Friday, September 29, 2006

election vote-counting still in progress...

Zambian presidential elections were yesterday and votes are still being counted. I visited a polling booth near the house, and, as expected, everyone seemed to be voting for Michael Sata. (woo hoo!).

It was rather annoying that there were no taxis around and everything was closed. But, I walked around outside on the dusty roads and found an empty bar willing to serve me Coke, ice, and access to TV. [I miss TV... well, sort of...]

Below is an article former NYT writer Howard French wrote about Zambian-China relations.
By the way, most media portrays Michael Sata as being "maverick" and "dangerous" to foreign investment. I disagree; he's doing what's best for Zambia even if he is rough around the edges in terms of his rhetoric (which I don't necessarily think is bad...though that's probably because I tend to err on the offensive/careless side when I try to speak truth...). All that he's done is stand up to China for legitimate reasons. When he threatens to kick out "bogus Chinese investors," he says that to defend Zambian labor rights and to promote better foreign investment in the Zambian economy. While it's nice for a poor African country to import cheap goods from a foreign investor, what the Zambians really need is a foreign investor who will develop real infrastructure in terms of physical assets [plants, factories, etc] and also in terms of "human" assets, i.e. providing good training to equip Zambians with practical skills.

Any political candidate willing to stand up to China (or any other powerful/rich foreign country) for the long-term development of their people and economy is a good politician, in my books.

Michael Sata, if I were a Zambian citizen, you would have my vote.

http://www.howardwfrench.com/archives/2006/09/29/chinas_african_embrace_evokes_memories_of_the_old_imperialism_zambia_anger_over_employment_practices_has_spilled_over_into_a_general_election_prompting_intervention_from_beijing/


China's African embrace evokes memories of the old imperialism ZAMBIA: Anger over employment practices has spilled over into a general election, prompting intervention from Beijing

September 29, 2006

Copyright - Financial Times

Zambia's Copperbelt, an industrial hub set amid torrid African bush, is one of the world's richest stores of the metal. During British rule the region formed the backbone of the colonial economy and served as a cradle of Zambian nationalism. In the 1970s Maoist China, in a mark of solidarity with southern Africa's newly independent states, built the Tanzam Railway linking Zambia's Copperbelt with the Indian Ocean ports of Dar es Salaam and Mombasa.

Today China - as an emerging economic colossus hungry for raw materials - is back in Zambia as a direct investor. Like past foreign patrons, the Chinese are taking no chances with their new prize.

In July six workers at the Chinese-owned Chambishi mine were shot and wounded after rioting over wages. This was the company's second serious incident in just over a year. In April 2005 a massive and still unexplained blast levelled an explosives factory on the premises, owned by China's NFC Mining Africa, killing 46 people. A witness says rescue workers were still retrieving body parts from the scene the next day.

Both incidents had a brief impact on world copper prices. They also stirred resentments in Zambia against the Chinese, a growing economic and diplomatic force there as they are around Africa. Now the issue has ricocheted directly into Zambian politics as the country prepares to vote in today's general election. Michael Sata, a maverick populist challenging the investor- and donor-friendly incumbent Levy Mwanawasa for the presidency, has accused Chinese investors of underpaying and neglecting the safety of Zambian workers, and vows to limit foreign ownership of Zambian mines to 51 per cent.

In an unusual diplomatic intervention, this month Li Baodong, Beijing's ambassador to Lusaka, said Chinese investors were holding back from committing funds pending the outcome at the polls. He also warned that China might sever relations with Zambia if Mr Sata won. While Beijing later distanced itself from Mr Li's remarks, the incident starkly illustrated China's ascendancy on a continent traditionally dominated by the US, France and other western powers.

Elsewhere in Africa, the growing Chinese presence has been greeted with a mixture of appreciation and resentment. Lax regulatory regimes have allowed Chinese goods, traders and workers to move into the continent's underserved markets with relatively little hindrance. On the positive side, poor African consumers like the cheap goods China exports to their countries. Beijing has also proved a pragmatic, sleeves-up economic partner for governments at odds with the US, from Sudan to Zimbabwe.

But tensions have flared over various issues, from China's use of its own nationals to rebuild war-ruined infrastructure in Angola to its export of cheap clothing to South Africa, which trade unions there say is destroying local industry. In Zambia, in addition to mining, Chinese investors have moved into sectors as diverse as farming, timber and retail.

In some cases, the newcomers have angered Zambians by importing Chinese citizens for unskilled jobs in areas such as construction. "We need capital and we need skills but we take exception to someone bringing labourers in," says Chileshe Mulenga, director of Zambia's Institute for Social and Economic Research and a supporter of Mr Sata.

