Mike! Watch your ass.

And that project leans toward ???

from: AU/NEPAD AFRICAN ACTION PLAN 2010‐2015, P4, African Development Bank, 2009 "The benefit of a regional integration approach to energy in Africa is expected to be a win‐win situation for all stakeholders involved."

I'm almost certain I must have taken it out of context as it was only a spotty read, but are you sussing out the ability of the locals to repay the investment loans to the influx of "investors" that is about to happen?
Or, am I way out of line here?

Darryl


On 03/09/2012 6:36 PM, michael gurstein wrote:
I'm right now in a guest house in Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso,
the third poorest country in the world as measured by the World Bank among
others... On the edge of the Sahel and bordered by some of the
currently/recently unsettled countries of the region--Mali, Ivory Coast,
Niger... I'm doing some background work for a significant Community
Informatics project that the e-Africa division of NEPAD/the African Union
wishes to undertake throughout sub-Saharan Africa.

This afternoon between appointments I went for a walk in the centre of the
city towards the Grand Mosque, a very Moorish structure in desert coloured
sandstone.  It was around 4 pm and as I was walking I came across rows of
men undertaking one of their daily prayers only this time in public led by
what looked like a lay preacher.  As I walked further I kept coming across
these street corner prayer sessions--perhaps 3 or 4 within a three block
radius and not more than two blocks from the main Mosque in Ouga.

This evening I'm back at the guest house doing things on the reasonably good
Internet connection.

It is getting late--now it is about 1.30 am local time.

I've just e-published the most recent issue of the online Journal of
Community Informatics.
http://ci-journal.net/index.php/ciej/editor/issueToc/30
Glocality: Thinking about Community Informatics and the Local in the Global
and the Global in the Local.

For the last half hour or so I've been hearing the sounds of jet planes
flying low overhead--back and forth, back and forth. At first I thought they
might be commercial planes coming in to land--but this is Burkina Faso where
there are probably no more than a dozen flights in and out a day and I would
guess none of them are scheduled for 1 am.

Mike



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