Thursday, July 26, 2007

Meimona, The Everywoman

It has been two years since I noticed that there was definitely something wrong with Meimouna. She has been our neighbor for about seven years, living three blocs away from my parents’ house. Ever since I knew her, many things have happened to us and to the country. Meimona broke up with her husband the same day the country broke up with TAYA ) (lol). I remember standing confused not able to tell my feelings. I was in the cloud nine about the news of tanks rolling around the streets of NKTT in what appeared to be a bloodless coup against the vicious dictator. This euphoria was marred by the sad face of my mother telling me that Meimouna is divorced. Although our relationship never got beyond formal and quick exchange of Salamoualeikoum, her frequent visits to the family and her shy and conservative manner made her one of those women who are likely to win your respect easily and then your affection. So, always with a head-down attitude when saying hello, she gained my respect and admiration as I started to see her as a member of the family. Small wonder then that the news of her divorce overshadowed my excitement about and celebration of Taya’s departure.

Now it has been two years since Mauritania conducted her course without Taya and Meimouna faced her fate without her husband. What became of the country is what I’ve been trying to tell you since I launched the blog. What became of Meimouna is another story, which I’ll try to tell you today.

But first, why the feeling that there’s something wrong about Meimouna?

I was walking through the corridor which lead to the living room, when I saw my mother with other women. They were talking, laughing and drinking tea. This is a familiar sight which I used to meet with a hasty hello, hurrying my way to the living room at the end of the hallway. Not now! There was Meimouna among these women, looking like nothing I’ would have expected. I was stunned when she looked at me straight in the face and asked half-speaking and half-laughing if I still know her “matleit taarafna”. I have faced this not- quite-innocent question many times and had answered it in a variety of ways, but from her it came as a shock which rendered me speechless. She was there, ten years younger than her age, confident, defiant, well dressed and casting her net wide on me. With the heavy make-up, the expensive mobile she kept brandishing and the French perfume filling the air, Meimouna fitted not in my image of a mother of five who had been left to the vagaries of the cold world after her husband abandoned her. Back to consciousness, I heard her answering a question from one of the women “hamda el moulana elli ouveit menou, houa ‘el ai eeg”.

With this note of relief and freedom from Meimouna in mind, I started to ask whether divorce is a curse or a blessing and if divorced women in our society have any regrets at all about losing the sacred bond of marital commitment and partnership. Whether a woman in our rapidly changing society has anything to loose from divorce. And If her loss, if any, is comparable to her gain.

We are probably the only society on earth which celebrates divorce and allows divorced men and women a clean bill of health when they try to marry again, and again. I'm sure the scene of divorced women being cheerlead in fancy procession cars to their parents is a sight too common for us to beg contemplation. We don't even ask whether it's a wedding or a break-up celebration, we have become so used to it that we are no more excited by the event of marriage than we're saddened by the eventuality of divorce. And by the same token that marriage has been stripped of its moral and emotional significance as a mutual partnership for life, divorce also has been purged of all its negative connotations.

We all know that divorce is the sad end of a failed marriage. In some other social contexts, divorce offers an important second chance in life for couples who couldn't get along together anymore as wife and husband. It's a chance given by society to start over without absolving the couples of their social responsibility toward the children. Society, through mechanism of behavior control, like courts and others, makes sure that we don't tamper with the value of the family which is the basis of society and the sole guarantee of its continuity. This is why state institutions, law, religion, etc are part of a network of moral vehicles cultivated and used by society to make sure that marriage is respected and that divorce is discredited. In some societies, divorced husbands can't afford to make ends meet because ninety percent of their income goes to the children. So after divorce, they find themselves confined to a life of celibacy till this end. These may be extreme measures, but they show how much societies want to preserve themselves and their continuity by making marriage sacred and by protecting the family.

I'm no Dr. Phil (lol) but this is the truth, if a society fails to monitor the behavior of individuals, the result will be a sate of anarchy where anything goes. And the laws against divorce and the social stigma attached to it worldwide are just an expression of this collective will to avoid a life of chaos and lawlessness.

But do Mauritanians think twice before they embark upon "abkadou al halai"? The answer is no. In fact they don't think at all when they take the decision. Everyone of you has certainly a member of the family who has divorced his wife, remarried and divorced her again for no reason at all. Some of you also may have close relatives who were obliged to use a third party to marry his wife , divorced for the third time, before he can claim her back "ala sounati allahi wa rassouli " (lol). If you try to figure out why both sexes are quick to resort to divorce as a handy solution for their problems, you'll be amazed to find out there need be no reason at all. Divorced men and women in our society are just relishing their rights granted to them by a culture which gives precedence to divorce over marriage. We're a society of divorcees because ours is a culture of divorce. Full stop. This explains how divorce doesn't have to do with the social background, regional origin, professional success or level of education. In Nouakchott, we're all actual or potential second-hand husbands and wives. It's amazing that as much as you're jealous, fellow Mauritanian, you don't realize that your wife today will be someone else's wife tomorrow after you would have abandoned her. So, on a deeper level of observation, we're not only a nation of divorcees but also of cuckolds (lol). Poor Mauritanians!

This may explain a bit why my neighbor looked jubilant and rebranded after the poor "garay" left her. From a wretched mother of five who bore the brunt of NKTT's life every day, she becomes now the owner of a two-story house which people started to use as an address to tell their way in the maze of our neighborhood. Last night, I had an encounter with her. I was driving past her gorgeous villa when she shouted my name asking me to pull over. She came along with a group of women whom I haven't seen in the neighborhood before and can tell form their dress, cigarettes and easy going manner they don't dwell here. She didn't say anything particular but her attitude spoke volumes.

As I started the engine, a thought crossed my mind that maybe life in our society is about attitudes. The thought kept running through my mind that if society gave Meimouna no third choice between being married and heart-broken and being divorced and happy, the blame is not hers alone if she chooses to be happy. The blame is on our culture of divorce.

mom

380 comments:

1 – 200 of 380   Newer›   Newest»
Anonymous said...

excellent topic, i've seen thousands of Meimounas in my life but story of cuckolding never occured to me. It's superb, it's original.

i have some problem with the conclusion of the blog. i beleive in the necessity of encouraging good in life and expected you to put the balme on Meimouna. I share your view that society is to be held accountable, though.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

Fantastic and hilarious this blog about divorce. Mom, would you allow me to translate it and publish it in Arabic and French. I hope by showing men that divorcing means being a cuckold, they will "thin twice" before they do it. Mauritanian men have no problem with stealing public wealth, lying, divorcing, etc. but the thought of their women in other men's beds is something they can't put up with.

Anonymous said...

there're those who break up becose too rich, other becose too poor. The rich want to enjoy life, the poor can't afford to live it (lol).

Anonymous said...

mom this is an excellent piece of social reality in Mauritania around the no more sacred mariage bondage. You scared the hell out of me now and guess what: I will never take my wife for granted because of the risk of being one of those cucklolds. I do believe that this excellent piece of sociological thought about marriage at home should be translated into french and Arabic and posted in Cridem and perhaps in Canalh. Dificult to translate as each word is difficult to translate in another language besides English.

Where did you do your English mom? A cuckold me? Jesus !

Anonymous said...

Still thinking that this is reality. Lots of women gt divorced because of poverty (poor husbands not able to provide needs and have to go) and sometimes the women get all right with attitude and some financial independance. Imagine the old husband realizing his ex-wife he left and that he dreams of evry night is in the possession of someone much wealthier for no fault of his: just bad luck. In reading your story I thought "blokatt" as there are some meimounas, married sometimes to their poor relative teachers or civil servants with very low to make it. One day because of peer presure from friends with attitude, they divorce. This of course is more occuring the other way around, that is, the husband leaving for another one for no obvious reason. He soon find himself a cuckold ...

Anonymous said...

indeed, a remark piece, excellent english and deep thought. Really glad to read you as ever.

Anonymous said...

Californian,

Just saw your note on praying Sidioca. Fully agree with you that this is not the road to take. He should not have fired his Minister over the latter precautionary approach to seek help from donors well before hunger strikes. Early warning reports from last year were very clear about things to come in line with climate change. Someone managed to covince Sidioca about honor, pride, oil (that he did not know was not coming soon) and fired someone who could have helped. I will pray the Day D, but as you said he better work double shift to bring water and try to bring back the oil money siphonned by some people still on vacation after the transition. Last year WFP was looking for $5 million I believe to set up food storage for this year and I recall the CSA guy making all sort of excuse that there was no problem...

Un Chinguittois: no problem to give you my chinese wife's sister. If I do, is that cuckolding? Cheers. Misse you really.

Tidinit.

N.B: Am also the author of the two unsigned messages above. First time to hear the word "cuckold" and this brought the hell out of me. My chinese woman is very beautiful and I will die if I lose her to a sucker (you are warned Un chinguittois !)

Anonymous said...

Tidiinit, who the hell are you and what kind of life have you been through? You're in the know about politics, economy, realestate, hunger and even cockolding (lol).Few can much your prolific interest and knowledge.

i laughed alot about the Meimounatt of Blockatt. I used to be there and know exactly what you are talking about.

this topic of divorce and the perspective mom cast on it is really unsettling. it's strange when you look around and see that the reality you have taken for granted is not as you think it is. Then you start asking ambarassing questions.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

if a women marries a man she would expect him to feed her and her family and her friends and thier families and her neighbors and their families and those she will know next year and their families. And son on, till he is broke and prison. Once behind bars, she asks for divorce and seeks another victim.

More men are broke and in prison because of women. Did you forget the "forbidden fruit" men? they are at the root of our misery.

Anonymous said...

The word “Cuckold” has made a grand entrance in the vocabulary of the daybreakers and is here to stay. It is classic to describe us as a “society of cuckold men”. I have to admit I don’t hear the word used very often in California despite the fact that cuckolding (if I can make a verb out of it) is widespread. That could be a word used in spelling bee contest. Will be hilarious to hear young contestants asking about the meaning of the word or how is it used in a sentence. Those of you who’ve seen spelling bees contest know what I am talking about.
I know I I learned something today. Thanks mom and kudos for another outstanding blog that raises a legitimate social issue. Can’t wait to hear Lady Luck, FPB, and Houdasilvia’s opinion.


Californian

Anonymous said...

un chinguittois is probalby making many "chuckolds" out of men in NKTT these day.

The chuckold maker

Anonymous said...

The chuckold maker

very funny indeed. UN CHINGUITTOIS gives the impression that he is one. My advice is to shoot him down (lol). But hang on, what this name you have yourself "Cuckold maker"? You're a dead man.

Anonymous said...

A passer by,

Thanks for letting me know that you know blokatt and we might have been crisscrossing each other then. Have you ever cuckolded me? I am the funny guy from Blokatt with a head like a mangoo.Ah Jesus I am going to die if you have ever cuckolded me ! Since this text from mom, I have been trying to list those I know who have been cuckolded several years in a row. Miss you too.

On another issue, anyone has news if Sidioca brought more that $2.2 million to deal with the water problem? A grant agreement from the Koweitis needs time for signing the papers and certainly the $2.2 million will come only after many Sunday's prayers. Why not tomorrow Friday? By the way signing a grant agreement will require providing clean audit reports for some 3 years, I believe. Do you know if we have any? If we don't the $2.2 million may take until 2012 to come. I like Sidiocazz, but he inherited a situation not clean and he refuses to do an audit. He may pay or it;

On a second issue, I am scared. If you analyze these two weeks news and look at them coldly, you feel something will happen and does not look good. Just guts feeling ... and I am far from a welly. Hope that the potenial troublemakers know they cannot survive a stupid move. Democracy is in and you cannot rule if you do not go through the ballots in 2012. For me the following have something to do with it: refugees return, drug/cigarette traficking and potential fool play with oil contracts prior and during transition I;

On a third issue, it is lack of $$ in the coffers (just $42 millions in the account @ the Bank of France from oil sales as of 30 June 2007 - Source: www.tresor.mr). And the money will be depleted soon as we get $2 million in here and take out $5 million there. Read again that the Treasury issued short-term bonds for few billions UM to face expenditures. My fear: ZZ and his ministers for oil and finance will run to borrow $$ against future oil/gas production at bargain price. So my concern is that they do like our cousins the Congolese: borrow lots of unnecessary money from the external banks in Nouakchott to spend to save face (and use some for their own needs) and let the rest of us foot the bill for 20 years to come with oil barils sold 50% cheaper than the future market price (I am telling you: the congolese did and Sassou Nguesso is Taya's classmate and ZZ and at least his finance minister are from Taya's circle before). I guess that is why we had two to three international banks established at the speed of light (Ehl SORECI entouma vem?)when they learned that oil is in Mauritania. Mauritanians have to be vigilant. The Congolese, the Gabonese, the Angolan did the same with the same banks and they are now in trouble for decades to come ...

Good luck. Checking if someone not trying to cuckold me. See you tomorrow. Sayanora. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

congrats mom, hooray for this fascinating blog. Now, i seem Meimounas everywhere and Kumabs as well (lol).

Anonymous said...

Ano of Thu Jul 26, 03:23:00 PM

Babih yalkhla and Allah yisselmak. My worries too.

Your wise analysis: "my biggest worry, however, is that the army may come back again and usurp power. There is a strong feeling of unease in NKTT these days about the "refugees' return" and the government is losing the debate to the extremists on both sides".

I read this morning that Sidioca's sister from Liberia has faced a coup attempt by the military. There is therefore a theory that some military people do not understand that coups d'etat are over.But they will always find a cleaver lawyer or crooked incompetent saffag to convince them of the contrary. They made the poor Taya gone crazy because they made him believe that he is God. Ely almost fall in the trap by being told he can go prolonguation (Chbih and AOD) or vote blanc (Dahi & Co). Some other people are certainly feeding the same bullshit again to Aziz and Ghazouani, among others. Cuckolding does not stop with beautiful women. It also goes to the ego of some military people (how many we had of them in the first round?). They did the same trick to Ndayane (Allah Yarhmou) and Taya got ride of him. They don't know that Sidioca can call it enough, accuse them of ploting to overthrow him and adieu villas, ranches, overshadowing Sidioca on matters of national interest and pride. A Samuel Doe can get upset and stop la recreation for everybody ...and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Everyone should play th democracy game until 2012 and Sidioca can still run as he will be one year before the presidential retirement age of 75 (AOD enta vem?).Tidinit

Anonymous said...

Sidi Ahmed Ould Taya turned up to court in a stormy session which saw the judge and the defence trading accusations.

This is the second time Ould Taya attends court proceedings, he faces charges of belonging todrugs network in Nktt.

