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Sunday, April 4, 2010

Mark and Delia Owens, poachers, Zambia shooting: newyorker.com

Mark and Delia Owens, poachers, Zambia shooting: newyorker.com

You have got to read this article about top American journalists covering up a murder in Zambia: Amos, Viera, Sawyer READ IT

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Ben Affleck Visits DRC

Just read a great piece about Affleck's work in Congo. I'm going to see all his movies!

Friday, March 5, 2010

Rebuilding Hait'e Media

oice of America


Media Experts Urge Support in Rebuilding Haiti’s Media at VOA Panel

Washington, D.C., March 4, 2010 – Many radio stations and newspapers in Haiti
are unable to operate at capacity because of technical and financial problems
caused by January’s devastating earthquake, according to experts appearing at
the Voice of America (VOA) Thursday.

Sinclair Cornell, senior media adviser at USAID’s Office of Transition
Initiatives, said the destruction was so complete that the national radio
station was knocked off the air and a TV station operated under a tent. USAID is
providing a range of assistance to help improve communication, allowing people
to get vital information, he said.

The VOA event, “Rebuilding Haiti’s Media: The Lifeline of Development,” brought
government, media and non-government organizations together to examine the
current state of media in Haiti and its future after the earthquake. The
conference was webcast at
http://author.voanews.com/english/About/2010-03-01-haiti-discussion.cfm.

P.P. Youri Emmanuel, an alternate representative at Haiti’s mission to the
Organization of American States (OAS), said there has been an outpouring of
support for Haiti since the earthquake. While the destruction is tragic, he said
the rebuilding process offers hope for the future.

Ronald Cesar, chief of VOA’s Creole Service, recently surveyed the media in
Haiti. “More than 12 stations in the Port-au-Prince area had their buildings
either collapse or damaged by the quake,” he said. “Although most are back on
the air, they are not able to resume their full programming” because they lack
the resources and equipment.

Moreover, he said, advertising revenues have dropped off across the country,
forcing some media companies to lay off staff. VOA’s Creole Service
(www.voanews.com/Creole) is the largest international broadcaster to Haiti. It
produces 10.5 hours of programming a day during the week, and 9.5 hours on the
weekends.

Marjorie Rouse, a vice president at Internews (www.internews.org), a non-profit
that focuses on media development, said an Internews team created a 15-minute
daily show now broadcast on 27 stations in Haiti.

Shanthi Kalathil, a consultant at the World Bank’s CommGap, urged donors to
conduct long-range planning to rebuild the media and prevent distortions in the
media market. She also said new media present an opportunity to give Haitians a
voice in the rebuilding of their country.

/The Voice of America, which first went on the air in 1942, is a multimedia
international broadcasting service funded by the U.S. government through the
Broadcasting Board of Governors. VOA broadcasts approximately 1,500 hours of
news, information, educational, and cultural programming every week to an
estimated worldwide audience of more than 125 million people. Programs are
produced in 45 languages and are intended exclusively for audiences outside of
the United States./

/For more information, please call VOA Public Relations at (202) 203-4959, or
e-mail us at askvoa@voanews.com ./

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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Listen to "Rebuilding Haiti's Media" at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday

Fabulous panel -- the Haitian ambassador, USAID, VOA and Internews. Please listen!

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Tibetan Monks Hear About Dalai Lama's Obama Meeting on VOA

*Fireworks in homeland ahead of Dalai Lama's Obama meeting
*Ben Blanchard and Maxim Duncan
TONGREN, China
Wed Feb 17, 2010 11:43pm EST


TONGREN, China (Reuters) - Tibetans living near the birthplace of the Dalai Lama in northwest China welcomed Thursday's scheduled meeting between their exiled spiritual leader and Barack Obama with a defiant show of fireworks.

Buddhist monks in Tongren, an overwhelmingly ethnic Tibetan part of northwestern Qinghai province, said they were celebrating the meeting in Washington, which is going ahead despite warnings from Beijing that Obama's act will hurt Sino-U.S. ties.

