среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.
FED:R&D tax offset to boost investment: Carr
AAP General News (Australia)
08-23-2011
FED:R&D tax offset to boost investment: Carr
PARLY 014
CANBERRA, Aug 23 AAP - Australian firms investing in research and development (R&D)
can now access more government assistance to boost the nation's productivity, Innovation
and Industry Minister Kim Carr says.
Senator Carr said the passage of the Tax Laws Amendment (Research and Development)
Bill 2010 and the Income Tax Rates Amendment (Research and Development) Bill 2010 in the
Senate on Tuesday would underpin investment in innovation.
"It is about building support, changing the culture of business in this country so
to ensure that there are higher limits of investments," he told the chamber on Tuesday.
Eligible firms with a turnover of less than $20 million could claim a 45 per cent refundable
tax offset while all other eligible businesses could claim a non-refundable 40 per cent
R&D tax offset.
Senator Carr said R&D investment had increased significantly in the past 15 years.
"This is a scheme that in the 1990s was attracting something less than $300 million
per annum in terms of support, to the position where we estimate in the next financial
year will require $1.8 billion per annum," he said.
Australian Greens senator Christine Milne said innovation was essential for the economy.
"Increasing productivity through innovation now has to be Australia's top priority,"
Senator Milne said.
"With these important structural reforms, much more support will be delivered to the
small and medium-sized enterprises which are genuinely the engine-room of innovation in
Australia."
But manufacturing lobbyist the Australian Industry Group (Ai Group) was sceptical the
new bill would boost R&D in the sector because it would take time for the changes to filter
through,
"We will be closely monitoring the take-up and effectiveness of the scheme and would
urge the government to be open to future amendments," Ai Group chief executive Heather
Ridout said.
"It will be important for the government to make a substantial effort to build understanding
in industry of these changes."
The bills were expected to have no impact on the budget's underlying cash balance in
the four years to 2014/15.
AAP el/klm
KEYWORD: RESEARCH
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
WA: Teachers to stop work next Thursday
AAP General News (Australia)
02-21-2008
WA: Teachers to stop work next Thursday
PERTH, Feb 21 AAP - Teachers and public sector staff are poised to launch industrial
action in Western Australia after what they call an inadequate response from government
on pay rises.
The State School Teachers Union of WA (SSTUWA) has contacted its members to gauge their
feelings on the issue and will hold a stop work meeting next Thursday morning.
Teachers will return to work on that afternoon but further industrial action …
NSW:Drunk survivor can't remember fatal crash
AAP General News (Australia)
04-27-2011
NSW:Drunk survivor can't remember fatal crash
SYDNEY, April 27 AAP - A man who was in a car which crashed and killed two teenagers
has told an inquest his last recollection was being in a beer-sculling competition with
one of them.
Shayne Hausner, 14, and Cailin Deering, 16, drowned when the car they were in ran off
an embankment into the Murray River at Barnawartha in northern Victoria on March 11, 2007.
The sole survivor, 26-year-old Billy Christopher Dixon of Sydney, escaped from the
submerged car through a window.
Giving evidence at the inquest into the teenagers' death at Glebe Coroner's Court on
Wednesday, Mr Dixon said his last recollection was being in a sculling competition with
Shayne, who he thought was aged "roughly" 17.
He told the inquest he had been convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol
and unlicensed driving in relation to his driving preceding the crash.
Mr Dixon agreed the charge covered a period up to the time he drove from a camp site
with the two teenagers in the car.
He pleaded guilty in Wodonga Magistrate's Court to the offences and received a six-month
jail term which was reduced to three months on appeal.
Police have been unable to determine who was driving the car at the time it entered the river.
Mr Dixon told the inquest he believed Shayne and another male had a go at driving his
car on the day before the accident.
The inquest is continuing.
AAP mss/nep/wjf/nb
KEYWORD: HAUSNER
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW:Keneally defends family package
AAP General News (Australia)
02-12-2011
NSW:Keneally defends family package
New South Wales Premier KRISTINA KENEALLY has denied her Fairness for Families package
is a fraud and says the state opposition should do their homework on it.
Liberal campaign spokeswoman GLADYS BEREJIKLIAN earlier today said the 900-million-dollar
package unveiled by the premier last Sunday .. doesn't extend to stamp duty and land taxes
.. labelling it a fraud.
But Ms KENEALLY has hit back at the opposition .. telling reporters in Sydney the opposition
was simply trying to find another way to attack the package.
She says some taxes and charges aren't in the Fairness for Families act because they're
dealt with in other pieces of legislation.
AAP RTV ih/sw/
KEYWORD: POLLNSW BEREJIKLIAN (SYDNEY)
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW:Building on fire in Kensington
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2010
NSW:Building on fire in Kensington
Police say people should avoid Anzac Parade in Kensington in Sydney's east due to a
fire at a university campus office.
The fire broke out in a building believed to part of the University of NSW just before midday.
About 200 firefighters are still battling to put it out .. and Anzac Parade is closed
in both directions between Doncaster Avenue and Barker Street.
About 25 people have been evacuated from their homes as a precaution .. and 500 people
have been evacuated from a nearby auditorium.
AAP RTV lxs/jmt
KEYWORD: FIRE (SYDNEY)
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Qantas says flights to London, Frankfurt to resume =3
AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2010
Fed: Qantas says flights to London, Frankfurt to resume =3
A flight from London to Sydney via Singapore is scheduled to depart at 12.05pm local
time, and a flight from London to Melbourne via Hong Kong will depart at 12.20pm local
time.
Two flights from Singapore bound for London and one to Frankfurt are due to depart
on Wednesday evening.
There will also be one flight from Bangkok to London.
Early on Thursday, there will be a flight from Hong Kong to London.
MORE ih/klm/mn
KEYWORD: VOLCANO QANTAS UPDATE 3 SYDNEY
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Shoppers get more than they bargain for from the Sheriff
AAP General News (Australia)
12-08-2009
Vic: Shoppers get more than they bargain for from the Sheriff
MELBOURNE, Dec 8 AAP - Almost $1 million in fines has been dished out by the Sheriff's
Office at the southern hemisphere's largest shopping centre.
During the three-day operation at Melbourne's Chadstone shopping centre that ended
last week more than 14,000 cars were checked, and 3,500 outstanding warrants were finalised.
Officers even applied 138 wheel clamps and issued licence suspension warnings for continued
fine evasion.
Victorian Attorney-General Rob Hulls said only a small number of people ignored repeated
warnings and court enforcement orders.
"The Sheriff's Office is firm but fair on fine defaulters by giving them ample opportunity
to settle their debt and, if a matter is not settled, serious fine evaders face a series
of tough sanctions such as wheel clamping, suspension of licence and registration non-renewal,"
he said in a statement.
A new SMS payment reminder service has been introduced to assist people who have payment
plans for their outstanding fines.
Anyone who wants to settle their debt or apply for an extension of time should contact
the Sheriff's Office on 1300 743 743.
AAP ees/gfr/maur
KEYWORD: SHERIFF
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Green power boost set for nod, but households may foot bill
AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2009
Fed: Green power boost set for nod, but households may foot bill
A massive boost to renewable energy is expected to be approved at today's Council of
Australian Governments meeting in Hobart .. but households might end up footing the bill.
The federal government wants 20 per cent of electricity to come from renewable sources
by 2020 .. and that Renewable Energy Target scheme is separate to emissions trading scheme.
The plan is a huge boost to wind and solar power .. but expected to push up the price
of electricity.
And .. a plan to exempt some businesses and industries from having to pay for it is
causing controversy .. with suggestions that households will pay instead.
AAP RTV ca/kms/tnf/wz/crh
KEYWORD: COAG CLIMATE (CANBERRA)
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
WA: Crash claims two lives
AAP General News (Australia)
12-27-2008
WA: Crash claims two lives
Two people have died in a head-on collision in Western Australia .. bringing the state's
toll to six this holiday season.
A four-wheel drive carrying four people and a car with two people collided at Lake
Clifton .. south of Mandurah .. at about 2pm (WST) on Saturday.
Two people .. both believed to be from the four-wheel drive .. were killed at the scene.