Anonymous said...

i've raised this issue before and i raise it now. The ongoing debate in the blog sphere is marked by extremism and racial intolerance unlike the number of conferences organised by official media. Reading on this blog and Canalh, cridem, one has the impression that a civil war is going to erup tomorrow and that this nation will be ripped apart very soon. But looking at the official media you find a completely different picture. Just today, "Siraj" organised a conference about identity crisis and language in the country. The country was attended by senior administration officials from the era of the independence, current political parties laeders and host of other public players. The debate was deep and highlighted all the problems but what differs is the tone, as all participants exposed their views on the issue within a spirit of consensus and reaching out for the other. There was Jamil Mansour stressing that Islam is the sole means to hold the country together, also the Baathis Ould Hurma who asserted the need of clarifying relations between the majority and the minority. Ibrahima Sar said he has no problem with Arabic and that he listens to Dimi mint ABa and to UM Kalthum from Egypt. Other went to say that the crisis is triggered by the elite and that the common people has nothing to do with it.
this is the kind of debate that we need. It's good to defend one's views but it's better to defend the other opinion.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

khleitouna, we are a group of Houbara and Houbarat. What we have can't be called marriage or divorce, in both cases people are "houbaring" (lol)

Anonymous said...

so why is "houbara" is socially more acceptable that drinking alchool for example? Although drinking is now widespread in Mauritanian anyways.

There is a topic for you.

ELY Mustapha said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ELY Mustapha said...

Dear friends, happy to meet you all in this blog.


I publish below, a call to create an organisation gathering all mauritanian living abroad.
Your contributions are highly appreciated

Please read it and send me your comments.

Invitation to join an Organization of the Mauritanians Abroad.

Considering the organisational vacuum and persistent refusal of the representativeness of the Mauritanians abroad,

Considering the lack of a public strategy and a will to associate the Mauritanians abroad to the future of their country (absence of dialogue, wrong senatorial representativeness.)

Considering the marginalisation of the Mauritanians abroad and the absence of a dynamque structure gathering them,

Considering the permanent failure of the Mauritanian consular and diplomatic structures to register the Mauritanians abroad in their concerns (by the failure of their administrative services, by the negligence of the support for the nationals in foreign countries...)

I propose to all the Mauritanians of goodwill living abroad the creation of a structure which will be a place of discussion, defense of their interests and a body federating their efforts to make hear their voice (their difficulties, their concern), to find solutions (public or private) for their problems and to open the way to them to take part in the development of their country.

All the Mauritanians resident abroad are invited to take part in this organization of which the structure, the missions and the operating mode will be proposed to all the adherent members.

Any adhesion is done by simple mail with the following address:

kafernaum@yahoo.ca

The mall having to mention following information:

- Last Name and First Name:

- Address and home country:

- Activity:

- phone for contact.

A dedicated Web site as well as a neswletter are under development for this purpose.


Cordially.

Pr Ely Mustapha

Anonymous said...

great call prof. you may find out that many members of this blog community have already contacted you or others about your proposed group.

cheers

Anonymous said...

Pr Ely Mustapha

great idea indeed, you'll find mail e-mail in your inbox.

Anonymous said...

mom, this is a stand-out story. Hope you write more on social issues. Keep it up.

Anonymous said...

guys, the narcotics networks are still active and oprational. Read on Sahramedia that Spanish authorities have seized a million and thirty five thousand dollars which traffickers were trying to transfer to Mauritania. Spanish police arrtested Ducth and Belgian nationals with this amount in cash. Their plan was to transfer the money to drugs traffickes in Mauritania who were trying to sell 682 kgs of cokaine.

Anonymous said...

What's scary about our government is that it has all the problems of the world and instead of facing them it just sits like a lame duck and let others do its dirty laundry. Look at the refugees, it's Senegal and the UN who are in charge. And on Drugs, the government is stepping back and letting Morocco and Spain take a frontline position in the fight. The case of Ould Heidala is now in Moroccan hands and now we have this Spanish bust. This without mentioning the case of illegal immigration.

A passer by

Anonymous said...

anything came ou of the famous rain prayer (lol). God uses natural disasters to punish the sinners and to my knowledge Sidiocazz are blacklisted (lol). They can cheat on people and pray as much as they want but can not cheat on God.

Anonymous said...

no rain, not even a single cloud. Sidioca has only one option left, to fire another scapegoat. Mseikeen Ould Leila.

Anonymous said...

National TV will be broadcasting a recoded interview with the president today at 13:00 local time.

Anonymous said...

guys, are you watching the final of Asian Cup between Iraq and Saudi Arabia? It's a wondeful match.

cheers.

Anonymous said...

The president didn’t say anything new at all. He kept repeating the same generalities we hear everyday from government officials. I’m sorry to say that I had the impression he has no clue about the challenges facing the country. He said, though, that water crisis won’t be overcome before three years to come. A sad note, indeed.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

A passer by,

I am much in agreement on what you said: "Other went to say that the crisis is triggered by the elite and that the common people has nothing to do with it".

This has gone so far that people like Jamil is suggesting us to go back to a seemingly Taliban way of doing things to relieve us from this mess (don't be fooled by him) and Ould Horma telling us to look into majority-minority kind of divide (don't be fooled by him) and of course the true Flamists (don't be fooled by them)who want their own country south and will come back 10 years later with an armed struggle if we leave them and their two brothers above hijack this debate.

I met a yesterday a senior "internationalist" who knows us all from Ould Daddah to Haidallah to Taya to Ely to Sidioca and in between. He told me: "young brother something fishy is going on in your country and I am just getting the gut feeling that something bad might happen if you Mauritanians do not sit urgently together and talk". More on this later? Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

Sodiocazz is a losing team, I think. Is you Passer By tellimng us the the refugees situation is left with Wade & the UN and the drug with Moroccon and Spain. Sidioca seems to have been influenced by Ould Daddah style. This may not work with the old CMJD in the loose and Gaddafi receiving Ely as a libaretor, after insulting him as the most stupid of all bedouins (Gaddafi on top and Ely at the bottom). Interesting this $$ been channeled through to mauritanian dealers. This business will never finish ...

N.B: I saw our First Lady for the first time in Jeune Afrique: she is tall and good looking. We should pay her respect here. Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

The overall take is that the president was very much on the defensive throughout the interview. He tried to defend himself against everything and everybody, against the opposition, the press and the common people. Either he does not know how to speak to the media or he has no plan of action to push through his reform programme. He was more bullish and convincing in the pre-second round polls debate against AOD. Now, Sidioca looked absent-minded and complacent. What is worrying above all is that he thinks he has done all he can and at the same time recognizes the many problems bogging down the country. There is only one word to describe this, and it’s that he is helpless. He did all his power but falls shorts of healing the problems, “ivikna men el mabkhel shi u maza shi”.
Frankly, I hope to see him today passionate, confident and tabling hundreds of projects to address our many predicaments. Unfortunately, he was not.

Anonymous said...

صحراء ميديا

أفادت شبكة الاتصال الإداري بوزارة الداخلية الموريتانية،ان مصالح الرصد الجوي سجلت خلال الأربع والعشرين ساعة الماضية تساقط كميات من الأمطار على مناطق متفرقة من موريتانيا.

وذلك على النحو التالي:
لعيون.....................5ر45
تامشكط......................41
الطينطان....................37
عين فربا..... ..............05
اطويل.....................5ر02
كوبنى......................01
كيفة......................2ر28
غرو........................36
باركيول....................40
بومديد....... .............07
الزيره....................5ر12
اكطاع الوطيه...............35

Anonymous said...

Sidioca is a true Mreibtat, he knows that rain is due and asks people to go and pray for it.

I don't want to be misunderstood as i know it's good to pray Allah for a reason and for no reason.

Anonymous said...

ano: 01:22

Sidioca is our first democratically elected president. He is a decent man and shame on you to call him "Mreibtatt".

Anonymous said...

ano above

birds of the same feather flock together. I'm not mistaken when i see a Mreibett like you defending a Mreibtatt like Sidioca. Telba are the most racist people on earth, they defend each other like bees (lol).

Anonymous said...

Ano El Arbi,

Be nice with those who are not "arabs" which means nothing. They are alleged coupeurs de route (bandits) and the French beat the hell out of them real good during colonisation. It was good because they stopped stealing and became civilized people (they were stealing, killing and worse of all killing each other).

The "Zouayas" that you call Mreibtatt were dealing with religion and Allah. Yes, indeed: the "arabs" and beat the hell oput of them during the Char Bobba war. But colonization came and the zouayas took over since.

I see nothing wrong with that division of labor. Now here you are saying that only the descendants from robbers should lead over the learned people, while we are trying to deal with corruption.

Now I propose to you the following deal: put yourself into the mind of a zawi and read my response. Does this makes sense? It is sickining and you should leave this kind of rethoric in the toilt and flush oveer it. Allah yikhalik nna

Anonymous said...

Who has been kuckolded so far? Me not yet Alhamdou Lillahi. How is vacation? Any news of rain besides Kiffa? Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

Sidiocazz'S Record:

No water yet

No power yet

No work yet

No Infrastructure yet

No housing yet

No Refugees' return yet

No Food yet

No Justice yet

Nothing yet

Anonymous said...

ano

the only thing there's is Sidioca (lol)

Anonymous said...

the row about the number of the refugees has broken out again. And guess what, it's not the baathists who are warning against upsetting the delicate demografic balance by allowing hundreds of thousands of refugees in. It's the Flams who started to sound the alarms about the numbers released by the UN and other regional agencies. Flam said organisations's putting the number of the refugges in Senegal to is falso and misleading. And went on to describe the same organisations' conclusions that refugees in Mali have got the Malian nationality and no need to bring them back, descibed these conclusions as outrageous.

Anonymous said...

sorry for the typing mistakes:

the UN put the number of refugees in Senegal at 20 thousand.

Anonymous said...

Yep Ano above. I noticed that part of Flam is playing the number game. You recall that article from Lance Kinne that I shared the llink here with you? You get the accurate numbers there as it was taken from UNHCR and the American Embassies in both Senegal and Mauritania. I recall the number of refugees then to be 30,000 (UNHCR data). You just make calculation and you will find a close figure of those Mauritanians still there(population plus births minus deaths - I am not a demographer and I forgot how to do it). That number 30,000 shall certainly have some senegalese, but not in great number. The trouble is that Wade has offered Senegalese citizenship to those auritanians who do not want to come back. I don't know, but I feel there is something wrong with that proposition (the mistake, if any, is unintentional as Wade made it in good faith).

Great to debate on this. Later. Tidinit

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

Don't put this kind of messages here. Too easy to insult and you can be accused of losing the debate ... that is just starting. Take it easy yakhouya. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

MOM, ente mnein gaari inglizie?
HUCK LE BERRY FINN

Anonymous said...

Criminal court has convicted five Salafists and acquitted the other defendants who have been on trial for several counts including links to Lemgeity onslaught and "taking up arms against the country". Of the five convicted, two were sentenced to two years in prison. The verdict, which is preliminary and liable to appeal, also dropped the two serious charges of connection to Lemgeity and armed rebellion against the state for all the defendants.

mom

Anonymous said...

I'd like to know the identity of the following:

-mom
-Tidinit
-californian
-a passer by

thanks in advance for providing that info.

Anonymous said...

ano: 03:24

why? enchalla khai.

Anonymous said...

read: enchalla khair.

Anonymous said...

Sidioca has to be careful not to go soft on the Islamists. To have an independent and credible judiciary is something and to overlook the security danger these elements present to the country is something else. There is a tendency among the islamists, even the most tolarent among them, to resort to violence to push through their ideology. If Sidiocazz fail to keep a close eye on them we risk to see them embarking upon some vicious plan one of these days.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

a passer by

i fully agree with these security concerns fueled by the possibility of some extreme elements of the Islamists going violent. But also banning these guys from peaceful political action and denying them the right to form their own political party can only drive them to take more extreme positions instead of trying to be part of the mainstram. So it may be safe to deal with the Islamists with the two issues in mind, allowing them to have their own party and keep them under tight security surveillance.

Anonymous said...

has the Taliban conducted its threat to kill the South Korean expedition in Afghanistan yet? Just take a deep breath and think that similar hostage taking and threats could be routine here in the country hadn't security been a number one priority of our government.

Anonymous said...

Ano of Tue Jul 31, 03:24:00 PM said:
I'd like to know the identity of the following:

-mom
-Tidinit
-californian
-a passer by

thanks in advance for providing that info.

Answer: easier for you to make Brigitte Bardot pregnant now (agene 80-90+)than to know the identity of these wonderful people. Leave them alone. Lakhbar chinhi? Ella yakhouya el kheir? Have they won the lottery?

Anonymous said...

ano:03:24:00

welcome aboard daybreaking and its community of friends:

if you're a friend all you need is just to pick up a nickname and keep visiting the blog. In no time you will be recognized by that name as you will yourself recognize the other daybreakers by their pen-names. After a while you'll enjoy this game of anonymity and will no longer be able to tell the difference between real names and borrowed ones. You’ll in fact come to love and cherish these fake but very “real” names. Just think how dear and lovely are names like Californian and Tidinitt.

mom

Anonymous said...

A passer by and ano of Tue Jul 31, 10:36:00 PM

Going soft on the islamists when it is proven that they did something wrong (lemgheity, etc..) will be the wrong signal. Both the radicals (I calle them the armed faction) and some of the moderates (I call them the political faction) work in tandem to put pressure on governments to do dialogue with them as their main aim is to get power (fair, but for a laic like me religion should stay in the mosque to guide people as the Coran has nothing to do with constitutions or the way to run governments). For those who read French I suggest two excellent books (i) l'histoire du terrorisme - de l'antiquite a el Quaida - I forgot the authors and (ii) a second one written by a certain Del Valle (professor at the Ecole de Guerre Economique/Paris).

Sidiocazz should be very careful. As soonm as there is a sabotage - such as Marché de la Capitale - it would be too late to rein them in. True: allow them to create a party and even give them some responsibilities to see them fail (such as SMH), fire them or let the polls hang them.

This is just my personal opinion and I may be wrong. I don't like the mixing of religion and politics. See Iran, the taliban, Pakistan ...

Tidinit said...

mom,

I did as per your suggestion. Hope my real identity - Mauritanian married in a chinese community in Southern Asia, not yet cuckolded I presume- will not appear. Let's try. This is the first time I do this and Bismillahi Rahman E Rahimi. Cheers. Tidinit

N.B: for those who contacted me at Tidinit@gmail.com: I am sending you now a recent document on RIM.

Tidinit said...

It worked. Great.

Anonymous said...

congrats for the blue and bold signiture. It's so lovely.

mom

Anonymous said...

A passer by, Lavrak, Un Chinguittois, Rim Politician, Ano Halal, Ano Extraordinary, Ano El Arbi: we are waiting for you to join the blue club.

Anonymous said...

It looks like we now have a "blue & bold" tidinit. Am i missing something or this is a makeover to avoid any potential cuckolding? Why the change?

I'd like to think that the ano who wants to know the identity of certain bloggers is an exquisit and sophisticated female who has a crush. If that is the case, I may need a makeover myself in order to compete.


Californian

Anonymous said...

californian,

my fear the ano turns to be a security agent who wants to track the stars of the blog down. she may still be a female security agent lol.

Anonymous said...

last ano,

That was pretty funny, but I would give security agents more credit and assume that they are smarter than that. Beside, this is a peaceful group anyways... most of the time.