Tensions with Washington have already risen over issues ranging from trade and currencies to a U.S. plan to sell $6.4 billion of weapons to self-ruled Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province.

The midnight display of fireworks along a valley dotted with Tibetan Buddhist monasteries was a bold and noisy reminder that, in spite of Chinese condemnation of the Dalai Lama, he remains a potent figure in his homeland, and his meeting with Obama will be noticed here by both supporters and opponents.

"My heart is filled with joy," said Johkang, showing off an enormous smile, standing at his monastery in this arid and mountainous part of the Qinghai province, which lies next to the official Tibet Autonomous Region.

"It is so important for us that this is happening, that the U.S. has not given in to threats and will meet our leader," added the monk, who like many ethnic Tibetans goes only by one name.

Qinghai, called Amdo by Tibetans, is where the Dalai Lama was born in 1935. He fled into exile from Tibet in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule, and since then has campaigned for self-rule for Tibetans. China brands him a separatist.

Tibetans set off fireworks at this time of year anyway to mark the start of their traditional lunar new year.

But many Tibetan monks in Tongren told Reuters that this year they were also marking the Dalai Lama's scheduled meeting in the White House.

"We do this whenever something big, and good happens," said Losan, swathed in the vermillion robes of a Buddhist holy man, standing on a hillside above a monastery where monks were lighting fireworks in the early hours of Thursday.

"He's really going to meet Obama?" interrupted a monk standing next to him, sounding somewhat incredulous.

*"I heard it on Voice Of America,*" Losan told him confidently.

The sound of conch shells being blown echoed around the valley as a group of monks burned an offering of flour and a ceremonial Tibetan scarf on a fire.

Veneration for the Dalai Lama transcends the Buddhist clergy and extends into broader Tibetan society where many resent Chinese rule and the relative wealth of Han Chinese.

"I'm very excited about who the Dalai Lama is going to meet," said one Tibetan woman, who declined to be identified citing the sensitive nature of the topic. "But I worry about what measures the government could take against us in retaliation."

Word of the Dalai Lama's meeting with Obama has filtered through to Qinghai through Tibetan-language foreign radio broadcasts, monks say, though news that the meeting was happening has been mentioned in passing in state media.

Some spoke proudly of the Dalai Lama's Nobel Peace Prize, awarded in 1989.

"That the 1.3 billion Han Chinese have never had one of their number win a Nobel prize and that we have, with just 6 million people, says something powerful," said a monk, Tedan. "Now you understand why we love him so much."

While technically Tibetan monasteries are not supposed to show pictures of the Dalai Lama, many in Qinghai do, the government generally having a more relaxed attitude outside of the Tibet Autonomous Region.

Still, a sense of wariness pervades Tongren.

A large new paramilitary police headquarters is being built outside the county seat, and monks mutter about occasional fines if their public devotion to the Dalai Lama becomes too much.

Around 12 months ago, also during the start of the Tibetan lunar new year, Chinese security forces maintained an obvious presence in Tongren, though lighter than in some Tibetan areas, especially Lhasa, capital of the official Tibet autonomous region.

The year before had been marked by anti-Chinese violence across Tibetan-populated parts of China, centered on Lhasa, where at least 19 died after protests by monks gave way to bloody violence, with Tibetan rioters attacking Han Chinese.

China blamed the Dalai Lama for inspiring the unrest, and regularly condemns him for seeking Tibetan independence. He has repeatedly denied being a separatist or supporting violence.

"CCTV is always saying this and that about him and about us Tibetans," said monk Tarkey, referring to China's main state-run television network. "The world will get a better idea about who he is once he meets Obama."

'Anonymous' Captured Neda's Death, and Now the Polk Award -- Politics Daily

'Anonymous' Captured Neda's Death, and Now the Polk Award -- Politics Daily