit. That’s right, today is the opening day of the 2010 World Cup, the most-watched sporting event on the planet. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan Gonzalez.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Yes, once every four years, the world comes to a standstill as an estimated one billion people across the globe tune in to watch countries compete in what is known as "The Beautiful Game," football, or soccer, as it’s called here in the United States. For four weeks, thirty-two countries compete in sixty-four matches to vie for the World Cup trophy, perhaps the most coveted prize in all of sports.
This year, the World Cup is being held in South Africa. It’s the first time in history the tournament is held on the African continent. An estimated 350,000 people are expected to visit South Africa for the competition.
AMY GOODMAN: Last night, tens of thousands of people gathered in Soweto’s Orlando Stadium for a celebration concert that featured African stars Angelique Kidjo, Amadou & Mariam, Hugh Masekela, as well as stars from around the world, including Shakira and John Legend and Black Eyed Peas. One of the keynote speakers of the night was South African archbishop and Nobel Peace Prize winner, Desmond Tutu.
DESMOND TUTU: Welcome you all! For Africa is the cradle of humanity! So we welcome you home, all of you! All of you—Germans, French—every single one of you. We are all Africans! We’re all Africans! Oh! Hoo-hoo, hoo-hoo-hoo! And we want to say to the world, thank you for helping this ugly, ugly, ugly worm—caterpillar, which we were, to become—to become a beautiful, beautiful butterfly. We are a beautiful, beautiful butterfly!
JUAN GONZALEZ: At the time of this broadcast, the opening ceremony of the World Cup is underway in Johannesburg. One person that is notably absent from the event is Nelson Mandela. South Africa’s iconic anti-apartheid leader and first black president is mourning the death of his thirteen-year-old great granddaughter, Zenani, who was killed in a car crash as she returned from last night’s concert.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, one of the most overlooked aspects of this year’s World Cup is the ongoing struggle of tens of thousands of shack dwellers across the country. Over the past year, shack settlement leaders in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town have been chased from their homes by gangs, arrested, detained without hearing, and assaulted. As the World Cup begins, a shack dwellers’ movement is mounting what they’re calling "Upside Down World Cup" campaign, to draw attention to their plight.
Raj Patel is a visiting scholar at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, an honorary research fellow at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. He administers the website—well, you’re going to have to say the name of the website, Raj. Tell us the website and what is happening in South Africa.
RAJ PATEL: OK, so the website is Abahlali—A-B-A-H-L-A-L-I.org. And the organization is called the Abahlali baseMjondolo, which is Zulu for “people who live in shacks.” Now, the reason this is an interesting organization is because when we’re seeing all the joy around the World Cup, it’s important to remember, of course, that the World Cup is not an unalloyed good. Not everyone in South Africa is benefiting from the World Cup. And in fact, you know, FIFA, the organization that organizes the World Cup, the Federation of—sorry, the International Federation of Football Associations, is an incredibly powerful organization that in many ways has sort of commandeered the willing South African government to be able to rearrange the country to make it more football- and corporation-friendly.
And so, around all the stadiums, for example, the stadia, are exclusion zones, where street traders have been moved away—informal traders, in some circles as they’re known—and in which a beautification campaign has been carried out. Of course, I mean, this isn’t a terribly new idea. I mean, the sporting events around the world, when they happen in the Global South, have usually been alibis for a few corporations and a few people to profit massively and for governments to engage in what they seem to—what they call beautification, or what more rightly is called gentrification and privatization.
Now, what’s happening in South Africa is very interesting. We’ve seen billions of dollars of subsidy given by the South African government to FIFA. But we’re seeing in the mainstream media stories coming up about how, while a few people, you know, tourists, are enjoying the World Cup, and the World Cup is being broadcast around the world, and while FIFA clearly has the power to get someone like K’naan to rewrite his song, we’re also seeing that poor people are excluded from the World Cup. And that’s an important narrative for us to have. It’s important to see that, for example, informal traders are being moved away. Or, for example, in Durban, artisanal fisherpeople, people who were normally allowed to fish from the piers in Durban, a struggle for which they fought very hard—it was one of the sort of key demands for certain people in the anti-apartheid struggle, is the freedom to be able to fish wherever you like—well, those rights have been rolled back for the duration of the World Cup.
And civil rights have been suspended in some places. I mean, today, for example, there was meant to be a protest in Johannesburg demanding education rights for everyone. But the government has denied the rights—denied the protest permission to march, because the police are otherwise occupied guarding the tourists and making sure that FIFA’s property and intellectual property is being safely guarded.
Now, what the shack dwellers have been saying—and shack dwellers throughout South Africa number in over a million households—shack dwellers are saying that, "Well, actually, we know—and this is a verbatim quote from S’bu Zikode, who is the head of Abahlali baseMjondolo, the president of the organization. He said, “We know that our names are being used to"—we know that—sorry, "We know that we’re going to be excluded, but our names are being used to justify the goodness of our country in the world. But the country is divided. There are certain people who are benefiting, and we are excluded. We want to tell the other side of the story.”
And so, the way that they’re trying going to tell the story is by making themselves visible. Some shack dwellers in Cape Town, for example, will be breaking the exclusion zone to set up shacks to show people how they live. And this is an important counter-narrative, because when the media sort of comes in and tells stories about poor people, what often gets left out is the fact that poor people are not just sitting there twiddling their thumbs. They are organizing, and they are using the World Cup, just as the World Cup is using them. And so, they’re using the World Cup as an opportunity to show the rest of the world how they live and the conditions in which they have been left to wait for development to come. So, in Cape Town, for example, there will be shack dwellers outside the exclusion zone—or sorry, within the exclusion zone, and there is a danger that they will be arrested.
And within Durban, shack dwellers who were chased from their homes last year will be trying to get back into their communities. They’ve been asked back by the communities that—where the violence that excluded them happened. And they’ve been asked back, in large part, by women. Now, the organizing that shack dweller organizations like Abahlali do are the kind of organizing that are actually very gender-sensitive. They provide childcare, they provide HIV/AIDS drop-in centers, all the things that are desperately needed in communities of poor people. And, of course, when we hear the World Cup, when we hear stories about the World Cup, gender is the one thing that gets dropped out. And so, what we’re seeing is a demand from women in shacks for their leadership and for organizations to come back and to provide support. And so, in this moment of World Cup celebration, what organizations of poor people are hoping is that the world media will pay a little bit of attention to what they’re doing and to provide some cover for the organizing that will happen long after the World Cup ends and the final whistle blows.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And Raj, I’d like to ask you, about $6 billion was spent in the building of these various stadiums. How did the government finance all of this, given the huge problems and disparities, income disparities, that still exist in the country?
RAJ PATEL: Well, I mean, debt is the main way. I mean, the government has siphoned resources away from other projects, and there’s been a huge opportunity cost. This is money that shack dwellers and other people have been saying could have been going to housing, could have been going to education, could have been going to healthcare. But it’s been diverted to provide these white elephant stadiums, as Desmond Tutu called them, stadiums that will be scaled back or, in some cases, left to rot after the final whistle blows.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Raj Patel, we want to thank you very much for being with us. Among everything else, he is the author of The Value of Nothing: How to Reshape Market Society and Reclaim Democracy.
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South Africa’s Poor Targeted by Evictions, Attacks in Advance of 2010 World Cup
October 01, 2009 | Story
Thousands of South Africans are being displaced in preparation for the 2010 World Cup. While Durban completes the finishing touches on its new stadium, thousands of the city's poor who live in …
March 02, 2010
In the Shadow of the Olympic Flame: A Report from the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, the Poorest Neighborhood in Canada
Mate-olympic-democracynow
The 2010 Winter Olympics have wrapped up in Vancouver, Canada. The Olympic flame has been doused, and a return to normalcy has begun for a city thrust onto the world stage. Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté traveled to Vancouver to look at an issue lost in the two-week spectacle, the struggles of a low-income community in the Olympics’ shadow. [includes rush transcript]
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"In The Shadow of the Olympic Flame", produced by Aaron Maté with help from Democracy Now!'s Nicole Salazar & Hany Massoud and Julius Fisher of Vancouver's Working TV as well as the Vancouver Media Co-op.
Aaron Maté, Democracy Now! producer
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Rush Transcript
This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
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AMY GOODMAN: The 2010 Winter Olympics have wrapped up in Vancouver, Canada. The Olympic flame has been doused, and a return to normalcy has begun for a city thrust onto the world stage.
Well, Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté traveled to Vancouver to look at an issue lost in the two-week spectacle: the struggles of a low-income community in the Olympics’ shadow. He filed this report.
