African Press International (API)

"Daily Online News Channel".

Archive for July 15th, 2009

ECOWAS BANK HIGLIGHTS PROFIT-MAKING BALANCE SHEET FOR THE YEAR 2008

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

The Board of Governors of the Ecowas Bank for Investment and Development met in Abidjan, Ivory Coast at Hotel Tiama to review the economic programmes and investment projects as well as highlighting the profit-making outcome for the financial year ending on the 31st of December 2008.

This important meeting was attended by the ministers of Finances of ECOWAS member states or their representatives, the Vice-Chairman of ECOWAS Commission, the President of EBID Christian Narcisse Adovelande and his two Vice-Presidents Mr. Bashir Ifo in charge of Finance and Mr Ernest Komena responsible for Operations.

The board of governors was satisfied with the unsoiled bill of health of the financial operations by the bank for the year 2008  even tough the financial market is characterized by the global financial crunch.

The balance sheet on the 31st of December 2008 highlights a profit-making outcome of 40,7 million UC  about 29,5 billion CFA francs.

According to a communiqué issued by the board of governors at the end of the meeting, this indicates on the one hand the financial clean health of the bank due to the increase of the loans, on the other hand the pursuit of the mastered management policy inspite of the crunch.

According to the bank, this brings to 296,2 billion CFA francs the total financial support given by the bank to 76 projects since the effective starting of its activities on the 1st of January 2004.

Mr. Christian Adovelande was optimistic that despite the observed financial tendency, it is believed that the balance sheet at the end of the year 2009 will also be positive.

It will be recalled that during the 25th session held on the 26th of June 2009 the board of administrators approved the funding of projects in the sub-region estimated at 32 billion CFA francs including the project of the construction and exploitation of the Riviera-Marcory Bridge in Ivory Coast estimated at 8 billion CFA francs.

According to Mr Christian Adovelande, 63, 26 per cent of the loans agreements made by EBID are for the funding of infrastructures, 10,45 per cent for the social sectors, 13,36 per cent to industry sector and 12,93 per cent to services sector.

Mr. Charles Koffi Diby, Ivorian Minister for Finance and Economy is appointed as the new chairman of the board of governors of the bank.

According to Mr. Charles Koffi Diby, “EBID plays a crucial role in the sub-region in conformity with the aspirations of the population that lead to its creation. Created five years ago, the bank approved and financed important projects in favour of the state members to become in few period of time a valuable tool for integration and development of our sub-region”.

At the end of the meeting, the board of governors expressed thanks and profound gratitude to his Excellency Laurent Gbagbo to the Ivorian Head of State Laurent Gbagbo as well as the government and the people of Ivory Coast for their warm hospitality.

According to analyst the reputation of EBID as a credible source of financing development and public sector projects in various Ecowas  member states has began to soar.

BY Blame Ekoue, Abidjan

About these ads

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

Women ‘should go through pain’ in childbirth, says male midwife; Women are avoiding the “rites of passage” of childbirth by receiving epidurals because they “don’t fancy the pain” of childbirth

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

By Duncan Gardham

The pain involved in childbirth serves a purpose and more women should go through it in order to prepare themselves for the responsibility of bringing up a baby, according to Dr Denis Walsh. Dr Walsh, a senior midwife and associate professor in midwifery at Nottingham University, said: “A large number of women want to avoid pain. Some just don’t fancy the pain [of childbirth]. More women should be prepared to withstand pain.

