Thursday, August 17, 2006

YouTube outage

Web video sensation YouTube.com, which serves up more than 100 million videos online a day, suffered a six-hour breakdown on Tuesday -- its first-ever unplanned outage, a company spokeswoman confirmed today. She also stated that the problem was related to a database issue. The problem occurred on the same day as a release from internet audience measurement firm comScore Networks on Tuesday which showed that YouTube surged into the top 40 ranking U.S. Web sites for July, with 16 million visitors, up 20 percent in one month.

YouTube was founded in February 2005 by Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim. It is is a social web site that allows users to upload, view, and share video clips. The company employs 50 people in San Mateo (near San Franciso) California. YouTube uses Adobe Flash to serve its content, which includes clips from films and television programs, music videos, and homemade videos. Video feeds of YouTube videos can also be easily embedded on blogs and other websites. YouTube prohibits the posting of copyrighted video by anyone but the copyright holder; however, restriction of copyrighted material has proven difficult. The three founders of YouTube were all early employees of PayPal. The site's popularity surged in December 2005 when it hosted the Lazy Sunday clip from the NBC’s Saturday Night Live broadcast. Lazy Sunday became hugely popular among Internet communities for its memorable one-liners in a hip-hop parody based on the Chronicles of Narnia. In February this year, the NBC asked YouTube to remove Lazy Sunday and other copyrighted video clips. However, by June 2006, NBC had radically reconsidered its approach to YouTube; now the two companies have announced a strategic partnership. Under the terms of the partnership, NBC will create an official NBC Channel on YouTube to showcase its preview clips for The Office. YouTube will also promote NBC's videos throughout its site.

Copyright remains a major problem for YouTube. Their policy does not allow content to be uploaded by anyone other than the copyright holder. They remove videos that infringe on copyrights, but a large amount of copyrighted material is uploaded nonetheless. These are typically only discovered when they are reported by the YouTube community, or when the copyright holder reports them. Others have questioned whether they have a viable business model. The site was founded on $11.5 million in venture capital but didn't gain any revenue until March, when they cautiously began selling ads. The site's bandwidth costs, which increase every time a visitor clicks on a video, may be approaching $1 million a month--much of which goes to provider Limelight Networks.

The popularity of YouTube has inspired other websites into creating similar services. The craze over sharing homemade videos on the Internet is beginning to draw some big-time Hollywood players. On Monday, Warner Bros. announced that Internet video site Guba has started selling downloads of the studio's movies and TV shows. Guba is the first among the video-sharing sites to offer full-length movies. They also announced last month it had chosen file-sharing technology from BitTorrent to distribute films. BitTorrent is designed to distribute large amounts of data widely without incurring the corresponding consumption in costly server and bandwidth resources. Internet optimists predict that online video, long-rumoured to be the next big thing, is finally taking off. Some estimates that video generated $230 million in revenue in 2005 but will jump to $1.7 billion by 2010. In the meantime YouTube needs to grow with its bandwidth and ensure that the bad publicity of the overnight outage is not repeated in a hurry.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Maori Queen dies

The Maori Queen is dead. Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu died on Tuesday at the age of 75, after a reign of more than 40 years. She will be buried according to strict protocol on the sacred mountain of Taupiri. Dame Te Ata was the longest serving head of the Kingitanga movement - the royal line, which started almost 150 years ago in an effort to stem the loss of native lands to the flood of white settlers arriving in New Zealand.

She died in her ancestral home in the North Island Waikato town of Ngaruawahia and many mourners have congregated in the area to pay their respects. A family spokeswoman said she was "tireless in terms of ensuring there were good relationships throughout all peoples of New Zealand” while Prime Minister Helen Clark said: "A mighty kauri (tree) has fallen."

Dame Te Ata gained the largely ceremonial title of queen the day her father was buried in 1966. She was recognised as a cultural ambassador for the Maori people who make up approximately 15% of New Zealand’s 4.1 million population. Her successor is expected to be named during the week of mourning. Although the throne is not hereditary, one of her seven children will inherit the post if tradition is followed. She gave a rare interview in 2003 and hinted that one of her sons would succeed her. "My feeling at the moment is that the people are ready for a male heir to take over," she said.
Dame Te Ata was the only natural child of Koroki Mahuta and Te Atairangikaahu but had many adopted siblings.

The office of Māori Queen holds no constitutional function, but Te Atairangikaahu was an avid supporter of cultural and sporting events and commonly appeared in a figurehead role at locally held, international political events involving indigenous issues. The Kingitanga, or Maori King Movement, is seen as an important expression of Maori unity and today holds an established place in New Zealand society. This has not always been the case, however. In the early 1850s, a movement was formed to establish a King in order to unify the Maoris and avoid the ‘divide and rule’ policies so successfully used by the British in other countries. In the Waikato War of the 1860s, the government attempted to destroy the movement, which it considered a threat to the authority of the British Crown.

The Treaty of Waitangi had been signed in 1840 but contained major issues of translation from English into Maori. The Maori had no word for sovereignty in their language. Ambiguity over the meaning of the word plagued the treaty for many years and remains the object of much controversy and political debate. The Treaty itself is short, consisting of only three articles. The first article of the English version grants the British monarch sovereignty over New Zealand. The second article guarantees to the chiefs, their continued chieftainship, and ownership of their lands and treasures (taonga). It also specifies that Māori will sell land only to the Crown. The third article guarantees to all Māori the same rights as all other British subjects. The treaty was never ratified by Britain and carried no legal force in New Zealand until receiving limited recognition in 1975. Many settlers did not appreciate that Māori owned land communally and that permission to settle on land did not always imply sale of that land. Under pressure from settlers the Colonial Government gradually ignored the provisions of the Treaty of Waitangi and permitted settlers to settle in areas that had uncertain ownership. Māori began resisting the alienation of their homelands to the British settlers and eventually led to war.

Potatau Te Wherowhero was formally selected as first Maori King by a meeting of chiefs of the tribes held at Pukawa, Lake Taupo in April 1857. He was crowned King Potatau during elaborate ceremonies held at his marae in Ngaruwahia in 1858. Potatau achieved good rapport with early NZ governors but never ceded sovereignty to the Crown. He died before the Waikato War started in earnest in 1863. The government wanted to obtain the fertile Waikato lands for European settlement, but the King movement, which was centred there, resisted the loss of land and control. This proved to be a great calamity for the Maori people and resulted in the confiscation of millions of acres of tribal territory. A compensation claim was not settled until 1995. Along with her brother, Sir Robert Mahuta, the Queen, Te Āta, brought to conclusion the Waikato raupatu (confiscation) claim. This settlement delivered compensation for the confiscation of lands and an official apology from the Crown. The claim settlement was a particularly significant event for Waikato people, as they secured a range of resources and economic assets. Older structures of the King movement remain in place, supplemented by initiatives such as Tainui Endowed College, a university graduate facility, and Raukura Hauora o Tainui, a major provider of health services.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Queensland goes to the polls

Queensland premier Peter Beattie announced this morning he has called a state election for Saturday, September 9. He nominated health and delivering water reforms and the water grid as the top election issues. He said he made up his mind after discussions with retiring Bundaberg Labor MP Nita Cunningham yesterday. He also said he would not remain state ALP leader if he lost the election. Labor has been in office since 1998 and currently holds a 16 seat parliamentary majority. In the last couple of years, it has faced controversies over the crisis in the public hospital system and on how to tackle the dwindling water supply in the drought stricken south-east. The Opposition will be out to highlight Labor's supposed inability to handle several crises in electricity, health, and water.

The announcement ends weeks of lingering speculation on when Beattie would call an election. By law it was due before February 2007 but he has played his hand early due to the impending retirement of Labor MP Nita Cunningham due to ill-health. Cunningham represents Bundaberg, the site of the Dr Death scandal. Surgeon Dr Jayant Patel operated in Bundaberg Base Hospital and he found himself at the centre of a political scandal in early 2005 when he was accused of gross incompetence. The Indian born doctor had been disqualified from surgery in Oregon before coming to Australia. Queensland Health employed him without conducting any due diligence and appointed him to become director of surgery at Bundaberg. His surgical work was described as "antiquated" and "sloppy", and some nurses even claimed that they hid their patients from him when they knew that he was in the hospital. Patel was linked to at least 87 deaths out of the 1,202 patients he treated between 2003 to early 2005, 30 of whom died while under his care in Bundaberg. The Opposition raised the matter in state parliament and called for his suspension. Patel left Australia using a first-class air fare paid for by Queensland Health and returned to Oregon.

