


Cellphones Leapfrog Poor Infrastructure in Mali 102
Hugh Pickens writes "CBC News has up an article by Peace Corps volunteer Heidi Vogt, a woman who served in the small village of Gono in Mali five years ago and remembers letters dictated and hand-carried by donkey cart or bicycle to the next town. Vogt recently returned to see the changes that cellphone communications have made in a village that still doesn't have electricity or decent drinking water. 'Gono's elders say the phones can keep them in touch with their village diaspora,' writes Vogt. 'Villagers depend on far-off relatives to send money in time of crisis — if someone is sick, if a house has caught fire, if there's been too little or too much rain and the harvest is poor. There's a new sense of connection to a larger world. In a village where most people can't read or write, they can now communicate directly with far-off relatives.'"
Re:with out power it is hard to keep your phone ba (Score:1)
Re:with out power it is hard to keep your phone ba (Score:1)
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I have a tourch that is crank powered and it dosent hold a good charge for long, the three leds start fading as soon as you stop cranking so you need the be cranking while using it inorder to get good light and considering how cheap it is to use batteries in an led tourch your better off just buying the batteries.
Even one of those single led tourches people have on keyrings would be better suited to most jobs, I just keep my tourch in the car for when all else fai
Re:with out power it is hard to keep your phone ba (Score:2)
Re:with out power it is hard to keep your phone ba (Score:5, Informative)
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The article seems to suggest that the cell tower was 16 miles away. I'm just saying that's pretty impressive range.
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Re:with out power it is hard to keep your phone ba (Score:1)
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This however is another paradoxical example of where it is impossible to tell if it is demand driving supply or supply driving demand,
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Re:Good start. (Score:4, Funny)
Some say, rocks don't kill people, only people do...
Without a rock it becomes just that much more difficult to slay another person.
Once this is completed, we are moving onto our next project... removing hands... I know... fucking brilliant... I can't believe we didn't think of this earlier.
Re:Good start. (Score:5, Insightful)
Look at Kenya, once a bastion of African stability (corruption not withstanding). Pretty much the nicest, most progressive and most developed sub-Saharan country in Africa, second only to SA (and what Zimbabwe once was)
In the space of a few weeks, they went from stability to killing each other with pangas, bows and arrows. Guns aren't the problem.
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All I'm saying is that the economic wealth we enjoy (and if you'r
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Guns are tools, tools that can be used for murder, but as Africa in particular has shown us, people can and do commit murder and atrocities on epic scales without guns.
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Technology is technology. You can't have cellphones and computers without also having guns, bombs, etc. The modern combat rifle has been around for about 60 years now. Even modern jets were products of the breakthroughs made in the the late '40s. If people are wanting to kill eachother and are willing to spend the money to buy modern weaponry, no amount of naive, wishful thinking is going to stop it from being available to them.
-Grym
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I feel like the whole world is crazy and
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South Africa, however, is more complicated than that. On one hand, I can easily point to SA's vastly increased integration into the global market since the end of apartheid, higher economic growth, lower inflation, better, more equitable access to social services and improvements in education...
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Re:Good start. (Score:5, Informative)
Where I'm from (Somalia), weapons are probably where you see the least American influence. The most common weapons you find are Chinese, Libyan, Russian made AK-47's. Although the M-16 was becoming popular when i was there last time. especially for it's light weight.
And similar to what the Original poster noted, our Telecommunication infrastructure is one of the top in East Africa, it is a True free market, absolutely no regulation, no taxes.
But aside from Telecom everything else in the whole, completely unstable, 17 year civil year, puppet interim governments (we have our version of Hamid Karzai).
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If those African governments buying guns decided they wanted to instead spend all that money on, say, textbooks, I guarantee, the West would shut down some gun factories and start printing more books.
You also imply that the West is rich *because* Africa is poor, which economically is a complete load of bollocks, nobody in the West gets
Yep... (Score:2)
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If we withdrew our money, our food programs, and our influence, there would be short term cries of victory, followed by pandemonium, famine, and increased violence. This I suspect would be followed up by a "do something" from the UN/WTO.
I realize that our current administration is a laughing stock, and I realize that we the US have a history of meddling too much (I postulate that some m
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Depends on how you see it.
Sweden gives 1.03% of GNI,
Luxembourg and Norway 0.89%
then comes almost every other industrial nation
then the US as second-last with 0.17%
And all the rich nations agreed in the UN to give at least 0.7%
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Goes to show:
Lies, Damned lies, and statistics
Either way, to respond above the chain as well:
I fully agree it would hurt the US.
-nB
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That kind of stuff is what the Peace Corps does and the reason she was there in the first place. It's often though their work that many of these villages can start thinking about keeping in touch with others outside of the village rather worrying over rampid disease, crop failures, etc.
