Thursday, January 31, 2008

"Why Gay Marriage Should Not be Legal"

  1. Being gay is not natural. Americans always reject unnatural things like eyeglasses, polyester, and air conditioning.
  2. Gay marriage will encourage people to be gay, in the same way that hanging around tall people will make you tall.
  3. Legalizing gay marriage will open the door to all kinds of crazy behavior. People may even wish to marry their pets because a dog has legal standing and can sign a marriage contract.
  4. Straight marriage has been around a long time and hasn't changed at all; women are still property, blacks still can't marry whites, and divorce is still illegal.
  5. Straight marriage will be less meaningful if gay marriage were allowed; the sanctity of Britney Spears's 55-hour just-for-fun marriage would be destroyed.
  6. Straight marriages are valid because they produce children. Gay couples, infertile couples, and old people shouldn't be allowed to marry because our orphanages aren't full yet, and the world needs more children.
  7. Obviously gay parents will raise gay children, since straight parents only raise straight children.
  8. Gay marriage is not supported by religion. In a theocracy like ours, the values of one religion are imposed on the entire country. That's why we have only have one religion in America.
  9. Children can never succeed without a male and a female role model at home. That's why we as a society expressly forbid single parents to raise children.
  10. Gay marriage will change the foundation of society; we could never adapt to new social norms. Just like we haven't adapted to cars or cellphones.

I do not intend to offend anyone with this post. I only would like to show the absurdity of this whole debate. I hope you agree.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

From the Back Seat

What is all the fuss about Kenyan politics? Almost a month after the historical general elections in Kenya, temperatures and tempers are rising day in day out. Notwithstanding are the hundreds of innocent citizens dying and families losing their property and sources of livelihood. the recurring question remains, who do we point the finger to? Well I'll tell you, The Kenyan Government. Yes I said it,shoot me like you shot the other 300+ innocent citizens.

It is rather appalling that in the midst of the fracas and lack of tranquility, a policeman, who claims training from a top institution in Kenya will let his adrenalin take the best of him. Hundreds of innocents Kenyans have ended up six feet under or in dilapidated hospital beds as a result of a bullet wound that was inflicted by a man in uniform. Before pointing fingers or crossing over to the other side of the fence(the peoples' side), I'd like to sit on the fence and be neutral. so maybe Kenyans have an adrenalin than is way beyond control and someone, preferably God, needs to swing his hand and slap the entire country back to its senses. Police are genuinely required constitutionally to use any means within their reach to ensure the SAFETY of the citizens of Kenya. A number of options are presented to them in this regard namely:
  1. Rubber bullets
  2. Water from fire trucks
  3. Tear gas
  4. Peaceful negotiations which should actually be priority
Yes, and nowhere do we see the prescription of live ammunition against the Kenyans during what was actually a peaceful mass demonstration turned helter skelter run for dear life thanks to the......you guessed it!POLICE! It's not sad, rather its pathetic and sickening that the police kill the very people who pay them(Kenyans are among the highest taxed people in the world). A move by the opposition, or government in waiting as I would like to put it, to sue the Kenyan government for constant disregard and violation of human rights in the International Court of Law based in Hague is just the beginning of the long process as we fight for justice. For the Police Force which has turned form its motto."Utumishi kwa Wote"(translated:"Service to All") to "Utumishi kwaKibaki"(translated:"Service to Kibaki") judgment day is nigh

From the back seat,all is clear and the view is perfect but if you take the front seat, you will be oblivious of the obvious as events will pass you faster than you can say, "Raila, the People's President". Kenya is not in the front seat so Kibaki, stop treating us like we are.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Who Will Rule Us After the Next 9/11?

The reality of NSPD-51 is almost as bad as the paranoia.
By Ron Rosenbaum

Oh, god. I'm reluctant to write this particular column. I've been scarred by this kind of story before. I've learned that it's difficult to write about the sources of paranoia without spreading paranoia.

But the subject, NSPD-51—that's National Security Presidential Directive 51—and the attendant explosion of blogospheric paranoia about it deserve attention. Even if you don't believe, as I don't, that NSPD-51 is a blueprint for a coup in the guise of plans for "continuity of government" in the event of a national emergency (such as a terrorist attack during an election campaign). Even if you don't believe, as I don't, that it will be used as a pretext for canceling the upcoming presidential election and preserving "continuity" of this administration in office.