Queensland’s last election in 2004 produced a landslide victory for Labor. To form an effective government, the Coalition would need to take 19 seats and gain an overall swing of approximately 8%. Despite the dissatisfaction with the current government that has seen it lose three bye-elections in 18 months, that swing seems unlikely to be achieved. Especially as the Coalition itself is in disarray in the wash-up of the failed attempt to create a new combined party and the very recent sacking of Liberal leader Bob Quinn in favour of Bruce Flegg. Flegg pledged to work closely with the Nationals, despite once having questioned Opposition leader Lawrence Springborg's electability. Flegg said in an interview last year he doubted city voters would support a "farmer from the Darling Downs" as premier.

Queensland is the only state where the Nationals lead the Coalition. This is Lawrence Springborg’s second election as leader. In 2004, aged 35 he was the youngest opposition leader in Queensland's history and although he cut Labor’s majority after the 2001 debacle (when the Nationals preferenced One Nation and the Opposition was reduced to 15 seats in an 89 seat parliament) it was not enough to avoid a heavy defeat. Despite the defeat he was unanimously re-elected Leader of the Opposition in February 2004 after calling on both coalition partners to investigate whether they should unite as one single conservative party in Queensland. The state’s optional preferential voting system means that many conservative votes are exhausted rather than flowing to Coalition parties. But Springborg’s attempts to create a merged party were spectacularly torpedoed by John Howard who argued it would seriously damage Federal Coalition unity.

The importance of Queensland in the overall Australian scheme of things should not be understated. In 2005 the population of Queensland officially reached 4 million. Queensland is the fastest growing state in Australia, with nine hundred people moving to the state a week. Predictions have been made that by 2051 Queensland will become Australia's 2nd most populous state of 7.5 million behind New South Wales. Whatever can be said about 2051, it is rather more likely that Queensland will remain a Labor state for the next three years.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Iran president joins the bloggers

Today Al Jazeera announced Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, has started his own blog. Iranians found out about this after it was announced on state TV on Sunday and they urged members of the public to send the president written messages through the website.

Ahmadinejad’s blog can be found here and as well as the Farsi version there are US, Saudi and French flags which link to translations in English, Arabic and French respectively. His front page contains a mini autobiography which, after a brief prayer commences with “During the era that nobility was a prestige and living in a city was perfection, I was born in a poor family in a remote village of Garmsar-approximately 90 kilometer east of Tehran.” Ahmadinejad wrote about how Ayatollah Khomeini began to appeal to him when the ayatollah was in exile during the 1960s and 70s. As well as criticising the Shah, he criticises the US and discusses the 1980-88 war with Iraq, when he served in the elite Revolutionary Guard. He called Saddam Hussein, the former Iraqi president, the "aggressor" and wrote that international organisations tried to "distort and hide the facts that Saddam was the aggressor and that the arrogant powers had fully supported him". Ahmadinejad's government have arrested and pressurised some bloggers as part of a wider internet clampdown launched after he became president last year. Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, a prominent human rights lawyer, estimates that at least 50 bloggers have been detained in the last 12 months.

Internet censorship in Iran is amongst the most restrictive and sophisticated in the world and much of the filtering technology in use was developed by western companies. Studies done by a partnership of Western universities found that 34% of the 1465 URLs they tested were blocked, including 100% of the pornographic websites tested. Many gay and lesbian web pages were blocked, as were those hosting politically sensitive content - 15% of blogs and 30% of news sites were inaccessible. Sites providing tools and information for circumventing filtering technology were also blocked in 95% of cases. The researchers say Iran mainly employs a package called SmartFilter, developed by US company Secure Computing. However, Secure Computing told New Scientist that Iran’s state-controlled ISPs are using the company’s software without permission. "Secure Computing has sold no licenses to any entity in Iran," says spokesman David Burt. "We have been made aware of ISPs in Iran making illegal and unauthorised attempts to use of our software.”

The 2005 study from the multi-university OpenNet Initiative (ONI) called "Internet Filtering in Iran," documented the degree and extent to which the Iranian government controls the information environment. Iran has successfully adopted an extensive filtering regime at a time of extraordinary growth in Internet usage among its citizens, as well as a tremendous increase in the number of its citizens who write online in Farsi. ONI's research shows that Iran is among several countries in the Middle East that focuses its censorship efforts on expression through local language.

The report showed that Farsi sites were more likely to be blocked than comparable sites in English. Individuals who subscribe to ISPs must promise in writing not to access “non-Islamic” sites. There are approximately 5 million Internet users in Iran and the country is starting to deploy Broadband widely. The Internet is the most trusted media outlet in Iran and thus explains why Ahmadinejad is appealing to his people in this fashion. However the state has demonstrated its commitment to a censorship regime that keeps up with the technology.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Anorak Krakatoa

Woolly Days is reading 'Krakatoa' by Simon Winchester which is a very readable account of the massive volcano which erupted there in 1883. This event plunged the world into darkness for many months and was the first worldwide event that received mass communication after the world was brought together by telegraph cable. The mountain and the entire island was destroyed by the volcano but a new island called Anak Krakatoa (child of Krakatoa) is building up very rapidly to take its place.

The 1883 eruption ejected more than 25 cubic kilometres of rock, ash, and pumice and generated the loudest sound ever historically reported — the cataclysmic explosion was distinctly heard as far away as Perth in Australia (approx. 3100 km distant), and the island of Rodrigues near Mauritius (approx. 4800 km away). Near Krakatoa, official records state that 165 villages and towns were destroyed and 132 seriously damaged, at least 36,417 people died, (plus many more who wouldn’t have been captured by the record) and many thousands were injured by the eruption, mostly in the tsunamis which followed the explosion.

The eruption destroyed two-thirds of the island of Krakatoa. New eruptions at the volcano since 1927 have built Anak Krakatau. The impacts of a possible earlier quake in approximately 535 AD has been blamed for everything from the fall of the Roman Empire and the darkness of the Middle Ages in Europe to the rise of Islam. Most of Indonesia was well and truly Islamised by the 1880s even though the Dutch had ruled it for nearly three hundred years mainly through its proxy the VOC The Dutch East Indian Company, a company which went along way to invented modern international capitalism. On 26 August 1883 after many months of threatening to blow its top, Krakatoa finally gave up its cataclysmic secret and spewed a toxic mix of pumice and ash. The following day it exploded completely. There were four explosions in all, each of which was accompanied by a tsunami. Hot gas, ash and rock (called pyroclastic flow) were strewn across a large area of Sumatra and Java. Ash was propelled to a height of 80kms. Smaller eruptions continued through to February 1884. In the aftermath of the eruption, it was found that the island of Krakatoa had almost entirely disappeared, except for the southern half of Rakata cone cut off along a vertical cliff, leaving behind a 250 m-deep caldera.

Ships as far away as South Africa rocked as tsunamis hit them, and bodies were found floating in the ocean for weeks after the event. There are numerous documented reports of skeletons floating across the Indian Ocean on rafts of volcanic pumice and washing up on the east coast of Africa, up to a year after the eruption. Some land on Java was never repopulated; it reverted to jungle and is now the Ujung Kulon National Park. The eruption was 13,000 times stronger than the Hiroshima bomb. The pyroclastic flows caused several cubic kms of material to enter the sea, displacing an equally huge volume of seawater.

The eruption produced erratic weather and spectacular sunsets throughout the world for many months afterwards, as a result of sunlight reflected from suspended dust particles ejected by the volcano high into Earth's atmosphere. The area around Java is now known as Lady Bull because of its fiery nature. In the year following the eruption, global temperatures were lowered by as much as 1.2 degrees Celsius on average. Weather patterns continued to be chaotic for years, and temperatures did not return to normal until 1888.

