Naeem Mohaiemen on Wed, 21 Nov 2007 16:16:28 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Sidr, American Generosity, & Sirocco (Modified by Geert Lovink) |
Bangladesh, the week after Cyclone Sidr. A bureaucrat told me today: we were very lucky, this was the strongest cyclone to hit Bangladesh, but water was at low tide, so many lives were saved because they were not water-dragged away as in Sri Lanka. Official toll is "only" 3,000 (we are trained over decades to expect far worse), Red Crescent says it will be 10,000. Numbers, #s, I am obtusely numb. During Hurricane Katrina, Bangladesh (population: 140 million; size: state of Wisconsin) offered to send $1 million to help New Orleans. After Cyclone Sidr, USA (population: 300 million) offered to send $2 million to help southern Bangladesh. Saudi Arabia offered $100 million. The city middle class wonders why the Saudis have so much influence here. Happy thanksgiving. Condoleeza Rice: "We extend our deepest sympathies to the people of Bangladesh following this major natural disaster, and we stand ready to assist further." Warm fuzzies. A friend writes to me from Los Angeles, tongue_firmly_in_cheek: "You callin' us cheapskates? We got a war goin' on that needs all the cash we can muster, so spare your cyclone sob stories, baby" I'm in Dhaka, which is inland. Most of the impact here is mild, and on infrastructure -- relative to what the south has gone through, we're on another planet. In the north, it was only initial outage of electricity, running water, internet, and mobile networks. Speaking of mobile phones, in the south they are being called "lifelines" for the cyclone refugees. Some are powering up their mobiles with solar panels. Ten years ago there was virtually no mobile network in Bangladesh. A decade of explosive growth has reached 30 million customers, and VCs now call this country one of the "three hottest" markets for telco. Grameenphone (owned by a subsidiary of Grameen Bank and Norway's Telenor), which has 59% market share, plans to go IPO next year and claims a market valuation of $3.5 billion. Telenor's customer base in Bangladesh is 3 times Norway's total population. Mobile networks are now the backbone of the country, and sorely missed when they get snapped. .... Somehow life went on, in the middle of it all. I went to an art opening by candle light, soldiering on in the middle of a blackout. The next night, there was an event in more questionable taste. Sirocco, a club night at 5-star Hotel Sheraton ("Winter Garden & Poolside") was the party that "survived Sidr". Cue angry posts about the ridiculous sight of $15 tickets and $85/night hotel rooms the day after the cyclone (the median national income by the way is about $2 per day). But room rate includes extras: Buffet breakfast (extra breakfast is $16 per person, that means ..umm... if you have any guests), one hour Tennis lesson, half hour Squash lesson, Health Club, and Swimming Pool. I skipped Sirocco, but I saved a copy of the flyer (attached). For future generations. In the south, a sign reprinted in the newspaper says "no food, no home, no burial cloth (dafon kapor)" ############################### khujeci_tomai (comment # 7) writes about Dhaka in the dark: http://www.drishtipat.org/blog/2007/11/16/cyclone-sidr-hits-bangladesh - the-day-after/ Drishtipat's ongoing coverage: http//drishtipat.org/blog and...our friends & neighbors http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-2554441,prtpage -1.cms # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org