Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

The problem of poverty isn’t the hunger, per se – most people can cope with shortages for limited periods. True poverty is a life so circumscribed and limited that even children cease to hope for something better.
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Saturday, December 20th, 2008
[Originally published in the Vanuatu Daily Post.]
On December 5, a remarkable document surfaced. Prison Report 2008, authored by the prisoners themselves, is a long, ambling document that alternates between history, documentary and cri de coeur as it recounts the hardships faced by those incarcerated in Vanuatu’s prisons.
At times uncritical, naive and even occasionally self-serving, the report nonetheless contains well documented reports of violence and mistreatment in our prisons.
The report paints a picture of regular physical abuse and neglect in an environment that resists our best efforts to improve it. The prisoners claim that it is precisely these conditions that not only lead them to escape but allow them to succeed.
The prisoners are frankly foolish in their expectations. The make claims for compensation to the tune of 100 million vatu and finish with a warning that if these claims are not addressed within 14 days the prisoners will walk out.
Director of Correctional Services Joshua Bong initially insisted his department had not seen the report, but has since assured the prisoners that a commission of inquiry will be established to investigate the claims. On Thursday, he indicated his intention to stop any effort to leave the prison – with or without outside help –by blockading the road in front of the Stade.
Notwithstanding all precautions taken, the prisoners made good on their threats. On Friday morning at roughly 9:30 a.m., they set the prison alight. In the ensuing chaos, they exited the building, tossed a bible astride the concertina wire atop the fence, and used that foothold to effect their escape.
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Originally published at the Scriptorum. You can comment here or there.
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Tuesday, December 16th, 2008
[Originally published in the Vanuatu Daily Post’s Weekender Edition.]
Poetry is what gets lost in the translation – Robert Frost
This quotation is one of those handy catch-all phrases that scholars love to use to explain – and often excuse – people’s inability to capture the essence of a statement when it’s translated between languages and cultures. Examples of miscommunication between peoples are everywhere.
One of the most startling examples of the limits to cross-cultural communication occurred during US-Russian nuclear talks. Disarmament expert Geoffrey Forden writes:
‘It turns out that when the US START II treaty negotiators tried to explain to their Russian counterparts the need for a “strategic reserve” of nuclear warheads, they called it a hedge. The Russian interpreters alternately translated that as either “cheat” or “shrub”.’
You can imagine the confusion and consternation this would have caused. More than poetry was at stake in this particular translation.
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Originally published at the Scriptorum. You can comment here or there.
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Saturday, December 13th, 2008
[This week's Communications column for the Vanuatu Independent.]
It won’t come as news to anybody if I say that family is strong in Vanuatu. We’ve known it all along. But with the upcoming release of a new report on telecommunications liberalisation, we will see its influence illustrated in vivid terms.
The Pacific Institute of Public Policy (PiPP) will soon be releasing a report measuring the social impacts of telecoms liberalisation in Vanuatu. One of the main findings is that, in the months following the extension of mobile telephone service to the majority of Vanuatu’s population, families benefited more than businesses in terms of changed perceptions and real outputs.
We’ve suspected this for a while. In June of this year, I presented a talk to regional telecommunications providers. Titled ‘Network Effects: Social Significance of Mobile Communications in Vanuatu‘, it explains Network Effects and how they manifest themselves in village life, then looks at some obvious and not-so-obvious implications for network providers in the Pacific.
Briefly, my point is that village life features very tight communication loops from which no one is exempt. The one-to-one aspects of village communications are enhanced by mobile communications, and smart network operators should do what they can to enhance this effect. The result is that our island geography (and gestalt) creates more value per user than traditional business analysis might lead us to believe.
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Originally published at the Scriptorum. You can comment here or there.
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Monday, December 8th, 2008
You may be wondering what on earth this post is about. Well, you’ll find out soon enough. But firstly, let me tell you something about Vanuatu.
Vanuatu is an archipelago of some 83 islands covering a land mass of approximately 13000km2. It is located to the East of Australia, West of Fiji and North of New [...]
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Saturday, December 6th, 2008
[Originally published in the Vanuatu Daily Post’s Weekender Edition.]
I have to write three things today. First, I’ve got this column. Then a column discussing privacy issues in an online world. Then I have to write a farewell letter to someone who’s shared my life for the last year and a half.
My friend is only one of thousands of admirable people from nations all over the world who have devoted a part of their lives to making Vanuatu a better place. For the most part, they labour quietly, preferring to draw attention to Vanuatu’s development than to themselves.
Yesterday was International Volunteer Day, so I thought I’d take this (belated) opportunity to let you say thanks.
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Originally published at the Scriptorum. You can comment here or there.
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