Author: Serkadis

  • USTR Responds To Sen. Wyden About ACTA; Admits It Hopes ACTA Will Cover Patents Too

    You may recall, at the beginning of the year, Senator Ron Wyden complained about the secrecy surrounding ACTA and sent a series of questions to the USTR about the negotiations behind ACTA. While the USTR apparently replied in late January, both sides have only just revealed the contents of the response (pdf). It’s about what you would expect. The answers leave plenty of wiggle room, and a few seem to be blatant falsehoods. For example, Wyden is concerned (accurately) not just over whether or not ACTA will change US copyright law, but if it will limit Congress’s ability to change copyright law to fix some of its problems. The USTR claims that it is making sure there is “flexibility” in the agreement to allow for that — but the leaked documents show no such flexibility.

    Furthermore, the response confirms what became clear in the most recent leak, that the US sees ACTA as covering not just copyrights and trademarks — but patents as well (though, some of the other participants are against including patents).

    Finally, the USTR repeats the bogus claims that it is being transparent about ACTA, noting that it put up a dedicated web page. Well, doesn’t that just solve everything?

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  • AutoblogGreen for 03.04.10

    Getting zero mpg (i.e., idling) could cost drivers £20
    You wanna shut that down, sir?
    Zero Motorcycles adds color and power to 2010 line-up
    More colors to go with enhanced acceleration and increased power.
    Geneva 2010: Audi A1 e-tron Wankels its way to the show floor
    Is Wankel a verb? It is now.
    Other news:

    AutoblogGreen for 03.04.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 07:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Social Recommendation Just Got a Lot Easier with the New Glue Add-ons

    There are plenty of services out there trying to help you figure out what you like, well, what you would like if you only knew about it. And there are plenty more sites that try to predict what might be relevant, useful or entertaining for you from Google search to Last.fm and Netflix. That said social network/browser add-on … (read more)

  • Online Auto Loans – 3 Easy Steps to Get Instant Approval

    03.04.10 02:32 AM posted by autoloanonline

    Getting an auto loan to finance your car is not an easy task. If you have ever done it before you must know that it is no fun going from one to forger filling out application forms and when you call them back you are rejected. An online auto loan is much easier. You can sit right at your home in front of the computer and browse the internet for a loan. There are many online lenders you will find who deal with auto loans. Follow these 3 simple steps to get instant approval for your online auto loans.

    Step #1

    Before you apply for an auto loan, you should decide on the amount of money you are willing to invest in your car. This is very important for determining the loan amount, the rate of interest and the time period of the loan. Whatever amount you decide on, quote something above it as it will be required for road and sales taxes. Online car loan application is usually pretty straight-forward. There is usually an online calculator which you can use to determine the amount of loan you may want to take. Take its help and also review whether you will be able to afford it. When you have a clear idea about your budget it will be easier for you to get instant approval. read more »

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/o…stant_approval

  • Morgan Stanley: Ignore Absurdly Low Treasury Yields Because Bond Markets Never See Inflation Until It’s Too Late

    U.S. treasury yields are relatively low these days with 10-year government bonds offering just 3.63%.

    This would seem to imply that bond markets don’t expect much inflation ahead, since even a historically benign 3% inflation per year wouldn’t leave much of a real return for bondholders.

    So is the bond market telling us to chill out or is it completely blind right now?

    It’s blind, says Morgan Stanley’s Joachim Fels. Historically, bond markets have usually been wrong when it comes to forecasting future inflation:

    Joachim Fels @ Morgan Stanley:

    Historically, yields lag behind inflation. Throughout the 1970s, bond yields never meaningfully caught up with the inflation takeoff: real interest rates were mostly very low – indeed negative for sustained periods – a bad time for bonds. Exactly the opposite happened during the Great Moderation of the 1980s and 90s. The sustained decline in inflation meant real interest rates were high, giving rise to a long bull market for bonds (see Exhibit 2).

    Chart

    Thus Mr. Fels worries that treasuries will be wrong yet again. High inflation is in the cards because despite whatever inflation environment we may see today, the fact is that high levels of U.S. debt make high inflation and sluggish GDP growth highly probable:

    Chart

    Which means that if one were to simply play the odds, then today’s bond market is likely to be wrong and higher inflation is likely to happen. We could start to see this play out in the second half of this year.

