jeudi 18 décembre 2014

African Summit for Peace in the Sahel Region


AMI Photo for illustration



By Seyid Ould Seyid

Security reinforcement in the Sahel region is the main agenda of Nouakchott semi African Summit held today in the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott International Conferences Center.

Mauritania President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz chairs the summit as African Union President reiterates the commitment of his country to contribute effectively in the common fight against terrorism.

In his turn, Chad President Idriss Dibi appeals for hastening the process of joint efforts for better military and intelligence cooperation to secure the sub-region from all kinds of violent extremism.

The African Union Security and Peace Commissioner Ismail Chargi appreciates Mauritania approach for regional security.

Nouakchott African Summit gathers elven African countries including presidents of Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Chad and Burkina Faso in addition to key observers and representatives from the African Union, Regional entities; the European Union and the United Nations.

vendredi 5 décembre 2014

Hiding Behind Golden Dunes

My apologies for hiding behind golden dunes to draft ordinary lines of the first e-book of my age pages that I like to release in 2015 first week.



To the world of words lovers and swimmers in literary waters, I will miss the loving moments that we spend online and offline.

Thanks to all for all.


Seyid.O.Seyid

mercredi 3 décembre 2014

SHAME ON THE SUN TO SHINE ON SLAVERY



IRA President Biram (unpo photo)
By Seyid.O.Seyid

“Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds”, said liberty voice Bob Marley. Black activist iconic liberator winning UN Human Rights Prize is in jail again. What absurdity! It happens unhappily in haven contradictions when the convention is no conviction.

lundi 1 décembre 2014

750 Miles Demo Walk!

Demo spokespersons


By Seyid.O.Seyid

Crashed by oppression, armed with determination, and disappeared in desperation, the Caravan of 206 employees had walked 750 miles from mining capital Zouerate with a labor union intention to protest democratically in front of Presidency Palace in the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott.

Walking in demonstrations on behalf of 400 voiceless work mates in their Private Security Company, the retired military security workers have been jammed to enter the city for security reasons. With little food and no resting rooms, they have to wait 19 days of depressions for their cry to be heard by concerned Ministry, their spokespersons told me.

We have done every possible striving including, sit-in striking, writing, and legal protesting in the work site in vain. The pain of being unable to provide bread for crummy children is the motivation behind our malevolent decision, complained the workers delegates in their meeting with the Ministry decision makers. Everyone is unrestricted to walk. The solution must be a long administrative procedure. Your rights are fail-safe as long as the law is in on your side courtesy, replied the Ministry.

The employees’ caravan had settled in temporary squatter.  They have refuted political parties to exploit their public opinion case. Surviving on individual donations of the generous nation and undivided on more waiting to see President Aziz in person, the only one capable of solving their human plight in the fight of justice. Nature is home of homeless caravan until getting new home or return home.

The melancholiest story is spasmodic coverage in local independent news wire. State Medias had not covered the new old story yet. Mauritania Government had granted free access to news reporters to visit the downhearted Caravan in steady juncture declining to exit, as deprived to enter.  The Caravan had reached the door of no return, concluded the organizers. As optimistic axiom goes, “The brightest dawn comes after the darkest hours”.

Regardless of legal debates, the security employees inhuman situation should be dealt with as human case with due urgency. For justice to prevail, the state of law ideals that Mauritania Government is promoting in its public media should be in action immediately.

In the past, 12 workers of the economic capital Nouadhibou have marched to protest at the Presidency gate. They were received and promised equate consideration.  They have returned in ablate oblivion.

It might be appeasing to grant Presidential audience to such patient, patriotic and peaceful Caravan, despite busy schedule of acting President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz on the wheel for advancing the agenda of the African Union he is chairing.

