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solomons
Saturday, 5 April 2008
AN APPEAL TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
Now Playing: AN APPEAL TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

The war in Iraq is getting worse. More and more American soldiers are being killed. Of course Iraqis are being killed in greater numbers.

This war was started by President Bush and supported by Prime Minister Tony Blair. They had lied in order to invade Iraq.

What has this war gained for America and Britain? Nothing except the unnecessary deaths of American soldiers, destruction of Iraq and higher oil prices. There is no democracy in Iraq, for which American soldiers were supposed to die.

Invading a country today does not end in conquest and subjugation of the people. The occupying forces would be continuously attacked by guerillas and terrorists.

War is no longer an option for even the most powerful countries in the settlement of international disputes.

Killing people to achieve a national objective is primitive and barbaric.

Modern wars kill and destroy more.

The majority of those killed are non-combatants; old people, sick people, children and babies.

War makes a mockery of our claims to be civilised, to care for human life, human rights etc.

War reduces us to being brutish animals.

It is time we renounce killing masses of people in order to solve international disputes. It is time we renounce WAR! Defensive war would not be necessary in the absence of wars of agression. Trillions of dollars would be saved as nations scale down their war machines.

I appeal to the American people to reject candidates in the Presidential primaries and election who do not reject killing people, who do not reject war as a policy option for the United States of America.

Elect only candidates who categorically declare they reject war and killing people.

If the United States does this, then candidates in elections in other countries will have to reject war.

Americans – you have a duty to yourselves – you have a duty to humanity at large.

Please do not fail in this moral duty.

Dr Mahathir bin Mohamad
Chairman,
Perdana Global Peace Organisation


Posted by ralf911 at 8:09 AM NZT
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Wednesday, 20 June 2007
CAN SOLOMON ISLANDS CLAIM 21st CENTURY?
Mood:  not sure

By Geoffrey Kaka

Can Solomon Islands Claim 21st Century?

Solomon Islands enters the 21st century with many of the world's poorest countries.

Incomes, assets, and access to essential services are unequally distributed and the rural areas of the Solomons contains a growing share of the world's absolute poor, who have little power to influence the allocation of resources.

Moreover, many development problems have become largely confined to Solomon Islands. They include lagging primary and high school education, high child mortality, and endemic diseases - including malaria.

Many countries have made important economic reforms, improving macroeconomic management, liberalising markets and trade, and widening the space for private sector activity. Where these reforms have been sustained - and underpinned by civil peace - they have raised growth and incomes and reduced poverty. Even as parts of the region are making headlines with wars and natural disasters, other parts are making headway with rising interest from domestic and foreign businesses and higher investment.

But the response has not been sufficient to overcome years of falling income or to reverse other adverse legacies from the long period of economic decline – including deteriorated Solomon Islands capacity, weakened institutions, and inadequate infrastructure. The recent attitude of the Police Force after cyclone Zoe struck Tikopia and Anuta at some 320kmph also highlighted changes in values among our people.

Whilst major changes are needed if Solomon Islanders - and their children - are to claim the 21st century. With the region's rapidly growing population, 5 percent annual growth is needed simply to keep the number of poor from rising.

Moreover, Solomon Islands will not be able to sustain rapid growth without investing in its people and in particular tertiary students both at home and abroad. Many of our rural areas lack the health, education, and access to inputs needed to contribute to – and benefit from - high growth. Women are one of Solomon's hidden growth reserves, providing some of the region's labour, but their productivity is hampered by widespread inequality in education and access. Thus gender equality can be a potent force for accelerated poverty reduction.

Solomon Islands thus faces an immense, multifaceted development challenge. But the new century offers a window of opportunity to reverse the marginalisation of

Solomon Island's people - and of Solomon Island's governments relation with donors in the development agenda. The time has come for political participation to sharply increase, paving the way for more accountable government, and there is greater consensus on the need to move away from the failed models of the past. With the end of the second world war, Solomon Islands is no longer an ideological and strategic battleground where ``trusted allies'' receive foreign assistance regardless of their record on governance and development. Globalisation and new technology, especially information technology, offer great potential for Solomon Islands, historically a sparsely isolated region. Though these factors also pose risks, including that of being left further behind, these are far outweighed by the potential benefits.

Making these benefits materialise will require a ``business plan'' conceived and owned by Solomon Islanders, and supported by donors through coordinated, long term partnerships. Solomon Islands culture differs widely, so there is no universal formula for success. But many countries face similar issues, and can draw on positive examples of how to address them. Improving governance and resolving conflict is perhaps the most basic requirement for faster development. Widespread civil conflicts impose enormous costs, including on neighbouring countries. Contrary to popular belief, Solomon Island's conflicts do not stem from ethnic diversity. Rather, in a pattern found around the world, conflicts are driven by poverty, underdevelopment, and lack of economic diversification, as well as by political systems that marginalise large parts of the population. But conflicts perpetuate poverty, creating a vicious circle that can be reversed only through special development efforts - including long run peace building and political reforms. With success in these areas, countries can grow rapidly, and flight capital can return.