    Morgan Stanley: Yet inflation is low almost everywhere. And with yawning output gaps, surely inflation is nothing to worry about. Policymakers, some say, couldn’t inflate even if they wanted to.

    Not quite. It is true that inflation will remain subdued for some time to come. But inflation risks are visible on the horizon. Our US team expects the inflation picture to turn at around the middle of the year, as import prices pick up and the output gap narrows

    (Via Morgan Stanley, Global Monetary Analyst, Joachim Fels, 3 March 2010)

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  • Here’s A Quick Guide To Various Events That Are Going To Happen In The Future

    Instead of a morning recap, let’s glimpse into the future.

    Here are some notable contracts on InTrade, and where they stand.

    (Remember: InTrade is a real-money market where various propositions are traded with contracts that end at 0 or 100. If they happen, they end at 100, if they don’t, they end at 0. While the question is open, the contracts can trade anywhere in that range.)

    So, let’s go to it:

    • Obamacare: Odds of passing before June 30th are now 55%.
    • The euro: Odds of a nation abandoning it by the end of the year are 11%.
    • Congress: Odds of a Republican takeover this year are 29%.
    • Stimulus: Odds of another one getting passed before the end of March are just 3%.
    • UK Election: Odds of a Labour victory just 17%.
    • Geithner: Odds he departs before June 10 are 5%.
    • Sarah Palin: Odds she’ll be the Republican nominee in 2012 are 22%.

    And there you have it, from the brilliance of markets, your quick glimpse at the future of the world.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • DR-CONGO: EU Urged to Ban ‘Conflict Minerals’

    By Ida Karlsson STOCKHOLM, Mar 4 (IPS) After the United States senate’s move to stem the flow of money from mineral mines fuelling the brutal civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the watchdog group Global Witness (GW) is calling on Europe to follow suit.

    "We are calling on the European Union (EU) to introduce legislation to exclude conflict minerals from eastern DRC coming into the European market," Lizzie Parsons from GW, an international organisation investigating the links between natural resource exploitation and human rights abuses, told IPS.

    According to GW, armed groups control much of the mineral trade in the eastern DRC. These armed groups profit from the multi-million dollar mineral trade by forcibly controlling the mines and exacting bribes or taxes. Those buying the "conflict minerals" include companies based in EU member states.

    The role of the mineral trade has been recognised as one of the factors fuelling the violence and contributing to human rights violations in eastern DRC since the start of the war.

    Human rights activists have long called attention to how "conflict minerals" are sold to purchase arms by rebel groups that regularly commit horrific abuses against civilian populations, including mass murder, rape, torture and forced recruitment.

    Over the last few months, GW gathered information in the region and visited mines that are under the control of armed groups.

    Parsons says the armed groups would have been a lot poorer and much less well-armed without the trade. "We do know that the mineral trade is a significant proportion of their income."

    GW is calling on suppliers that source minerals from DRC to identify the mines they come from. They are also recommending spot checks and audits to back these declarations. According to the watchdog group a few companies have made some efforts, but that is not enough.

    "The companies’ policies have purely been on paper. And a number of companies, including for example Apple, have not acknowledged the problem at all," Parsons says.

    The "conflict minerals" – tin (cassiterite), tantalum (coltan or columbite-tantalite), and tungsten (wolframite) – are, after they are mined, moved from DRC to East Asia where they are processed into valuable metals needed for electronic products. The metals are used in i-pods, digital cameras, cell phones and laptops worldwide.

    Global Witness states that, so far, governments have done little to curb the trade in conflict minerals. But last year the U.S. made a move. In May 2009, a draft legislation requiring U.S. companies to disclose the origin of their mineral supplies was introduced in the senate.

    According to the EU Special Representative for the African Great Lakes, Roeland van de Geer, the EU has confirmed its commitment to more formal and legal ways of cooperating in the fight against illegal exploitation of conflict minerals.

    But so far, the EU has not introduced any legislation to exclude conflict minerals from eastern DRC entering Europe.

    "Some experts are suggesting an adapted ‘Kimberly model’, similar to the one regarding diamonds, while others think that it is unlikely that international legal measures would make a contribution to the fight against illegal exploitation of minerals," Van de Geer told IPS.

    His office currently serves as the secretariat of a task force on illegal exploitation of natural resources in the east of the DRC.

