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“Some observations have been made that Wal-Mart gave some amount to government officials here. It is our duty to look into it,” Vigilance Commissioner T M Bhasin ..
Please see this report on Substance Abuse in Korogocho
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/international-business/Wal-Mart-paid-millions-of-dollars-as-bribes-in-India-Report/articleshow/49447657.cms
WASHINGTON: America’s multinational retail corporation Wal-Mart is suspected to have paid bribes worth millions of dollars in India, according to a media report.
In a major report, The Wall Street Journal said Walmart’s “suspected bribery” unearthed in India involves thousands of small payments to low-level local officials to help move goods through customs or obtain real-estate permits.
“The vast majority of the suspicious payments were less than $200, and some were as low as $5, the people said, but when added together they totaled millions of dollars,” the daily said.
In 2013, Wal-Mart shelved plans to open retail stores in India by severing a joint venture with Bharti Enterprises Ltd and instead decided to become solely a wholesaler there, the report said.
Wal-Mart, who was pushing the previous UPA regime for opening of the multi-brand retail sector was also involved in lobbying before the US Congress in this regard, Congressional disclosure reports have said in the past few years.
According to the report, Wal-Mart’s massive bribery efforts is unlikely to bring in any penalty on it as its Indian operation does not yield any profit under the provisions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) of the United States.
“Because penalties under the FCPA are often connected to the amount of profit the alleged misconduct generated, the payments in India wouldn’t be likely to result in any sizable penalty, since Wal-Mart’s operations there haven’t been particularly profitable, said people familiar with the matter,” the daily reported.
There was no immediate response from Walmart’s corporate headquarters here on the Wall Street Journal’s report on its bribery in India.
According to The Wall Street Journal, federal investigators “found evidence of bribery in India, centering on widespread but relatively small payments made to local officials there,” during the course of its “high-profile federal probe” into allegations of widespread corruption at WalmartStores Inc’s operations in Mexico.
The investigations though have found little in the way of major offenses in Mexico, and is likely to result in a much smaller case than investigators first expected, the daily said.
Burnaby Payday Lenders Policy Report from ACORN Canada
Link to full article
One-day strike against prime minister’s pro-business initiatives reportedly cause billions of dollars in economic losses
Millions of Indian workers launched a 24-hour strike on Wednesday against what they said were Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “anti-labor policies,” prompting billions of dollars in economic losses.
Ten major unions called the nationwide strike over the government’s pro-business initiatives after recent talks with Finance Minister Arun Jaitley broke down.
The unions — which represent a wide range of industries, from banking to coal mining — are demanding the government dump plans to sell off stakes in state-run companies to boost the public purse and to shutter unproductive factories.
“We are against these anti-labor policies. The government is going to change the laws to benefit the corporates,” said Gurudas Dasgupta, secretary of the Indian Trade Union Congress, which has 3.6 million members.
“The changes they want to bring are against the working classes. I am very confident of a hugely successful strike,” he told Agence France-Presse on Tuesday.
Later on Wednesday, Dasgupta told The Times of India that the response to the strike was “magnificent” and estimated that more than 150 million workers participated, though the figure could not be independently confirmed.
Workers in the banking, manufacturing, construction and coal mining sectors were among those who walked off the job, according to union leaders.
Modi won a landslide election victory last May, promising a string of business-friendly reforms to attract foreign investment and revive Asia’s third largest economy.
But the opposition has blocked flagship tax and land reforms, aggravating investor concerns, while the unions are increasingly angry over the reforms.
“The Modi government has turned a blind eye towards the problems being faced by the labor class,” Dharmendra Kumar, president of The Hawkers’ Federation, said at a news conference.
“The government must rethink its labor policies. Modi has made a mockery of us by telling the world to come and manufacture in India because it has the cheapest labor.”
The Hawkers’ Federation is demanding that a monthly minimum wage hike from $72 to $226 be extended to the informal sector.
India’s economy grew by a slower-than-expected 7 percent in the first quarter of the financial year and experts warn reforms are needed to at least keep that pace to create jobs for millions of young people.
