Author: Serkadis

  • Streets reopen after West Loop fire

    _fire612.jpgFirefighters respond to what was described as a small fire at 420 W. Van Buren St. (William DeShazur/Chicago Tribune)

    West Loop streets closed this morning because of a small office building fire have reopened, authorities said.

    Firefighters were called to 420 W. Van Buren St. at 9:50 a.m. and discovered that  welding sparks had apparently ignited insulation inside walls on the 12th floor, Chicago Fire spokesman Quention Curtis said.

    The fire was under control just after 10 a.m. but traffic was blocked for sometime afterwards as firefighters stayed on the scene, Curtis said.

    Lanes were closed for more than an hour on Van Buren at the Chicago River. About 15 fire companies responded.

    There were no reports of injuries.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Ford Shares Virtual Reality With Space Shuttle Developer

    Ford is cooperating with the United Space Alliance (USA) to make better use of virtual reality applications. The automaker uses simulation software developed by video game developers and movie animators in order to pre-test its future car’s driving characteristics.

    This is the task of the company’s Virtual Evaluation lab (iVE). The company’s engineers gather data from the tests performed here and use it to improve visibility, quality and comfort of the vehicles, thus reducing costs related … (read more)

  • Kraft-Cadbury: Sweet for all?

    With the battle for Cadbury PLC all but complete, score a victory for Kraft Foods Inc. and hard-charging Chief Executive Irene Rosenfeld: She’s poised to pick up a candy industry crown jewel for a price that didn’t rattle Wall Street.

    But score a victory, too, for Cadbury’s management, which, after months of effectively dismissing Rosenfeld as a low-rent piker, managed to extract nearly $3 billion more from Kraft than its first offer.

    The challenge now for Kraft will be to make the enormous deal pay off, including being able to meld a proudly British company with Kraft, which Cadbury’s management once derided as a low-growth conglomerate.

    Kraft announced Tuesday that Cadbury had accepted its buyout offer of $19.5 billion, considerably above the $16.7 billion Kraft first bid in September. The deal would create the world’s largest confectionary business.

    And if the deal goes off without any major integration hitches — always a possibility in such a large combination — it should help Rosenfeld deliver on her long-term promises to boost Kraft’s sales and profit growth.

    Kraft, facing a Tuesday deadline to up its bid or hold steady, did the former, turning a hostile pursuit into a friendly deal. Kraft still has two weeks to persuade a majority of Cadbury shareholders to accept the deal. And, under British law, the door remains open until Monday morning for the Hershey Co. to jump in with a rival bid.

    Hershey couldn’t be reached for comment.

    But an offer from Hershey at this point isn’t expected, nor is a rejection by Cadbury shareholders, analysts said. “A bidding war for Cadbury is highly unlikely given the backing of the (Cadbury) board” for Kraft’s offer, said Erin Swanson, a stock analyst at Morningstar Inc.

    Topping Kraft’s bid would be “very challenging” for Hershey, a considerably smaller company than Kraft, Swanson said. “We expect the saga to finally come to a close.”

    Kraft isn’t necessarily getting Cadbury on the cheap, experts said. But the price it’s paying is within a range that many Wall Street analysts expected. “In our opinion, Kraft is paying a fair price for a very attractive asset,” Swanson said.

    Rosenfeld, in a conference call with stock analysts, said Kraft had maintained its “financial discipline” and that both its dividend and credit rating would remain intact. Indeed, Moody’s Investors Service on Tuesday said Kraft will likely retain its investment-grade credit rating, despite taking on debt to help fund the deal.

    As for Cadbury, the $19.5 billion is somewhat less than what some analysts believed it is worth, but 50 percent more than Cadbury’s market value before Kraft went public with its buyout bid in September.

    “What Cadbury did was fantastic — they pulled another $2 1/2 billion out of Kraft’s pockets,” said Thomas Lys, a professor and acquisitions expert at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management.

    Kraft, with $42 billion in annual revenue, is a collection of brands and foods from Oscar Mayer meats and Oreos to chocolate candy in Europe. Cadbury, with about $8 billion in revenue, is a worldwide leader in chocolate and is known best in the United States for its Dentyne and Trident chewing gum.

    “The two companies are highly complementary,” Rosenfeld said.

    The combined companies would be the world leader in chocolate and sweets, Kraft said, and No. 2 globally in the high-growth gum market, behind Mars’ Wrigley operations. For Kraft, the deal should help boost its sales and profit growth rates, and greatly bolster its presence in international markets.