Nonetheless, the specifics of the directive are a matter of legitimate concern that has not been given the urgent and sustained attention it deserves by Congress or the mainstream media.

I first became aware of the extent of the paranoia when I read the following comment, which was appended to an essay Naomi Wolf wrote for the Huffington Post:

Scenario for 2008: Sometime in middle to late summer, perhaps early fall, a "terrorist attack," or a natural disaster occurs, allowing Bush to suspend the elections in the name of "national security," and take the control of the government via the "National Security Presidential Directive/NSPD 51" and "Homeland Security Presidential Directive/HSPD-20," released by the WH May 9th of this year. He could remain in control as long as he wanted. Now, wouldn't THAT be an interesting nightmare?

Crazy, right? Well after I read it I Googled "NSPD-51" and got something like 36,000 hits. (HSPD-20 is essentially the same directive under a different title.) Most of the ones I sampled elaborated on the "nightmare" coup scenario above. Of course, Google hits are not evidence of the facts, only of the temper of the times, and the times are seething with paranoia.

But that doesn't mean NSPD-51 doesn't deserve careful scrutiny. Consider that an election-eve al-Qaida attack, for instance, is not inconceivable. What if a nuclear device goes off in New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles the weekend before the election and a warning is issued that the other two cities will be hit on Election Day?

Who will decide whether the elections in those heavily Democratic states should be put off or whether the entire election should be postponed until ... when? Until the bodies are cleared, the gamma radiation has subsided? Just how wise and fair—and constitutional—are the brand-new mechanisms for "continuity of government" that NSPD-51 has put into effect with almost no prior and little subsequent discussion last May?

And there's another paranoia-inducing element of the story: The existence of "classified continuity annexes" whose content has been kept secret even from the House Committee on Homeland Security. A troubling aspect of the story that, so far as I know, only one mainstream media reporter, Jeff Kosseff of the Portland Oregonian, has pursued.

As it happens, I had a troubling experience in the past writing about paranoid fears that an unpopular president will cancel a presidential election. The experience helped turn me into a conspiracy theory skeptic, so let me briefly recount that incident—which, curiously enough, also involved the Portland Oregonian—so you'll understand the perspective I bring to the question.

Return with me to 1970, another moment of seething paranoia two years before Richard Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, before Watergate was even a gleam in Gordon Liddy's eyes. A time of war and of an increasingly frustrated and suspicious anti-war movement. It was my first year as a reporter, and the whole episode started with a cab driver from Staten Island.

As historian and frequent Slate contributor David Greenberg recounts it in his thoughtful book Nixon's Shadow, "the rumor [that Nixon had a secret plan to cancel the '72 presidential election] first appeared in print on April 5 in the Portland Oregonian, the Staten Island Advance and other Newhouse-owned newspapers. According to the item, the administration had asked the RAND Corporation ... to study whether 'rebellious factions using force or bomb threats would make it unsafe to conduct an election' and how the president might respond. Ron Rosenbaum, a reporter from the Village Voice, heard about the article from a Staten Island cab driver and investigated. He reported in The Voice on April 16 that RAND and the administration denied that any such study existed, but then playfully pointed out that they would surely deny it if it were true. Rosenbaum added that the country would just have to wait until 1972 to see."

Lesson here: Don't get too "playful" when writing about conspiracy theories. The problem with being "playful" back then was that much of the anti-war movement read the Voice at the time, and my story ignited a firestorm of paranoia. Soon there were "documents" of dubious authenticity circulating that purported to be RAND memos outlining plans to round up and lock up leaders of the anti-war movement. Eventually Pat Moynihan, then a Nixon consigliere, thundered against the rumor as an example of the intrusion of irrationality into politics.

The thing is, there's nothing wrong with planning for "continuity of government," especially in the nuclear age. Planning for continuity doesn't necessarily mean plotting a coup, although that's the way my story was read and spread. (Of course, meanwhile—proving that reality can outrun paranoia—the Nixon administration was planning to subvert the election, anyway, with the assortment of illegal actions and dirty tricks that became known as Watergate.)

Still, there's nothing I feel the need to apologize about for pursuing that story then (or this one now). Indeed, it was marginally possible back then, when the anti-war movement had become massive and some were turning to violence, that the RAND Corp. might have been involved in planning how to maintain "continuity" in the face of violent disruptions.