Chinese investors have also been criticised for deploying poorly-paid and under-equipped Zambians in dangerous jobs. In June Zambian authorities closed the Chinese-owned Collum Coal Mining Industries, based in southern Zambia. This followed reports that workers were being sent underground without protective clothing or boots.

The workers involved in last year's explosion at Chambishi were unskilled and, according to unions, unprepared for work with hazardous materials. "That explosion happened due to negligence," says Albert Mando, general secretary of Zambia's National Union of Mining and Allied Workers. "You need experienced people to work there, but they decided to employ casual labour and cheap workers who didn't know the dangers of an explosion."

NFC was greeted as a saviour when it paid Dollars 20m (Pounds 11m, Euros 16m) for 85 per cent of the Chambishi mine in a 1998 privatisation deal, averting a threat of closure. But since then, against a background of soaring copper prices, tensions have flared between workers and management over wages and other issues.

In the July clash, one worker was shot by Zambian police at the plant after employees rioted, according to Xu Riyong, Chambishi's company secretary. Another five were taken to hospital after they stormed into the Chinese residence, prompting expatriate management to open fire, says Mr Xu, who expresses regret for the incident.

Labour relations have recently improved since the implementation of a new collective agreement with workers. "When we came, conditions of service for employees were quite bad," says Mr Mando. "We negotiated with them and conditions started improving."

In addition to criticising foreign investors, Mr Sata has also promised a more assertive relationship with donors, who finance a large portion of the poor country's government budget. "I think China's relationship (with Zambia) is very imperialistic and that the attitude of western donors is also very imperialistic," says Guy Scott, general secretary of Mr Sata's PF party. "We had the western powers and then the Russians here in the Seventies," he says. "Now we have the Chinese."

Recent opinion polls show Mr Mwanawasa's government fending off the threat from the PF leader. But even if he loses the election, Mr Sata does appear to have put Mr Mwanawasa's government on the defensive. The Zambian president last week ordered the arrest and prosecution of investors in the copper industry who violated labour laws.

Support for the opposition candidate certainly runs high in Kamwala, an area of modest trading shops in Lusaka. Mabvuto Nkoma, a 24-year-old trader selling gauzy women's skirts made in Dubai for Hong Ling, a Chinese-owned trading company, is one of many local people who say they will vote for Mr Sata. "I like the way he talks," Mr Nkoma says of the candidate. "I want a government that will encourage people to build (infrastructure) - not just investors who will come here to start trading."

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

more about cheap laptops

Business Week Online
Close Window
JUNE 21, 2006

LATIN BEAT
By Geri Smith

For Brazil's Poor, a Digital Deliverance?

The Committee for Democracy in Information Technology helps the unempowered use computers to reboot themselves and their communities

Ronaldo Monteiro was halfway through a 13-year prison sentence for kidnapping when his life took a turn for the better. That's when a nonprofit group delivered a bunch of personal computers to the rough Lemos Brito prison in Rio de Janeiro and taught inmates how to use them. Within months, Monteiro had become an instructor, and then he helped start a prison recycling program that today sells paper products, from calendars to notebooks, whose proceeds help support inmates' families.

Freed two years ago, Monteiro has just launched his own nonprofit group that provides seed capital and business advice to 25 former prisoners starting their own businesses, from small garment factories to ship soldering outfits. "The computer project changed my life," says Monteiro. "It taught me skills that empowered me, and that led me to think about doing things to help others."

The prison computer-education school is just one of 951 such centers created in Brazil and eight other countries over the past 11 years by the Committee for Democracy in Information Technology (CDI), a Rio de Janeiro-based nonprofit group. But these are not run-of-the-mill "telecenters" that offer rudimentary training and an Internet connection. Their name—Information Technology and Citizens Rights Schools—suggests a broader purpose. According to Rodrigo Baggio, the 37-year-old tech whiz who created the program in 1995, the idea is to teach the underprivileged basic concepts of self-esteem, citizenship, and their rights as individuals—essential building blocks for a fairer society.

After sub-Saharan Africa, Brazil has the worst distribution of wealth in the world. "People don't die of hunger in our cities—they die from lack of opportunities, and that leads them into a life of crime, violence, drug trafficking, and death," says Baggio. "People need more than just food. They also want fun, art, and technology in their lives."

CORPORATE BACKING.  Call it Digital Democracy or Digital Inclusion. It means spreading technology to the masses so they will not be left behind as the rest of the world becomes interconnected. In the U.S., two-thirds of the population is connected to the Internet, but in Latin America as a whole the rate is a low 15%. "There is a kind of 'digital apartheid' in developing countries that must be overcome so they can progress, not just economically but socially," Baggio says.