Slow news day and nothing much happening that is worth discussing. The first 100 days of the Sidiocazz rule "passed by" without mush fanfare or discussion in this forum. 100 days of disappointments? What say you?


Californian

ELY Mustapha said...

Why We Should Pray for a New public Management Tool: Pray and go on sleeping

When the Head of the the state calls for praying to make rain falling on the country, he’s not empoyered by the Constitution, he is acting as the first Imam of the Republic. The laicity was "damned" here by religion. Who says State is separated from religion ?.

Confusion is undoubtly, the rule. The problem is deeper than just a call for praying.

A Call for praying to solve a national gap is certainely a new way of managing the State issues and solving our economic problems.
In that case praying each time to manage difficulties we are facing leads to one conclusion : we prioritize lazy effort as usual against the big effort needed : working to change our social and economic state.

If praying will solve the problem, we have to pray in each case. We are certainely late of one step. If it’s not the case, tell me why it’s heavy and continuously raining in western Countries ? Do they pray much more than our people ? Or does that simply mean praying is not sufficient to bring raining clouds ?

If we accept that praying is sufficient to solve our huge problems we have to declare from now a new management concept to run mauritanian political life : « Pray and go on sleeping ».

Unfortunately, the real meaning of invokation Allah for rains was misunderstood. Praying for rain has to be followed by hard work to show Allah that we are not only counting on praying attitudes but also on our will to change the economic and social situation

Allah said : « Allah doesn’t change person’s situations till they change their own ». At the begining was then the effort not pray. Act and pray, Allah will help you to accomplish your goal. That is the true rule.


Allah's Apostle (p.b.u.h) said, "Keys of the unseen knowledge are five which nobody knows but Allah . . . nobody knows what will happen tomorrow; nobody knows what is in the womb; nobody knows what he will gain tomorrow; nobody knows at what place he will die; and nobody knows when it will rain." (Narrated Ibn 'Umar)

Pr ELY Mustapha

Anonymous said...

When sidioca called upon the nation to pray for rain he was reviving an old-standing behavior characteristic of failed leaderships, i.e. Machiavellianism. While the court was in his ball to come forward with policies to fight the draught he sat like a lame duck and called for prayer instead. The problem is that we have more Ulamas than free press, reason why everybody went praying without questioning this move as political manipulation.

When I voted for Sidioca my idea was that he will press for a gradual and steady change. My fear was that if elected head of state AOD would undertake a radical reform and endanger the stability of the country. Now, I realize that neither Sidioca nor AOD or any other leader will serve the people willingly, we need to rely on ourselves and put the president under constant heat. Only this way he will face the challenges head on.

Anonymous said...

Right professor. Pray and go on sleeping, a pure mauritanian attitude.
We'll cross the 21st century as we entered it: poorest as we had ever been!

A big desert where an old man is sleeping in a big garden.

Anonymous said...

apart from the return of the refugees, what other projects does the current government have at hand right now? I'm not sue but it appears that the government is either paralysed for some reason or without vision.

Anonymous said...

Cal. the record of sidiocazz is difficult to exhaust because non-existent lol. As you said great "deception", hope he'll pick himself off the floor soon. noone can underplay the wisdom of the old man.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

what do you expect Sidioca to do and had not done? he showed great courage when he launched the refugees return plan. he also allowed the existence of the free press and free speech, look at the tv, radio, newspapers and parliament. There are no more taboos. yea there are problems bearing on urban side, but to solve them the government needs to have resources which are simply not there. The government is however sparing no efforts to convince its friends and partners to invest in the country and help ease the situation. Guys try to be positive and see the half of the cup which full.

Anonymous said...

I've just viewed the "Islamic Issues" show featuring the prominent Muslim scholar Abed Alaziz Sy about the theme of unity in Islam. It's the first time in my life that I feel this good watching tv. It was also the first time that I followed a Pular speaking and felt he was a Bhidani. It's really rewarding to see that after all color and race matter very little when the right people take the floor and address the public. Honestly, I never felt this way, I never felt so good listening to this great, very great scholar.

Guys, don't miss the show when it will be repeated next, and remember that you will not feel the same when it's over. Thank you very much Mr. Sy. The feeling of self-reconciliation and peace of mind that you gave me are part of an experience I'll never forget and will act upon forever. I owe you this great transformation.

Anonymous said...

there are no public speakers better than Oulama, good ones anyway. They are real good communicators if they can speak independently from power.

Anonymous said...

true, anos, i've known Sy for a long time and he incarnates the very spirit of moderation which you would expect to have among good Muslims. If he is given his due role in the public life a lot will change. We're bogged down by this social bickering and splintering because of a disastrous lack of communication across the racial divide. Not only the common values shared by Mauritanians have been occluded and dropped from the national debate but also the public speakers who stand for them have been sidelined in favor of extremists.

mom

Anonymous said...

mom, could you please do an interview for us with Abdel Aziz Sy? I don't mean live debate and another HANANA lol, i mean just an interview and if you are tire post it in its original language, no need for translation.

Anonymous said...

regarding the identity ano:

if you are a security agent, i'm just a passer by


if you are a woman, i pass by veeeeery frequently lol.

about Sy, i don't know him and if he's this good why not interview him. it's a good idea, mom.

Anonymous said...

The interior ministry has issued licenses authorizing the creation of twelve new political parties, including a party close to the Islamists.

mom

Anonymous said...

more rain across the country, the rates from Sharamedia:

عين فربة 1.5 مم
هامد 03 مم
باركيول 28.5 مم
أمبوت 30 مم
مونقل 05 مم
تيفوندى سيفى 74 مم
كيهيدي 30 مم
مقامه 08 مم
لكصيبه 1) 18 مم
لحرش 42 مم
سوفه 40 مم
أدباي أهل منكوس 34 مم
جونابه 07 مم
بوغى 22 مم
أمبان 7.5 مم
باكودين 18 مم
ادباي أهل حجاج 16 مم
مال 09 مم
دار البركة 19 مم
دار العافية 48 مم
ألاك 6.5 مم
أولد بيرم 30 مم
العزلات 25 مم
زغلان 27 مم
شكار 11 مم
آقشوركيت 11 مم
بابابى 31.5مم
مقطع لحجار 11 مم
روصو 75 مم
واد الناقة 10 مم
تكنت 28 مم
كرمسين 14.5مم
ادياولينغ 3،11 مم
جدر المحكن 28.5 مم
بوتلميت 6.5مم
لكصيبه 2) 20 مم
انتيكان 25 مم
المذرذرة 41 مم
أركيز 7.5 مم
أشرم 22 مم
أنبيكه 5.5 مم

Anonymous said...

forgot to sign the identity disclosure post dated Fri Aug 03, 05:39:00 AM

a passer by

Anonymous said...

Ok. So it rained in various portions of the country the past few days. All the true believers who prayed for rain are now under the impression that their prayers have been answered. First of all I watched highlights of the official prayer at the main mosque and there were only two rows. So, there must not be too many who thought their prayers will be answered. I am not one to challenge divine interventions, but I think they should also pray for food, health, and random water well eruptions in the middle of the desert. And while they are at it, we’d like more oil, gas and gold discoveries in Taoudeni and Inchiri. Why stop there? When your prayers are being answered go big and have stretched goals... I mean wishes.

I am not the most religious person out there and I keep it pretty simple. Stay out of the mou7aramat and conduct my daily prayers and stay out of trouble. But I would pray for my fellow Mauritanian to get rid of their lackadaisical work ethic, I would pray for strong, practical leadership, and I would pray for broken social and racial barriers.
Three simple prayers that would change us for good if answered.


Californian

Anonymous said...

Hi Cal.

i sign up to your three prayers for the nation and another one: few decent roads, just few to be able to drive safe to the mosque to pray for more, to the work to produce more and to the Palace to lead more lengths along the path of social reconciliation.

well, let's go a bit humble and pray for one road by international standards in the capital.

mom

Anonymous said...

very interesting rail project:


NOUAKCHOTT, Aug 4, 2007 (AFP) - A Chinese-Sudanese consortium has won a contract to build a 620-million-dollar railway through southern Mauritania that will facilitate phosphate mining, the country's AMI news agency reported Saturday.
The new train line will stretch 430 kilometres (270 miles) from the capital Nouakchott to the town of Bofal, near the border with Senegal, which possesses significant phosphate reserves, the mines and energy ministry said.
The consortium -- a tie-up between the Chinese company Transtec and the Sudanese firm Danfodio -- said the project cost was subject to a revised feasibility study in the next three months, before the deal is definitively signed.
Mauritania's transport ministry said the rail line would also help development in the south by carrying people and goods. The country currently has only one train line, in the north.
Phosphate is an important mineral in fertilisers and is much sought after in agriculture.

Tidinit said...

Interesting and needed indeed. We just have to be careful that the payment of the cost is transparent, not through in kind payment, that is, barrels of oil sold in advance at a very cheap price and attached to some high interest rate fees. This is the new China .... and our friend Sudan. Why Sudan in telecommunication and Sudan in railways now. Hope no one from Mauritania has personal interest in the new railways joint venture. If yes we are dead... Sudan is even in the oil sector through High Tech Group Mauritania (a subsidiary of High Tech Group of Sudan). This might (I say might) explain the posting of an Ambassador there ....

This is of course your servant Tidinit. Was really busy (I swear) and reading you all and missing you all, with no time to say anything meaningful. But I could not miss this one .....

N.B: Have you read the 2006 ITIE Report posted this weekend ?. Just some crap full of inconsistencies and calling more strongly for an audit of the oil & mining sectors.We are not yet out of the woods ......

Tidinit said...

Yep. I verified with click4. The railways joint venture is China, Sudan ... and Ehl Abdallahi. Good people.

Anonymous said...

Was this railway project put out there for bids? I am not sure, but I don't remember seeing a bid invitation announcement. I wouldn’t be surprised if the Sudanese-Chinese joint venture on this project was won through back channels. Regardless, I am not fully convinced that this project is needed at this time. Phosphate mining in the south is not mature enough to generate significant quantities that will make a significant impact on the GDP. The populations in remote areas between cities that this project is suppose to help with supply of goods and services are also insignificant. Rain road maintenance cost, especially that long, is not cheap. So, the $620M is just the beginning.

I don’t want to get into the habit of criticizing and rejecting everything, but I would invest that money into roads first. Answer mom’s prayer. I have personally lost a father, an uncle and many good friends and relatives because of accidents on roads. How many have you lost?
I think the narrow roads of El Amel, to Rosso, to Atar can all benefit from a one way paved road in each direction. Head on collision accidents due to drivers avoiding sand build up or pot holes is such a common occurrence. Large vehicle parked in the middle of the road when they have mechanical problems can’t pull aside because there is no road shoulder and they will get stuck. How dangerous is that at night?? I can tell you many horrific stories.

270 miles rail road will be needed one day, but not today.


Californian

Anonymous said...

cal,
i too lost family because of accidents and everytime i go home for a vacation and travel and I have to check in with my family at every spot. There is no peace of mind when you are on the road. So I agree with you. This project was a campaign promise from Sidioca and thats all it is.

Tidinit said...

Californian,

Good point re: need for the railways, but it was a campaign promise from Sidioca. I am not a transportation economst, nbut if this system can allow cheaper transportation of goods - impacting in the cost of goods at arrival - it is good. Mucher better than Ely's plans to make ilot A the Manhattan of Nouakchott (he has certainly some personal stake in the land below the blokatt et we know now how he operates). You are also perfectly right that these kind of projects - railways @ more than $600 million - should go through the usual international bidding. Something anyway is certain not very clear: the Chinese, the Sudanes and the Abdallahi ...

Tidinit said...

Californian,

Forgot to add that good roads that cover the whole country are needed too. Sorry for your loss. Me too I lost friends and relatives on the Wad Naga road several times over. Cheers T

Anonymous said...

A newspaper in Morocco saying directly that Ely is involved the drug traficking. If it is true, he is not alone: all the security apparatuses in Mauritania, Morocco and Algeria are involved and the source is ... the very serious International Crisis Group in its recent document on the Occidental Sahara crisis.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Tidinit. Always good to read you on this blog and other forums. True Sidioca is spending $620M to fullfil a stretched campaign promise while many other cheaper promised left unfullfilled. Out of balance strategy.


Summer vacation for all the college guys is about to be wrapped up. Does that mean we will be seeing Un Chinguittois, Lavrak and the rest of the "MIA" blogger coming back? I hope so.


Californian

Tidinit said...

These "MIA" guys are just terrible (Un chinguittois, Lavrak, Rim politician, Ano Halal, Ano Extraordinary, etc..). Not even a word if they are now part of Sidiocazz hit team or not. Hope they are not part of the drug dealers behind the bars between Nouadhibou and Morocco. They are good guys and they will come back soon, after El Gueitna.

mom,

Time to write something else. Meimouna has cockolded all of us for a long time. Something sexy on drugs, the situation of Elliot Ness Ould Horma the incorruptible (not the nationalist one), Sidioca's coming from an expensive trip to Kuwait and coming back with only a tiny $2.1 million (not even $2.2 million), the resignation/firing of the Army Chief or anything. I know you are working on something now ..

Cheers. Tidinit on vacatiion from the Samoa Islands

Tidinit said...

Californian,

This Msidi seems to agree with you re: the railways and me too. Something is bizarre with the awarding of this contract ... Hope you and others do not mind putting this french text below. Bonne lecture


================
08 août 2007 : A Monsieur le Premier Minsitre : Construction du chemin de fer Nouakchott Kaedi

Le projet de construction d'un chemin de fer reliant la ville de Kaédi à celle de Nouakchott, dont un mémorandum a été signé tout dernièrement entre le ministère des transports et un consortium de sociétés nationales et sino-soudanaises, suscite des observations :

Combien coutera se projet ? Selon le Ministère du Transport 450 Millions d'euros pour 430 Km. Soit plus de 370 Millions UM par Km.
Ce projet dont l’objectif dominant est l'évacuation du minerai de phosphate de la région de Boghe n’est pas rentable à ce prix pour notre pays, car il faudra quelque part rembourser par l’exploitation des ressources du pays le consortium.

Une alternative naturelle permettant de faire un retour d'investissement sur le pays rapidement est celle de la voie navigable du fleuve. L'évacuation du minerai par la voie fluviale de Boghé demandera uniquement l'aménagement d'un chenal navigable pour une profondeur de référence de 2m et l'aménagement de moyens de manutention des ports escales.



Ces travaux rentrent pour la plus part dans les compétences de l'OMVS, qu'il conviendra d'associer pour une prise en charge d’une bonne partie de l’investissement.

Monsieur le Premier Ministre, il me semble qu’une comparaison préalable de l'évaluation économique du projet de navigation sur la base du coût d'investissement, d'exploitation et d'entretien entre ces deux mode de transport pour l’évacuation du minerai sur le marché international permettra de mesurer l'impact des retombés sur le pays avant de se lancer dans l'inconnu.

L’évacuation du phosphate par voie maritime pourra se faire rapidement, si toutes les dispositions sont prises ainsi les retombés pourront financer nos routes Nouakchott-Rosso, Rosso- Boghe et pourquoi pas Zravia-Tamchekett.