But the fact that the extreme worst-case scenario didn't happen in 1972 (no coup attempt) left one big question unanswered—and NSPD-51 illustrates it still hasn't been settled in any satisfactory way: What are the contingency plans for holding or postponing a national election in the midst of a traumatic national emergency?

I've studied the actual presidential directive, which you can find here.

In many respects, it's innocuous. It doesn't, for instance, tamper with the procedures for presidential succession in case, say, the chief executive and vice president are killed. And there's a value to requiring that every government agency prepare a plan to deal with a catastrophe.

But consider provision 2E of the directive:
"Enduring Constitutional Government," or "ECG," means a cooperative effort among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the Federal Government, coordinated by the President, as a matter of comity with respect to the legislative and judicial branches and with proper respect for the constitutional separation of powers among the branches, to preserve the constitutional framework under which the Nation is governed and the capability of all three branches of government to execute constitutional responsibilities and provide for orderly succession, appropriate transition of leadership, and interoperability and support of the National Essential Functions during a catastrophic emergency. (Italics mine.)

Do you see those five weasel words "as a matter of comity"? Just what elements of the legislative and judicial branches will be allowed to participate in "executing constitutional responsibilities" and "providing for orderly succession [and] appropriate transfer of leadership"?
In other words, who gets to call the shots? What does comity mean in this context? Informally, it means good-natured, good-faith camaraderie. In its jurisprudential sense, the American Heritage Dictionary defines it as "the principle by which the courts of one jurisdiction may accede or give effect to the laws or decisions of another."

In other words, in the weasel-speak of NSPD-51, it implies that one or more branches of the government will have to cede power to another. And since everything is to be "coordinated by the president," I'm guessing that the members of the Supreme Court left alive and some congressional leaders left alive (How chosen? What party balance?) will in effect have to sit around a big conference table and do a lot of "ceding" to the executive.

And given the current state of relations between Congress and the executive, such comity will not necessarily translate into camaraderie.

If it comes down to whether to pull the nuclear trigger, who will get to vote, and how large a majority will be required to launch?

Comity—that innocent-sounding word—could well turn out to be the excuse for junking those pesky checks and balances the Founding Fathers seemed so obsessed with. For an indeterminate period of time.

The document is also hazy on when our new continuity policies will be set in motion. The directive tells us that they'll kick in whenever the nation faces a "catastrophic emergency." But look how vaguely "catastrophic emergency" is first defined:

"Catastrophic Emergency" means any incident, regardless of location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the U.S. population, infrastructure, environment, economy, or government functions.
These are profoundly, potentially calamitously, broad terms. Who defines what is extraordinary? Who defines how severe severely is? Is there any procedure to challenge the junking of constitutional government?

Worse, "catastrophic emergency"—woefully vague to start out with—is later expanded to include even "localized acts of nature and accidents" as well as "technological or attack-related" emergencies.

In other words, even if you don't believe the most sinister paranoid coup theories, the document does nothing to allay one's fears that it could be used in a sinister way.

I wish I did, but I see nothing in the document to prevent even a "localized" forest fire or hurricane from giving the president the right to throw long-established constitutional government out the window, institute a number of unspecified continuity policies, and run the country with the guidance of the "National Continuity Coordinator" and with the "Continuity Policy Coordination Committee" for as long as the president sees fit.

This order has been issued by executive fiat and has not been subjected to any public examination by the other two branches, which have behaved in a supine way that suggests how they'll behave when comity time arrives and urgent decisions on the fate of the nation and perhaps the world (nuclear retaliation being what it is) need to be made immediately.

The fact that Congress has not scrutinized and challenged the potential here for an emergency-situation power grab is scandalous, unacceptable.

Let Congress pass a law posthaste nullifying the directive, and then when the executive nullifies the nullification, challenge it in the courts. I can't believe even this Supreme Court, with its deference to executive power, could take this clownishly drafted document seriously.

It's not that others haven't noticed the problem. The Wikipedia entry on NSPD-51, for instance, cites rational warnings against it from both right and left:

Conservative activist Jerome Corsi and Marjorie Cohn of the [left wing] National Lawyers Guild have interpreted this as a break from Constitutional law in that the three branches of government are equal, with no single branch coordinating the others. … The directive does not specify whose responsibility it would be to either declare a catastrophic emergency or declare it over.