Two other people have been airlifted to Perth in a serious condition.
Police say at this stage details of the people involved in the accident are not available.
The deaths brings the state's holiday road toll to six.
(EDS: National road toll figures are for the period 0001 December 19 to 2359 January
2. Some states and territories have different periods.)
AAP RTV kd/
KEYWORD: TOLL WA (PERTH)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Banks' rate stance "serious issue" for economy: Swan
AAP General News (Australia)
08-18-2008
Fed: Banks' rate stance "serious issue" for economy: Swan
By Colin Brinsden, Economics Correspondent
CANBERRA, Aug 18 AAP - Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan says the retail banks will be putting
the economy at risk if they don't match any interest rate cut by the Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA).
The RBA will release minutes from its August 5 board meeting tomorrow - a meeting where
it appears to have had a marked change of heart about the economic outlook.
It has already clearly indicated that it intends to cut its key cash rate because of
a rapid slowdown in economic growth - financial markets expect the first move to be next
month.
But the retail banks refuse to guarantee they will follow suit, drawing a series of
threats and warnings from the government.
"This is a very serious issue," Mr Swan told the Fairfax Radio Network in Adelaide.
"It's a very serious issue for households, it's a very serious issue for business and
it's a very serious issue for our national economy.
"There is absolutely no excuse for banks not to pass an official rate cut from the
reserve bank in full, should that occur. Absolutely no excuse."
Deputy RBA Governor Ric Battellino and Assistant Governor Philip Lowe separately expressed
similar sentiments last week, saying that borrowing conditions had improved for retail
banks and shouldn't stand in the way of lower mortgage rates.
Some economists believe it was last month's independent rate increases by the banks
that are forcing the RBA to act quickly in lowering rates for fear of crippling the economy.
Lehman Brothers Australia chief economist Stephen Roberts said tomorrow's minutes may
show whether there was any discussion about cutting the cash rate at the August 5 meeting.
"It may be interesting to see whether there was any ... discussion about the size of
rate cuts and their relationship to bank lending rates, which seem to have become the
interest rates that the RBA has become most interested in for policy purposes," Mr Roberts
said.
Financial markets are betting on a quarter percentage point cut in the 7.25 per cent
cash rate at the RBA's September 2 meeting, and at least one further one before the end
of the year.
The commercial banks have increased their lending rates by around 0.55 percentage points
on top of the two increases made by the RBA this year, blaming the increases on the global
credit crunch which has forced up their own borrowing costs.
Mr Swan said there was justification for the some of that increase by the retail banks.
"In recent times, the cost of borrowing money short term has come down and that is
a considerable benefit to the banks," Mr Swan said.
"What I've said is that we are always looking at the extent of competition within the
mortgage market and if the banks don't move, I've said the Treasury are examining a range
of options and all options are on the table."
He would not elaborate on these options, but ruled out that the government would regulate
interest rates.
"There is no way in the world we can return to a situation where the federal government
regulates interest rates," he said.
AAP cb/it/cdh
KEYWORD: ECONOMY NIGHTLEAD
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED: Attention on Therese's fashion is "silly": Gillard
AAP General News (Australia)
04-11-2008
FED: Attention on Therese's fashion is "silly": Gillard
CANBERRA, April 11 AAP - Acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard says media focus on Therese
Rein's wardrobe is a little bit silly.
Ms Rein, wife of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, has been the target of sniping from so-called
fashion experts while accompanying her husband on his 18 day world tour.
Ms Gillard, often critiqued for her changing hairstyles, says people should be judged
on their contributions not their fashion.
"It all gets a little bit silly, whether it's Therese (Rein) or other women in public
life," Ms Gillard told the Fairfax Radio Network.
"I'd like to think that people get value for their accomplishments and their character,
more than the colour of what they're wearing that day.
"That is a hundredth-order question compared with the contributions that people make
and Therese Rein is someone who has made a considerable contribution in her own right."
AAP sld/rl/jec/mn
KEYWORD: FASHION GILLARD
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
SA: Wine export growth slows to lowest level in nine years
AAP General News (Australia)
12-07-2007
SA: Wine export growth slows to lowest level in nine years
ADELAIDE, Dec 7 AAP - The growth of Australia's wine exports has slowed to the lowest
level, by volume, in nine years, figures show.
Wine exports grew in volume terms by 44 million litres in the year ended November 2007,
the Australian Wine and Brandy Corporation says.
That figure was the lowest incremental volume growth since 1998, the corporation's
latest wine export approval report showed.
But in value terms, the same 12-month period to the end of November recorded the biggest
increase in three years - an incremental rise of $227 million.
The result evidenced more exports of higher priced bottled wines, particularly reds,
and less of lower priced soft pack wines, the report said.
Overall, the 795 million litres exported in the year ended November was valued at $3.023
billion - an eight per cent rise on the corresponding 12 month period.
The United Kingdom (289 million litres valued at $980 million) remained the largest
export market, followed by the United States (211 million litres valued at $938 million)
and Canada (50 million litres valued at $289 million).
AAP sl/jnb/de
KEYWORD: WINE EXPORTS (WITH FACTBOX)
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Rain falls on Canberra service, but 30,000 still attend=2
AAP General News (Australia)
04-25-2007
Fed: Rain falls on Canberra service, but 30,000 still attend=2
The RSL's ACT branch president Gary Brodie read the Anzac dedication, saying Australians
owed a great debt of gratitude to the soldiers who landed at Gallipoli 92 years ago today.
"The Australia and New Zealand Army Corps at Gallipoli made immortal the name of Anzac
and established an imperishable tradition of selfless service, of devotion to duty, and
of fighting for all that is best in human relationships," he said.
"Let us dedicate ourselves to the service of the ideals for which they died.
"Let us, with God's help, give our utmost to make the world what they would have wished
it to be - a better and happier place for all of its people, through whatever means are
open to us."
Governor-General Michael Jeffery attended today's dawn service at the Australian War
Memorial, continuing a tradition he began almost 50 years ago as a cadet at the Duntroon
military college.
"It never fails to move me, to be up here from this beautiful shrine looking down Anzac
Parade to the Old Parliament House and the new Parliament House," he told the Nine Network.
"To see the gathering and the increasing number of people coming to pay their respect
and, I guess, their homage.
"I think they (the Anzacs) up there are part of it, I think this is a spiritual place,
our war memorial, and I think the public feel that."
Major-General Jeffery will deliver the commemorative address during the main Anzac
Day service in Canberra later this morning, which Prime Minister John Howard and Opposition
Leader Kevin Rudd will attend.
AAP dcr/cjh/jlw
KEYWORD: ANZAC CANBERRA LEAD 2 CANBERRA
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Rudd urges tolerance at Christmas
AAP General News (Australia)
12-24-2006
Fed: Rudd urges tolerance at Christmas
KEVIN RUDD has urged Australians to respect one another's religious beliefs and to
think of the poor and ill this Christmas.
In his festive season message .. the Opposition Leader says it's time to reflect on
how blessed Australia is .. but to remember that not everyone is so fortunate.
He says Christmas also causes us to reflect on our responsibilities beyond ourselves
.. for the lonely .. for those suffering illness and for those who have very little.
Mr RUDD says for those of the Christian faith .. Christmas is a time of special spiritual
significance .. which all people of goodwill respect.
But he says just the same respect is needed to those of other faiths .. and those of no faith.
The new Labor leader says people should also pray for Australian military personnel
serving overseas .. who won't be with their families on Christmas Day.
AAP RTV dcr/wz/els/
KEYWORD: XMAS RUDD (CANBERRA)
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: House gutted by fire in suspicious blaze =2
AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2006
Vic: House gutted by fire in suspicious blaze =2
Police are also investigating two deliberately lit house fires in as many days at Norlane
in Geelong .. south east of Melbourne.
The first fire was at a house in Plume street .. about 12.30 yesterday morning (AEST).
Police discovered the second house in Pettitt Crescent well ablaze about 3.30 this morning.
Both houses were vacant.
Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
AAP RTV cmb/crh
KEYWORD: GUTTED 2 MELBOURNE REOPENS
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Kokoda to educate new generations
AAP General News (Australia)
04-10-2006
Fed: Kokoda to educate new generations
By Jonathon Moran, National Entertainment Writer
SYDNEY, April 10 AAP - A film based on Australia's bloody campaign against the Japanese
along the Kokoda Track highlights the importance of this historical event to a new generation,
says lead actor Jack Finsterer.
Kokoda is set in 1942 and tells the story of a small group of Australian soldiers cut
off from their supply and communication lines along the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea.
"This script not only honours the memory and the deeds of the diggers that fought out
there, it also makes it accessible to a younger generation, which is vitally important,"
said Finsterer, 37, who plays soldier Jack Scholt.
"I am deeply honoured to be in a film called Kokoda - the responsibility of that was
not lost on me."
The 96km Kokoda Track, linking the southern and northern coasts of Papua New Guinea,
was one of Japan's first significant reverses in the Pacific war.
It was feared that if the Japanese secured Kokoda, they would have gone on to seize
Port Moresby and then threaten northern Australia.
More than 2,100 Australian soldiers were killed and a further 3,500 were wounded in
fighting to prevent Japanese troops from reaching Port Moresby.
Kokoda, the movie, marks the first time the story of those soldiers has been told on
the big screen.
The film opens nationally on April 20 with special screenings being held around the
country to coincide with Anzac Day commemorative events.
The film directed by Alister Grierson also stars Shane Bourne, Christopher Baker, Tom
Budge, Steve Le Marquand, William McInnes and Travis McMahon.
"It is taking certain elements that were a common experience to many soldiers and turning
that into a story," explained Finsterer.
The film was shot at Queensland's Mount Tamborine last year.
Finsterer described the shoot as "physically demanding", saying the conditions helped
him to "get in character".
"It fed into the whole character and the feeling of Kokoda," he said.
"For me, the harder it was, the better. Those guys did it a billion times harder than
we did though."
Kokoda is Finsterer's first major film role. His previous credits include parts in
TV series All Saints, McLeod's Daughters, Blue Heelers, and tele-movies Jessica and Big
Reef.
He's also worked with the Sydney Theatre Company, where he met his wife, fellow actor
Justine Clarke.
Finsterer and Clarke, who recently performed in the STC's production of Hedda Gabler
in New York with Cate Blanchett, juggle their careers with being parents.
"It just seems to work out," said the father of two - Josef, 4, and Nina, 2.
"We have crossover periods which can be difficult to juggle but we have managed."
AAP jwm/rj/sp
KEYWORD: KOKODA FINSTERER (PIX AVAILABLE)
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.
substance over form
BTI Enhances Customer Service with eQuality Software from Witness Systems.
Business Editors/High-Tech Writers
ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 21, 2002
Southeastern integrated communications provider heightens customer
service operations with customer interaction recording and
performance evaluation solutions
Witness Systems (NASDAQ: WITS), a leading global provider of performance optimization software and services, today announced that integrated communications provider Business Telecom, Inc. (BTI) has selected and implemented its eQuality(R) software. The company is using the software to capture customer intelligence and optimize workforce performance, including service delivered through the customer sales/service representatives (CSRs) at its 120-seat contact center in Raleigh, N.C.
BTI - which provides business voice, data and Internet services - deployed two products from Witness Systems' eQuality software suite. The voice and data recording solution, eQuality Balance, enables BTI to capture agent-customer conversations, as well as the corresponding activities taking place at the agent's desktop, such as data entry and screen navigation. The other product implemented by BTI, eQuality Evaluation, is an online agent performance evaluation solution that allows customers to assess staff performance and development needs, as well as gauge business process effectiveness. Using eQuality, BTI has seen improvements in its ability to provide quality customer service through knowledgeable CSRs, while boosting productivity. The software also has enabled management to observe and evaluate service delivery for a complete quality assessment based on eQuality's synchronized voice and data recording functionality.
"With eQuality, we have established a foundation for our quality assurance program that has allowed us to gain a better understanding of not only our customers' requirements, but also the needs of our staff," said Beverly Fuller, director of BTI customer service. "Our team can now leverage customer intelligence gathered through eQuality to learn more about our customers' experiences. This information enables us to focus on maintaining and improving BTI's service excellence."
About BTI
BTI (bti.com) is the premiere integrated communications provider of voice, data and Internet services to businesses in the Southeastern U.S. Founded in 1983, BTI serves more than 30,000 customers and operates 22 sales offices. The company owns and operates a network covering 4,400 route miles of lit fiber for extensive regional penetration, with 14 Lucent Technologies 5E 2000 digital local switches to serve local markets, as well as four network operations centers with Alcatel 600E digital long distance switches. BTI is one of the largest privately held communications providers in the country, with annual revenues in excess of $286 million.
About Witness Systems
Witness Systems (NASDAQ: WITS) provides the contact center industry's first integrated performance optimization software suite to help global enterprises capture customer intelligence and optimize workforce performance. Comprised of business-driven multimedia recording, performance analysis and e-learning management applications, the browser-based eQuality(R) solution is designed to enhance the quality of customer interactions across multiple communications media, including the telephone, e-mail and Web. The closed-loop suite enables companies to record, evaluate and analyze customer contacts, and then launch e-learning to develop staff, generate additional revenue, and achieve greater customer retention and loyalty. An integrated business consulting, implementation and training methodology provides services to support an effective, rapid deployment of eQuality that enables organizations to maximize their return on investment. For additional information about Witness Systems and its eQuality software suite, visit www.witness.com, or call 1.888.3.WITNESS.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-looking Statements Under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: Information in this release that involves Witness Systems' expectations, beliefs, hopes, plans, intentions or strategies regarding the future are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. These statements include statements about Witness Systems' strategies in the marketplace, its market position and its relationship with customers. All forward-looking statements included in this release are based upon information available to Witness Systems as of the date of the release, and the company assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statement. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results could differ materially from our current expectations. The factors that could cause actual future results to differ materially from current expectations include, but are not limited to, fluctuations in customer demand and the timing of orders; the company's ability to manage its growth; the risk of new product introductions and customer acceptance of new products; the rapid technological change which characterizes the company's markets; the risks associated with competition; the risks associated with international sales as the company expands its markets; and the ability of the company to compete successfully in the future, as well as other risks identified under the caption "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" in the company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001 and any other reports filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Witness, eQuality and the Witness logo are United States registered trademarks of Witness Systems, Inc., protected by laws of the U.S. and other countries. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners.
Ernst & Young Once Again Named One of the Most Admired Organizations for Knowledge Management.
Business Editors
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--June 11, 2001
Professional Services Leader Receives Most Admired Knowledge
Enterprise (MAKE) Award For Fourth Consecutive Year
Ernst & Young LLP announced today that it was again ranked one of the most admired knowledge enterprises in the world.
The 2001 Most Admired Knowledge Enterprises (MAKE(SM)) awards recognized Ernst & Young for the fourth year in a row, and it gave the firm top honors for "success in establishing a culture of continuous learning." The 2001 MAKE survey, conducted by Teleos in association with the KNOW Network, was completed by an expert panel, consisting of senior executives at Fortune Global 500 companies, chief knowledge officers and leading knowledge management practitioners.
"We are proud and honored to have received the Most Admired Knowledge Enterprises (MAKE) Award for the fourth consecutive year," said Tim Curry, Ernst & Young's Global Chief Knowledge Officer. "It is a prestigious award that recognizes world-class efforts in managing knowledge and we are particularly pleased that our culture of continuous learning has been recognized. This, together with our ability to provide an efficient infrastructure and high quality knowledge content through the Ernst & Young Center for Business Knowledge(R), has contributed to our overall organizational success and enabled our people all over the world to improve the service we provide to clients."
Started in 1998, the annual MAKE study is now the leading benchmark for the world's best knowledge-based organizations. Each year, the survey identifies organizations that stand above the crowd in the knowledge economy. In 2000, Ernst & Young was inducted into the MAKE Hall of Fame. Top MAKE Award winners, in addition to Ernst & Young, include Cisco Systems, General Electric, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, McKinsey & Company and Siemens.