CDI has won international recognition for its unique approach of combining digital and civic education. With backing from such multinationals as Microsoft (MSFT ) and AOL (TWX ) and from Ashoka, a Virginia-based organization that encourages grass-roots social entrepreneurship worldwide, CDI has trained 600,000 underprivileged youths in computer and Internet skills. It does this with an annual budget of about $5 million in cash and donated services.

Baggio opened the first center in a Rio de Janeiro hillside shantytown in 1995, in space provided by a church and with computers donated by a retail chain. He was soon bombarded by requests to open centers throughout the country. Although most equipment is donated, all the centers are self-sustaining, charging students $5 to $10 a month for a three-month course. Students who cannot afford to pay are expected to contribute by helping out around the center. For many, the school is an oasis from the violence of the urban slums that are dominated by gun-wielding drug dealers. And the instructors, as well as the computer-repair specialists trained by the centers, serve as positive role models for kids.

EMPOWERING COMMUNITIES.  I visited one center, in Morro da Providencia, a century-old slum in Rio de Janeiro where gun battles between police and traffickers recently shut down schools and businesses for two weeks. There, students ages 9 to 17 work on 15 computers donated by British Petroleum (BP ). They're learning how to use the Internet for their schoolwork, but embedded in the lesson plans are exercises in building self-esteem and strengthening the community. "We're trying to show students that they have other options in life besides working for drug traffickers," says Mario Chagas, 48, the center's director.

Young people are not the only students. In some centers, the physically and mentally disabled, prostitutes, and housemaids learn skills that may enable them to open home-based businesses. But CDI aims to improve not just individual lives but that of the community as a whole. Slum residents are encouraged to discuss possible solutions for everything that's plaguing their neighborhoods. In one shantytown, where a trash-choked river frequently flooded streets, students printed and distributed flyers explaining to residents why it was important to refrain from throwing garbage into the waterway. After four months, flooding ceased to be a problem.

In another community, residents were frustrated when the city moved a bus stop far away, requiring residents to take an extra bus to get to work. Students in a CDI class calculated how much the extra bus fare affected family budgets and presented the information in spreadsheet format to city officials, who promptly moved the bus stop back to its original location. "These are molecular-sized revolutions that truly empower people, converting them into people capable of using technology and ideas to achieve change," says Baggio.

FREE LAPTOPS FOR KIDS.  There are other computer initiatives percolating in Brazil, whose 188 million inhabitants make it Latin America's most populous country. It's an interesting testing ground for computer and Internet use because Brazilians are eager technology adopters. Brazil has 22 million computers in use and boasts one of the highest numbers of Internet users in the world—around 26 million. It was the first country to introduce electronic voting, and it long has had one of the world's most computerized banking systems.

Yet, half of all Brazilians are poor, with little hope of ever learning to use a computer—much less owning one. The Brazilian government plans to install 6,000 community computer telecenters around the country by 2007. But that won't train enough of the workforce in computer use to make the country competitive.

So Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has agreed to distribute 1 million low-cost laptops to poor schoolchildren starting next year. Brazil will be one of the pioneer countries in a program called One Laptop Per Child, created by MIT's Media Lab (see BusinessWeek.com, 12/20/05, "Quanta's $100 Laptop Challenge"). It aims to hand out millions of $100 laptops equipped with open-source software to children around the world as part of the effort to bridge the digital divide between rich and poor countries. By allowing children to take the laptops home from school, the hope is that parents born before the digital age began will learn to use them as well.

INDIA, CHINA NEXT.  The laptops, now in the final stages of design, will be distributed for free by governments starting next year, first in Nigeria and Brazil, and then in Argentina, Thailand, and perhaps Egypt (see BusinessWeek.com, 10/4/05, "Help for Info Age Have-Nots"). Ultimately, says Walter Bender, One Laptop Per Child's president, the idea is to reach India and China, home to one-third of the world's children.

Granted, the 1 million laptops to be distributed initially in Brazil will barely scratch the surface: Brazil has 55 million school-age children. But it's an important first step. "It's inevitable that kids are going to have access to modern communications and to laptops eventually," says Bender. "We just want to make it happen faster, so that we don't lose another generation of kids in the developing world."

Already, the future looks clearer to Wanderley Canhedo, 13, a student at the CDI center in the Morro da Providencia slum, whose father is a bartender. Wanderley aspires to join the Brazilian Navy to use his new computer skills as a communications officer. "That's my dream now," he says, smiling.

With around half of Latin America's 560 million people living below the poverty line, dreams are in short supply. "Digital inclusion" is a necessary first step to equip young Latin Americans with the knowledge, skills, and self-confidence they need to succeed in the global workplace.