Because the underground telegraph cable had recently been laid all the way to Australia, this was massive news quickly across the planet. The Javan name "Krakatau" was turned into the more dramatic sounding Krakatoa and then Hollywood moved the island to east of Java. But Anak Krakatau remains where its parent once stood serenely on the west coast of Java near the coast of Sumatra. But serene isn't the right word. It is growing every day and fast. Hormones, perhaps? The Sunda strait remains a geological time bomb.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Mexican election result still in doubt

Mexico’s federal political system remains in chaos waiting for the partial recount of the Presidential election. The official result of the July 2 election gave a narrow victory to the conservative Felipe Calderón (pictured left) over his left-wing rival Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. On 6 July 2006 the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) announced the final vote count resulting in the victory for Calderón over the PRD candidate Obrador. Calderón had won by a difference of 243,934 votes (or 0.58%)

However, under Mexican electoral law, only the Federal Electoral Tribunal (TEPJF) can declare who will serve as Mexico's next president. Lopez Obrador alleged electoral fraud and has led a mass civil disobedience campaign to demand a full recount. However independent and international observers said the election was fair. The TEPJF has declared a full recount as impossible by law, and has ordered a recount of about 9% of the total votes. Meanwhile thousands of Obrador’s supporters have been demonstrating for more than a week on the streets of Mexico City. Incumbent President Vicente Fox said Thursday that he is confident the country's disputed presidential election will be resolved peacefully and Mexican democracy will emerge stronger after its greatest test yet. The new president will serve a six-year term replacing Fox who could not constitutionally stand for re-election. Vincente Fox (whose father is of Irish descent) was the first president since Francisco Madero in 1910 to be elected from an opposition party. Fox and Calderon are both from the same party the National Action Party (PAN).

Felipe de Jesús Calderón Hinojosa will be 44 years old on August 18. He has three children under ten years old. He has a law degree and a masters in economics from Mexican universities and a master of Public Administration from Kennedy Business School at Harvard. He ran for governor of the Pacific state of Michoacán de Ocampo in 1995 and was PAN party president between 1996-1999. When Fox became president, Calderón was appointed director of a national development bank and later joined the Cabinet as Energy Secretary. He left the post in 2004 after Fox indicated his preference for a different candidate to replace him. However Calderón won the battle to become the PAN presidential candidate by a comfortable margin. He was forced to deny charges of corruption from his days as bank director. Although this hurt him in the polls, he recovered sufficiently to record a narrow lead on election day.

Soon after it was clear that the "Official Count" would result with Felipe Calderón ahead, Andrés Manuel López Obrador stated that he and his party, the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), would fight for a "vote-by-vote" general recount. His party organised mass protests, marches, and civil disobedience which culminated in a massive rally in Mexico City's historic Plaza de la Constitución on 30 July. Estimates of the crowd at the rally range from 500,000 to 3 million. Obrador is 52 years old and comes from the southern state of Tabasco. He graduated from the most important university in Mexico, the National Autonomous University of Mexico, with a major in political and social sciences. In 1994, he ran for the governorship of his oil-rich home state, but lost to the PRI's Roberto Madrazo in a highly controversial election. The election was plagued by allegations of fraud. Then-President Ernesto Zedillo sent a committee led by lawyer Santiago Creel to investigate and investigators found irregularities at 78 percent of polling stations. Obrador recovered from this setback and he was mayor of Mexico City between 2000 and 2005. During this period he built up a major public profile which became the platform for his election campaign.

The election was also important because for the first time, Mexicans living abroad were allowed to vote by mail. However it is estimated that of the more than 11 million Mexicans living abroad, only four million have a voter identification card, a requirement that leaves out millions of potential Mexican voters, who reside in the United States illegally. Dr. Todd Eisenstadt, a visiting fellow at the Center for U.S.-Mexico Studies at the University of California-San Diego has claimed that only about 400,000 US votes will be cast in the 2006 election. If the recount does not change the result, Calderón will be formally proclaimed as president elect before serving for the period 1 December 2006 to 1 December 2012.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Ekka 2006

The 129th annual Royal Queensland Show started yesterday. The show, also called the Exhibition but beloved by Queenslanders as the "Ekka”, is a ten day amalgam of exhibits, entertainment and agriculture that take place at the RNA Showgrounds every August in the Brisbane inner city suburb of Bowen Hills. Its the time when the country comes to the city and just about the only time of year that anyone frequents the austere looking Jubilee Hotel on nearby St Pauls Terrace.

The Exhibition grew from the formation of the National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland in 1875. This group was formed to organise the first Queensland Intercolonial Exhibition as a showcase of Queensland progress and prosperity. This occurred in 1876 at the present site. Admission was 5 shillings on judging day, 2/6 for the opening ceremony and one shilling for admission after the opening ceremony. School children were admitted free. A public holiday was declared and the first Show proved a triumph beyond all expectation. The Association's first Show was called "The Intercolonial Exhibition of 1876" and was held from August 22 to 26. On the opening day 17,000 people attended - not a bad turnout at a time when the total population of Brisbane was only 22,000. The first actual "Brisbane Royal Show" was held in 1921, when the Association was granted the prefix "Royal" under warrant from His Majesty King George V.

This year’s Show marks the 130th anniversary of the first annual celebration of Queensland’s “progress and prosperity”. In that time The Ekka has only been cancelled twice. This was in 1919 during the international Spanish flu epidemic, when the grounds were used as an emergency hospital and again in wartime in 1942 when the Showgrounds were used as a staging depot for troops moving north.

The Ekka is organised by the Royal National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland (RNA). The showgrounds are served by Exhibition railway station on the Exhibition railway line on which special QR suburban passenger services operate during the ten day event. The first railway station opened at the Exhibition grounds in 1882, following the opening of the Brisbane-Sandgate railway. Many show-goers arrived by trams, running down Gregory Terrace. The tram tracks remained in the road long after trams were withdrawn from Brisbane in 1969. The large concrete viaduct of Bowen Bridge Road bridge across the Exhibition railway line, backing onto Sideshow Alley was completed in 1940.

Because of the cultural significance of the Ekka, the city of Brisbane holds a public holiday on the Wednesday (the 7th day) which is known as "People's Day". The Ekka is the largest annual event in Queensland and attracts more than 600,000 visitors each year. The Show features more than 25 competitions ranging from cattle and horses to fine arts and horticulture. Approximately 30,000 entries are received each year from throughout Queensland and Australia. More than 4,000 cubic metres of manure is collected from the Showgrounds each year some of which is recycled to enrich the gardens at New Farm Park, Mt Coot-tha and Government House. More than 500 volunteer judges and stewards participate in the Ekka each year, supporting the RNA’s 52 permanent staff. There are also 60 sideshow attractions as well as food, beverages and other products and services amounting to 500 exhibitors in total.

The Show is renowned particularly for three indigenous food forms: Fairy floss, Dagwood dogs and strawberry sundaes. Fairy floss is cotton candy, a form of spun sugar that is produced in a special machine and sold at fairs. Many people consider eating it, along with toffee apples, part of the quintessential experience of a visit to a fairground. Eating it is only part of the attraction, however - watching it being made often fascinates children and adults alike. It is sweet and sticky, and though it feels like wool to the touch it readily melts in the mouth. The meat in the “Dagwood Dog” has long been considered suspect (stories of greyhounds and horses going missing are part of the lore) but it is essentially a hot dog on a stick drowned by batter and coated with tomato sauce. Death by Dagwood Dog is considered a legitimate demise by the Queensland coroner. Strawberry sundaes are the preserve of volunteers raising money for a welter of charities. The sundae is a concoction of ice cream, strawberries and cream served in a cone. Sideshow Alley has always been a favourite part of the Ekka for children. In 1891, local press attracted show-goers with the promise of seeing ‘the Lady in spangles and tights’ and ‘the Man who swallows swords, and ties snakes around his neck’. Nowadays it has gravity defying rides that mix with more traditional fairground entertainments.

The Show does have its critics. There have been some allegations of cruelty against some of the 10,000 animals that appear in the show. The protest group Animal Activism Queensland (AAQ) believe that “the Ekka is an exercise in glossing over the often-ugly realities of what industrial agriculture has done to the outback and what globalised farming will do to the world.” They filed complaints to the RNA, DPI, RSPCA and also the Queensland government following investigations into reports of animal cruelty at the Ekka. These complaints include lack of water, housing conditions and inadequate medical treatment. However the AAQ have their work cut out to convince Queenslanders that their Ekka is anything less than a wholesome tradition.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Howard gets ready to send the kids to prison

The controversial new Australian asylum seeker legislation passed its House of Representatives vote today 78 votes to 62. This was despite three Liberal MPs (Petro Georgiou, Russell Broadbent and Judi Moylan) voting against the bill and one other abstaining. The effect of the new legislation will be to automatically lock up the children of refugees who try to enter Australia illegally. The bill was gagged and guillotined through the House of Representatives will little time for debate but will receive a tougher time in the Senate next.