Previous strikes have shut down cities and cost the Indian economy millions of dollars in lost production.
Industry body Assocham estimated $3.7 billion in economic losses from Wednesday’s strike, singling out the country’s ports where exports were stranded on the docks, reported The Times of India.
Al Jazeera and wire services
IMPACT OF THE VISIT OF THE UNITED STATE OF AMERICAN PRESIDENT IN KENYA
The visit of the American President has given Kenya as a country positive publicity on the Global stage which we hope will improve to revive our tourism industry.
His visit was a vote of confidence after week ties with the West for a long time.
On issues of Security the US president promised to support and boost government on the fight against Alshabab as well as supporting other governance initiative and joint county action plans.
By the very fact that the Global Entrepreneurship took place in Kenya, this alone gives an opening for more funding/ many investors’ opportunities that we are also looking forward to explore too.
In actual fact The President himself promised more funding to benefit youth and women in the country.
Other issues that he emphasized on included
– Applauded the New Constitution and the peaceful elections in Kenya
– Emphasized on the role of Civil Society Organizations
– Civil participation, Freedom rights Liberties and Tolerance
– Talked strongly against corruptions, Violence and Terrorism
– The role of women and youth in the Nation building
– Talked of Ethnicity as a drawback to National development
– Giving power to the local communities and the respect of the minority
– Role of conserving our environment for our children
– Power of Networking and collaboration
– Innovation and entrepreneurships.
Thousands of men and women as leaders, members, and staff made signal contributions to the growth and development of ACORN from June 18, 1970 through its growth in the United States and then around the world. The ACORN Memorial Orchard located on a half-acre of the ACORN Farm in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans seeks to pay small tribute to many of just a few of them that were giants in ACORN’s history.
Terry Andrews – Over Ten Years with ACORN (c. 1976 to 1986)
Terry was from Fairfield County, Connecticut but he ended up working for ACORN first in Philadelphia and then moving from there to run the Dallas office of Texas ACORN for many years before relocating. His contributions there were vital, but within the ACORN world he set the standard for self-less, disciplined service always ready to work, always willing to take on the hardest jobs and assignments at whatever cost and sacrifice. Health problems led to both his early departure from ACORN as well as his untimely and sudden passing as a young man.
Dewitt Clinton Armstrong IV (1950 – 2013) (ACORN Time 1973 – 1983)
Dewey Armstrong came to work in Arkansas almost as soon as he graduated from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. After proving himself there he was willing to head up the organizing team opening the first expansion state for ACORN in the United States in Sioux Falls, South Dakota in early 1975. After several years in South Dakota expanding the organizing to Huron and Rapid City and initiating and winning a number of campaigns, Dewey headed up our organizing in Florida before returning to New Orleans to the headquarters office as the first National Political Director during the 20/80 campaign, including shepherding the ACORN Convention delegates in New York City in 1980 and managing the work on our lower income affirmative action committee won from the Democratic Party and operationalized through the Leland Committee, chaired by Democratic Congressman from Houston, Mickey Leland. Dewey left ACORN to become a carpenter in the Miami area to be close to his daughter. While in South Dakota, Dewey often was asked if he had any connection with Armstrong County and of course he did as a relative of General George Armstrong Custer. Dewey came from a long line of generals including his father, and he was a general in the ACORN army as well.
John Beam (1950 – 2014) (ACORN Time 1973 – 1982)
John Beam was from Dallas, Texas and came to work for ACORN not long after finishing school at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. His seniority day on August 5th was a regular even for him and Wade Rathke, since it was Wade’s birthday. They used to joke about the coincidences. John began work in Arkansas. He handled some interesting projects including the northeastern part of the state including the very conservative Tri-County Action Group and helped supervise our first foray out of Arkansas in a short lived project in Missouri in the boot heel of the state. John opened up Memphis as head organizer there between leaves to travel in Latin America, and came back as one of the first Regional Directors for ACORN working out of New Orleans. He helped out even off of the staff while living in New York City with his wife, former ACORN organizer, Polly Chase, by writing proposals and serving as director of a program for New York ACORN on school reform.