    The United Nations Security Council has passed a resolution paving the way for the imposition of asset freezes and travel bans on companies that support armed groups in eastern DRC via the illicit mineral trade.

    The illicit exploitation of natural resources is not a new phenomenon in eastern DRC. It has characterised the conflict since it first erupted in 1996 and has been well documented by non-governmental organisations and the United Nations Panel of Experts.

  • Sorry, We’re Not Weimar Or Zimbabwe, And Gold Is Never Going To Be A Currency Again

    (This guest post originally appeared at the author’s blog)

    Gold is hotter than ever.  You can’t turn on the TV these days without seeing a gold commercial.   Several well known hedge fund managers have leveraged up positions in gold while John Paulson even went so far as to start his own gold hedge fund.  As an asset class gold has outperformed just about everything over the last 10 year period.  It’s been an impressive run.   But is it all justified?  Bear with me for a bit while I take a long-term macro look at gold as an asset class….

    After having experienced deflation through much of 2008 and the beginning of 2009 the economy began to reflate as the Fed’s printing press (or button pressing if you prefer) went to work.  Asset prices began to stabilize and bank balance sheets were suddenly flush with cash as the Fed provided liquidity like it was going out of style.  The inflationistas immediately began crying wolf.  All of this extra cash was certain to cause inflation.  And that meant one thing: buy gold and short dollars.  Right?

    All was not what it seemed, however.  Underneath the surface, there was no real reflation – only continuing signs of deflation or at best, very benign inflation.  Asset prices surged as money flowed out of low risk assets (for which investors were no longer rewarded) and into high risk assets.  This herding of the Federal Reserve has given many the impression that the economy is “recovering”.  But underneath the surface lies the continuing problem of double D’s (and not the good kind) – debt and de-leveraging.  While asset prices have improved the liability side of the ledger remains in tatters in the U.S. economy and around the world.  De-leveraging continues and demand for more credit remains subdued.  Yet, the price of gold rallied.  I believe a large portion of the move is based on the misconception of gold as an asset class.

    When analyzing the price of gold it’s important to understand that gold prices do not move like most other commodities.   It has certain built-in unquantifiable characteristics that drive price.  The price of gold is actually a function of four things: 1) its replacement potential for the U.S. dollar; 2) the future rate of inflation, 3) Sentiment – generally fear based and 4) true supply and demand.  Let’s take a look at each.

    Nouriel Roubini recently quoted Keynes in describing gold as a “barbarous relic”.   While I can’t entirely agree with that opinion I think there is a certain level of truth there.  Let me elaborate.  There is a certain premium built into the price of gold because it is viewed as a currency – currently an alternative to the dollar.  It has served as a reliable currency for thousands of years and continues to be seen as an alternative to fiat currencies.  Going forward, I think this is a dying belief which has led to considerable confusion in the current economic environment.

    The fact of the matter is, the fiat currency system is here to stay (or at least some form of it).  The odds of reverting back to a purely gold based system is next to zero in my opinion.  The truth is, the gold standard as a currency system is a barbarous relic.  It is a currency system that worked well in the old world economy, but simply does not have the flexibility to meet the demands of the growing global economy.   The global economy has become too complex and too intertwined to be constrained by the gold standard. The fiat currency system is a product of economic evolution and the growing demands and strains of international trade.  Famous examples of the break-down of the gold standard and its inflexibility to meet trade demands include the UK in 1931 and the U.S. government’s destruction of the gold linked currency system under the Bretton Woods agreement.

    Gold investors generally make the false argument that the gold standard somehow stabilizes prices (as if the price of gold is stable) or will restrain governments from excess spending, but the truth is, under sound stewardship, the fiat currency system provides all the benefits of the gold standard and all the flexibility that the gold standard didn’t contribute.  In addition, the  gold standard had a tendency to cause severe strains on countries due to trade imbalances and the inability to provide flexibility to countries with trade deficits.  The argument that inflation, instability, corruption and mal-investment cannot occur under the gold standard is historically false.

    If we were to alter our currency system it is most likely that we would move to a currency basket of some form, a global currency or move to a commodity basket – of which gold would likely be a component.  Realistically, however, the odds of moving back to the gold standard (or even a commodity basket) are next to nothing.  Nonetheless, gold investors remain hopeful of a currency collapse and a rewinding of our economic evolution.  Don’t count on it.  The current monetary system provides sovereign issuers of currency with a powerful monopoly over their currency and they are unlikely to relinquish this power into the hands of gold producers or an international currency (or bank) any time soon.