Good point. And then there are the final two provisions of the NSPD, which mysteriously refer to unseen secret "annexes" to the directive. Needless to say, if what they've made public is so shameless in its disregard for the Constitution, the following two sections on secret provisions don't allay suspicion:

(23) Annex A and the classified Continuity Annexes, attached hereto, are hereby incorporated into and made a part of this directive.
(24) Security. This directive and the information contained herein shall be protected from unauthorized disclosure, provided that, except for Annex A, the Annexes attached to this directive are classified and shall be accorded appropriate handling, consistent with applicable Executive Orders.

So, how many secret annexes are there in addition to "annex A," and what kinds of things do they say that even the paranoia-inducing public document can't include?

Here's where Jeff Kosseff of the Portland Oregonian comes in. In an e-mail to me, he said he believed he was the first mainstream media reporter to pursue the classified annex issue (although Charles Savage reported on the disturbing public aspects of the directive itself in the Boston Globe in May).

Kosseff told me he got onto the story when Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio expressed puzzlement that he was having trouble seeing what was in the classified "annexes." DeFazio was a member of the homeland security committee and cleared to read classified material in a supersecure "bubble room" designed to prevent any kind of surveillance. But DeFazio's initial request was, as Kosseff reported, "denied" by the White House, which cited national security concerns.

DeFazio said this was the first time he had been denied access to classified documents. He brought in the chairman of the Committee on Homeland Security, Bennie Thompson, and the chairman of the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Management, Investigation and Oversight, Chris Carney, to back his request for access to the classified annexes.

In a phone conversation, Jeff Kosseff told me the latest development. In August, these requests were denied as well. On grounds of "national security."

I don't want to be alarmist, I have no evidence there's a coup brewing. But I think the American people and their congressional reps deserve some say in how they will be ruled when the ordinary rules go out the window in a national emergency. For one thing, what will happen to the Bill of Rights' guarantees of individual liberty and the courts that are supposed to enforce them?

If you ask me, setting aside any paranoid fantasies, it is clear on the most basic level—read it yourself—that NSPD-51 is the creation of irresponsible incompetents, bulls in the china shop of our constitutional framework. It is a recipe for disaster. For a catastrophe of governance that would match whatever physical catastrophe it followed and threaten the re-establishment of constitutional democracy. It would make the partisan warfare over the 2000 election in Florida seem like child's play. We might recover from a disaster but we might never recover from the "continuity coordination" that followed, "coordination" that could forever undermine any faith in the actual continuity of constitutional liberty in America since it would put it at the mercy of any president who wants to "coordinate continuity" rather than govern legally.

I think it's urgent that we bring these questions out of the shadows of phony comity. I'd urge readers to call or e-mail their members of Congress and senators now. Call for an emergency joint congressional hearing to end this farce, give us some transparency about what our government will do if we suffer another 9/11. Let all branches of government participate in the attempt to reach some consensus on rational and effective continuity planning. Something more specific and sophisticated than the clumsy but dangerously Orwellian "Continuity Coordination Committee."
By Ron Rosenbaum Posted Friday, Oct. 19, 2007, at 2:23 PM ET

Friday, January 18, 2008

Did democracy die along with Bhutto?

The killing of Benazir Bhutto has also laid to rest the Bush administration’s grand plans for Pakistan, said Simon Robinson in Time. Washington had engineered Bhutto’s homecoming last fall, after she spent eight years in exile, seeing her as a civilian counterweight to the increasingly unpopular military ruler, Gen. Pervez Musharraf. With Bhutto serving as prime minister and Musharraf as president, the White House hoped, it would look “as if it were keeping its word to spread democracy in the Muslim world while still having its man run the country.” But this tidy arrangement was doomed from the start, said Trudy Rubin in The Philadelphia Inquirer. Bhutto had no sooner returned than Musharraf got jittery over his declining popularity, declared martial law, and put her under house arrest. Now, following her assassination, on Dec. 27, the nuclear-armed Muslim country is in tumult. With many Pakistanis blaming Musharraf for Bhutto’s death, he has postponed elections scheduled for this week until next month. “If, as looks likely, the delayed elections are blatantly rigged, Pakistan could implode.”

Pinning our hopes on Bhutto was a big mistake, said William Dalrymple in The New York Times. With her Western diplomas, extensive Washington contacts, and abundant charm, she posed as a freedom-loving democrat. But she was “a natural autocrat’’ who believed that ruling Pakistan was her birthright; when she was prime minister in the 1990s, Pakistan was rife with repression, torture, and political killings. Even in death, said Rosa Brooks in the Los Angeles Times, Bhutto’s arrogant sense of entitlement continues to shape Pakistan. Her will named her 19-year-old son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, as her successor as party chair. She designated her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, as “co-chair and quasi-regent” until Bilawal graduates from Oxford. That’s a commitment to dynasty, not democracy.