Countries that have made the greatest gains in political participation are also those with better economic management. Again, this conforms to a global pattern that  suggests multiethnic states can grow as fast as homogeneous ones - if they sustain participatory political systems. Many countries need to develop political models that facilitate consensus building and include marginalized groups.

Development programs need to be win-win, improving the management and distribution of economic resources and contributing to more effective states.

Programs should empower citizens to hold governments accountable, enable governments to respond to new demands, and enforce compliance with the economic and political rules of the game. Development efforts may start to move in this direction, with greater beneficiary involvement in the delivery of services and more emphasis on results. But far more needs to be done to strengthen Solomon Island's institutions - including ensuring that representative institution, such as parliaments, play their proper role in economic and budgetary oversight.

Investing in people is also essential for accelerated poverty reduction. Many countries are caught in a trap of high fertility and mortality, low education (especially of women - less than onequarter of poor rural girls attend primary school), high dependency ratios, and low savings.

While the resources available for education and health are inadequate in Solomon

Islands, many need to translate their existing commitment to human development into effective programs for delivering essential services and increasing gender equality. Solomon inherits some of strongest communities in the Pacific, yet services are usually provided through weak, centralised institutions that are seen as remote and ineffective by those they are supposed to serve. Deconcentrated service delivery through local communities, supported by capacity building at local levels and effective governance to ensure transparency and empower recipients, could have a major impact. These could be done with effective regional cooperation and donor support through coordinated long-term partnerships.

Increasing competitiveness and diversifying economies must be a third area of focus if Solomon Islands is to claim this new century. Job creation is slow not because of labor market rigidities (though there are exceptions) but because of the high perceived risks and costs of doing business in Solomon Islands due to the current law and order problem. These need to be lowered by locking in reforms and delivering business services more efficiently - with less corruption, better infrastructure and financial services, restoring law and order and increased access to the information economy. Solomon Islands trails the world on every dimension of these essentials. Lowering these barriers requires new approaches, including more participation by the private sector and by local communities, a more regional approach to overcome the problems posed by their rural communities, and a central government shift to regulating and facilitating services rather than providing them.

Reducing aid dependence and strengthening partnerships will have to be a fourth component of Solomon's development strategy. Concessional assistance is essential if Solomon Islands is to grow rapidly while also increasing consumption to reduce poverty. Excluding private inflows, the savings gap for a typical country is about 17 percent of GDP, and other regions show that private flows cannot be sustained at more than 5 percent of GDP without risk of crisis. But aid, particularly when delivered in a weak institutional environment by large numbers of donors with fragmented projects and requirements, can weaken institutional capacity and undermine accountability.

High debt and debt service add to the problem, deterring private investment and absorbing core budget resources, making governments ever more ``cash poor'' but

``project rich,'' with a development agenda increasingly perceived as being shaped by donors. Lack of selectivity compounds the problem, channeling a lot of aid to countries with poor development policies. And with few exceptions, aid has largely been confined to national boundaries rather than used to stimulate regional and international public goods.

These problems should be widely recognised, and a consensus has emerged that the primary goal of aid should be to reduce poverty. But paradoxically, aid transfers are declining just when many of the problems are being addressed. Solomon Islands enters the new century in the midst of intense debate on aid. New aid relationships are being implemented - relationships that emphasize a holistic, country-driven approach supported by donors on the basis of long-term partnerships, and with greater beneficiary participation and empowerment over the use of resources.

If there is change in the right direction, I believe there is a long way to go. In a typical poor country aid transfers might equal 10 percent of GDP, yet the poorest fifth of the population disposes of only about 4 percent of GDP. It remains to be seen how well partnerships can resolve the tensions between the objectives of recipients and individual donors, and how far the behaviour of donors will change to facilitate Solomon Islands ownership of its development agenda. It also remains to be seen how far partnerships can extend beyond assistance, to include enhanced opening of world markets to Solomon Islands products and services.


Posted by ralf911 at 5:38 PM NZT
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AUKI INDEPENDENCE CELEBARATIONS
Mood:  happy
Topic: auki

Its such a wonderful idea that the Malaita Provincial government and its people have come together to spearhead the 29th Solomon Islands Independence celebarations at Auki..

I would like to congratulate the provincial government on their hard work and dedication to make this possible.. Its been hard for the good people of Malaita for the last few years and I think this would be the best occasion to invite our brothers and sister froms all over the Solomon Islands to come and celebarate the INdependence day celebaration with us.

I hope that many of our brothers and sisters from other provinces would love and enjoy their stay over there.. Lets help the celebaration be enjoyed all over malaita from the southern to the northern..

