Shell ordered to pay Niger Delta farmer

A Dutch court ruled on Wednesday that a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell was partly responsible for oil pollution in the Niger Delta, but said the company was not liable for four of the five charges brought against it. (from ft.com)

In relation to one spill it ordered the Shell subsidiary to pay compensation to a local farmer, saying the company had neglected its duty of care.

The case revolved around the issue of oil spills in the Niger Delta, which have blighted Nigeria’s main oil-producing region for decades.Shell argues that the damage is caused by sabotage and oil theft or “bunkering”, which takes places on an industrial scale in the Delta. Environmental groups say Shell does not do enough to maintain and protect its oil infrastructure in the region.

Shell welcomed the verdict, but Friends of the Earth, the pressure group that brought the charges, expressed disappointment and said it would appeal.

“We have mixed feelings,” said Geert Ritsema of FoE, saying he was unhappy that four of the charges were dismissed. On the other hand, “this is the first time that Shell has been ordered by the court to pay compensation for damage. The Nigerian justice system has never been able to accomplish this.”

The suit was filed in by FoE and four Nigerian farmers in 2008 in the Netherlands, where Shell has its headquarters. It focused on four oil spills in the period from 2004 to 2007, in the Delta villages of Goi, Oruma and Ikot Ada Udo, which locals said had polluted the farmland and fish ponds around their homes.The case was unique in that it was the first time a Dutch multinational had been taken to court in Holland over environmental damage caused abroad.

The court established that the spills were caused by sabotage, not poor maintenance on the part of Shell. Regarding the 2004 spill near Goi and the 2005 spill near Oruma, Shell Nigeria had taken “sufficient precautions” to prevent sabotage from its underground oil pipelines and was therefore not liable for damage claimed by the farmers.

But in the case of two spills near Ikot Ada Udo, it ruled that Shell’s local subsidiary, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Ltd (SPDC) had violated its duty of care and should be held liable for negligence.

It said the sabotage had occurred in 2006 and 2007 when criminals opened the valves of a deserted Shell oil well with a monkey wrench. Shell could have prevented the sabotage by putting a concrete plug in the well, which it did not do until 2010, the court found.

It ordered SPDC to pay unspecified damages to the Nigerian plaintiff in the case, Friday Akpan. The court dismissed FoE’s claim that SPDC did not clean up the spill sites properly.

Mutiu Sunmonu, managing director of SPDC, said: “We welcome the court’s ruling that all spill cases were caused by criminal activity.”

He reiterated Shell’s view that most oil pollution in the Delta is caused by oil thieves and illegal refiners, and said SPDC had made “great efforts” to raise awareness of the issue with the government of Nigeria.

“For SPDC, no oil spill is acceptable and we are working hard to improve our performance on operational spills,” he said.

Soccer stadium hearing threatens Egypt with more unrest

Egyptian soccer fans have threatened violence on Saturday if a court does not deliver the justice they seek for 74 people killed in a stadium disaster. (from news.yahoo.com)

The hearing over the Port Said disaster in February follows unrest on Friday that killed five people and injured more than 330 during anti-government protests on the second anniversary of the uprising against Hosni Mubarak.

The court had been due to rule on Saturday in the cases brought against 73 people, 61 of whom are charged with murder in what was Egypt’s worst stadium disaster.

Another 12 defendants, including nine police officers, are accused of helping to cause the February 1, 2012, disaster at the end of a match between Cairo’s Al Ahly and al-Masri, the local side.

Expecting a verdict, hardcore Al Ahly fans, known as ultras, have protested in Cairo over the last week, obstructing the transport network. The Port Said disaster triggered days of street battles near the Interior Ministry in Cairo last year.

The ultras have blamed the deaths on the military council that was governing Egypt at the time of the disaster a year ago, accusing it of planning the incident for political reasons.

Saturday would be “a decisive day for many”, the Al Ahly ultras declared on their Facebook page on Friday. “Beware of our anger: justice or blood”, they wrote.

