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U.S. Bank Receives Appreciation Award from Lake Street Council

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U.S. Bank received an appreciation award from the Lake Street Council in Minneapolis recently. The award was given to U.S. Bank during the council’s annual meeting at the Lyndale VFW.

 

“This award is an expression of thanks from the Lake Street Council to U.S. Bank and its commitment to Lake Street,” said Joyce Wisdom, executive director of the Lake Street Council. “U.S. Bank donated office space to our organization and provided much needed financial support in the form of equity equivalent investments for the corridor during road construction. During construction, the U.S. Bank team shared parking spaces with other local businesses. They also participated in the celebration to welcome Metro Transit Commission buses back to Lake Street when construction was complete.”

 

“The Lake Street community is a vibrant and vital part of Minneapolis,” said Christine Hobrough, regional market manager in the Twin Cities. “The U.S. Bank team in the Lake Street neighborhood has been led by Marty Shimko, branch manager at the 919 E. Lake Street location. U.S. Bank proudly supports the Lake Street Council and its efforts to make the neighborhood stronger.”

 

Accepting the award on behalf of U.S. Bank were Hobrough; Shimko; Vicki Shipley, vice president and community development manager; Rafael Quintero, community business banking officer; and Matt Thompson, metro district manager for retail banking.

 

U.S. Bancorp is the 6th largest financial holding company in the United States.

 

Picture Caption: Vicki Shipley, U.S. Bank Community Development; Joyce Widsom, executive driector, Lake Street Council (holding award); Marty Shimko, U.S. Bank branch manager at 919 E. Lake St., Minneapolis; Christine Hobrough, regional market manager for U.S. Bank in the Twin Citiesand Matt Thompson, metro west  district manager for retail banking, U.S. Bank. Gary Schiff, Minneapolis City Councilmember, is in the background (left).

 

Picture: Courtesy US Bank.

Students Key to African Renaissance, says Kofi Woods

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Students Key to African Renaissance, says Kofi Woods

"Dawn is approaching in Africa, Daylight is approaching in Africa".
These were the words of guest speaker and Minister of Labor in the new Liberian government Samuel Kofi Woods as he addressed a packed ballroom at the St. Paul Student Center on Saturday. African Nite, hosted by the University of Minnesota’s African Student Association brought together a diverse crowd of people to celebrate and honor the cultural richness of the countries on all corners of the continent.

 

Those in attendance enjoyed a program centered around the theme "Africa Today". Each act received loud applause and cheers from the audience, with a level of energy and enthusiasm that they maintained throughout the evening.

Seyon Nyanwleh reported that this year’s attendance was much higher than last year’s 500. Titi Solarin, mother of two University of Minnesota students said that the attendance "attests to the fact that Africans are united and in peace and freedom."

 

"This is a great way for all countries in Africa to be represented. It helps us realize how similar everyone really is", said Sam Adegoke, a graduate from the University of Minnesota who came to support his friends and take part in the fashion show.

 

To go along with the night’s theme, the fashion show included current styles most popular in the countries students represented.  Models strutted across stage as each flag was cast on a screen behind, eliciting loud cheers from the audience – a show of solidarity and support between students from each country.

 

"It would be hard to get this many people for any other event,"  remarked Global Studies and French student Iman Mefleh.  "It’s important to participate in something different; it’s important that people of other cultures attend this event, not just Africans," she said as she waited in line for food. A variety of dishes from East and West  Africa were served – fried plantains and gravy, jollof rice (fried rice), and puff-puff or Kala which is made of flour, yeast, and sugar. Although each guests’ dinner plate consisted of items from several regions of the continent, the food was "common to all of Africa," according to Seyon Nyanwleh, president of the African Student Association.

 

Within the diversity of dishes in the menu, garments on the runway, and acts in the program, there remained an underlying sense of unity that tied each individual together. "When I look around all I see is Africans – the difference lies in how and when we arrive on these shores," Samuel Kofi Woods said, reflecting on the Pan-Africanism and solidarity he saw at African Nite.  One Psychology student originally from Somalia, who declined to give her name, said that it reminded her of home and it made her "feel good to see all these people from Africa. Different cultures and languages, but it’s still
Africa."