 


Smith, BusinessWeek's Latin America correspondent, lived in Brazil for eight years

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MIT is planning to produce a $100 laptop, but India thinks it can produce it for $10

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/2019126.cms

Saturday, September 23, 2006

on expats and zambian nightlife

The American embassy held a barbecue last night at the "Marine House" to brief U.S. citizens living in Lusaka about the upcoming presidential elections. There's been some tension/worry about the peacefulness of the elections as riots broke out in downtown Lusaka on Thursday. The U.S. ambassador to Zambia (a tall, tall woman) gave us a short briefing reassuring us that elections would most likely go off without a hitch and that results would be announced about 72 hours after Sep. 28.

After that, a fellow expact friend of mine and my Zambian supervisor friend went out to "Pete's" a steakhouse/pub for some drinks. We were supposed to meet up with some of Zambian colleagues from the social marketing NGO but my contact never called me back.

Those are my formal thoughts.

Informal thoughts:
- Certain American expat children disgust me; they are some of the most worst-behaved, selfish, and greedy children I have ever seen. But... it's not surprising given that the expat American families live the same lifestyle in Lusaka that they would have lived in America. They all drive SUVs [argh, hate SUVs], they all live in a posh area of Lusaka which my friend nicknamed "Little America", and their soccer-mom-mothers all hang out and eat at the same restaurants.

- However, there's also a nice smattering of hardcore missionaries. I met two Southern Baptist missionary couples who had lived in the Zambian bush for about 15-20 years. It's so unbelievably cool to hear that deep Southern twang in the middle of Zambia -- "Y'all take care now, ya hear?"-- awesome. They invited me and my friend to their "expat" bible study, which I'm going to definitely take them up on.

- The "Marine House" ... (I guess a place where the Marines stay?..) is basically a frat house. There's a pool table, bar, grill, big movie projector, etc. It's really weird to see all that in the middle of an African city.

- I really like Zambian bar-hopping nightlife. So far, all my bar/nightlife experiences have been very positive; no loud, violent drunkards, a calm, relaxing atmosphere, always interesting Zambian men to talk to [usually mostly males, obviously], and great selection of alcohol. I like drinking the ciders, specifically Redd's.

- Yeah, so educated Zambians know more about America and the world than we do. We Americans are just... sheltered and spoiled. period.

Friday, September 22, 2006

water, water everywhere... but nothing to drink

that's my attitude about churches right now. there are churches of every size and denomination at every other street corner, but sometimes it feels like i won't be able to find a church "home." well, maybe it is a bit too early to make this judgment since i've only been to two churches.

the first one i visited is the main anglican church in lusaka (cathedral of the holy cross) but the service is a bit too traditional and unengaging for my liking. however, it's theologically sound, there are families and older people, and it's nice that the kurians go there. a cool thing is that they serve real wine from a communal cup during communion.

the second chuch i visited i like to call "american megachurch meets zambia" i.e. Miracle Life Family Church. the pastor seems to be a less-better-looking version of joel osteen; he preaches an unashamed, undiluted health-wealth-prosperity theology. my first experience listening to something like it. Check out the recent Time article for a description of the growing prosperity movement amidst evangelical churches. i appreciated how the pastor directly approached difficult yet relevant sin issues during his message -- poverty, sexual abuse, divorce, incest, rape -- topics that most zambian pastors skirt, supposedly. [also, a friend of mine commented that he could get away with preaching about these touchy ( i.e. sexual) issues to zambians because he was white] but at the same time, i just couldn't stomach all his partially true statements [Our God is a God of gold and silver, he wants the best for his children....he does not want us to be poor or sick" .... "all you need to do is to ask God in faith... the woman who touched Jesus was healed because of her faith... if you have faith, you will be healed" ]... there are "altar calls" where they call up sick people to the front and the pastor and the "healing" team pray for physical healing [and then ask them to raise their hands publicly if they have been healed]. this church is located next to the richest shopping mall in lusaka, and its congregation is filled with "yuppie" zambians... (yes, there is actually a yuppie class in lusaka...)..after service, people like to go shopping, surf the web, catch a movie, etc after service... sort of like how part of the reason i liked going to bcec was I could go eat delicious dimsum afterwards.... or like how i'd always go out to lunch with emmanuelites after service..   in a way, it feels too comfortable, too yuppie, too urban American...  I feel like i'm sitting at another typical american evangelical church, except that it's all africans and there are no asians.

so ... I'm going to explore.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

a catchy zambian song... and video

go to
http://audio.xanga.com/stinaanits

and listen to one of the most popular zambian artists, K'millian.

more to come.

also go to

http://video.xanga.com/stinaanits

for short clip from a "kitchen party" (zambian bridalshower/bachelorette party) that I went to.

also more to come.

a picture


train tracks and CHW
Originally uploaded by stinaanits.
i'm trying out this blogging-from-flickr feature since i just started uploading photos. i wonder how this will turn out.