    Rosenfeld told analysts Tuesday that the biggest opportunity presented by the deal is to “fill in geographic white spaces.” For instance, with Cadbury’s strong presence in India and Mexico, Kraft will have better opportunities to distribute its products there.

    “From a strategic perspective (the deal) makes a ton of sense,” said Morningstar’s Swanson.

    Matt Arnold, a stock analyst at Edward Jones, agreed, “If it’s integrated right.”

    Many big corporate mergers have eventually foundered on integration issues. If integrating a buyout target takes longer than expected, anticipated cost savings dissolve. Kraft predicted pretax cost savings of at least $675 million a year once the combination has been working for three years, which will likely entail job cuts.

    And then there’s the issue of melding together disparate corporate cultures, a task that won’t be made any easier by Cadbury management’s public dismissals of Kraft’s business model and management, Swanson said. “They’ve bashed Irene and Kraft for months.”

    With its new bid this week, Kraft sought to appease not only Cadbury shareholders, but its own stockholders, reducing the amount of new shares it will issue to fund the deal.

    Kraft had planned to issue up to 370 million new shares of stock, which would have required shareholder approval. Earlier this month, Kraft’s largest shareholder, billionaire Warren Buffett, said he’d likely vote “no” to that proposal, fearing Kraft might overpay for Cadbury.

    But with the new deal, Kraft is paying more cash, so the amount of stock it would be issuing would fall below the amount needed to conduct a vote by its shareholders. Buffett didn’t release a public comment Tuesday on the deal.

    Kraft’s stock slipped 17 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $29.41 on Tuesday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    [email protected]

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • China Plans To Scan Text Messages For Unhealthy Content… Five Years After Announcing The Same Thing

    Apparently, it’s time for reruns. The NY Times is reporting that China is now planning to start scanning text messages for “unhealthy content,” which is defined as including any of various (secret) keywords supplied by the police. Now, given the recent ramp up in attention paid to China’s censorship efforts, this might be interesting… if it hadn’t been announced five years ago. This is what the NY Times wants us to pay for? I guess if they block off their content behind a paywall, no one would be able to search the archives of the NY Times to find out that that great paper had covered the story five years ago itself (though, a couple months after we wrote about it).

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Report: Bears assistant Spencer talks to MSU

    One down and four to go, or so we think.

    Lovie Smith has made one hire so far as he begins Day 15 of the coaching search at Halas Hall, and four positions remain unfilled. Could another opening arise?

    Running backs coach Tim Spencer has spoken to Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio about the vacant running backs coach position on the Spartans’ staff, according to FootballCoachScoop.com.

    Spencer is an original member of Smith’s staff. He left Ohio State after 10 seasons as an assistant for the Buckeyes to join the Bears in 2004. He was one of two assistants on the offensive side of the ball to survive the Jan. 5 purge along with wide receivers coach Darryl Drake.

    The report indicated that Michigan State also was considering Reggie Mitchell (Kansas) and Sedrick Irvin (Memphis) to replace Dan Enos, who left to become the head coach at Central Michigan.

    Irvin, a who played at Michigan State, accepted his position at Memphis less than two weeks ago.

    Spencer’s son Evan is a junior at Vernon Hills High and is a highly recruited wide receiver who is getting significant interest from Big Ten programs. Tim Spencer played at Ohio State.

    By Brad Biggs

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Vancouver 2010 Olympics

    Everything about the Olympic games in Vancouver

    Official site
    http://www.vancouver2010.com/

  • Samsung Omnia 2 vs HTC Nexus One

    In a few months Verizon subscribers in the US will have the choice between the Samsung Omnia 2 and the HTC Nexus One. CareAce.net have published this brief look at some of the features which make the Omnia 2 a better choice than the Nexus One.

    Read more at CareAce.net here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Jenks, Quentin and Danks added to SoxFest

    Closer Bobby Jenks, slugger Carlos Quentin and left-hander John Danks were added to the list of players who will attend this weekend’s SoxFest at the Palmer House Hilton.

    All three were arbitration eligible players who agreed to terms in the past week.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Obama’s TSA nominee withdraws in political standoff

    Erroll Southers, the Los Angeles airport official whose nomination to lead the Transportation Security Administration was blocked by Republican opposition in Washington, has withdrawn his name from consideration.

    Southers, in a statement issued today, complained that his nomination had become a political lightning rod.