“Pain in labour is a purposeful, useful thing, which has quite a number of benefits, such as preparing a mother for the responsibility of nurturing a
newborn baby.” Celebrity births, TV programmes and films such as Knocked Up, give the impression that childbirth is a highly medical process, when in fact the pain is natural, healthy and temporary, according to Dr Walsh. “In the west it has never been safer to have a baby, yet it appears that women have never been more frightened of the processes,” he said. In an article for the journal Evidence Based Midwifery, published by the Royal College of Midwives, Dr Walsh argues that normal birth is in danger of being “effectively anaesthetised by the epidural epidemic.” He says a widespread “antipathy to childbirth pain” has emerged in the past 20 years which has combined with increased patient rights and risk-averse doctors to create a situation where almost all hospitals now offer epidurals on demand.
Instead the NHS should take a “working with pain” approach which would encourage women to use yoga, hypnosis, massage, support from their partners, hydrotherapy and birthing pools as natural ways of alleviating their pain, he said. “Over recent decades there has been a loss of ‘rites of passage’ meaning to childbirth, so that pain and stress are viewed negatively,” he added, arguing that patients should be told labour pain is a timeless component of the “rites of passage” transition to motherhood. He says that said epidurals are also associated with medical risks such as a prolonged first and second stage of labour, a heightened chance of the baby’s head being in the wrong place and lower rates of breastfeeding.  In addition, an epidural makes a mother more likely to need help during the birth, for exampled by using forceps, which can be traumatic for both mother and child. Official figures show that the number of mothers receiving an epidural has soared from 17 per cent in 1989 to 1990 to 33 per cent in 2007 to 2008.
Dr Walsh said 20 per cent of epidurals are given to women who do not need them and that “Emerging evidence [shows] that normal labour and birth
primes the bonding areas of a mother’s brain better than caesarean or pain-free birth” But Dr Justin Clark, a senior obstetrician and gynaecologist at Birmingham Women’s Hospital, rejected Dr Walsh’s claims, adding: “He’s exaggerating the risks of epidurals. They aren’t overused. In the main they’re a good thing and almost always necessary, for example when there are complications, like a breech delivery or a prolonged induction, where the woman will get tired.

It would be wrong to suggest that modern women are somehow less stoical than in the past.” Revealing divided opinions, Mary Newburn of the National Childbirth Trust, said Walsh’s comments were timely and important and blamed inadequate antenatal education, lack of midwife-run birth centres and the fact that 93 per cent of births happened in hospital for creating an “epidural culture.” Cathy Warwick, the RCM’s general secretary, said mothers-to-be were demanding pain relief due to anxiety at not getting one-to-one personal care from a midwife, creating an “unnecessarily high” incidence of epidurals.

END

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

Kenya: CRIME IN THE CITY OF NAIROBI.

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009


It is so hurting as crime rate rises in the city of Nairobi.  We see on daily basis that people have to take cover whenever the police try to shoot some criminals who harrass people in the city.

Frightened pedestrians take cover as gangsters and police exchange fire almost on a daily basis.

It is so hurting that one puts on a clean clothe for work only to find him or her lying down on the dirty pavement for the sake of saving his or her life from bullets when gangsters decide to fire back at the police.

The government should do something to curb robbery.

By Paulline Onyango, API writer

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | 1 Comment »

Traditions delay airport expansion – Kisumu airport for extension but Luo cultural practices stops the project

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

Cultural practices are slowing the expansion of Kisumu Airport, the manager, Mr Joseph Okumu, has said.

Mr Okumu said that although some of the families had been compensated for the land, they were still holding on, arguing that there were ceremonies they needed to perform before moving out.

“There are cultural requirement that the first born moves out of the family before the rest. This has made it impossible for people to move out,” said Mr Okumu.

He added that although the Kenya Airports Authority had compensated the families for the land and the houses, families insisted on clearing the homesteads, arguing that in the Luo culture, a person cannot establish a home while structures of the former home are standing elsewhere.

“The trees and the houses are properties of the airport but the families insist that they cannot leave them standing,” said Mr Okumu.

The latest complaint comes just days after the authority raised the alarm that the compensation of some families was being delayed by unresolved succession issues or properties which have since changed hands without proper documentation.

KAA legal officer John Tito said last week that Sh41 million compensation was yet to be paid out pending the outcome of court proceedings.

But KAA managing director George Muhoho said they were seeking a possibility of depositing the amount equal to the value of the land with the courts so that eventually the person who will be granted the ownership can take the money.

The families have until the end of September to move out of the land.

source,nation.ke

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

PRESIDENT KIBAKI’S NYANZA TOUR SPARKS DEBATE

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

By JEFF OTIENO

The intended official visit by President Mwai Kibaki to Luo Nyanza early next week ( around 22nd ) has sparked debate with keen political pundits arguing that it’s part of re-alignments a head of 2012 polls.

President Kibaki who has never stepped in Luo Nyanza since the last disputed General Elections which culminated to bloody battles, is scheduled to tour multi billion Japanese funded hydro-electric power project Sondu Miriu, commission the expansion of Kisumu airport, tour Yala swamp project among others according to sources within state house.

He will be accompanied by Prime Minister Raila Odinga who has of late been calculating how to tame some of the renegades in his ODM party under the tutelage of agriculture Minister William Ruto.