The new laws would mean Australia would send all boat people to islands like Nauru and Christmas Island for processing, even if they reach the Australian mainland. The laws were proposed in April to heal a diplomatic rift with Indonesia, sparked by Australia's decision to grant protection visas to a group of boat people from the troubled Indonesian province of Papua. The bill means that all people who arrived on the mainland (backdated by 13 April 2006) will be treated as if they arrived in so-called ‘excised’ places. This means that regardless of where refugees arrived, they would have no access to the Refugee Review Tribunal or Australian courts for judicial review.
43 asylum seekers left Papua in January and landed at Cape York peninsula. They alleged Indonesian human rights abuses and sought refugee status in Australia. The Indonesian government applied pressure on Australia to send them back. However the Australian did not intervene with the legal process and they were granted Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs) allowing them to stay for three years. This decision was seen as a snub by Indonesia and President Yudhoyono called it “incorrect, not realistic and unilateral”.

As well as a suspicion that Australia is being “dictated to” by Indonesia, the strongest concern over the bill domestically is about the detention of women and children in offshore centres. The community action group GetUp have conducted a media campaign against this provision. Jurists are also worried that Australia will not be fulfilling its obligations under international law. Barrister Julian Burnside QC said “There are going to legalise kidnapping….removing them from the protection of the Australian legal system and taking them to a place where they have virtually no rights at all”.

The ALP supported the original 2001 excise bill in the wake of the Tampa incident. Their position now is that if asylum seekers land in Australia, they should be assessed under Australian law. They, the Democrats and the Greens will vote against the new measure in the Senate. With National senator Barnaby yet to make up his mind, right wing Family First senator Steve Fielding becomes the crucial vote. Today, he meets the Prime Minister one-on-one to discuss the issue. Though Family First have stated they will not do a deal over the matter, it would be very tempting for Fielding to vote for the legislation if Howard makes concessions in Fielding’s key social constituencies.

Ironically, the legislation is being pushed through on the same day as the UNPFII (UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) proclaimed International Day of the World’s Indigenous People August 9 (US time). The tradition dates back to 1994 and the aim of the day is to further the "strengthening of international cooperation for the solution of problems faced by indigenous people in such areas as culture, education, health, human rights, the environment, and social and economic development, by means of action-oriented programs and specific projects, increase technical assistance, and relevant standard-setting activities".

It is unlikely that Howard’s “Pacific Solution” is quite the action-oriented program the UN had in mind. Howard is simply following his political instincts, thinking he can bring a “scared” population along with him. This is why in 2004 former UN High Commissioner on refugees Ruud Lubbers stated: “in the past few years, the politicisation of immigration, confusion between refugees and economic migrants, and fears of criminal and terrorist networks have combined to erode asylum legislation in many States. Paradoxically this has taken place against a backdrop of declining numbers of refugees and asylum seekers.”

Ultimately this bill is more about elections than immigrants.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

The teardrop explodes

Thousands of people are fleeing the latest round of violence in north-eastern Sri Lanka. The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has been assisting local agencies with an estimated 21,000 people who have been displaced from the town of Muttur, which lies across Koddiyar Bay from the historic port city of Trincomalee. They are fleeing the latest outbreak of fighting between government forces and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Sporadic fighting continues around Muttur where 4,000 people are said to be trapped.

Before the latest outbreak of fighting, more than 312,000 people had been displaced within Sri Lanka since 1983, some 67,000 of whom are being assisted by UNHCR in welfare centres throughout the country. The 2002 ceasefire unravelled in April this year and before this weekend's displacement, 50,000 people had fled their homes to find refuge elsewhere in the country while another 6,000 have fled to southern India's Tamil Nadu region.

The conflict has its roots in ethnic tension between the Buddhist Sinhalese majority in the south and the mainly Hindu Tamil minority in the north (Tamil regions shown in map shaded areas) who accuse the government of discrimination. The dispute goes back to a “divide and rule” policy of British colonial times. The Sinhalese complained that the British gave the Tamils preferential treatment and better schooling. This meant that there were disproportionate number of Tamils in the civil service, and in medicine and law in post-independence Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka became independent in 1948 and its new parliament was dominated by the Sinhalese. Initially the transformation to nationhood was peaceful but that changed after the 1956 Sinhala Only Act was passed. English was removed as an official language leaving Sinhala as the only language of government. Most Tamils who worked for the government lost their jobs. Tamils protests against the act were broken up by Sinhala gangs while police did not intervene. Though sporadic riots continued in 1958 and beyond, the situation did not seriously deteriorate until 1970 when Sri Lanka decided to ban importation of Tamil cultural material (films, books, magazines and journals) from India. This was done under the guise of achieving self-sufficiency by the socialist Sinhala government.

Discrimination steadily worsened in the 1970s to the point where a coalition group proposed a separate state of Tamil Eelam for the north of the country. In 1981 an attack on Jaffna public library (which was burned to the ground) and as well as a Tamil newspaper office caused great distress and proved to be a turning point in attitudes towards the South. By 1983 the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) started to attack military positions in the North. The government responded by unleashing riots in Colombo which killed thousands of Tamils. The violence intensified through the 1980s to the point where Jaffna was a besieged city. In 1987 India signed a peace accord with Sri Lanka which included significant concessions to Tamil demands. However few of these concessions were ever implemented. The Tamils lost their Indian support when ex-PM Rajiv Ghandi was assassinated by a suicide Tamil Tiger bomber.

Tamil was finally recognised as an official language in the 1990s but the war dragged on. Government forces finally retook Jaffna in 1995. However LTTE suicide bombers continued to wreak havoc in Colombo and elsewhere. They caused major damage to Sri Lankan infrastructure and the air force with their attack on the international airport in 2001. One third of Sri Lankan airlines were put out of commission. The attack also caused tourist numbers to plummet. The sides agreed to a Norwegian-brokered peace deal in 2002 but many Sinhala remain against the deal until the Tigers are disarmed. The government also believes that the Norwegians are biased in favour of the Tamils. When a new hardline president Mahinda Rajapaksa was elected in 2005 the Tigers reneged on the tenuous ceasefire. The situation in the country has been escalating since April this year with many tit-for-tat killings and bombings. In July, the government claimed the LTTE was blocking a sluice gate in the north-east that provided water to civilians. The Air Force attacked rebel positions and ground troops began an operation to open the gate. Following these moves, LTTE political leader S Elilan announced an end to the ceasefire.

29 countries (including India, USA, the EU and Australia) have proscribed the LTTE as a terrorist group. The LTTE proclaims itself the sole representative and protector of Sri Lankan Tamils. The government has accused them of crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing in the Jaffna peninsula. The LTTE position can be summarised as follows: 1) It is for a ceasefire and monitoring by international observers; 2) It seeks the lifting of the economic blockade and a return to normal in Tamil areas; and 3) but they are silent on the issue of a political settlement within a united Sri Lanka. The government position is unsurprisingly different. 1) The ceasefire will follow if preliminary negotiations make substantial progress. 2) The Army is unlikely to sacrifice its recent gains to political expediency. 3) There must be a definite timeframe for the negotiations which can overlap with a return to normalcy in the North. 4) The Tigers must renounce the idea of a separate state.

The prospects of peace in Sri Lanka are bleak while there is such a huge gulf between what any government in Colombo can offer and what the Tigers will be prepared to settle for. Over 60,000 have been killed since hostilities commenced in the eighties. The teardrop shaped island has many more tears to shed.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

How Chicken McNuggets are destroying Mato Grosso

Mato Grosso is a state in Western Brazil. The name ‘mato grosso’ means thick jungle in Portuguese and the state is at the heart of Amazonia. Apart from the state capital, Cuiabá, there are few cities. However, Mato Grosso is the site of some of the worst deforestation in the world. In 2005, the Brazilian federal government said that 48 percent of Amazon deforestation that took place in 2003 and 2004 occurred in Mato Grosso. Although some deforestation is part of the country’s plans to develop its agriculture and timber industries, other deforestation is the result of illegal logging and squatters. Because the forest is so large and is difficult to access or patrol, the government uses satellite images to detect illegal deforestation. The images taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASAs Terra satellite can provide an initial alert that tells officials where to look for illegal logging.