    President Barack Obama nominated Southers, who is a former FBI agent with experience in counter-terrorism, to head the TSA in September.

    But Sen. Jim DeMint, a South Carolina Republican who complained that Southers hoped to make good on an Obama pledge to allow TSA workers to unionize, had placed a hold on Southers’ confirmation by the Senate.

    Southers also had faced questions over an event years ago, when he had ordered criminal background checks on the boyfriend of his estranged wife. He acknowledged in a letter to senators that it was wrong and he regretted the incident. He had been censured by his FBI superiors for the action 20 years ago.

    “Americans deserve a leader at TSA with integrity and with an unwavering commitment to putting security ahead of politics,” DeMint said in a statement today.

    He said the White House had never responded to requests for more information about Southers’ testimony during his committee confirmation hearing about the background checks .”And Mr. Southers was never forthcoming about his intentions to give union bosses veto power over security decisions at our airports,” DeMint said.

    Southers maintained that he had no intention of sacrifcing security in the interest of collective bargaining for TSA screeners.

    The White House has accepted Southers’ withdrawal of his nomination today, while maintaining that he would have made an excellent TSA administrator.

    Following the attempted bombing of a U.S.-bound airliner on Christmas Day, congressional leaders had called for a speedy confirmation of Southers for the vacant TSA post.

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) had said he would seek to force the confirmation over Republican objections in the Senate by invoking cloture.

    However, the Democrats’ 60-vote super-majority in the Senate, which enables to party to override GOP filibusters, is evaporating with the loss this week of a Senate seat in Massachusetts to Republican Sen.-elect Scott Brown.

    The forfeiture of the administration’s nominee in the face of Republican objections may also be taken as the first sign of the impact of the GOP’s stunning victory in Massachusetts, where Republican Brown claimed the seat held by the late and long-serving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy in a special election on Tuesday.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • SOUTH SUDAN: Changing of the Guard

    By Skye Wheeler TORIT, south Sudan, Jan 20 (IPS) An old rite is long overdue in Paul Yugusak Tombe’s home village, in Central Equatoria State, south Sudan.

    Because of Sudan’s long and painful north-south war that scattered much of the population, Tombe’s age set that won power in a 1974 contest with their elders still rules. But they should have given up control many years ago.

    "We are making arrangements now. The change must take place," Tombe, also a member of Central Equatoria’s parliament, said. His age set has been in power about 10 years too long, albeit tumultuous ones.

    Before the war in the tradition of handing over power, the ruling age set of men and the set below would go into the forest together, hunt and then fight fiercely over the dead animal.

    Today it is more likely that a purchased bull, instead of a hunted animal, will be torn apart by the two sides in the heated tug of war, Tombe said. But the symbolism, and the genuine tensions that underlie this, and other similar battle or mock battle traditions among the tribes located east of the River Nile, remain the same.

    "It is not an easy thing," cultural expert Lias Ohisa Affwonni said about the handover. "It is a struggle."

    The younger men usually would win this battle; the elders would admit defeat and hand over control of all aspects of village life including its protection. (The upcoming set ranges in age from about 18 to about 45 years old, usually the eldest here are about the same age as the youngest of the ruling set.) This passionate cycle of societal renewal in Tombe’s section of the Olubu tribe is meant to take place about every 25 years.

    But because of the war it has not taken place for a decade longer than it should have. But also because of the war the monyomiji are changing. And the upcoming leaders are men grown up in war and still affected by the trauma of it.

    Monyomiji (which is used interchangeably to refer to the governance structure, the men in charge, and also the youth) is an effective structure of governance, its proponents say. It provides a clear path for societal change with each passage of control, usually about every 22 to 25 years. However, changeovers can occur more frequently in some groups.

    The system has also been lauded as especially democratic. The men in the ruling age set govern together in a highly organised system that gives each member a role, in most cases won by merit.

    Chiefs or "kings" – traditionally the community’s rainmaker, usually have a hereditary role, but more recently government-appointed headmen have also joined the monyomiji. Chiefs are usually changed in the handover of power, Tombe said, unless they are especially talented.

    Anthropologist and development worker Simone Simons believes that the monyomiji structure is being under-utilised by development workers and south Sudan’s new government, formed in 2005 after a north-south peace deal ended more than 20 years of war.

    There is more to the monyomiji system than just tradition. Tombe’s generation introduced and implemented new concepts to his home area, including cooperatives and self-help projects for education and health services.

