Archive for the 'Politic' Category

Dith Pran, Photojournalist and Survivor of the Killing Fields, Dies at 65

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Dith Pran, a photojournalist for The New York Times whose gruesome ordeal in the killing fields of Cambodia was re-created in a 1984 movie that gave him an eminence he tenaciously used to press for his people’s rights, died on Sunday at a hospital in New Brunswick, N.J. He was 65 and lived in Woodbridge, N.J.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, which had spread, said his friend Sydney H. Schanberg.

Mr. Dith saw his country descend into a living hell as he scraped and scrambled to survive the barbarous revolutionary regime of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979, when as many as two million Cambodians — a third of the population — were killed, experts estimate. Mr. Dith survived through nimbleness, guile and sheer desperation. His credo: Make no move unless there was a 50-50 chance of not being killed.

He had been a journalistic partner of Mr. Schanberg, a Times correspondent assigned to Southeast Asia. He translated, took notes and pictures, and helped Mr. Schanberg maneuver in a fast-changing milieu. With the fall of Phnom Penh in 1975, Mr. Schanberg was forced from the country, and Mr. Dith became a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge, the Cambodian Communists.

Mr. Schanberg wrote about Mr. Dith in newspaper articles and in The New York Times Magazine, in a 1980 cover article titled “The Death and Life of Dith Pran.” (A book by the same title appeared in 1985.) The story became the basis of the movie “The Killing Fields.”

The film, directed by Roland Joffé, showed Mr. Schanberg, played by Sam Waterston, arranging for Mr. Dith’s wife and children to be evacuated from Phnom Penh as danger mounted. Mr. Dith, portrayed by Dr. Haing S. Ngor (who won an Academy Award as best supporting actor), insisted on staying in Cambodia with Mr. Schanberg to keep reporting the news. He believed that his country could be saved only if other countries grasped the gathering tragedy and responded.

A dramatic moment, both in reality and cinematically, came when Mr. Dith saved Mr. Schanberg and other Western journalists from certain execution by talking fast and persuasively to the trigger-happy soldiers who had captured them.

(more…)

احمد بورقانی رفت

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Photo by Pooyan Tabatabaei - Boorghani - پویان طباطبایی

Toronto leads for Sharing Central Financing

Saturday, April 21st, 2007

Photo by Pooyan Tabatabaei - David Miller - Mayor of Toronto - پویان طباطبایی

Mayor David Miller has won the attention by demanding 1 cent from GST for his city and this demand for 1% of GST is exciting all cities. The cities face a financial crunch and the money doled to them is ties with strings. These cities that almost mini states desire to perform, but are hamstrung. In order to be the growth engines of the state, local communities incur major expenses to attract, retain and expand businesses. First and foremost, they have to provide quality basic services. Basic services appear to be just as important to economic health as specific economic development services from the perspective of municipal officials involved in economic development. A strong public service foundation is necessary and, rightly so, is taken for granted by existing businesses and assumed by business prospects. Certain types of local programs, such as parks and recreation, are often referred to as discretionary. However, they are an important part of the quality of life in communities, a factor that can contribute to lower crime rates and that is an inherent part of the package that businesses and their workers expect.

In addition, cities and towns fund a wide variety of services that are directly geared to economic development. A wide spectrum of economic development activities and tools are utilized by cities and towns to support, promote, retain, expand and attract businesses. These include programs such as technical assistance for start-up small businesses, funding for regional economic development organizations, funding for chambers of commerce, and incentive policies, such as reductions in impact fees and local sales tax rebates. Most cities and towns play major roles in their own growth and development and, therefore, in the country’s growth and development.

Cities and towns are good investments for both the state and the business communities. The adage of the 21st century, “think globally, act locally,” exemplifies the importance of local communities in a global economy as the world flattens. Thriving local economies reduce the costs of municipal (and state) government in the long run. State policies that strengthen municipalities are a good investment and result in substantial increases to the state treasury.

Probably the greatest constraint facing city governments as they seek to address poverty is the inadequacy of financial resources. How can cities increase their resources? Property and business taxes are major sources of revenue for most large cities. But property tax is politically sensitive, unresponsive to inflation and economic growth and difficult to enforce which is widely seen as having a negative economic impact.