Ernst & Young continuously strives to leverage the intellectual capital of its professionals to maintain its industry-leading position as an innovative driver of the knowledge economy. In 1993, the firm established the Ernst & Young Center for Business Knowledge (CBK) to make knowledge management a reality, and to bolster its capacity to create and share intellectual capital on a global scale. The CBK consists of an unparalleled worldwide network of content, people and knowledge programs that allow the firm's professionals to access the latest information on companies, industry trends, benchmarking studies and leading practices. Regional and global teams can also source business insights from 14 strategic locations around the world to generate timely proprietary research.
For Ernst & Young, the CBK drives integration of knowledge management into the daily responsibilities of its professionals. It ensures that the firm delivers significant client value through capturing, reshaping and transferring intellectual capital. Information generated by the CBK is stored and delivered throughout the firm's Intranet: the KnowledgeWeb. The KnowledgeWeb provides Ernst & Young's 78,000 people from around the world with instant access to collective knowledge from more than 1,200 knowledgebases, including best practices, industry news, information on previous client work and articles from over 5,500 publications.
Recent awards honoring Ernst & Young's industry leadership in providing critical knowledge and information services to its management and client-serving professionals include:
-- eWeek's Fast-Track 500 (November 2000) : Ernst & Young ranked among the nation's top 500 Internet leaders, information technology innovators and companies transforming their businesses into e-businesses. -- Information Week 500 (September 2000): The firm was recognized as one of the nation's most innovative users of information technology. -- Linkage, Inc.'s Vision Award (September 2000): Ernst & Young was named one of the top 10 companies in the world for the most creative and strategic processes in knowledge management and organizational learning. -- KMWorld magazine (July 2000): The firm was named one of the world's top "100 Companies That Matter" in knowledge management - those companies best positioned to influence markets and future business innovation through knowledge management technologies. -- CIO magazine's Web Business 50/50 award (July 2000): Ernst & Young was recognized as one of the top 50 Intranets that most impressively use technology and design.
About Teleos
Teleos is an independent knowledge management research company. The KNOW Network (www.knowledgebusiness.com) is a group of leading knowledge-based organizations dedicated to benchmarking and sharing best knowledge practices that lead to superior business performance. An executive summary of the 2001 MAKE survey can be requested by sending an email to infor@knowledgebusiness.com.
About Ernst & Young
Ernst & Young, a global leader in professional services, helps clients to quickly and confidently make financial decisions designed to enhance value. Its 78,000 people in more than 130 countries have the industry and financial experience to provide fresh perspectives on operating successfully in the new economy. Ernst & Young offers traditional audit and tax services, as well as customized services in corporate finance, online security, risk management, the valuation of intangibles and e-business acceleration. In addition, legal services are available in various parts of the world where permitted. A collection of Ernst & Young's latest ideas on the new economy can be found at www.ey.com/thoughtcenter.
Ernst & Young refers to the U.S. firm of Ernst & Young LLP and other members of the global Ernst & Young organization.
SiteROCK(SM) Corp. is First Management Service Provider to Achieve ISO 9001 Certification.
As IT Shortages Increase Demand for Outsourced Services, International Quality
Seal-Of-Approval Becomes Critical in Differentiating E-Business Service
Providers
EMERYVILLE, Calif., Aug. 1 /PRNewswire/ --
SiteROCK Corp. today became the first management service provider (MSP) to be recognized for its quality improvement and change management processes by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) based in Geneva, Switzerland. SiteROCK earned ISO 9001 certification for the processes it has developed to deliver its remote operations support services, which keep e-businesses up and running around the clock.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000203/SITEROCK )
Keeping an e-business up and performing 24 x 7 is an increasingly daunting task requiring the monitoring, measuring and managing of as many "moving parts" as the most complex manufacturing systems in the world. These moving parts, including co-located e-business systems, network providers and dependent third party applications, are critical to generating revenue and ensuring that service to the end user is speedy, efficient, and informative.
The complexity and constant change inherent in managing each link in this dynamic IT delivery chain demands precise, yet flexible processes similar to those used to ensure quality, output and efficiency in life-critical areas such as medical instrument manufacturing.
"SiteROCK is the first management services provider (MSP) to receive the internationally recognized standard of quality that ISO certification represents," said George Peabody, vice president and managing director, of Boston-based consultancy, Aberdeen Group. "In this new market, ISO certification gives customers needed assurance that their service provider has the processes in place to effectively manage e-business operations. Given the critical nature of their websites, e-businesses will require proven quality and accountability from their outsourcing providers."
ISO certification was a key factor in SiteROCK's recent selection by Stentor, Inc. to provide primary operations support for its Internet-based hospital networks. Stentor, Inc., a Silicon Valley-based medical informatics company, is a world leader in the management and distribution of diagnostic images.
"SiteROCK's ISO certification was the deal-maker for us," said Oran Muduroglu, president and CEO of Stentor, Inc. "Our mission is to deliver diagnostic-quality, full-fidelity medical images across the entire hospital enterprise. In the medical world we understand the importance of quality standards and demand the same from our key service partners such as siteROCK. We value SiteROCK's ability to effectively manage and process the ever-changing demands of an e-business network."
"Companies around the world look to the ISO standard as an objective seal-of-approval," said Dave Lilly, SiteROCK COO. "Certification means our customers can trust our change management processes and our ability to see the 'big picture' while maintaining the detailed focus necessary for the alarm processing, fault localization and corrective actions we take on their behalf."
The scope of the ISO 9001 registration at siteROCK included evaluation of siteROCK's software and process engineering, employee training and development, operation of the company's global network of Reliability Operations Centers (ROCs), quality assurance, change management and continuous improvement policies and processes.
ISO certification was conducted by TUV Essen a certification body of TUV Mitte AG, which provides a full range of testing and certification services for more than 100 industries. TUV Essen performed on-site assessments, examined documented procedures and surveyed siteROCK's overall operations. To determine continued compliance, TUV Essen will periodically conduct routine surveillance audits of siteROCK's operations and quality improvement programs.
"In my experience, a relatively young company achieving ISO 9000 in the very first audit without any major or minor non-conformity is uncommon," said Sham Beri, Lead Auditor, TUV-Essen. "We found siteRock's quality management system to be worthy of ISO 9001, which is the most comprehensive standard because it includes design controls, engineered processes and an in-depth verification and validation of quality practices."
About the International Organization for Standardization
The ISO 9000 Standard was written by representatives from the United States and 14 European countries and published in 1987 by the International Organization of Standards in Geneva, Switzerland. The requirements of the Standard are aimed primarily at achieving customer satisfaction by preventing nonconformity at all stages, from production through servicing. The requirements include management, leadership, a pro-active and well-trained work force, customer feedback, measurement, documentation, internal audits, continuous improvement, and third party validation.
About siteROCK Corporation
SiteROCK Corporation is the only management services provider that is IS0-certified to monitor, measure and manage complex ebusiness systems, networks and dependent third-party applications for those companies whose revenues are dependent upon a consistent and reliable Internet presence. SiteROCK's remote 24/7 operations support services cost-effectively augment internal staff freeing them to focus on and control core IT initiatives.
With offices in California, New York, and Tokyo, siteROCK is currently supporting a list of leading ebusiness customers. Principal investors include Mohr, Davidow Ventures, Weiss, Peck & Greer Venture Partners, and Patricof & Co. Ventures, Inc. The company is headquartered in Emeryville, Calif. and can be reached at 510-768-6000 or on the Web at www.siterock.com.
Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange Reports 1Q99 Internet Revenues Exceed Five Times Total 1998 Internet Revenues.
DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 16, 1999--
Aggressive Technology Deployment Drives Explosive Growth
in Company's Electronic Commerce Division;
Company Sets Launch Date for New Site FirstJewelryAuctions.com
Dallas Gold & Silver Exchange, Inc. (Amex:DLS) or (Amex:DLS.EC) announced that its unique auction and person-to-person trading site for jewelry, fine watches, diamonds and precious metals products has experienced dramatic growth for the year-to-date period. Revenues generated through March 15, 1999 are five times the revenues generated for all of fiscal 1998. At the current rate of growth, revenues related to Internet activities will exceed 15 percent of total corporate revenues by year-end 1999. After a significant upgrade in late 1998, the site (http://www.dgse.com) now includes a fully functional auction, a live trading floor, and a complete virtual store.
