News: CBAAC blames foreign language adoption for Africa’s under-development

Found on Leadership Nigeria.com on 8 May 2009
By Isaac Aimurie, Abuja

The Director/Chief  Executive of the Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilisation (CBAAC), Professor Babatunde Babawale, yesterday in Abuja, blamed Africa’s under-development on the adoption of foreign languages for socio-economic transactions.

Babawale, who spoke at this year’s  CBAAC public lecture with the theme; ‘African Languages, African Development and African Unity’, noted that while it is true that Africa and her people “spread all over the world occupy a place of special importance in world history, it can be rightly argued that Africans seem to be the primary architects of their misfortunes in the areas of development and unity given our collective preference for and our willingness to celebrate, at the slightest opportunity, the pre-eminence of foreign languages against sustained interest in our very rich languages”.

Continuing, he said, “the long-standing decline in the usage and patronage of African indigenous languages accounts for widening communication gap between the governors and the governed, as well as the noticeable disparity between potentials, development policies and the ends to which policies are committed”.

The CBAAC boss observed that indigenous languages harbour within the socio-cultural, agricultural, medical, scientific and technological knowledge “which our ancestors bequeathed to our generation and those after us”, regretting that African languages face extinction and preference for foreign languages “is a clear manifestation of the triumph of forces of domination”.

In his address, the Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Senator Bello Gada, noted, “what is left of our language due to the displacement it suffered under colonialism is endangered by globalisation. We have failed to discover that the foundation of our problems in the educational sector lies in the absence of our mother tongue, for instruction in schools and at developing curriculum. Similarly, our desire for technological advancement and greatness can only be driven by the use and development of our indigenous languages”.

Citing the examples of  China and Japan which made remarkable progress in technological advancement, through the preservation of their language and other aspects of their culture, the minister urged Nigerians to see the and proclaim the goodness in their mother tongue.

Guest lecturer at the event, Professor Kwesi Kwaa Prah, of the Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society in Cape Town, South Africa, submitted that African cannot make progress unless she takes indigenous language seriously. The imposition of English language on Africans by the colonial masters, in his view, was to serve their selfish interests.

News: SA: MPs can choose their language for oath

Found on IOL.co.za on 25 April 2009

As the excitement of South Africa’s fourth democratic election fades to a memory, newly elected MPs will focus their attention on the next phase of the process – taking up their seats in Parliament.

The new Parliament is set to convene on May 6 for the 400 National Assembly MPs to be sworn in with Chief Justice Pius Langa presiding.

As in the past, MPs are expected to be inducted in batches of 10, and take the oath in their language of choice.

They will then elect a new Speaker, who will in turn preside over the election of a Deputy Speaker.

It is expected that President Kgalema Motlanthe, who remains President until the new President is sworn in, will attend the ceremony.

The Assembly will then likely adjourn for lunch, but reconvene afterwards to elect, again with Langa presiding, a new President – by all indications certain to be African National Congress President Jacob Zuma.

Party leaders will then have an opportunity to make short speeches, and the new President will also address the House.

The nine provincial legislatures will also convene on May 6 for MPLs to be sworn in and for them in turn to elect the new premiers and permanent delegates to the National Council of Provinces.

Senior judges will preside over the ceremonies.

Permanent delegates to the NCOP will be sworn in on May 7, and MPs will then travel to Pretoria for Zuma’s inauguration at the Union Buildings on May 9. Langa will again preside.

Zuma is expected to announce his Cabinet during the following week.

Parliament will convene with a joint sitting of the Assembly and NCOP on June 3 for Zuma’s state of the nation address.

The traditional debate on his address will be held on June 4 and he will reply to the debate on June 5.

Both Houses will then adjourn and are expected to reconvene on June 9 to deal with the budget, legislation, and other business.

The session is expected to run until about July 10, followed by the winter recess.

Further sittings are expected later in the year. – Sapa

French and German Get Axed — Are Any Languages Thriving?