For starters, Ruto has been making in roads in the Prime Ministers home turf allegedly to entrench his roots and woo support a head of 2012 elections.

Sources within Rutos circles, confided to this writer how the combative Minister has even gone the full throttle to win the support of some of the prime Minister allies including Luo Councils of elders.

Some of the elders are attributing their shift of allegiance to resilient Ruto arguing that he’s more pragmatic and accessible.

“The man is more approachable I tell you my son”, confided one of the elders whose son the Minister fished out from the streets to land him a job in one of the parastatals after tarmacking for decades.

The Minister has embarked on aggressive scheme in Luo Nyanza region where in almost every constituency he has to hold a fund raising for either a church or school all in abid to entrench his roots.

It will be interesting to see what prompt political mechanisms the Prime Minister will deploy to neutralize Rutos schemes or else it will be too late for him according to keen political observers.

One school of thought is of the view that for the Prime Minister to survive Rutos onslaughts, he should crack the whip and relegate him to a lesser ministry where finances are scarce.

But the other thought sharply differs saying that it will earn the Minister mileage and reason to officially jump out of the ODM vessel to make fresh alliances which could be suicidal and costly.

The former ruling party KANU is said to be waiting in the fringes to capitalize in the event of a fall out in ODM if this week’s events are anything to go by.

KANU operatives who is also Homa Bay branch supremo Tom Alila early this week called a high powered consultative meeting in Nairobi where they’re slated to deliberate on crucial party issues.

Delegates drawn from all the branches of the Province interviewed have however dismissed a notion that they are either scheming for finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta or the former President’s son Gideon Moi.

The duo have of late been embroiled quiet wrangles and schemes to take control of the former ruling  party in readiness for 2012 polls.

END.

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

Taita Memoirs: The Teacher Who Dated a Pilot and a Cyclist.

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009


I loved teaching at Kenyatta High School, Mwatate. I was posted there in the April of 1988 after leaving KU but was to report there after 3 months because I didn’t want to teach that far. I had made the mistake for opting to teach Islamic Religious Education/Christian Religious Education and History. TSC thought those who had opted to teach IRE should be posted to Coast Province. I was then a photographer and doing very well taking pictures in KU, Loreto Kiambu, Kanunga High School, Kiambua High School, Karuri High School and Uhuru area in Nairobi. I could afford to live for a few months without a salary.

My father was mad with me. He wanted me to take the teaching job and go to Kenyatta High School but mostly because he thought I would lose my job. It was my father who brought two fellows who had worked in Taita to talk to me and they also influenced my flight to Mwatate. I had also heard of the tales of the beautiful land and the women of Taita. The tales ranged from the women being the most beautiful and the wild story of the dark women given free (of dowry). They were probably wrong because it was almost impossible to get a dark skinned Taita woman. Everybody in Taita is chocolate or brown. Some people joked of those at Mbololo as heading to be white in a few years to come. Many of the teachers from upcountry fell in love with Taita and the women. Some of them like my friend Omosh had a few scandals involving women and worthy a memoir on its own.

I was also told of tales about how teachers were so respected in Taitaland that women sent their daughters to the male teachers so that they could cook, wash clothes and assist the teacher live a comfortable and good life. I was further told that I would not have problem getting women to deliver whatever I wanted, most times for free. Then was told of how everybody is beautiful so that whoever ended being delivered to assist the young teacher would meet the requirement for washing my clothes, cooking and anything pertaining to leading a good life. The place sounded like one paradise with the only thing missing being getting naked virgins sent to serve teachers in paradise. I didn’t need further encouragement to take off for Taita.

I can only confirm that Taita women are extremely beautiful. I have never seen a place with so many beauties in one place. It is probably the only place where you go to the market and find all mama mboga looking extremely beautiful and qualified for a date. Not like the mama mbogas of Ngara in Nairobi who may not attract any fresh graduate teacher. But before you accuse me of talking ill of Ngara mama mbogas, let me remind you that the River Road Indians are reported to have admired them and tales of children sired by the wahindi and mama mbogas were in abundance. Stories were told of the mama mboga who went to this mhindi at River Road to sell greens to him. The Indian fellow is said to have been asked if he wanted to buy mboga na kitu ingine. Mhindi then closed the shop and bought the mboga and demanded to also buy kitu ingine. He then laid the mama mboga on the floor of his shop. The woman woke up and shouted in Gikuyu to the mhindi: “Muhindi ninii wakomia thi a ngara ma ya Ngai?” (lying ngara means facing up and she was demanding to know why the mhindi laid her on the floor and laid on her). Mhindi replied: “Mama, hapa si Ngara, ni River Road!”