AARON MATÉ: For two weeks, Olympic fever gripped Vancouver’s downtown core. Thousands of people flooded the streets, the logos of corporate sponsors on display at nearly every turn. At the Olympic Superstore, shoppers lined up for several blocks just to buy official merchandise.
OLYMPIC SUPERSTORE REP: There’s tons of people from all over the world with different languages, and they’re coming here because this is the official Olympic Superstore. So everything in here is official with the Olympic. It has the little rings and all that kind of stuff. We have about thirty-two different licensees in here, so we have a wide assortment of products, from a 59-cent postcard to a $7,500 canoe.
AARON MATÉ: The Vancouver Olympics saw a mass display of civic and national pride. But they’ve also intensified a struggle over what kind of a city is left behind. For many people, the front lines of that struggle are in a neighborhood called the Downtown Eastside.
PROTESTERS: 2010 homes, not 2010 Games! 2010 homes, not 2010 Games! Homes, not games! Homes, not games! Homes, not games!
AARON MATÉ: It’s just a short walk from the Olympic festivities, but the Downtown Eastside can feel worlds apart. An area of fifteen square blocks, it’s the poorest postal code in Canada. It has the highest HIV infection rate in North America, an outgrowth of rampant drug use and prostitution. But for decades, right through the Olympics, it’s also been a community of resistance.
PROTESTER: What we have in the Downtown Eastside is the most impacted and one of the most devastated communities as a result of the 2010 Olympic Games. People are being pushed out. People are being shoved around. People are being thrown into jails. And yet, we’re standing here, because this community always fights back and always resists with courage and with love. Thank you, everyone, for being here.
AARON MATÉ: The Winter Olympics cost around $6 billion, nearly $1 billion on security alone. That’s seen as an affront in the Downtown Eastside, where residents have fought to preserve the social services that can mean life or death for many vulnerable people. Libby Davies is a member of the Canadian Parliament.
LIBBY DAVIES: In many cities across North America, inner cities have either been demolished, gentrified, wiped out, or people just left in misery. In this neighborhood, there has been a struggle for more than thirty years to fight back and to say, “This is our community. We have a right to be here. We have a right to live in dignity, in good housing, with parks, with a community center.” And so, this struggle goes on.
ELAINE DUROCHER, DTES Power of Women Group: I think what the effects of the Olympics, that it has on us, is that it takes all the monies away from the poor people, and it puts it all towards—to Olympic venues, the Games, the building, the construction. They forgot about us.
AARON MATÉ: The Vancouver Olympics were initially billed as the world’s first socially sustainable Games. But one key legacy is a squeeze on low-income housing. Harsha Walia is an organizer with the Downtown Eastside Women’s Center and the Olympic Resistance Network.
HARSHA WALIA: The Olympics has spurred on real estate speculation and construction in Vancouver, in general. And the Downtown Eastside has kind of been the last bastion for condo developers. And since the Olympic bid, we’ve seen approximately 1,800 units of market housing and condominiums being built in the Downtown Eastside, while we’ve lost approximately 1,300 units of low-income housing.
AARON MATÉ: The real estate boom has coincided with a contentious record on social housing. Low-income homes have been built, but not enough to meet demand. David Cadman is a Vancouver city councilor.
DAVID CADMAN: The major issue that we wanted to solve with these Olympics, we had a social inclusivity agreement with the national and provincial governments, and our hope was that we would begin to deal with the homelessness crisis in this city.
AARON MATÉ: The social inclusivity agreement spoke of creating a housing legacy and protecting low-income residents from evictions. Am Johal is chair of the Impact on Communities Coalition, which tried to work with Olympic organizers.
AM JOHAL: Literally years after the bid began, civil society organizations were sidelined. Reports that were written, like the Housing Table, which recommended 3,200 units of housing over four years, these reports were essentially shelved. So the commitments that were made ended up being more in the realm of marketing and public relations than a document that was substantive or something that could actually be—that we could hold governments to account.
AARON MATÉ: The Olympic Athlete’s Village was to be the centerpiece of the Games’ social housing legacy. Two hundred and fifty units are designated for social housing after the athletes leave town. But the village has been a financial disaster. After the global economic crisis, private financing collapsed, forcing the city to put up around $1 billion to finish construction. With that kind of price tag, the social housing units could be sold off.
AM JOHAL: This has happened—happening exactly at the same time as Olympic infrastructure was being built, like speed skating ovals and luge tracks. In the case of security, we have $900 million being spent over—you know, literally over a two-month period. And so, these one-time costs, it’s very difficult not to compare them to the lack of social investment that’s going on.
AARON MATÉ: The focus on private development over social housing is felt all over the city. Just two months before the Olympic Games, developers began bulldozing one of the oldest social housing projects in Canada. Built in the 1950s, the Little Mountain housing complex was home to over 700 people.
ELLEN WOODSWORTH: Two hundred twenty-four units of perfectly good social housing were torn down. It would have taken as little as $10,000 per unit to fix them up. Fifteen acres of public land was sold off to the highest corporate bidder.
AARON MATÉ: That’s Vancouver City Council member Ellen Woodsworth. She took us to the ruins of Little Mountain on her sixth day of a seven-day hunger strike for a national housing program in Canada. Woodsworth tried to prevent the demolition and now fights to ensure the social housing units are replaced. But there are no guarantees.
ELLEN WOODSWORTH: This is really just so terrible that you would take people out of perfectly good housing and destroy a site and just leave it vacant. This could be empty for ten years. This developer has no experience with building housing. It’s just such a tragedy when this whole country—if you got, you know, thousands of people homeless in Vancouver, and you got 200,000 people homeless across the country, and twelve people in BC have died from homelessness each year, it’s outrageous that they would have done this.
AARON MATÉ: One building prevented the demolition of their homes. But developers vow to force them out. Back in the Downtown Eastside, residents are also standing up. On day four of the Olympics, hundreds of people took over a vacant lot owned by a major condo developer, erecting Tent Village.
STELLA AUGUST, DTES Power of Women Group: It’s to stand for the government to see that our people need homes. We need them now. And we’re desperate for these people, because we have too many people getting sick and dying, out sleeping out in the cold.
RICKY, Olympic Tent Village: This is part of my family down here. And I’m going to—I don’t give a care if I get arrested or not. I am a warrior, because I am handicapped. I am sick and tired of what the police are doing to the Aboriginal people. They’re beaten up with sticks, and they’re being dragged by their hair. I have—I’m one of them, that’s got the same thing as the brothers and sisters out there. To me, it’s rough to live down here, because people walk by and they look at us like we’re garbage.
ERIC CASTONGUAY, Olympic Tent Village: They want us to get out of here. But like we said, we’re going to stay here until we win.
AARON MATÉ: So what are you painting here?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN, Olympic Tent Village: I’m painting “Housing is a human right.”
AARON MATÉ: And you’re staying here in the tent city?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Yes, I am.
AARON MATÉ: And why are you here? Why are you taking part in this?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Why am I taking part? Because I believe that people have a right to have a house. People have a right to have somewhere to be called their own.
AARON MATÉ: And how long do you plan to stay?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: I plan on staying here as long as necessary.
PETER DERANGE, Olympic Tent Village: I am homeless also, myself. I have no place to stay. So I come here to a supportive tent city. Maybe we can bring attention to the world what is happening to the [inaudible]. The richest country in the world, and us native people and all other people who are homeless, we are forced to live in the streets.
AARON MATÉ: Down the street from Tent Village, a large crowd has gathered for the Women’s Memorial March. It’s held every year to honor the over 3,000 missing and murdered women in Canada since the 1970s, one of many issues disproportionately affecting the country’s indigenous population. Today, over thirty women are reported missing from the Downtown Eastside.
MOTHER OF MISSING DAUGHTER: I’m here to remember my daughter. Her remains were found four years after she went missing.
BROTHER OF MISSING SISTER: My sister was twenty-six years old when she was reported missing.
GLENDENE GRANT: My daughter Jessie Foster went missing March 29, 2006.
AUNT OF TAMARA LYNN CHIPMAN: My niece Tamara Lynn Chipman went missing out of Prince Rupert, September 21st, 2005.
AARON MATÉ: A local farmer, Robert Pickton, has been convicted of killing six women and is accused in the deaths of at least twenty others. Organizers want a public inquiry into how police respond to reports of missing women and whether any deaths could have been avoided.
WOMEN’S MEMORIAL MARCHER: As soon as maybe someone that is of a richer—from a richer family, as soon as they go missing, a lady goes missing, they have investigations. But our ladies don’t get investigated.
FAY BLANEY, Aboriginal Women’s Action Network: The police are extremely unresponsive. The entire justice system is unresponsive to missing and murdered Aboriginal women, not just in BC, but all across the country.
DALANNAH GAIL BOWEN, Musician: We deserve to be respected. We deserve to be treated like human beings.