    The popular idea of hyperinflation is one of the primary arguments in favor of gold. Of course, as we’ve already discussed, this is inherently flawed because the likelihood of reverting back to a gold based monetary system is virtually nil so anyone hiding gold bars under their bed is unlikely to find themselves trading them back and forth at the local Wal-Mart any time soon.   Regardless, speculation, corruption and mal-investment will occur in any currency system that allows such things to persist.  If these inefficiencies are allowed to persist they can lead to inflation and economic ruin.  The favorite arguments used by inflationistas are the Weimar Republic and Zimbabwe, however, any true historian understands that the United States is not even remotely comparable to these corrupt and inefficient economies.  The comparisons are completely and entirely debunked by Bill Mitchell at Billy Blog.  This is not to imply that inflation cannot occur in the modern currency system, but under sound stewardship the fiat currency system is no more potentially destructive than a gold standard (where sound stewardship remains a necessity).

    Of course, there is nothing in a gold standard that keeps a country from becoming a poor steward of the currency. In fact, the restrictions of the gold standard have resulted in more government defaults than any flexible exchange rate fiat currency.  The argument that 99% of all fiat currencies have failed is simply an outright falsehood.   Fiat currencies restricted by the gold standard or pegged to another currency have failed repeatedly.  That is not the system in which we reside today.  It’s important to understand that the currency system in which we reside is vastly different from the pre-Nixon Shock currency system in which  currencies did not freely float and currencies were convertible.   As I described last week, a sovereign issuer of currency with no foreign denominated debt cannot go bankrupt in a floating exchange rate system unless it effectively decides to.   Inflation is another story altogether, but we’ll touch on this further.

    Most of the hyperinflationists or gold investors I know are worried that the Fed’s printing press (or button pressing if you will) will ultimately result in inflation.  This is not entirely correct.  As I have previously explained, when you pour an iced tea packet into a pitcher of water you don’t automatically get iced tea.  You have to stir it in.  Our banking system is much the same.  There is no demand for credit as of now and therefore there is no expansion in the amount of actual money in the system.   Because the private sector is busy repairing their balance sheets aggregate demand remains historically low.  Therefore, the hyperinflation argument remains bunk.  The latest readings on wage inflation, demand for credit, etc all point to continued de-leveraging and low demand for credit, and in our banking system that means inflation is not yet a concern.  For all his faults, even Bernanke would not be ignorant enough to leave rates at 0% when there are signs of inflation.  Mr. Bernanke is actually acting as a relatively good steward of the currency now (we’ll see how long that lasts – I am not banking on it).*  For a more detailed explanation of the deflationary risks please see here.

    In terms of sentiment there is an inherent premium built into gold because it is viewed as a safehaven currency.  This opinion is generally sold to the public by investors who genuinely believe the world is going to end or that the modern economic system will ultimately fail as the dollar crumbles.  These people genuinely believe that the entire global economy will collapse one day and we will all be sitting around trading our gold bars back and forth.  This is pure and simple fear mongering.  This is not to imply that the U.S. dollar can’t fail or that the fiat currency system will always exist in its current form, but the idea of reverting back to a time when we carry gold in our pockets in order to purchase goods is simply ludicrous.  “Barbarous” as some might call it.  The truth of the matter is that the fiat currency system is simply an evolutionary step in our economic progress.   Those who latch onto the days of the gold standard simply don’t understand how fiat currency works in the current floating exchange rate system.  If you want to believe the global economy will one day collapse that is just fine, but should that scenario actually pan out the last of your concerns will be which local market is accepting gold in exchange for food.  The man with the most lead will be the man with the most food in that scenario.