    The same capacity for high levels of organisation also proved an asset during the north-south war when the monyomiji joined the southern rebel movement, effectively defending their home areas from infiltration from northern forces even as other areas fell.

    "It is easier to do things through the monyomiji. They are organised, with different functions," Simons said.

    And their success in war is not surprising as Affwonni believes the monyomiji system was created hundreds of years ago as part of a war effort against the fearful Toposa tribe.

    Organised and renewed with fresh blood, the monyomiji rule meant the villages did better in battle, and in protecting the integrity of the village in a wider sense; ensuring internal cohesion and the maintenance of spiritual practices.

    While the leadership enjoy privileges they are also held strictly accountable, sometimes with their lives. In many tribes, rainmakers who failed to bring rain were killed, sometimes burned alive. This practice is now being changed.

    "They have reason (rationality) now. They don’t do that to the rainmaker," monyomiji member Joko Jacqueline, one of a new generation of women who have been partly allowed into the system said.

    She believes that ensuing generations will force change further, and women will be initiated into the monyomiji alongside men.

    But how long that will take, is not certain. The monyomiji, like the rest of Sudan, are still coming to terms with the consequences of the country’s civil war.

    Tension between the ruling generation and the one below it has always existed. But now leaders say their youth are especially antagonistic, and many believe it is a result of war trauma. They also believe that many of the youngsters have become heavy drinkers because of this.

    And now the ruling age set no longer has the same amount of control over often-armed youth that it once did.

    But even within some tribes’ ruling age sets there are problems, and several monyomiji admitted that their age sets are less close, less organised than previous generations of rulers.

    Traditionally, the older or more accomplished men tend to form the head – the decision making part of the government – the youth are more likely to form warrior groups. But the war has even changed this.

    "From the head, many of these people were killed in the war, the younger are now in (majority) and they want to do things by force, they can be insubordinate," Father Kamilo Afore, a priest and monyomiji member said. He celebrated his age set’s coming of age in neighboring Uganda, at the height of the war that fragmented his village. "They (the youth) have grown in war," he added.

    It is, in theory, peacetime but cattle raiding has worsened between monyomiji-practising tribes and other groups. It has kept entire areas insecure and has hindered development.

    "Unity often depends on hostility to outsiders. This is definitely a weakness," Simons said.

    Monyomiji accept that violence is a serious problem in their home areas.

    The monyomiji IPS spoke to say that the government has not been able to provide security they need in order to lay down the thousands of small arms acquired during the war.

    "They could do it at any time," Affwonni said. But any group that did so in a generally insecure environment would make itself highly vulnerable, he added.

    Some monyomiji told IPS that even government interventions, when they come, are sometimes biased and heavy-handed and can worsen relations between tribes or fail to provide justice.

    "(Also) they get in the way of the monyomiji getting involved with their coercive kind of rules," Martin Napali, a monyomiji, said. "If we are belittled then we will just do what we want."

    The government has equally high expectations of the monyomiji, who they believe not only allow raiding to continue but are the perpetrators.

    "Are monyomiji still peacemakers or have they left peacemaking to the government?" Toby Atare a Eastern Equatoria State Peace Commission member asked. "The monyomiji are meant to promote the law and order in villages but all we see is a lot of lawlessness."

    "(The monyomiji) are saying this is the work of the government and the government is saying this is your work," he added.

    Eastern Equatoria State Governor Aleision Ojetuk went even further at a recent conference to try and bridge the widening gap between the monyomiji and the government in the state capital Torit. He cited cases where the monyomiji had stopped policemen he had sent from doing their work in villages, getting in the way of justice, which is meant to be a main function of the monyomiji.

    "Your norms are being eroded and so a kind of ‘who cares’ attitude is settling in … if we are in competition, the gap between us will widen," Ojetuk said, adding that the government simply does not have enough resources to maintain security in a state chock-full with guns.

    But the monyomiji’s challenges go beyond a rough and tumble relationship with the new government. Urbanisation is also eroding the old system of life.

    "At the moment the attitude of the monyomiji is not as it used to be. Most try to migrate to towns, leaving the land without cultivation," Tombe said. The youth that stay behind are in some cases especially hostile to the ruling generation.

    A new Local Government Act that gives traditional authority official standing in the government could smooth the way between the government and the monyomiji Affwonni said. He added that fitting the monyomiji into the structures dictated by the law will take patience and flexibility on both the monyomiji and the government.