AARON MATÉ: This is the march’s nineteenth year. This year, city officials approached organizers about canceling it during Olympic festivities. But the march committee held its ground, and the largest-ever crowd turned out.
The Olympic Committee wanted this march to be delayed.
FAY BLANEY: They did, yes. You know, we’re here to stand up for the missing and murdered Aboriginal women, and they’re not going to stop us. They can try, which they did. The police came and met with our organizing committee, but we’re not willing to hold back the march.
DOROTHY CHRISTIAN, DTES Resident: This is absolutely incredible. And it’s beautiful, you know, that all the people have come out. And I’m glad that the VANOC committee wasn’t able to cancel it, that the people stood by their guns and that the people in this community in the Downtown Eastside are able to maintain their presence throughout the Olympics.
AARON MATÉ: As the most underprivileged neighborhood in a port city overrun with heroin, cocaine and crystal meth, the Downtown Eastside’s drug epidemic is staggering. It’s now the most concentrated area of drug use in North America.
LIBBY DAVIES: That’s been a tremendous transformation in the neighborhood. Like, it could have been one of those issues where people got divided between good people and bad people, good citizens, bad citizens. And what happened was that people came together, and the drug users themselves started speaking out and saying, “We have rights. And we need healthcare, and we need housing, and we need to have our rights respected.”
AARON MATÉ: One outgrowth of this movement is the Portland Hotel Society, which runs domiciles for people living with issues including drug addiction, mental health disorders and HIV. The Portland also runs Insite, the only safe-injection clinic in North America. It faces the constant threat of closure from the right-wing Canadian government. Mark Townsend is the Portland’s executive director.
MARK TOWNSEND: It came about because in the projects that we were working in, which were primary housing projects down here, people were dying. They were overdosing. And also they were, you know, sharing rigs, or if they were using the alleys, they were using puddle water and stuff. And it seemed that that didn’t seem right. And it seemed that maybe we could do something to make it a little bit better for people who are so pushed to the margins of society.
AARON MATÉ: How long have you been coming to Insite?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: I guess pretty much since I’ve been a user of needles, about three years. They’re great people here.
AARON MATÉ: How often do you come here?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: Probably about three, four times a day, minimum.
MARK TOWNSEND: Insite has taken over one million injections off the streets of Vancouver. It’s also had around $3.5 million of studies. And it concludes that there are some basic things that are obvious. It does reduce the spread of HIV and AIDS, because obviously all the equipment is clean. Addicts that use this place are more likely to go to detox and treatment.
Despite the fact that the provincial or state government here, the police, the local city government all support this, the federal government, even though they don’t fund it, do not support it. They won’t believe the evidence. And they funded all the research, and all the research is relatively positive. They just do not believe it, and they don’t like it, so they have dragged us and a couple of addicts here through court. We’ve won them every single time.
AARON MATÉ: If this place were to close down, how would that impact your life?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: Quite a bit, actually, because, like, I know the staff here. They’re great people. This is a great place. I mean, it’s safe. You can come in here and shoot up, like, and not have to worry about the police come in and, like, arrest you.
MARK TOWNSEND: Well, the immediate fact is like a million injections will be back on the streets and in the alleys and in the hotel rooms. The long-term effect is people will die. Disease will spread. People will be less likely to go to detox and treatment. And it will cost the healthcare service more money.
AARON MATÉ: Although Insite has taken over a million injections off the street, the widespread drug use still seen on corners and in alleyways underscores the severity of the Downtown Eastside drug crisis. It’s easy to feel horrified and judgmental. Those who work here urge compassion.
HARSHA WALIA: I work predominantly with women, and I can say, confidence, that approximately 70 percent of women that I know who turn to drugs turn to drugs because of childhood trauma of sexual assault and of child apprehension. And, you know, addictions are a—they’re a symptom of something. They’re not anything in and of themselves. And there’s reasons why people are addicted, why people are drinking, why people are forced into these desperate situations.
AARON MATÉ: The many problems notwithstanding, what’s also unmistakable here, and voiced by almost anyone you talk to, is a sense of community.
DOROTHY CHRISTIAN: The people look out for each other. You know, I don’t think that that happens much anywhere, you know, in any of the large city urban centers across the world.
GURU NANAK’S FREE KITCHEN: This is the Guru Nanak’s Free Kitchen, that we serve about a thousand meals every Saturday and every Sunday.
AARON MATÉ: After many years of doing this, what’s your sense of the homeless problem right now in Vancouver?
GURU NANAK’S FREE KITCHEN: It’s been increased. We’ve seen new members. We’ve seen new people on the streets. And a lot of the guys may not be homeless, but they can’t afford to feed themselves.
AARON MATÉ: Before the Olympics, a group of media activists established the Vancouver Media Co-op. Co-founder Dawn Palley.
DAWN PALEY: It’s a place for media makers who believe in social justice and who are part of movements or who are in support of movements—environmental justice, migrant justice, and specifically like anti-colonial, anti-capitalist struggles—to come together, to share ideas, to put up pieces, to work together, to support each other in media. We do trainings. People can access machines here. And yeah, we meet once a week, and now that it’s convergence, we’ve been here pretty much 24/7.
WENDY PEDERSEN, Carnegie Community Action Project: We fought for labor rights in this neighborhood. We squatted to get a park. We had to squat to get a—fight to get a community center. And now—and we fought and scratched and scraped for housing. So it’s no surprise that the community spirit to fight for social justice is still alive and well in the Downtown Eastside. And people are waking up, and they’re organizing.
HARSHA WALIA: When women are going missing and when women are being murdered in this neighborhood, the people who find out are not the cops. The people who are looking out for each other are other women in the neighborhood, who are looking out for women’s safety when they’re out working late at night on the streets.
AARON MATÉ: On the morning of the opening ceremonies, just hours before the Games began, the provincial government of British Columbia announced a $10 million cut to programs for at-risk children. That’s just one part. Days after the Olympics closed, the government will come out with its next budget, and many expect that to have major cuts to education, to housing, to healthcare and the arts.
DAVID CADMAN: So we’re faced with a situation where we’ve spent a lot of money, not so much the city, but the national and provincial government, on these Olympics, and yet the plight of poor and homeless people is not going to get better as a consequence to these Olympics. And it’s, in reality, going to get worse.
STELLA AUGUST: It’s The government needs to get their priorities straight and see us on the map here, you know, and recognize us and acknowledge us. Our people here, we’re just as here when—as the rich people. You know, even though we’re not as rich as they are, but we are rich in heart for caring and loving and respecting our people here in our country.
AARON MATÉ: On the Games’ last day, people across Canada celebrated as the men’s national hockey team defeated the United States in the gold medal game. In the Downtown Eastside, there was a different cause for celebration. Less than two weeks after occupying that vacant condo lot, forty-one homeless people living in Tent Village won a promise from the city to be placed in social housing.
LILY LONCAR, DTES Residents Association: Many have been homeless for a long time. And one guy, awesome guy, he hasn’t slept in a bed in eight years, and he’s got a place. He’s got his own apartment. And he’s ecstatic. And we’re all pretty stoked today. None of that would have happened without the Tent Village. There’s just no way. No way. It’s the Tent Village, it’s people fighting in solidarity for their rights that got people housed today and yesterday.
AARON MATÉ: A victory in the shadow of the Olympic flame.
For Democracy Now!, I’m Aaron Maté.
AMY GOODMAN: With special thanks to Democracy Now!’s Nicole Salazar and Hany Massoud, as well as Julius Fisher of Vancouver’s Working TV and the Vancouver Media Co-op.
In these last few minutes, we’re joined by Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté.
What was it like, Aaron, to go home? Going to Vancouver was actually going home for you.
AARON MATÉ: It was. It’s interesting, Amy. You leave, and you come back, and on the one hand there’s this huge hoopla and people in downtown celebrating. There were zip lines fastened to buildings, and people were literally flying over your head, screaming and hollering, and there’s a lot of sort of celebration.
But one thing, actually, we didn’t get to in this piece was sort of this neo-authoritarian push that came along with these Olympics. There was a censorship put on artists, people who had to—if they took Olympic funding, had to sign contracts vowing not to criticize the Olympic Committee or the Games.
And in one case, one gallery actually had to paint over a mural it had put up of the Olympic symbol with five unhappy faces and one happy face just to depict the artist’s feelings about the Games. You know, one happy face, but mostly unhappy faces. It had to be taken down. That was challenged and then eventually was put back up.
But to come back to this, to this weird struggle, you know, in a North American city, where murals have to be debated based on their feelings about—based on their statements about these Olympic Games, was—it was surreal.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s amazing to think, since we certainly didn’t get it in all the glitz, that Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is the poorest postal code in all of Canada?