Many fans accused security forces of causing the disaster to punish them for taking a frontline role in the street revolt that toppled Mubarak in 2011. A parliamentary inquiry last year blamed fans and shoddy policing for the deaths.

The ultras consider their dead as martyrs of Egypt’s revolution – a status officially conferred on them this week by President Mohamed Mursi, who assumed power from the military council after winning an election in June.

The focus of protester rage during Friday’s demonstrations, Mursi faces discontent on many levels, including frustration at the perceived failure to secure justice for those killed in the anti-Mubarak uprising and the following period of military rule.

Protesters accuse Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood of seeking to dominate the country and betraying the revolution. The Brotherhood dismisses such accusations as part of a smear campaign by its rivals.

Street battles erupted in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez, Port Said and elsewhere. Arsonists attacked at least two state-owned buildings as symbols of government were targeted. An office used by the Muslim Brotherhood’s political party was also torched.

Govt signals Saudi bridge project moving forward

President Mohamed Morsy’s office said Tuesday that it expects to soon begin a joint project with Saudi Arabia to build a bridge between the two countries across the Gulf of Aqaba.(from egyptindependent.com)



Saudi officials expressed a desire to begin implementing the project during Morsy’s visit to the country early this week, presidential spokesperson Yasser Ali told reporters on Tuesday.

The King Abdullah Bridge was first proposed in the 1980s but but has since been shelved. The ambitious 50-kilometer land-sea bridge would link the resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh with the northern Saudi Arabian area of Ras Hamid and would allow travelers to cross between the two countries in 20 minutes. Experts say that it would take three years to build.

Former President Hosni Mubarak dismissed the project in 2008 without giving a reason, but state-owned newspapers reported at the time that the project would have a negative impact on the Western-style tourism industry in Sharm el-Sheikh.

Ali said the project has regained momentum because of “the mutual political will” supporting the construction.

Foreign Minister Mohamed Kamel Amr said earlier this month that the bridge would have many benefits but that the technical and financial aspects of the proposal must be studied carefully.

Barack H. Obama is the 44th President of the United States.

His story is the American story — values from the heartland, a middle-class upbringing in a strong family, hard work and education as the means of getting ahead, and the conviction that a life so blessed should be lived in service to others. (from whitehouse.gov)


With a father from Kenya and a mother from Kansas, President Obama was born in Hawaii on August 4, 1961. He was raised with help from his grandfather, who served in Patton’s army, and his grandmother, who worked her way up from the secretarial pool to middle management at a bank.

After working his way through college with the help of scholarships and student loans, President Obama moved to Chicago, where he worked with a group of churches to help rebuild communities devastated by the closure of local steel plants.

He went on to attend law school, where he became the first African—American president of the Harvard Law Review. Upon graduation, he returned to Chicago to help lead a voter registration drive, teach constitutional law at the University of Chicago, and remain active in his community.

President Obama’s years of public service are based around his unwavering belief in the ability to unite people around a politics of purpose.

South Africa convicts Nigerian for ‘terrorism’

Johannesburg court convicts Nigerian Henry Okah of 13 charges, including car bombings that killed 12 people in Abuja. (from aljazeera.com)

A South African court has convicted Nigerian national Henry Okah of charges related to “terrorism”, including bombings that killed 12 people in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, on independence day 2010.

“I have come to the conclusion that the state proved beyond reasonable doubt the guilt of the accused,” said Judge Neels Claassen, handing down the verdict in the South Gauteng High Court on Monday.

Okah was found guilty of masterminding attacks including twin car bombings that killed 12 people in Abuja on October 1, 2010 and two explosions in March 2010 in the southern Nigerian city of Warri, a major hub of the oil-rich Delta
region.

He faces a life term at minimum when the court hands him the sentence between January 31 and February 1.

The armed Nigerian group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), which in 2010 was a well-equipped group fighting for a greater share of the Delta oil wealth, claimed responsibility for the attacks.

Although Okah has denied leading MEND, saying he just sympathised with their goals, court documents referred to him as its leader.

“The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta has been known in the past to blow up or disrupt oil installations and pipelines in the oil rich Niger delta area,” Al Jazeera’s Haru Mutasa reporting from Johannesburg, said.