Even as the U.S. searches for a new Pakistan policy, said Robin Wright in The Washington Post, Bush is clinging to the old one. He still wants to “prop up” Musharraf, believing him essential to the country’s security. So the White House is trying “to forge a new moderate center” to work with him. Why bother? said Peter Galbraith in The Boston Globe. Musharraf has shown himself to be an utterly unreliable ally. Of the billions we’ve given him to fight the war on terror, he’s squandered half of it “for use against India.” Instead of destroying Islamic militants, he’s allowed them to sink roots and proliferate, undermining Pakistan’s safety and ours alike. “The United States needs to be tough with Pakistan, not gullible.”

Fortunately, said Amir Taheri in the New York Post, reports that Pakistan is poised to self-destruct are greatly exaggerated. Its nuclear arsenal is secure. The army is stable. And contrary to popular belief, the “Islamists are not about to seize power.” At best, their fractured parties command 11 percent or 12 percent of the vote. The best solution to Pakistan’s problems is “more, not less, democracy.”

In the short term, that means settling for half a loaf, said Charles Krauthammer in The Washington Post. It’s in our best interests to have democracies in this critical region of the globe, even if the democracy practiced in each country is a “local variant.’’ In Afghanistan, this means accepting “the power of warlords”; in Iraq, it means giving Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds autonomy in a system of decentralized federalism. “And in Pakistan, it means accepting both the enduring presence of feudal politics and the pre-eminent role of the military.” It’s not ideal, but “that is not a reason for giving up on it”—especially when you consider the alternative.

--The Week Vol. 8 Issue 344

Sunday, January 13, 2008

World food prices- Rise again...

Recently, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) revealed that World food prices have risen making food out of reach once again for the World's poorest. Skyrocketing prices surpass exchange rates only found 30 years ago. Estimates suggest hundreds of millions of people in all reaches of the Earth will feel the effects of rising prices. Not only will farmers and laborers be affected, but those who purchase and consume will fall victim to rising grain prices. "Net food importers", or countries like the United States which primarily import agricultural goods will also feel the sting of rising food prices. Cheap commodities used to feed workers will now be more expensive, thus increasing the price of imported goods. Along with this grim message from the IFPRI, a far more menacing laundry list of catastrophes waiting to happen still cloud our dreary path to progress. Not surprisingly this list includes climate change, unequal wealth distribution, and the rise of global urbanization tally this list with impending urgency. Ironically alternative "green" bio-fuels are poised to increase soybean prices by 26 percent before the year 2020. Riots are slowly surfacing in dangerously overpopulated areas such as Bangladesh beacon the beginning of yet another brooding crisis. Indeed the growing economies of Asian countries such as India and China demand meat products and high-quality imported goods, which in turn require cheap grain to either produce or sustain. This interdependency balances the food supplies of the Earth on a very fragile scale, which can be easily tipped by expected environmental catastrophes. Inevitably scientists postulate the growth of the human race to levels beyond those we see today. Dwarfing the already bloated tally of 6 billion lives, the years to come forebode a reality of 12 billion human souls wandering the Earth in search of food. This statistic becomes far more startling when the prices of food are not expected to falter...

http://www.alertnet.org/db/blogs/47985/2008/00/4-124656-1.htm

Update: January 14, 2008

Due to the rise in world food prices, the global community has responded with the creation of an independent fund which will now provide food and much needed supplies for those countries who ask for rudimentary goods such as grain and water. These basic goods are used to feed those workers who in turn cultivate high demand imported agricultural goods. Despite the far reaching effects of the recent surge in food prices, the global community has established this fund backed with $17 million dollars.

However, there is concern within the UN that the new fund will not meet the demands of impoverished countries. Stemming from a sheer lack of supply the UN fears that by the end of the year the requests for basic commodities will not be properly fulfilled. A hefty fee of 107 billion dollars is needed to fund those countries, creating a huge disparity in assets and demands.

Not surprisingly severe droughts and an unprecedented lack of supply is the cause for the recent spike in prices. Furthermore the price of crude oil has risen in kind with food making shipping even more expensive, thus making a sound exchange process rather pricey. Interestingly most farms are watered through precipitation rather than irrigation. This capricious relationship between farmer and mother nature has recently been plagued with misfortune.