Notons enfin qu’un investissement de 450 Millions d’euros permet de réaliser 4500 Km de routes pour un pays très enclavé et qui ne compte pas plus de 3000 Km soit de l’ordre 0,003 Km/Km2. A titre d’exemple le Sénégal dispose de 0,03Km/Km2 soit 10 fois plus.



Note: Info source : msidi19

Anonymous said...

natural disaster:

NOUAKCHOTT, Aug 8, 2007 (AFP) - Heavy downpours and flooding in Mauritania have killed at least one person and caused major damage, officials told AFP on Wednesday.
At least one person was swept away by the floods overnight Tuesday in the southeastern town of Tintane, a local financial and trading centre, and hundreds of people remained blocked in flooded areas.
An unidentified number of houses collapsed.
Authorities said that rescuers were trying to reach the area but access was difficult because of water gushing down the nearby El-Aguer mountains.
Houses in neighbouring villages, often built on ground liable to flooding, were also affected.
Mauritanian President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi last month asked Muslim clerics to pray for rain after years of severe droughts.
hos/gk/shn

Tidinit said...

My condolences to people from Tintane. Is this related to climate change?

Anonymous said...

its related to the prayers

Tidinit said...

Of course (lol)

Anonymous said...

Read on al-akhbar.info

أعلن أحمد باب ولد أحمد مسكه منسق مؤسسي حزب السلطة الجديد أنه سيودع أوراق حزب سياسي خلال الأيام القادمة مؤكدا تلقيه إشارة من رئيس الجمهورية سيدي محمد ولد الشيخ عبد الله تترجم عن موافقته على المشروع وكان ولد أحمد مسكة يتحدث مساء اليوم الخميس(09/08/2007) في مؤتمر صحفي عقد بنواكشوط للإعلان عن مباركة السلطة للتوجه الجديد

وترددت منذ أسابيع أنباء عن اعتزام جهات في السلطة تشكيل حزبي سياسي داعم لبرنامج الرئيس ويعلن العديد من الفاعلين في تيار المستقلين تشبثهم بالمشروع الحزبي ناظما للنشاط السياسي للتيار

Anonymous said...

Baba Miska is losing credibility more and more. He started to rally behind the government during the last months of TAYA and now he is spearheading this stupid initiative to form a party loyal to the government.

Anonymous said...

hi day breakers
how r u miss u guys and miss the blog i am back home that's why i don't pop up quite often b coz the internet down here is a bit expensive and there is no money at all
about NKTT everything is getting more and more expensive "dara3et basin 40000um " bouche coca 60um gasoil 235um etc edhawe mahou khaleg there is nothing down here life is getting harder u have to have a hell of money to come back home and have a nice holiday

have a good time

Anonymous said...

any day breakers on this list??

Les trente éminentes matières
grise de la Mauritanie à l'étranger"

1-Isselmou Ould-Dellahy O Maloum, PhD. Informatique, Ingénieur chercheur wireless technologies. Chicago-USA
Pays de Résidence-USA
2-Toka Diagana , Ph.D - Pure Mathematics Pays de Residence-Washington DC, USA, professeur, et prix
Chinguiti
3- Aboubakr Ould MAROINI - Dr Ing. (Centrale Paris, Sup de Co, CEDS) / Manager Consulting, Paris Pays de
Residence-France
4-Mohameden Ould Ahmedou Habilite à diriger les recherches en Mathématiques
de l'Université de Paris VII.
5- Ibrahima BA MBAKellogg, Ing. Ecole des Mines St-Etienne. Consultant, Directeur Stratégie telecom/IT
& High-tech. Denver CO USA Pays de Résidence USA
6-Mohamed Billy Ould Sidi, M.Sc.A Génie Civil, Université de Sherbrooke, Canada Pays
de Résidence- Canada
7-Mohamed Vall Ould Mohamed-Salem Ould Zein PhD Computer Science,
Université de Montréal, Canada Pays de Résidence - Dubaï (United Arab Emirates)
8-Sidi O. Soueina Ph D Informatique / Computer Science/ Avicenne Laboratoires, pays de résidence
Chicago, USA.
9- Mohamed-Saadbouh MOHAMED-AHMED -Ph.D Informatique Pays de
Résidence -France
10 Ahmed Salem Ould Moustapha Dr Ingénieur (Ingénieur ENSTA - Paris, Dr
de l'Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris VI) / Consultant
Senior SAP R/3 Pays de Residence-France
11-Mohamed Ould Khaled Executive MBA-HEC, France; Ing. Tech Uni Ulm,RFA. European Business
Development Manager at a Semiconductor Multinational Pays de Residence- RFA
12-Mustapha ELY Professeur d'université, Juriste consultant international et
auteur Pays de Résidence -Tunisie
13-Mohamed Baba, maître de Conférences, Habilite a Diriger la Recherche en Chimie physique (Matériaux) Pays de
Résidence- France
14 Ousmane WAGUE, Docteur en Sociologie du Développement, Professeur d'Université, Journaliste et
Chercheur, co-auteur du Dictionnaire International des politiques du Développement Culturel, Pays de Résidence-
Tunisie
15 Abderrahmane Mohamed Lemine KHIDDY - Ingénieur, consultant senior SAP, EAI, chef de projets,
France - Europe Pays de Résidence- France
16 Mahfoudh Ould Ahmed Taleb PhD in Computer Sciences, Institute of Engineering Cybernetics, Academy of Sciences of Byelorussia Pays de Residence-Canada
17 -Ebou Yazid-Ould Sidi DSP Systems Design Engineer Pays de Residence-USA
18-Aminetou Mint El Hassen, Dip. Ing en Télécommunications de l'école technique supérieure - Mannheim (RFA) Pays de Résidence -Allemagne
18- Mohamed Aly OULD LOULY -Maître de Conférences Pays de Residence-France
19-OULD BAH Med Elmoktar, Ingénieur en Informatique, Master- DESS Pays de Résidence- France - Mauritanie
20 Ismail Ould Mohamed Sidiya Senior Software Architect, Mobile & Interactive, STAR Group Ltd Pays de Residence-Hong Kong
21-Ahmed Ould El Moctar Maître de Conférences, Habilite a Diriger des Recherches Pays de Résidence- France
22-Hassena Ould ELY –DEA d'Analyse Economique (Publié) Pays de Residence -France
23 -Aboubacar – SOUMARE Doctorant, ingénieur chercheur en Informatique à l'université de Picardie Jules
Verne, Ingénieur - Ponts & Chaussées spécialisé en systèmes d'information, Pays de Résidence- Mexique/France
24--Nouredine OULD MOHAMEDOU Doctorant, ingénieur chercheur en Informatique à l'université de Picardie Jules
Verne Pays de Résidence France
25 Ibra Touré, Docteur en géographie physique, spécialiste en géomantique (Télédétection et SIG), Pays de
Résidence- France, expatrie au Sénégal depuis 1999
26-Khalil El Mehdi Ejiyed -Habilté à Diriger des Recherches en Mathématiques Pays de Résidence- Mauritanie
27Saad Bouh OULD ISSELMOU Ingénieur en Télécommunications, Pays de Résidence -Mauritanie
28AW Abdellahi Bechir, - Ph.D en Mathématiques Appliquées Pays de Residence- USA
29--Yarba Ahmed Taleb, Assistant Professor Dept. of Computer Sciences Pays de Résidence- Arabie Saoudite
30 -Mohamed Ould Hamady Docteur en Informatique appliquée à la Gestion industrielle, SAP AG,
Walldorf/Allemagne Pays de Résidence -Allemagne


que vous pouvez lire sur le lien suivant:
http://www.akhbarnouakchott.com/imagesprg/zeit_750

Anonymous said...

VOA report on The Criminalising of Slavery. It features clips by Yassa and the president"


Mauritania Makes Slavery a Criminal Offense
By Phuong Tran
Dakar
09 August 2007
Tran report - Download 470k
Listen to Tran report
Mauritania's legislature has approved a law that will criminalize slavery. Anti-slavery lobbyists say enforcement will determine if this law can end slavery in the West African country where it has continued despite earlier bans. Phuong Tran has more from VOA's West Africa Bureau in Dakar.
Ending slavery was one of President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdellahi's campaign promises.

The newly-elected president told VOA this law has a better chance to end slavery than previous attempts.
The president says the government will be vigilant in enforcing the law, which for the first time, punishes acts of slavery with jail time and fines. He adds it is now illegal for officials who know about an act of slavery to not intervene.
Secretary and co-founder of the Mauritanian non-profit, anti-slavery group SOS Esclaves, Abdel Nasser Ould Yessa, says he is relieved the long legal battle against slavery is over.
He says this law is specific in describing what constitutes slavery, such as debt bondage and forced marriage. He says the law reverses denials under previous governments about the existence of slavery in Mauritania.

The lobbyist adds the state needs to set up programs to provide employment help and social services to former slaves.
He says there are often cases when victims leave slave-like relationships, but then must return, because they cannot find work or afford health care on their own.
Slavery has not been permitted legally in Mauritania since French colonizers abolished the practice, which had existed before colonialism. A previous government passed numerous laws starting in 1981 to reinforce the colonial ban on slavery.
Sociologists and religious scholars say slave-like practices continued, in part, because some mistakenly believe the Koran allows it.
But Mauritanian religious leaders, widely respected in the Islamic state and looked to for guidance on public behaviors, have not formally endorsed any legislation to end slavery.

Anonymous said...

what a fine pleasure to learn that you're back "Rim Politician". To me, you're the glow of this blog and missing you was like losing an indispensable energy here. Have a nice vacation and don't forget that the "bush coca" habit is abit American and you should abandon it the moment you touch down in Mauritania. Drink ZRIG or Elma Lekhal instead, too much water with the floods lol.

Anonymous said...

great story. Keep up the good work

Anonymous said...

Finance minister Ould Hama Vazaz has called for international help to deal with the floods in Teintan. He said he hopes to get millions of dollars in aid to deal with damage caused by the floods. The question is whether the guy is putting his job on the line, ould Leila ente vem. If Sidioca is smart he has to wait until aid arrives and then sucks his finance minister lol.

Anonymous said...

You read below a list of the suspects in the last drugs scandal in Nktt published in Al-Akhbar.info. the sheer number of the suspects and their backgrounds are amazing, enjoy the reading and save on your laptop. You can never tell you may get involved in business with one of these guys, you have to know them lol.

1." ميكا ورت أريك" - التجمع والتمالؤ من أجل تهريب المخدرات ذات الخطر البالغ.
2. ستوتي نبيل سمير جميل - نفس التهمة.
3. افريديريكو - نفس التهمة.
4. كان صيدو - نفس التهمة.
5. أحمد ولد العتيق (الملقب المسافر) - نفس التهمة.
6. يحي ولد اعبيد الرحمن- نفس التهمة.
7. باركلّ ولد اكريميش- نفس التهمة.
8. عالي ولد مولاي- نفس التهمة.
وهم خرج قبضة العدالة وقد أمر وكيل الجمهورية قاضي بإصدار مذكرات اعتقا دولية بحق هؤلاء.
9. علي ولد سالم ولد السوداني (الملقب ميني)- نفس التهمة.
10. سيد أحمد ولد محمد ولد الطايع- نفس التهمة
11. سيد أحمد ولد مكي ولد اكريبه- نفس التهمة.
12. سيداتي ولد الحسن ولد بوشعاب- نفس التهمة بالإضافة إلى إخفاء محصولات الجريمة.
وقد تم الأمر بإيداع هؤلاء السجن.
13. محمد ولد بيجه – المشاركة في تهريب المخدرات ذات الخطر البالغ وغسيل الأموال وتمويل الإرهاب وإخفاء محصولات الجريمة.
14. مولاي إبراهيم ولد امربيه – المشاركة في تهريب المخدرات ذات الخطر البالغ وغسيل الأموال وتمويل الإرهاب.
15. عثمان ولد محمد ولد ادميس- نفس التهمة بالإضافة إلى عدم التبليغ عن الجريمة.
16. الشيخ ولد أحمد ولد محمد عال- نفس التهمة.
17. اعلي ولد أحمد ديه- نفس التهمة بالإضافة إلى المشاركة في المساس بالحرية الشخصية.
18. محمودي ولد السوداني - المشاركة في تهريب المخدرات ذات الخطر البالغ غسيل الأموال وتمويل الإرهاب.
19. سيدي ولد سلم ولد السوداني- نفس التهمة.
20. سيدي ولد الكيطكاط - نفس التهمة بالإضافة إلى إخفاء محصولات الجريمة.
21. هاني الكرام ميشيل (الملقب ميشو)- المشاركة في تهريب المخدرات ذات الخطر البالغ غسيل الأموال وتمويل الإرهاب.
أما من تم الاستماع إليهم أو استجوابهم حسب ما زودتنا به مصادرنا من وثائق فهم:
1.على ولد السوداني.
2. سيدي ولد الكيطكاط.
3. ميشي مين.
4. سيد أحمد ولد اكريكب.
5. سيد احمد ولد مكي ولد اكريبه.
6. محمد جاكيتي.
7. بد الله ولد مولود.
8. عثمان ود ادميس.
9. محمد ولد ابيجه.
10. اعل ولد أحمد ديه.
11. محمد ولد السوداني.
12. محمد ولد محمد اعلي.
13. ملاي إبراهيم ولد امبيه.
14. سيدي ولد السالم ولد السوداني.
15. عثمان ولد محمد ادميس.
16. سيداتي ولد الحسن ولد بوشعاب.
17. سيد أحمد ولد الطايع.
18. عبد الله ولد محمد مولود.
19. يحي ولد المختار –(عامل مع ميني).
20. آمادو ممدو صو –(سائق تاكسي).
21. محمد ولد عمار ولد اعلي ولد مكي.
22. انجاي ولد محمد –(شرطي)
23. أحمد سالم ولد احبيب.
24. مريم بنت عباب –(زوجة ميني).
25. السالك ولد الطيب (حمال بالمطار).
26. عبد الرحمن ولد امحيميد –(جار للمتهم الرئيس).
27. محمد الامين ولد السيد – (جار للمتهم الرئيس).
28. محمد السالك ولد محمد سام –(مشتبه).
29. أحمد يعقوب ولد عبد الله –(عامل مع المتهم الرئيس).
30. حبوب ولد النخ –(شرطي).
31. سيكو جالو – (حارس لمنزل أوروبيين مشتبه فيهم).
32. عاليون انينغ –(حارس آخر لنفس الأوروبيين).
33. تيرنو فاي –(كهربائي زبون للأوروبيين (سنغالي).
34. اسلامه ولد اسويلم – (من معارف ميني).
35. سالم ولد السوداني –(والد ميني).
36. الشيخ سي – (خادم في بيت ميني).
37. محمد ولد سويدي (عامل في شركة باركو).
38. الصديكه بنت المصطفى –(من معارف ميني وتقطن في بيته).
39. مولاي ابرهيم ولد امربيه –(مشتبه).
40. خدجة بنت الصوفي –(زوجة المشتبه سيدي وديع)
41. أحمد سالم ولد عبد الفتاح –(عامل مع ميني)
42. تسيلم بنت داود –(عاملة في بيت ميني)
فضلا عن ذلك صرح للمحققين في ذات القضية عناصر من سرية الشرطة الثالثة المكلفين بحراسة الإدارة العامة للأمن الوطني وهم:
1. الرقيب: محمد المصطفى ولد عمار
2. الوكيل: خليهن ولد أعمر.
3. الوكيل: محمد ولد الزبير.
4. الوكيل: الشيخ لمين ولد ابحيده
5. الوكيل: الزبير ولد امبارك.
6. الوكيل: فال ولد عالي.
7. الوكيل: موسى ولد أنحوي.
8. الوكيل: المختار ولد محمد عبد الرحمن.
9. الوكيل: مولود ولد محمد.
10. وكيل: شرطة سرية إسلك ولد امبارك.
كما تم الاستماع من قبل المحققين إلى أفراد من شرطة المطار:
1. الرقيب: سيد أحمد ولد اعل.
2. الوكيل: عبد الله الملقب خيرات.
3. الوكيل: الخليل ولد اباه.
4. المساعد: أول جينك خليلو.
5. الرقيب: أول مولاي جالو.
6. المساعد: عبد العزيز جي.
كما تم التفتيش على:
- مقر الشركة الموريتانية للإيداع والعبور والنقل.
- منزل شخص مالي يدعى هاني حسن فضلا عن مكان عمه.
- منزل رعية لبناني.
- منزل صيدو كان.
- منزل محمد سالم ولد أمم.
- صندوق مدرع "كوفر" لعلي ود السوداني.
- مقر شركة باركو.
- منزل تفرغ زينه تابع لعصبة.
- منزل موطنة صينية تدعى نانك بابتو متزوجة من موريتاني.
- شقتين مؤجرتين من قبل ميني ويملكهما العقيد: انّ ود عبد المالك القائد السابق لأركان الدرك الوطني.