There also another woman from my village whose third child was a cute girl whose bio father was definitely a mhindi. People complained because the father didn’t complain a lot when the child was born. The woman was said to have visited Murang’a town to buy clothes in a mhindi shop and then the mhindi finding her stark naked as she tried the dresses in one of the room. The mhindi is reported to have pleaded with her to let him get the goods as he argued the case in some broken Swahili, “mama, kama b… amka, hakuna swari ingine” and then later the birth of the girl we just called mhindi. She attended my primary school and was only two classes behind me and everybody wanted to date her in order to have a feel of how Indians “taste”.

I loved visiting Mbololo for picture taking on a Sunday afternoon. The place is reputed to have the most beautiful women in Taita. One would be forgiven to think that he was watching Miss World contestants taking a

walk in Mbololo on a Sunday afternoon. Up to this day I cant believe that I fell in love with a form two girl whose mother was a Kikuyu woman married to a Taita man and was attending school at Mbololo. Unfortunately I didn’t stay in Taita for too long but she was to later arrive in KU looking for me and somebody led her to my department. She was with her younger sister and they had eloped from their parents’ home and had decided to come look for the lost life. They were financially stable since they had eloped with the tuition for that term. My sweating on finding her and her sister waiting for me at the Department of Religious Studies when I arrived from class that afternoon was justified. I remember lying that there were my cousins and it worked well since they said they came from Taita and the sweetheart was Waithera Mwandawiro. Shipping them back to Taita was the most logical thing but God was on my side because their aunt met them on the third day as they toured the city in the sun. She took them and ferried them back to Taita. I have not heard from my Waithera since then.

There were over 40 teachers at Kenyatta High School. Most were males and may be 5 female teachers. It was one of the female teachers who was dating a fellow who worked for the wildlife and was a pilot of a huge military plane. The pilot would come driving all the time and in odd hours. She also dated one of the teachers who lived outside the school compound. The teacher had a bicycle which he rode all the time. The teacher would park his bicycle outside the house and spend some quality time with his sweetheart. He was obviously in love with the teacher. We didn’t know whether he knew of the pilot. We also didn’t know whether he was a pilot but those of us who lived in the school compound know that the teacher had a co-boyfriend. May be nobody ever told the teacher of his co-boyfriend. He was a loner and spent most of the time in the lab and rarely mixed with the other teachers. We new the pilot came on weekends when the cyclist was at home or outside the school. He never landed in school until one day.

It was a Thursday afternoon and the cyclist was in the house with the teacher. Some people claimed that they were having sex. The teacher had left the lab and had decided to see his sweetheart that afternoon. He parked the bike outside the house and was busy in the house when we heard the airplane roar in the sky as it headed to our school. Such a plane was good enough to excite students and teachers. I must confess that I was one of the people who went to wait for the pilot to arrive from the sky. It was rare to see a plane land in school anywhere in our country. We didn’t know that it was the teacher’s pilot on board and she was not expecting him on that day otherwise she would not be entertaining the cyclist with the pilot on his way to his house. I guess the cyclist and the teacher were too busy in the bedroom to come out to watch the plane land or hear the sound of the plane roaring from heaven to Gomorrah. Initially we thought it was Moi arriving in Mwatate as he was fond of arriving in a military helicopter in some remote place in the country. Then the plane started hovering above Kenyatta High School and directly above the teachers’ house. Almost all the students and teacher knew that the cyclist was dating the teacher but few knew that another boyfriend was a frequent visitor. Nobody expected the pilot to be headed to the bed then occupied then by the cyclist. I doubt the teacher expected a successor of the cyclist at that time.

The plane landed outside the teacher’s house (the date’s house). Unfortunately the huge helicopter landed too close to the bicycle and the wind being blown by the propeller blew the bike off, destroying it in the process. It was then that the teacher looked outside and saw a plane outside her house. She ordered the cyclist to dress and take off using the backdoor. Unfortunately almost every teacher and every student was outside her house waiting for the pilot to arrive and say hello to wananchi.