 

"I am continually impressed with the (level of) energy and organization," commented August Nimtz, a professor in the Political Science department as he was leaving at the end of the evening for the third year in a row. "I am struck by the unity of the people here and the pan-African character of the event is impressive," he added.

 

Looking beyond the atmosphere of solidarity and celebration, Global Studies student Lily Shank believed that African Nite was an important event for the University. ""It’s an amazing expression of all the diversity at the University of Minnesota. The University is enriched by people bringing and sharing their cultures."

Titi Solarin said that she really appreciated seeing students coming together to celebrate their heritage and celebrate their freedom. "It’s of great value to do this."

 

As a minister in Ellen Johnson Sirleaf’s new government in Liberia, Samuel Kofi Woods’ human rights work is an example of the positive gains and hope for the future, which he stressed during his speech on Saturday. Expressing his faith in the students, Woods said that "This generation has the key. You are the new hope of the African Renaissance."

Visit the picture gallery for images from the U’s African Nite.

Obama Brings his Magic to Minnesota

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Obama Brings his Magic to Minnesota

US Senator Barack Obama wowed Minnesota yesterday when he visited to keynote the sold-out $125 per ticket Hubert H. Humphrey Day Dinner, a fundraiser for
Minnesota
’s Democratic Party (DFL) and to campaign for Amy Klobuchar who is running for the US Senate to take over from fellow Democrat Mark Dayton who is not seeking reelection.

 

 

Obama, who enjoys near universal appeal and gets 300 speaking invitations a week, drawing large crowds in the process, said Saturday that the ballooning federal deficit is a reflection that there is a “lack of adult supervision in
Washington
” and called it untenable.

 

 

Minnesotans got a taste of the Obama magic Saturday and insight as to why there is so much talk of a future presidency by this son of a Kenyan father and Kansan mother. Senator Mark Dayton, who introduced him at both the afternoon rally for Klobuchar where Obama began his day in Minnesota, did not bat an eyelid when he referred to him as the future president of the
. At the Humphrey dinner,
Dayton
told those attending to go and tell others they had dinner with the future president.

 

 

18-year old Jackie Stahlmann, a senior at
Cooper
High School
in
New Hope
, will be voting for the first time this November.  She said her main draw to the Klobuchar rally was Obama. She decided “a long time ago” that she was going to vote for Klobuchar “because she will push for our rights”, she said. But for this Saturday afternoon, she was unlikely to have come to the rally but Obama was definitely a draw “he is just awesome”, she said.

 

 

Over 1,500 people including about 50 Kenyan-Americans attended the afternoon rally for Amy Klobuchar at the

St. Louis Park
Middle School

gymnasium. Senator Obama received a loud celebrity welcome with his entrance and after speeches by Amy Klobuchar and a welcome speech from Mark Dayton, he took the stage. After calming the excited crowd, he then quickly demonstrated why some believe he is presidential material with his ability to quickly connect with the crowd.

 

 

 

He said at the rally that the despite the differences that Americans have had with each other in the past, there has always been a sense that “we are in this together” and that unfortunately the current administration ahs managed to shake the faith of the American people leading to the current cynicism about government that is prevalent.

 

 

He drew laughter at the dinner when he said he recalled President Bush saying in the 2000 election that he did not believe in nation building, “we just didn’t know he meant this country.” He said the attitude of everyone for himself that the Republicans are currently pursuing by trying to bankrupt the government amounts to social Darwinism which he said ignores the history of this country. Senator Obama also drew a picture of past Democratic successes such as putting a man in the moon, the new deal and the successful execution of the Second World War. He said the Democratic Party is the party of opportunity and its agenda is ’s agenda as well.

 

 

Amy Klobuchar drew laugher from the crowd as well by saying that the Medicare Part D bill that has proven frustrating for many seniors got the grading it deserves from the beginning – a D. She said she feels the spirit of change coming to .