Picture of Little Rock Staff Meeting 1976. Dewey Armstrong at the end of the table with a cigarette. Kaye Jaegar in the middle laughing and John Beam next to her with a coffee cup.
Elena Hanggi Giddings (1941 – 2014) (More than 20 years)
Elena often told the story of living near McArthur Park, raising her children, and staying out of controversy no matter her opinion until some people knocked on her door, including an early ACORN organizer, Barbara Friedman, and started talking about the Wilbur Mills Expressway being built nearby and the fact that it might take her home. After many sessions around her kitchen table with Barbara and other members, she came to the first meetings of her ACORN local group, emerged as a leader of the group and the fight against what became I-630, and never looked back. Elena was the first woman president of ACORN and helped expand the organization nationally during her terms in office. She stood down from election in order to become director of the AISJ, then the Arkansas Institute for Social Justice and later the Institute for Social Justice, a training and research organization closely support ACORN leaders and staff. One of Elena’s biggest contributions was leading ACORN’s annual week long summer Leadership School for many years and mentoring scores of dynamic ACORN grassroots leaders. She went to law school at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock later but that didn’t quell her fire for example when she was arrested in Chicago at the convention action and along with Maude Hurd and other leaders was arrested for protesting inside a Capitol hearing.
Picture of Elena Hangii Speaking as ACORN President in 1978
Jon Kest (1955 – 2012) (More than 30 years)
Jon came down for a summer and stayed a lifetime, contributing mightily throughout his decades with ACORN. He ran our office in Hot Springs after dropping out of Oberlin, and then later when he went back to school at the University of Pennsylvania we followed him there as he became the founding organizer of Pennsylvania ACORN with his partner and wife, Fran Streich, for many years, until moving to Brooklyn and becoming the founding organizer of New York ACORN where he worked as head organizer until his death, when the organization was known as New York Communities for Change, after the ACORN attack. Jon was tireless in building the New York organization and helped many other offices as a regional director and even in a brief stint as field director on campaigns, dues collection, strategy, and tactics. His best work may have been the leadership on the squatting campaigns in Philly and later a similar campaign in New York, which ended in the agreements that created MHANY (Mutual Housing Agency of New York) which manages several thousand properties in the city. Jon was also one of the key organizers and founders of the Working Families Party of New York.
Picture of Jon Kest talking to Wade Rathke at an action In Washington D.C. Jeff Elmer also pictured.
Norka Maldonado (1957 – 2015)
Norka never worked for ACORN though for years she was a regular at ACORN events in St. Louis and Philadelphia as the partner of Craig Robbins during his time as head organizer in those cities, nonetheless she, as much as anyone, triggered the growth of ACORN on an international level. She was born in Lima, Peru, but she and many of her siblings, active in the student movement of her time fled the country to the United States during the repression of the left occasioned by the disputes between Sendero and the Fujiori dictatorship. When Toledo was elected ending that period, Norka lobbied effectively with ACORN organizers that there was a vital role that the organization needed to play in rebuilding civil society in Peru, which triggered a weeklong visit. Her family opened their doors to ACORN, housing the organizers, connecting them to various people in the new government and in the emerging rebuilding, and in one of her sister’s cases even serving as an attorney for the organization when it began. The long and short led to a partnership between ACORN and several locally based organizations, the comadores and a union of water workers, that then led to ACORN Peru working to build the first international affiliate of ACORN International. Small steps begin a long journey.