Mato Grosso is an agrarian state with economy based on cattle-raising in the land-cleared areas. The area is also the major producer of soybeans in Brazil. The Agricultural Federation of Mato Grosso said Thursday they oppose a decision made last month by the nation's soy crushers and traders, prohibiting purchases of soybeans grown in recently deforested regions of the Amazon biome. On July 24, the Brazilian Vegetable Oils Industry Association announced they would not buy soy from recently deforested Amazon forest for the next two years. The decision comes on the heels of an announcement by the European branch of McDonald's to stop buying soy meal for chicken feed made from soybeans in the Amazon. The company said they made the decision following a report titled "Eating the Amazon" by Greenpeace International, which put much of the onus on Amazon deforestation on McDonald's as well as the US-owned agricultural giants Cargill, ADM (Archer Daniels Midland) and Bunge. Europe is the main export market and imports 18 million tons of Amazonian soya beans mainly for use as animal feed. The Mato Grosso soya beans ultimately ends up inside the British, French and German consumers in the form of McDonald’s chicken nuggets.

In 1977 the state was split into two halves, with Mato Grosso do Sul becoming a new state. Mato Grosso is now the northern half of the region and is sparsely populated with barely a million inhabitants. Most of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, which is marginally more populous, is either seasonal flood plain or open scrubland. The Pantanal wetlands is one of the world’s great swamps and extends into both states. It is one of the largest nature reserves in the world and has the greatest concentration of fauna in the Americas. But it too faces an uncertain future stemming from a series of socioeconomic pressures. United Nations University experts warn that the Pantanal is at growing risk from intensive peripheral agricultural, industrial and urban development – problems expected to be compounded by climate change.

Some of the local indigenous tribes are fighting back. For decades, the 7,000 strong Kayapó nation have defended their 113,000-square kilometre, Cuba-sized homeland in Mato Grosso and Pará from incursions by speculators, ranchers, gold miners, loggers and squatters. Today the Kayapó fight two new threats: five huge hydroelectric dams planned on their lifeline Xingu River, and completion of the second half of BR-163, the road that slices through Amazonia north to south. Brazil's government is preparing to let private companies embark on a $417 million paving project to turn BR163 into a modern two-lane toll highway stretching 1,800kms. That would link Brazil's most important soy-growing region with a deep-water Amazon River port.

The 1,000 strong Bororo tribe also live in Mato Grosso. They been constricted to an ever-shrinking territory but the agricultural and ranching activities of the settlers have altered the environment so much that the former subsistence activities of the Bororo have become increasingly less productive. With many of the old cultural traits no longer practiced or forgotten, and with a dwindling population, the modern-day Bororo bear little resemblance to their forebears.

The flora and the fauna and the indigenous tribes all face the same rapacious enemies. With the combined threat of roads and dams for farmers, and soya beans for Chicken McNuggets, it is unlikely to be too long before Mato Grosso becomes a thick jungle in name only.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Two Viktors in Ukraine

Ukraine’s parliament appointed pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych (pictured left) as Prime Minister last week. The appointment was a compromise after a four month political crisis. The stand-off ended after arch rival and pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko (pictured right) finally agreed to share power after Yanukovych signed a pact aimed at preserving key areas of the president's policies.

Ukraine has been in political turmoil since a parliamentary ballot in March in which no party won a majority, although Mr Yanukovych's Party of Regions polled the most votes. The country is split geographical with Yanukovych drawing his support from the mainly Russian-speaking industrial south-east of Ukraine. In this part of the country, many voters are suspicious of the pro-Western agenda. Although the Party of Regions won the election, they did not win enough seats to form an outright government. With the help of the smaller Socialist Party, they were the leading party in the new parliament. President Yushchenko then had to decide whether he would nominate Yanukovych as prime minister, or call for fresh elections.

It represents a stunning comeback for the 56 year old Yanukovych whose fraud-tainted 2004 presidential victory was turned back by the Orange Revolution. Yushchenko eventually won the second round of that election after a Supreme Court-ordered revote. But now the pro-Western reformer must now work closely with with his former rival. Many Orange Revolution supporters see Yushchenko's move as a betrayal, and they have accused the president of weakness. Yanukovych however has promised to continue Ukraine's pro-Western course, uphold democratic freedoms and ensure the opposition has equal rights in elections.

This represents a full circle turn from the heady days of the Orange Revolution. The 2004 election was held in a highly charged atmosphere, with allegations of media bias, intimidation and even a poisoning of Yushchenko that was later confirmed to be the result of the poison dioxin. After Yanukovych was announced the winner, Yushchenko supporters and many international observers denounced the election as rigged. This led to a serious political crisis and wide scale acts of civil disobedience. Protesters adopted the orange as the official colour of the movement because it was Yushchenko campaign colour. Millions demonstrated daily in Kiev wearing orange ribbons and a large tent city was set up. The protests spread nationwide and sit-ins, and general strikes organized by the opposition helped eventually to annul the election result. The second run-off in December was agreed by domestic and international observers to be virtually problem-free and the result showed a clear victory for Yushchenko with 52 percent of the vote compared to Yanukovych's 44 percent.

Ukraine has struggled to find its feet since becoming independent in 1991. Although it has a population of 46 million people in one of the largest countries in Europe, its fate remains inextricably link with its slavic Big Brother in Moscow. Ukraine depends on Russia for most of its energy needs and the Russians also maintain their Black Sea Fleet in the Ukrainian Crimean city of Sevastopol. President Vladimir Putin visited Ukraine twice before the 2004 election to show his support for Yanukovych and congratulated him on his victory even before official election results were announced.

The country is also split in two along language lines. The west of the country speaks Ukrainian where as the east mostly speaks either Russian or Surzhyk which is a hybrid language of Russian vocabulary and Ukrainian grammar and pronunciation. Currently Ukrainian is the only official language although many media cater for Russian or even both languages. Russian is the mother tongue of 30% of the population. Yanukovych’s promise to make Russian a state language accounts for much of his support in the East. His balancing act will be to satisfy his own supporter base without alienating the pro-European Western half of the country.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Bugs, Mangoes and Maids

Many Australian media reported this weekend that the Great Barrier Reef is among the list of potential Queensland items to be officially turned into "cultural icons". The National Trust Queensland is seeking nominations of things that make Queensland unique. 12 Queensland “icons” will form one third of an exhibition at the Queensland Museum. The other 24 were chosen in 2004 and 2005. Already on the list are such notables as the Pub with No Beer, the Gabba and Bundy Rum. The 2006 list of 12 will be chosen on 28 September.

Though the Reef is more known for its ecological properties, it is likely to achieve the cultural immortality as it gets its imprimatur from the tourist industry. Fraser Island is also nominated in this category. A third nomination is for the Quinkan Rock Art at Laura where the Ang-Gnarra run tours of rock drawings of an ancient Aboriginal society.

Moving back into the water, the Moreton Bay Bug has been pressed into serving its state in the identification stakes. The bug, thenus orientalis, is not totally indigenous to Queensland, its habitat is all of the coastline of the Northern half of Australia. Outside of Queensland it is known by a string of other mobster sounding names that are waiting for the band the B-52s to do something with: Bay Lobster, Bug, Shovelnose Lobster, Slipper Lobster, Squat Lobster and Mud Bug. Unfortunately for the humble bug, whatever you call it, the BBC has used it in another list of 50 things to eat before you die. Hopefully not everyone will take this campaign to heart. There is a human dimension to the bug’s culture entry as they are a staple catch of the Queensland Trawl Fishery industry.

The farming industy throws its akubra into the ring too with the nomination of the Bowen mango. The mango tree is a native of India. Two southern languages, Tamil and Malayam, claim ownership of the word and the Hindu Vedas described mangos as the "food of the gods". The fruit is easily cultivated and spread to any climate worldwide which no guarantee no frosts. Because these are high population areas, it is possibly the most eaten fruit in the world. It thrived in Northern Australia which has now has many varieties. The tastiest is the Kensington Pride, which is popularly called the Bowen Special mango. Bowen's unusually dry climate for a tropical location, plus its fertile alluvial soil, makes it the ideal place to grow a wide variety of small crops. But it is the mango that has the name attached to it and that’s the one that is a possible Queensland cultural “entity”.

But the “icon” nomination that has gathered most attention and the only reason the list in the news at all, is the inclusion of the Surfers Paradise meter maids. They are a 40 year old tradition where bikini-clad girls walk around the town putting change into parking meters. They claim this the only place in the world where parkers are subsidised in this fashion. The Maids were a 1965 brainwave of local entrepreneur Bernie Elsey help to beat the bad image created by the installation of parking meters in December 1964. Since then they have spearheaded many tourist campaigns for the tourist strip. Because the method chosen is on the faultline of sexism, the meter maids are not without critics and thus their appearance on the cultural index is given prominent attention in the headline for the whole event. It is now safely beyond argument in the list of things that are “iconic”.