 

 

Senator Dayton said Amy has proven herself by her lifelong commitment to public service.  Senator Obama said at the rally that Amy Klobuchar reflects the decency of America and chalked up some of her past successes and added that “there is no doubt that Amy is going to be an outstanding senator, the only question is how inspired are you to get her there.” He urged the partisan crowd to make sure they sign up as volunteers for the campaign. He said sending Amy to
Washington
will help achieve the Democratic agenda.

 

 

After the rally, about 30 Kenyans lingered outside and had their own rally to discuss how to get involved in this year’s election. Among the African immigrant community, Kenyans have a special fondness for Obama given his ancestry and commonly refer to him as “our son” or “our brother”. There were speeches from community leaders such as Paul Morande of the Nyagetinge Association of Kenyans in Minnesota and Ferdinand Obure, a former Member of Parliament in who now resides in the Twin Cities. Judy Reinehr, a community activist and Klobuchar supporter has lived in in the past and was at the impromptu rally. She told everyone to get involved. Nimco Ahmed, the Klobuchar campaign Field Director was present and quickly signed up volunteers. A Somali-American, she is the only African immigrant so far this election season in
Minnesota
holding a key position in a statewide race.

 

 

The Minnesota US Senate race has attracted national attention because of it being an open seat and its potential to determine control of the Senate. Mark Kennedy is the frontrunner in the Republican side. Among those that have headlined his fundraisers have included Vice-president Dick Cheney.

 

 

The Humphrey Dinner which drew about 2,000 people according to DFL officials is the biggest fundraiser for them each year, and with Obama’s attendance yesterday, they were hoping to raise between $100,000 to $200,000.

 

 

Check out the Photo Gallery  for pictures on Obama’s visit to
Minnesota
.

Minneapolis Public Schools Announces Changes to Early Kindergarten Admission Procedures

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Deadline for applications is May 1

 

 

MINNEAPOLIS , April 5, 2006 – In an effort to better serve the community, Minneapolis Public Schools has revised its early kindergarten admission policy to establish standardized criteria for deciding which students are ready to enter kindergarten. Among the changes, students who turn five years of age on or by Oct. 31 may be considered for early admission into kindergarten. Applications for early entrance must be submitted by May 1.

 

 

“Parents are increasingly asking for early kindergarten entrance for their children due to the reduction in High Five programs and child care subsidies,” said Jackie Turner, director of Student Placement. “A standard early admission procedure will allow the district to respond consistently to the individual educational needs of these children.”

 

Under the new procedure, early entrance candidates must complete an early childhood screening, be observed in a kindergarten classroom for one to three hours by a cadre of district assessors, and earn a composite score of at least 40 on the MPS Beginning Kindergarten Assessment. Culturally and linguistically appropriate staff will also be involved in the decision-making process.

 

Once all of the requirements have been completed, the child will be recommended for early entrance. Only schools with space available after the initial kindergarten placements have been made will be offered for early entrance.

 

“This change in procedure will allow the district to continue to be competitive with the surrounding school districts,” said Turner. “We know that some children whose birthdays fall after Sept. 1, the traditional kindergarten start date, have the academic knowledge, skills and social competencies needed for success in kindergarten.”

 

Families interested in applying for early enrollment to kindergarten should visit the

Student

Placement

Center , 910 W. Broadway Ave., or call (612)668-1840.

 

 

 

 

 

Nancy Barceló Appointed as U’s VP and Vice Provost

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Nancy Barceló Appointed as U's VP and Vice Provost

MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL ( 4/5/2006 ) -The University of Minnesota announced today that Nancy "Rusty" Barceló has been appointed the first vice president for access, equity and multicultural affairs and vice provost at the U of M. Barceló will be responsible for developing and implementing a systemwide strategic plan for access, equity, and multicultural affairs consistent with the university’s strategic positioning efforts. Pending approval by the Board of Regents, Barceló’s appointment will become effective May 15, 2006.

 

 

"Dr. Barceló is a national leader who has demonstrated her leadership ability and commitment to multiculturalism in higher education," said

University
of
Minnesota President Robert Bruininks

. "This institution is founded in the belief that we bear responsibility for a diverse educational experience so that students are prepared to succeed in a global world."

 

 

As the university moves forward in its efforts to become one of the top three public research universities in the world, access and diversity will continue to be a crucial part of its mission. The vice president for access, equity, and multicultural affairs and vice provost will be responsible for ensuring that the university continues to be a vibrant and inclusive academic community.