Found on Finding Dulcinea.com on 9 April 2009
By Haley A. Lovett

As Winona State University looks to get rid of its French and German language programs, and as French is used less and less in international politics, some languages flourish.

Winona State Cuts French and German, More Students Nationwide Study Arabic, Chinese

As Universities and colleges across the nation look for ways to trim down budgets, Winona State University has found one way to eliminate expenses—by cutting its French and German programs.

The university, which currently has only 24 students majoring in the two areas of study combined, will still offer beginning level courses in those languages. Winona State decided to make cuts to the program to conform to a shrinking budget, and because of the decline in the popularity of French and German, according Peter Henderson, the dean of liberal arts at Winona State. Henderson told the Rochester Post-Bulletin, “The future, as I’ve said for the last 20 years, has not been in European languages other than Spanish.”

In the most recent MLA survey on foreign language study in higher education, Arabic and Chinese were the languages with the greatest increases in study. The survey showed that the study of Arabic had increased more than 125 percent, and the study of Chinese had increased more than 50 percent from 2002 to 2006. Enrollments in the less commonly taught languages, and the number of uncommon languages taught increased during this period as well. Although the raw number of students studying foreign languages has increased, the percentage of college students studying foreign languages is only about half of what it was in the 1960s. Spanish maintains its status as the most popular language, accounting for about 50 percent of language study.

Background: English pushes out French in many arenas, France tries to intervene

Winona State University’s dropping of the French major is not the first blow to the French language in recent history.

In New York, the United Nations has seen an increase in the choice of English or Spanish as the working language of diplomats, rather than French. Most of the European countries, former Soviet republics and Arab countries chose to use English as the language they are addressed with at the UN. According to The New York Times, “Factoring in China and India, with over a third of the world’s people, leads to the conclusion that 97 percent of the global population (or rather the elite of those countries) choose English as their international link language.”

The European Union has also seen a move toward English dominance. In 2004, English muscled out French as the common language among diplomats in the EU. English is used to write all financial and economic documents in the EU, reports the Telegraph, and more than 50 percent of all of the EU documents are written in English rather than in French or German (the other two main languages of the Union).

In Africa, English may take over French as the secondary language of many of the people. With much of Africa having been colonized by the French in the late 1800s, the move represents a shift in the language of the global economy, anger in parts of Africa with the history of France colonization, and in some war-torn areas a need to be able to speak with members of the UN (who mostly speak English) in order to stay safe.

France has developed organizations within its borders and beyond to try and preserve the language. The French government has a Commission de Terminologie that regulates the language and protects it from foreign word intrusion, and the Académie française, an elite group of academics in France that publishes the official dictionary of French, acts as the authority of the language.

There are also organizations designed to promote the use of French around the world, such as the Alliance Français and the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie; more than 110 million people speak French worldwide.

News: American President thinks ‘Austrian’ is a language

Found on RedState.com on 6 April 2009
By Josh Painter

Can you say Dohbama? I knew you could.

President Barack Obama made a world-class gaffe in front of the entire planet’s press during his news conference in Strasbourg, France. The transcript as released by the White House on April 4:

Q Sonja Sagmeister from a little country, Austria, from Austrian Television. Mr. President, you said you came here to learn and to listen. So a quite personal question — what did you learn from your personal talk with the European leaders? And did this change in a certain way your views on Europe and its politics?

PRESIDENT OBAMA: It’s an interesting question. I had already formed relationships with many of them. Some of them I had met when I traveled through Europe before my election. Some of them I had met because they came to Washington after the election. This is the first time I’ve been in a forum with so many of them at the same time.

I’m extraordinarily impressed by the quality of leadership. I am constantly reminded that although there are cultural differences that are important and that we have to be sensitive to, what we have in common between Europe and the United States so vastly exceeds any differences that we have; that we should not forget why we are allies, and we should be careful about some of the easy stereotypes that take place on both sides of the borders.

It was also interesting to see that political interaction in Europe is not that different from the United States Senate. There’s a lot of — I don’t know what the term is in Austrian — wheeling and dealing — and, you know, people are pursuing their interests, and everybody has their own particular issues and their own particular politics.