"The Internet is becoming a more important component of our business activity every day," said William Oyster, president of Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange. "It is by far the fastest growing and most profitable segment of our business and we will continue to invest in technologies that allow us to become the dominant player in the auction and sale of jewelry, diamonds, fine watches, and precious metals."
Dallas Gold & Silver Exchange, Inc. also announced that it is in the final stages of development of a new and much larger web commerce site called FirstJewelryAuctions.com. Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange's proprietary Virtual Auctioneer software, which was featured in a recent Information Week story on electronic commerce, will power this new site. The site will contain thousands of active items collected from around the world. Additionally, it will be the first site to allow individuals and professionals from the jewelry industry to meet anonymously in the auction and trading environment, where price and quality will determine buying activity. The new site will be launched by June 1, 1999.
About Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange
Dallas Gold & Silver Exchange, Inc. is a wholesaler and retailer of jewelry, diamonds, fine watches and precious metals to domestic and international customers through its Superstore in Dallas, Texas and through its live real-time auction on the Internet (www.dgse.com). Dallas Gold and Silver Exchange's new online auction product Virtual Auctioneer was recently featured in Information Week.
Statements about the Company's future expectations, including future revenues and earnings, and all other statements in the press release other than historical facts are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such forward-looking statements be subject to the safe harbors created thereby. Since these statements involve risks and uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the Company's actual results could differ materially from expected results.
воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.
Elron Electronic Industries Ltd. Makes Announcement.
Business & Technology Editors
HAIFA, Israel--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 3, 2000
Elron Electronic Industries Ltd. (Nasdaq:ELRNF) a leading multinational high technology holding company, further to its announcement of February 29, 2000, announced that Elbit Ltd. (Nasdaq:ELBTF), in which Elron holds approximately 42% interest, signed today a detailed agreement for the sale of the entire share capital of Peach Networks Ltd. ("Peach") to Microsoft Corporation ("Microsoft"). Elbit Ltd. holds approximately 57% of Peach, on a fully diluted basis, for which it will receive a cash payment of approximately $43 million. Subject to the completion of the transaction, Elbit Ltd.'s net income after tax from the transaction is estimated at approximately $35 million and Elbit will record a net capital gain of approximately $30 million. Elron will record a gain of approximately $12.5 million from the transaction, if completed.
The closing of the transaction is expected to take place within thirty days of the date of signature of the agreement, subject to various conditions, including: receipt of the approval of the Israel Supervisor of Restricted Trades Practices; the consent of at least 65% of Peach's key employees, and at least 65% of Peach's other employees, to employment by Microsoft; an agreed solution with the tax authorities concerning the exchange of employee options with options in the company by whom they will be employed following the closing.
Under the agreement, $7 million from the overall consideration paid for the shares will be deposited in an escrow account, to secure representations and performance of contractual obligations, for an eighteen-month period (Elbit's share is in proportion to its relative share in the transaction). The agreement contains a non-competition undertaking and also establishes arrangements (supported by a pre-ruling) concerning the tax consequences of the transaction.
Peach is an Israeli company engaged in the development and marketing of systems enabling digital cable TV subscribers to operate interactive services, such as internet and computer games, on their TV screens.
Elron Electronic Industries Ltd. is a multinational high technology holding company based in Israel. Through affiliates, Elron is engaged with a group of high technology operating companies in the fields of advanced defense electronics, communication, semiconductors, networking, software and information technology. For further information, visit http://www.elron.com
Any statements in this press release that may be considered forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. Actual results may differ from such forward-looking statements due to the risk factors discussed in periodic reports filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission which the Company urges investors to consider.
Warecorp is a tale of two cities, linked by technology; The software developer is a Minneapolis firm that's mostly in Minsk as it keeps its labor costs low.(BUSINESS)
Byline: STEVE ALEXANDER; STAFF WRITER
There was a time when a company based in Minneapolis was really here.
In the digital age, it's not that clear-cut. Warecorp, a Web and software development company, is based in downtown Minneapolis, where its three founders have an office in the old Grain Exchange building. All of its data, including proprietary customer information, is locked in a computer at a Twin Cities data center.
But 50 of Warecorp's 60 employees live in the city of Minsk, Belarus. Minsk, one of the technology centers of the former Soviet Union, is a place where English is a foreign tongue and automobile ownership is a sign of prosperity. There Warecorp workers program software projects over the Internet, using data that never leaves Minnesota.
That arrangement helps Warecorp (the name is based on the word "software") provide customized Web and software development at reduced prices, since Belarus programmers make about a third as much money as their U.S. counterparts.
Is this international outsourcing -- sending would-be U.S. jobs to another country -- or is it a different kind of corporate structure, in which a company's head is in one city and its body is eight time zones away?
Warecorp's founders, CEO Chris Dykstra, Mike Milkovich, the chief technology officer, and Lee Rogas, the chief operating officer, say it's the latter. They say they're running a "virtual corporation" from afar, even though they speak only English and most company workers start out speaking only Belarusian or Russian, though they're required to learn English.
To Dykstra, using foreign labor is both a business strategy and a bit of idealism.
"There's market demand for outsourcing," Dykstra said. "And, if you are a capitalist, you believe those other countries have a right to get on the playing field."
Milkovich argues that seven-year-old Warecorp doesn't fit the profile of an offshore company because its Belarus workers are full-time employees who are closely managed from the United States.
"Offshore companies put together a document, hand it off to a group in another country that doesn't have any cultural connection to the customer or local business knowledge, then wait months to get something
back," Milkovich said. "The difference with us, as local folks, is that we're your primary contact. We figure out how to make things in your company work, and then deal with really bright technical people who just happen to be eight hours in time ahead of us."
The three founders monitor the work in Belarus daily via Skype conversations, Facebook, Twitter and cellphones, Milkovich said. When a software project is completed, the three do quality control testing in Minneapolis.
But the "virtual company" has encountered cultural barriers.
"We had to teach them that they could disagree with us," Milkovich said. "That's the American way of dealing with difficult technical problems."
The Warecorp founders say they have more than 30 customers, including eight in the Twin Cities, such as MinuteClinic (since sold to CVS Caremark Corp.) and Internet Broadcasting Systems, which does Web pages for TV stations.
"The key benefit Warecorp gives us is related to the Belarus time zone," said Dave Michela, vice president of strategic initiatives at Internet Broadcasting in St. Paul. "We can drop off tasks, such as creating digital website ads, at the end of our business day, and they're done when we come to work the next day. It's an efficiency play for us because the work is being done in the wee hours of the night."
Warecorp's founders concede that the recession nearly ruined them, but say the privately owned company's revenue is growing and is expected to approach $3 million this year.
"What we bring to the table is depth of business experience, which we blend with the production capacity in Belarus," Dykstra said. "Belarus was the engineering capital of the U.S.S.R., and it still pumps out more engineers than India."
Steve Alexander - 612-673-4553
BRIEFING - ASIA INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - JUNE 24, 2011.
An executive briefing on information technology for June 24, 2011, prepared by Asia Pulse (http://www.asiapulse.com), the real-time, Asia-based wire with exclusive news, commercial intelligence and business opportunities.
IT FIRM KASPERSKY LAUNCHES NEW ANTIVIRUS PRODUCTS IN BANGLADESH
DHAKA - IT firm Kaspersky Lab has introduced its latest 2012 editions of antivirus and internet security software in the Bangladesh market.
The launch is highly notable as this was the first official launch of the 2012 editions in the Asia-Pacific region for Kaspersky Lab. It is also the first time that a globally reputed software company makes its new version regional debut launch in Bangladesh.
(C) Asia Pulse Pte Ltd.
CONTACT:
Asia Pulse Production Centre
Phone: (612) 9322 8634
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ASIA PULSE RY 24-06 1641
Breaking Fast: A year with and without poetry in Sudan.
by Toby Collins A disclaimer Hawajat [1] in Sudan are stubborn; running away from something or towards oblivion; or in the wrong place. I had been sold on Sudan with stories which I half believed and in retrospect, I was guilty of all the aforementioned.