To elude hazard manners, labor essential requests are to process in decentralized manner. It is undesirable end to end nowhere. Primarily, national means must serve human needs. Getting back to normal stagnation is conclusive victory in the face of abnormal absurdity. As American song does reiterate, “Life’s funny proposition after all, imagination, jealousy, hypocrisy and all”.

dimanche 30 novembre 2014

President Obama Wishes on the Occasion of Mauritania National Day

Barack H. Obama (Whitehouse photo)


Saturday, 29 November 2014, 10:53 am
Press Release: U.S. Department of State

Mauritania National Day
Press Statement
John Kerry
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
November 28, 2014
On behalf of the American people, I send best wishes to the people of Mauritania on the 54th anniversary of your independence on November 28.
Mauritania and the United States have a strong partnership founded on shared interests for regional peace and security, and countering the spread of Ebola in West Africa.
Last August, I hosted President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz in Washington at the U.S. – African Leaders Conference. I thanked President Aziz for his work in crafting a ceasefire agreement in Mali and for your country’s commitment to counterterrorism efforts throughout the Sahel.
I look forward to working with the Mauritania government and civil society to expand trade and increase prosperity for all Mauritanians in the years ahead.
On this day of celebration, I wish all Mauritanians a joyful Independence Day.
ENDS
Source : © Scoop Media

First Lady Parting Paris for Dearest Desert Marvels

French lawyer Mariam, Mauritania First Lady for 20 years (Noorinfo pict


vendredi 28 novembre 2014

Golden Desert Milky Nights


Nouakchott City , Mauritania – Seyid .O.Seyid . Drinking camel milk and sleeping is silent golden desert is ultimate happiness of Mauritania nomad population leaving in harmony with nature, without imagining the existence of any technical application of ITC revolution. The best life is to drink milk with my girl Mrayouma, voiced one of the desert poets.
Happiness is not something readymade. It comes from your own action, stated Dalai Lama. Solitude is one of the happiest experience you may have when fixing your temporary mobile tent in no man island far from the high way and noisy polluted cities. Four hours of deep sleeping seem to be an eternal rest. Without clock alarm or any sound accept your heart beatings, you wake up at four or five in the morning in relaxed shape to see the sky stars and shining moon covering the horizon. The golden sunrise and sunset are the peak of your beautiful moments that you should never miss in the surrounding mysteries. With mixed feeling of admiration and natural abundance; you think of yourself as the king of the universe or the unique citizen still surviving to tell the world about such solitude of internal images and unbelievable imaginations. Such isolation is the best set up for psychological introspection or enriching meditation of no interruption.
If you’re not born for adventurous traveling or cannot make it for long alone, you could move on in your vehicles or on camels to the nearest Bedouin camp to settle with them. They treat you as you have been an ancient member of the neighborhood. They welcome you with natural smile without even asking who you were and why you come. They might be the poorest of the planet but they will share their little food freely. The day best news is the falling of the rain in their place or the nearest one. The preferred talk is about raising cattle’s. Men take cares of camels. Women go after the goats. Hospitality is legendary. Tribal relations are solid bounds. Social integration is the easiest adaptation. Marriages are the earliest. Girls marry in fourteens; boys do at the age of 26. There is no limit of age difference .Man could be older than woman by 30 or 40 years. Divorce is the quickest decision men can take in view minutes. The community is the happiest is such nomadic context protecting the traditions of ancestors going back in history for centuries.
They consider milk as perfect food and drink at once. Without meat, they think one boil of milk will do for the day, another for the night. The night should be milky even after eating camel or goat meat. They do not like to go to bed before ending up with drinking fresh hot milk. It may help to get a milky dream in the night of all fantasies.

Milky World:
 “I am the happiest person in my milky nights, I sell 300 litters a day”, told me the milky man Sweidat Ould Brahim (around 55 years) living in the city suburb by selling camel milk for  the last 14 years. I bought some milk and asked him about the world news. He confirmed that he should spend the rest of his life in the world of milk. The real world is camel milk. The rest is an outside business that does not interest him at all.
For elite literary figures, the golden desert scape is an inspirational way to stay inspired for writing original poems or reading selective books. Unfortunately, the majority of desert dwellers are illiterates. The oddity is that they are famous for oral traditions and untold wise stories.
Emirati poet Abdullah Bin Sultan Bin Sulayem had explained Sahara traditions of nomadic life in 38 poems. One of his verse translates, “Eager to imagine lightning raining nights. Gone with running Bedouins to join resources of water roses”.

jeudi 27 novembre 2014

Celebrating Independence of Dependencies!