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Re:Good start. (Score:5, Insightful)
UP YOURS!
That kind of bullshit, paranoid thinking reared it's head at me and some of my friends through our service. Rumors get spread, and some un-trusting chap would come up and confront one of us for being an "agent" of the USA, and accuse us of plotting nebulous, vague "bad" things in projects like, oh say BOOKS FOR THE SCHOOL, or TEACHING PEOPLE TO MAKE JAM. It didn't matter that the person couldn't make a logical connection between JAM/BOOKS and EVIL, their trust was broken.
Trust that is hard enough to earn in the first place.
Trust is what keeps a volunteer safe.
(Not to sound melodramatic, but off the top of my head I can think of at least one situation I was in where my life might have been in danger had some paranoid-ass started saying I was CIA.)
The Peace Corps goes to great lengths to distance itself from any inkling of spying. If a person has ever been in an intelligence gathering position, they can pretty much kiss their chances of volunteering goodbye. After you have volunteered, you are PREVENTED from taking any job in the intelligence services for something like 5 years at a minimum. Volunteers are not allowed to make political statements relating to the host country, and are discouraged from pretty much anything political in nature i.e, do it and you could go home. There is no fucking spying going on in the Peace Corps.
If you still don't believe me, let me clue you in on a non-secret: Peace Corps volunteers by and large get sent to rural areas. Why the fuck would the CIA or NSA give a rats ass about what is going on in some forgotten backwater of a country, let alone care enough to put a covert agent there for extended time? As for the few volunteers who go to large cities, there would be no need for a "Peace Corps cover" with all the other options (State Department, USAID etc), and a Peace Corps cover would be a pretty shitty one at that, because you probably wouldn't get a ton of useful intel out of schoolchildren and aids patients.
Sorry, but that really touched a nerve.
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You seem to imply that the US (and the rest of the 'west') isn't contributing a whole lot.
Bull.
I suggest that we immediately stop toppling governments.
Ok, great. And lets get them to start electing leaders who won't steal the money and
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You do realize many times you can't positively contribute without toppling "governments. Many third world countries are suffering because that is how those in power maintain control.
So do France, UN, NATO, etc.
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Naw, lets get communications fixed in the US first (Score:2)
in a village that still doesn't have electricity.. (Score:1)
Phones before guns (Score:2, Insightful)
The effect of cell phones is to allow a village to remain much the same village, despite the children dispersing. Over time, the kids will marry away, but the blow gets softened, and the children are stabilized by contact with home.
So it is a good thing over all. The interesting bit is: who pays for the village phones. Just the children. When you think that this is a force for stability, and how cheap phones are compared
Re:Phones before guns (Score:5, Informative)
Doutenze (at 25,000 people) ranks in Mali's top 20 cities
Mali is one of the 3rd poorest country in the world according to the UN*
The median age is 16
Here are the coverage maps for Mali:
http://www.gsmworld.com/cgi-bin/ni_map.pl?cc=ml&net=ik [gsmworld.com]
http://www.gsmworld.com/cgi-bin/ni_map.pl?cc=ml&net=mt [gsmworld.com]
Notice how little of the country is covered? This "news" is just a human interest story, a fluff piece designed to give you the warm fuzzies. That small village is not representative of Mali as a whole and anyone trying to extrapolate anything from such an example is making a mistake.
*2006 Human Development Index
Preemption (Score:5, Insightful)
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Do you have any arguments other than "People who think that are idiots"?
Re:Preemption (Score:5, Interesting)
It's capitalism at its finest--let the people decide for themselves what is most deserving of their money.
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Re:Preemption (Score:4, Interesting)
Even though he didn't do it more than a few times, I was impressed with the idea.
And I still have no idea how they grew so many bloody tomatoes in that place. It was insane
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Furthermore, the role of technology is misunderstood by people who say these things. Technology might not directly feed your family but it is a force multiplier and a time saver. There is a reason why most o
Why not both at once? (Score:2)
what do they need cellphones for? (Score:1, Interesting)
It is obvious that in the major insurgancies in the region are going to keep blowing up the infrastructure as their power and territory waxes and wanes vs govt troop deployments so perhaps in this case, it may be appropriate to say this. Although previous slashdotters (read techno-centric people) would argue otherwise, the main factions of the Mba'Lo region do not want any of this, they simply want control and they are willing to
Wrong Solutions? (Score:2, Insightful)
Instead of sending them food, cellphones, water, or weapons, why not send them some capitalism? Microloans, an active press to fight corruption, and education in systems of law and governance?