Coffee for sale in Medani souq, the Republic of Sudan (photo: Heidi Erickson)
The British Ambassador's bodyguards in Khartoum, the capital of the Republic of Sudan, were bored out of their minds. The ex-Foreign Legion haulier I met in Juba, the capital of the soon to be, Republic of South Sudan, was drunk out of his mind. In the isolated pockets of excess people exhibited strange behaviours like animals in captivity. Many of my Sudanese friends fought for excess and spoke about their Romantic environment without fear of disjointedness or pretentiousness or cliche or embellishment of the truth or self-aggrandisement. This is an ode to them, not about them. There are still Bohemians in Khartoum; sometimes eating, sometimes drinking and always smoking in barren rooms with noisy fans. They embrace the verbose and do not glorify brevity. They tell long, lyrical stories that, if I had free abandon, I would link to a slower and more rhythmical pace of life, an inherently nostalgic light and the desert. I might even stretch to the haboob, great dust storms which march from the deserts into the towns and eat away at the buildings, returning them to powder. But the metaphorical mention of hour glasses makes me wince. Perhaps if this was a translation I could get away with it. Fierce rocks in the desert I lived in a small town in the desert on the Sudanese side of the Ethiopian border. It was the metropolis of the Gedaref state where private and alien groups of people met and bartered. The water was brown and the wind was always hot. Most people used the remains of the train track as a thoroughfare. We jumped between the beams high above the deep, dried-out river to where we smoked shisha [2] at night. Once we saw a goat with a cardboard box stuck on its head in the riverbed -- the spectators were going berserk and after three months there, I understood why. Eid Mubarak [3] Sometimes I took the bus across expanses sparsely populated with nomads and their camels, armed with a bundle of security papers to the bright lights Khartoum. This time they played Rambo III, where he joins forces with the Afghans, against the Soviets. Near Souq Arabi, there is a man who sells the books which he shouldn't. Unless someone is privileged enough to go, or to know someone going overseas, this is the man they have to see. Although censorship of this kind is becoming harder with the massing digital cloud, the availability of controversial texts in Arabic is still limited. For the majority, internet access is still found in the internet cafes, monitored and with rudimentary censorship (perhaps courtesy of a deal struck with the CIA). When the internet enabled phone is cheap and cheerful, the second digital revolution will take place. Partly by imposed isolationism, the old traditions of Sudanese poetry have a solid footing in the modern Sudanese psyche. A bag of tombac [4] was being passed around and people were beginning to lie back onto the grass or pick at what remained of the spiced yoghurt; peanut, tomato and chilli; wet dates; sweet pastries; gorasa [5]; assida [6]; kissra [7]; and abray [8]. I asked a friend if he had heard of the Sudanese poet, Gely Abdel Rahman. He smiled. We were breaking fast in a packed, chattering park to the east of the Nile; the north and thankfully downwind of the fish market; the west of the tank waiting outside the TV station, since the media savvy Darfurians crossed the desert in pick-up truck to storm the city in 2008, hoping to address the nation with the state's own apparatus; and a stone's throw from the house of the great-grandson of the Mahdi -- the self-proclaimed messianic redeemer of Islam. He fought General Gordon in 1880s and his great-grandson studied at Oxford and was Prime Minister of Sudan in the 1960s and 1980s. The statue of colonial Britain's Gordon which was in Khartoum, where he died, is said to be resting at the bottom of the Nile. What the Nile definitely has contained is gallons of Khartoum's booze. In 1983 people watched as the then president, Nimeri poured it in, to mark a new era of harsh sharia [9] law, which has been memorialised in song. There were shifting, sprawling groups of friends and families, with children darting about in sweet and balloon induced stupors. It was my first Eid and therefore the first time I had had a fast to break. The sun had set and a Hadendewa man in a white jalabia [10] sold us his coffee. He was a descendant of the warriors Rudyard Kipling described in his poem 'Fuzzy-Wuzzy' -- they broke the symbol of military and empirical might, the British Square. We drank from a fist-sized pitcher, hammered out of aluminium cans, kept warm by coals on a tray, held precariously above his head, poured into tiny bell-shaped cups, more than half full with sugar. Rich, thick and spiced. Coupled with the tombac, mind and stomach were gently fizzing. My friend recited a lengthy Rahnman poem from memory. The day before I broke fast in Souq Arabi with my friends at the phone shop. It was eerily quite without the traffic. The shopkeepers laid mats out on the street and waiting in long lines, either side dishes of food. Everyone was waiting for the muezzin [11] to announce the departure of the sun. There were a couple of false starts but I didn't mind -- some tea ladies from the Nuba Mountains, hiding behind a parked car had already ushered me over to eat with them. After eating, a man of some religious seniority came to lead people in prayer. He pointed at me with his stick and asked those around me if I was going to pray with them. He gave me a relaxed smile and I went for some coffee. The ontology of Sudan's poetry In the second half of nineteenth century there were two major waves in Arabic poetry which are the fundamentals of the majority of contemporary Sudanese poetry: The first was the rediscovery of classical Arabic poetry. This renaissance was spearheaded by the Egyptian, Mahmid Sami al-Barudi and Syrio-Lebanese, Maronite Nasif al-Yazif, who showed little Western influence in their work. In the second wave, English and French literary influences started to creep in. It was dominated by the Diwan poets, most of whom studied English Literature. The Mahj group, from the Syrian Diaspora in North America were also significant. They expressed a sense of being in a culturally alien environment. Unlike the Diwan, their otherness had been thrust upon them. They had forgotten some of their traditions but the nostalgic nuance of their work gave the impression that it was an unwanted forgetting. The Apollo group focused on the second generation of English Romantic poets and romanticised England. In the 1940's a new form of Arabic poetry came out of Iraq and took hold in Lebanon, Egypt and then spread throughout the region. It was less constrained by the traditions of rhyme and meter. In the 1950's Free Verse was de rigueur. Form was the albatross around the poet's neck. In the 1960's Arabic poetry gained more direction. The political context of the time meant that modernity became synonymous with rebellion so there was something to kick against. Understanding life rather than describing it became the focus. Modernity meant access to information was freer but it also meant personal isolation. Some of the dice of the recent Arab uprising have been thrown and there are plenty of unpredictable African countries in the mood for insurrection, yet to come to the table. Poets will be there to log the existential crises of the process and inshallah [12], in doing so, create solidarity and empathy. The elephants' graveyard To get to the park in Omdurman, I had changed at Jackson bus station, which takes its name from a member of the British colonial administration. It is alive with place names proclaimed by conductors: "Arabi, Arabi, Arabeeeeey!", "Shooada, Shooada, Shooada", "Bahribahribahreeeeee!" They slap the sides of their buses like unruly cattle . The only sense not assaulted is taste -- tankards of fresh, thick, icy mango juice. That day I drank water from the bucket. Boys carrying buckets of water and ice clink their metal cups together patrol the station. The dubious provenance of the water makes it all the more indulgent. Sat on the bus I was hit by wave after wave of nostalgia for things I had never experienced. The light had the right mix of red, yellow and grey to make the jallabiat outside glow. Old Sudanese music played on the radio. The tassels around the driver swayed like Sufi [13] dancers. Everything had been in the sea. Everything was washed up on the shore a long time ago. Everything was covered in a fine red dust. The sky was darkening and everyone in the bus was rolling and pitching gently, in silence, thinking about longer journeys, looking about without seeing a thing. I really was smiling. I had an inexplicable and very powerful sense of contentment, as though lots or pernickety frets had converged into a manageable cloud. The conductor held folded money between his fingers. He casually kept count of the payees and the change they were due. He resolved disputes between passengers who were insisting on paying one-another's fare. He listened out for the clicks of the passengers fingers and relayed it to the