Monday, September 18, 2006

conversations

Today I interviewed about 15 Zambian women to be supervisors or enumerators (i.e. surveyors) for the upcoming intervention. (Intervention refers to the actual field experiment of sending out enumerators to households to survey the women.) I decided to incorporate some role-playing in the interview to get a better sense of how experienced these candidates were. I decided to throw in some scenarios we had seen in the pilot....

Candidate: Hello Christina, my name is Doreen Chanda and I am from the Society for Family Health. I would like to conduct a survey on family planning.

Me: Hi.... [looking at her suspiciously]. Who are you again? Why are you interviewing me? Are you a Satanist? Are you going to put a curse on my family after you interview me?

Candidate: Oh.. why no, I am here to conduct a survey on family planning. I am affiliated with the Society for Family Health. Here is my ID and a letter from the supervisor.

Me: [grudgingly] fine... ok, go ahead.

Candidate: Ok... now Christina, how many more children does your husband want you to have?

Me: Well... I've currently got about 4 children. My husband doesn't think that's enough, since he wants 6 children. So... he wants 2 more children.

Candidate: Ok. Now, Christina, how many times have you had sex with your husband in the past week?

Me: Oh... my... hmmm... I'm a bit shy. I don't feel comfortable telling you this.

Candidate: Oh, you don't need to worry. We're both married women. We both know about sex. We can talk about this freely. There's no need to feel embarrassed.

Me: Ok... 2 times.

Candidate: What type of family planning method did you use when you had sex?

Me: Withdrawal and male condoms. But I'm looking to switch to another method since my husband is tired of withdrawal and doesn't like condoms. Also withdrawal is not reliable in preventing pregnancy.

Candidate: Ok... what would your husband do if he wanted you to get pregnant within 2 years but you didn't?

Me: Well, he'd be disappointed.

Candidate: Ok, can you be more specific? What would he do? Would he be supportive? Leave you for another women? Quarrel for you? Beat you?

Me: Well.... don't tell anyone this... but... I'm afraid he would leave me for another woman if I don't produce.

Candidate: I see.... that's understandable... now, has your husband ever threatened you with physical violence?

Me: Sometimes....

Candidate: Has he ever hit you in the past month?

Me: [looking down]... actually once. But that was when I was arguing with him about money.
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I liked this description of Harvard/America...

"So [Harvard] has many of early-21st century America's strengths — but many of the country's weaknesses as well. Its diversity is skin-deep: like the country as a whole, Harvard is actually getting more class-stratified, not less so, both within the school and in how well the student body reflects the broader society. Its scientific successes have been balanced by drift and even rot in the humanities, which mirror the larger rot in American popular culture; its formidable clout is undercut by a deep insecurity about its purpose and it founding ideals; and perhaps most importantly, its unprecedented wealth has too often fostered a spirit of materialism, greed, and success-at-all-costs. Harvard doesn't "hate America," as one conservative writer once put it — it is modern America, with all the good and bad that being modern America entails."

--Harvard alum Ross Douthat, National Review Online,

Friday, September 15, 2006

two dozen years on this earth.

My dream company...

I'm a huge believer of healthy, strong private enterprise as the main engine of economic development. I think Google is on to something when they decided to make their "do-gooder" arm for-profit.


The New York Times


September 14, 2006

Philanthropy Google's Way: Not the Usual

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 13 — The ambitious founders of Google, the popular search engine company, have set up a philanthropy, giving it seed money of about $1 billion and a mandate to tackle poverty, disease and global warming.

But unlike most charities, this one will be for-profit, allowing it to fund start-up companies, form partnerships with venture capitalists and even lobby Congress. It will also pay taxes.

One of its maiden projects reflects the philanthropy's nontraditional approach. According to people briefed on the program, the organization, called Google.org, plans to develop an ultra-fuel-efficient plug-in hybrid car engine that runs on ethanol, electricity and gasoline.

The philanthropy is consulting with hybrid-engine scientists and automakers, and has arranged for the purchase of a small fleet of cars with plans to convert the engines so that their gas mileage exceeds 100 miles per gallon. The goal of the project is to reduce dependence on oil while alleviating the effects of global warming.

Google.org is drawing skeptics for both its structure and its ambitions. It is a slingshot compared with the artillery of charities established by older captains of industry. Its financing pales next to the tens of billions that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will have at its disposal, especially with the coming infusion of some $3 billion a year from Warren E. Buffett, the founder of Berkshire Hathaway .

But Google's philanthropic work is coming early in the company's lifetime. Microsoft was 25 years old before Bill Gates set up his foundation, which is a tax-exempt organization and separate from Microsoft.