Anonymous said...

if police steps up the probe they will send all the residents of Tavraghzeina behind bars. Under TAYA, people got rich through narcotics. But will Sidiocazz be so bold and bullish? Will they go that far? I'm not sure.

Anonymous said...

ano

tavrakzeina is no different from the rest of Nouakchott, there live decent as well as indecent people. It's not good to generalise.

Anonymous said...

Not all people in TZ got rich through drugs or embezzling money from government's coffers. Some are filthy rich through commerce and are spoiling help workers (at least five in a home and one for: (i) tea, (ii)garden, (iii)cooking lunch, (iv)cooking dinner, (v) cleaning outside the fence, however outside is filthy). I forgot the three drivers !. I live there and built my house through a loan from an external bank, paid through my salary and is now all paid. My family don't do drug or prostitution. I have some very fine neighbors ...Don't generalize, please

Anonymous said...

anos above

you're right to warn against generalising about social phenomena. But i'm of the majority of Mauritanians who think Tavragzeina is a neighborhood without a history. It just rose up from nowhere and thus it keeps expanding. The only way to understand it's being packed with rich people is to know where these rich residents got their wealth. They all made money under Taya and that money can't be legal. This doesn't mean, though, that there are no good people there, but they're very few and are not representative of the neighborhood. We don't mean by Tavraghzeina's residents people who own a house there, it's the lifestyle, the careless spending which is the result of gaining money illegally.

Anonymous said...

Random thoughts. The curtain has been unveiled to shed more light on a fact that many of us have believed for a long time. The fact is that the sudden individual wealth witnessed throughout the last decade or so is not simply due to government money being used up buffet style, but rather due to a deliberate and illegal trafficking of the most expensive and dangerous type for narcotics out there. Some of the cover stories was that some got rich because they cured some wealthy Saudis by the power of “lehjab”. Give me a break. We all sat there and scratched our collective heads wondering how stupid or foolish these wealthy Saudis or Kuwaitis... or whoever they are.. how stupid can they be. How stupid can they be to give away large amount of cash to someone who pretended to have a direct line to divine power? I don’t think they are that stupid, as a matter of fact, I have known my friends from the gulf to be very stingy except when it comes to their own comfort. We were naïve??
I think the joke has been on us all along. The joke has been on us when we believed the tale of quick money through “lehjab”. The joke has been on us when our youth has it set on their mind that the road to quick wealth is an easy one. The joke has certainly been on us when we lost our moral compass. So, yes, that wealth built homes in Tevrag Zeina, but destroyed a foundation of decency and morality that has been our greatest asset.
With such an identity crisis, I don’t know about you, but I don’t recognize the Mauritania that I love anymore. It now remind me of Charles Dickens description in his “Tale of two cities”,
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way..."


Californian

Anonymous said...

thanx Californian, very deep and impressive thoughts. I didn't know that you have certain exposure to literature but the quote from the Dickens is very telling. True, whether it's a story of wealth or poverty, success of failure and happiness or wretchedness, etc. Tavraghzeina as well as the sprawling suburbs of the capital are face of the same of the same story, the story of a lost and disoriented nation which can't recognize itself anymore.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

what these rich businessmen are doing to allieviate the troubles of Flood-stricken Tintan? They know very well how to take but not how to give, shame on them.

Anonymous said...

are you kidding? asking our businessmen to express solidarity with the flood victims is like asking them to do business legally. these are "tayfaya" and no real businessmen lol

Tidinit said...

How is everyone here? Still on vacation in jouja and majouja. 900 kg seized in Nktt these days. A narco state and no going back: too much money chasing the best monkeys among 3 million people (these monkeys are very few).

Californian: RIM has changed terribly and things are just not what decent people are used to. I thought that all these flashy cars, nice villas and well "gifted" women (in beauty, I meant) for the few of us were financed by stealing from the State coffers. You come to Nouakchott and "levrouh" is in the thousands of hard earned $$ (Un chinguittois and Lavrak entouma vem?). I did not buy much "lehjab" as I knew few of the hajaba unable to convince an Arab Cheikh to give away his money (heard of some girls doing that successfully, but that is another story like kuckolding). I am realizing now it is DRUG and everyone there is involved somehow, either actively or passively: direct benefit or trickle-down effect.

Do you think guys this will end one day? I don't think so. Not soon anyway. I imagine lots of people wanting to take any opportunity to make some bucks, not once but at infinitum ... Sometimes you say these PRDS barons have made enough forever. They try all they can to come back and loot more. Cheers. Tidinit

N.B: read the interview of Hamahallah Ould Salem (cridem) last night. You may wish to read it. It is like a FLAM rethorics. Trouble no. 2 looming at the horizon ... in addition to hardcore FLAM

Anonymous said...

the only safe way to stop a thief is to bring him before court and that won't happen until the country is run by truly democratic institutions and the rule of law. if we rely on the good will of PRDS thieves to walk away from public life and leave us in peace, then we are wrong. They will keep coming back and suck our blood. It's up to us not them, which is another way of saying that Mauritanians are to blame not these rascals. What did we do to put them behind bars and prevent potential thieves from emerging? nothing.

Anonymous said...

Mauritania seizes 860 kg cocaine in biggest seizure
NOUAKCHOTT, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Mauritanian police found 860 kg (1,896 lb) of cocaine hidden beneath sacks of rice in a parked minibus in the West African country's biggest drugs bust, police said late on Monday.
The region has become a major hub for Colombian cocaine being trafficked to highly lucrative markets in Europe, where illegal use of the white powder is a growing problem and street prices are significantly higher than in the United States.
Mauritanian authorities made the find while investigating those behind the smuggling of a previous batch of more than 600 kg of cocaine which was seized after a small plane made an emergency landing at the northern port of Noudhibou in May.
"During our investigations we noticed a parked minibus which looked different from other such vehicles even though it had registration plates from this country," Police Commissioner
Ely Ould Sneiba, director of the country's anti-drugs office, told Reuters.
"The investigating judge ordered the police to search the minibus and inside they found 21, 50 kg sacks full of cocaine hidden beneath sacks of rice," he said.
The drugs were packed in 761 bricks, each weighing by 1.13 kg.
Four people were detained in the operation, including one person from Mauritania and one from Western Sahara, which is claimed by Morocco, itself known as a major source of smuggled hashish.
Law enforcement officials say Guinea Bissau, which adjoins Mauritania's southern neighbour Senegal, is a major hub in a network of sea, land and air routes spanning the Atlantic and much of Africa which are used by Latin American drugs gangs to ferry their valuable contraband to Europe and the Middle East.

Anonymous said...

Ano of Tue Aug 14, 04:26:00 AM said:
It's up to us not them, which is another way of saying that Mauritanians are to blame not these rascals. What did we do to put them behind bars and prevent potential thieves from emerging

My response: People were so happy to see the military go, that all closed their eyes on the oucome of the elections, even knowing that the elections were flawed (buying voting cards for instance). The more forceful forv the changes as set by the military were those left out by Ould Taya for political reasons or because they were from "gweibilat": they thought that they will get in as soon as Sidioca & ZZ seat on their respective chairs. I even got deadly wounded once here for warning too much and I then choose to keep quiet ...and to follow the crowd (the followers of the "let go" were everywhere: here, canalh, on the phone with your fellow relatives. You talk about it, they hit you and very hard).

Nothing happened since @ home and it is business as usual, with new players playig their own game of serving themselves first (nominating relatives first and doing business like the SORECI one and I am seeing others but want to keep quiet for the time being). I read last night a summary of one possible future ideology man in the making saying (les nationalistes entouma vem?)and I agreed with him: Sidioca has no realpower, ZZ is only discussing and dealing with his close friends and Aziz/Ghazouani are holding the real power (he was of course wrong sur toute la ligne regarding his analysis of the country's problems and solutions).

There is nothing to do but wait for 2012 and avoid being fooled by Ely's and Aziz/Ghazouani's followers, if "they" don't take power in the meantime, Sidioca bringing rain or no rain. Some people home cannot do without power in their hands and they don't care. Unfortunately, Sidioca played the bad role of a democracy "sabotageur" by allowing the military to bring him in. As you can see for yourself, Aziz & Ghazouani are still hanging in there and nothing can be done without their blessing. I know some agree and some do not agree ...

Anonymous said...

Tidinitt, i agree with your point that the wrongdoers are still around and in charge. I also agree they will hold power even after the next presidential polls. But i think as well that we have been asking the wrong question all the way long, betting on what the ruling political class can do to bring the country to safety. We never focused on what we ordinary Mauritanians can do to bring this elite to hell and get rid of it. Nothing is going to change unless the ordinary people start to change. Until now all that we are able to come up with is segregationist and racist agendas which are deeply soaked in sectarianism. As long as we remain engulfed in our divisions we will never be able to do anything more than blaming our corrupt rulers while failing to act against them.

Tidinit said...

Ano above,

I fully agree with your statement below: " Until now all that we are able to come up with is segregationist and racist agendas which are deeply soaked in sectarianism. As long as we remain engulfed in our divisions we will never be able to do anything more than blaming our corrupt rulers while failing to act against them". Homo Mauritanicus is indeed the problem and unless they make noise, nothing will move. Look at the following:

- with which money Khattou is funding her Foundation? I requested once we respect her but we have to ask questions too from time to time. No one from home will ask that question and embezzlers will be lining up to put stolen finds into her Foundation;

- I just read that the captain who blew the whistle on his military chiefs got political asylum in France. In reading carefully that story and his previous interview (CRIDEM), we see exactly what you said, that is, " Until now all that we are able to come up with is segregationist and racist agendas which are deeply soaked in sectarianism" and it is exactly happening in the army along ideological and tribal lines (since when an army is intellectual/ideological?). Hope Homo Mauritanicus will change soon, just by the power of prayer ...

Big question: why the hell France giving political asylum to people from a newly democratized country? If it is true, is something ishy coming?

Anonymous said...

very interesting debate

Anonymous said...

please make another post mom

"Le Tunisien"

Anonymous said...

your fist lady is messing with a lot of sensitive issues, read on al-akhbar.info:


زوجة الرئيس ترفع دعوى قضائية ضد يومية "البديل الثالث"


تقدمت السيدة الأولى ختو بنت البخاري زوجة الرئيس سيدي محمد ولد الشيخ عبد الله مساء أمس الثلثاء عبر محاميها: بونن ولد اعثيمين، كابر ولد إميجن، الزعيم ولد همد فال بشكوى من يومية "البديل الثالث" في سابقة هي الأولى من نوعها في تاريخ زوجات الرؤساء الموريتانيين وقد تم إيداع عريضة الشكوى لدى وكيل الجمهورية بمحكمة ولاية انواكشوط.

وقد أكدت البديل في رسالة تلقت وكالة "الأخبار" نسخة منها أن: "الشكوى تأتي إثر نشر الجريدة لخبر في صدر صفحتها الأولى عنما أسمته النفوذ المتزايد للسيدة الأولى، جار فيه يتعاظم يوما بعد آخر نفوذ سيدة القصر الرمادي الأولى، فقد أكدت بعض المصادر "للبديل الثالث" أنها استدعت خلال الأيام الماضية شخصين أو ثلاثة على الأقل وعرضت على كل منهم منصب مدير التلفزة بعد سوء خلاف بينها والمدير الحالي حمود ولد امحمد في لقاء جمعهما، لكن الرئيس تدخل في الوقت المناسب ورفض تبريرات السيدة الأولى التي ساقت له..
وأضافت البديل في عددها الصادر اليوم15/08/2007: و"في موضوع متصل قالت بعض المصادر إن السيدة استدعت بعض الوزراء أثناء زيارة الرئيس السابقة للكويت وبعدها وطلبت منهم إجراء ل! قاءات خاصة مع نافذين محليين، وتقديم بعض الامتيازات لهم، كتمكينهم من بعض الصفقات وغيرها..
وأثناء نفس الزيارة وعند سير الوزير الأول على البساط بعد عودة الرئيس أشارت إليه أن يتراجع قليلا إلى الخلف وهي لفتة لم تفت على مصور التلفزيون الذي يغطي الزيارة، وشاهدها الجميع على الشاشة الصغيرة، كما شاهد امتثال الوزير الأول لإيماءة سيدة القصر وبسرعة أيضا.
وخلصت البديل إلى أن السيدة الأولى قامت بتحويل مبلغ 130 ألف أورو أثناء وجودها في فرنسا الاسبوع قبل الماضي..
كما تضمن نفس العدد مقارنة للسيدة ختو مع زوجات بعض الرؤساء من بينهم شاه إيران السابق وأمير قطر حمد بن خليفة، في عمود نشر في الصفحة الأخيرة باسم مدير الجريدة..
وتحاول السيدة الأولى البروز في الساحة السياسية والإعلامية من خلال إطار إغاثي جديد هو "هيئة ختوا بنت البخاري الخيرية".

