7/7/06

Digicel in Trinidad, Jamaica Homophobia Debate

Digicel in Trinidad
  • It's almost shocking how the opening of the Telecom market in T&T generated a set of events that closely parallels the opening of the market in Haiti: local competitors attempting to clean up their act and lowering prices, improved service, interconnection battles. Listen for yourself in this Trini podcast from the T&T Computer Society. (See podcast #10.)
Homophobia in Jamaica Debate
  • Nyasha Laing from the Global Parish disagrees with a friend about the extent and danger of the current configuration of homophobia in Jamaica. It all started with a MSM article, a response by an acquaintance of Nyasha's and Nyasha's rebuttal.

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7/6/06

New Haitian Blogs from La Gonave to Scotland

Supporting Children in La Gonave
  • A new Haitian blog, Notre Dame de Guadalupe, popped up out of La Gonave, an island off of Haiti of all places. The first and only post so far was on an event celebrating children's rights. Notre Dame de Guadalupe seems to be a children's oriented NGO based on the island and I added it to the Haiti-based blogroll, at the bottom right of the home page.
Following Love in Scotland
  • Check out Adventures in Negroshire, a blog by kiskeyAcity commentor Peggy Brunache. She moved to Scotland from the US recently to join her Scottish beau. She chronicles her life there with humor and ineresting images. Lots on cuisine, farmer's markets and culture. Added to Haitian Diaspora blogroll on the home page.
Global Voices Show #3

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6/30/06

More Six Degrees of Brooklyn Caribbean Bloggers


Bloggers, wine, chocolate...

Bloggers, wine, chocolate...

When Bloggers and Chocolate come together... Nyashazaza from the Global Parish has been friends with fellow haitian blogger Nighshift Chronicles for quite a while. I only met him in person recently and a six degrees can of worms ensued. When I went to Nyashazaza's Wine & Chocolate soiree last Saturday, I met yet another brooklyn blogger, Richard Louissaint the Haitian Eclectic, whose blog I added to my Haitian Diaspora blogroll a couple of months ago.

Bloggers, wine, chocolate...

Haitian Eclectic & Nyashazaza


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6/28/06

Soccer, Tourism, Creative Commons and more




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6/25/06

Catching an Unexpected (Harikrishna) Parade



Harikrishna Parade, NYC

See album.

It was the day before the Puerto Rican day parade a couple weeks ago. 5th avenue was gearing up for the next day's party with its salsa- syncopation, boisterous spirit and flag toting boricuas. Little did we know that a colorful little Harikrishna parade was in the cards for that very day. Thankfully, my camera was in tow.

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6/21/06

Everyday Heros, Late Boycott, Snake Eating & more

Sculptures for Peace
Pirates of the Caribbean Boycott
  • Interesting, well intentioned, but maybe a bit late?
Ti-Jean, Everyday Hero
  • Touching account of the life of Ti-Jean, a Haitian NGO worker over at the Haiti Innovation Blog. My favorite excerpt:
    Haiti is full of everyday heroes who struggle, intellectually and physically, to build a new Haiti. You won’t see them in the mass media. Tourists won’t find them. Development consultants won’t meet many of them. But when you read about unrest and turmoil in Haiti, remember people like Ti Jean who fight for the dignity and stability their country deserves. It will be a struggle, there will be disappointments, but remembering people like Ti Jean inspires all of us, and makes, as Haitians say, the load less heavy.
  • Very true. I can think of many such heros.