AARON MATÉ: It is, yeah. And what’s striking is that it’s literally just blocks from the main Olympic sites. Really, some of the things that we saw—that department store, where people are lined up down the block just to buy merchandise, it’s about a few blocks away from where the Tent Village was and where residents occupied this vacant condo lot for two weeks. But yeah, the poverty there is striking. It’s visible everywhere.
AMY GOODMAN: And the tent city did have a victory.
AARON MATÉ: It did. It was amazing. This actually was just announced yesterday. This condo lot was a contentious place, and people were quite nervous about it when it was first purchased. It’s seen as a site of gentrification. And so it was taken over, and people brought in tents, over forty tents. There were campfires, people watching around the clock. They demanded housing, and they got it. The city awarded housing to forty-one people. Every single homeless person that was living at tent city that they could account for have now been given a place in social housing.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much for an excellent report, Aaron, and it’s nice to have you back. Aaron Maté, Democracy Now! producer.
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AMY GOODMAN: A poem from Leafdrift, could you share with us?
DENNIS BRUTUS: Right, I think it would be appropriate to read a poem which is actually about our current protest. You may know, and I think you covered it on Democracy Now!, when we were marching against Kofi Annan and Colin Powell and the World Summit on Sustainable Development, people were marching from the ghettos, from the townships, to this expensive suburb called Santon, where you had this enormous expense, you know, lavish expenditure and talk about making the world a better place, when in fact the world was becoming a worse place. So, we have a poem about it, and I’m going to read that, which is just about the march.
When we marched,
Slithered
Through slimy mud past riot-shielded cops in Alexander
(This is the ghetto.)
While children peered wild-eyed from dark windows,
For some of us these were re-runs of earlier apartheid-burdened days.
But, then, it was defiant resolution that drove our hearts and braced our feet.
Now, sadness at betrayal sat sadly on our hearts.
Our shouted slogans hung heavy over us in grimy air.
We winced at familiar oft-repeated lies
Oft-repeated lies.
- A poem from Leafdrift
June 11, 2010
"Upside Down World Cup": Raj Patel on How South Africa Has Cracked Down on the Poor and the Shack Dwellers’ Movement Ahead of the World Cup
Worldcup
As the 2010 World Cup opens in South Africa, Raj Patel looks at one of the most overlooked aspects of this year’s tournament: the ongoing struggle of tens of thousands of shack dwellers across the country. Over the past year, shack settlement leaders in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town have been chased from their homes by gangs, arrested, detained without hearing, and assaulted. As the World Cup begins, a shack dwellers’ movement known as Abahlali baseMjondolo is mounting what they call an "Upside Down World Cup" campaign to draw attention to their plight. [includes rush transcript]
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Guest:
Raj Patel, visiting scholar at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, an honorary research fellow at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. He administers the website of the Abahlali baseMjondolo shack dwellers organization at www.abahlali.org. He is also the author of The Value of Nothing: How to Reshape Market Society and Reclaim Democracy.
Rush Transcript
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* Raj Patel: "Off-Side at the World Cup"
AMY GOODMAN: Angelique Kidjo, performing before tens of thousands of people at the World Cup concert in Soweto’s Orlando Stadium in South Africa Thursday. And you can go to our website to see a full interview with Angelique that we did in Copenhagen at the climate change summit. That’s right, today is the opening day of the 2010 World Cup, the most-watched sporting event on the planet. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan Gonzalez.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Yes, once every four years, the world comes to a standstill as an estimated one billion people across the globe tune in to watch countries compete in what is known as "The Beautiful Game," football, or soccer, as it’s called here in the United States. For four weeks, thirty-two countries compete in sixty-four matches to vie for the World Cup trophy, perhaps the most coveted prize in all of sports.
This year, the World Cup is being held in South Africa. It’s the first time in history the tournament is held on the African continent. An estimated 350,000 people are expected to visit South Africa for the competition.
AMY GOODMAN: Last night, tens of thousands of people gathered in Soweto’s Orlando Stadium for a celebration concert that featured African stars Angelique Kidjo, Amadou & Mariam, Hugh Masekela, as well as stars from around the world, including Shakira and John Legend and Black Eyed Peas. One of the keynote speakers of the night was South African archbishop and Nobel Peace Prize winner, Desmond Tutu.
DESMOND TUTU: Welcome you all! For Africa is the cradle of humanity! So we welcome you home, all of you! All of you—Germans, French—every single one of you. We are all Africans! We’re all Africans! Oh! Hoo-hoo, hoo-hoo-hoo! And we want to say to the world, thank you for helping this ugly, ugly, ugly worm—caterpillar, which we were, to become—to become a beautiful, beautiful butterfly. We are a beautiful, beautiful butterfly!
JUAN GONZALEZ: At the time of this broadcast, the opening ceremony of the World Cup is underway in Johannesburg. One person that is notably absent from the event is Nelson Mandela. South Africa’s iconic anti-apartheid leader and first black president is mourning the death of his thirteen-year-old great granddaughter, Zenani, who was killed in a car crash as she returned from last night’s concert.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, one of the most overlooked aspects of this year’s World Cup is the ongoing struggle of tens of thousands of shack dwellers across the country. Over the past year, shack settlement leaders in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town have been chased from their homes by gangs, arrested, detained without hearing, and assaulted. As the World Cup begins, a shack dwellers’ movement is mounting what they’re calling "Upside Down World Cup" campaign, to draw attention to their plight.
Raj Patel is a visiting scholar at the Center for African Studies at UC Berkeley, an honorary research fellow at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. He administers the website—well, you’re going to have to say the name of the website, Raj. Tell us the website and what is happening in South Africa.
RAJ PATEL: OK, so the website is Abahlali—A-B-A-H-L-A-L-I.org. And the organization is called the Abahlali baseMjondolo, which is Zulu for “people who live in shacks.” Now, the reason this is an interesting organization is because when we’re seeing all the joy around the World Cup, it’s important to remember, of course, that the World Cup is not an unalloyed good. Not everyone in South Africa is benefiting from the World Cup. And in fact, you know, FIFA, the organization that organizes the World Cup, the Federation of—sorry, the International Federation of Football Associations, is an incredibly powerful organization that in many ways has sort of commandeered the willing South African government to be able to rearrange the country to make it more football- and corporation-friendly.
And so, around all the stadiums, for example, the stadia, are exclusion zones, where street traders have been moved away—informal traders, in some circles as they’re known—and in which a beautification campaign has been carried out. Of course, I mean, this isn’t a terribly new idea. I mean, the sporting events around the world, when they happen in the Global South, have usually been alibis for a few corporations and a few people to profit massively and for governments to engage in what they seem to—what they call beautification, or what more rightly is called gentrification and privatization.
Now, what’s happening in South Africa is very interesting. We’ve seen billions of dollars of subsidy given by the South African government to FIFA. But we’re seeing in the mainstream media stories coming up about how, while a few people, you know, tourists, are enjoying the World Cup, and the World Cup is being broadcast around the world, and while FIFA clearly has the power to get someone like K’naan to rewrite his song, we’re also seeing that poor people are excluded from the World Cup. And that’s an important narrative for us to have. It’s important to see that, for example, informal traders are being moved away. Or, for example, in Durban, artisanal fisherpeople, people who were normally allowed to fish from the piers in Durban, a struggle for which they fought very hard—it was one of the sort of key demands for certain people in the anti-apartheid struggle, is the freedom to be able to fish wherever you like—well, those rights have been rolled back for the duration of the World Cup.
And civil rights have been suspended in some places. I mean, today, for example, there was meant to be a protest in Johannesburg demanding education rights for everyone. But the government has denied the rights—denied the protest permission to march, because the police are otherwise occupied guarding the tourists and making sure that FIFA’s property and intellectual property is being safely guarded.
Now, what the shack dwellers have been saying—and shack dwellers throughout South Africa number in over a million households—shack dwellers are saying that, "Well, actually, we know—and this is a verbatim quote from S’bu Zikode, who is the head of Abahlali baseMjondolo, the president of the organization. He said, “We know that our names are being used to"—we know that—sorry, "We know that we’re going to be excluded, but our names are being used to justify the goodness of our country in the world. But the country is divided. There are certain people who are benefiting, and we are excluded. We want to tell the other side of the story.”
And so, the way that they’re trying going to tell the story is by making themselves visible. Some shack dwellers in Cape Town, for example, will be breaking the exclusion zone to set up shacks to show people how they live. And this is an important counter-narrative, because when the media sort of comes in and tells stories about poor people, what often gets left out is the fact that poor people are not just sitting there twiddling their thumbs. They are organizing, and they are using the World Cup, just as the World Cup is using them. And so, they’re using the World Cup as an opportunity to show the rest of the world how they live and the conditions in which they have been left to wait for development to come. So, in Cape Town, for example, there will be shack dwellers outside the exclusion zone—or sorry, within the exclusion zone, and there is a danger that they will be arrested.
