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Showing posts from April 24, 2012

Europe: Things fall apart

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Europe: Things fall apart     Dutch PM Mark Rutte (standing, right) failed to get a coalition deal on budget targets The eurozone crisis is not just back. It has returned in a much more dangerous form. This time the questions are more fundamental. The doubts about the whole austerity strategy - made in Germany and policed by EU officials - are openly expressed. The French elections lay bare the fault lines. If the Socialist candidate Francois Hollande wins he will not just be the first victor from the Left in France in 17 years. He has put down a marker - that he will challenge German leadership of the debt crisis. Mr Hollande believes that austerity first is destroying parts of Europe. Yes, deficits have to be cut, but his priority will be growth. He has pitched his statements not just to the French people but to the rest of Europe. He wants to reorientate Europe on a path of growth and employment. It was not a surprise that yesterday Angela Merkel's

Viewpoint: Binyavanga on why Africa's international image is unfair

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Viewpoint: Binyavanga on why Africa's international image is unfair   Should Madonna be Africa's president? Binyavanga Wainaina, Kenyan author and a past winner of the Caine Prize for African Writing, argues that the world has got its image of Africa very badly wrong. Let us imagine that Africa was really like it is shown in the international media. Africa would be a country. Its largest province would be Somalia. Bono, Angelina Jolie and Madonna would be joint presidents, appointed by the United Nations. European aid workers would run the Foreign Affairs Office, gap year students from the UK the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Culture would be run by the makers of the Kony2012 videos. 'Wholesome and ethnic' “Africa's image in the west, and Africa's image to itself, are often crude, childish drawings of reality” Actual Africans would live inside villages designed by economist Jeffrey Sachs . Those villagers woul

French election: Why is turnout so high?

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French election: Why is turnout so high? By Tom Geoghegan BBC News Magazine The turnout in the first round of the French presidential election was more than 80%. The last time that number went to the polls in the UK was 1951. Why do so many French vote? It's a measure of the Gallic fervour for election campaigning that the candidate who went on to earn fourth place in Sunday's vote was able to draw crowds in their tens of thousands. Jean-Luc Melenchon, the Left Front leader, invoked France's revolutionary past while addressing packed street rallies ahead of the poll, in which he just about reached double figures. But perhaps a more accurate reflection of the strength of political engagement came at the ballot box, where four out of five registered French voters cast a vote. Turnout was slightly down on the 84% who voted in the last presidential election in 2007, but given the poor showings in the regional

Gustav Klimt: What's the secret to his mass appeal?

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Gustav Klimt: What's the secret to his mass appeal? By Stephanie Hegarty BBC World Service This year marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Gustav Klimt. The Austrian painter's most famous work, The Kiss has become a staple on university residence walls, but what is it about Klimt that garners such mass appeal? Paintings by Klimt are among the most expensive in the world but they have also come to adorn the cheapest tat - everything from mugs and fridge magnets to key-rings and tea towels. One of his works, the Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer, even has a Barbie doll made in its image. "It's quite extraordinary the way the 'Klimt factor' has taken off," says art critic Richard Cork. "He's one of those artists - and there aren't many - who gets his repros everywhere. "It's like an extraordinary contagion but of course it's more positive than that, it's a whirlwind.

Tech conversion: India's richest shrine goes green

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Tech conversion: India's richest shrine goes green By Shilpa Kannan BBC News, Tirumala Green temple: India's Tirupati Temple has adopted a range of green technologies - and the shrine is now trading carbon credits Surrounded by seven hills, high above lush green forests is the temple town of Tirumala. The crown jewel is the dazzling gold-plated temple of Lord Venkateshwara. Located in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, this is not just one of Hinduism's holiest shrines, but also one of the richest. It has an annual income of $340m - mostly from donations. Between 50-100,000 people visit this temple every day. This puts enormous pressure on water, electricity and other energy resources. Now the temple is using its religious influence and economic might to change the way energy is used here. Sustainable sources