A diplomatic mistake?

Yahoo! reported yesterday that the U.S. ambassador to Bolivia is to be asked to explain why he was photographed next to a convicted criminal. He already made himself unpopular by criticising one of Evo Morales’ quips about moving the U.N. away from New York.

Of course, the ambassador represents his or her own country in an official capacity. Normally it is inappropriate for such people to criticise a country’s leader.

The photo is interesting because it also features Gabriel Dabdoub, a businessman who opposes President Morales. Is it really the criminal on the photo who’s the problem?

I guess for the U.S. media, standing next to a criminal from Colombia is actually more of a scoop than a businessman would be.  But since the criminal is now behind bars, perhaps the Bolivian Government is getting a bit worried about who the U.S. ambassador is socialising with?

Allerheiligen

Allerheiligen is celebrated on 1st November each year. It is a public holiday in a number of western Bundesländer, and has been celebrated in the Roman Catholic Church since the 9th Century.

The next day is Allerseelen (2nd November), and it is on these days that people visit and tend to the graves of their deceased relatives.

It is not a public holiday in Hessen and as such many people from the neighbouring Bundesländer come here to go shopping!

To hear a simple explanation and short discussion in German, listen to the podcast:

(Press the “play” button to listen to the podcast)

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A crime against humanity?

I was going to call this post “food or fuels?”, but then I read this item on the BBC News website.

This is a bit over the top isn’t it? Calling bio-fuels “a crime against humanity”?

The term usually makes me think of events in places like Kosovo, people being charged in The Hague, or even back to the Nuremberg trials of the 1940s. Am I committing a crime against humanity? I thought I was trying to save the planet!

It’s a thought that I touched on in the Monday Podcast a couple of weeks ago – should we be growing all these plants (regardless of which ones) to make bio-fuels, when there are people on the planet that don’t have enough to eat? Most often, Africa is brought up in the discussion.

But is it really that simple? If we didn’t turn the crops into fuel, would they be exported to Third World countries to stop people from starving? Somehow, I doubt it.

But these countries are also affected by Global Warming – in fact, isn’t it often the case that such countries are quoted as being affected but without themselves producing very much of the greenhouse gasses? They suffer at the hands of the industrialised nations, and don’t have much of a chance to cut down emissions themselves?

So I’m wondering if the process is a little bit more complicated than just growing food to eat and shipping it out there. If we can reduce Global Warming, will there be less drought in Third World countries and hence more chance of growing food – in the countries themselves?

In which case, anything we can do to reduce emissions good, right?

Perhaps the UN should have another think about the problem, before they make more such bold statements…

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