Normally under a federal system, Ottawa’s role should be limited to funding only those services, such as immigration and urban aboriginal programs, for which it is directly responsible, as well as programs, such as social housing, that are of a national interest or where there is a compelling reason for Ottawa to have a national presence.

According to Professor Harry Kitchen , author of Financing City Services: A prescription for Future, “…increased funding responsibilities for Canadian cities, reduced provincial grants, and a corresponding increase in reliance on own-source revenues over the past 12 to 15 years have changed the fiscal environment in which cities now operate.” That in itself, however, does not justify new federal involvement in financing cities.

Cities have become increasingly important players in the competitive global economy. The result is the current call for a massive influx of federal dollars under a renewed national “cities agenda”, but Kitchen concludes that there is much the cities could do to put their own houses in order.

The major points relevant to a revival of any constitutional initiative are that the provinces will jealously guard the constitutional arrangements that give them exclusive control over their municipalities. Any injection of the municipal question into national constitutional discussions has, in the past, provoked a reaction that has jeopardized even the ad hoc relationship between the federal and municipal governments.

Up to now, municipalities have been allowed sole occupancy of the field of real property taxation. Property taxes include levies both for general municipal purposes and also for schools. Provincial grants – the other source of municipal revenues – are given with strings attached in the form of conditions that govern how the money will be spent. These grants are made to further certain municipal objectives and can include money earmarked for schools and social services. The conditions placed on provincial money mean that municipalities are limited in their ability to spend their grants for locally determined purposes but must make choices that meet provincial policy goals. Interestingly, about 80% of provincial transfers to municipalities are for a specific purpose, while roughly 50% of federal transfers to municipalities are for a specific purpose.

Photo by Pooyan Tabatabaei - David Miller - Mayor of Toronto - پویان طباطبایی

There is a definite merit in Miller’s crusade. The history of other cities reveals that all such cities that received funding in an innovative manner have been able to show results that are simply staggering.

The Prefecture of Paris receives a special share from the tax collected and the civic services are something to be proud of.

The City of Shanghai has a provincial level status, and this status enables it to collect all taxes, and transmit some share (almost 23%) to the federal government, and retain the rest. It enables it to provide all such services that make this city one of the most enviable ones).

European Union parliament is also seized of the issue. In its meeting held in February, the Parliament took note of the cities that need to provide all essential services, but the financial crunch makes then inhibit from taking such steps. The parliament recommended that such cities, that have A1 status, should have special share from the Federal Kitty. So what Mayor Miller wants is not something different.

The cities have the ultimate responsibility for providing education, health, transport , water, economic development and a host of other services. These cities do need not grants, as grants are inhibitory by the very reason of being tied to specifics. They come with strings attached. The cities need finance that can be used as per their needs.

David Miller’s demand is a reality in Poway. The city of Poway receives 1 percent of the sales tax collected, which is 7.75 percent on sales made within the city limits; the rest is split between the state and the county. City officials expect Poway’s total sales tax income to be about $13.2 million for the current fiscal year that ends June 30. That figure represents about 34 percent of Poway’s $38 million annual budget, making sales taxes the city’s single-largest source of revenue. Poway’s sales tax income typically goes into the city’s general fund. Because Gateway’s sales patterns tend to fluctuate dramatically from one quarter to another, though, the city puts that money into a special projects fund, said Peter Moote, deputy director of administrative services for the city.

In California, local sales tax revenues accrue to the jurisdiction in which the sale occurs. This gives cities an incentive to promote the location of retail businesses within their boundaries. Although sales taxes account for only a modest portion of total city revenues, cities regard them highly because they represent a major share of their discretionary income.

The concept of sharing GST is innovative for Canadian people, but is an accepted fact all over, and has proven that is one of the most equitable ways of funding. After all businesses are supported by the City, so if they have a share in the revenue generated, it is only fair and just.

Prepared on behalf NEPMCC by Dr. Bikram Lamba, a political and business strategist and Ombudsman of NEPMCC. He can be contacted at torconsult@rogers.com.