I wish all the of you an enjoyable Idependence celebaration.


Posted by ralf911 at 2:00 AM NZT
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Friday, 1 June 2007
THE POLITICAL GAME
Mood:  don't ask

The dirty game of politics. Well, I said its a dirty game b'cos we can  loose millions over night.

In a small country like Solomon Islands, government stability is what we needed the most..Development plans and successful execution and implementation of sound development policies and project would be the most influential thing to kick start all our development efforts.. when there is stability in the government, donors and development partners alike would help in developement of that country and with a sound national plan and development plan - we can change the solomons islands today to one where all people would enjoy what their country offered for them.

We need a strong leadership whose not a puppet to aid donors and development partners but one that can share the same stage with them.. We do not need a YES BOSS in the leadership role of this nation. Whoever our leader is should know what the people need and how to get it over to the people and not to put all those that partners wants yu to do.. your partners are your partners, they can say whatever they want to say but you know about your society more than them so the role our leaders should be playing is a positive combination of what we should do and how we should it to accommodate the patners requirements..

Whats going on between our government and the opposition now is a sad case. Do we really need to change our current government?? I believe not alot of us would agree  with all the decisions that our PM made but I personally like his leadership style. Though I do not agree with all his decisions, I like how he handle the international pressure.

But what he should do best is to keep politics from the personal relationship between australia and solomon islands. let your politcal decisions be politics and do not involve it in the business sectors of the country..

The opposition for some reason, want to take power maybe for ya own reasons i dont know... Someone said they are good to in begging (I mean asking aid). we'd been asking for the past 30 years and nothing changes... only the amount increases in figure but less in value..

I do not see any reason why we should abaundant the government policies now and embark on some new policies while we should help implement those made by the government now.

do not change projects every 4 years or less cos new governments seemed to ask more money took office?? we have invested  millions in the current government policies and a change over night would see us loose millions of dollars and whats the benefit to the people? lost jobs and the country, lost projects.. change in government means change in policy, change in policy means change in projects change in projects means, we do not complete what the previous government has started.. all we have to do is  to be implemenmt what the government has put forward now, otherwise we will be losing millions yet again.

Whether you are opposition or backbencher or public servant, our job is almost the same... we work together for the development of the country so we have to play all our parts.

From those in the rural areas/villages to those in the offices in honiara and around the country..

The national government should implement their Bottom Up Approach BUA to serve the people rather than politicising it. BUA should not be a political weapon to slaughter the members of opposition cos when you slaughter the member of opposition, its the people that yu supposed to be serving that you are actually killing.. Recently, I read about the Guale member of opposition wants the ships for guadalcanal back in service and asking the government to help... Well, the government should take this and help cos at the end of the its helping the people who will help in the economic development of the country.. 

to be continued


Posted by ralf911 at 2:04 AM NZT
Updated: Wednesday, 20 June 2007 2:23 AM NZT
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WHERE IS SOLOMON ISLANDS HEADING??
Mood:  lazy

where is the solomon islands heading?? alot of us would think its going down the drainage as has claimed by many.. if all our political analysis and  thoughts are something to stand by.. I would say that we need total change in our political line up, from the PM down to all cabinet and ministers, but who would lead Solomon Islands out of what we are in now?? 

Many are saying MS the honorable PM of Solomon Islands is a dictator or rather somebody unproductive to lead the country.

I do not see anyone doing something new rather than what we are experiencing now.. I know where alot of us who talks alot are coming from or at and I believe your ideas are incfluenced bu the fact that yu so close to something.

I would like to say that PM has done some very fanastic things thats needs total commitment and transparent implementation. For example, the Bottom Up Approach (BUA) which the government is implementing at the moment.. But wait, its yet to be done and assess whether its successful or not.. I don't know the real time-frame put to this, maybe four years or a little bit more.. whatever it is, the expertise of those in the government and misnistries are need for the successful implementation of this project.

One thing that I oppose to as many of us did, is the appointment of Julian Moti to the AG position. While its true the PM should hand pick anyone to strengthen his position, why on earth does he decided to choose JM for this post while known his past? 

PM should know more and should know how and who to choose to be in such an influential and sensitive area..

On our Political stand with aussie, I think its a just the begining. I mean someday we'll take this stand as the PM is doing now.. whether its too early or not is another thing.

We should look seriously at areas of development in solomon Islands and relax our hands.. almot 30 years begar on the streets of the world.. we have areas of development which will help ease our hunger..

with the population increasing, we should look seriously on farming... plant  food to feed the people then after that yu can planti the oil palms.. instead you plant oil palm and harvest mineral resources  and forget about food.

Focus on main towns and provincial capitals to reduce mass exodus to the capital centre (Honiara). with the BUA I believe we have something good for the people to kick start the development of solomon islands.

2007 ahmad christopher pupuro


Posted by ralf911 at 1:43 AM NZT
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