Anonymous said...

something has to be done to make it clear to Khatou that she can not have it both ways: using her influence as the first lady to stick and carrot people and suiting anyone who is courageous enough to bring her illegal conduct to the open.

a passer by

Anonymous said...

where does Khatou get the financing for her aid organization? Where does the money come from and why the good will to help the poor and the disenfranchised emerged only when in the grey palace? Why it didn't emerge before, since Khatou wants us to believe that her money is from legal sources? And last, but not least, why did Sidioca ask his cabinet to disclose their possessions and not ask the same of his last in bed and second in command?

Khatou, give me answers and I'll go around the world raising funds for your humanitarian project. Without answers, we're left only with embarrassing questions.

Anonymous said...

guys, which is best Khatou or Mint Toulba? The first embezzles public money and gives some of it back to the people to improve her public image and the second steals and transfers the money to foreign accounts to feed the poor of other countries. At least Khatou's money stays in Mauritania.

Anonymous said...

any updates on the drugs case?

Anonymous said...

Hi daybreakers

Great to read your thoughts, I've been away for a while and couldn't have time to pop up regularly.

About Khattou business:

Sidioca has to be vigilant about the increasing role of Khatou in the running of the state, a role which may ruin his policies buy turning the country into a corrupt hegemony. Reports have it that she is naming her friends and family members to high posts in the administration as well as trying to establish contact with political leaders and tribal dignitaries. If not stopped on time, she would throw us back into the basket case we used to be. The least we want now is another Mint toulba as the pervious ano seems to suggest. The good news is that she is receiving her share of media attention at this early stage of Sidioca's presidency, an attention which could let her rethink her priorities and behave like a real first lady respected by her people and countrymen.

I do however appreciate her prompt response to flood-hit residents of Tintan and the aid she was capable to secure for them. This is a role model highly needed to develop a culture of voluntary aid and charity in the country. Only she needs to stay away from politics and inner workings of the regime. If Khattou's aim is welfare work she can find plenty of international donors willing to fund her organization. If she goes clean about her humanitarian project she will receive a well deserved Kudos from all of us.

mom

Anonymous said...

there is a certain Ould Abeid Arrahman on the list of Dugs suspects, is he the same politician and current MP? I mean is he the ex-husband of Nancy?

Anonymous said...

above ano

no, he's not. I don't exclude him from featuring on the next list, though, lol

Anonymous said...

mom,

it's a fine pleasure you're back with your clear and smooth ideas. but don't you see you're a bit changed being so nice in you post with Khattou. i expected you to be very harsh on the blood suckers in power, regardless of who they are or where they come from.

Tidinit said...

Glad to see that the day-breakers wake up once with this Khattou business (she is a truly outstanding beauty in the Jeune Afrique photo. N'est-ce pas Un Chinguittois?). If she is not careful, someone will tag her one day as Imelda Sidioca (with all my respects).

As you said guys: this is a lady, the wife of a recent retired international civil servant that was not making much in terms of salary (let's say $120 k net per year or a little bit more). Gone through retirement - petite traversee du desert - like all of us in the future and with less than he was earning in the active life. All of sudden he becomes President and the First Lady starts a foundation and money comes rolling in , while people have not seen their salary status improve, no employment scheme ever discussed and the state coffers are almost empty (more on that after this note). Citizen lambda like most of us have the right to start asking THE QUESTION: from where in the hell our big sister is getting easy money? I do not recall her doing peace corp type of work in the past. As someone has rightly said, if Sidioca is asking his ministers to come clean on what they own, our big sister should also do the same. Because we know with certainty that the Khattou Foundation will break Sidioca's back very soon with a scandal of her own and she seems not careful. Interesting to follow and good that she is helping people in need though.

Question from an ano about Ould Abeiderrahmane/drug: I think it is the bloody &*$@ son. Those higher-up people had each a close relative in this business like Sidi Mohamed. Read something about the son of the the former custom chief Diaga Dieng who knew or had relations with the people running the truck business seized with 900 kg cocain the other day (Houmoum Ennas trying to make the father a clean heros of some sort). It is a small world and it is the same people: they get together, marry together, rape together, embezzle together, pass on lucrative info to each other, cross and double-cross the rest of us together, lie together, etc..

RIM coffers: please note that the ministry of finance took off $20 million from the oil proceeds by end of June 2007 (see June report: www.tresor.mr). They had some $40 million left then in May 07 from the $70 million allegedly left by the Ely & Co gang in April 07. The level of oil production is adding some paltry $2 million at each monthly sale or so. So taking $20 million at once is like taking 10 months proceeds. So if my hissab is correct (I am very good at numbers), that account should have something like $25 million left tonight. So, I see the risk of salaries not being paid on time in the near future if there is no $$ rain from somewhere (Sidioca needs to pray harder this time because people don't joke with salaries). You miss 1-2 months salaries with the military and you are in deep trouble. Particularly when it seems that the military are not on the same wavelength (rumors saying that the former army chief resigned and not "fired"into early retirement). With limited info from home, there is no other better way but to make educated guesses ... Hope I am really wrong time. Good night.

N.B: can someone make a summary of what is written in Arabic above? I have perhaps not captured part of that info here. Sorry: you cannot be good at more than two languages. I should have listened to Ould Taya: attend arabic classes with the dockers ...

Tidinit said...

Ano worrying about mom being nice to Khattou,

Leave mom and me being nice to our big sister. We are perhaps trying to cuckold someone. I find her truly awesome in that Jeune Afrique photo. Never seen here before and she is more good looking than Mint (I already forgot the name of the ex ...). I can't hide my feeling of respect for good looking people (Un Chinguittois enta vem?).

Anonymous said...

tidinit, you sum it all when you said in your ususal brilliant manner:

"they get together, marry together, rape together, embezzle together, pass on lucrative info to each other, cross and double-cross the rest of us together, lie together, etc.."

your insighted statement leads me to think that the real conflict is not a racial or tribal or even regional one as some try to depict it. It was and still is a conflict based on unbalanced class relationships, where the rich take advantage of the poor. No matter how you look or to which tribe or region you belong, if you happen to be on the winners' side you will not spare anything to exploite the poor out there who are also of all colors and from all walks of life. The real struggle is to take our country back from this ring of criminals who knows very well how to watch each other's back but also how to sow dissension and division among the poor.

Anonymous said...

sorry forgot to sing the previous message, Ano Extra.

Anonymous said...

who is this mom and what does he do in life? Is he Mauritanian, and a Bhidani?

Anonymous said...

khatouat kethrou. it appears there is another khatou mint laghdaff who has another aid agency and who has also sent some help to Teintan. This last khatou is said to be lesbian, my question is whether her help to Teintan is halal?

Tidinit said...

Thanks Ano Extra. Glad to read you. You are right: the problem of this country is related to class struggle. See Nouakchott: the divide is not anymore between tribes or negro-african communities and bidhan tribes. It is a divide between those who live in Tevragh Zeina and those who live in Mellah. I also do believe that all this language issue (arabic-french-national language) is sheer competion among the powerful people to get juicy jobs/salaries. This is a good area of research for a good sociologist. He can open our eyes and may be save us of all this debate that will never finish. N.B: just read something from Hamahou Allah Ould Salem dumped in Canalh after one of his interviews. Go read it, please (for tose who rread French). Good night from jouja and majouja in East Asia. Cheers. Tidinit

N.B: did not know that the other Khattou is accused of being lesbian (better check to avoid harming her and better leave this out as we shall only say good things about our sisters). Helping is halal, whatever your sexual orientation, I believe. Is this question from Ano Halal? How are you? Miss you.

Tidinit said...

Looks like my big sister Khattou making her first big mistake in suing a journalist's small arse. Told you last night she is not careful: the paperazzi will now go after her to get public attention and soon you will have a scandal or two of her own (true or false, but the damage will be done). In Mauritania everyone has some "casserole" of its own, particularly newly powerful people ...

N.B: big public people do not go after small newspapers if they don't accuse you of drug dealing, assassination, rape or not going to the mosque (lol). Being accused of influencing the nomination of someone @ TVM, true or false, gives you an aura of unparalleled discrete power .... She looks better in Jeune Afrique though(what do you think Un Chinguittois?). God bless Khattou

====

http://www.cridem.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=11186

Anonymous said...

tidinit, thanks for the Cridem link, though the subject has been published above on the blog and in full detail in Arabic from al-Akhbar.

the parliament has been discussing today what seems to be a project to fund small business to fight poverty in the country. Lacking the necessary economic background, could anyone of you explain in objective and scientific manner the nature of this project and those which were approved before it under Taya, like CAPEC etc. I want names, figures, laws, not just political evaluation. If you can shed a purely economic light on these small project, please do. It will help us understand the government's policy to fight poverty and diversify economic possibilities for the low income out there.

Anonymous said...

above ano

sorry, nothing i can do to help. Figures make me dizzy lol, reason why i'm the eterenal poor.

Tidinit said...

Ano above the eternal poor,

I do believe that the best document you can read is the World Bank Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) from 2007-2011. It has all the ingredient to deal with the lack of economic info on the country and it is a quite good document. Have not read it thouroughly, but you can find in it some answers to your questions as "It will help us (you) understand the government's policy to fight poverty and diversify economic possibilities for the low income out there" like you said. The politics side of this you know.

Try google and type "+World Bank + CAS". If you can't find the document in English, let me know to see if I can fetch one for your from here in Southern Asia.

Regards. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

the newspapers run stories about upcoming join military drills involving US, Mauritanian and Mali at the end of the month in Mali. This is yet another occasion to shed more light on the secrecy which shrouds Mauritania's security cooperation with the US and, why not, revive the US-administered prisons in the country. There is no reason not to think that the two countries' cooperation in security issues is complex and covers a variety of ineresting aspects that are still seen as closely guarded secrtes.

a passer by

Tidinit said...

A passer by,

There are so many secrets between RIM and the US and no one knows. If Ely was not that much interested in politics again (I assume he is as he might be feeling betrayed by someone), he could have told us. One of my favorite conspiracy theories after the coup is that the CMJD guys could not have done it without the blessing of the US/Isreal because the latter had a lot to lose if a Hanena & Co type of insurgents took power. I am told that the Isrealis were in charge of Ould Taya's security. The change was neither the French, nor the courage but according to me Ould Taya was pushed away by the Americans as they understood he was a bad apple and they could not afford a country in the Gulf of Guinea neighborhood to go sour like some of those in the middle east. If whatb the journalist from the New Yorker has not mislead us, this theory holds. This policy to secure 25%+ of oil to the US was plainly written in a US Foreign Committe Policy Paper that I read already in 2003 or 2004. If I find it I will let you know of the link.

So to make a story short, RIM and the US are good bedfellows for quite sometimes and my second conspiracy theory is whether Lemgheity was not a ploy with A NEIGHBORING COUNTRY to speed up dissent and the departure of Ould Taya by the US/Israel connected friends in the army (lots of mauritanians spy for either their rulers or for foreign powers). Lemgheity could not happen without the US military seeing the attackers coming and/or going. Manipulating events after like the US did to topple the dictator in Romania (seen it in a History Channel emission) confirms me in these conspiracy theories. Hope you guys read the article in le Monde Diplomatique of February 2005 regard El Para the Algerian. If not, read it ...Too many manipulations around these days. Hope Ely will talk one day to us through a kind of memoir.

Good day. This is the first time I share this personal thought because of a Passer By.
Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

tdinit

US and Israel are not divine powers and infallible. Like any other country around the world the miscalculate and commit some times deadly mistakes. Just think of the last war on Lebanon and the invasion of Iraq to see how both countries got stuck in their bad planning. The same a[[lies to political changes in Mauritania as both countries fail to predict the coup as well as Lemgeity. In fact both country would do anything to prevent al-Qaida from scoring victories against a western ally like TAYA. It goes without saying also that the coup caught both by surprise and condemned it at the beginning.

ano above

the security cooperation with US has not changed an ioa since the days of TAYA.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Ano for sharing your "perception" on the coup. I am not certain that the coup surprised US/Israel pants down. Recall the interview of the New Yorker journalist? Recall that it appeared that we had one/two US jails for the last couple of years? Recall the New Yorker journalist said that a consultant with the US military in the States confirmed to him that the US helped in the coup?. The two days astonishment looked like the best to do to hide things. Everything played then to ok the coup, although it is not anymore acceptable to do coups. It worked only in Thailand, after ours. Recall pushing Saddam to occupy Koweit so that to crush him easily? There are so many other things unexplained such as Lemgheity and the US prisons according to the New Yorker article, that someone has an explanation. That is Ely if he decide one day to tell us.

Ah! I almost forgot: Sellahy was beaten-up in Nouakchott with the full knowledge of our security apparatus before being sent to Jordan, Bagram (Afghanistan) and Gitmo. So, we and the US have been excellent bedfellows for years. Very amazed that a deal was made after the coup for the US to do capacity building at ISERI. Try doing that in Pakistan these days. Looks like the first person to call Ould Taya early the day of the coup was the US Ambassador (he said so in an interview).

N.B: please nobody get me wrong. I just want to know what the hell happened home prior and after the coup, after some retrospective thinking. Still all conspiracy theories in the absence of some truth that we may never get without guessing. Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

another scuffle between PM's bodyguard and a journalist. The incident looks set to put more strain on an already sour relations between the media and the palace. there is definitely a credibility gap there.

Anonymous said...

Terrible. This government will not last long

Anonymous said...

the ruling class wants to get away with its wrongdoing and enjoy immunity from the spotlight. what they don't understand yet is that the time is over when senior officials can do as they please and blame the press. the recent clashes with the press are indicative of this irresponsible obsolte mentality which the ruling class has inherirted from the regime of TAYA and seems unwilling to do without. this is the real test of the success of democracy, when top officials feel pressure from the media and start to backlash.

Anonymous said...

Like my big sister. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

Saudi orders 40 mln dlrs flood aid to Sudan, Mauritania
RIYADH, Aug 17, 2007 (AFP) - Saudi King Abdullah on Friday ordered two aid packages worth 20 million dollars each be dispatched to Sudan and Mauritania to help the impoverished African countries hit by severe floods.
The two grants will aim to bring rapid relief to the stricken zones in cooperation with the Saudi Red Crescent and international humanitarian organisations, according to a royal court statement carried by SPA state news agency.
The King also ordered quick medical and food relief to be transferred by Saudi planes to the two countries, it said.
Early arrival of heavy rain in Sudan caused rivers in the country's north and east to burst their banks, inundating villages, towns and farm land, and destroying tens of thousands of houses.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies last week more than doubled its Sudan floods appeal to almost 5.5 million Swiss francs (4.6 million dollars, 3.3 million euros) after flood waters rose above levels set in 1988.
Meanwhile, half of the 60,000 inhabitants of Titane, in southeastern Mauritania were affected when floods submerged the town's northern half last week.

Anonymous said...

With the prospects of Oil creating the economic boom becoming slimmer, the government is now heading for Uranium exploration in the hope it will give the much needed boost for the economy.

Encouraged by discoveries of large reserves of uranium in the region, the government gave six mining licenses to the Australian mining company Murchison United NL. The company will be exploring in the north of the country over a region covering “8,200 km2, with two more permits awaiting approval”, Murchison said on its website. The company also is expecting to secure two more exploration licenses.

mom

Anonymous said...

uranium, oil, fish, iron ore, etc. So what, they alweays make a mess of all these resources. it won't be different this time around.