By choosing for-profit status, Google will have to pay taxes if company shares are sold at a profit — or if corporate earnings are used — to finance Google.org. Any resulting venture that shows a profit will also have to pay taxes. Shareholders may not like the fact that the Google.org tax forms will not be made public, but kept private as part of the tax filings of the parent, Google Inc.

Google's founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, believe for-profit status will greatly increase their philanthropy's range and flexibility. It could, for example, form a company to sell the converted cars, finance that company in partnership with venture capitalists, and even hire a lobbyist to pressure Congress to pass legislation granting a tax credit to consumers who buy the cars.

The executive director whom Mr. Page and Mr. Brin have hired, Dr. Larry Brilliant, is every bit as iconoclastic as Google's philanthropic arm. Dr. Brilliant, a 61-year-old physician and public health expert, has studied under a Hindu guru in a monastery at the foothills of the Himalayas and worked as a Silicon Valley entrepreneur.

In one project, which Dr. Brilliant brought with him to the job, Google.org will try to develop a system to detect disease outbreaks early.

Dr. Brilliant likens the traditional structure of corporate foundations to a musician confined to playing only the high register on a piano. "Google.org can play on the entire keyboard," Dr. Brilliant said in an interview. "It can start companies, build industries, pay consultants, lobby, give money to individuals and make a profit."

While declining to comment on the car project specifically, Dr. Brilliant said he would hope to see such ventures make a profit. "But if they didn't, we wouldn't care," he said. "We're not doing it for the profit. And if we didn't get our capital back, so what? The emphasis is on social returns, not economic returns."

Development of ultra-high-mileage cars is under way at a number of companies, from Toyota to tiny start-ups. Making an engine that uses E85 — a mixture of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline — is not difficult, but the lack of availability of the fuel presents a challenge, said Brett Smith, a senior industry analyst at the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Another barrier, Mr. Smith said, lies in the batteries for so-called plug-in hybrids, which require more powerful batteries that charge more quickly than the current generation of hybrid batteries.

There are skeptics, too, among tax lawyers and other pragmatists familiar with the world of philanthropy. They wonder whether Google's directors might be tempted to take back some of the largess in an economic downturn.

"The money is at the beck and call of the board of directors and shareholders," said Marcus S. Owens, a tax lawyer in Washington who spent a decade as director of the exempt organizations division of the Internal Revenue Service. "It's possible the shareholders of Google might someday object, especially if we go into an economic depression and that money is needed to shore up the company."

And there is the question of how many of the planet's problems can truly be addressed by a single corporate entity.

But even while expressing reservations about Google's approach, Mr. Owens said that the structure of Google.org "eliminates all the constraints that might otherwise apply."

The only conventional part of Google.org is the Google Foundation, a nonprofit with an endowment of $90 million that is constrained in how it spends by the 501(c)(3) section of the Internal Revenue Service code.

Google's big philanthropic experiment lies in the part of Google.org where the bulk of the funding now resides. This part of Google.org will be fully taxable, with the ability to invest in a full spectrum of programs and companies.

All of Google.org's spending, Dr. Brilliant said, will be in keeping with its mission, and there is to be no "blowback." That is, should Google.org make a profit with one of its ventures, those funds will not go to the search engine business, but will stay within Google.org.

Google had existed for only six years, when, in advance of the company's initial public offering in August 2004, Mr. Page and Mr. Brin told potential investors that they planned to set aside 1 percent of the company's stock and an equal percentage of profits for philanthropy. By the end of 2004, Google.org was formed.

The company has said it plans to spend the money over the next 20 years, and the Google board recently approved a more rapid disbursement rate, $175 million over the next two years.

"Poor people can't wait," Dr. Brilliant said. "Dying people can't wait for some 20-year plan. It's not what we're doing here."

Ventures that grow out of Google.org could be seen to have a competitive edge because they do not need to show a financial profit. But financial returns from a project like the high-mileage car are not necessarily the aim.

"I think how you count profit is the issue here," said Peter Hero, president of the Community Foundation of Silicon Valley, a charitable foundation with about $1 billion in assets. "Google.org is measuring return on cleaner air and quality of life. Their bottom line isn't just financial. It's environmental and social."

Once Google.org was formed, the company spent months searching for an executive director. There was no lack of interest in the job.

"Literally thousands of people worldwide got in touch with us," said Sheryl Sandberg, the Google vice president who led the search. "We'd get someone who was an amazing technology entrepreneur but who didn't know anything about the developing world."

Then along came Dr. Brilliant, an affable man generous with bearhugs and self-deprecating humor whose unlikely résumé looks like a composite career summary of multiple high achievers.