    Where gold does contain real value is as an actual commodity.  I don’t believe that gold has no intrinsic value as many gold haters believe.  I believe it has intrinsic value in the same way that diamonds have intrinsic value.  I just don’t believe gold should have any intrinsic value as a currency.  None.  From a purely supply and demand perspective the gold market actually looks fairly constructive.  Nouriel Roubini pointed to several reasons why gold is not necessarily a bad investment:

    “the global supply of gold—both existing and newly produced—is limited, and demand is rising faster than supply over the medium term. The recovery of the global economy has started a revival of retail gold demand especially in India. Central banks looking to diversify their portfolios account for further demand—see for instance, the recent increase in gold holdings by emerging market central banks. Most of the increase in demand comes from private investors using gold as a hedge against low probability tail risks of high inflation and another near depression caused by a double dip recession. Inflation risk and the risk of a double-dip are both low, suggesting lower gold prices, but increasingly investors want to hedge against such risks early on. And given the inelastic supply of gold, it only takes a small shift in the portfolios of central banks and private investors to boost increase the price of gold significantly.”

    Passport Capital recently laid out the bull case as well:

    • Demand in India and China is surging and demographic and wealth trends should bolster prices.
    • Demand from central banks has undergone an important shift in recent years in response to the credit crisis.
    • Mined supply peaked in 2001.
    • The ability of above-ground gold stocks to satisfy demand is undergoing structural change, and markets may be overestimating their ability to satisfy an increase in demand at current prices.

    One might conclude that I think gold is a terrible investment after reading this.  That couldn’t be farther from the truth.  I simply believe gold is a misunderstood asset (particularly as an alternative to the dollar).  I know that the overwhelming majority of investors see value in gold and therefore it is ignorant to ignore its potential as an asset.  The modern fiat currency system is still largely misunderstood and very young.  It will take time for investors to learn to trust it and fully understand its benefits.

    Of course, these misconceptions are likely to persist for years if not decades and ignoring the beliefs of a huge amount of the investment world is no different than the fundamental analyst who ignores the millions of chartists in the world.  The belief is there therefore the price action is there.  I believe there are good reasons to hold gold in ones portfolio, but those reasons should be purely based on the underlying laws of supply and demand at work as they pertain to gold’s value as a commodity.   The idea that we will one day revert back to the gold standard is simply not pragmatic in my opinion.   If I were a betting man (and I am) and if I had to bet my lead on it I would bet that the idea of gold as a currency will be almost entirely extinct in 500 years.   But that doesn’t necessarily mean the price of gold won’t be much much higher.

    In conclusion, I continue to fail to grasp the rationale for gold as a safehaven in this environment.  As we learned in 2008 the true safehaven in the modern floating exchange rate fiat currency world is actually the reserve currency.   With little to no inflation the inflation hedge argument remains bunk.   As for sentiment and the collapse of the modern economy, well, I don’t think gold will be the thing you really want to own in that world.  It is not gold we will all be clamoring for, but lead and God save you if you don’t have something to load that lead into because those gold bricks are mighty hard to throw at someone….

    *It’s important that I enter one caveat here.  As regular readers know, I believe the current print and spend policy will do little to fix the long-term structural problems in the real economy. The real problem in the U.S. economy is that we remain in a stranglehold by a banking sector that is too large, too powerful, unproductive and poorly allocates capital.  The problem with Bernanke & Cos. plan is not that they are necessarily being poor stewards of the currency, but rather that they continue to allow bankers to allocate capital in an entirely unregulated manner.  This should not be fixed via currency restructuring or even austerity necessarily, but through harsh regulation and permanent downsizing of the banks.  But MUCH more on this in a later article….

    Read more market commentary at The Pragmatic Capitalist >

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  • Google Goes Greener, Launches PowerMeter API

    Google’s green energy plans are moving forward with a new push to spread its PowerMeter initiative even further. The company is now releasing an open API for its PowerMeter widget so that device manufacturers can build smart devices to measure electricity consumption at the plug level. This will allow people to get detailed data and see the exact cons… (read more)

  • Shanghai Plummets 2.5% Ahead Of Possible Tightening, US Drifts Lower

    Tightening fears are once again on the agenda in Asia.

    As we mentioned yesterday, the Chinese People’s National Bank Congress meets Friday, and it’s certainly possible that the next proposed tightening comes out of that meeting.

    Shanghai Plummeted 2.5%.

    In the US, stocks are down, but the action is a bit more mellow.

    chart

    Meanwhile, Gold has had a good couple of days and is remains close to $1140

    chart

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  • “Happiness is not about what happens to you – but how you interpret what happens. That’s why it’s called HAPPINESS – not HAPPENNESS – although it could be called HOPE-NESS. You must leave room for hope that all has happened for good cause.” – How To Be Happy Dammit

    book cover

    The World Health Organization predicts by 2020 depression will be 2nd only to heart disease when it comes to global burden of illness!  Eeeeek! I wanna do what I can – with my books, articles, and blog – to ensure that this does NOT happen, dammit!