Anonymous said...

Above ano

All these natural resources in a country which doesn’t boast of one single highway, or a five-start hotel of international renown or a public park for its desperate and unhappy citizens. There is nothing wrong, well there’s always, with these rulers looting and stealing our wealth if they invest the money in lucrative projects and build a modern looking cities nation wide. They buy more camels instead, shame on them. The only public figure who is putting his money to the benefit of the nation happens to be Nancy Abeidrahman, and they’re doing everything to ruin her business and kick her out. She is doing with milk what they couldn’t do with oil.

Anonymous said...

20 million dollars from Saudi Arabia can rebuild five complete cities from the ashes in Mauritania. Will the government rebuild Tantan or use the money to build villas in Tavraghzeina, here lies the question. My estimation is that their eyes are on Tavraghzeina, they were always.

Uranium: you can expect the government use it to own a nuclear weapon but not use revenues from it to provide decent housing, jobs, and ease water crisis. So congrats, Mauritania is going nuclear.

Tidinit said...

Thanks mom for leading us to Murchinson's website. Uranium seems to be, as you said, the next focus.

I do not recall Sidiocazz signing any oil exploration deal after Ely. Did they? I might have missed it. Read last week that Woodside hired again the "Atwood" exploration boat to look into shallower parts of offshore RIM and I do believe they are coming back to solve Chinguetti's problems for the 3rd quarter 2007. They say they expect 50,000 barils a day at Chinguetti if they solve the technical problems (geology). Chinguetti is not the only one facing the same problem in Woodside's portfolio worldwide. Let's see.

Please note that Ely & Co gave a huge tract in the North to Bouamatou's company in September 05, just after the coup (re: warning of unfair practices from the report of the Interntional Crisis Group on the transition, published in April 2006). I am also thinking that most of those small companies from outside that were given exploration rights might certainly have some ex-CMJD associated person or persons as partners. The 2005 & 2006 ITIE reports do not tell us the whole picture and are not even worth the papers they are written on. Definitively an audit of the sectors oil and minerals are in order: SMH site is dormant (no official news) and I have not even bothered to visit SNIM's.

Remember one thing: only you guys who read English will be able to get info through published reports on the web. People home who know only Arabic and French are completely in the dark, including all the members of the government ..

Anonymous said...

UAE's Al-Qudra Holding to invest in Mauritania
DUBAI, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Abu Dhabi-based Al-Qudra Holding plans to invest in Mauritania as part of a regional expansion strategy that has already taken it to Syria and Morocco, the official WAM news agency said on Sunday.
Qudra Chairman Salah al-Shamsi met Mauritania's top investment official, Mohamed Abdellahi Ould Yaha, to discuss opportunities in infrastructure, property, tourism and agriculture WAM said, without giving details.
It did not make clear how much Qudra, a private company would invest. Qudra's holdings include industrial, real estate and investment firms.
Asharq al-Awsat newspaper reported last year that Qudra planned to offer a 30 percent stake in an initial public offering.
Qudra has also said it is interested in investing in Egypt and other Arab countries.

Anonymous said...

well, every new day brings news to the country, this government is not asleep.

Anonymous said...

Well". "Government not asleep" doing something or being worried comme il navigue a vue? I wish you say worried

Anonymous said...

where's everybody? what went wrong with you guys? if you're on vacation, you can pop up from time to time and not let yourselves driven by the pleasures of home.

Anonymous said...

read on alakhbar, a strong alqaida threat to foreign ambassies in NKTT:

أصدرت وزارة الخارجية الموريتانية بيانا صحفيا مساء اليوم الأربعاء 22/08/2007اعتبرت فيه ما نشرته "وكالة الصحافة الإفريقية" وبعض المواقع الإلكترونية الموريتانية عاريا من الصحة تماما ولا أساس له وكانت الوكالة قد نقلت عن مصدر دبلوماسي في نواكشوط قوله إن السلطات الموريتانية حذرت الممثليات الدبلوماسية الغربية في نواكشوط اليوم من احتمال اختطاف رعاياها المقيمين في موريتانيا.

وقالت وزارة الخارجية في بيانها لقد "نسبت إحدى وكالات الأنباء الإفريقية إلى من وصفته بمصدر دبلوماسي في نواكشوط أن الممثليات الدبلوماسية في بلادنا أشعرت من طرف السلطات الرسمية بوجود تهديدات من طرف ما يعرف بتنظيم القاعدة في بلاد المغرب العربي بخطف بعض رعاياها المقيمين فوق التراب الموريتاني".

وأضاف البيان: "إن وزارة الشؤون الخارجية والتعاون لتنفي بقوة هذه المعلومات، وتؤكد أن ما جاء في برقية وكالة الأنباء المذكورة وأعادت نشره بعض المواقع على شبكة الانترنت كاذب ولا أساس له".

Anonymous said...

there seems to be a renewed threat of Al-Qaida against foreign national in the country. The foreign Affairs Ministry has issued a statement denying these reports which came first from African Press quoting a nationa diplomat and then republished by number of Mauritanians newspapers.

Of course one should be skeptical about the official line on this story, the governmnet has every reason to be publicly in denial about any security threat inside the country while working to deter it. Governmnet around the world do the same. But this doesn't mean that there's no threat at all. Al-Qaida is active throughout the Maghrab Arab and would strike at any time of its chosing in Mauritania.

Anonymous said...

if alQeida carries out an attack in Nktt it will be the end of its presence home and of its sympathizers. Mauritanians don't tolerate violence and mass murder.

Tidinit said...

Back to base. I was on a business trip while you were enjoying the guetna. Reading all: your messages and those of la toile mauritanienne. Talk to you soon. Seems some news: Haidallah explaining the problems of the country (he got a degree in political science recently), Her Excellency the First Lady (don't want to be sued) being asked to come clean on "her" foundation and God bless her hide. Worrying this Al Quaeda threat and don't listen to the government line on anything, even the US jails (they will deny anything in line with woussayed Ely ma tentsa). Knowing my country, as soon as Al Quaeda blows something, desperate people will just join them as Sidiocazz are not yet realizing this is the opportunity to reach out to the poor first, instead of nominating their cronies first. The Tintane issue is good, but very soon people will start asking questions on how long to expect more to fight poverty. See you soon. Cheers

Anonymous said...

IS WOODSIDE GOING BACK TO LNG AND EXIT AFRICA? WE WILL THEN GET CHINA AND FRANCE TO TAKE OVER, FOR SURE, FOR THE OBVIOUS REASONS: (i) CHINA TO SET A FOOT IN THIS PROMISING PROVINCE AND FRANCE TO KEEP ITS "PRE-CARRE". RIM SEEMS TO HAVE GAS TOO AND IT IS EARLIER FOR ANY MEANIGFUL COMPANY TO LEAVE THIS SOON. I DO UNDERSTAND THAT THE CEO OF WOODSIDE IS UNDER PRESSURE TO PROVIDE RESULTS VERY SOON AS WOODSIDE FAILED SOMEWHERE ELSE BESIDES CHINGUETTI. READ THE OTHER DAY THAT THE CEO OF WOODSIDE HAS A MANAGEMENT CULTURE THAT CHASING AWAY COMPETENT MANAGEMENT PEOPLE. IS THAT TRUE? WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE NEW WOODSIDE'S FOCUS? GRATEFUL TO HELP ME READ TO GUESS WHAT IS NEXT. THE CEO OF WOODSIDE IS A WELL TRAINED/WELL EXPERIENCE IN THE ENERGY SECTORS AND VERY SHARP. THE SHIFT TO LNG HE IS INDICATED MIGHT BE THE THING OF THE FUTURE, GIVEN THE MESS OVER CLIMATE CHANGE. CHEERS. TIDINIT

N.B: YOU ALWAYS HAVE TO GUESS THROUGH ARTICLES LIKE THIS ONE. SMH IS AS SECRET AS THE BANK OF ENGLAND AND THE GOVERNMENT MEMBERS KNOW NOTHING BEYOND WHAT THEY SEE.
======

UPDATE 3-Woodside eyes Africa exit to focus on LNG
Wed Aug 22, 2007 6:11 AM ET



(Adds background in paragraphs 8, 20)

By Fayen Wong

SYDNEY, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Woodside Petroleum Ltd, Australia's largest independent oil and gas producer, said it was considering exiting Africa and restructuring its portfolio to focus on its liquefied natural gas (LNG) business.

Perth-based Woodside said it was considering a range of options for its African business, including trading the assets with other companies for a stake in various projects, spinning it off into a separate firm, or a direct sale of the assets.

"We are in the process of restructuring our exploration portfolio," CEO Don Voelte told a results briefing on Wednesday. "We plan to refocus on our LNG business and other areas which are more attractive."

Woodside's African business includes the Chinguetti oil project in Mauritania, where output has disappointed since production began in February 2006.

Other African assets include exploration ventures in Libya and Kenya and a stake in the producing Ohanet natural gas venture in Algeria.

Voelte said he saw strong growth potential in LNG and the company was in discussions with potential Asian buyers of LNG from its projects.

Demand for clean-burning LNG -- led by the United States, China and India -- is forecast to triple by the end of the next decade due to economic growth and environmental concerns.

Woodside's proposed shift suggests it may be seeking to emulate the tightly focused gas strategy which has helped make Britain's BG Group Plc one of the most highly-valued companies in the oil and gas industry, based on share price-earnings ratios.

"Things are breaking loose for us in this industry and people are trying to grab whatever gas supplies they can get hold of," Voelte said.

Flat production from existing suppliers, delays in planned and possible projects as well as increased demand from both traditional buyers and new market entrants were driving up LNG prices, said Voelte, adding that average Asian LNG prices were often above those in the Atlantic.

Last month, Woodside approved the 4.8 million tonnes per year (mtpa) Pluto LNG project off the Western Australia coast, which it has estimated will cost more than A$12 billion.

The company said it was evaluating options for the proposed 10 mpta Browse LNG project off the northwest coast of Australia and had acquired two new exploration blocks adjacent to its existing Browse gas fields earlier this year.

Expansion of the fifth processing train at its North West Shelf project is facing cost pressures but the final cost is expected to be under A$2.6 billion, Woodside said. First LNG from the fifth train is expected by the fourth quarter of 2008.


INTERIM RESULTS

Woodside posted a 10.6 percent rise in first-half net profit to A$545.4 million ($436.3 million), below analysts' forecasts for around A$557 million.

The company said full-year production would be 72-78 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe), a forecast first made in February. Woodside has downgraded its production outlook twice from an initial forecast of 90 million boe.

"Most things seem to be in order and there's a strong cash flow. The move to rationalise some of its assets and focus on LNG is a big plus and that will obviously be a huge profit driver for the company in future," said Gavin Wendt, a resource analyst at Fat Prophets.

Reported net profit rose 16.3 percent to A$610.1 million, thanks to increased production and the sale of its equity in the Legendre field off Western Australia, which helped offset the negative hit from a strong Australian dollar and higher depreciation.

Woodside's shares, which have risen about 4.5 percent so far this year, closed virtually flat A$40.99.

Woodside, 34 percent-owned by Royal Dutch Shell Plc, said January-June capital expenditure was A$1.3 billion, up 30 percent from a year earlier due to increased appraisal and development activities, particularly on the Pluto and Browse LNG projects off Australia.

Woodside's decision is another vote of no confidence in Mauritania after BG Group Plc sold its interest in the Chinguetti licence earlier this year and Premier Oil Plc said in March it wanted to sell its stake. (Additional reporting by Tom Bergin in London)

Anonymous said...

hey guys,
see pple are wondering about the day breakers identity...but no anwser yet!! poor he or she who s waiting for it lol
i have wonders too n hope i ll find answers ,im not asking too much just wanna know whos single and whos not lol
a f

Anonymous said...

Dear Ano above,

Tidinit is the only single among the guys here. Moreover, besides me, the rest is just a bunch of "cuckolded" people. Unfortunately "Un Chinguittois" looks like busy ...

Your personal phone and email, please

Anonymous said...

This press release from Woodside is not very reassuring. Low production coupled with shady business practices are finally taking their toll on Woodside’s presence in Mauritania. This is not good news for the multiple families living on Woodside’s revenues. But good riddance! It’s been one scandal after another with these guys and going back to the French or the Chinese may not be a bad thing after all.

Any daybreakers joining in Sidioca’s party? How is Chinguittel phone service compared to Mattel or Mauritel?


Californian

Tidinit said...

Hello Californian. Hope you are fine and you got the opportunity to go to the Guetna, even in California.

Regarding the oil/gas sector in the country, lack of info and consistency is to be blamed on Ould Marouani. The guy is unable to let people know what is going on (SMH site is still under construction since he got hired more than 2 years ago) and no one knows with certainty what deal he has done with Ely before the latter left. "Citoyens" lambda like the rest of us are bound to fish info on this key sector through our readings on the web of the companies'annual reports and other press releases. I am sorry to say that a young BS graduate from a US University would have done better than this supposed graduate of Ecole Centrale. I know that there are some problems that seem to relate to good governance and the ability of SMH to tell it all (Marouani - re: Nouakchott-Info - said that he was under tremendous pressure during the transition to hire people just for the sake of giving them salaries and other perks). If I were him, I would have resigned and gone to look for another job outside. Someone has to keep his reputation, particularly at that young age, sponsored by the Islamists or not ...

Going entirely French or Chinese with oil/gas exploration will bring problems: all will be secrets, kick-backs and coups d'etat. At least with the Australians and the Brits, they were forced legally to publish progress through periodic reports. The Chinese may have left Tiguent, but no one knows whether they found something or not. Baraka (Australia) left their part of Tiguent area and told us that the well is dry and reliquished the area back to RIM. Lack of info from them and SMH keep us guessing what is going on. It is a dangerous situation as people can say anything and reinforce the wish of some people to take over ...

Has anyone seen anything new with Total or the Chinese ?. If so, please let us know (I bet $1,000 if anyone can come up with the right published news from now to Friday). It is all secrets, secrets and secrets

Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

hey mom,
what are you trying to do here?you're gonna drive mauritanian men crazy with this cuckolding story!they definetly gonna think twcie before they take that decision lol
its the first time i hear this word "a cuckold" lol .you're good!!
is there a name for cheated women?
FPB

Anonymous said...

Today’s court decision to punish those accused of rape is worthy of note. I can’t think of a worst crime than rape. Disgraceful, shameful, dreadful, appalling are few synonyms that I would describe the individuals convicted and the crime they committed. After the verdict was announced, the families of the criminals raced to the presidential palace seeking a presidential pardon based on their sons’ innocence. Families blinded by their allegiance and their failure to raise their kids. Finally some justice in the land of the lost souls.

Californian

Anonymous said...

