Tuesday, 30 August 2005

New Orleans

Filed under: Environment — Rick Eyre @ 10:21 am

With New Orleans being hit on Monday by the savagery of Hurricane Katrina - though not as catastrophically as was feared - I’m putting the RSS feed from Metroblogging New Orleans up on the site (see left). This also links through to media sites in New Orleans and Louisiana. There’s talk of looting, alas, and some discussion, which I think unseemly at this time, of politicisation of the tragedy.

Update 2am Thursday 1/9/05 AEST: I’ve replaced the metroblog feed, which sadly is no longer either adequate or appropriate as the full extent of the devastation in the Gulf of Mexico coastline becomes clear. The Yahoo! feed at left of Indian Ocean Tsunami news has been replaced for now by one covering hurricanes and tropical storms.

Tsunami damage in Yemen

Filed under: Tsunami — Rick Eyre @ 9:59 am

It’s now eight months since the December 26 tsunami. It was never the “Asian Tsunami” as too many have described it, and I’ve written about Somalia before. This report from IRIN:

YEMEN: Tsunami damage underestimated, FAO

SANA, 28 Aug 2005 (IRIN) - A recent mission to Yemen by United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) found that Yemen was more severely affected by the tsunami in December 2004 than originally estimated.

Though only five deaths were reported, the mission found that 2,000 fishing families were directly affected with damage totalling about US $2.2 million.

Hans Bage, who led the mission, said that representatives from the Yemeni Ministry of Fish Wealth were surprised by the findings of the mission and the extent of the damage. ?There were significant impacts on the livelihoods of local people, especially fisherman,? he said.

The mission, undertaken in July 2005, surveyed 34 coastal communities in Socotra, an archipelago 350km south of the mainland, close to the tip of the Horn of Africa, and the governorate of al-Mahrah, in eastern Yemen, bordering Oman.

High waves damaged boats, engines and fishing gear as well as infrastructure vital to the fishing sector, such as ice plants, storage sheds and jetties.

Some 653 boats, 569 engines, 1,625 nets and 16,980 fishing traps were either damaged or completely destroyed, and many landing beaches and natural harbours were also severely compromised, according to the latest estimates made by the joint FAO/government mission.

“Many fishermen have not been fishing for six months now,” said Bage. Moreover, he noted that the halt in fishing has in turn had an economic impact on buyers, sellers, processors and others who make a living in fisheries-related activities.

Lack of financial and technical resources and the remoteness of these communities meant very little information about the impact of the tsunami had been gathered, and authorities did not immediately perceive the need for international relief efforts.

However, as early as February 2005, Minister of Water Mohamed al-Eryani had estimated that the total cost of the tsunami to Yemen would be US $3 million.

Despite this warning, the mission saw little in the way of government activities to help those affected by the tsunami. “We only saw the construction of some gear sheds by the Ministry of Oil and Gas,” Bage explained.

The FAO is now working on getting Yemen included the list of countries affected by the tsunami, so that it can receive international assistance.

The FAO is proposing a US $2.2 million post-tsunami fisheries rehabilitation project in Yemen and is urging donors in the Arab world to support it.

Bage said that, given suitable assistance, ?it will take at least a year for the fishing sector to be restored to its previous level of activity?.

The fishery sector plays an import role in the Yemeni economy and provides employment to more than 53,000 fishers and workers in related sectors.

However, these coastal communities are amongst the poorest and most food-insecure in this under-developed country, and Bage hoped that the rehabilitation project would do more to help them than just restore them the level they were at prior to this disaster.

IRIN also learnt that while over $6 million was pledged in private donations in Yemen towards the international relief effort in Southeast Asia, very little of the promised money was received.

An aid source said that the private sector was not confident that the government would deliver the money to the intended beneficiaries, due to a lack of visibility or accountability.

(This report is reproduced with permission via IRIN, a UN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. Copyright © UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2005.)

Saturday, 27 August 2005

Parrot habitat enlarged after logging mistake

Filed under: Australia, Environment, Biodiversity — Rick Eyre @ 8:08 pm

Another great moment in bureaucratic cartography.

