Madonna gets Political….again

John McCain sure won’t be seeing any of Madonna’s Sticky & Sweet Tour, which began with a bang this weekend.

Always controversial, Madonna irritated the presidential hopeful when she and her team played a video tacitly comparing McCain to horrible dictators, like Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe and the incomparable Adolf Hitler.

Amid a four-act show, a video interlude carried images of destruction, global warming, Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, Zimbabwe’s authoritarian President Robert Mugabe - and the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. Another sequence, shown later, pictured slain Beatle John Lennon, climate activist Al Gore, Mahatma Gandhi and finally Barack Obama.

Furious over Madonna’s hyperbolic act, the McCain camp used its reply to cast a shadow over Obama.

Said a spokesman: “The comparisons are outrageous, unacceptable and crudely divisive all at the same time. It clearly shows that when it comes to supporting Barack Obama, his fellow worldwide celebrities refuse to consider any smear or attack off limits.”

[Queerty]

Popularity: 45% [?]

(Sponsor Link: assetant.co.za)

Involved in Africa

Popularity: 32% [?]

(Sponsor Link: assetant.co.za)

Failure no option

From The Namibian:

DECLINING academic standards at the University of Namibia (Unam) have again come under the spotlight after a senior lecturer was allegedly told to drop his standards or resign from the Department of Political and Administrative Studies after only 60 out of 148 students passed their examination last semester.

About 50 students who failed the two-year Diploma in Local Development in July drew up a petition in which they demanded to be given an automatic pass and that Professor Piet van Rooyen be removed as course lecturer.Van Rooyen was subsequently brought before a disciplinary hearing at which the Dean of the faculty, Dr Boniface Mutumba, allegedly twice demanded that Van Rooyen let these students pass or hand in his resignation.The meeting was attended by Unam Vice Chancellor Dr Osmund Mwandemele, Registrar Alois Fledersbacher, Head of Examinations John Ockhuizen, Mutumba and Head of Department Dr Tapera Chiwaru.

PRECEDENT? However, Mutumba denied that he had asked for Van Rooyen’s resignation or that the meeting amounted to a disciplinary hearing.

“We were just meeting as colleagues, but it was not a disciplinary hearing… the matter was resolved,” he said.

What was resolved was a decision to allow all the failed students to repeat the course, free of charge - raising questions about the legal precedent this decision could create, other academics and students said.

The two-year diploma course was designed to allow students who did not achieve high enough marks at school - 25 points on the ICGSCE grading - to enter university.

Successful completion of this course would allow them to enrol for further studies at Unam - seemingly the main reason why most of the students enrolled, students said.

Van Rooyen declined to discuss the issue, but agreed to allow a reporter to attend a lecture on Wednesday, in which he outlined to the students why they had failed his course.

It was a lesson not much appreciated by those who had failed, judging by complaints from the back rows.

WHYS AND WHEREFORES Van Rooyen told the students that while there were 148 students enrolled, only eight copies of the prescribed textbook had been sold by the campus bookshop in the past semester.

Class attendance the past semester was also very poor, with only 40 students on average attending lectures in spite of a Unam regulation that they have to attend at least 80 per cent of classes in order to sit for examinations, he noted.

Further, their ability to communicate in English was poor - but not one of the students had a dictionary with them, and even the better students asked for explanations of words such as “locality”.

Assignments handed in often were of very poor standard, both in presentation and terms of language, with some students unable to distinguish between words like “policy” and “police”, he said.

While Van Rooyen admitted freely that his Afrikaans-accented English was perhaps hard to understand at times, students had the right to ask him to explain or ask for help, he said.

However, as a senior academic, he had responsibilities to make sure that students meet minimum standards, as he refused to hand out “phoney” qualifications, Van Rooyen told the class.

WHAT ABOUT US? The rowdy group of first years generally welcomed news of the appointment of a new, more junior lecturer.

While efforts were made to speak to students who had failed, only those who passed the first module were generally willing to be interviewed.

Asked why so many students had failed, top student Aino Mundilo suggested that these students “preferred their independence” to enjoy student life away from the strictures of parental control.

The main reason was because they failed to attend lectures - and then as a result could not understand the prescribed textbook, she said.

“But if I fail one of the next modules, will I also be allowed to repeat the course free of charge?” Mundilo asked.

Too many of the failed students merely took the course because it allowed them to say they were studying at Unam, others felt.

“The biggest problem is that many of them, especially those who come from schools in the North, have real difficulty in expressing themselves in English,” said Sibongile Tshabalala.

Another Unam academic said the problem was exacerbated by a political decision by Unam’s senior management to force their most senior staff to teach undergraduates.

This meant that some lecturers were shouldering massive workloads while neglecting essential research and publication, the measure by which universities worldwide are judged.

An obvious problem was motivation: senior lecturers such as Van Rooyen earn salaries less than half the generous packages that Unam’s administrators have given themselves, it was established.