Decades of assistance to the third world, and all manner of sociali
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Re:Wrong Solutions? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've a feeling I've seen similar villages to the one discussed in the article, though.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again. One of the biggest shocks to me in my life was when I visited a small village in Ethiopia dominated by a former communal farm. One of the middle level farm workers asked me, in English, why the U.S. maintained such high subsidies on cotton and rice; why wouldn't the U.S., master of free trade, import Ethiopian cotton and rice?
They didn't want aid; they didn't want "education". They wanted to know why we refused to buy their products, even though their products were produced more cheaply than ours.
How do you answer that? Coming from someone who makes less in a month than I might spend in a night.
Maybe it is just me, but there is only one answer; abject shame, apologies, and a decision to try one's hardest to pursue business in the forgotten realms of this planet.
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The answer is rather simple. Being a sovereign nation, the United States isn't ob
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(*) Like most everyone else.
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Cell phones and communication with the diaspora will help in the future, look at Armenia and the Philippines where their diaspora are a big help to their economies.
Then again the deportation of American rejects to El Salvador (MS-13) was not a good idea either...
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Decades of assistance to the third world, and all manner of socialist leaders ready to aid and reform have done little except generate more poverty. Perhaps, instead of giving to the third world, we should start taking; in the form of purchasing agricultural goods, in ecotourism, and other friendly means to transfer money to these areas while simultaneously encouraging (and rewarding!!) hardwork?
I agree with your sentiment, but I'm surprised to see it on /.. Usually sourcing goods or services from the third world sparks complaints about outsourcing & offshoring. Think of all the good that has happened in India and other countries due to purchasing services from them, yet people here would rather bitch that it reduces their job opportunities. It seems competition is considered a good thing when you're the little guy throwing rocks at the tower but not when you're at the top looking down...
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That's why whenever I see protectionist liberals, I call them selfish bastards. Globalization is the *most* efficient tool of wealth redistribution from the rich to the poor, worldwide. Just look at the Western (EU + US) trade imbalance with the Asian tigers & India.
Vastly more wealth has been transferred from the hands of the rich to the poor due to the last 15 years of globalization than the 50 years of Foreign Aid offered by the West AND the USSR.
Socialism (especially International Socialism) a
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Liberals are by definition not protectionist.
By the way, Socialists are not liberals.
And International socialists are not protectionist.
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I think life in the third world is similar to life in medieval societies; brutal, cruel, and short. Hunter/gatherer societies go through boom/bust periods of feast and famine, not to mention the ravages of indigenous diseases. Beyond that, I don't subscribe to pure cultural relativism. I believe all humans are created equal, I believe men are socially equal to women, and I don't believe in human sacrifice.
If one comes across a society that routinely kills 1 in 4 of its female children, ho
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What we're saying is that
Similar experience (Score:5, Informative)
You don't buy a plan like in the US, you buy a phone ($30 for a cheap model) and then you buy minutes (leading to some of the shortest phone conversations I have ever heard). People who live in areas without electricity find ways to charge them. Someone might buy a generator and set up a side business charging phones. Some people have to bike hours to the nearest town with electricity.
The difference in how people communicate was astounding. Kids away studying could keep in contact with their families back in the villages. Kids who had met in school but lived in different places kept in touch (I reunited a number of my former students by passing cell phone numbers around). Farmers could keep in touch with people in the markets. It was an amazing change.
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Too much of the old Kiswahili will probably invoke the wrath of mods, but I'd bet we know a lot of the same people. This is too crazy. What sites did you visit when you were there?
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Yeah, pretty weird, but then it's no secret that there are plenty of geeks in Peace Corps.
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Sounds like a golden opportunity for solar battery chargers.
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I'm sure I'm not the only one here (Score:5, Informative)
I had 3 (count them, one two THREE!) cell phone towers within sight of my house, and I could always hear the diesel generators at night if the winds lulled.
Would I have traded the cell phone for reliable electricity or running water?
HELL NO.
Cell phones improved my life and the life of the other people there tremendously. Electricity is about 1,000,000 times more expensive to cook with than charcoal, and kerosene lamps and candles make plenty of light. Water was scarce, but I had a no-flush pit toilet and an in ground rain-catch cistern for water. I only really used about 60l a week. The real problem was that not enough people had big enough cisterns (20% maybe), and many people had none. Water ran out in places at times, people suffered when they couldn't wash or bath as often, but no one ever died of dehydration for lack of a drink. If 60% of the houses had big cisterns, it would solve that problem.
Life without electricity and running water can be just fine. What is really needed is healthcare.
The hospital didn't have a single actual doctor after the foreign volunteer left. Pretty much everyone who walked in was told they had malaria and treated for it regardless. People suffered and died frequently from stupid, easily treated things. THAT was -IS- a tragedy.
Literacy is needed more than anything else. (Score:1, Troll)
How to persuade the illiterate that it's worth while putting in the effort to learn how to read and write is another, and very difficult question to ans
surprising effects (Score:1)