driver with a "kisss kisss" which told him to stop. He hopped off the bus as it moved, his footsteps in perfect harmony with the bus. People from other worlds There was a man who wandered around Gedaref with a bag string, calling out his job again and again for hours. He fixed the beds that most sleep on, string tied to a frame - cooler than a mattress. Another aged man rode a tricycle at speed while playing a home made trumpet -- announcing his unrefrigerated ice cream for sale, for a limited time only. There were two little girls in the shop opposite. They used kittens as boxing gloves. They ran barefoot on the rocks. Their younger brother, a baby, had Downs Syndrome. The family joke was to call him Cini -- Chinese. I wasn't sure if I should laugh. I know on some days they didn't have enough to eat but would insist on giving me coffee, thick with sugar. When the mother pounded the roasted coffee beans with a hunk of iron, she sang in rhythm, with her daughters. The shop next door was run by an Eritrean man who was all for Hitler because he hated Jews. The teaching assistant at university risked her marriageability by eating an hibiscus ice lolly in the park with me. There were young men proud to have lost their virginity to Ethiopian prostitutes in the brothels on the border. Tribes and hearsay The Beni Amir and Hadendewa (both Beja) wore black waistcoats over their jalabia and carried ornate swords and had dramatic hair. They sold milk from aluminium urns just off Million Stupid Street. The Rashida wore platform shoes and their women were heavily veiled, with ornate jewellery pouring out of every available gap in the fabric. They fled Saudi Arabia a century ago and they smuggle Iranian arms from Eritrea to Palestine and keep their money in holes in the ground. They rebelled against the government as the Rashida Free Lions, then joined with the Beja Congress to form the Eastern Front in a rebellion against the Khartoum regime. The Mbararo women were topless at home in their tents and had powerful sorcerers whose hijab [14] of powdered lion forehead protects the wearer from bullets. They chose their husbands, who had meticulously coiffured hair and wore multiple watches with their colourful robes. A doctor saw an Mbararo sorcerer in the village of Elephant's Stomach draw a donkey in the sand and make it materialise. The first time I met some Mbararo, they were wearing different clothes from anyone else around. One had cat whisker shapes scarred into his cheeks. My friend knew their language but they refused to acknowledge they were Mbararo. Subsequently we were told it is a derogatory term. However, they put me in contact with a chief who invited me to come to Elephant's Stomach in the cab of his son's lorry (there were fifteen other passengers clinging to the cargo on the back). I went to Elephant's Stomach and saw a man holding a hijab in his mouth stab at his stomach with a knife. It was in candlelight, he was overweight, I don't know how sharp the blade was and I don't know how many layers he was wearing; it was still arresting. I went to a place where I was sold water in a bowl with ice served with a soup spoon and it was the most delicious water I have ever drunk. That night under a mango tree a generator powered a techno cassette and a single light bulb. All that was recognisable was a thick, sludgy beat. People danced in and out of the darkness. When the generator died there were just the rustles of nature and humanity and a hint of moonlight. After the British colonisation of northern Nigeria in 1903 there was mass migration out of the country. Mbararo had taken the same route across Africa on Hajj [15], through Sudan, for centuries. Their cattle are larger zebus than most used by northern Sudanese, linking them them to South Sudan. Their allegiance in Sudan shifts. They are perceived by some as enemies of the north and south. They are not particularly popular with ex-car mechanic and current president of the Republic of Sudan, Omar al-Bashir. Key to their social system is foulanite -- self-denial, modesty and toughness. Something which the elders feel is being lost. There are no lions in Sudan, they were eaten or fled in the war between the north and south. I saw women with tattooed faces when I went to a crumbling coral city called Suakin. This is where pilgrims used to depart Africa on the Hajj. It was lit by candlelight, there was no electricity. A few miles down the road in Sinkat, I wanted to get a lift to Erkowit -- a place where New Zealanders flew RAF planes to attack Italians in Eritrea - and was picked up by the security services. A man without uniform put me in the back of a truck and drove me around the state all day. There are rumours of Palestinian freedom fighter training camps in the area. So, I was on the back foot. Rather than the neatly codified Orientalism I had hoped for, I was barraged by waves of otherness. This otherness stretched out to the horizon. I had heard of a few Sudanese poets, but they seemed preoccupied with a romantic past which I assumed would be overarching in the present. I was struggling to marry what I had imagined and what I was experiencing. I was powerfully aware that I was an alien and I was subject to Sudan's sleight of hand. Going about town En route to the shisha place we went past the gun shop and the abandoned cinema. Past outdoor TVs, to the gym on the edge of the football pitch. The gym equipment was made up of bits of old lorry -- cogs on an axle and so on. That's where we got rushed by the police. At night we sat there and smoked shisha and talked of distant lands where women wandered the streets in bikinis. That night a primary school teacher from a village on a dirt track was talking about Wasteland. For many of the younger people in Gedaref I represented either debauchery or freedom and for many of the older generation either oppressive colonialism or sagacity and resolve, The legacy of colonial rule lives on in a generation of English students trying to learn from teachers who don't know English, being taught The Wasteland and Shakespeare. They learn from text books riddled with spelling mistakes. A line of policemen emerged from across the football pitch. Their guns were illuminated by moonlight and the licks of orange light from the shisha coals. They did not stop. The nonchalance with which they carried their guns was intimidating. Without shouts and without fuss everyone stood up from their collapsing chairs and ran, and the police chased. We met there the following night and no one seemed to know what had happened or why. Someone was muttering about the Ja'aliyyia [16]administration, some of whom consider themselves to have patrilineal descent from Prophet's uncle, Abbas. It was out of character. The poetry book left on the train I was collecting contemporary Sudanese poetry for a book and was interested in how it related to a long history of lyricism in Arabic and in Sudan in particular. Near the vegetable market on the edge of town, in an area populated by immigrants, on the flat, low-walled roof my friend's house we were sitting on paint tins and drinking aragi [17]. The air was still dusty and there were stragglers, pieces of rubbish still floating about in the trail of the haboob, which had long since cut the power. After an hour or so of hitting the paint tins like drums, revelling in the cool breeze that always follows the storm, the mood became solemn like clockwork, and I asked the assembled about Sudanese poetry. Drinking from the same cup like this, everyone gets drunk at the same time and when drinking is an act of rebellion, there is a sense of comradeship, a sense which is fortified by drunkenness. It also stilts development; there are some very old teenagers in Khartoum. After a few days I met someone from the party in a cafe near my home that sold liver and beans. He handed me a folder of yellowed photocopies and told me how he came by it:
SudaNow was a magazine of value in the eighties. It had short stories and poems of a different calibre to what you will find today. There was more freedom at that time and people could remember what Sudan was like when we were really free. This new generation have never known and the arts are dying. We are going through a difficult divorce. Everyone is thinking about separation now so they can't think about rebellion. Sudanese protest when they are hungry anyway.
We were speaking just before the 2011 referendum vote in which South Sudan voted overwhelmingly to secede become an independent state. The plebiscite was a condition of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement which marked the end of more than two decades of civil war between north and south Sudan. The Republic of South Sudan is scheduled to declare her statehood in July 2011.
With the director of the Goethe Institute in the eighties I compiled these poems. These are what we thought were the best poems of the eighties. She fled the country, I can't remember why, she was married to a Sudanese man. She was carrying a copy of the collection with her back to Germany for publication. She left her copy on a bench at Cairo train station. I don't know what happened to her.