    HAPPINESS TIP: If you’re spinning about something bad which happened to you in the past, force yourself to face forward to something you’re excited about in your future. Make the word “FORWARD” your single word mantra. Whenever negative thoughts enter your head, repeat the word FORWARD – and meditate on this happier vision for your future.

    For more about my book HOW TO BE HAPPY, DAMMIT – click this line, right here, RIGHT NOW.

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  • Is The Euro Rebound Real This Time?

    We’ll just throw this chart out to you, and ask for your thoughts. It seems pretty clear that for the second time since it began its decline (at the end of December 2009) it’s putting together some kind of run.

    We’ve also predicted that a parade of euro-bulls (on a trading basis) would soon be coming out of the wood work. This started already with Marc Faber.

    So what do you think, is it real?

    chart

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  • And Now Europe’s Uber-Right Is Surging

    Geert Wilders

    Geert Wilders is the uber-right, anti-Muslim Dutch politician who is banned from entering the UK.

    And now: he and his party are surging.

    A new poll shows Wilders capturing huge swaths of the population, and his party set to win the most seats in June 9 elections.

    European flirtation with the nationalist right comes and goes obviously. France shocked the world early last decade when Jean Marie Le Pen made it into the runoff against Jaque Chirac. Another anti-immigrant Dutch politician, Pim Fortuyn, looked set to capture his country’s election before being murdered. In Austria, Nazy sympathist Jörg Haider had bouts of electoral success.

    But the huge surge in the right never really amounts to much, or a huge trend. Odds are it won’t this time, but with the Europe facing a true existential crisis at the moment, along with a Tea Party-like undercurrent of populist anger, the possibility of a real lurch rightward can’t completely be counted out.

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  • Northern Sudan: 12 months since expulsion

    On 4 March 2009, Oxfam GB was one of 16 international and Sudanese organisations whose licences to work in northern Sudan were revoked. Alun McDonald looks at what has happened since.

    It’s one year today since the expulsions brought an abrupt end to 25 years of Oxfam GB programmes in northern Sudan. These projects were working with around 500,000 people in some of the poorest communities in the region, and were forced to shut down almost overnight.

    So what has happened in the following 12 months?

    When Oxfam's licence in northern Sudan was revoked, 63,000 people  in Kalma camp (pictured) alone were relying on Oxfam to provide clean  water. Photo: Oxfam.

    When Oxfam’s licence in northern Sudan was revoked, 63,000 people in Kalma camp (pictured) alone were relying on Oxfam to provide clean water. Photo: Oxfam.

    Darfur crisis still as real as ever

    In some areas we don’t really know. With fewer agencies on the ground, information has partly dried up. The crisis in Darfur has gradually faded from the international media spotlight and become yet another forgotten, complicated African conflict. But for many communities it is still as real as ever. This week there have been reports of some of the heaviest fighting in Darfur in many months, with thousands of people displaced and up to 400 people killed in the mountainous Jebel Marra region. Civilians in the camps and villages still lack the protection they have been promised for years.

    In recent months there has been a lot of talk that the war in Darfur is over, or at least in its last throes. While it’s gladly true that a lot of the large-scale attacks on civilians that marked the early years of the crisis have reduced, and the dynamics of the conflict have changed, the violence is certainly not over. Areas where Oxfam GB used to work have been affected. In Shangil Tobai, a small town near the border of North and South Darfur where Oxfam GB was providing water and sanitation, around 8,000 mainly women and children have arrived in the past few months, fleeing new fighting and attacks on villages. The UN warned that many of them faced “desperate shortages” of water, food and other basic services – aid that would previously have been provided quickly by the expelled agencies.

    However, in most parts of Darfur the remaining international and Sudanese organisations – including our sister agency Oxfam America and some of our community partners – have stepped up their emergency responses, filling some of the most urgent gaps. A major humanitarian emergency has largely been averted – at least in the sense that what is still one of the biggest crises in the world has not got substantially worse.

    Oxfam supported schools in some of Port Sudan's poorest  neighbourhoods. People from all over Sudan arrived in the city after  fleeing war and drought. The schools gave hundreds of children the  chance at an education. Photo: Alun McDonald.