Finally, the director of FAO (The UN Food and Agriculture Organization) Jacques Diouf stressed the temporary nature of the fund. However Diouf hints that longer programs must be established to fully wrestle the crisis of rising food prices.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/e907a284ee2f0d9ab2c368dafa127cc6.htm

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Somalia – Quest for Stability and Development

President Siad Barre of Somalia was overthrown in 1991. The clans which had united to overthrown him could not agree on a replacement and ignited a conflict that still has not been entirely resolved. In 2004, Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government (TFG) was set up. The authority of this government was challenged in 2006 by the rise of the Union of Islamic Courts. This Union seized Mogadishu, which had not been under the full control of the transitional government, in June of that same year. In December, the city was regained by government forces backed by Ethiopian military. In the northwest part of the country, the territory of Somaliland remains autonomous. The region of Puntland also remains semi-autonomous. The BBC reports that up to one million people have died as a result of not only the prolonged fighting between rival warlords, but also due to famine and disease. The United Nations estimates that an additional one million people have become refugees. In March and April of 2007, hundreds of thousands of people fled Mogadishu to escape the worst fighting there in nearly two decades.

The issue of Somalia is important because it remains and unresolved conflict that is almost two decades long. People have been refugees for many years, without neither a permanent home nor way of sustainment. Many are located in the bordering states of Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya, and Yemen. Others keep suffering within Somalia as a result of conflict and the inability of the government to properly take care of its people. The Ethiopian intervention in Somalia reignited tensions between Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia, which increased the destabilization of the region.

To resolve the instability and problems of Somalia, it is necessary to come to an agreement not only within the country but also with its bordering states. Ethiopia and Eritrea still have diverging views over their shared border. Eritrea has backed the Union of Islamic Courts while Ethiopia has supported the TFG. Eritrea allegedly gave weapons to the Union during the 2006 conflict in Somalia, so as to draw the Ethiopian troops away from the Eritrea-Ethiopia border. The reliance of the TFG on Ethiopian troops during the conflict has left many Somalis and pro-Union forces refusing to accept the TFG’s legitimacy and rejecting reconciliation initiatives. A mediator is necessary to unite the different groups inside Somalia along with the TGF, such as the African Union or the United Nations. Since France and the United States have interests in the region, they may also become involved in the negotiations. The arms embargo the United Nations has placed on Somalia must be fully enforced with aid from the international community. Nevertheless, the TFG should be allowed to develop a stronger military force, one which is diverse in its composition, so as to prove its authority in Somalia and not have to rely on the Ethiopian military in case of future conflicts. Plans for the reintegration of Somali refugees must be formed and developed to bring back the people to areas in the country where they can develop their own communities and be safe from any conflict. Humanitarian aid must be provided to help the Somali population and refugees create communities and ways of sustenance and development.

In 2000, Eritrea and Ethiopia signed a peace agreement and Ethiopia accepted its new land-locked status. The international community must place emphasis on both nations in maintaining the terms of this peace agreement. Even though the region of Somaliland provides port facilities and trade ties for Ethiopia, another possible resolution to Ethiopia’s lack of an outlet to the ocean should be sought so as to appease the country. Both countries should be discouraged from intervening in Somali affairs.

Coutry Profile – Somalia
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/country_profiles/1072592.stm

The Diplomacy of Chavez

The past few weeks have witnessed a rather interesting battle between the Colombian government and the infamous Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. For those who haven't been following due to the Odyssey of Ms. Clinton or the dire events in Pakistan, Kenya, and Sri Lanka, here's a summary:

Chavez has been getting highly involved with Colombia as he wishes to mediate between the government and the guerrilla groups to coordinate the release of hostages, especially the better known ones such as Ingrid Betancourt, who was kidnapped when she ran for president, Clara Rojas, who was working with Betancourt at the time of her abduction, and Emmanuel, the first child born in captivity, son of Rojas and a guerrilla soldier.

Last week, there was supposedly an agreement between Chavez and the guerrillas that would lead to the liberation of hostages on December 31, 2007, namely the young boy Emmanuel. However, nothing happened at all, leading many to question Chavez and the intentions of the guerrillas (who claimed they didn't show up because of military action nearby, which they feared represented a trap.) Chavez was further humiliated when it was revealed that Emmanuel had been in the hands of Bienestar Familiar, an agency that deals mostly with homeless children, as proven by DNA tests. This proved that the boasts that Emmanuel would be freed were empty. Chavez faced the world by saying that what was important was that Emmanuel was safe. Meanwhile, Uribe stated to the world that Colombia wanted no interference, as other countries (such as France) wish to intervene to release hostages.