  • Screening of "Un Certain Bord de Mer," Film on Arabs in Haiti
    • Again from Haiti Innovation Blog:
      At its second showing in Haiti this past Wednesday evening about 50 some people showed up to watch the film ‘Un Certain Bord de Mer’ at MWEM, an experimental center for visual communication and the only place to catch a good flick in Port-au-Prince. A film by Haitian director Mario Delatour, ‘Un Certain Bord de Mer’ is unique in its subject, the migration of Arabs, from Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere to Haiti since 1866 and their role since then.
    • The title of Haiti Innovation's post is "Arab Manje Koulev" ("Arabs eat snakes" in Creole), probably after an early stereotype held by non-Arab Haitians in the early days of the (mostly christian) migrants in the 19th century.
    Anti-Gay Activism in Jamaica Intensifies

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6/20/06

Six Degrees of Caribbean Bloggers, Rasta, Polygamy and more

Six Degrees of Brooklyn Caribbean Blogger Separation (or is that Closeness?)
  • I bumped into fellow Brooklyn-based Haitian blogger Ferentz Lafargue accidentally at a Brooklyn Cafe last Sunday, now look what he started... Faithful to his Yale PhD education, he calls it "Deconstructing the Ubiquitous Image of a Haitian Brooklyn Blogger". Hmm... You should read the whole thing but his conclusion should clue you in on just how many twists, turns, cousins, bloggers, people and "accidents" are involved:
    So, I don't know if you call this six degrees of separation, a small world, kiskeyAcity, the global parish, the homelands, or as Yemi has declared: "deconstructing the ubiquitous image of a haitian brooklyn blogger," to me it's just another day on the nightshift.

Sharon Marley on Rastafari and Polygamy

  • Judging from a recent interview by the Jamaica observer with Sharon Marley (Bob's oldest daughter), it looks like Generation X women (or maybe just Sharon) in the Marley clan are not too thrilled with some of the gender-related implications of Rastafari. Here is a juicy excerpt:
    Sharon is also unhappy about how Rastafarian women are treated by their men. "I don't like the burden put on some Rasta women. They don't want them to look good, to wear certain things and wear makeup."
    She is somewhat conservative on the question of polygamy, which is practised by many Rastafarian men. "That has been around for many years. I can't change that. My mother didn't fight with any of the mothers of my father's children. But now that my brothers are having children with different women, some of them are not getting along with each other."
  • Surprise, surprise...
African-American Blog Picks
  • Was Malcolm X Gay? asks Temple University Prof. Marc Lamont Hill. The answer, although well thought out and reasoned is just as surprising as the question.
Haiti


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6/19/06

Haiti: Digicel and the Telecom Wars


In writing the following article for GV, I raked the internet looking for negative feedback on Digicel's recent launch in Haiti and ... could find hardly any. The only people who are visibly upset are competitors Haitel and Comcel-Voila (who had to decrease their prices) and local regulatory body CONATEL who has tended to side with the latter. There has got to be another side to this story (no one wants to give a non-locally owned giant corporation a free pass), but I haven't come across it yet. I'll let you know when I (and if) do.

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digicelmartinique
Digicel billboard, Martinique. By blogger Greg at InternetRapide.com.

Jamaica-based Caribbean telecom giant Digicel has a presence in over a dozen countries in the region. Digicel officially launched operations on the Haitian market in May to much resistance from local private telecoms Haitel and Comcel but bloggers and other web commentators seem to agree that Digicel’s presence on the Haitian market is actually a good thing for local consumers’ pockets, for their safety as well as potential job creation.

Launching a $130 million investment

Martiniquan blogger InternetRapide.com chronicled (Fr) the launch when it happened in early May:

Digicel offers have been commercialized since May 3, 2006. Digicel obtained a license to operate a GSM network on the island since June 2005. The operators already in place in Haiti operate on CDMA and TDMA networks (…) The launch in Haiti is an important step in the development of Irish magnate Denis O'Brien's company and represents 130 million dollars in investment.


A Haitian creole-speaking commentator seemed enthusiastic (Kr) about the launch in her comment on Internetrapide.com's blog:
Digicel you are the best. If you want to cover Haiti, just go to all corners that others do not reach. Put antennas in small towns where others do not go; you will see results. All will come to you. When will you activate service? Many are awaiting activation. Thank you. I love you.

Jobs and Investment, Please

Read more.

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