“They are also known to take a lot of foreign hostages and ask for ransom,” she added.

Documentary evidence of his role in the group included handwritten notes by his wife.

MEND has a history of staging fierce attacks on oil facilities and kidnapped oil expatriate workers in Nigeria’s oil-rich southern Delta.

He holds permanent residence in South Africa, but is known to have travelled back and forth between the two countries.

In 2009 he was freed from a jail in the central Nigerian city of Jos where he was being held for treason and gun-running.

His liberation came in the wake of an amnesty deal offered by the government to thousands of Delta fighters.

The court said he then left for South Africa, but returned to Nigeria in early 2010, sponsoring the purchase of cars which were modified to allow the fitting of explosive devices.

Eight months later the cars were used to bomb independence day festivities that were attended by several foreign heads of state, including South African President Jacob Zuma.

Okah have denied involvement in the Abuja blasts, saying the charges were politically motivated. He was also accused of being one of the spokesmen for MEND.

$25 Computer (Yes, Computer!) Could Change The World

The Raspberry Pi is a $25 computer that is powerful enough to run Quake 3, a pretty intense 3D video game. It plugs straight into a TV with an HDMI output and it’s designed to be cheap enough that anyone can buy. (from businessinsider.com)

So why is the Raspberry Pi foundation, the organization behind this charming device, making the computers in the first place?

We spoke with Eben Upton, executive director of the Raspberry Pi foundation to find out why. Here’s what we learned:

  • It’s primarily intended for the education market. The whole idea was conceived as a way to get kids to learn how to manipulate and program computers earlier on.
  • The Raspberry Pi foundation wants to open-source the technology so “a company in China can produce a million computers” for developing countries and schools. The foundation expects third parties to start developing Raspberry Pi devices midway through 2012.
  • The multimedia performance of the Raspberry Pi is “substantially better” than the Tegra 3, a chip used in many modern smartphones, Upton said. The only smartphone that comes close to the Raspberry Pi’s performance is the Galaxy S 2, he said.
  • They don’t intend to make money off it. While you could easily turn something like this into a fully operational business, the Raspberry Pi foundation will remain a not-for-profit, Upton said.
  • Around 10,000 units should be available once or twice a month. There’s an upper limit of about 100,000 that the Raspberry Pi foundation can produce in a year, though.
And here’s the full interview:

BUSINESS INSIDER: Why did you guys want to build such a cheap computer?

Eben Upton: We came up with the idea because we’d been interviewing potential undergraduates to come to Cambridge university about 5 years ago. Both the number of people applying and the stuff you could have relied on them already done was getting worse. The numbers were going down and could hardly rely on the people you did get to know anything about computers.

We looked around for reasons why this happened. The thing that came to me, the people of my generation had small computers when they were kids. They had TRSATs, they had these machines and they were programmable. You turn them on and the first thing you could do was print “hello world.” These are going away and have been replaced by game consoles or PCs, which are programmable.

I started looking for a way you could provide a machine cheaply enough that you could give you children, settling on this $25, $35 price point. Over the last 5 years, we’ve been looking at ways for making a machine like this. I joined Broadcom and it turns out Broadcom made chips that ware really cheap. You could build a pretty respectable computer at the $25 point and the foundation is really an organization that brings out the possibilities of this.

Now you’ve got a chip that can meet the price point, the foundation is a way to do that.

BI: So it’s a shot at getting kids to learn how to program?

EU: Yeah, they’re so cheap you can give them to all the children or they can buy them like they buy textbooks. That’s the idea, children are enormously illiterate now, but what they know how to do is use computers. They see them as bits as functional magic and have no idea how they work. That’s fine for Facebook and browsing, but if you want a career out of this stuff or create something that’s high value, you have to understand how the thing works

This is almost nationalist. We were concerned about Cambridge’s problem and the university’s problem of getting enough qualified students. Then we were concerned about Britain’s problem, not producing enough engineering graduates. It was a quite parochial initial view we had. AS soon as news got out that we were going to do this, most of the interest we saw was in the undeveloped world. Russia and Brazil, a lot of people very interested in this.