Parrot habitat enlarged after logging mistake. 27/08/2005. ABC News Online

My top 10 favourite podcasts

Filed under: Arts, Verse, Technology, Media, Music — Rick Eyre @ 3:22 pm

The growth in podcasts over the past six months or so has been bewildering. Because audio is such a linear medium, there is only a finite amount of podcasts that one can listen. It is much more time-consuming and resource-intensive to browse podcasts than to skim over web pages.

I was won over to podcasts when ABC Radio National started putting a lot of its programming into RSS syndication. But while I listen to a lot of non-commercial radio programming on the MP3 player, the podcasts that I consider my favourites are independent efforts.

I figured it was about time I prepared a list of my Top 10 Favourite Podcasts. One thing you’ll notice is that they are all under half an hour in length per episode. While there are a number of longer programs that I like, I think an hour for a single podcast is too long.

There are no podcasts about cricket on the list for the simple reason that there is one person doing them, and The Net Sessions isn’t quite that good yet :-)

Here’s my list:

1. Digital Flotsam
Truly brilliant. A rich, eclectic mix of music, monologue and comedy. PW Fenton is a blues performer and expert and he presents some great set pieces over a wide range of styles. Some wonderful cover versions too (you haven’t lived till you’ve heard Pink Floyd’s “Comfortably Numb” performed in the style of the Bee Gees’ “Stayin Alive”). I can listen to these over and over again.
Links: Website, Podcast feed, Blog.

2. Caribbean Free Radio
Cool and atmospheric. Georgia Popplewell’s podcast makes you really feel like you’re in Trinidad. And she’s keen on supporting indy music from all across the Caribbean.
Links: Website, Podcast feed, Blog, Photoblog.

3. Radio Curious (KZYX Mendocino County)
I firt stumbled across Radio Curious in June when I spotted a program in the Radio4All podcast listings entitled “Genocide in Darfur”. First thing I heard was the Gene Autryesque theme tune and I thought “What the…” But this is a fascinating interview series which has been conducted by the urbane Barry Vogel for more than a decade. An incredible range of topics, handled in a warm, engaging manner, and masses of archives online which I am yet to explore in any detail.
Links: Website, Podcast feed.

4. Documentary Archive (BBC World Service)
Some outstanding radio documentaries from the BBC World Service dealing with topics from all over the world. Some recent examples include the re-forestation of Iceland, the 60th anniversary of the end of WWII in some Pacific islands, and the debate over the terrorist threat in the Sahara Desert. Longer documentaries are split into half-hourly instalments, which is good.
Links: Website, Podcast feed.

5. From Our Own Correspondent (BBC Radio 4)
Half an hour of talk, without interviews, sound effects or music. Five or six BBC foreign correspondents each week get to chat about a story they’ve been covering or just give a personal account of life in wherever they happened to be posted at the time. Always interesting, sometimes amusing. Hosted by the doyenne of BBC foreign correspondents, Kate Adie.
Links: Website, Podcast feed.

6. The Bike Show (Resonance FM London)
I’m not a cyclist but this program is at its best when host Jack Thurston interviews his guest while both are on a ride somewhere. Here’s the December 27, 2004 program as an example.
Links: Website/blog, Podcast feed.

7. Life Matters (ABC Radio National)

8. The Sports Factor (ABC Radio National)

9. A Klingon Word

10. TUC Radio

Wednesday, 24 August 2005

Religious extremist advocates murder of foreign leader

Filed under: Conflict, Religion — Rick Eyre @ 11:10 pm

I’m talking, of course, about Pat Robertson.

Donald Rumsfeld’s response to Robertson’s suggestion of assassinating Hugo Chavez says it all:

Certainly, it’s against the law. Our department doesn’t do that type of thing.

Wednesday, 17 August 2005

So when will “Getaway” do a show on this village?

Filed under: Mentioned In Dis Patches, World — Rick Eyre @ 2:40 pm

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/08/15/austrian_signs/

Sunday, 7 August 2005

Who would you rather believe?

Filed under: Conflict, Human Rights, The 4th Term — Rick Eyre @ 12:53 am

Exhibit A:

I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!