The poetry book did not contain what I expected. There was the spattering of colonial ghosts which I had expected -- sunburnt wives of diplomats desperately romanticising their surroundings - but there was poetry written by South Sudanese which I did not expect and the content was predominantly racy and universal. Khediry, the translator of the poems is old and blind. He lives to the north of Khartoum, and travels by donkey. I wondered how these translations could retain their lyricism, but Sudan is a place familiar with translation. Arabics in Sudan Daragi or Randog or Sudani, the Arabic of Khartoum is clearly suited to poetry. In the east of Sudan, bordering Ethiopia, there is a spattering of Amharic 'shoya shoya' or 'little little' or to translate it further, 'a little bit' in the East, becomes 'tinish tinish'. In South Sudan the 'ayn' is softened and are more distinct melody is added. It's something like the -ch from loch but with the retching muscles doing more work. In Darfur their Arabic is eloquent and archaic. Across Sudan there are hundreds of languages. In the north many have Arabic as their second language. In the South, Arabic is perceived by some as the language of the oppressors. English is is the official language but for many it is the third, after a tribal language and Arabic. Communism, atheism, alcoholics and other affectations of middle-classery I used to exchange lines of poetry with my friend in Khartoum. Now the Sudanese youth text poems to each other. They have condensed ancient poems and they are alive again. Poetry in relevant in Sudan. Perhaps this has something to do with the Koran -- many Sudanese learn great tracts of it off by heart and it is lyrical. The Koran, unlike the Bible, for its followers, is the verbatim word of God and is written in a difficult, archaic Arabic is for some, at times incomprehensible. Some of the poets in Khartoum sit in the concrete remains of the bars their parents frequented. Glugging from scuffed water bottles of booze, sometimes with perfunctory cardamom pods in them. When some of them say they are communists, they mean they smoke. Some women conceal it with their headscarf in public. Some drink because they don't want to be there. Some drink because they feel apart from Sudan and a part of it. Some drink because they are tortured by the security services. But, there are some who successfully embody this bi-polarity of environment and people. The bar of rebellion is so low and the suppression is so systemic that the kicking is inward. There is a precise word in Sudan -- Gatia'a, a kind of Schadenfreude gossip. I went to an apartment furnished with a string bed, fan and scrawls all over the walls, to meet a studious man watching Inland Empire on his laptop. Through a translator I recommended Antichrist to him and he was very pleased. That night I was accused of working for Mossad, and I was not sure if it was a joke, but it ended in hugs as everyone gradually converged to an international proto-language of slurs and slow, wide gesticulations. Sitting with a tea lady on the roadside, with patterned scars on her face, the air rich with bahoor [18], with her singing in a Nuban language under her breath was, for me, exotic. For the man who had spent his life in an environment where the women on billboards cover their hair and tradition dictates that a guest should only ever be asked about the length of their stay after a month has passed, it is hard to imagine how Lars von Trier sits. It is less difficult to imagine how T. S. Elliot, Philip Larkin or even James Joyce sit. Their abstraction and aesthetics are far more fluid. What unified it all was their sense of otherness. Not only outside the cultural context which they experienced, but occupying a singular space outside time. That these artefacts are experienced by a clique, driven on by a claque whose payment is membership to the clique, where some of the women are perceived by some to have less robust moral outlooks, and that they meet in secret places and do the secret things they see codified in fiction, unifies them. That is not to say that these are acts alien to Sudanese society. But, the alchemical combination of history, personalities and circumstance means some of them are creating something worth sitting up and listening to. A friend left Khartoum and headed north to make his millions in a gold rush last year. When he came back, everyone knew that he had failed, knew that he had been as foolish as Dick Whittington, but the way this was dealt with was alien to me, but joyous. Upon his return we went to the grassy bank of the Nile where Southerners sell aragi -- they walk back and forth, darting into the bushes and emerging with bottles. Anyway, he tackled it head on. He described his experiences in minute detail, with necessary prompting from his friends. He orated his experiences, which involved the death of scores in pits in the desert, with all the nuances to suggest that there were truths in every twist and turn of the tale and he ended with a punch line -- "the only people making money were the Rashida hiring out the metal detectors." Sufi poetry I went to a town north of Khartoum with a friend who was after a cure for recurring headaches. We went to visit a Sufi preacher who when he heard my name asked "why not three 'b's?" in perfect English. There was a storm outside. The streets that had been alive with the song and dance of Dervishes [19] and their drums, were rivers of mud ferrying torch-lit raindrops and umbrellas. We were all huddled in the low ceilinged room. Its, walls, steps and wood shiny and smooth. It was full of cats sheltering from the storm, who seemed quite at home in the hushed, reverential confusion. A Dervish recited an epic poem about the Sufi preacher, everyone was waiting for a minute with. He sat cross legged on a palm mat, grinning into the middle distance. A man at his side was on fly duty, ensuring that none remained on the preacher for an irreverent length of time, yet the preacher had a monstrous hair growing out of a mole on his face like an antenna. He prescribed my friend a treatment we got from another room. The room was full of men writing sections of the Koran with special ink on special paper. They lent on wooden boards. Everything was stored in alcoves in the walls. The relevant section was transcribed and folded small. My friend stewed it in water which she drank and bathed in over the next few days. The other poets There are other cafes in Khartoum where you can buy bad coffee. This coffee costs the same as a meal for five. But, it offers escapism. There are young Sudanese who take rebellious brunches. Many of them were schooled overseas. They discuss cupcakes at length and pretend they are in Sex in the City without the sex. Too many of them are poets. There are open mic nights where they read poems about a nebulous and toothless peace as if they were not connected war. The civil war between north and South Sudan ended in 2005. But, this artificiality in itself, is interesting and some seem aware of it and are bound to make good use of it. The languages of South Sudan The South is a very different place. But... there is something indescribable that links it with north Sudan. Despite the dissimilarities in landscape, faces, cultures and religions, the sum of the sameness is greater than the language, history and heart parts. It has something to do with pace and movement and the Nile and stories and the quixotic. The 'natural units' of administration, as the British officials of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan described its tribes speak languages that fit into the band of sub-Saharan languages which crosses the continent from Senegal to Eritrea, what Diedrich Hermann Westermann described as Sudansprachen. They tend to have logophoric pronouns. For example, he thought he could understand is ambiguous in English -- the two hes involved could be the same person, or they may not be. Logophoric pronouns disambiguate this. Romantic poets and the Sudan People's Liberation Army Once upon a time I was in the Nuba Mountains, the edge of the Republic of Sudan, where the Republic of South Sudan begins / will being. There were no buses so to get from place to place we had to catch a ride. After a night of harassment by the police we went to the market square to look for someone ticking one or all of the following figure of authority boxes: old, with a big stick, strikingly white jalabia, sunglasses. We found our man and drank tea with him. He put us on the back of a lorry carrying troops from the Sudan People's Liberation Army south. It was scorchingly hot and bumpy and unnerving. We watched their AK47's bounce around in the spare tire. By hour three they had had enough of eyeing us up we had run out of places to look, to avoid eye contact. There was a studious looking soldier with glasses who seemed to have some authority. He asked me a question I heard a thousand times in Sudan: "What is the best way to learn English?" I wittered on about the BBC World Service and remembered that I had a book of Wordsworth in my bag. He read I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud out loud. We were passing baobab trees in bloom, his rank was painted onto his shoulder with oil paint. This was not the transubstantiation of a donkey or magic teabags or the voice of a nation. He thanked me for the book which I had not planned to give him as and we came to a group of Joint Integrated Units [20]. He took off his glasses and stared them down. As someone from a dreich land it still does sit right when the flowers are in bloom and the light is clean and yellow, for the mood to be so dark. He turned back to us and smiled and asked to us to spend the night at his family's home. Originally published by The Conversation Papers The above article expresses the views of the author, not Sudan Tribune.
[1] 'Foreigners' in Sudanese colloquial Arabic. Probably originally referred to the Turkish colonial forces in Sudan. [2] Water pipe used to smoke tobacco. Shisha bars are common across Sudan. Often shared with friends and accompanied with coffee. [3] 'Happy Eid', Eid is a Muslim religious period in which food, and in Sudan, water, cannot be consumed while the sun is in the sky. [4] Tobacco squashed into a pellet and stored under the lip. [5] Okra stew. [6] A giant dumpling made of ground millet. [7] A giant savoury pancake. [8] A sweet drink made from fermented kissra [7]. [9] Islamic law. [10] A long, white robe. Similar to thobe worn throughout Arab but with wider sleeves and no collar. Associated by some with the proletarian. Prestigious in squint-inducing white. [11] Leader of Islamic prayer. [12] God-willing. [13] Islamic mysticism. [14] A piece of leather containing things which are believed to protect the wearer. [15] Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca. [16] North Sudanese tribe. [17] Moonshine, traditionally made with dates. [18] Mixture of frankincense and other incenses. [19] Travelling follower of Sufism who leads ascetic life. [20] Forces made up, in accordance with the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, of troops from north and south Sudan.
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