But I think it’s a testimony to the success of the European Union, as well as NATO, that on very important issues, each leader seems to be able to rise above parochial interests in order to achieve common objectives. And I think that has accounted for some of the extraordinary success and prosperity of Europe over the last several years.

So what’s so embarrassingly wrong about what the president said? Only this:

German is the official language of Austria. Worldwide, 10 million native speakers speak German and it ranks as the tenth most spoken language in the world. The total number of German speakers leaps to around 130 million people if non-native speakers are included. Linguists class German as an Indo-European language. It is also the official language of Germany, Belgium, Liechtenstein, and part of Switzerland, Luxembourg, and others.

In other words, this is no such language as “Austrian.” Isn’t there someone on the White House staff, a director of Protocol or something, whose job it is to make sure the leader of the free world knows these things? Or did no one say anything because they assumed that it was reasonably common knowledge?

You probably recall the howls from the drive-by media and the leftosphere when Fox News’ Carl Cameron said that he was told “by folks” – folks without names, apparently – that Sarah Palin didn’t know that Africa was a continent. The press and “progressive” bloggers had a field day with it, even though it was only a rumor and had never been confirmed by anyone willing to put their name behind it.

For that, Gov. Palin was maligned. A “dubious grasp of geography,” sniffed HuffPo’s Nicholas Graham. Wonkette, dripping with superiority, posted, “And did we mention that she thought Africa was a country, and not a continent? Wait until she hears about Australia: it’s both.” Salon’s Anthony Freed wrote: “Stunningly, but not surprisingly, the gal who was 3% of the vote and an old man’s heart beat away from the presidency thinks Africa is a country in and of itself.” It would later come to light that the “Martin Eisenstadt” who took credit for passing the tidbit along to Fox News does not exist. It was a hoax. But many Palin critics still believe the continent meme, even though it’s never been more than a rumor.

Obama’s ignorance of Austria and what language is spoken there, however, is a unicorn of a different hue. It’s on the official White House transcript. It’s on video (at the 28:30 mark). Many people know that German is spoken in Austria, and they didn’t have to look it up. So where are the Obama-worshippers on this? They are curiously silent. No snickering from HuffPo, no acidic Salon snorting, no “dumb as a bag of hammers” diaries from Wonkette. The double standard runs deep and wide, and there’s no ceiling, glass or otherwise, limiting the heights to which the Left’s hypocrisy can soar.

h/t: Free Republic

- JP

News: Jordan Opens Chinese Language-learning Confucius Institute

Found on CRI.cn on 2 April 2009

China and Jordan on Wednesday opened a Confucius Institute in the kingdom to teach Chinese language to promote bilateral relations.

The inauguration came following a Memeradum of Understanding (MOU) signed last September between the Confucius Institute Headquarters of China and an Arab professional service firm Talal Abu-Ghazaleh Organization (TAG-Org).

Speaking at the opening ceremony, Chinese Ambassdor to Jordan Yu Hongyang highlighted the importance of the opening of the institute, saying it will not only facilitate Jordanians to learn the Chinese language, but also present more Chinese culture to them.

It can also promote the bilateral ties and friendship between the two countries, and play productive role for bilateral cooperations, Yu added.

For his part, Jordanian Cultural Minister Sabri Irbeihat expressed his hope that the Chinese language-learning institute would strengthen the cultural ties between the two countries and bridge the gap between the Chinese and the Arabs.

TAG-Org CEO and Chairman Abu-Ghazaleh also highlighted the importance of learning Chinese language, saying there is an urgent need to learn Chinese to facilitate communications and exchange of trade between the two peoples.

The TAG-Org is one of the largest Arab professional service firms specialized in the fields including training, accounting, intellectual property and information technology.

It has 71 offices in the Middle East and North Africa, with some representative offices in Europe and North America.