  • White House: Message heard on Senate election in Massachusetts

    The White House faces questions today, on the anniversary of President Barack Obama’s inauguration, about the Senate election in Massachusetts that cost the president’s party its short-lived super-majority control of the Senate.

    “There’s an unbecoming habit in this town of trying to defray a responsibility, point in other directions,” the White House’s David Axelrod said today, with a ribbing for Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, joining him on MSNBC’s new The Daily Rundown.

    “So let me say it was Robert’s fault and I’m bitter about it.”

    Joking aside, Axelrod said: “You know, I’ll let others assess responsibility. I think the main thing that we saw in Massachusetts was the same sense of concern on the part of middle class folks about the economic situation, about their wages being stagnant, about jobs being lost, about their economic security that’s been in jeopardy.

    “And this is something that predated the big recession that we’re going through,” the president’s chief political advisor said. “And that’s something that we have to pay a great deal of attention to. It is the focus of this president’s attention at all times. And we have to convey that.”

    How can the White House interpret the Massachusetts defeat as anything other than a “total rejection” of the president’s health-care reform, he was asked – in light of Brown campaigning as the 41st vote against the bill.

    “I think that there were a lot of elements to the message yesterday. Health care was part of it,” Axelrod said. “I would note that Sen. Brown didn’t run one ad on health care in the entire campaign. I’m sure you know that.

    “And he supported a health care reform similar to the one that the president was and is committed to in Massachusetts, and said during the campaign that he wouldn’t repeal it,” he said.

    “I mean, there are messages here,” he said. “We hear those messages, but there is a tendency in this town — not that you guys would do it — but to overblow things, even beyond their importance. And I don’t think it’s about that one particular issue. I think there’s a general sense of discontent about the economy and there’s a general sense of discontent about this town. That’s why we were elected. We are committed to doing something about it.”

    The president’s men were asked about the president’s first year, and why more hasn’t been accomplished.

    “For a lot of reasons,” Gibbs said. “The first of which is change takes a long time to happen, certainly in this town. And it takes even longer for the American people to feel that. The president didn’t have a first-year agenda, he has a first-term agenda. So while today marks the end of the first year and the beginning of the second, it’s not even really a hallmark holiday.

    “I would say this too, building off of what David said, there are things that the president has accomplished, whether it’s a credit card bill of rights, whether it’s a recovery plan that’s led to the first quarter of economic growth in more than a year, that same sort of anger and frustration that the President saw when he traveled in Iowa, and throughout this country for more than two years is still very pervasive today,” Gibb said.

    “I think that’s what we saw most of all coming out of Massachusetts, is there’s a tremendous amount of anger and frustration about where people are economically and whether this town is fighting for their economic well-being or fighting for the special interests well-being,” Gibbs said.

    “I think that’s what’s ultimately going to define more about the coming political battles and the upcoming election.

    “Health care is an aspect of it, but this is far broader than that. There’s an anger and a real frustration. People’s jobs are being shipped overseas. As David said, they’re working harder, they’re working longer, they’re more productive, yet their wages are going down. That leads to the type of isolation and economic frustration that we felt for quite some time.”

    by Mark Silva

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Heritage Foundation: Canada’s Economy Freer Than U.S.

    A year of bailouts and stimulus spending has taken a toll on global economic freedom, according to the 2010 Index of Economic Freedom. For the 16th year in a row Hong Kong is #1, followed by Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Ireland.

    The report from the conservative Heritage Foundation bumped the United
    States from #6 to #8. It’s not often you hear praise of Canada
    (#7) from a right-leaning think tank, but our neighbors to the north have
    been deemed to have the freest economy in North America:

    Canada’s economic freedom trails the world average only in government
    spending. Elaborate social and welfare state programs swell overall
    government expenditures. Government spending has also increased
    slightly due to implementation of a significant stimulus package.
    However, good fiscal management and federal budget surpluses have
    enabled the economy to undertake stimulus measures without undermining
    fiscal soundness and long-term economic competitiveness.

    Not surprisingly, the report’s authors are not fans of Pres. Obama’s economic policy.

    Seeing
    Hong Kong in the #1 spot, where it has presided since the index was
    created in 1995, may be jarring for those who have followed the
    Google – China saga. And to be certain the Heritage Foundation doesn’t look kindly
    on mainland China, ranking it at #140, sandwiched between Djibouti and
    Haiti.

    So why does the Index favor Hong Kong when
    it is ultimately answerable to the same rulers who demand censorship
    from Internet companies? The short answer: Low taxes, tariffs, and
    government spending
    .