Chavez, unhappy, claimed this week that he had obtained coordinates at which hostages Clara Rojas and Consuelo Gonzalez would be liberated. This time it came true and the said hostages were freed, taken by air to Venezuelan ground, and then sent back to their families. Chavez has used this as leverage to the claim that with him as mediator, he can manage to get other hostages freed.

To the government of Uribe, this is a tough blow. On one hand, accepting the aid of Chavez would please many and get several hostages home, including three Americans. However, doing this would leave Chavez with too much influence in the country's affairs, and it also would entail sacrifices, such as the liberation of captured guerrillas.
On the other hand, rejecting the aid will be seen as negative by the public due to the general desire to have hostages free. Additionally, back in July the president faced a pacifist congregation that took place in the Plaza de Bolivar (the political center of Bogota), assuring people that he'd work to get hostages free. Rejecting aid might also lead to different tactics from Chavez, but it would be a show of strength as Colombia had stated that it wished no foreign interference.

Considering the political conditions of the Continent, this is an important moment, as it will establish just how much power Chavez is exerting. It is a clear attempt of Chavez to expand his sphere of influence, for the sake of his "Bolivarian" revolution. This is seen in the way Chavez defends the Colombian guerrillas, claiming they're not terrorists, but revolutionaries (something that ceased to be true after the fall of more political groups such as the M19.) It is also seen in the way Chavez has not given up on his reform that would drastically change the Venezuelan constitution and increase his power. The increase in weaponry within Venezuela is also worthy of note...it leads to the question of how Chavez managed to negotiate effectively with the guerrillas.

My opinion is that this struggle will continue to play an important role until the end of President Uribe's term, after which the election of a new president will change conditions. I would recommend that these affairs be regarded as closely as those in the Middle East, as they play a major role in the politics of the Americas.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Australia Continues to Pledge Aid to East Timor, Independent Since 1999

East Timor, a former Portuguese colony, was under Indonesia rule for 25 years, ending it in 1999. It remained under United Nations protection until 2002.

Australia will keep 1,000 troops in East Timor until needed, probably sometime during 2008. Last year, elections resulted in violence in East Timor, and Australia sent 1,000 troops along with the United Nations' 1,500 police.

The current president of East Timor is President Jose Ramos-Horta.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7143915.stm

Kenya: Opposition Shall Resume its Protests

The following conflicts remain:

Opposition leader Raila Odinga refuses to meet with President Kibaki unless the meeting is lead by mediators. Kibaki refuses that condition.

A coalition government is still possible since ministerial posts have not yet been filled. Odinga refuses to have a shared government if Kibaki was to lead it. Kibaki will not change his position that the election is finished and correct.

A mediator that can unite both parties and at least have the success of some communication between them, is very much needed. Hopefully, Kofi Annan shall have more success than John Kufour.

Protests are not allowed by the government but protesters are not willing to give up: a planned rally is scheduled for next Tuesday, with time for mediation efforts to be fruitful, states the opposition.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7182642.stm

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Kofi Annan to Take Over Mediation Talks

Ex-Secretary General of the United Nations will take over mediation efforts between Odinga and Kibaki. Previously, it was thought that African Union Chairman and President of Ghana, John Kufuor, would have been an successful mediator but this was not the case. Bishop Desmond Tutu, receiver of the Nobel Peace Prize, visited Kenya in attempts to act as a peacemaker.

The opposition states the death toll due to violence is at 1,000. The government claims it is around 500.

The election took place on December 27, two weeks ago.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/01/10/kenya/index.html?iref=newssearch

Kenya's Talks End in Failure

Two weeks ago, the presidential elections in Kenya were held. Official and final results were not released until the following Sunday.

The opposition is led by Raila Odinga, losing by 230,000 votes out of a total cast of 10 million.

The president, Mwai Kibaki, retained his position.

About 600 deaths have been reported and 250,000 people have fled their homes at the arrival of violence.

Different solutions have been proposed. One of the leading ideas is that of forming a coalition government between both parties until another election can be held under a system that is more effective. Neither side, naturally, wishes to give in to the other.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7181184.stm