Nouakchott, Mauritania- Seyid .O.Seyid“Freedom is the emancipation from the arbitrary rule of other men”, US philosopher Mortimer Adler memorable quote. Officially, Mauritania is celebrating its national day 54th anniversary ending nearly 55 years of French colonialism. Mauritania had gained its political independence in painful isolated conditions, 28 November 1960. France had colonized this unrolled country or uncontrollable desert refusing to recognize any central powerful leadership in its political history.


On the occasion of the nationwide celebrations characterized by series inaugurations of nearly created infrastructural projects, Mauritania President Mohammed Ould Abdel Aziz talks in his broadcasted statement about another year of unprecedented modern achievements of his second term. His radical opposition terms his record as the climax of dreary hardship. That political indirect debate has to mature for the sake of continued improvement that is badly needed. Apolitical youth middle class may not believe those political claims but it can stick to the politics of fruition if there is any.

Historically, Mauritania was called plundering divided land ruled by different tribal Emirates. Like modern military civilian presidents, most powerful Mauritanian princes had inherited power by chance or sized it by force, according to reliable oral version if there is any objectivity in subjective story of human history. Winners of desert nomadic wars are the ones who are left to tell their own victories. As usual, jungle law victims are voiceless in every invasion that may never be justified by any justice. In their dreadful setting, it is better to be feared than loved, wrote Machiavelli in his Italian “Prince”. I wonder whether there had been any historical connection between Mauritanian dictatorship and Machiavellian prince or such dictatorship had no citizenship. The world is running short of righteous answers. Even righteous principle is hardly accepted concept.

Economically, Mauritania is still importing almost 90 % of domestic necessities from global market, stated President Aziz in recent remarks. Yesterday colonizer is today first economical partner, the biggest sister with the biggest mouth, the largest ears and the widest eyes is the most intimate insider implanting its magic force in major national affairs of its baby country.

Culturally, Nouakchott city is the Mauritanian capital copying Paris cultural style and speaking French language with bizarre local accent more than any of its own Arabic, African dialects. France itself is overwhelmed by the omnipresent American cinema industry and the English pioneers of the world first class media. Ironically, in their native country, Mauritanians are foreign linguistics alienates thinking with French mentality, preserving French ideology and acting in physical slim bodies covered with traditional clothes. Francophone language had softly served France glory more than any military operation or colonial oppression. Liberation is a long term action of lasting transformation. “For what is liberty but the unhampered translation of will into act?, questioned Italian poet Dante Alighieri.

Strategically, Mauritania elite will be breathless unless it is clear about the wind direction in French capital. French view might be sacred vision and noble mission. The diplomats’ admiration of France civilization makes them speechless unless they are briefed about French position even in issues that may not have any nothing to do with French critical interests.

Logically, French rulers are invisible in independent Mauritania but French values are visible in common sense. The socio-economic, cultural and technical independence realities are remained to be seen. Until then, Mauritania is celebrating the independence anniversary of all dependencies, despite the fact that some of us would love to name a spider by its ellipsis. As humanist US poet Walt Whitman mentioned, “ The beauty of independence, departure, actions that rely on themselves”.

Naturally, Mauritania beauty is general generosity of its people, the simplicity of its singularity, and the virginity of its land of million square kilometers bridging the cultures of Middle East North white Africa and the history of black West Africa by the means of fascinating geographical explorations that France had discovered to link the sub-region under the umbrella of an extended colonial era.

mercredi 26 novembre 2014

How Teachers Are Teaching Shakespeare in Shaking Desert ?

Nouakchott City - Mauritania . Seyid .O. Seyid. The world has studied Shakespeare and his language culture extensively without giving him due deserved consideration. Locally, even Shakespeare passing on stage may not be perceived. With overloaded challenges of cultural shocks and contradictions of educational systems, Mauritanian English teachers are facing a killing music in Mauritanian schools.

English credits in high schools are only five hours to deliver in a class of almost different generations. Typical public mixed class is open to more than hundred students of multi-ethnic groups. The first 15 minutes of the class hour are devoted to the practice of being an iron baby sister with snowy mind and rocky heart. The teacher has to use all tricks of class management for his next 30 minutes chalk and talk dancing where he has to write the day lesson on the black board that is not black any more. Irrational usage of another generation had made it colorless and shapeless. Shouting he will be in another round to explain every word by acting, drawing or finally translating it into local languages if the top learners do not figure out the intended meaning.