 

 

"The

University
of
Minnesota

has made access and diversity a top priority in its pursuit to be one of the top three public research universities in the world," said Barceló. "I’m excited about the opportunity to help the university achieve that goal."

 

 

Barceló has more than 20 years of experience promoting diversity and multiculturalism in higher education. She currently serves as vice president and vice provost for minority affairs and diversity at the

University
of
Washington

, a position she has held since 2001. From 1996 to 2001, Barceló was the associate vice president for multicultural and academic affairs at the

University
of
Minnesota

, and she also headed the university’s Chicano studies department from 1999 to 2001. Barceló holds a doctorate in higher education administration from the

University
of
Iowa

.

 

 

"We are happy to welcome Rusty back to the

University
of
Minnesota

," said Robert Jones, senior vice president for system administration. "We want to ensure that the university remains an inclusive and multicultural environment, and we are confident that Rusty will provide quality leadership in those areas for the entire university system."

 

University of Minnesota Students to Host African Nite

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MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (4/4/2005) — To heighten awareness and understanding about Africa and its people, the University of Minnesota African Student Association (ASA) will host African Nite from 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, April 15, in the North Star Ballroom of the

St. Paul
Student
Center

,

2017 Buford Ave., St. Paul

.

 

 

The annual event, which drew 600 participants last year, will showcase African culture, life and history through an evening of educational and entertainment programs.

 

 

"We hope African Nite will enable students, faculty and the broader community to gain a better understanding about
Africa
and its people," said ASA president Seyon Nyanwleh.

 

 

In addition to entertainment and food representing various nations in the African continent, this year’s African Nite will feature a speech by Hon Kofi Woods, a human rights advocate and the Minister of Labor in the newly elected Liberian government.

 

 

Woods goes to the Labor Ministry with a vast experience in general administrative, managerial skills with specialty in human rights, economics and management, development, labor relations and general social work. He has worked in both Liberia and abroad mainly in the field of human rights advocacy serving as Executive Director for the Monrovia YMCA, founding National Director, Catholic Justice & Peace Commission, Consultant Dutch Inter-Church Aid, Utrecht, Netherlands and National Endowment for Democracy (NED) based in Washington, D.C. USA, Program Director for International Human Rights Law Group (IHRLG) in Sierra Leone, among others.

 

 

He is the founder for Foundation for International Dignity-FIND, a human right institution based in and .

 

 

What:    U of M students to host African Nite

 

When:    6-10 p.m. Saturday, April 15

 

Where:  

St. Paul
Student
Center

,

2017 Buford Ave., St. Paul

 

Who:     U of M students and staff, general public

 

Contacts:Seyon Nyanwleh, ASA President, (612) 730-1373

 

 

Visit Calendar section of Mshale.com for any updates.

 

Windows Vista: Microsoft’s Latest Operating System

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Windows Vista: Microsoft's Latest Operating System

Since the initial release of Windows XP five years ago, Microsoft has been able to increase its security significantly by releasing updates such as Service Pack 2. However, enormous changes in security features require significant changes in system architecture hence the need for the development of Microsoft’s latest Operating System:- Windows Vista. According to Microsoft, the Beta version for Windows Vista is only available to Developers and IT Professionals.

 

 

The scheduled release date for businesses is November 2006 and the release date for the consumer market is January 2007.

 

 

New Features

 

 

Aero: Windows

Vista has a completely restructured user interface. Aero is an acronym for Authentic, Energetic, Reflective and Open. This new user interface is intended to be more user friendly not to mention more appealing to the consumer in that it adds support for 3D graphics, translucency, animation and other visual effects. Also, the Start Menu has changed and the word "Start" has simply been replaced by a blue Windows symbol similar to the Windows key on a keyboard.

 

 

Internet Explorer 7(IE7): IE7 is Windows Vista’s upgraded version of internet explorer. It is predicted to be equipped with anti-spoofing technology making it more secure for the user to go online.