In semiotics, an icon is a sign where the signifier (in this case, the Reef or the maid) resembles the thing it refers to (in this case Queensland). Clearly none of these things physically resembles Queensland. But they have a power of association that is redolent and real for all that. Primarily it is because they are all driven by human commerce. The identity they have for humans reading these signs is they are is part of an imagined Queensland community that everyone shares in a comfortable mutual illusion.

Woolly Days awaits the final list of 12 with curious interest.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Recipes, rules, plans, instructions

Cultural study is the study of everyday life. A culture is common meanings and the product of an entire people. This is the thought process of everyday life and the study of culture is a useful tool for understanding thought itself. Culture is concerned with meaning and practice and can be analysed through its relationship with power structures. This essay will discuss the history of how culture came to be seen in this light and how it now relates to power structures and the politics of identity in an Australian context. The discussion of these politics will be supported by a textual analysis of the final chapter of the Kate Grenville novel Joan Makes History which examined women’s everyday roles in the making of that culture. The novel was written in the bicentennial year to commemorate 200 years of Australian culture (with more than a passing nod to the previous 40,000 years) and is replete with clues for interpreting many of the social identities in the Australian landscape. The final chapter of the book brings many of these identities together. In conclusion, the essay will remark on why the productive nature of culture and identity deserves to be studied.

One way of studying culture identity is through the science of anthropology. Anthropology is the study of humanity. It has a strong emphasis on cultural relativism which is the principle that societies’ beliefs and activities make sense in terms of their own culture. Clifford Geertz was an American anthropologist who offered a new framework for cultural analysis. In his book The Interpretation of Cultures, Geertz stated that culture is not a function of behaviour but rather a set of controls that govern behaviour. These controls, which he likened to computer programming rules, are a key ingredient in the moulding of human nature. According to Geertz, we finish ourselves through culture. The product of this finishing school is the sum of our ideas, values, acts and emotions. Culture sits at the core of our very humanity. This means that a wide variety of objects can be analysed as cultural artefacts.

Robert Darnton was strongly influenced by this form of analysis and he describes Geertz’s study of culture as “history in the ethnographical vein”. In The Great Cat Massacre and other episodes in French cultural history, he used Geertz’s approach to study life in France prior to the Revolution. He worked with that society’s everyday activities (lists, jokes, songs, police notes) to unlock their cultural secrets. By examining a joke he does not “get”, such as why French peasants thought it hilarious to kill cats, he opens a window on the mindset of the Ancien Régime. Darnton also charted the evolution of the wholesome fairytales of the Brothers Grimm back to the grim French peasant stories they were based on. Darnton argues that the peasants found their macabre fairy tales “good to think with”. The French tales and jokes offered lessons on the unending toil and Hobbesian brutalities of everyday life at the time. When it comes to culture there is no source material that is inconsequential.

Jennifer Craik placed an Australian context around finding consequence in the everyday. Craik observed that the true self does not exist and that we are instead, highly trained bodies performing particular roles for specific occasions. In her text The cultural politics of the Queensland house Craik argued that the Queenslander home is critical in the development of a regional identity. Craik states that the home and its occupants influence each other. The house is shaped by the lifestyle compromises of those who live there while the house imposes a financial discipline on the family. Craik goes on to argue that the design of the Queenslander home itself reflects Victorian era gender politics by physically confining women in the private realms where they could not influence public spheres of engagement. The house is the arena where the politics of everyday life are carried out. And within the house, it is the kitchen that is now the dominant room within the home. But the occupants of the kitchen have become increasingly isolated due to its usual position at the back of the house. In Craik’s analysis of the home, culture can be understood as an active force that shows how the human self is the product of culture. It is also dynamic and evolving. The breaking-down of the traditional role of women has redefined domestic politics with home labour now seen as chores rather than what Craik called a crucial bio-political agency.

Newspapers may still be counted as an example of a crucial bio-political agency. The daily reading of newspapers constitute a mass ceremony of almost simultaneous consumption. Newspapers permit the conduct of public debate on a national scale. The French Revolutionary-era journalist J-P. Brissot was an early visionary who saw the potential of that power and said “one can teach the same truth at the same moment to millions of men”. It was part of a perfectioning of the political machine where even decimal clocks would bear witness to the Revolution. The French were among the first to confront the paradox of freedom of the press under a democratic system. Australia is still grappling with this paradox today in the shape of defamation laws, limited ownership and cross media-rules. These are Geertz’s control mechanisms that govern the behaviour of newspapers. But these laws are fairly static identities compared to the ephemeral form of the newspaper itself. Newspapers by their very ordinariness and ubiquity constitute an example of a technological habitus of a nation. The habitus is the techniques, practices and ‘environment’ in which it is possible to be and feel ‘at home’. In the newspaper, nations are imaged in four different forms of stories. There can be stories about people, stories about their geography, stories about their history, and stories about their conflicts. The idea of a contested nation is at the core of media treatment of such news items as the Cronulla riots of December 2005. The division of people into simplistic tribes called “Australians” and “Lebanese” is an example of what Mercer called the articulation of the problematic into our rich cultural lives. In Cronulla, that “problematic” was nationalism.

Sylvia Lawson understood how a genie like nationalism could escape from the bottle. She described nationalism as a psychic and social reality, gift and burden, culture saturating nature. Sport can be seen as a psychic reality and a nationalistic vehicle through which culture saturates our nature. Sport has a crucially important function in Australian culture and nowhere is the nationalism of Australian sport more pronounced then during the Olympic Games. This competition is open to nation states only. And so the Olympics lend legitimacy to the nation state as the proper unit of cultural as well as political and economic sovereignty and organisation in the world. Greenfield and Williams also argue that sport is inextricably linked with political elements and is the venue for ongoing negotiation of social power between individuals and between nations. Among the great myths that sport produces is that of natural justice; a level playing ground where competitors and indeed nations can supposedly gain a clear and truthful ranking. The Australian media obsession with the ranking of the Olympic medal tally is an example of how these political elements are engaged in the national habitus.

The hosting of the Games in Sydney 2000 was a chance to epitomise many of these cultural aspects of sport. The marginal nation of Australia would become central to an international spectacle. The political planning for the event was well-known enough in 1998 to be satirised in the ABC show The Games. This was how many Australians learned to think about the Olympics. As the event drew closer, the Torch Relay took centre stage. John Sinclair examines that phenomenon in his essay More than an old flame. Taking his cue from Darnton, he examined the history of the relay and finds its beginning in that most politically charged of Games: Berlin, 1936. Sinclair identifies the Torch Relay as, what Hobsbawm called, an “invented tradition”. Eric Hobsbawm had defined invented traditions to mean responses to novel situations which take the form of reference to old situations. Thus Sinclair saw the Nazi era Torch Relay as a reference to separate ancient Greek traditions involving flame lighting and torch races.

Despite its fascist beginnings, the Torch Relay became a successful tradition. In each of the following Games, the host country lent its own cultural slant to the tradition. The nation-state basis of the Olympics allows countries to feed off each other to define themselves in cultural terms. For Sydney 2000, this meant ensuring the Games had a national and inclusive focus and one which could embrace the multitude of social and cultural differences that exist in Australia. Media commentators rushed to define themes of reconciliation and redemption in the Relay. The arrival of the flame in Australia gave the Relay immediacy and saliency in terms of news value. Local newspapers along the route could connote a wide range of associated meanings and local references into their coverage of the event. The Relay was a community event and the media followed the flame, and the stories associated with it, across the country. It was, as the mayor of Mount Isa told the Courier-Mail, “a catalyst to get the energy flowing in everyone” (Courier-Mail 8 June 2000). The Torch Relay created a sense of time, place and character as well as being a journey.

That journey ended at the Sydney Olympic stadium. The lighting of the cauldron in the stadium brought an important sense of closure of the Relay event. The identity of who would light the flame during the Opening Ceremony was a closely guarded secret until it happened. The choice of a female Aborigine to light the flame was a culmination of the inclusive of the entire event. And if mythology is the sense of the reconciling socially disruptive contradictions, then this was most clearly brought out in the drama of Cathy Freeman’s subsequent 400 metres victory ten days later. In a matter of 49 seconds, she was able to conjure up great themes of gender, race and politics. It was a “triumph of social justice, a moment of national reconciliation, and….an unspoken moment of chagrin for the (absent) prime minister”. Immediately the cudgels of her identity were taken up by vested interests claiming her victory in their name. The media hailed her as “our golden girl.” This interpellation claimed possession of her in the name of often conflicting views depending on the politics and the ethnicity of who was making the claim.