The students are to copy their teacher unsacred scripts in drowsy copybooks during the last quarter of that century teaching hour. In the meantime, the teacher goes in the rows of dusty tables to supervise general behavior. Only the best ones used to write down their lessons while the troubles makers curse the universe to end this monkey business of hated supervision. Unexpectedly, the very loud alarming bell does announce the end of the English course that is yet to begin. The teacher is likely to repeat the same play with different class players for six hours, before closing the day business of no business. The players may change but the game or the battle of teaching will never change if he is lucky to survive without registering major accident in the class or the schoolyard.

Crowded beginning classes are the worst turning their teachers into the peak of laughing fools whenever they uttered a single strange word of Shakespeare foreign language in this Arab African desert. The land obsessed by Arab heritage in conflicting competition with a culture of historical French colonialism. Despite various attempts of Arabization and many enacted laws claiming Arabic as official lingua franca, Moliere language is the winner in public administrative spheres dominating usage at least. The teachers were used to enjoy the highest esteem of prophetic position as expressed in poetic compositions of certain Arab poets. Yesterday teachers have mastered the public schools. Today, they are serving private schools. In future, they might be disturbed by their fears of uncertain destiny. The fragile emotional ones may even dropping tears on losing glorious past for wearied reasons. The brave teachers will die hard teaching as long as they are surviving the calamities of their notable profession.

Therefore, it is a dramatic action to teach Shakespeare global language in the shaking ground of the desertification capital. Despite all the odds of the impossible mission, teaching was, is, will always be the most efficient working tool of the brightest teachers to change the world tremendously in every positive direction by educating any uneducated nation of no established education.


As the wise quote goes, “Who dares to teach should never cease to learn”. You can learn more by teaching surely. That is why teaching ourselves is a never-ending process. Islamic tradition is calling us to learn forever, even in China, from birth to death. 

mercredi 19 novembre 2014

The Moon Poets, Mauritania Girls


By SEYID OULD SEYID

This is the very real human pain love story in plain poetic expressions that you will never read in romantic book or watch in thrilling movie. It is moving to grasp the essence of flouring cultural habit that is vanishing in the face of technical invasion.

This is the story of Mauritania Arab girls singing out for their hidden love in late evening’s hours under the moon and the stars, hiding out from community eyes. It is the ritual of overwhelming love invading ultimate sprit, without daring to dream of touching dearest lover.

mardi 18 novembre 2014

G20 Summit: African Union President Aziz Presents Challenges Facing the Union.


African Union and Mauritania President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz has spoken on behalf of African continent to 2014 G20 two days Summit in the Australian city Brisbane, as an observer representing the continent and raising up its most pressing issues of needed development in keys industrial and agricultural sectors.

President Aziz highlighted the energy prominent role in global economy as a key factor in any productive activity. He added that Africa had registered a low level of energy consumption, despite the fact of having large available natural sources. The African Union is determined to work hard on accelerating the pace of progress and development in the Continent by exploiting its resources to get rid of backwardness, stated Aziz.

For him, Africa is using only 12% of global oil reserves and 4% of gas and coal resources while its huge capabilities and raw materials are enough to improve significantly the population living conditions. Africa's share of energy does not exceed 720 thousand megawatts representing 13% out of global 23 million megawatts that was produced in 2013, revealed Aziz. He called African countries to focus on production, transmission and distribution of electrical energy for industrial usage.

President Aziz welcomed the World Bank recent global initiative to enhance the efforts of the G 20 to invest in infrastructures in order to boost global economic growth .Partnership between public and private sectors is a top priority now, recalled Aziz.

For his country, Mauritania, he refers to its gas reserves estimated at 1500 watts for over 30 years to cover local and regional needs of neighboring countries such as Senegal and Mali. He added that Panda project energy, supported by the World Bank, would produce 310 megawatts. $ 700 million private capital is need for its development, concluded the African Union and the Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz.

By SEYID OULD SEYID

lundi 17 novembre 2014

Lost in Styles of Verbal Communications!