And within Durban, shack dwellers who were chased from their homes last year will be trying to get back into their communities. They’ve been asked back by the communities that—where the violence that excluded them happened. And they’ve been asked back, in large part, by women. Now, the organizing that shack dweller organizations like Abahlali do are the kind of organizing that are actually very gender-sensitive. They provide childcare, they provide HIV/AIDS drop-in centers, all the things that are desperately needed in communities of poor people. And, of course, when we hear the World Cup, when we hear stories about the World Cup, gender is the one thing that gets dropped out. And so, what we’re seeing is a demand from women in shacks for their leadership and for organizations to come back and to provide support. And so, in this moment of World Cup celebration, what organizations of poor people are hoping is that the world media will pay a little bit of attention to what they’re doing and to provide some cover for the organizing that will happen long after the World Cup ends and the final whistle blows.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And Raj, I’d like to ask you, about $6 billion was spent in the building of these various stadiums. How did the government finance all of this, given the huge problems and disparities, income disparities, that still exist in the country?
RAJ PATEL: Well, I mean, debt is the main way. I mean, the government has siphoned resources away from other projects, and there’s been a huge opportunity cost. This is money that shack dwellers and other people have been saying could have been going to housing, could have been going to education, could have been going to healthcare. But it’s been diverted to provide these white elephant stadiums, as Desmond Tutu called them, stadiums that will be scaled back or, in some cases, left to rot after the final whistle blows.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Raj Patel, we want to thank you very much for being with us. Among everything else, he is the author of The Value of Nothing: How to Reshape Market Society and Reclaim Democracy.
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South Africa’s Poor Targeted by Evictions, Attacks in Advance of 2010 World Cup
October 01, 2009 | Story
Thousands of South Africans are being displaced in preparation for the 2010 World Cup. While Durban completes the finishing touches on its new stadium, thousands of the city's poor who live in …
March 02, 2010
In the Shadow of the Olympic Flame: A Report from the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, the Poorest Neighborhood in Canada
Mate-olympic-democracynow
The 2010 Winter Olympics have wrapped up in Vancouver, Canada. The Olympic flame has been doused, and a return to normalcy has begun for a city thrust onto the world stage. Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté traveled to Vancouver to look at an issue lost in the two-week spectacle, the struggles of a low-income community in the Olympics’ shadow. [includes rush transcript]
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"In The Shadow of the Olympic Flame", produced by Aaron Maté with help from Democracy Now!'s Nicole Salazar & Hany Massoud and Julius Fisher of Vancouver's Working TV as well as the Vancouver Media Co-op.
Aaron Maté, Democracy Now! producer
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* Photographer Kike Arnal & Ralph Nader on "In the Shadow of Power: Poverty in Washington, DC"
Rush Transcript
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AMY GOODMAN: The 2010 Winter Olympics have wrapped up in Vancouver, Canada. The Olympic flame has been doused, and a return to normalcy has begun for a city thrust onto the world stage.
Well, Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté traveled to Vancouver to look at an issue lost in the two-week spectacle: the struggles of a low-income community in the Olympics’ shadow. He filed this report.
AARON MATÉ: For two weeks, Olympic fever gripped Vancouver’s downtown core. Thousands of people flooded the streets, the logos of corporate sponsors on display at nearly every turn. At the Olympic Superstore, shoppers lined up for several blocks just to buy official merchandise.
OLYMPIC SUPERSTORE REP: There’s tons of people from all over the world with different languages, and they’re coming here because this is the official Olympic Superstore. So everything in here is official with the Olympic. It has the little rings and all that kind of stuff. We have about thirty-two different licensees in here, so we have a wide assortment of products, from a 59-cent postcard to a $7,500 canoe.
AARON MATÉ: The Vancouver Olympics saw a mass display of civic and national pride. But they’ve also intensified a struggle over what kind of a city is left behind. For many people, the front lines of that struggle are in a neighborhood called the Downtown Eastside.
PROTESTERS: 2010 homes, not 2010 Games! 2010 homes, not 2010 Games! Homes, not games! Homes, not games! Homes, not games!
AARON MATÉ: It’s just a short walk from the Olympic festivities, but the Downtown Eastside can feel worlds apart. An area of fifteen square blocks, it’s the poorest postal code in Canada. It has the highest HIV infection rate in North America, an outgrowth of rampant drug use and prostitution. But for decades, right through the Olympics, it’s also been a community of resistance.
PROTESTER: What we have in the Downtown Eastside is the most impacted and one of the most devastated communities as a result of the 2010 Olympic Games. People are being pushed out. People are being shoved around. People are being thrown into jails. And yet, we’re standing here, because this community always fights back and always resists with courage and with love. Thank you, everyone, for being here.
AARON MATÉ: The Winter Olympics cost around $6 billion, nearly $1 billion on security alone. That’s seen as an affront in the Downtown Eastside, where residents have fought to preserve the social services that can mean life or death for many vulnerable people. Libby Davies is a member of the Canadian Parliament.
LIBBY DAVIES: In many cities across North America, inner cities have either been demolished, gentrified, wiped out, or people just left in misery. In this neighborhood, there has been a struggle for more than thirty years to fight back and to say, “This is our community. We have a right to be here. We have a right to live in dignity, in good housing, with parks, with a community center.” And so, this struggle goes on.
ELAINE DUROCHER, DTES Power of Women Group: I think what the effects of the Olympics, that it has on us, is that it takes all the monies away from the poor people, and it puts it all towards—to Olympic venues, the Games, the building, the construction. They forgot about us.
AARON MATÉ: The Vancouver Olympics were initially billed as the world’s first socially sustainable Games. But one key legacy is a squeeze on low-income housing. Harsha Walia is an organizer with the Downtown Eastside Women’s Center and the Olympic Resistance Network.
HARSHA WALIA: The Olympics has spurred on real estate speculation and construction in Vancouver, in general. And the Downtown Eastside has kind of been the last bastion for condo developers. And since the Olympic bid, we’ve seen approximately 1,800 units of market housing and condominiums being built in the Downtown Eastside, while we’ve lost approximately 1,300 units of low-income housing.
AARON MATÉ: The real estate boom has coincided with a contentious record on social housing. Low-income homes have been built, but not enough to meet demand. David Cadman is a Vancouver city councilor.
DAVID CADMAN: The major issue that we wanted to solve with these Olympics, we had a social inclusivity agreement with the national and provincial governments, and our hope was that we would begin to deal with the homelessness crisis in this city.
AARON MATÉ: The social inclusivity agreement spoke of creating a housing legacy and protecting low-income residents from evictions. Am Johal is chair of the Impact on Communities Coalition, which tried to work with Olympic organizers.
AM JOHAL: Literally years after the bid began, civil society organizations were sidelined. Reports that were written, like the Housing Table, which recommended 3,200 units of housing over four years, these reports were essentially shelved. So the commitments that were made ended up being more in the realm of marketing and public relations than a document that was substantive or something that could actually be—that we could hold governments to account.
AARON MATÉ: The Olympic Athlete’s Village was to be the centerpiece of the Games’ social housing legacy. Two hundred and fifty units are designated for social housing after the athletes leave town. But the village has been a financial disaster. After the global economic crisis, private financing collapsed, forcing the city to put up around $1 billion to finish construction. With that kind of price tag, the social housing units could be sold off.
AM JOHAL: This has happened—happening exactly at the same time as Olympic infrastructure was being built, like speed skating ovals and luge tracks. In the case of security, we have $900 million being spent over—you know, literally over a two-month period. And so, these one-time costs, it’s very difficult not to compare them to the lack of social investment that’s going on.
AARON MATÉ: The focus on private development over social housing is felt all over the city. Just two months before the Olympic Games, developers began bulldozing one of the oldest social housing projects in Canada. Built in the 1950s, the Little Mountain housing complex was home to over 700 people.
ELLEN WOODSWORTH: Two hundred twenty-four units of perfectly good social housing were torn down. It would have taken as little as $10,000 per unit to fix them up. Fifteen acres of public land was sold off to the highest corporate bidder.
AARON MATÉ: That’s Vancouver City Council member Ellen Woodsworth. She took us to the ruins of Little Mountain on her sixth day of a seven-day hunger strike for a national housing program in Canada. Woodsworth tried to prevent the demolition and now fights to ensure the social housing units are replaced. But there are no guarantees.