The project has broadened out from this educational thing to adult hobbyists. A lot of the biggest cheerleaders are guys my age who want to build robots and media centers. Also people in the developed world where you can get performance out of places with televisions but not computers. It turns your TV into a workable productivity computer.

BI: Why show off the video game performance of it, then?

EU: I guess what we tried to do, we showed you running a web browser, a piece of productivity software. We wanted to emphasize everything the chip can do. It’s a maddeningly powerful process, it will run a desktop. It won’t set the world on fire with its desktop performance, but it has a lot of multimedia performance. It can do 1080p HD video playback. We wanted to put out a series of videos capturing it doing these things that surprise people at that price point.

BI: Do you guys ever plan to make money? Or turn this into a business?

EU: There is no corporate organization. The Raspberry Pi foundation has six trustees, I’m the executive director of the foundation. The foundation owns all the intellectual property embodied in the device and is the business entity procuring the manufacturing and handling distribution. It’s a limited company under English company law. It’s possible to take a company like that and register it as a charity. The company is registered as a not-for-profit.

The money you get is recycled back into the business. The bearers of the trustees have given loads of money to the foundation. That provides the working capital required to pay for chip infantry. The primary limit on our scale is the working capital to hold our infantry and buffer it as it runs through the company, we have pretty insignificant fixed overheads.

We’ve raised capital in 10,000 unit batches to build the devices. That’s the money we need, that will provide us, but there’s an upper limit to how many devices you can build in a year at that rate. With best use of working capital you can build 100,000 devices each year, to scale we’ll have to raise additional capital. We’re intending to release the designs for the device at due cost. We can’t make any money out of this, we have no incentive to keep the design of the device secret.

We do hope third parties will be able to manufacture clones. We can expand the concept without having to expand the capital base.

BI: Does that mean you guys are planning on releasing a second version?

EU: We’re comfortable with our multimedia performance, we do realize our ARM performance is kind of retro. 700MHz is enough, but it could be more, but we don’t currently have any plans for a successor.

Obviously we’re careful not to speculate. We’ll see how this one goes. The history is full of computer companies that have imagined the next product and talked about it and then people have fallen out of sway. There are no concrete plans. Look at Apple, it’s a company that I really admire in a lot of ways and they are extremely good at controlling information and their image. We’re going to do that.

BI: So when are you taking reservations for the device?

EU: We actually haven’t taken pre-orders. We built an initial prototype batch, alpha boards, we’ve had those for several months. We’ve built a very short run of the final device, a test run to make sure the design is sound. It does appear to be sound, we found one small design defect, it’s a five minute fix and we’ve fixed that now. We’re in the process of committing a manufacturing run. We’ve bought parts for 10,000 devices and we are in the process of committing a manufacturing run for that.

When those devices come back in a few weeks time, we have a web store that we’ll turn on. We’ll turn the storefront on with a few thousand devices for sale. I suspect it’s gonna take an hour to sell through it at that point, I’m going to hold a few hundred in reserve. We have developers we’ve committed priority devices to.

We’ve been unusual in not taking pre-orders, a lot of people try to fund the capital requirements of the project by taking pre-orders. I think we could do that, but it’s always felt very risky to me. It creates the risk of, if something goes wrong, we’re going to end up having defrauded a lot of people a lot of money. Even now, with a workable device, we’re still very careful about not taking people’s money until we have a physical device in our hands.

BI: How often do you expect to have Raspberry Pi computers available?

EU: I suspect we can do a batch slightly more than once a month. Looking at the supply chain, it will require some careful planning to do that within our capital requirement. I think that’s pretty achievable. The aim very early on is to get these designs into the hands of the parties. We would like nothing more than some company in China to make a million of these. It would be perfect, we would achieve our goal, which is ubiquitous presence of cheap computers without having all the requirements of doing capital raising to scale.

Fingers crossed. I hope that’ll be in the first half of 2013, clones will be a factor.