 
By SEYID OULD SEYID

“ The most important thing in communication is hearing what is not said ”-Peter Ducker

Social creatures of the Western African country Mauritania are born to communicate indirectly .This is how they are in their most verbal communication style. Actually, lacking communication culture fostered certain behavior that has pushed Mauritanians to be unspecific in communications, according to my personal little experience, if I have any.

Historically, to be precise- not your perception -  in demonstrating this singularity, please let me take my capital ME to be my own case study in this context at least.  I was born under a military regime in the nation of historical coups toppling most of its presidents by military force, trained and travelled in democratic countries. Opening up in this culture could be a real adventure, if not tragedy in the past. Nowadays, we called our country a big democracy with no limit of free expressions. Still we are not democrat thinkers or straight speakers. Nature has its implication in that modelling of no model. Disorder is our order .We used to live up in free open space when we were nomads on the move in the desert, following rain clouds and avoiding wind directions.

Please hold it, socio-political contradictions are second nature here. The State constitution would like to teach us to act civically when there is no civisms as children of the State and give up the perceived notion shaping our mind to be servant of tribal well-beings. We tend to forget that rigid habit dye hard in rage, if they are not eternalized. Before the existence of any state authority, the tribe was the leading authority taking charge of its member’s well-faire. In this regard, please make no mistake; individualism is meaningless absolute selfishness. To fit within the Mauritanian society I know best, you have to learn how to serve social, tribal or regional system. You should consider your individual needs as last item on your priority list. If you do not follow up, you are the worst failure to avoid. This is the beginning of total rejection for dooming seclusion. Even worse, you will have to keep it as your lifetime secret; complaining is not allowed. Proper channel of communication is not accessible.

Fortunately, the best mean to share your fears is to talk about them indirectly even in family setting.  To speak with your father about any significant topic. It is preferred to communicate your message through your mother's tongue. That message is likely to be heard. Only your mother is listening with her heart tirelessly. If your mother cannot take your burden on her shoulders by facing her angry or misunderstood husband.  The indirect magic formula would be the other way to try.

Hereby, you must be expert in bringing forth a long introduction that has nothing to do with the original topic as I did in this paper of expert complication. For example, if I have a problem with my brother, or school issue, I have to introduce the story by reporting the problems of my neighbors, and then compare it to mine to conclude with my specific personal ones in exaggerated terms to play the innocent role, while purifying myself from all imaginable sins. I am innocent said once a Mauritanian president in an official speech. Such declaration does not hold water. Under his brilliant leadership, it is almost unconceivable to be innocent of alleged corruptions or atrocities of his regime.

During my narration, I have to be a perfect example of shyness, and reluctance, my eyes should remain downwards, if not closed totally. I should never ever look into the face of any older man, not to mention my own father or questioned the veracity of remarks. I must be cunning in choosing special repertoire of indirect vague words. It is just my desperate attempt to start that difficult never-ending conversation.

That is the best local strategy of verbal communication I have witnessed. If there is any deviation to simple straight short, sweat talk. It might be understood as silly or impolite style. It could be your condemnation to go back to the age of mothering drills to get painful update on how to speak to the king of your house or your family military commander.

The indirect style of communication may turn into a closed dead end in big social gathering of the elder community. This is the place of absolute silence. If you are young, you are only permitted to listen and execute social orders of the elders to the letters. The youngsters have no voice in Saga meeting of the wise community. It is logic in the present wisdom that unwise men like me should be voiceless or get out of such meetings. Females have no chance to be heard in big masculine gathering.  They must wait for their day to shine in closed female circle as they are still doing in most of marriage celebrations in Gulf countries.

Honestly, sometimes the so-called wise men are unwise in their statements but I would be crazy to voice it, if I dare to imagine saying it. We must learn to be patient and absorb any frustration of the Generations huge Gap to narrow ultimately by modernity requirements.
Our generation's gap would get wider than ever if I switch to the direct style of the super nation of the United States emerging from Western side of the blue Atlantic Ocean that might turn dry under the invasion of our desert kingdom.