 

 

Windows Defender: Miscrosoft’s famous anti-spyware software has been incorprated into this latest version of windows which previously wasn’t the case in Windows XP and older versions. Microsoft anti-spyware has proven to be veyr effective in protecting against spyware and other threats.

 

 

Speech Recognition: This is another useful feature that is fully embedded into Windows Vista. It has the capability to understand a user’s voice, to activate commands in any windows application and to enable voice dictation.

 

 

Windows DVD Maker: This feature enables the user to create video DVD’s based on their content.

 

 

User Account Control: This is a new security feature that enables a user to enter an administrator password (without being logged in as an administrator ) when an action requiring administrative rights is required. Non-administrator user accounts in the previous Windows versions proved to be too restrictive and you had to be logged in as an administrator to be able to download software for example.

 

 

Some XP Features Removed: Some noticeable XP features such as Windows Messenger, Net Meeting, MSN Explorer have also been eliminated from this new version.

 

 

What Happens to businesses currently using Windows NT, 2000 and XP desktops?

 

 

Microsoft is using a large number of features such as the WIM image Format ( a file based disk image format specifically developed for the Windows Vista OS). WIM files contain a copy of

Vista and businesses can maintain and patch their older verisons wihtout having to rebuild new images. The WIM files can be obtained from the Windows Vista installation DVD.

 

 

What are ths system requirements for installing Windows

Vista ?

 

Windows Vista requires atleast 512 megabytes of physical memory, atleast 3 gigabytes of hard drive space for installation files or possibly more depending on the edition of Windows Vista. In additon, it also requires a modern processor Central Processing Unit (CPU) as well as a Graphics card that has a DirectX 9 class graphics processor.

 

Different Versions of Windows

Vista

 

Unlike Windows XP that only had two versions notably XP Pro and XP Home Edition, five variations of the new Windows Vista Operating Sytem will be available. These are Windows Vista Business, Windows Vista Enterprise (designed to meet the requirements for massive global organizations), Windows Vista Home Premium, Windows Vista Ultimate and lastly Windows Vista Home Basic (for everyday basic use at home such as checking email).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How To Teach Your Kids To Hold Onto Money

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How To Teach Your Kids To Hold Onto Money

What is the American Dream? One part is the hope of making a good life for yourself.

 

Another big part is this: To create a better life for your children.

 

That’s what motivated the generation born in the Great Depression to scrimp and save to send their kids – the baby boomers — to college. But the baby boomers have morphed the dream in a different direction — determined that their children would not know the privation and struggles they’d witnessed.

 

And so today we have about 42% of our population under the age of 30 – and, with it, a generation of middle-income children who have grown up with an enormous sense of entitlement. In their quest to ease their children’s lives, many of these baby-boomer parents have inadvertently denied their children the challenge of achieving financial goals and the joy of surmounting obstacles.

 

And what this means is that a lot of kids just don’t get it when it comes to money.

 

Respect For Money
So what can we, as parents, do to create money-smart and motivated kids? We can start by helping our kids sort out and understand the blizzard of messages we send to our children. Two-year-olds recognize television commercials and demand the toys and snack foods that are cleverly marketed to them. Toddlers in a grocery cart watch while Mom inserts a piece of plastic — and money spurts out! Late-night arguments between parents over unpaid bills send strange signals to children.

 

We can try to find new ways to celebrate old-fashioned money virtues. If parents treat money with respect, watchful young eyes learn. I still remember mom forcing me to pick up a nickel I’d dropped in a muddy gutter along a sidewalk.

 

You teach kids about money through such tools as allowances, letting kids work for money and introducing them to investing. But as you do those things, keep two key points in mind:

 

  • Your children are individuals. Some will grasp the lessons, others won’t. You’ll just have to accept that the motivational techniques that work with one child may not have much effect on another. Still, that’s no reason not to give it a try.
     

     

  • As parents, remember: you’re in control. It’s a truth that’s not always obvious. Don’t fall into the parent trap of giving in to your kids out of fear, guilt or pure indulgence.  Every family needs at least one adult, and that person should be you!