ELLEN WOODSWORTH: This is really just so terrible that you would take people out of perfectly good housing and destroy a site and just leave it vacant. This could be empty for ten years. This developer has no experience with building housing. It’s just such a tragedy when this whole country—if you got, you know, thousands of people homeless in Vancouver, and you got 200,000 people homeless across the country, and twelve people in BC have died from homelessness each year, it’s outrageous that they would have done this.
AARON MATÉ: One building prevented the demolition of their homes. But developers vow to force them out. Back in the Downtown Eastside, residents are also standing up. On day four of the Olympics, hundreds of people took over a vacant lot owned by a major condo developer, erecting Tent Village.
STELLA AUGUST, DTES Power of Women Group: It’s to stand for the government to see that our people need homes. We need them now. And we’re desperate for these people, because we have too many people getting sick and dying, out sleeping out in the cold.
RICKY, Olympic Tent Village: This is part of my family down here. And I’m going to—I don’t give a care if I get arrested or not. I am a warrior, because I am handicapped. I am sick and tired of what the police are doing to the Aboriginal people. They’re beaten up with sticks, and they’re being dragged by their hair. I have—I’m one of them, that’s got the same thing as the brothers and sisters out there. To me, it’s rough to live down here, because people walk by and they look at us like we’re garbage.
ERIC CASTONGUAY, Olympic Tent Village: They want us to get out of here. But like we said, we’re going to stay here until we win.
AARON MATÉ: So what are you painting here?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN, Olympic Tent Village: I’m painting “Housing is a human right.”
AARON MATÉ: And you’re staying here in the tent city?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Yes, I am.
AARON MATÉ: And why are you here? Why are you taking part in this?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Why am I taking part? Because I believe that people have a right to have a house. People have a right to have somewhere to be called their own.
AARON MATÉ: And how long do you plan to stay?
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: I plan on staying here as long as necessary.
PETER DERANGE, Olympic Tent Village: I am homeless also, myself. I have no place to stay. So I come here to a supportive tent city. Maybe we can bring attention to the world what is happening to the [inaudible]. The richest country in the world, and us native people and all other people who are homeless, we are forced to live in the streets.
AARON MATÉ: Down the street from Tent Village, a large crowd has gathered for the Women’s Memorial March. It’s held every year to honor the over 3,000 missing and murdered women in Canada since the 1970s, one of many issues disproportionately affecting the country’s indigenous population. Today, over thirty women are reported missing from the Downtown Eastside.
MOTHER OF MISSING DAUGHTER: I’m here to remember my daughter. Her remains were found four years after she went missing.
BROTHER OF MISSING SISTER: My sister was twenty-six years old when she was reported missing.
GLENDENE GRANT: My daughter Jessie Foster went missing March 29, 2006.
AUNT OF TAMARA LYNN CHIPMAN: My niece Tamara Lynn Chipman went missing out of Prince Rupert, September 21st, 2005.
AARON MATÉ: A local farmer, Robert Pickton, has been convicted of killing six women and is accused in the deaths of at least twenty others. Organizers want a public inquiry into how police respond to reports of missing women and whether any deaths could have been avoided.
WOMEN’S MEMORIAL MARCHER: As soon as maybe someone that is of a richer—from a richer family, as soon as they go missing, a lady goes missing, they have investigations. But our ladies don’t get investigated.
FAY BLANEY, Aboriginal Women’s Action Network: The police are extremely unresponsive. The entire justice system is unresponsive to missing and murdered Aboriginal women, not just in BC, but all across the country.
DALANNAH GAIL BOWEN, Musician: We deserve to be respected. We deserve to be treated like human beings.
AARON MATÉ: This is the march’s nineteenth year. This year, city officials approached organizers about canceling it during Olympic festivities. But the march committee held its ground, and the largest-ever crowd turned out.
The Olympic Committee wanted this march to be delayed.
FAY BLANEY: They did, yes. You know, we’re here to stand up for the missing and murdered Aboriginal women, and they’re not going to stop us. They can try, which they did. The police came and met with our organizing committee, but we’re not willing to hold back the march.
DOROTHY CHRISTIAN, DTES Resident: This is absolutely incredible. And it’s beautiful, you know, that all the people have come out. And I’m glad that the VANOC committee wasn’t able to cancel it, that the people stood by their guns and that the people in this community in the Downtown Eastside are able to maintain their presence throughout the Olympics.
AARON MATÉ: As the most underprivileged neighborhood in a port city overrun with heroin, cocaine and crystal meth, the Downtown Eastside’s drug epidemic is staggering. It’s now the most concentrated area of drug use in North America.
LIBBY DAVIES: That’s been a tremendous transformation in the neighborhood. Like, it could have been one of those issues where people got divided between good people and bad people, good citizens, bad citizens. And what happened was that people came together, and the drug users themselves started speaking out and saying, “We have rights. And we need healthcare, and we need housing, and we need to have our rights respected.”
AARON MATÉ: One outgrowth of this movement is the Portland Hotel Society, which runs domiciles for people living with issues including drug addiction, mental health disorders and HIV. The Portland also runs Insite, the only safe-injection clinic in North America. It faces the constant threat of closure from the right-wing Canadian government. Mark Townsend is the Portland’s executive director.
MARK TOWNSEND: It came about because in the projects that we were working in, which were primary housing projects down here, people were dying. They were overdosing. And also they were, you know, sharing rigs, or if they were using the alleys, they were using puddle water and stuff. And it seemed that that didn’t seem right. And it seemed that maybe we could do something to make it a little bit better for people who are so pushed to the margins of society.
AARON MATÉ: How long have you been coming to Insite?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: I guess pretty much since I’ve been a user of needles, about three years. They’re great people here.
AARON MATÉ: How often do you come here?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: Probably about three, four times a day, minimum.
MARK TOWNSEND: Insite has taken over one million injections off the streets of Vancouver. It’s also had around $3.5 million of studies. And it concludes that there are some basic things that are obvious. It does reduce the spread of HIV and AIDS, because obviously all the equipment is clean. Addicts that use this place are more likely to go to detox and treatment.
Despite the fact that the provincial or state government here, the police, the local city government all support this, the federal government, even though they don’t fund it, do not support it. They won’t believe the evidence. And they funded all the research, and all the research is relatively positive. They just do not believe it, and they don’t like it, so they have dragged us and a couple of addicts here through court. We’ve won them every single time.
AARON MATÉ: If this place were to close down, how would that impact your life?
UNIDENTIFIED ADDICT: Quite a bit, actually, because, like, I know the staff here. They’re great people. This is a great place. I mean, it’s safe. You can come in here and shoot up, like, and not have to worry about the police come in and, like, arrest you.
MARK TOWNSEND: Well, the immediate fact is like a million injections will be back on the streets and in the alleys and in the hotel rooms. The long-term effect is people will die. Disease will spread. People will be less likely to go to detox and treatment. And it will cost the healthcare service more money.
AARON MATÉ: Although Insite has taken over a million injections off the street, the widespread drug use still seen on corners and in alleyways underscores the severity of the Downtown Eastside drug crisis. It’s easy to feel horrified and judgmental. Those who work here urge compassion.
HARSHA WALIA: I work predominantly with women, and I can say, confidence, that approximately 70 percent of women that I know who turn to drugs turn to drugs because of childhood trauma of sexual assault and of child apprehension. And, you know, addictions are a—they’re a symptom of something. They’re not anything in and of themselves. And there’s reasons why people are addicted, why people are drinking, why people are forced into these desperate situations.
AARON MATÉ: The many problems notwithstanding, what’s also unmistakable here, and voiced by almost anyone you talk to, is a sense of community.
DOROTHY CHRISTIAN: The people look out for each other. You know, I don’t think that that happens much anywhere, you know, in any of the large city urban centers across the world.
GURU NANAK’S FREE KITCHEN: This is the Guru Nanak’s Free Kitchen, that we serve about a thousand meals every Saturday and every Sunday.
AARON MATÉ: After many years of doing this, what’s your sense of the homeless problem right now in Vancouver?
GURU NANAK’S FREE KITCHEN: It’s been increased. We’ve seen new members. We’ve seen new people on the streets. And a lot of the guys may not be homeless, but they can’t afford to feed themselves.
AARON MATÉ: Before the Olympics, a group of media activists established the Vancouver Media Co-op. Co-founder Dawn Palley.
DAWN PALEY: It’s a place for media makers who believe in social justice and who are part of movements or who are in support of movements—environmental justice, migrant justice, and specifically like anti-colonial, anti-capitalist struggles—to come together, to share ideas, to put up pieces, to work together, to support each other in media. We do trainings. People can access machines here. And yeah, we meet once a week, and now that it’s convergence, we’ve been here pretty much 24/7.