As it stands, my heart is falling apart as I try to remain indirect in my communications while on the dry side; I must be direct in my conversations with the interlocutors of the wet land or of the old continent citizens. In the wet land, they tell me to be direct in making my point specifically and write as I speak concisely. For them, to show respect and interest, you have to look into the eyes of your interlocutor. It has to be a face-to-face style of direct verbal communications. The Americans had taught me to bold in expressing myself fearlessly. What a surprising global lesson to apply in local denying culture! As George Bernard Shaw put it, “The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place”. It is painful to cross all times from the indirect verbal communication style of my mother Arabic language culture to the direct communication mode of my acquired foreign universal tongue. It is puzzling and dazzling when two modes of verbal communication are at loggerheads. Why they cannot be harmonious for the sake of common simplicity?

As forgetful as I am under daily pressures, my life is a constant struggle to follow up the dry land communication rules while still on the wet one and vice versa. Sometimes, I dream of being a model on both sides to bring my shattered tribes in getting closer and work in complementarity to reduce sharp distinctions. I have to make peace on both sides of the Atlantic. My original being and my large dreaming are split on the deferent sites of the Atlantic Ocean. Please let us get together through peaceful connection and learn to agree on common rules of either indirect or direct communications. 

I would love to explain to you, my dear readers - if I have any - my ideas clearly but it is impossible without being stuck or lost in conflicting styles of verbal communications. In my daily battle, I do my best to accept and understand people as they are. In the same token, I am keen to sound acceptable as I am, without the judgment of the beholder eyes or ears. “Be the change you want to see in the world”, as forged by the wisest Gandhi. We have to sing the song of the birds when we enter their forest, as local adage goes.


Please do not get me wrong. When I say you, it means me; when I used the pronoun I, it means everything as long as there are such contradictions in my daily linguistic patterns or verbal communications! Does that make any sense, even in a world of non-sense? When it comes to choosing between absurdity and diplomacy I will try the latter exist with a quote from Noble Prize winner Will Durant, “To say nothing, especially when speaking, is half the art of diplomacy”.

jeudi 6 novembre 2014

Mauritania Press review: latest headlines of online news


By Seyid .O.Seyid

Nouakchott city- Nov 6, 2014- Decision of Mauritania weekly cabinet meeting, PM Yahya Hademine calling for political dialogue and first interview of Al-Qaida ex -advisor with female TV reporter are the top headlines of the day review.

AMI State News Agency: Mauritania weekly cabinet meeting held in the State House under the leadership of Mauritania President Mohamed Abdel Aziz decided the creation of two schools of instructors for improving the quality of initial training in northern mining city Akjoujt and southern agricultural city Kaedi.

Here is more information in French. http://fr.ami.mr/index.php?page=Depeche&id_depeche=28893

Alakbarinfo independent news agency: Mauritania political situation is the subject of the talks that the new Prime Minister Yahya Hademine is holding with the leaders of key opposition parties of radical and moderate wings in order to get their proposals about the best successful way to arrange another political dialogue between the different political parties.


Saharamedia independent news agency: Al-Qaida ex advisor, third leader after Ben Lader and Ayman Dhawahiri Mahfoude Waled , commonly known,  the Mauritanian Abu Hafs explained what he called sharp distinction between Al-Qaida and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. For him, Al Baghdadi model is not the Muslims expectations of an Islamic leadership at all. This is the first time for him to accept to be interviewed by El An Dubai TV female reporter Assiya Abdurrahman. It was unthinkable for Abu Hafs to interview any women for his religious reasons.



For more information, please see the above links or contact me for pitching your own preferred news story.

lundi 3 novembre 2014

8 New Ambassadors Submit Credentials to President Aziz by Seyid



8 New Ambassadors Submit Credentials to President Aziz


By seyid o.seyid

Nouakchott city- Eight new Ambassadors have submitted their credentials to Mauritania President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz in the gray Presidential Palace of the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott.

The diplomats have renewed their countries interest to work on developing more socio-economic ties with Mauritania Government, according to in their official declarations to State Medias.

The diplomats are representing the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, Malta, Croatia and Gambia.

Mauritania Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmed Teguedi and certain key advisors of the State House have assisted today diplomatic audiences.

For more information in French, please see news coverage of Mauritania Official News Agency.