اگر «روز» در زمان مصدق در می‌آمد

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

از

حسين درخشان


می‌گویند کاریکاتوری که در شماره‌ی پیش روز آمده بود مال قبل از آزادی سربازان بوده است. خب، باشد. پس حالا این یکی جدیدترش را ببینید که حتی از آن یکی هم بدتر است.

کاریکاتوریست «روز» از حل شدن شگفت‌آور و خلاقانه‌ی بزرگترین بحران سال‌های اخیر ایران فقط یک چیز را—لابد فرافکنانه—دیده و آن هم دینامیک بی‌اهمیت و بچگانه‌ی جذابیت جنسی ملوان زن بریتانیایی است برای رییس‌جمهور کشورش. او آگاهانه تمام مناسبات موجود قدرت در این بحران دو هفته‌ای و همه‌ی لایه‌ها و ابعادش و پیامدهای آن را برای مردم کشورش، پدر و مادر و خواهر و برادرش، تقلیل داده به سکس و سردبیر «روز» هم با افتخار آن را منتشر کرده است.

این توهین‌آمیزترین واکنشی است که یک ایرانی می‌توانست در ازای دویست یورو پول به چنین اتفاقی نشان دهد. واکنشی حقیرانه‌ که حتی زردترین روزنامه‌ی انگلیس، سان، هم هرگز به اتفاقاتی چنین نشان نداده و نمی‌دهد.

با همین طرز نگاه، شک ندارم که اگر «روز» در زمان مصدق درمی‌آمد، کاریکاتوری از نخست‌وزیر پیر و بی‌باک ملتش می‌کشید و در آن مثلا نشان می‌داد که مصدق پس از سخنرانی‌اش در سازمان ملل، شب‌‌هنگام، کنار منشی موطلایی نماینده‌ی چرچیل در سازمان ملل عاجزانه خوابیده و آرزو می‌کند که کاش می‌توانست راست کند و موطلایی انگلیسی را از نظر جنسی ارضا کند.

شیرین عبادی در آن مقاله‌ای می‌نوشت و به مصدق می‌تاخت که بجای جنجال آفرینی و به خطر انداختن منافع مردم ایران بهتر است ایده‌ی ملی شدن نفت و قطع دست بریتانیا از درآمد کشورش را به رفراندم بگذارد.

مسعود بهنود می‌نوشت که هنگام قدم زدن در خیابان ساوث کنزینگتون، روزنامه‌ی تایم در دست، دختر جوان خطیب‌السلطنه را دیده که در لندن دارد با تمام کردن دکترای حقوق برای خودش خانمی می‌شود و از قول دخترک جوان برای ما نقل می‌کند که در کلاس درس حقوق بین‌الملل تمام ششصد و بیست و سه نفر دانشجوی انگلیسی پس از شنیدن اسم مصدق از استادشان از شدت خنده به گریه افتاده‌اند و استادشان برایشان دو ساعت و چهل و چهار دقیقه‌ی تمام توضیح داده که چرا روش ایران را در علم حقوق بین‌الملل به عنوان دیپلماسی مندرس می‌نامند.

حسین باستانی با اسم مستعار نیک‌زاد حقیقت‌بین گزارشی می‌نوشت و در آن به نخست وزیر ایران «هشدار» می‌داد که «رویکرد» «تهاجمی»‌اش در «مواجهه» با «امپراطوری» محترم «و» بزرگ «بریطانیا» با توجه «به» شرایط «سنی» نخست‌وزیر به مصلحت نیست «و» بهتر است آن «روزنامه‌ی عصر طهران» به جای انتقاد از «دولت فخیمه‌ی» «بریطانیا» به «حقوق» پایمال شده‌ی کارمندان «بریطانیایی» «کمپانی» «انگلو-ایرانین» بپردازد.

امید معماریان با یکی دیگر از شش اسم مستعارش گزارشی درباره‌ی وضع نابسامان خانه‌های سالمندان طهران می‌نوشت و با مقایسه‌ی آن با وضع درخشان خانه‌‌های سالمندان در کالیفرنیای جنوبی به ... ادامه

URGENT CALL FOR SUPPORT

Wednesday, December 20th, 2006