Bubblespeak: The Orwellian language of Wall Street finds its way to the Treasury Department

Found on Slate.com on 1 April 2009
By

The Orwellian language of Wall Street finds its way to the Treasury Department.

The Orwellian language of Wall Street finds its way to the Treasury Department.

In his timeless 1946 essay “Politics and the English Language,” George Orwell condemned political rhetoric as a tool used “to make lies sound truthful” and “to give an appear­ance of solidity to pure wind.” Were he alive today, Orwell might well be moved to pen a com­panion piece on the use of financial lingo. Remember those toxic assets? The poorly performing mortgages and collateralized debt obligations festering on the books of banks that made truly exe­crable lending decisions? In the latest federal bank rescue plan, they’ve been transformed into “legacy loans” and “lega­cy securities”—safe for professional in­vestors to purchase, provided, of course, they get lots of cheap government credit.

It’s as if some thoughtful person had amassed, through decades of careful hus­bandry, a valuable collection that’s now being left as a blessing for posterity. Using the word legacy to describe phenomena that are causing financial car­nage is “crazy,” according to George Lakoff, a Berkeley professor of cognitive science and linguistics, because “legacy typically suggests something positive.” More insidiously, the word is frequently deployed to deflect blame. Legacy finan­cial issues are, by definition, holdovers from prior regimes. Word sleuths advise me that legacy derives from an ancient In­do-Aryan root meaning, “It wasn’t my fault, and I should still get a bonus this year even though we lost billions of dollars.”

The (not so) Big Three auto companies routinely refer to the now-unaffordable pension and health care commitments en­tered into by prior management as “legacy costs.” (And why not? They’ve convinced us to regard used cars as “pre-owned.”) Citi CEO Vikram Pandit last month told employees that “we are profitable through the first two months of 2009 and are hav­ing our best quarter-to-date performance since the third quarter of 2007.” Huh? Citi, currently connected to a taxpayer-funded multibillion-dollar feeding tube, is “prof­itable” only if you ignore the losses it con­tinues to incur on lending decisions made in the previous years—legacy loans made by legacy bankers.

In this new paradigm, a legacy, usually a gift, is a burden. A potential loss is spun as a potential gain. War is peace. See what I mean by Orwellian?

The legacy gambit is necessary, in part, because the prior nomenclature used to describe the stuff in question was so cor­rosive. “Toxic is one of those words that is so negative that it’s just hyperbole,” said Jesse Sheidlower, editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary. The phrase toxic assets, used widely in 2008, was ei­ther a sign of admirable reality or an at­tempt to scare people into action. A mid­dle ground of sorts was reached last fall when then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson rolled out the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Of course, calling some of those mortgage assets “troubled” was a little like calling Charles Manson a troubled person.

In trying to rebrand dodgy financial in­struments, treasury secretaries like Paul­son and Timothy Geithner are continuing a recent tradition. So much of the finance sector’s innovation in the past 30 years, it turns out, wasn’t developing new stuff, but rather developing new ways of talking about pre-existing stuff. In the 1980s, la­beling risky debt offerings as junk bonds was an intentionally ironic feint (pros knew that the instruments pos­sessed real value). But as junk bonds went mainstream in the 1990s, they evolved into “high-yield debt”—their liability be­came an asset. Frank Partnoy, a reformed derivatives trader who teaches law at the University of San Diego, recalls that at Morgan Stanley in the 1990s, “we were constantly coming up with new acronyms” to describe similar financial in­struments. The goal: to present products, some of which had been discredited, in a more favorable light.

At the height of the housing frenzy, I visited a large subprime lender in Irvine, Calif. These folks would have made a $425,000, no-money-down, negative-amortization loan to a 12-year-old presenting nothing more than Pokémon cards as collateral. Were they engaged in subprime lending? Absolutely not. This outfit, they informed me proudly, made “nonprime” loans.

The late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moyni­han lamented declining societal standards in an essay titled “Defining Deviancy Down.” The language employed in the late credit bubble—let’s rebrand it the Dumb Money Era—helped define solvency down. And words, even if they’re thrown mostly by sophisticated professionals at other sophisticated professionals, can be just as damaging as sticks and stones.