The cyclist was seen buttoning his clothes as he took off. He came from the backdoor as some students and teachers watched and then found the rest of the school near where his bike was lying. He had to face the whole school in the front of the house since his bicycle was lying outside the house, dusty and messed up. Fortunately the bike was ride able. He took his bike and rode off, cycling very fast and too embarrassed since he knew that everybody was aware he was kicked out of the house to make room for the pilot. I guess it was obvious that he was the weakest link and had to leave and make room for a pilot. He rode off then disappeared for a couple of days from school, too embarrassed to return to school. The pilot continued from where the cyclist had left. I can’t remember if he went back to finish off where the pilot may have left.

End.

Kuria

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | 4 Comments »

The Man in the Mirror – Who was Michael Jackson really? Do people get blinded by popularity making them look the other side whenever the popular in society are in the wrong?

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

Send to API by Mohamed Jiwa

Hedges puts it into words.  Thanks to Richard S for sending me this compelling reading which I forward to some addresses in my book (I have taken the liberty to add some of my observations and reflections in italics)

Re: A chalk-faced androgynous ghoul with no clear sexual identity-when human beings are commodities

The Man in the Mirror

Posted on Jul 13, 2009

AP photo / Jacqueline Larma
Images of a young Michael Jackson fill the TV screens at a downtown Los Angeles bar near the site of his memorial service.

By Chris Hedges

In celebrity culture we destroy what we worship.

We destroy that which we no longer need to worship when it fails to project an illusion that hides us from the realities that prevent us from facing what/ who we really are and why we are here.

The commercial exploitation of Michael Jackson’s death was orchestrated by the corporate forces that rendered Jackson insane. Jackson, robbed of his childhood and surrounded by vultures that preyed on his fears and weaknesses, was so consumed by self-loathing he carved his African-American face into an ever-changing Caucasian death mask and hid his apparent pedophilia behind a Peter Pan illusion of eternal childhood. He could not disentangle his public and his private self. He became a commodity, a product, one to be sold, used and manipulated. He was infected by the moral nihilism and personal disintegration that are at the core of our corporate culture. And his fantasies of eternal youth, delusions of majesty, and desperate, disfiguring quests for physical transformation were expressions of our own yearning. (most of us – not all of us.  But we all need to better psychoanalyse these yearnings, taking an ecological approach)He was a reflection of us in the extreme.
His memorial service—a variety show with a coffin—had an estimated 31.1 million television viewers. The ceremony, which featured performances or tributes from Stevie Wonder, Brooke Shields and other celebrities, was carried live on 19 networks, including the major broadcast and cable news outlets. It was the final episode of the long-running Michael Jackson series. And it concluded with Jackson’s daughter, Paris, being prodded to stand in front of a microphone to speak about her father. Janet Jackson, before the girl could get a few words out, told Paris to “speak up.” As the child broke down, the adults around her adjusted the microphone so we could hear the sobs. The crowd clapped. It was a haunting echo of what destroyed her father. (her family, or the forces that hold into place the system that creates such suicidal ‘families’?)
The stories we like best are “real life” stories—early fame, wild success and then a long, bizarre and macabre emotional train wreck.

O.J Simpson offered a tamer version of the same plot. So does Britney Spears. Jackson, by the end, was heavily in debt and had weathered a $22 million out-of-court settlement payment to Jordy Chandler, as well as seven counts of child sexual abuse and two counts of administering an intoxicating agent in order to commit a felony. We fed on his physical and psychological disintegration, especially since many Americans are struggling with their own descent into overwhelming debt, loss of status and personal disintegration.
The lurid drama of Jackson’s personal life meshed perfectly with the ongoing dramas on television, in movies and in the news. News thrives on “real life” stories, especially those involving celebrities. News reports on television are mini-dramas complete with a star, a villain, a supporting cast, a good-looking host and a dramatic, if often unexpected, ending. The public greedily consumed “news” about Jackson, especially in his exile and decline, which often outdid most works of fiction. In “Fahrenheit 451,” Ray Bradbury’s novel about a future dystopia, people spend most of the day watching giant television screens that show endless scenes of police chases and criminal apprehensions. Life, Bradbury understood, once it was packaged, scripted, given a narrative and filmed, became the most compelling form of entertainment. And Jackson was a great show.