     

Chuck Chuckuemeka is managing partner of Chuckuemeka & Associates, a nationally focused CPA firm specializing in Accounting, Auditing, Consulting and Tax Advising. Visit them at www.chuckcpa.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

U Guarantees Tuition and Fee Coverage for Qualified Students

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Nearly a third of Founders Opportunity Program recipients will be students of color

Higher education has been the “great equalizer” for decades – the best possible path people could take to overcome class, race or ethnic inequalities.

That’s the path I chose. Since my father was a sharecropper and my mother a domestic, during high school I worked the night shift as a press operator at a factory to scrape together enough money to attend

Fort

Valley

State

University in and continued to work other jobs throughout my college career.

But today you’d be hard-pressed to pay for college with what you earn as a press operator. In 1970, a student had to work just 24 hours per week at minimum wage to cover the average cost of college tuition and fees. Today, a student needs to work 60 hours per week to cover those costs.  

That’s why I’m so happy to share the news that the University is expanding its major new scholarship initiative, the Founders Opportunity Program.

The program, which we introduced last year for freshmen
Minnesota residents who demonstrate a need for financial help by qualifying for a federal Pell grant, is being expanded to include transfer students.

Once the program is fully phased in, all Pell-eligible undergraduate students from
Minnesota will be guaranteed aid to cover 100 percent of tuition and required fees – for four years for freshmen and two years for transfer students. 

We’re expecting that more than 4,500 low and moderate-income undergraduates from
Minnesota – nearly a third of them students of color – will benefit from this expanded commitment. This should provide some help to a majority of University students from families with incomes of less than $50,000 per year.

The bottom line is that this new financial scholarship package will cover all of the $8,902 in tuition and fees on the Twin Cities campus or the comparable cost to attend one of our other campuses – more than double the maximum Pell grant of $4,050.

As you know, higher education costs have risen steadily in recent years, making it a lot more difficult for people of modest means to attend – particularly in
Minnesota .

Our state was once a leader in college attendance by low-income students. But our ranking has fallen in recent years. We’re hoping that the Founders Opportunity Program – and other private scholarship opportunities such as the one announced in January by the William and Nadine McGuire Foundation – will help reverse that trend.

The nearly $4 million gift from the McGuires will allow the University to create a pilot program intended to provide four years of financial help for as many as 120 underserved students. When combined with Founders Opportunity scholarships, up to 90 percent of students’ total cost to attend the University will be provided for.
 
In addition, the McGuire gift will also allow the

College of

Liberal Arts to expand mentoring, advising and academic experiences for these students so they can succeed at the University.

We think this is the best news students from low- and middle-income families have had in years. And it places the

University of

Minnesota at the forefront of colleges nationwide in providing need-based support for students.
 
To date, we’ve raised more than $107 million toward the $150 million goal of our Promise of Tomorrow campaign – the largest scholarship drive in University history. We’re now providing scholarships to more than 1,000 more students than we did two years ago before this fund-raising initiative began.

Education helped change my life and I can guarantee you that it beats sharecropping. I went on to earn a Ph.D. in crop physiology and later came to the

University of

Minnesota , where I now serve as senior vice president for system academic administration.

I’d urge each of you to spread the word about these scholarship programs to your family and friends and how the

University of

Minnesota is working to ensure that students of color and others from lower socio-economic circumstances have access to the best education. 

Please visit our Web site at www.umn.edu and click on the Founder’s Opportunity Program icon to learn more about these exciting scholarship opportunities.

Of Rattlesnakes and Loudmouth Writers

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Of Rattlesnakes and Loudmouth Writers

East African Traveler

 

One night while on the road, I found myself in an unnamed hostel bar in some East African town striking up a conversation about freedom of the press.

 

It was a reckless move. Especially when traveling, I have a general principle to refrain from talking any politics whatsoever with anyone in an establishment of higher refreshment. After all, I didn’t know the two Kenyan gentlemen who sat next to me from Adam, and they had just met themselves after overhearing each other speak Kikuyu.

 

Nevertheless, I continued to run my mouth about the recent high media drama in Nairobi, even though, for all I knew, these guys could have been high-ranking members of the Mount Kenya Mafia. (Some of us journalists excel in wheedling information out of people, but that doesn’t mean we learn when to keep our own mouths shut!)