    Oxfam supported schools in some of Port Sudan’s poorest neighbourhoods. People from all over Sudan arrived in the city after fleeing war and drought. The schools gave hundreds of children the chance at an education. Photo: Alun McDonald.

    Longer term development has suffered

    But the biggest impact of the expulsions has been felt in other ways. Having to increase emergency aid, remaining agencies have therefore had to de-prioritise important longer-term development projects such as supporting education and livelihoods. After seven years of war, and major demographic changes with rapid urbanisation and millions stuck in camps, these are the kind of programmes that Darfur communities need if they are to rebuild their lives and their region, and if peace is to be truly sustainable.

    Support for victims of violence, particularly rape and sexual assault, has also suffered. 14 of the 16 expelled agencies had projects working to support victims of sexual violence and many of the trauma counselling projects, women’s health centres and support networks that were shut down have not been adequately replaced. Meanwhile women in and out of camps continue to live in fear of rape.

    Abductions commonplace

    For the aid agencies that remain, the security environment is as bad as ever, and in some ways even worse. Kidnappings of foreign aid workers have become commonplace – fortunately most have eventually been released unharmed, although one French aid worker is still being held after more than four months in captivity. These abductions have forced many agencies to scale back their presence outside the biggest towns. Unfortunately these areas – including the most remote and rural areas – are arguably where assistance is most needed.

    Most of the attention after the expulsions focused on the impact in Darfur. But Oxfam GB’s programmes also covered some of the other neglected parts of northern Sudan. We were one of the few agencies working in the eastern Red Sea State – one of the poorest and least developed parts of the whole country. These communities have been left far more vulnerable than before.

    I’m still in touch with many of our local Sudanese staff who lost their jobs after the expulsion – some of whom were working for Oxfam for many years. Some have found other employment, but many have not. Some still meet up in the cafes and parks of Khartoum and Darfur to reminisce about their old work and colleagues. Emails I get are full of pride for what was achieved, and sadness that projects that were making a real difference to people’s lives were ended.

    Next 12 months crucial

    So what does the future hold for Oxfam GB in Sudan? We continue to work in the south of the country, which has recently witnessed a major upsurge in violence and displacement. The next 12 months will be crucial for Sudan, with the first national multi-party elections in 24 years scheduled for April and a referendum – where southerners will decide whether to remain part of a united Sudan or secede and become the world’s newest country – to take place next January.

    International attention has rightly begun to focus more on the whole country and the fragile Sudan-wide Comprehensive Peace Agreement, rather than just on Darfur. But the needs in the north remain enormous, and I hope that Darfur and eastern Sudan will not now be forgotten. We hope one day that we can return to the north and resume work there.

    Following Oxfam GB’s expulsion, Oxfam America continues to work in Darfur, providing clean water, sanitation and long-term development, and still needs your support.

    More on Oxfam’s work in northern Sudan

    In pictures: Oxfam’s work in southern Sudan

  • China Services Index Plummets To One-Year Low

    china angels

    China’s official non-manufacturing index, its services index, collapsed to a one-year low in February, hitting 46.1 vs. 55.1 in January.

    The Chinese new year surely had a negative impact, but it remains to be seen how much fo the slow-down was due to the new year holiday and how much represents an actual slow-down. This February’s reading was still above the 41.9 level it hit last February.

    Yet the official data was more negative than the services index calculated by HSBC:

    China Daily:

    Its sharp drop contrasted with HSBC’s China services sector PMI, which eased only a touch to 56.7 in February, staying comfortably within expansionary territory.

    All of the PMI surveys for February were complicated by the timing of the Chinese New Year holiday, which effectively halted work for a full week last month.

    According to the CFLP’s official survey, the new order sub-index for China’s service sectors fell to 46.2 in February. But the outlook sub-index was strong at 68.0, showing that service sector managers remained confident.

    Does HSBC adjust out the new year?

     

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  • A law to punish the plunderers

    Egypt Today (Nadine El Sayed)

    Egypt owns two thirds of the world’s monuments.” So says the government’s state information service. It doesn’t go into detail. But when you consider the abundance of national icons — the Pyramids, the Sphinx, Abu Simbel, the Valley of the Kings — that draw thousands of visitors every year, the richness of the country’s past can be overwhelming.