After receiving his medical degree, Dr. Brilliant studied for two years with Neem Karoli Baba, a famous Hindu guru.

As Dr. Brilliant tells the story, in 1973, shortly before the guru's death, he told Dr. Brilliant to "take off the ashram whites" and use his skills as a physician to help eradicate smallpox, which was devastating India at the time.

Dr. Brilliant joined a team of United Nations workers who painstakingly worked their way through India inoculating people against the disease. In 1980, the World Health Organization declared that smallpox had been eradicated.

In 1978, Dr. Brilliant started the Seva Foundation, which focuses on preventing and curing blindness throughout Asia and Latin America. In 1985, Dr. Brilliant was a co-founder of the Well, a seminal online community. Throughout the 1990's and early 2000's, he ran several high-tech companies in Silicon Valley.

Dr. Brilliant first heard about Google.org in early 2005 while lying in bed in India, sick with dysentery. He had gone there to work with the polio eradication program of the United Nations and, while recovering, he saw news of Google.org in a local newspaper.

He sent an inquiry to the only e-mail address he could find: info@google.com. He got no response.

This year, Dr. Brilliant was awarded the TED Prize, an award given at the annual Technology, Entertainment and Design conference, a gathering of leaders from the technology and entertainment industries. The prize awards three recipients $100,000, and a "wish" for how to change world.

Dr. Brilliant's wish was for the creation of an "early detection, rapid response" system for disease outbreaks. The idea would be an open-source, nongovernmental, public access network for detecting, reporting and responding to pandemics.

Some Google insiders heard about the award and invited Dr. Brilliant to give a talk at the company. Mr. Page and Eric E. Schmidt, Google's chief executive, were in the audience as Dr. Brilliant described the polio eradication efforts of the United Nations. They agreed they had found their director and began to recruit him.

At first, Dr. Brilliant said, he was thrilled. But then he turned skeptical, largely because of the for-profit structure of the organization.

"I got weak knees," he said. "It was weird. It was precedent setting." After several lengthy conversations with executives at Google, Dr. Brilliant changed his mind. Six months into the job, he has traveled to India to visit eye clinics and polio vaccination projects with Mr. Page, and to China to discuss clean energy alternatives. Next week, he leaves for Africa to visit Google grant recipients in Ghana.

Dr. Brilliant said he had no desire to "reinvent the wheel" by working on projects others are already involved in. And although Google is a high-tech company, that does not mean that Google.org will be throwing around high-tech solutions.

"Why would we put Wi-Fi in a place where what they need is food and clean water?" he said.


Thursday, September 14, 2006

I'm feeling sick. Don't worry; I went to the doctor, and it's definitely not malaria. All blood tests were normal. It's probably a virus... brought about by lack of rest/ too much stress. But, given all the Zambian warnings and horror stories about malaria, I now look at all mosquitoes now with a mixture of disgust, anger, and fear. Which one of them carries the malaria disease?? Better not bite me.

Saturday, September 09, 2006

tired... so tired.

I've been working for about 13 days straight...

The pilot stage of the project (basically implementing a mini-version of the real survey involving only 100 people) started last Tuesday, August 29th. [The real survey will involve at least 1000 women.] The pilot lasted through Monday, Sep. 4, and it's been a scramble since then to enter the results as quickly and accurately as possible while continuing to manage the other remaining community health workers (CHWs). I'm somewhat sleep-deprived; numbers, data, contraceptives, images of Zambian babies, and African female names are swimming around in my head.

In general, I feel quite disconnected from the "real world,"... or more accurately the American media that I'm usually exposed to. I have internet access once a day for a couple hours if I'm lucky... which also means phone access is also limited... (though starting to use Skype instead of using inconvenient international calling cards.) It feels weird not knowing what's going on in NYC, America, etc. All I know about know is whatever I hear on Zambian radio, which is usually concerned with the upcoming presidential elections.

My world is now largely limited to a few environments:

1. the public health clinic next to the government-provided housing compounds (not nearly as violent or crowded as an typical urban ghetto in America... just more babies/young children and life-threatening disease) This is the homebase/meeting place from which we send out the teams of community health workers (CHWs) and surveyors (i.e. enumerators) to interview women about fertility preferences, contraceptive use, spousal communication, sexual history, etc. It's also a place where death and life mingle together... in one section are the wards where sick people lie and rarely get better... [mourning/grief over the dead are heard every couples of days... along with loud prayers by visiting pastors/churchmembers] ... and in another adjacent section is the family planning/child monitoring area... where I see unbelievably cute African babies being held/breastfed by their usually young, tired-looking mothers.

2. the research office of the social marketing NGO my research project is partnering with. (they provide us office space, administrative support, and human resources... i.e. the women who work for us). when I need to have a quiet, office environment to do data entry, look at data, organize my thoughts, and write email, I go here.