    Critics of the Index have long complained that it rewards and punishes countries on the basis of conservative economic doctrine, without providing any helpful predictions about when more freedom — as defined by the Heritage Foundation — will result in higher economic growth. (One obvious example: #140 China’s GDP growth puts 139 “freer” countries to shame.)

    As Wheaton College economics Prof. John Miller wrote on the 2009 Index:

    So it seems that the Index of Economic Freedom in practice tells us
    little about the cost of abandoning free market policies and offers
    little proof that government intervention into the economy would either
    retard economic growth or contract political freedom. In actuality,
    this rather objective-looking index is a slip-shod measure that would
    seem to have no other purpose than to sell the neoliberal policies that
    brought on the current crisis.





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  • Fat Princess patch 1.04 coming tomorrow with free map

    When patch 1.03 came in, Fat Princess also got the New Pork map for free. Guess what? Titan Studios has 1.04 ready for release tomorrow, and it comes with yet another new map, free of charge.
     
     
     

  • Entry-level Ariel Atom 3 priced from $49,980

    Filed under: , , ,

    Ariel Atom 3 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Admittedly, “entry-level” is a bit of a stretch, as one Jefferson Jackson shy of $50k is a nice chunk of change. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Two years ago we learned that TMI AutoTech would be the Ariel Atom’s new master here in the U.S. After a few fits and starts, TMI is now selling the new Ariel Atom 3 with a starting price of just $49,980. This base model ships with a 2.0-liter Honda motor good for 219 horsepower.

    We can hear some of you scoffing from over here. Never forget, the Atom weighs just 1,350 pounds. Meaning that a 219-horsepower engine can catapult the car to 60 mph in 2.9 seconds. For the sake of silly comparisons, the 638-hp supercharged Corvette ZR1 takes 3.3 seconds to achieve the same velocity. Also, don’t forget we’re talking about the entry-level Atom. A 245-hp version can be yours, as well as a supercharged 300-hp example. Of course, those will cost you extra.

    However, if you’re looking to spend a little less, TMI AutoTech can still accommodate you. For an undisclosed sum they’ll happily sell you a rolling chassis and you’re free to cram whatever motor you like into the Atom. Might we suggest the LS9? Though if cheap(ish) topless, doorless motoring really is your thing, a fully built Se7en can be had for around $30,000 depending upon the options. And unlike the “porky” Atom 3, proper Se7ens usually weigh in at 1,200 pounds. Just sayin’.

    Gallery: Ariel Atom

    [Source: TMI AutoTech via Motor Trend]

    Entry-level Ariel Atom 3 priced from $49,980 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 20 Jan 2010 13:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • SOUTH SUDAN: Changing of the Guard

    By Skye Wheeler TORIT, south Sudan, Jan 20 (IPS) An old rite is long overdue in Paul Yugusak Tombe’s home village, in Central Equatoria State, south Sudan.

    Because of Sudan’s long and painful north-south war that scattered much of the population, Tombe’s age set that won power in a 1974 contest with their elders still rules. But they should have given up control many years ago.

    "We are making arrangements now. The change must take place," Tombe, also a member of Central Equatoria’s parliament, said. His age set has been in power about 10 years too long, albeit tumultuous ones.

    Before the war in the tradition of handing over power, the ruling age set of men and the set below would go into the forest together, hunt and then fight fiercely over the dead animal.

    Today it is more likely that a purchased bull, instead of a hunted animal, will be torn apart by the two sides in the heated tug of war, Tombe said. But the symbolism, and the genuine tensions that underlie this, and other similar battle or mock battle traditions among the tribes located east of the River Nile, remain the same.

    "It is not an easy thing," cultural expert Lias Ohisa Affwonni said about the handover. "It is a struggle."

    The younger men usually would win this battle; the elders would admit defeat and hand over control of all aspects of village life including its protection. (The upcoming set ranges in age from about 18 to about 45 years old, usually the eldest here are about the same age as the youngest of the ruling set.) This passionate cycle of societal renewal in Tombe’s section of the Olubu tribe is meant to take place about every 25 years.

    But because of the war it has not taken place for a decade longer than it should have. But also because of the war the monyomiji are changing. And the upcoming leaders are men grown up in war and still affected by the trauma of it.

    Monyomiji (which is used interchangeably to refer to the governance structure, the men in charge, and also the youth) is an effective structure of governance, its proponents say. It provides a clear path for societal change with each passage of control, usually about every 22 to 25 years. However, changeovers can occur more frequently in some groups.