 

Anyway, the elder of the two suddenly posed a question of great significance: “So tell me then which country—Uganda, Kenya, or Tanzania—has the most freedom of the press?”

 

We ordered another round, and I cancelled any plans for getting enough sleep before an early morning of travels.

 

With all due respect to my colleagues in Kampala, we ruled out Uganda right away. The Monitor stands as the sole independent daily newspaper in the country. During the recent national elections, Ugandan reporters faced beatings by military guards and strict censorship. Let us not forget the foreign journalists who have been kicked out of the country as well.

 

Recent news from Kenya looked even grimmer. In early March, masked militiamen and police officers raided the offices of the East African Standard and a connected television station. They wreaked havoc, manhandling journalists, destroying property, and burning newspapers. The most telling repressive quote of the year came from Kenya’s security minister, John Michuki, who later admitted to authorizing the raid: “If you rattle a snake, you must be ready to be bitten.”

 

On the surface at least, journalists in Tanzania have something more going for them. For example, the new president of Tanzania, Jakaya Kikwete, admonished his ministers to remain available and open to the press, stressing both the importance of transparent leadership and a progressive, responsible media in good governance.

 

Reports from the international press watchdog group, Reporters Without Borders, back up the aforementioned examples. 

 

In the organization’s 2005 World Press Freedom Index, Tanzania stands in the middle of the pack overall, 74th out of 167 countries. It drew praise for having an increasingly robust and free press. Obstacles to press freedom included a serious need for media law reform and the increasingly lack of freedom in the archipelago of Zanzibar. Uganda followed up not far behind their neighbors at 80 with Kenya falling all the way to 109, the same level as Chad.

 

Note that the report was compiled well before the national elections in Tanzania and Uganda and, in Kenya, the constitutional referendum along with increased pressure on the government for massive corruption scandals. It also does not reflect the level and standard of the media.

 

An international media hub, Nairobi has long developed a diverse, exceptional press that has even helped raised the standard of journalism in Tanzania in recent years. Kenyan journalists have also always been more dare devilish than their Tanzanian counterparts.

 

It’s all changing faster than you can say globalization, and I highly recommend reading the full press freedom report at www.rsf.org for a more in-depth perspective.

 

I still don’t advise taking on sensitive subjects in bars you have never frequented with people you don’t know. On the other hand, as long as you get the facts, curiosity might kill the cat, but the cat always writes a better story than an obedient dog.

After United States Invasion of Iraq; is Nigeria Next?

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Special for Mshale

 

 

A prominent and highly-influential Washington journal, The Atlantic Monthly, has laid out a scenario which suggests that the may attempt an Iraq-type invasion, or at least military intervention, in
. The scenario pointing to US military intervention in is based on assumptions not unlike those that led to the invasion of .

 

 

 

The April edition of The Atlantic Monthly published its scenario under the headline, “Worse Than Iraq”. The opening passage of the report makes the claim that: “’s president and onetime hope for a stable future is leading his country toward implosion – and possible military intervention”.

 

 

The author of the article, Jeffery Tayler, explained that ’s “ethnically and religiously combustible population… is lurching toward disaster, and the stakes are high – for both and the ”.  Of particular concern is access to Nigerian oil.

 

 

“An OPEC member since 1971, has 35.9 billion barrels of proven petroleum reserves – the largest of any African country and the eighth largest on earth. It exports some 2.5 million barrels of oil a day, and the government plans to nearly double that amount by 2010. is the fifth-largest supplier of oil to the ; energy officials predict that within ten years it and the
Gulf
of
Guinea
region will provide a quarter of ‘s crude.”

 

 

“It is hardly surprising … that since 9/11 the Bush administration has courted as an alternative to volatile petro-states in the Middle East and
Latin America
. In 2002, the White House declared the oil of Africa (five other countries on the continent are also key producers) a "strategic national interest"—meaning that the would use military force, if necessary, to protect it. In short, ‘s troubles could become ‘s and, like those of the Persian Gulf, cost us dearly in blood and money,”
Taylor
wrote.