And just as “our Cathy” was at the centre of cultural conflict, so was “our Queen”. In the years leading up to the Sydney Games, many argued that the event should be opened by an Australian Head of State. But Elizabeth, Queen of Australia remains obstinately a British monarch. In 1996 Sydney Games bid chief Bruce Baird called for a trifecta of “an Australian republic with a new flag and a new anthem” (SMH 14 August 1996). Baird pointed out that the British IOC delegate Princess Anne had voted for Manchester to hold the 2000 Summer Olympics and only switched her vote to Sydney after her preferred choice was eliminated. Baird saw this as a “coming of age” crisis of Australian identity. The ambiguous position of our head of state was also explored by Amanda Lowrey in "Australia Day 1994". Lowrey described the 1990s as “the interregnum between the Commonwealth of Australia and the Republic of Australia. Although the interregnum has lasted longer than Lohrey anticipated, the concept still holds as a descriptor of the ambiguous state of Australia’s imagined political identity. Lohrey questioned whether Prince Charles attended the 1994 Australia Day celebration in Sydney as a representative of the Queen of Australia or as an ambassador for Britain. When Lohrey has the chance to see him at the ceremony, she notes he clearly has the “unmistakable detachment of the observer”. It is not until the drama of the fake shooting does he engage his “subjects” and even then it is not as the once and future King of Australia he garners their sympathy but rather as the novelty value of “he-who-almost-might-have-been-assassinated on Australia Day”.

Australia Day celebrates a sense of what may be described as “national time”. But its specific sense of past means that Aboriginals see Australia Day not as a celebration but as a day of invasion. In Identity Crisis, Colin Mercer argues that the most resilient form of political identity is ethnicity. He sees the three factors that most affect this identity are religious practices, daily rituals and language. European settlers showed little interest or understanding of any of these factors when it came to dealing with Aboriginals. Mercer argued elsewhere that European culture was incommensurable with the ideas of the person, the land and the connective logic of events which are operational in Aboriginal communities.

Joan Grenville grappled with the connective logic of the events of European and Aboriginal cultural history in "Joan Makes History". The book was commissioned to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the First Landing on January 26, 1788. Joan’s “History” is a rewriting of the dominant Australian narratives of economic success, justice, Aboriginality and women. Narratives are classified into types called genres. Grenville uses the genre of fiction in order to reconstruct a definition of national identity. The text examines the nation through the prism of everyday life. The final chapter of the book attempts to segue many of the various cultural themes of time, place and lifestyle that are expounded throughout the work.

The final chapter of Joan Makes History is told in the form of reminiscences about photographs. Photographs are among Geertz’s plans, recipes and instructions that mould human behaviour. They are also a visual form of history that are good to think with. The chapter is a narrative, something which tells a story. The narrative is the combination of two elements. The first element of any narrative is the story itself, a series of events in chronological order. The second element is the narration, the telling of that story. In the text the story is about the photographs. The voice of the text is the narrator. Joan is that voice. We know it is her voice from the first statement of the chapter when Joan interpellates the reader to examine the photographs with her: “Here is our Madge”. The photographs do not necessarily relate to each other but they do follow each other in time. It is thus a minimal story in the Rimmon-Kennan sense rather than the classical story structure in a Gerald Prince sense. Although there is not necessarily inversion of the events of the story, they do occur in the same represented world. That represented world is a chronological account of the habitus of Joan and her family. Joan is part of the fictional world so she is a restricted narrator. She addresses her story to an implied ideal reader of the text who, although is not part of the story, is there with her as she goes through the photographs. This positions the actual reader to form a close and trusting relationship to the narrator.

This trusting relationship has been built up through all the previous chapters. It is achieved through the process of characterisation which can be defined as the construction and function of characters to produce meaning in the text. Joan is a believable guide through consistent character traiting. Her photo album offers many clues to her social identity. There is the search for a link with “great moments in history” at Captain Cook’s landing spot and his transported English cottage. The text gradually moves from the national time of public sphere to the more intimate identities of the private sphere. So we follow Madge on the beach, to Madge in the vegetable garden, Madge in her grandmother’s fur stole, and finally a picture of the family together in front of the house on the day Madge leaves home. Through the story of these photographs, Joan weaves a tapestry of nostalgia, of lives lived, of tears cried, and of history made. There is an element of wistfulness about the narrative because the stories lead to an inevitable scenario where a washed-up Joan ends up “where the tide of life had been, and had passed”.

Grenville’s cultural tour takes us back to the “birthplace of the nation” where what her husband Duncan called “our history started”. This was the start of European history, the place where the “first buckled foot had stepped”. The buckle alludes to the shoeless Aboriginals already present but also reminds us of the barefoot Joan that swam ashore ahead of the First Fleet. In the photo taken here, Madge’s friend Ellen’s eyes wander away from the camera at the vital moment. This is no accident. Ellen literally misses history. Her story is one of the poverty of “potato and bread” and the strap from her father. Ellen’s father is a “fierce boilermaker’s-riveter’s-mate”, with each hyphen taking him further away from power, a power he regains by the vicious beatings he inflicts on his daughter. This flat characterisation encourages the reader to dislike him and his draconian patriarchal behaviour.

But reader does like the rounded and honest Joan, the dispassionate observer of history. She eavesdrops on her daughter’s games while “pretending to hang out a sheet”. There is delicious irony at work in this example of what Rimmon-Kennan called the indirect presentation of a habitual trait. That trait is Joan’s nosiness. Joan is not pretending at all; she is hanging out a sheet. This is how she makes “history” as a wife, a mother and a homemaker. But her restless curiosity allows her to use the sheet-hanging excuse to spy on her daughter’s games. The beach photo showed how a pre-pubescent Madge was dimly aware of the cultural taboo of showing her nipples to the Brownie camera. It is a clash between boundaries of behaviour acceptable in private and public spheres. The Australian invented tradition of a visit to the beach is already firmly established. There is a “long cranky drive home with the thousand of other Humbers”. The biblical allusion of the “fall from innocence” dovetails with the Eden metaphor of Joan’s veggie garden where Madge is snapped with her newly planted carrots. The scene also recalls the Scene Four Joan who plants her seed (neatly wedged between the chapters of the conception and the birth of the 20th century Joan) as a symbol of hope and the future. Madge’s carrots die but she herself is full of life. Joan is again surreptitiously a “proud, prying mother” watching the vibrancy of her daughter.

The final photo is the most poignant of all. The changing of the guard is noted by the fact that the photo was taken by Madge’s camera and she was able to work out the automatic option that her father had never worked out. It was her last day at home and the things she has packed are what Geertz called “a traffic in significant symbols”. The teddy bear, a photograph of Transylvania, a Sydney Harbour Bridge calendar and a Christmas card from a lover all contribute to Madge’s sense of place, character and lifestyle. The final words of the chapter beautifully encapsulate the sounds of the everyday. There is the “humming of insects in the grass, a rooster crowing and parents sighing". They sigh in desperation at the way life had suddenly passed them by. In Grenville’s topographical nation, it is an icon of ordinariness.

In Grenville’s fictional world, culture is active and diverse and imposes meaning on experience. It is also ordinary. Geertz and Darnton prescribed the path to a more holistic understanding of everyday culture. Resources such as newspapers, the Olympics and the Republican debate show how these cultural connections are made in an Australian context. People navigate their way through a multiplicity of cultural modes and each mode informs identity as well as informing each other. We may take these modes for granted, but they are no less important for it. Culture is ever-changing and productive. It therefore merits continual vigilance and analysis.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Castro out, Castro in

On July 31, Cuban state television issued a letter read by Fidel Castro’s secretary. It said sustained intestinal bleeding required him to undergo what was described as a complicated surgical procedure, and requires several weeks of rest. The Cuban leader said the health crisis was provoked by severe stress because of a heavy work schedule during recent trips to Argentina and eastern Cuba. Castro named his 75-year-old brother and Vice President Raúl Castro as temporary leader of the Cuban government, military and Communist Party. Raul has served as defence minister, and is second in command of the Communist Party and Council of State, Cuba's Supreme governing body.