    The system has also been lauded as especially democratic. The men in the ruling age set govern together in a highly organised system that gives each member a role, in most cases won by merit.

    Chiefs or "kings" – traditionally the community’s rainmaker, usually have a hereditary role, but more recently government-appointed headmen have also joined the monyomiji. Chiefs are usually changed in the handover of power, Tombe said, unless they are especially talented.

    Anthropologist and development worker Simone Simons believes that the monyomiji structure is being under-utilised by development workers and south Sudan’s new government, formed in 2005 after a north-south peace deal ended more than 20 years of war.

    There is more to the monyomiji system than just tradition. Tombe’s generation introduced and implemented new concepts to his home area, including cooperatives and self-help projects for education and health services.

    The same capacity for high levels of organisation also proved an asset during the north-south war when the monyomiji joined the southern rebel movement, effectively defending their home areas from infiltration from northern forces even as other areas fell.

    "It is easier to do things through the monyomiji. They are organised, with different functions," Simons said.

    And their success in war is not surprising as Affwonni believes the monyomiji system was created hundreds of years ago as part of a war effort against the fearful Toposa tribe.

    Organised and renewed with fresh blood, the monyomiji rule meant the villages did better in battle, and in protecting the integrity of the village in a wider sense; ensuring internal cohesion and the maintenance of spiritual practices.

    While the leadership enjoy privileges they are also held strictly accountable, sometimes with their lives. In many tribes, rainmakers who failed to bring rain were killed, sometimes burned alive. This practice is now being changed.

    "They have reason (rationality) now. They don’t do that to the rainmaker," monyomiji member Joko Jacqueline, one of a new generation of women who have been partly allowed into the system said.

    She believes that ensuing generations will force change further, and women will be initiated into the monyomiji alongside men.

    But how long that will take, is not certain. The monyomiji, like the rest of Sudan, are still coming to terms with the consequences of the country’s civil war.

    Tension between the ruling generation and the one below it has always existed. But now leaders say their youth are especially antagonistic, and many believe it is a result of war trauma. They also believe that many of the youngsters have become heavy drinkers because of this.

    And now the ruling age set no longer has the same amount of control over often-armed youth that it once did.

    But even within some tribes’ ruling age sets there are problems, and several monyomiji admitted that their age sets are less close, less organised than previous generations of rulers.

    Traditionally, the older or more accomplished men tend to form the head – the decision making part of the government – the youth are more likely to form warrior groups. But the war has even changed this.

    "From the head, many of these people were killed in the war, the younger are now in (majority) and they want to do things by force, they can be insubordinate," Father Kamilo Afore, a priest and monyomiji member said. He celebrated his age set’s coming of age in neighboring Uganda, at the height of the war that fragmented his village. "They (the youth) have grown in war," he added.

    It is, in theory, peacetime but cattle raiding has worsened between monyomiji-practising tribes and other groups. It has kept entire areas insecure and has hindered development.

    "Unity often depends on hostility to outsiders. This is definitely a weakness," Simons said.

    Monyomiji accept that violence is a serious problem in their home areas.

    The monyomiji IPS spoke to say that the government has not been able to provide security they need in order to lay down the thousands of small arms acquired during the war.

    "They could do it at any time," Affwonni said. But any group that did so in a generally insecure environment would make itself highly vulnerable, he added.

    Some monyomiji told IPS that even government interventions, when they come, are sometimes biased and heavy-handed and can worsen relations between tribes or fail to provide justice.

    "(Also) they get in the way of the monyomiji getting involved with their coercive kind of rules," Martin Napali, a monyomiji, said. "If we are belittled then we will just do what we want."

    The government has equally high expectations of the monyomiji, who they believe not only allow raiding to continue but are the perpetrators.

    "Are monyomiji still peacemakers or have they left peacemaking to the government?" Toby Atare a Eastern Equatoria State Peace Commission member asked. "The monyomiji are meant to promote the law and order in villages but all we see is a lot of lawlessness."

    "(The monyomiji) are saying this is the work of the government and the government is saying this is your work," he added.

    Eastern Equatoria State Governor Aleision Ojetuk went even further at a recent conference to try and bridge the widening gap between the monyomiji and the government in the state capital Torit. He cited cases where the monyomiji had stopped policemen he had sent from doing their work in villages, getting in the way of justice, which is meant to be a main function of the monyomiji.