By stressing access to higher education rather than quality of higher education, Unam management has “diminished the very currency of education” and this held very serious implications for Namibia’s future development, one academic said.

While Unam has spent N$4 million on modern teaching aids such as computerised touch-screens over the past year, its students appeared unappreciative.

After the class had left, the room was left filled with litter from food and junk left behind in spite of clear signs that say: ‘No eating in class allowed’.

Popularity: 23% [?]

(Sponsor Link: assetant.co.za)

Robert Mugabe is not the worst….!

With the ongoing fiasco that is Zimbabwe I found this article from Slate appropriate:

Who’s Africa’s Worst Dictator?Hint: It’s probably not Robert Mugabe.

By Peter Maass
Posted Tuesday, June 24, 2008, at 1:34 PM ET


A pop quiz: Who is the worst dictator in Africa?a) Robert Mugabe
b) Robert Mugabe
c) Robert Mugabe
d) None of the above

The answer seems obvious. Thanks to extensive coverage in the news media and abundant criticism by Western governments, everyone knows that Zimbabwe’s leader is trying to hang onto power by crushing his rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, who would roll to victory in the final round of elections on June 27 if his followers were not being killed, beaten, jailed, or harassed by state thugs. Even President George W. Bush described Mugabe’s rule as a “nightmare.”

But Mugabe may not be Africa’s worst. That prize arguably goes to Teodoro Obiang, the ruler of Equatorial Guinea whose life seems a parody of the dictator genre. Years of violent apprenticeship in a genocidal regime led by a crazy uncle? Check. Power grab in a coup against the murderous uncle? Check. Execution of now-deposed uncle by firing squad? Check. Proclamation of self as “the liberator” of the nation? Check. Govern for decades in a way that prompts human rights groups to accuse your regime of murder, torture, and corruption? Check, check, and check.

Obiang, who seized power in 1979, had promised to be kinder and gentler than his predecessor, but in the 1990s, even the U.S. ambassador to Equatorial Guinea received a death threat from a regime insider, the ambassador has said, and had to be evacuated. Not long after that, offshore oil was discovered, but the first wave of revenues—about $700 million—was transferred into secret accounts under Obiang’s personal control. The latest chapter, written in the last month, may be the least surprising, because Obiang’s ruling party won 99 of the 100 seats in legislative elections. A government press release, hailing Obiang as the “Militant Brother Founding President of the PDGE,” carried the headline, “Democracy at Its Peak in Equatorial Guinea.”

If you haven’t heard any of this, don’t worry; as far as I can tell, the only American journalist who has reported on Obiang’s electoral theft is Ken Silverstein, who writes for Harper’s and has for many years poured out a primal scream of investigative reports into Obiang’s misrule. Other than Silverstein’s recent postings and several wire-service stories that were not picked up in America, there has been a vacuum of coverage about a suppression of democracy in Africa that is more complete than what Mugabe is trying to get away with. True, Equatorial Guinea is a small country with a population of less than 1 million, its economy is expanding in an oil boom, and Obiang’s “victory” did not require the obvious and crude violence of Mugabe’s ongoing terror. But Obiang’s enforcers don’t need to club people on the streets. His would-be opponents are too frightened to openly demonstrate against him. His is the Switzerland of dictatorships—so effective at enforcing obedience that the spectacle of unrest is invisible.

The reality of the regime’s brutishness nearly hit me over the head as I was being expelled from the country while researching a book on oil in 2004. I had already been chilled by the docility of the people—unlike other countries in the Third World, no one approached me as I walked the streets. (The only place where I had felt a similar pattern of fear was North Korea.) After I had been in Equatorial Guinea for a bit more than a week, the minister of information, Alfonso Nsue Mokuy, summoned me to the patio of the Bahia Hotel, where Frederick Forsyth had written The Dogs of War, and told me I was an anti-Obiang agitator or a spy—he wasn’t sure which. I would be on the next plane out of the country, he said. One of his aides escorted me to the airport, and soon after we arrived, the minister showed up and rifled through my bags, seizing memory chips and notes, accusing me of being a spy (he had concluded I was not an agitator), and threatening to take me downtown for a real Obiang-style interrogation.(More here…)

Depressing stuff….

Popularity: 22% [?]

(Sponsor Link: assetant.co.za)

Moneymaking on the net…is it a real option for Africa?

Though I am relatively new to the making money on the net concept I allready have questions pertaining to its aplicabality to non-US residents. There are many sites offering pay per qlick, referrals et cetera. But it is noticeable that these sites are mostly aimed at the United States and even Europe. Most of these sites canvass for these markets obviously because of its vast number of consumers. But what then about Africa and the Middle East where most economies are still developing and where access to the internet and the concept of Web 2.0 is to a large extent limited?
Is it worth trying these sites out? Looking at the members very few are usually from the above stated regions…
Anyone with an answer welcome….

Popularity: 27% [?]

(Sponsor Link: assetant.co.za)

Close
Powered by ShareThis