This time I am back for real,
Hi everyone, how has life been treating you?
I was reading through the posts to get an idea on what's going on, I saw something thatt made me smile inside, "a f" was asking who's single and who's not? so I took a moment to immediately reply to her post,
"A f" all I know is that I am single and available, I spent +3months in Mauritania looking for my soul mate, the results are negative. Yes u can justifiably jump from happiness, today is ur luck day,

A bientot

Anonymous said...

Bonjour

Je viens d'avoir mon bac, et je veux des conseils sur mes etudes superieurs, je compte aller aux etats unis, qu'est ce que vous suggerer?
je vais etudier l'anglais pour une annee, pendant laquelle je veux decider ou (quelle universite) je vais etudier.

Si vous etudier/ avez etudie aux etats unis, votre conseil est tres apprecie

Merci beaucoup,

Un etudiant ambitieux

Anonymous said...

Un etudiant ambitieux,


If you have the financial means to study in the US, then the sky is the limit. If, on the other hand, you plan on working and paying your way as you, I suggest you thin twice before you come here. I have seen many Mauritanians get stuck here between their school ambitions and their obligations back home. If money is not a problem, then we can give you directions on schools, states, cost of living, insurances ..etc.


Californian

Anonymous said...

welcome back "un chinguittois"!
maybe its your luck day and trust me you're the one whos going to jump from hapiness...later!your email plz
a f

Anonymous said...

americandreamer4@gmail.com

Anonymous said...

a f,
Sounds great!!!
we will see who's the lucky one? my email is:
unchinguittois@gmail.com
waiting to read ur emails.
etudiant,
i suggest getting married and raising ur kids, school is bullshit

Anonymous said...

americandreamer, u re trying to steal my lady, shame on u!

Anonymous said...

Merci californian,
L'argent n est pas un probleme, mes parents sont prets a payer pour mes etudes, tes conseils sont les bienvenus,
les autres?? j'attend vos reponses

Un etudiant ambitieux

Anonymous said...

etudiant,
sorry to be sarcastic in my previous posting, but i am sure u understand me. I was trying to impress the girl and i used u as a means to do so; not appropriate at all, but as they say: u got to do what u got to do.
Anyway since money is not an issue, i suggest that you apply to Ivy leagues( mainly harvard, yale and priceton) and Stanford/ MIT, if you are doing econ/engineering/maths etc all that bullshit.
If ure going to do Business wharton and Stern are ur best choice,

I have to go now, i ll finish the list later.

PS: after they reject you, all of them, apply to a community college and then transfer to a state school, if u re successful


Again trying to impress the girl by making fun of u, life is a b****

later!

Tidinit said...

Etudiant,

Dès que j'ai un petit moment, je te ferai parvenir des conseils sur comment proceder avec cette excellente opportunité d'étudier aux USA. C'est une excellente initiative et tu ne la regretteras pas.

En attendant de t'envoyer un message plus complet, le processus le plus direct est de faire ton anglais à Washington (American Language Institute ou ALI, je crois - c'est le bon depart et n'accepte pas de faire ton anglais ailleurs car Washington est une ville calme et culturellement bien assise - J'ai fait mes etudes d'anglais ailleurs, mais dans un institut spécialisé pour ceux qui vont pour des études avancées en économie ou finance, commençant avec le troisieme cycle (Master, MBA ou PhD).

Les etudes d'anglais durent +- 6 mois pour ceux ou celles devant commencer avec les cours de Bachelor et 1 an pour ceux commençant avec les cours supérieurs (Master et/ou PHD). Il faut chercher le site de ALI sur le web. Ne vas nulle part ailleurs.Au cas où tu ne fais pas de progrès rapides, l'instuitut de langue peut te virer. Donc, il faut tout prendre au serieux dès le depart.

Pour les etudes universitaires, je te conseille un tres grand campus d'une université d'Etat ( tu y as tout ce qui peut s'y enseigner sous le ciel) telle que Michigan state State University, Pensylvania State University, North Carolina State University, University of Missouri, New Mexico, Califormia, ou bien University of Arizone (nous avons beaucoup de compatriotes a Arizona). Les universités américaines sont très bonnes et elles se valent toutes au niveau undergraduate, avec certainement quelques petites exceptions. La vraie difference est au niveau Master ou PhD au cas où tu souhaiterais prendre des cours specifiques avec des professeurs particuliers tres reputés (prix nobels, etc..). Mais encore une fois de plus elles se valent (une personne qui passe dans les premiers 5% au Mississipi State University - excellente université et c'est juste un exemple - est mieux qu'une autre qui passe parmi les derniers 5% a Harvard - les employeurs potentiels qui recrutent dans les campus ont accès aux notes !). Donc, je te suggere d'aller dans une universite d'Etat pour ton Bachelor et voir ensuite si tu as assez de sous pour continuer dans les plus fameuses telles que Harvard, Cornell, Princeton, University of Michigan, Carnegie Mellon, etc.., a condition que tu passes parmi les premiers 5%. Au cas contraire, continuer dans les universités d'état c'est parfait et elles sont bonnes et reputées. Par ailleurs ce sont les sortant de ces universités qui enseignent à Harvard, Princeton, etc..

Bienvenue dans le monde de l'excellence en matiere d'education. Si tu poursuis tes etudes correctement et tu evites d'etre parmi les derniers, ta carriere est assuree pour la vie. Tu ne connaitra peut-etre jamais le chomage et tu feras l'honneur de ta famille, de ton village et/ou de ton Adebaye.

Si tu as des questions precises, n'hesites pas de m'ecrire a tidinit@gmail.com. Il y a +- 3.000 universités aux USA et celle par laquelle je suis passé n'est même pas classée parmi les 60 premieres dans le domaine que j'ai étudié. Mais je n'ai rien ressenti durant toute une carriere riche de succès professionnels ....

A bientot. Tidinit

N.B: anyone to add anything to help this young person? We should all encourage him. He is one of those lucky people and I am certain he will succeed. His initiative tells me that

Anonymous said...

Californian,

It seems that RIM is flaring gas in the atmosphere while people needs it to sell to the chinese and solve the electricity in Nouakchott. We are also contributing to climate change. The rain on Tintane is not Sidioca's prayers, it is climate change.

Below part of the article putting RIM among the oil/gas countries. Perhaps the suckers are pumping oil and gas while Sidioca and Woodside saying to us that there is nothing. Bonne lecture.

"According to the satellite observations, 22 countries have increased gas flaring over the past 12 years. These include: Azerbaijan, Chad, China, Equatorial Guinea, Ghana, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mauritania, Myanmar, Oman, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Qatar, Russia (excluding Khanty Mansiysk region), Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Sudan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Yemen".

http://www.huliq.com/32351/first-satellite-observations-of-gas-flaring-show-need-to-step-up-efforts

Anonymous said...

Ooops!. The above from Tidinit

Anonymous said...

un chinguittois
mr5658@hotmail.fr is my email
a f

Anonymous said...

Un etudiant ambitieux,

Tidinit's advice on US education is very accurate. I went through undergraduate and graduate schools here in the US and I can confirm that you will be receiving a good education if you focus on it. You can also get derailed easily and still get a degree. The second scenario hits the majority of college grads here and the impact is sever on their career. As part of my day to day job, I get the chance to visit university campuses for recruiting and sort through tons of resumes trying to get the best. Obviously not all graduates get hired. The GPA (grade point average) during their 4 years or five years tenure is a big factor. But more importantly, what kind of skills they developed while going to school. How did they perform in a team environment? How did they handle conflict and other hardships? Did they get any special honors such as Dean’s List or Excellence in Academic achievement? How active are they when they are not going through school? What hobbies ..etc. Of course school will give you the foundation for all of the above, but you have to be well rounded. So, when you are looking for a good school, and there are many out here, please also look for the surrounding social life and what it has to offer. If you are not active socially, most likely your education will suffer as well. Social life around Mauritanians is good on occasions, but you will be better served shying away from it especially in the first year. What you learn about the system in the first year will shape up your approach in the following years.

Tidinit,

I didn’t think our gas emissions are making such in impact given our volume of production and the level of industrial activities. This seems to be an average increase from prior years, and if that’s the case then it makes sense with the newly added oil activities.

Californian

Anonymous said...

Tidinit, californian,
Merci beaucoup pour vos conseils, very helpful
if you gu dont mind which universities did u guys attend?

Etudiant,

Anonymous said...

Cher etudiant,

Je crois que tu as maintenant le basics pour survivre à travers l'education yankee. Les conseils de Californian sont extrement importants comme lui meme il fait du recrutement sur les campus.

Concernant là ou j'ai étudié, je suis un pur produit des universités d'etat. Jamais eu assez d'argent pour aller aux Ivy Leagues et ce n'est meme pas necessaire. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

You have certainly seen this by now. No jumping through the windows, please. It is what we knew best: PRDS. Cheers. Tidinit
========


Voici le texte intégral de ce communiqué :


Médiateur de la République : Sghair Ould M'Bareck
Chef d'Etat-major particulier du Président de la République : Colonel Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz.

Conseillers principaux à la présidence :

- Mohamed El Moktar Ould M'Balle
- Ahmed Kelly Ould Cheikh Sidiya
- Sidi Mohamed Ould Biya
- Mohamed El Heyba Ould Lemrabott
- Diallo Mamadou Bathia



- Khalil Ould Ennahoui
- Ahmedou Ould Cheikh El Hadrami
- Idoumou Ould Mohamed Lemine


Chargés de mission à la présidence :

- Moussa Fall
- Ahmed Baba Ould Ahmed Miské


Conseillers à la présidence :

- Yahya Ould Abd Dayem
- Brahim Ould Bah
- Mamadou Tall
- Hadiyetou Camara
- El Yezid Ould Yezid
- Bneta Mint Bamba Ould Khaless
- Mohamed Ould Chrif Ould Ahmed
- Mohamed Lemine Ould Bah
- Mohamed El Moktar Ould Iyahi
- Isselmou Ould Mahjoub

AMI

Tidinit said...

mom,

I know you are preparing one of those notes. The people is waiting you to wake them up. We have been cuckolded by Meimouna for so long. We can't wait any longer and we hope it will be something on the PRDS coming back through the front and back doors, the windows and the ceiling too.

I am giving up on Sidioca and I think that AOD would have done better. But, he fell into Ely's trap (as x has said: CMJD a clignoté vers AOD, mais il a tourné vers Sidioca). The guy is coming and I bet $5 on him in the seat in 2012. No way for the military to give up power.

What you guys think?

Anonymous said...

mom,

I think that Tidnit has a point re Meimouna and the need for a new blog. A lot of interesting activities these days that may warrant a new txt.

Californian

Anonymous said...

Thanks Californian for your support. I am sure mom is cooking something. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

come on people, live a little

Anonymous said...

mom is disapointing a lot of people right now.

Anonymous said...

anyone's getting married?

Anonymous said...

Yes. Me. Getting married to Meimouna, Cuckolding or not. I am on vacation and greeting you. Mom will be coming soon. Have not read the web for few days and I see no news. cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

Al right, this blog is in a funky mode again. Since its not the first time it happens, I see no reason to worry. Just to keep things interesting I couldn’t help but remember the following joke after I read the comment about marriage.

A few months ago, there was an opening with the CIA for an assassin. These highly classified positions are hard to fill, and there's a lot of testing and background checks involved before you can even be considered for the position. After sending some applicants through the background checks, training and testing, they narrowed the possible choices down to two men and a woman, but only one position was available.
The day came for the final test to see which peson would get the extremely secretive job. The CIA men administering the test took one of the men to a large metal door and handed him a gun. "We must know that you will follow our instructions whatever the circumstances," they explained. "Inside this room, you will find your wife sitting in a chair. Take this gun and kill her." The man looked horrified and said, "You can't be serious! I could never shoot my wife!" "Well," said the CIA man, "you're definitely not the right man for this job then."
So they brought the second man to the same door and handed him a gun. "We must know that you will follow instructions no matter what the circumstances," they explained to the second man. "Inside you will find your wife sitting in a chair. Take this gun and kill her." The second man looked a bit shocked, but nevertheless took the gun and went in the room. All was quiet for about 5 minutes; then the door opened. The man came out of the room with tears in his eyes. "I tried to shoot her; I just couldn't pull the trigger and shoot my wife. I guess I'm not the right man for the job."
"No," the CIA man replied, "You don't have what it takes. Take your wife and go home."
Now they only had the woman left to test. They led her to the same door to the same room and handed her the same gun. "We must be sure that you will follow instructions no matter what the circumstances; this is your final test. Inside you will find your husband sitting in a chair. Take this gun and kill him." The woman took the gun and opened the door. Before the door even closed all the way, the CIA men heard the gun start firing, one shot after another for 13 shots. Then all hell broke loose in the room. They heard screaming, rashing, and banging on the walls. This went on for several minutes; then all went quiet.
The door opened slowly, and there stood the woman. She wiped the sweat from her brow and said, "You guys didn't tell me the gun was loaded with blanks. I had to beat the son of a bitch to death with the chair!"

Not sure why you guys want to get married.


Californian

Anonymous said...

Wow Californian ! Women are always more intelligent that the rest of us. See: the Khattou Foundation is doing more that Sidiocazz are doing.

Seems all people still on guetna. Rain came late and certainly some people thinking that it is Sidioca's prayers.... It is climate change (Ano Halal enta vem?). tidinit

Anonymous said...

my understanding is that guetna is over and people are getting back to Nouakchott and getting ready for Ramadan. It sounds like it was a good year for date lovers. That is "dates" as in palm tree fruit not the romantic rendez vous. It could've been a good year for that too, but I can't confirm from here.

Tidinit, are you ready for Ramadan? I hope that you'll still be making some noise with that Tidinit during the holly month.


Cal

Anonymous said...

Oh yes Cal. Count on me. Noise I will make, particularly that I am now quite certain that Sidioca is getting PRDS in through the back door and through the ceilling,I believe. My bazooka is ready and just waiting mom to inform us what is behind all this new grouping to assist His Excellency and the way forward.

mom: enta mneine? marou taab?.

Big question: where are the others (Passer by, Un Chinguittois, Lavrak, Rim politician, Ano Extraordinary, Ano Halal, Lady Luck, Matabbia, etc..)? Hope they have not been arrested over the drug mess. Have not heard from them since that particular time. Or may be they are now part of the Sidioca's nominees as their disappearance coincided with nominating PRDS-linked SGs and Advisors.Or I hope not in Guantanamo ...

N.B: Tidinit is very worried about Al Qaida bombings in Algeria. So close to home ...

Cheers. Tidinit

Anonymous said...

hey guys

how u doing tidinitt i was on holiday but i am back now i don't have anything special to write that why i just read the blog
about elgueitna its over it was very good this year but dates are getting more and more expensive the price of a kilo has riched 2000um so not everyone can buy it

Mbarouk ramadan 3lina we 3likoum


by the way i wanna get married and i found a girl who isn't interrested on monney and i am broke what do u guys advice me to do

waiting for replies

Anonymous said...

If she is not interested in money and you are brok, then what you need advice on? match made in poor heaven? i wonder what she sees in you, no offense, if its not money.

Be careful that's how we get you guys to take the bait.


Lady Luck

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