- Patrick Henry, Richmond (Virginia), 23 March 1775

Exhibit B:

Well the most important civil liberty I have is, and you have, is to stay alive and to be free from violence and death and I think when people talk about civil liberties, they sometimes forget that action taken to protect the citizen against physical violence and physical attack is a blow in favour, and not a blow against civil liberties.

- John Winston Howard, Canberra (ACT), 5 August 2005

Saturday, 6 August 2005

More evidence that Google has lost the plot

Filed under: Corporate, Food, Labour — Rick Eyre @ 8:48 pm

http://www.google.com/press/pressrel/exec_chefs.html which begins:

Google Hungry for Executive Chefs

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – August 4, 2005 – Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) today announced a worldwide search for two executive chefs with the experience to creatively manage the preparation of thousands of quality breakfast, lunch, and dinner meals each day at the company’s Mountain View, Calif. headquarters. The executive chefs will oversee the development and continual refinement of an eclectic menu capable of suiting every Googler palate, from vegan entrees to pad thai, grilled burgers, and wood-fired pizza – all while using organic ingredients whenever possible.

“These two chefs will play an important role in managing the company’s growing appetites,” said Sergey Brin, president, Technology, Google Inc. “We welcome all culinary engineers to try out for our exceptional team.”

The Cookoff
Qualified chefs are invited to submit their resumes to Google at jobs@google.com. When a critical mass of submissions has been received, the top candidates will be invited to Google headquarters to prepare a meal for the “tasting committee.” Four finalists will compete in a Google Chef Cookoff, whose two winners will be offered the roles of Executive Chef at Google.

I’m still waiting for the formation of the Google Cricket Club…

Monday, 1 August 2005

IOC and Coca-Cola extend partnership to 2020

Filed under: Human Rights, Corporate, Torino 2006, Beijing 2008, London 2012, Vancouver 2010 — Rick Eyre @ 11:19 pm

The contribution of Coca-Cola to the Olympic Movement has always been the model of a true partnership.

- Jacques Rogge, 1.8.05

This just in from the media desk of the International Olympic Committee:

The International Olympic Committee and The Coca-Cola Company today announced a renewal of their partnership for an unprecedented 12 years, thereby taking what was already the longest sponsorship of the Olympic Games to a record 92 uninterrupted years. The partnership, which began in 1928, was extended during a signing ceremony on the Great Wall of China. The new agreement, which begins in 2009, will see Coca-Cola supporting the Olympic Movement over a period which covers the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games, the London 2012 Olympic Games, plus the Olympic Games of 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2020.

Welcoming the renewal of the partnership, IOC President Jacques Rogge said, “The contribution of Coca-Cola to the Olympic Movement has always been the model of a true partnership. The Olympic Games would not be where they are today, and so many athletes over the years could not have competed in the Games, without the extensive corporate support pioneered by Coca-Cola as our longest continuous sponsor. Because the Olympic Family and Coca-Cola share the values of Olympism at their deepest level, this is a natural partnership that we hold most dearly.”

The Coca-Cola Chairman, Mr E. Neville Isdell, echoed the President’s comments, emphasising the new atmosphere of Olympic spirit at the world’s leading beverage company. “The privilege of being associated with the Olympic Movement for nearly a century is reflected in this landmark agreement,” Mr Isdell said. “Our investment in the future of the Olympic Games underscores our faith in the Games and how they continue to make our world a little bit better. This long-term commitment comes at a time when those of us throughout the Coca-Cola system are rededicating ourselves to the Olympic spirit. We have recently challenged ourselves not to wait every two or four years to celebrate the Olympic ideal, but to bring to life those values in our everyday lives - to think Olympic, act Olympic, and, indeed, truly live Olympic.” he added.

Also attending the announcement, which was made in China as the country marks three years to go until the Olympic Games of Beijing 2008, was Jean-Claude Killy, three times Olympic Games gold medallist and IOC member, young Chinese diver Wu Min Xia, who won a gold medal and a silver medal at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, together with a host of guests including leadership from both the Beijing Organising Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad and the upcoming Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games.

Coca-Cola will start trading on Wall Street today at $43.77.