He deserved a great finale.
Those who created Jackson’s public persona and turned him into a piece of property, first as a child and finally as a corpse encased in a $15,000 gold-plated casket, are the agents, publicists, marketing people, promoters, script writers, television and movie producers, advertisers, video technicians, photographers, bodyguards, recording executives, wardrobe consultants, fitness trainers, pollsters, public announcers and television news personalities who create the vast stage of celebrity for profit. They are the puppet masters. No one achieves celebrity status,

Did MJ not want celebrity status?

no cultural illusion is swallowed as reality, without these armies of cultural enablers and intermediaries. The producers at the Staples Center in Los Angeles made sure the 18,000 attendees and the television audience (even the BBC devoted three hours to the tribute) watched a funeral that was turned into another maudlin form of uplifting popular entertainment.
The memorial service for Jackson was a celebration of celebrity. There was the queasy sight of groups of children, including his own, singing over the coffin. Magic Johnson put in a plug for Kentucky Fried Chicken. Shields, fighting back tears, recalled how she and a 33-year-old Jackson—who always maintained that he was straight—broke into Elizabeth Taylor’s room the night before her last wedding to “get the first peek of the [wedding] dress.” Shields and Jackson, at Taylor’s wedding, then joked that they were “the mother and father of the bride.”
“Yes, it may have seemed very odd to the outside,” Shields said, “but we made it fun and we made it real.”

There were photo montages in which a shot of Jackson shaking hands with Nelson Mandela was immediately followed by one of him with Kermit the Frog. Fame reduces all of the famous to the same level. Fame is its own denominator. And every anecdote seemed to confirm that when you spend your life as a celebrity, you have no idea who you are.


We measure our lives by these celebrities. We seek to be like them. We emulate their look and behavior. We escape the messiness of real life through the fantasy of their stardom. We, too, long to attract admiring audiences for our grand, ongoing life movie. We try to see ourselves moving through our lives as a camera would see us, mindful of how we hold ourselves, how we dress, what we say. We invent movies that play inside our heads with us as stars. We wonder how an audience would react. Celebrity culture has taught us, almost unconsciously, to generate interior personal screenplays. We have learned ways of speaking and thinking that grossly disfigure the way we relate to the world and those around us.
Neal Gabler, who has written wisely about this, argues that celebrity culture is not a convergence of consumer culture and religion so much as a hostile takeover of religion by consumer culture. (This reminds me of the religion of Scientology)

Jackson desperately feared growing old. He believed he could control race and gender. He transformed himself through surgery and perhaps female hormones from a brown-skinned African-American male to a chalk-faced androgynous ghoul with no clear sexual identity. And while he pushed these boundaries to the extreme, he did only what many Americans do. There were 12 million cosmetic plastic surgery procedures performed last year in the United States. They were performed because, in America, most human beings, rich and poor, famous and obscure, have been conditioned to view themselves as marketable commodities. They are objects, like consumer products. They have no intrinsic value. They must look fabulous and live on fabulous sets. They must remain young. They must achieve notoriety and money, or the illusion of it, to be a success. And it does not matter how they get there.

The moral nihilism of our culture licenses a dark voyeurism into other people’s humiliation, pain, weakness and betrayal. Education, building community, honesty, transparency and sharing are qualities that will see you, in a gross perversion of democracy and morality, ridiculed and voted off any reality show. Fellow competitors for prize money and a chance for fleeting fame elect to “disappear” the unwanted. In the final credits of the reality show “America’s Next Top Model,” a picture of the woman expelled during the episode vanishes from the group portrait on the screen. Those cast aside become, at least to the television audience, nonpersons. Celebrities who can no longer generate publicity, good or bad, vanish. Life, these shows teach, is a brutal world of unadulterated competition and constant quest for notoriety and attention. And life is about the personal humiliation of those who oppose us. Those who win are the best. Those who lose deserve to be erased. Those who fail, those who are ugly or poor, are belittled and mocked. Human beings are used, betrayed and discarded in a commodity culture, which is pretty much the story of Jackson’s life, although he experienced the equivalent of celebrity resurrection. This has been very good for his music sales and perhaps for his father’s new recording company, which Joe Jackson made sure to plug at public events after his son’s death. Compassion, competence, intelligence and solidarity are useless assets when human beings are commodities. Those who do not achieve celebrity status, who do not win the prize money or make millions in Wall Street firms, deserve their fate.