3. the comfort/shelter of the Kurian home, [as I might have mentioned before, they've already been an enormous source of emotional and spiritual to me....] After long, stressful, tiring days, I am always so glad to go back to a place that has become my African home away from home. if they are home, Mr. or Mrs. Kurian opens the door and waves as the taxi pulls up... one of them always makes me coffee or tea (always mixed with milk... ah.. milk tea) and often pulls up a chair... I tell them about problems/stresses I've had that day, and they give me support, encouragement, and advice. I've now become quite at home eating Southern Indian food every meal... and they are for sure my pseudo-"parents" here in Zambia. they and their daughter have already told me several times that they consider me a part of the kurian family.

4. the passenger side of the taxi as my "personal" taxi driver Joe drives me around (he's a trustworthy, nice, gentle young Zambian man who I call whenever I need to get somewhere quickly... and who's very happy for my consistent business.)

I wish I had my camera cable here so I could post pictures. But I can't for now...I must find some time to buy it somewhere or get it shipped here.
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Tonight I'm going to eat my first Chinese food since I've gotten here... meeting up for dinner with a girl who's working for IJM Zambia. (IJM = International Justice Mission, an organization of evangelical Christian lawyers dedicated to fighting domestic abuse, human/sex trafficking, and other human rights abuses in Southeast Asia, Africa, and some other places I think).

It'll be interesting to hang out with a fellow westerner/foreigner, since I spend most of my time with Indians and Zambians now.
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Thursday, September 07, 2006

China, Taiwan, and Zambia....

The Zambian presidential elections are coming up on Sep. 28. The two leading candidates are Levy Mwanawasa and Michael Sata. You, of course, know who I would vote for right? ;) (Read below)

Oh, and Michael Sata was a former Health Minister who decided to build the regional public health clinics around Lusaka... including the one I'm working at now. [good move, good move.] In addition, while he was health minister, he was known to randomly disguise himself in plainclothes and visit hospitals/clinics around Lusaka and observe how long it took for seriously ill/injured patients to be attended to. After seeing the long waits, the neglect, and general inefficiency he one day fired all the nurses, doctors, and other workers he observed to be negligent.

The general atmosphere in the clinic where I work is of hope for Michael Sata. They think that once he's in power, there will be no more long lines.

And yes, I'm trying to do my part in cutting down long lines/inefficiency. I've been regularly bothering the clinic administrator about overloaded nurses, long waits, negligence, etc. It seems to be working.
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China intervenes in Zambian election

By John Reed, Southern Africa Correspondent

Published: September 5 2006 19:19 | Last updated: September 5 2006 19:19

The Chinese government has intervened in Zambia's upcoming presidential election in a forceful sign of the commodity-hungry country's growing economic and political clout in Africa.

Li Baodong, China's ambassador in Lusaka, said Beijing might cut diplomatic relations with Zambia if voters elected Michael Sata, an opposition candidate, as president, Zambian media reported on Tuesday.

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His remarks are the first sign of overt political interference by China in African affairs in decades, reflecting Beijing's rapidly expanding role as an investor on the continent and as a client for long-term supplies of raw materials. China is a leading investor in Zambian copper, the country's biggest export product by value.

China has invested billions of dollars in Africa in recent years, rivalling the US as it does so, and Chinese trade with the continent has quadrupled since the start of the decade, mainly through purchases of crude oil.

In Zambia alone Chinese companies are believed to have ploughed more than $300m into copper and other industries.

Mr Sata is challenging Levy Mwanawasa, the incumbent president, in the September 28 election. Mr Sata has been quoted calling Taiwan a "sovereign state," angering China, and has also spoken out against Chinese labour practices in Zambia. Recognition of Taiwan would mean turning away from the country's ties with Beijing.

Most African countries have thrown in their lot with China, leaving only a handful of governments maintaining official relations with Taiwan. Zambian media also reported that Mr Sata, currently running second to Mr Mwanawasa in opinion polls, had met Taiwanese businessmen.

The Times of Zambia on Tuesday quoted Mr Li saying Chinese investors were "scared" to come to Zambia because of Mr Sata's "unfortunate" remarks. If Mr Sata won and established relations with Taiwan, Beijing might think of cutting its relations, the newspaper reported.

"Chinese investors in mining, construction and tourism have put on hold further investments in Zambia until the uncertainty surrounding our bilateral relations with Zambia is cleared," the state-owned Zambia Daily Mail quoted Mr Li as saying.

In Zambia several mineworkers were shot and injured in July after a violent protest at Chinese-owned Chambishi Mining. There are conflicting reports on whether Chinese managers or Zambian police shot the workers.