Raúl Castro has similar views to his brother and recognises the Party as the only source of power in Cuba. But he has also promoted free-enterprise farmers' markets and suggested the communist system could be reformed. Fidel Castro, who turns 80 on August 13, has been in power in Cuba for 48 years and his illness has unsurprisingly evoked mixed reaction. Castro was born in 1926 in the Eastern province of Holguin. Christopher Columbus landed there in 1492 and declared that Holguin was "the most beautiful country human eyes had ever seen".

Fidel comes from a family of six children. As well as Raúl, there is the eldest brother Ramón. Although not active in the military like his brothers, Ramón Castro aided in the ongoing revolution as the quartermaster for the troops of Fidel and Raúl. After the revolution he studied agriculture, and is chiefly responsible for many of Cuba's agricultural initiatives. There are also three sisters Angela, Juanita and Emma. Juanita Castro Ruz is estranged from her brother and now lives in Miami. She said on Thursday she has been told the long-time dictator is recovering from surgery and "doing well." She is a pharmacy owner who fled Cuba four decades ago, would not reveal how she learned of her brother's condition, but said: "The surgery was a major surgery. He's doing OK. He's out of intensive care, and he's in his own room." Castro's daughterAlina Fernandez is also estranged from her father. CNN said Thursday it had hired her as a network contributor. She was 3 years old when Castro took power and left Cuba disguised as a Spanish tourist in 1993.

Fidel was educated in Catholic boarding schools before attending the law school at Havana University in 1945. He became immediately fascinated by the politics on campus. Gangs controlled much of what went on in the political sphere, in some cases sanctioning murder to achieve the desired outcome. Castro took part in often violent demonstrations. At the time the island's government had become totally corrupt. Despite being nominally independent since 1898, no Cuban president could come into power unless backed by the US. Fidel joined the newly formed Ortodoxos party in 1947. Founded by Eduardo Chibás, Castro remained a party member for eight years. The party wanted revolutionary change by working within the system. Chibás lost the 1948 election and Castro left Cuba to attend a Pan-American conference in Bogatá, Columbia to escape political and police pressure. The heavy-handed police response to riots he saw there changed forever his view on how to bring about political change.

Chibás committed suicide after another disastrous electoral defeat in 1952. Castro was now the leading figure in the party. That same year Fulgencio Batista overthrew the Cuban government and established himself as dictator. The US immediately recognised his regime. Castro took failed legal action against him saying Batista had broken the constitution. But the case raised his profile as the most prominent member of the Opposition. The rebellion commenced in 1953 with an attack on the Moncada Barracks. It was led by the brothers Fidel and Raúl. The attack failed and one third of the attackers were killed. Castro was captured shortly afterwards. He defended himself at his subsequent trial. He was sentenced to death but Batista had recently removed the death penalty. He was sentenced to 15 years which was commuted to two after an amnesty in 1955. Castro then went to Mexico where he met Ernesto “Che” Guevara. Guevara joined Castro’s rebel group and organised the basics of guerrilla warfare. A group of 60 rebels landed in Cuba in 1956 but were mostly killed. The few survivors escaped to the mountains. They called themselves the July 26th movement after the day of the Moncada attack.

Resistance groups started to organise in the cities. Castro got international coverage when he was tracked down by a New York Times reported and a TV crew. In May of 1958 Batista launched Operation Verano aiming to crush Castro and other anti-government groups. But Batista’s poorly trained conscripts suffered mass desertions and the operation failed. In December the rebels won a decisive victory at the Battle of Yaguajay. This caused the provincial capital of Santa Clara to fall. News of the loss of Santa Clara and other losses elsewhere panicked Batista and he fled the country the next day. At the age of 32, Castro was now in command of Cuba. In 1959, he became Prime Minister. He immediately caused friction with the US as the new government began expropriating property owned by American corporations. He also quickly moved to expropriate farmlands and forbade foreign land ownership. An oil agreement with the USSR caused the US to break off relations in 1960. The 1960s was marked by US-Cuban crises such as the Bay of Pigs and the Missile Crisis.

Castro was supported by the USSR until it broke up in 1991. Cuba was left bankrupt thanks to the US embargo. However that same embargo has served to unite the country behind him. Raul Castro is credited with persuading his older brother to implement agricultural market reforms in the early 1990s which increased the food supply after the Soviet subsidies stopped. In the late 1990s, Castro has pushed for more developed relationships with fellow Latin American countries. The Bolivarian Hugo Chavez of Venezuela is a huge admirer of Castro as is the Bolivian president Eva Morales. As his health started to fail in the last few years, Cuba watchers have look for word on the succession.

Raul was anointed and this was confirmed with the adulatory coverage of the Comrade Raul's 75th birthday last month in the state media. Behind the scenes, his grip was strengthened by the appointment of several "Raulistas" to the party's newly re-formed secretariat. The new Castro era is about to start.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

The meth don't stack

In the fast world of drugs, crystal meth is on a mission. It’s cheap, highly addictive and ultra-powerful. It can be smoked, swallowed, snorted, or injected. It can even be inserted anally. In Australia its popularity has outstripped heroin and there are an estimated 70,000 users across the country. Since the late 1990s there's been a steady and notable increase in the use of the drug, which is the purest form of speed and is either injected or smoked.

People who use crystal have as many backgrounds as reasons for using the drug. Crystal is often used recreationally as a 'party drug', is used to stay awake for long periods, and also to heighten extended sexual pleasure. The drug heightens arousal and increases sexual stamina by delaying orgasm, but impotence is just as common a side-effect. This impotence is commonly referred to as "Crystal Dick" a state where the user is sexually aroused but fails to maintain or even achieve an erection.

Crystal meth goes by a variety of names such as ice, crystal, methamphetamine, speed, chalk, tina, krank and many others. It looks like clear chunky crystals resembling ice, which can be inhaled by smoking. It is harmful in very small doses. Heavily dependent users can suffer episodes of psychosis and describe feelings of persecution, such as believing people are "out to get them".

Ice is filling emergency wards with psychotic and dangerous patients, to the alarm of doctors who thought they’d seen everything. One doctor told the ABC, "They’re the most out of control, violent human beings I have ever seen in my life - and I’ve been around for a long time. It makes heroin seem like the really good old days."

Though it has only recently taken off as a major scourge, methamphetamine has been around for 90 years. It was first synthesized in 1919 by the Japanese chemist Akira Ogata using a reduction of ephedrine using red phosphorus and iodine. It was used during World War II by both sides and distributed under the name Pervitin. The Nazis widely distributed methamphetamine to their soldiers for use as a stimulant, particularly to SS personnel and Wehrmacht forces in the Eastern Front. The quack doctor Theodore Morell who was the personal physician of Adolf Hitler took it and also prescribed shots of methamphetamine to his star patient. In the 1950s, it was released in the US under legal prescription and treated an assortment of ailments such as narcolepsy, alcoholism and obesity. It is still used today in the treatment of these ailments as well as being used for AIDS patients and ADHD sufferers.

The recreational use of methamphetamine did not take off until the 1980s. It is easy to make in back yard labs. These labs use typical kitchen equipment: coffee filters, hot plates, electric skillets, Pyrex dishes, plastic tubes, funnels, rubber gloves, breathing masks and glass jars. Most of the chemicals necessary to make it are readily available in household products (salt, drain cleaner, camping fuel and paint thinner) or over-the counter medicines. There are recipes of doubtful quality on the Internet and almost every method of synthesis involves highly dangerous chemicals and processes and explosions are not unknown in home labs.

Crystal users may suffer 'amphetamine psychosis' which has symptoms resembling those of paranoid schizophrenia. Once a user has experienced 'amphetamine psychosis' they are likely to continue experiencing these symptoms again every time they use the drug. The use of very high doses can cause permanent damage to blood vessels in the brain and, in extreme cases, death. More common effects include headaches, nausea, dizziness, blurred vision and tremors.

Dr Rebecca McKetin from the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, says it has become a drug of choice for many young people. “People used to take speed back in the 1990s and not worry too much about the use of speed. Now what we're seeing is people taking up crystal meth use, or ice use and becoming dependent on the drug” The same ABC report stated that 73,000 Australians are dependent on methamphetamines and 3.2 per cent of people have used the drug in the past year. Crystal is superseding most others as the drug of choice for many Australians, and frontline workers fear that the full scale of the drug's devastating side effects is yet to be seen.