WENDY PEDERSEN, Carnegie Community Action Project: We fought for labor rights in this neighborhood. We squatted to get a park. We had to squat to get a—fight to get a community center. And now—and we fought and scratched and scraped for housing. So it’s no surprise that the community spirit to fight for social justice is still alive and well in the Downtown Eastside. And people are waking up, and they’re organizing.
HARSHA WALIA: When women are going missing and when women are being murdered in this neighborhood, the people who find out are not the cops. The people who are looking out for each other are other women in the neighborhood, who are looking out for women’s safety when they’re out working late at night on the streets.
AARON MATÉ: On the morning of the opening ceremonies, just hours before the Games began, the provincial government of British Columbia announced a $10 million cut to programs for at-risk children. That’s just one part. Days after the Olympics closed, the government will come out with its next budget, and many expect that to have major cuts to education, to housing, to healthcare and the arts.
DAVID CADMAN: So we’re faced with a situation where we’ve spent a lot of money, not so much the city, but the national and provincial government, on these Olympics, and yet the plight of poor and homeless people is not going to get better as a consequence to these Olympics. And it’s, in reality, going to get worse.
STELLA AUGUST: It’s The government needs to get their priorities straight and see us on the map here, you know, and recognize us and acknowledge us. Our people here, we’re just as here when—as the rich people. You know, even though we’re not as rich as they are, but we are rich in heart for caring and loving and respecting our people here in our country.
AARON MATÉ: On the Games’ last day, people across Canada celebrated as the men’s national hockey team defeated the United States in the gold medal game. In the Downtown Eastside, there was a different cause for celebration. Less than two weeks after occupying that vacant condo lot, forty-one homeless people living in Tent Village won a promise from the city to be placed in social housing.
LILY LONCAR, DTES Residents Association: Many have been homeless for a long time. And one guy, awesome guy, he hasn’t slept in a bed in eight years, and he’s got a place. He’s got his own apartment. And he’s ecstatic. And we’re all pretty stoked today. None of that would have happened without the Tent Village. There’s just no way. No way. It’s the Tent Village, it’s people fighting in solidarity for their rights that got people housed today and yesterday.
AARON MATÉ: A victory in the shadow of the Olympic flame.
For Democracy Now!, I’m Aaron Maté.
AMY GOODMAN: With special thanks to Democracy Now!’s Nicole Salazar and Hany Massoud, as well as Julius Fisher of Vancouver’s Working TV and the Vancouver Media Co-op.
In these last few minutes, we’re joined by Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté.
What was it like, Aaron, to go home? Going to Vancouver was actually going home for you.
AARON MATÉ: It was. It’s interesting, Amy. You leave, and you come back, and on the one hand there’s this huge hoopla and people in downtown celebrating. There were zip lines fastened to buildings, and people were literally flying over your head, screaming and hollering, and there’s a lot of sort of celebration.
But one thing, actually, we didn’t get to in this piece was sort of this neo-authoritarian push that came along with these Olympics. There was a censorship put on artists, people who had to—if they took Olympic funding, had to sign contracts vowing not to criticize the Olympic Committee or the Games.
And in one case, one gallery actually had to paint over a mural it had put up of the Olympic symbol with five unhappy faces and one happy face just to depict the artist’s feelings about the Games. You know, one happy face, but mostly unhappy faces. It had to be taken down. That was challenged and then eventually was put back up.
But to come back to this, to this weird struggle, you know, in a North American city, where murals have to be debated based on their feelings about—based on their statements about these Olympic Games, was—it was surreal.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s amazing to think, since we certainly didn’t get it in all the glitz, that Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is the poorest postal code in all of Canada?
AARON MATÉ: It is, yeah. And what’s striking is that it’s literally just blocks from the main Olympic sites. Really, some of the things that we saw—that department store, where people are lined up down the block just to buy merchandise, it’s about a few blocks away from where the Tent Village was and where residents occupied this vacant condo lot for two weeks. But yeah, the poverty there is striking. It’s visible everywhere.
AMY GOODMAN: And the tent city did have a victory.
AARON MATÉ: It did. It was amazing. This actually was just announced yesterday. This condo lot was a contentious place, and people were quite nervous about it when it was first purchased. It’s seen as a site of gentrification. And so it was taken over, and people brought in tents, over forty tents. There were campfires, people watching around the clock. They demanded housing, and they got it. The city awarded housing to forty-one people. Every single homeless person that was living at tent city that they could account for have now been given a place in social housing.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much for an excellent report, Aaron, and it’s nice to have you back. Aaron Maté, Democracy Now! producer.
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Wednesday, June 16, 2010
COMMENT ON: Ghana: The Nigerian press should stop fooling itself!
COMMENT ON: Ghana: The Nigerian press should stop fooling itself!
Posted by Newslive Top Stories, West Africa Jun 15, 2010
The Nigerian magazine
No Responses for “Ghana: The Nigerian press should stop fooling itself!”
1.
Nana Akyea Mensah, TheOdikro says:
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
June 16, 2010 at 9:03 pm
This is a very sad and pathetic article written by a man who has not spared the slightest opportunity in the past, to create any conceivable wedge between our two sister nations. I am a Ghanaian, but I feel very ashamed of the contents of this very unfortunate article. It is about time Africa focuses more on what unites us than divide us and to see those busy at the works for what they are!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
Posted by Newslive Top Stories, West Africa Jun 15, 2010
The Nigerian magazine
No Responses for “Ghana: The Nigerian press should stop fooling itself!”
1.
Nana Akyea Mensah, TheOdikro says:
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
June 16, 2010 at 9:03 pm
This is a very sad and pathetic article written by a man who has not spared the slightest opportunity in the past, to create any conceivable wedge between our two sister nations. I am a Ghanaian, but I feel very ashamed of the contents of this very unfortunate article. It is about time Africa focuses more on what unites us than divide us and to see those busy at the works for what they are!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
Comment: What Money, Ignorant Hanger-On ?
Comment: What Money, Ignorant Hanger-On ?
Author: Jato Julor (J.J.) Rawlings
Date: 2010-06-16 14:32:13
Comment to: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY?
Grandson, I do agree with you!
Nimrod, have you read the Ghana@50 corruption galore? What about the gold chains Kufour used the tax payers money to buy for him to hang on his wrinckled neck, MP aka Nimrod alias Royal Enoch? Don't you know by development, they mean only those who are lazy go hungry? That this was even a special concession given at the Tweneboa Kodua School Park Abuakwa, in the Atwima-Nwabiagya District? Are you not aware that this followed the declaration at Kasoa that hungry Ghanaians were non-existent? "Ghanaians are not hungry" said he to his hungry supporters! And then later, "they are hungry because they are lazy! Some development models to be proud of indeed!!! Hahaha he thinks it is very easy for Ghanaians to forget such impudence!
There is victory for us, Comrade Nimrod! Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Author: Jato Julor (J.J.) Rawlings
Date: 2010-06-16 14:32:13
Comment to: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY?
Grandson, I do agree with you!
Nimrod, have you read the Ghana@50 corruption galore? What about the gold chains Kufour used the tax payers money to buy for him to hang on his wrinckled neck, MP aka Nimrod alias Royal Enoch? Don't you know by development, they mean only those who are lazy go hungry? That this was even a special concession given at the Tweneboa Kodua School Park Abuakwa, in the Atwima-Nwabiagya District? Are you not aware that this followed the declaration at Kasoa that hungry Ghanaians were non-existent? "Ghanaians are not hungry" said he to his hungry supporters! And then later, "they are hungry because they are lazy! Some development models to be proud of indeed!!! Hahaha he thinks it is very easy for Ghanaians to forget such impudence!
There is victory for us, Comrade Nimrod! Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Comment to: Re: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY?
Read Article
Comment: THEY SHALL AVOID THIS QUESTION! #1
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-16 13:39:16
Comment to: Re: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY?
A very good question! What happened to the money? What do they have to show for it? Their private residences and the expensive cars? I wonder what these property stealing demonic rats call progress! The kind of economy they were growing was one that was good for the vulture capitalists to swallow with ease! They call it boom and bust, but with each boom, they make money, and with each bust, they make even more! Ghana under Kufour was like a sheep that was been fattened by the owner for the slaughter! Remember Argentina's famous crisis? Iceland? Greece? And very soon Spain and Portugal? The UK government is already talking of austerity measures. As millions on our planet are condemned to poverty, a very tiny minority of the world's super rich are becoming even richer by buying devalued properties, lands, industries for the penny on the dollar! The great capitalist swindle is what we must be worried about when planning our national development programme. I am confident that the Nkrumahist perspectives have been proven the most foresighted vision in Africa and most of the third world, with the notable exception of Cuba, which took a direct communist path and survived to improve the lives of the poorest of the poor in Cuban society, despite severe economic blockades by the US. It is more organised to resist hurricanes as well as the on-going world economic tsunami! I am yet to make up my mind on any particular CPP candidate. Needless to say that merely being a daughter of my hero shall not suffice. Samia needs to open up her own forum and build a comprehensive programme under a broad consensus of credible progressive alternatives to the current system, such as the Ghana Socialist Forum which comprises most of the progressive organisations on the ground.