    "Your norms are being eroded and so a kind of ‘who cares’ attitude is settling in … if we are in competition, the gap between us will widen," Ojetuk said, adding that the government simply does not have enough resources to maintain security in a state chock-full with guns.

    But the monyomiji’s challenges go beyond a rough and tumble relationship with the new government. Urbanisation is also eroding the old system of life.

    "At the moment the attitude of the monyomiji is not as it used to be. Most try to migrate to towns, leaving the land without cultivation," Tombe said. The youth that stay behind are in some cases especially hostile to the ruling generation.

    A new Local Government Act that gives traditional authority official standing in the government could smooth the way between the government and the monyomiji Affwonni said. He added that fitting the monyomiji into the structures dictated by the law will take patience and flexibility on both the monyomiji and the government.

  • Church music director charged with having child porn

    A Glen Ellyn church music director and his roommate have been charged with possession of child pornography, authorities said today.

    Brian Milnikel, 45, music director at St. James the Apostle Roman Catholic School in the western suburb, and Christopher Kontopoulos, 20, both of the 800 block of Nelli Court in Naperville, had bonds of $200,000 and $100,000 respectively set for them this morning by DuPage Judge Liam Brennan.

    (An earlier version of this story inaccurately reported the name of the church.)

    Assistant States Attorney Brian Perkins told Brennan that Naperville police have been investigating the pair since October.

    “They both admitted downloading the videos and that they watched them together,” Perkins said.

    Milnikel told Brennan that he was the full-time music director at the school and had been a music instructor for over 20 years.

    Barry Lewis, an attorney representing Kontopoulos told Brennan that if his client posts bond, he was going to move in with his parents in Glenview.

    “Your honor, there is a great likelihood that Chris was under the domination of a much older person,” Lewis said.

    Brennan, as a condition of bond, banned the defendants’ use of the Internet and computer, and ordered them not to have any contact with anyone under 18 years old.

    Art Barnum

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Graco recalls 1.5 million strollers

    WASHINGTON — About 1.5 million Graco strollers sold at Wal-Mart, Target and other major retailers are being recalled after some children’s fingertips were amputated by hinges on the products.

    The recall by Graco Children’s Products Inc. includes certain model numbers of its Passage, Alano and Spree Strollers and Travel Systems.

    The Exton, Pa., company received seven reports of children placing their fingers in a stroller’s canopy hinge as the canopy was being opened or closed. Five children had their fingertips severed and two children received cuts on their fingertips.

    The strollers were made in China by Graco and sold at AAFES, Burlington Coat Factory, Babies R Us, Toys R Us, Kmart, Fred Meyer, Meijer, Navy Exchange, Sears, Target, Wal-Mart and other retailers nationwide from October 2004 to December 2009.

    In announcing the recall Wednesday, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said the strollers pose an amputation and laceration hazard to children when opening or closing the canopy.

    The government advised consumers to stop using the strollers and contact Graco to receive a free repair kit.

    The recall involves strollers made between October 2004 and February 2008. The model numbers and manufacture dates are on the lower inside portion of the rear frame, just above the rear wheels.

    This is the second major recall in recent months of strollers that led to fingertip amputations and injuries. Last November, about a million Maclaren strollers were recalled after there were 12 reports of children’s fingertips being amputated by a hinge mechanism.

    The safety commission is now examining all strollers with the designs that have caused the fingertip amputations, said spokesman Scott Wolfson.

    “CPSC is taking a larger look at the entire product line to determine what steps need to be taken to keep children safe in and around strollers,” he said.

    For more information about the recalled strollers, consumers can call 800-345-4109 or visit cpsc.gov.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Kournikova’s mother charged with child neglect

    Tennis star Anna Kournikova’s mother has been arrested in Florida and charged with child neglect.

    A Palm Beach police report says 46-year-old Alla Kournikova left her 5-year-old son home alone while she ran errands Tuesday.

    Someone passing by the home found the boy and called police.

    The boy told police he jumped out a second-story window, but was not seriously injured.

    Police said Alla Kournikova locked the home with a deadbolt and officers had to get inside through a second-story window.

    She was released from the Palm Beach County Jail after posting a $3,000 bond.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Google Runs Search Ad to Promote Its New Stance in China

    Google has been known for its quirky ways and has surprised most people with its unique approach to any problem. If it’s the company’s way of doing business, giving away most stuff and making money from ads, or the way it approaches innovation, developing many of its products as open-source projects, Google has rarely followed traditiona… (read more)