Steve McDonald – First National President of ACORN
Steve McDonald became a member of ACORN in the earliest days of the organization in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1971 when he became active in the Vietnam Veterans Organizing Committee (VVOC). He was a former career military veteran who often explained his deep involvement with ACORN as his investment in change since he had missed the civil rights movement having been in the service. He retired once diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and was an inspiration to other leaders, members and staff as he unflaggingly devoted himself to the organization even as the disease progressed from to cane, crutches, motor scooters, and virtual immobility. Steve also lived in the Centennial neighborhood which was a centerpiece of the “Save the City” campaign, the first comprehensive community-based organizing drives undertaken by ACORN in 1972. Serving on the Arkansas board he was a delegate to the first meetings of the Association Board directing national ACORN and was elected as the first national president in 1975, chairing the organization through its early expansion first conventions, and the 20-80 plan. His steady hand was a key and universal respect was a key stabilizing force that allowed the early organization to grow.
Picture of Steve McDonald (wheelchair) being pushed by Dale Rathke 1979 in St. Louis
Dale Rathke (1950-2015) (ACORN Time 1978 – 2014)
Dale originally came to work with ACORN to handle obtaining and building out the office space on 628 Baronne Street in New Orleans as ACORN was opening the National Organizing and Support Center and moving most of its national operations from Little Rock to New Orleans. He first worked as a CETA funded employee during the Carter Recession and then began helping the Controller. Eventually, he ended up directing Citizens Consulting Inc. (CCI) which managed all of the bookkeeping, audits, legal, and most other shared services for ACORN and its family of organizations. Dale’s tenure was troubled in some aspects, but he almost miraculously held the financial life of the organization together for many years and his commitment to the organizations continued until his death. Many friends and colleagues donated to the ACORN Memorial Orchard in Dale’s name and the fruit of the number of the trees is part of his ongoing legacy.
Picture of Dale Rathke (right) with PA ACORN Marchers
Barbara Bowen Splain (1946 – 2012) (More than 20 years)
Barbara was a California girl down to the fact that she was in the first graduating class at Pitzer College, one of the Claremont Colleges, outside of Los Angeles. She did not formally begin working with ACORN until the 1980’s but her association with people like Wade Rathke, ACORN’s Chief Organizer, went back to the days when she was working Massachusetts Welfare Rights Organization in the late 1960’s originally as a VISTA volunteer. She was one of the organizers dispatched to Springfield the day after the riots in October 1969 and used to tell the story of calling Boston from a phone booth to report on the situation. She was an early organizer for the United Labor Unions in Boston and other cities as well. After working for ACORN she did time with SEIU and other unions and ended up working as the coordinator of the Organizers’ Forum domestic and international dialogues for eight years in the 21st century until she retired, shepherding organizers around India, South Africa, Australia, Russia, Turkey and the United States always dedicated to her lifelong commitment to social chan
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/open-to-amendments-in-future-once-gst-bill-is-passed-rajnath-singh/articleshow/48413246.cms
NEW DELHI: With Congress and Left opposing the GST Bill, Home Minister Rajnath Singh today appealed to all parties to lend support to the proposed legislation for its passage in Parliament, saying the government will be open to amendments in future.
“I appeal to all parties to support us in Parliament so that we can pass it. We are open to amendments of GST Bill in future as per suggestions of traders,” he said addressing a conference of traders here.
Singh said the government was trying its best to pass the GST Bill in Parliament but due to the continuous disruption of the House by the opposition, the effort has not been successful.
The GST Bill was passed by Lok Sabha but the Rajya Sabha is yet to pass it due to opposition of Congress, Left parties and AIADMK. These parties want changes in the Bill.
Terming retail traders as the backbone of country’s economy, Singh said the government would not allow their interests to be affected by globalisation.
The Home Minister said the central government understands the difficulty faced by the retail traders and would do its best to resolve them as no one can undermine their importance.
“We were, are and will always be business friendly. You had demanded that there should be no FDI in multi-brand retail and we ensured that it does not happen,” he said.
Dharmendra Kumar’s article published in Hindi daily on the Social-economic-caste census of India and rural homelessness. Translated version in English is at the bottom.
English Translation on Rural Homeless
Dharmendra Kumar led a delegation of street vendors leaders to the Hon’ble Minister of Labour & Employment, Govt. of NCT of Delhi demanding creation of a Street Vendors Board, Provision of social security to all existing street vendors and registration of street vendors associations as trade unions.