 

 

At first blush, the suggestion that the may use military force to effect “regime-change” in order to secure its oil interests , or any other African country, does indeed seem absurd. However, there may be some veracity to the The
Atlantic
Monthly’s
scenario. In a study on Washington’s strategic military objectives for the 21st century, the Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) makes it clear that there is “no doubt that the (was) in the regime-change business”.

 

 

Andrew Krepinevich of the CSBA, a Washington think tank, seems convinced that the has indeed assumed a role which one is tempted to describe as global vigilantism (the online Merriam-Webster Dictionary includes definitions of a vigilante as a ‘self-appointed doer of justice’, one who ‘would summarily punish’ criminal behaviour).

 

 

In the CSBA Study, Krepinevich makes the following argument: “Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, the has, on average, deposed the regime of a foreign state roughly once every three years. , , , and have each seen their despotic regimes turned out, directly or indirectly, by force of American arms.”

 

 

The Atlantic Monthly’s scenario of a possible intervention in ties the loss of oil revenues and overall reduction in crude production to “corruption” at the highest levels of government. As the Washington journal went to press last month, the The Guardian newspaper in Nigeria reported a 26 percent decline in crude oil production; a direct outcome of an explosion on the weekend of 18/19 March at a pipeline owned by the Italian multinational company, Nigeria Agip Oil Company (NAOC). While there was some disagreement at the time over whether the explosion was caused by vandalisation or a by rupture of the pipeline, the only certainty, according to The Guardian, was that Nigeria’s production capacity had been reduced to 631,000 barrels daily – 26 percent reduction in capacity. Before the weekend explosion, the hostage taking saga and militancy in the region had reduced the production level by 20 percent.

 

 

According to Tayler, Nigeria’s political leadership, has shown little interest in tackling crime, the neglect, and inefficiency rampant in the oil sector, or the tapping into pipelines and siphoning oil into makeshift tankers hidden in the swamps of the Niger River Delta. This practice of “bunkering,” he explained, is responsible for the loss of some 200 000 barrels a day, and for catastrophic fires that have incinerated local folk who try to scoop up the runoff from punctured oil pipelines.

 

 

“Criminal gangs with government connections are said to be behind the practice—who else could hire the needed equipment? During his first term, (Nigeria’s President Olesogun) Obasanjo established a development commission to distribute oil revenues among the country’s indigenous peoples, but its efforts have come to naught; most of the windfall oil profits of the last few years have gone toward refurbishing mansions for the elite. Oil spills and gas flares blight the delta, ruining farmland and poisoning fishing grounds. Owing to the abysmal state of its few refineries, remains an importer of gasoline. Officials divert gas from the pumps and sell it on the black market. Fuel shortages are endemic,” wrote Tayler in The Atlantic Monthly.

 

 

These are the bases of the scenario which, according to The Atlantic Monthly, suggests that military intervention may be moving from a possibility to a probability. There is, however, no indication from official sources in Washington that the is on any kind of war footing, with regard to .

 

 

In fact, in a statement released by the White house before Bush’s visit to Nigeria in July 2003 the President was questioned by African journalists about possibly switching US oil interests from Saudi Arabia to Nigeria. In reply, Bush said: “Well, conspiracy theorists about everywhere, I guess. That’s one of the most amazing conspiracies I’ve heard. Heck, no one has ever made that connection, and so I would say – well, first, look, I have been talking about
Africa
since I was sworn-in as President. I’ve met with 22, I believe it is, heads of state here. And I have met with President Obasanjo, gosh, I would say – I better be careful, because every number I put out there, people scrutinize – a lot, maybe five times….”

 

 

“I have got good relations with President Obasanjo. Every time we have visited it has been a very cordial, up-front way. I appreciate his cooperation on the ‘s desire to work with countries such as to train troops necessary to be able to handle some of the difficult situations on the continent. As a matter of fact, I believe the in working with has trained five battalions of Nigerian troops, preparing them for issues such as – or other areas on the continent. And we will continue that relationship with the President of Nigeria. And I appreciate his leadership on that issue.”

 

 

For now, it seems, there is only speculation of US military intervention in Nigeria; speculation which has to be seen in the context of Washington’s oil “interests” and the global vigilantism implicit in the CSBA’s study.