Capitalism is not the solution, it is the problem. Social Democracy is not a part of the solution either, it is a part of the problem. What the capitalists of Wall Street proved to the whole world at the onset of the current crisis is the ideological and practical superiority of socialism over capitalism. Samia needs to be very clear from the beginning, or she can forget about it! I advice her to patronise the Accra Freedom Centre, which his senior brother, Dr. Francis Nkrumah, who knows the ground better than Samia, inaugurated a few years ago and which is gathering the progressive segments of our society at the grassroots level. Our way forward must first be discussed and owned by a broad section of Ghana's progressive community before it stands any chance of success as a viable political programme. Fortunately some people did not wait. Samia can help improve and build on this tradition. Our leader shall definately emerge out of this project!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!! Cheers!
COMMENT ON GHANA-NIGERIA RELATIONS: STOP THE IMPERIALIST DIVIDE AND RULE CAMPAIGN NOW!!!
Read Article
Comment: STOP THE IMPERIALIST DIVIDE AND RULE...
Author: Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Date: 2010-06-16 10:44:22
Comment to: STUPID NIGERIAN
Hi Ken,
STOP THE IMPERIALIST DIVIDE AND RULE CAMPAIGN NOW!!!
Of all the problems we are facing on this continent of ours, following Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr, to create a wedge between Ghanaians and Nigerians is indeed the most stupid one! If anyone says there are Ghanaians holding their passports, it is simply their problem, not ours! Would it not have been nice to see the statistics behind our "learned professor's" assertion that: "In other words, an unacceptably high percentage of Nigerians resident in Ghana was alleged to be engaged in either criminal and/or morally reprehensible activities. In the case of the latter element, the key players were largely women"?
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!! Cheers!
--Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro. Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
COMMENT ON FACEBOOK: PV Obeng hit the nail…chronicle Editorial
Ken Amakye Ansah-Yeboah: PV Obeng hit the nail…chronicle Editorial
Ken's Notes|Notes about Ken|Ken's Profile
Nana Akyea Mensah
It is not the political parties that need to come together to plan for all of us, if we must escape this trap. It is the people who need to inform themselves, irrespective of political 'suation. The reason political parties in power manufacture these programmes is not for "national development", but to create "jobs for the boys".
The more the ... See Morepeople show concern for genuine national development programmes, the less the parties would be the audacity of the party in power to play politics with this issue. It makes no sense to ask political parties with conflicting ideological perspectives on development issues to draw a dynamic programme. We have to make a fundamental choice to be a neocolonial state or an independent state seeking to consolidate this with other African states with one history and one common destiny! So far as the NPP remains an agent of neocolonialism, whatever they may propose for our national Ndevelopment is bound to buttress our economic underdevelopment. So far as the NDC remains a social democratic party, it shall continue to accommodate the neoliberal paradise of the international banksters and their monopoly capital at the expense of the poor and the marginalised.
A true national development initiative must be a grass root affair and a subject of mass education. The pros and cons must be openly debated. Corporatist measures that are socially exclusive and corporate dominated by way of profits reduce us into the slaves of capital. There is a line to cross. We must go back to study the last serious attempt to develop the country. We must revive the Nkrumah development plan.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
Corporate Media Blackout of Kofi Adu-Brempong Shooting
Corporate Media Blackout of Kofi Adu-Brempong Shooting
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
COMMENT ON CNN: To Susan Rice, On Darfur and the ICC: The US Must Lead By Example!
Read article: Special reps brief U.N. Security Council on Sudan
By Evan Buxbaum, CNN
June 15, 2010 -- Updated 0229 GMT (1029 HKT)
"...in recent months, the US government has declared its interest in working more closely with the ICC – not with the intent of becoming a party to the Rome Statute (the ICC treaty), but to help execute arrest warrants." (See Samar Al-Bulushi and Adam Branch wrote: AFRICOM and the ICC: Enforcing international justice in Africa?).
Human rights can only be protected in an atmosphere of the rule of law. To police Africa, the USA must not be seen as operating above the law. You cannot commit your own genocides with impunity whilst pretending to clear this up! The reason given by the US government to remove their signature from the ICC instead of ratifying it was that “politicized prosecutions and investigations” could result in Americans being brought before the ICC.”
Meanwhile, “politicized prosecutions and investigations” is exactly what Parliamentarians from member-countries of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in Africa are complaining of. They are accusing the Court for selectively pursuing justice by focusing on investigating suspected criminals mainly from this continent: "while the ICC is keen on investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity in Kenya, Uganda, Sudan, the Court is sitting on numerous complaints against Western leaders who are accused of causing untold suffering from wars they started in the Middle East... They said that the ICC appears to act under influence of some Western powers who use it as an instrument to weed out leaders who are against their policies in Africa."
“The ICC as a court per see is innocent. Our problem is that the process of indictment is usually politicised. For instance, the United States’ voice is loudest yet it isn’t a member of the ICC. But those who are members but with little international influence cannot have their grievances listened to,” said Isaac Musumba, Uganda’s Minister for Regional Co-operation."
The ICC's very credibility is at stake for contemplating the use of USAfriCom as its police force. The people of Africa do not want to see a US that is not only above the laws of genocide and war crimes, Whilst offering their services to arrest African suspects for the ICC! The US still keeps on the statue books, a law that authorizes the US to raid Den Haag and free "covered United States" or "allied persons". Such a policy clearly has no future in Africa.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
By Evan Buxbaum, CNN
June 15, 2010 -- Updated 0229 GMT (1029 HKT)
"...in recent months, the US government has declared its interest in working more closely with the ICC – not with the intent of becoming a party to the Rome Statute (the ICC treaty), but to help execute arrest warrants." (See Samar Al-Bulushi and Adam Branch wrote: AFRICOM and the ICC: Enforcing international justice in Africa?).
Human rights can only be protected in an atmosphere of the rule of law. To police Africa, the USA must not be seen as operating above the law. You cannot commit your own genocides with impunity whilst pretending to clear this up! The reason given by the US government to remove their signature from the ICC instead of ratifying it was that “politicized prosecutions and investigations” could result in Americans being brought before the ICC.”
Meanwhile, “politicized prosecutions and investigations” is exactly what Parliamentarians from member-countries of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in Africa are complaining of. They are accusing the Court for selectively pursuing justice by focusing on investigating suspected criminals mainly from this continent: "while the ICC is keen on investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity in Kenya, Uganda, Sudan, the Court is sitting on numerous complaints against Western leaders who are accused of causing untold suffering from wars they started in the Middle East... They said that the ICC appears to act under influence of some Western powers who use it as an instrument to weed out leaders who are against their policies in Africa."
“The ICC as a court per see is innocent. Our problem is that the process of indictment is usually politicised. For instance, the United States’ voice is loudest yet it isn’t a member of the ICC. But those who are members but with little international influence cannot have their grievances listened to,” said Isaac Musumba, Uganda’s Minister for Regional Co-operation."
The ICC's very credibility is at stake for contemplating the use of USAfriCom as its police force. The people of Africa do not want to see a US that is not only above the laws of genocide and war crimes, Whilst offering their services to arrest African suspects for the ICC! The US still keeps on the statue books, a law that authorizes the US to raid Den Haag and free "covered United States" or "allied persons". Such a policy clearly has no future in Africa.
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers!
--
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/people/Nana-Akyea-Mensah
Blog: nanaakyeamensah.blogspot.com/
Twitter: twitter.com/TheOdikro
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You silly imperialist stooge with the logic of Jacobus Eliza Johannes Capitiene! Keep your John Knox and Queen Mary crap to yourself! It is very strange how this man manages to always raise a very distinctive indignation and a desire in me to punish him for waiting my time! There are so many interesting materials to read, but life is short. This is why I like to punish writers who waist my time, by way of helping them to meet a minimum of standards. In terms of content and of form, it is a pathetic piece on all counts. Illogical, childish and poorly written, including grammatical bullets such as ”you travel out of the country with your family any time one of them sneezes or even [have] headache?”; ”that individual [is should] travel to watch soccer matches in South Africa”; ”like the songs of the [Negroes] spirituals” Hahahaha!
Forward Ever! Backwards Never!!!
Cheers! Oh yes! Cheers to your bullets!
–
Nana Akyea Mensah, The Odikro.
Twitter: /twitter.com/TheOdikro