The people on Wall Street believed so fervently in their own rhetoric that they bet their financial houses on it. They chugged the Kool-Aid through funnels. “If you call a mortgage-backed security AAA for long enough, you forget that its value could get cut in half,” says Frank Partnoy.

The problem isn’t that words intended to change the conversation aren’t accu­rate. Rather, the accepted terms turned out not to mean what people think they mean. Instead of helping to reduce risk, securitization—chopping up debt and distributing it—spread risk. Nonprime mortgages frequently turned out to be subprime. A lot of high-yield debt turned out to be junk. This confusion over the meaning of financial terms, and the skep­ticism it engenders, may be the real legacy of the Dumb Money Era.

A version of this article appears in this week’s Newsweek.

News: Expert blames language barrier for Darfur mess

Found on GulfTimes.com on 1 April 2009
By Ramesh Mathew

Ismail ... believes the issue of Darfur has been hijacked by the West’s English-speaking media

Ismail ... believes the issue of Darfur has been hijacked by the West’s English-speaking media

Sudanese and African affairs specialist Salah Khogali Ismail believes the absence of proper English-speaking media in Sudan has hit the African Arab nation heavily in explaining its position on the Darfur issue at the international level.
Ismail, a media expert serving the State of Qatar, said his country could have turned the Darfur happenings to its advantage at the international level had there been an effective English media there.
“Western powers capitalised on this Sudanese handicap and orchestrated things at the global level to suit their interests,” he said.
Claiming that the entire case against Sudanese president Omar Hassan Bashir as “politically motivated”, the media expert said the timing of the order of his arrest itself proved it beyond doubt.
“It occurred at a time when the highest leaders of the region, including the HH the Emir, Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, and HE the Prime Minister, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jabor al-Thani, were trying to arrive at a settlement on the issue of Darfur.
“The peace talks had already begun when the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) orders for Bashir’s arrest came,” he insisted.
Reiterating that Darfur events were blown out of proportion by a judicial committee that went to Sudan to evaluate its judicial system, Ismail said the said it was ironic that the said committee had only one member, an Italian judge, with a legal background.
“All others were either so-called human rights activists or representatives of some namesake forums,” argued Ismail.
It is in this background that Arab leaders are currently opposing the arrest of the Sudanese president, he said.
The media expert said there was no reason whatsoever to find fault with the judicial system in his country.
“The expertise and sincerity of Sudanese judges are widely acknowledged in the region’s countries and they are presiding many courts of the GCC states,” he said.
The media expert also found fault with the Security Council’s argument that Darfur is an issue having an international bearing.
“It is only a regional issue that should be sorted out within Sudan, using the good offices of countries sharing the same cultural ethos and traditions of Sudan,” he said.
“However, without understanding the basic realities, western media is giving an impression that it is an issue that threatens international peace and security,” he added.
Ismail also believes western powers are orchestrating violence in Darfur and surrounding areas with the sole aim of splitting Sudan into at least five new independent states.
“If the Doha initiative doesn’t yield results, it could in all probability lead to a division of Sudan and Israel could be the major beneficiary,” he argued.
The expert felt Israel was instigating violence in Darfur at the behest of western countries and in the event of a split, a larger part of Sudan could fall into their control.
Ismail also felt that the US did not like the presence of Chinese companies in oil exploration in Sudan as it saw as the Asian giant as a major rival to their interests in Africa.
The Chinese, he said, had built bridges, schools and hospitals in Sudan at much cheaper costs besides using cheaper technology for oil exploration.
“This could be one of the reasons for the American anger towards Sudan,” he argued.
Ismail said the issue in Darfur had its start when pitched battles broke out between farmers and herdsmen at least 40 years ago.
“It is not a recent issue as is being propagated by western media,” he said.
The veteran political commentator also felt the westerners succeeded in sowing seeds of dissension among people of Darfur and their resultant division as Africans and Arabs weakened the country.