    It is precisely this illustrious history, in the form of exquisite relics, excavated ruins and secrets yet to be unearthed beneath the sands, that is the subject of a new amendment to the antiquities law that has caused much debate in the People’s Assembly (PA).

    Approved early last month after a year of discussion in Parliament, law 117/1983 is being amended in a bid to preserve the nation’s documented archeological heritage and prevent the expatriation of any future discoveries.

  • A synagogue in Cairo

    New York Times (Andrew Baker)

    One of Cairo’s most historic synagogues and a yeshiva, restored by the Egyptian government, is to be rededicated next week. Known colloquially as “Rav Moshe,” the yeshiva was the original study of Rabbi Moses ben Maimon, or Maimonides, the renowned physician, rabbinic scholar and leader of the Egyptian Jewish community in the 12th century. Accessible only by foot along narrow commercial streets, visitors today enter his yeshiva through the foyer of a 19th century synagogue built in his honor.

    The 18-month project of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities involved a team of Egyptian experts ranging from art restorers to mechanical engineers at a cost of nearly $2 million.

  • WordPress Blogs Go Real-Time with PuSH

    RSS feeds are so yesterday when you have things like Twitter, right? That seems to be the ‘popular’ belief, but there are those who still believe in the ancient technology and who are working on upgrading it to keep up with the increasing need for faster news and real-time content. Enter PubSubHubbub (PuSH), an open protocol that is designed to get a feed … (read more)

  • Opera Mini released as a native application on Windows Mobile

    opera-mini-windows-mobile-native Opera Software launched a native version of Opera Mini 5 beta for Windows Mobile 5- and 6-based handsets.

    By integrating Opera Mini with the Windows Mobile platform, Opera is able to deliver an optimized version of the popular Opera Mini browser that dramatically improves performance and the overall user experience. While Opera Mini traditionally requires Java, the new Windows Mobile version does not, which means that Opera Mini will work on any Windows Mobile phone.

    The Opera Mini 5 beta for Windows Mobile includes the same rich feature set as the Java-based version. Renowned features, including tabbed browsing, the password manager, bookmarks and Speed Dial, are built-in to deliver convenience while on-the-go.

    One of Opera Mini’s major benefits is that it compresses data traffic by up to 90 percent, resulting in significantly improved page-loading and speed. This results in a dramatically reduced data load, which can translate to lower browsing costs when on a pay-per-MB data plan or when on expensive roaming.

    "Windows Mobile deserves a mobile browser that looks better, handles better and delivers better than the default browser," said Dag Olav Norem, Vice President of Products, Opera Software. "Even though Opera has 50 million satisfied Opera Mini users, we always seek ways to improve our browser for each and every mobile phone user out there. Now, we are pleased to offer the world’s most popular mobile Web browser as a native Windows Mobile application."

    Download

    Windows Mobile 5 and 6 users can download Opera Mini directly to their phone for free from m.opera.com/next/ or read more at www.opera.com/mini/next/. Java is not required on the mobile phone for this download.

    Source:MSMobiles.com

  • Book Review: The Development of Accounting in an International Context

    Desicritics.com (Review by Dr Bhaskar Dasgupta)

    The Development of Accounting in an International Context: A Festschrift in Honour of R. H. Parker (Routledge International Studies in Business History)
    T.E. Cooke (Editor), C.W. Nobes (Editor) 1997

    Accountants are actually High Priests, drawing order out of chaos.

    When I read a paper by Mahmoud Ezzamel on how accounting was performed in Ancient Egypt, I could not suppress a chuckle. Once that was done, it made sense to me. So what is Dr. Ezzamel’s argument? In effect, he is saying that the ancient Egyptians in the New Kingdom (1552-1080BC) had a world view which was defined by the Gods, the Pharaohs, the living and the dead. As long as the relationship between these four parties was established and on track, everything was fine and dandy. It was the scribes (read accountants in modern parlance) who were responsible for making sure that the right numbers of wheat ounces, gold weights, cattle etc. were offered to the Gods by the Pharaohs, and were mentioned in the tombs, etc.

    Where does accounting come in? Well, accounting as formally defined is a practise of entering in a visible format, a record of items and actions. There is a value attached to these accounts and a way of capturing them and the definition of these values. In Ancient Egypt, this was inextricably linked with religion.