The cult of self, which Jackson embodied, dominates our culture. This cult shares within it the classic traits of psychopaths: superficial charm, grandiosity and self-importance; a need for constant stimulation, a penchant for lying, deception and manipulation; and the incapacity for remorse or guilt. Jackson, from his phony marriages to his questionable relationships with young boys, had all these qualities. This is also the ethic promoted by corporations. It is the ethic of unfettered capitalism. It is the misguided belief that personal style and personal advancement, mistaken for individualism, are the same as democratic equality. It is the celebration of image over substance.

We have a right, in the cult of the self, to get whatever we desire. We can do anything, even belittle and destroy those around us, including our friends, to make money, to be happy and to become famous. Once fame and wealth are achieved, they become their own justification, their own morality. How one gets there is irrelevant. It is this perverted ethic that gave us Wall Street banks and investment houses that willfully trashed the nation’s economy, stole money from tens of millions of small shareholders who had bought stocks to finance their retirement or the college expenses of their children. The heads of these corporations, like the winners on a reality television program who lied and manipulated others to succeed, walked away with hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation and bonuses. The ethic of Wall Street is the ethic of celebrity.
The saturation coverage of Jackson’s death is an example of our collective flight into illusion. The obsession with the trivia of his life conceals the despair, meaninglessness and emptiness of our own lives. It deflects the moral questions arising from mounting social injustice, growing inequalities, costly imperial wars, economic collapse and political corruption. The wild pursuit of status, wealth and fame has destroyed our souls, as it destroyed Jackson, and it has destroyed our economy.
The fame of celebrities masks the identities of those who possess true power—corporations and the oligarchic elite. And as we sink into an economic and political morass, as we barrel toward a crisis that will create more misery than the Great Depression, we are controlled, manipulated and distracted by the celluloid shadows on the wall of Plato’s cave. The fantasy of celebrity culture is not designed simply to entertain. It is designed to drain us emotionally, confuse us about our identity, make us blame ourselves for our predicament, condition us to chase illusions of fame and happiness and keep us from fighting back. And in the end, that is all the Jackson coverage was really about, another tawdry and tasteless spectacle to divert a dying culture from the howling wolf at the gate.

Chris Hedges is the author of the new book “Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle.”

——————————-

Related story(s):

People are crying over Michael Jackson’s death the King of Pop as they say: What really happened between him and the boy he paid millions after he accused him of sexual molestation?

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya warned Tuesday he will deem mediation talks over the country’s political crisis “failed” unless he is reinstated

Posted by African Press International on July 15, 2009

Ousted Honduran leader presses on

Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya warned Tuesday he will deem mediation talks over the country’s political crisis “failed” unless he is reinstated at the next meeting, likely this weekend.

Mediator Costa Rica said yesterday it may call Honduras’ interim government and Zelaya’s negotiators within eight days for fresh talks.

One of Zelaya’s negotiators, Milton Jimenez, said the next round would be held on Saturday or Sunday.

The talks began last week and stopped after two days, making scant progress.

Mr Zelaya insists on his reinstatement after the June 28 coup.

But Roberto Micheletti, installed as interim president by Honduras’ Congress, is adamant Zelaya cannot return to power under any circumstances because he was seeking to illegally extend his rule through the lifting of presidential term limits.

No foreign government has recognised Micheletti as president.

The United States, the Organisation of American States and the UN General Assembly have called for Zelaya to be restored to office after the coup in the impoverished Central American country.

“We are giving an ultimatum to the coup regime, that at the latest in the next meeting this week in San Jose, Costa Rica, they should carry out the expressed (OAS and UN) resolutions (to reinstate me),” Mr Zelaya told a news conference in Managua.

“If not, then this mediation will be considered to have failed,” he added, wearing his trademark white cowboy hat.

A spokesman for Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987, confirmed the mediator intended to issue a fresh invitation to the two sides “within a period of eight days” but could not give a precise date.

The Honduras crisis is a diplomatic test for US President Barack Obama after he vowed a fresh start with Latin America, where Washington has in the past been accused of backing coups and dictatorships that served its interests. Mr Obama has condemned the Honduras coup as illegal.

Micheletti on Sunday held out the possibility of an amnesty for Mr Zelaya if he returns home quietly and faces justice. It appeared to be the interim government’s first conciliatory offer to help defuse the worst crisis in Central America since the Cold War. Zelaya dismissed the gesture. (Reuters)

source.nation.ke

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 189 other followers

%d bloggers like this: