lørdag 26. september 2009

This country needs help very soon

Flee: People fleeing via power lines.
Flykter: Folk flykter via strømlinjene.
Tumakas: Ang mga tao ay tumatakas sa malaking baha sa pamamagitan ng mga linya ng koryente.
Struggling: A boy carrying a small boy through the overflooded Streets in Manila´s suburb Quezon City.
Strever: En gutt bærer en liten gutt gjennom de oversvømte gatene i Manilas forstad Quezon City.
Pagtulong: Ang batang lalaki ay dala ng isang batang lalaki sa lansangan sa Maynila dahil sa malaking baha.
Natural disaster: Population in Manila is trying to put their lives take its usual time despite the need to wade through the Streets flooded by a meter high water so far, and getting higher because of continious rainfalls.
Naturkatastrofe: Befolkningen i Manila prøver å la livet gå sin vante gang på tross av at de må vasse gjennom gater oversvømmet av en meter vann og oversvømmelser fortsetter å stige.
Natural na kalamidad: Ang populasyon sa Maynila ay sinisubukan ilagay ang kanilang buhay sa kabila ng oras ng pangangailangan na lumakad sa tubig ng mga kalye na lubog ng isang metro at tumataas ang tubig bawat oras.
Olav Mjeldes familie fanget i flom i Manila. Konas barn er fanget innendørs, vannet står over golvet i andre etasje, forteller nordmann Olav Mjelde (56) til Dagbladet. Barna på sju og åtte år bor i en femetasjes bygning i Filippinenes hovestad Manila. Byen med omegn er erklært som katastrofeområde etter at en hel måneds regnmengde, over 40 centimeter, har falt i løpet av bare tolv timer i dag, 26.september 2009. Over 40 mennesker er omkommet og 27 er savnet i den verste flommen på 42 år, som er forårsaket av den tropiske stormen Ketsana. Bare i den nærliggende provinsen Rizal døde 35 av en kombinasjon av jordskred og flommen, som bygde seg opp svært raskt.

Sunday, September 27, 2009 Death toll rises caused by the storm in the Philippines. 75 people are dead and many missing due to the tropical storm Ketsana in the Philippines. Monday, September 28, 2009 the death toll is now 100 people and many are missing, and around 500,000 homeless. -80 percent of Philippine´s Capital Manila is under water and the residents swim for life. -Right now, the challenge is to find out how many actually died, and how many people who need help, said Richard Gordon, Chairman of the Philippine Red Cross, to CNN. 300,000 homeless in Luzon Island alone, Richard Gordon mentioned. There are 25 other provinces in the country which are overflooded.

The Death toll rises in the Philippines. Wednesday, September 30. Around 300 people have died due to the typhoon and the number of death is still rising, and many more missing, said the countries authorities. President Gloria Arroyo has opened the Presidential Palace for the homeless flood victims near the area. More than 2 million families are now homeless. And another strong typhoon arrived October 2. The wind speed is up to 175 kilometers per hour when the new strong typhoon "Parma" or "Pepeng" hit the Northern parts of the Philippines, Saturday October 3.

The Norwegian Embassy has received worrying messages. The Embassy has registered more than 550 Norwegians in the Philippines.

Søndag 27.september, dødstallet stiger etter storm på Filippinene. 75 er nå døde eller savnet etter tropiske stormen Ketsata på Filippinene. Mondag, 28.september, dødstallet har økt til 100 mennesker og flere er savnet, ca. 500,000 hjemløse. - 80 prosent av Filippinenes hovedstad under vann go innbyggere svømmer for livet. - Akkurat nå er utfordringen å finne ut hvor mange som faktisk er døde, og hvor mange som trenger hjelp, sier Richard Gordon, formann i filippinske Røde Kors til CNN. 300,000 hjemløse på Luzon-øya alene, sier Richard Gordon.

Stormen og det kraftige regnværet førte til de verste oversvømmelsene i Manila-området på over 40 år. På tolv timer falt det like mye regn som det normalt gjør i hele september.
Soldater, politi og frivillige har berget over 4.000 mennesker, mange av dem fra hustak og fra takene på busser som satt fast i vannmassene, sier forsvarsminister Gilbert Teodoro.
Flere steder er gatene gjort om til strie elver, og flere tusen mennesker har måttet forlate sin hjem. Minst fire sykehus i hovedstaden har flyttet pasienter oppover i etasjene fordi første etasje er oversvømt.

Tusener av innbyggere har søkt tilflukt oppe på hustak under flommen, som til dels kommer overraskende på folk, og som ikke begrenser seg til områder rundt elver og bekker.Flere flyplasser for innenlandstrafikk. Myndighetene har stengt av strømmen i deler Manila, for å forebygge ulykker. - Strømmen har vært borte i flere timer, bekrefter Mjelde, som selv bor deler av året i millionbyen.

- Uansett hvor bra dreneringssystemet ditt er, blir det overveldet av slike regnmengder, sier Nathaniel Cruz ved det filippinske meteorologiske instituttet. Han legger til at dårlig vedlikehold av infrastrukturen, sammen med søppel som stenger for vannkanalene, bidrar til å øke problemene.

29.september, Dødstallene stiger på Filippinene
Minst 240 personer har mistet livet i uværet på Filippinene, melder landets myndigheter. President Gloria Arroyo har åpnet presidentpalasset for hjemløse flomofre. Tallet på døde er en kraftig oppjustering fra mandag da det ble meldt at i overkant av hundre personer var omkommet.
Uværet startet lørdag da den tropiske stormen Ketsana feide inn over Filippinene. I løpet av 12 timer falt det like mye regn som det vanligvis gjør på en måned, noe som førte til den største flommen i landet på 40 år. Det nasjonale rådet for katastrofekoordinering opplyser tirsdag at hjemmene til rundt 1,9 millioner mennesker i hovedstadsområdet er oversvømt. 374.890 personer befinner seg nå i nødleire som er satt opp ved blant annet skoler og kirker.

Åpner presidentpalasset
De sanitære forholdene i disse leirene er svært dårlige, og myndighetene har uttrykt frykt for spredning av smittsomme sykdommer som svineinfluensa og diaré. Tilgangen på rent drikkevann er også begrenset for mange. De enorme vannmassene har også ført til store materielle ødeleggelser. Hele nabolag er dekket av gjørme, og i gatene ligger bilene på taket.
President Gloria Arroyo har gitt tillatelse til at presidentpalasset i Manila blir brukt som distribusjonssentral og tilfluktssted for hjemløse flomofre. - Dette er mitt bidrag. Evakuerte kan få plass i palasskomplekset og i telt som vil bli satt opp mellom bygningene. Om det trengs, vil mine ansatte stille kontorene sine til disposisjon, sier Arroyo.

Nytt uvær underveis
Forsvarsminister Gilbert Teodoro forteller at 12.359 mennesker er reddet fra vannmassene, og at internasjonal hjelp sikrer det videre hjelpearbeidet. - Vi forsøker som best vi kan å tilfredsstille de grunnleggende behovene, men det er en risiko for at situasjonen kan forverre seg. Vi kan ikke la det skje, sier Teodoro. Meteorologer har advart mot at nytt uvær er under oppseiling øst for Filippinene og det kan nå øystaten så tidlig som fredag. Flere filippinske tjenestemenn har advart mot at det ikke finnes tilstrekkelige ressurser til å håndtere konsekvensene av nok en storm.

I hope the Filipino people gets the help and support they badly needed as soon as possible. - the masoria papers

torsdag 24. september 2009

Dust storm hits Sydney!





AUSTRALIA often has dust storms, but they are rare in Sydney and yesterday Wednesday September 23, the city was almost brought to a standstill. The worst dust storm in 70 years, but no one was hurt according to the news. Sydneysiders awoke to a blanket of thick orange haze this morning after dust swept in from South Australia. Many had the problem to breath due to the storm that hit the country. And also caused major delays for the other planes and ferries. The storm has dropped several thousands of tons of red desert dust over the famous Opera City of Sydney in Australia.
Again? Sydney was encased in a huge dust- and sandsky, Saturday 26th September. With vinds of up to 200 kilometers per hour, just 3 days after the worst dust storms in 70 years. This Saturday was visibility in Sydney reduced to 5 kilometers, and Doctor´s Offices and Hospitals were phoned by people who got breathing problems due to the incident. The 2 sand storms caused by strong vinds which has brought with it sand from drought-stricken areas of Southeast.
-Hope you are all OK. My brother & family in Sydney, Canada, Norway, USA and family in the Philippines who are experiencing heavy rainfalls in months due to many typhoons coming. Take care.
Australia er støvlagt den 23.september. Stormen som herjet landet har sluppet flere tusner av tonn rødt ørkenstøv over den kjente operabyen Sydney i Australia. Ingen ble skadet som følge av støvet, men ifølge nyhetsbyrået fikk nødnumrene mange henvendelser fra folk som hadde problemer med å puste. Politiet advarte samtidig mot å kjøre bil. Sandstormer og støvstormer kan være livsfarlig for trafikken. Stormen skapte store forsinkelser for blant annet fly og ferjer. Meteorologer spår at været vil gå mot normalt igjen i morgen, og tranporten er da ventet å være i rute.
Igjen? Den australske storbyen Sydney lå lørdag 26.september igjen innhyllet i en diger støv- og sandsky. Med en vindstyrke på opptil 200 kilometer i timen ble skyer av støv og rød sand igjen kastet inn over Australias østkyst, bare tre dager etter den verste sandstormen på 70 år.
Lørdag var sikten i Sydney redusert til fem kilometer, og legekontorer og sykehus ble nedringt av folk som fikk pusteproblemer i den dårlige luften. De to sandstormene skyldes kraftige vinder som har brakt med seg sand fra tørkerammede områder sørøst i landet.
- the masoria papers

søndag 9. august 2009

The Former Philippine President Corazon Aquino




Corazon Cojoangco Aquino (born 1933) was the first woman to run for the office of the president of the Republic of the Philippines. The results of the 1986 election were so fraudulent that both Aquino and her opponent, the incumbent, Ferdinand Marcos declared victory. As a result of the election, the Filipino people rose in protest and Marcos was forced to flee the country and Aquino assumed the office of president.

Corazon Cojoangco Aquino was born on January 25, 1933, the sixth of eight children born to Jose Cojoangco of Tarlac, a prosperous province 65 miles northwest of Manila, the Philippines capital. The Cojoangcos were members of a wealthy landowning family prominent in politics.
Aquino attended an exclusive Catholic school for girls in Manila before travelling to America to attend Philadelphia's Raven Hill Academy. After earning a degree in French and mathematics from New York's Mount Saint Vincent College in 1953, she returned to the Philippines and enrolled in a Manila law school. While at law school she met her future husband, Benigno Aquino and married him in 1954. The marriage united two of Tarlac's most prominent families.
The Politician's Wife
Aquino's husband belonged to a family whose involvement in politics went as far back as the last century. One year after they were married, Aquino's husband was elected mayor of the city of Concepcion at the age of 22. Her husband was considered one of the Philippines' brightest political hopes.

Moving up in politics, Aquino's husband became the youngest territorial governor and later the youngest senator in the Philippines. Through out all her husband's political successes, Aquino stayed in the background, preferring to concentrate her energies on raising their four daughters and a son.

As her husband rose in prominence, he became an outspoken critic of the regime of President Ferdinand Marcos. When Marcos declared martial law on September 21, 1972, Aquino's husband was one of the first persons arrested and put in jail. During the long years of her husband's incarceration from 1972 to 1980, Aquino's role as a quiet wife slowly changed. Becoming her husband's main link to the outside world, she was instrumental in having his statements passed along to the press and to activists outside the prison walls. From inside his cell, Aquino's husband even ran for a seat in Parliament, with his wife conducting a large portion of the campaign.
In 1980, Aquino's husband was released from jail in order to undergo heart surgery in the United States. Aquino's husband worked as a research fellow at Harvard University for the next three years. His family lived with him in the Boston area and his wife described the time as the best years of her life.

In 1983 supporters of the anti-Marcos factions persuaded Aquino's husband to return to the Philippines and to lead their cause. When his plane landed on the tarmac of the Manila International Airport on August 21, 1983, Aquino's husband was assassinated. A commission formed to investigate the murder indicted the military men assigned to escort him as well as their military superiors. However, the court which eventually tried them for the murder acquitted all 26 defendants.

Homemaker Turns Politician
Her husband's assassination served as the turning point of Aquino's life. As her dead husband became the rallying focus of anti-Marcos groups she, as his widow, became the unifying figure for the different factions of the opposition. Aquino was catapulted into the role of keeping the unity alive. On October 15, 1985, the Aquino presidential campaign was launched at the National Press Club in Manila by 250 founding members, many of whom were businesspeople and professionals.

Aquino agreed to run if one million supporters signed an endorsement of her candidacy and if President Marcos called for a snap election. The supporters collected more than one million signatures, and her candidacy was endorsed by six opposition political parties as the common candidate for president in the election called for February 7, 1986. The political support she amassed, and the exoneration of the military men tried for her husband's murder, made Aquino accept the mandate to run for the presidency, "not in vengeance but in search of justice."
She picked Salvador Laurel, leader of the opposition's largest faction, as her running mate. Initial negotiations fell through in a disagreement about which party's name to carry--her husband's LABAN (Fight) Party or Laurel's UNIDO (United Nationalist Democratic Organization). Before the deadline for filing candidacy she and Laurel agreed to run under the UNIDO banner.
Countering Marcos's charges of her political inexperience, Aquino counted as her main asset her diametrical opposition to the president. Her supporters considered her a fresh new face with a reputation for moral integrity. Her main assets in the campaign were her reputation for moral integrity along with her avowal of her slain husband's ideals. To these were added the quiet support of the influential Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines, whose prelate Jamie Cardinal Sin was instrumental in the Aquino-Laurel reconciliation.

The homemaker-turned-politician responded to the challenge with enthusiasm and a singular commitment to the cause of justice. Her opponent, Marcos, had extended his term of office for more than 20 years through a declaration of martial law and constitutional changes that increased his powers. The true results of the election may never be known as the incumbent forces used intimidation, scattered violence, and overt fraud to declare Marcos the winner. The people took to the streets in protest; some army leaders revolted; the United States expressed its indignation. Less than three weeks after his alleged election victory in February 1986, Marcos fled the Philippines. Aquino became the acknowledged president of the republic.
The Presidency and Beyond
Aquino admitted that she faced numerous challenges as the new Filipino president. The release of 441 political prisoners and the forced retirement of 22 pro-Marcos generals were among her first actions as president. She also reinstated the writ of habeas corpus, the right of a prisoner to appear before a judge, and abolished the government's ability to imprison people at will, which had been in effect since 1981. Aquino promised to promote the right to assemble peaceably, and free speech along with prosecuting corruption and abusers of human rights.
Protecting the countryside was another of Aquino's goals. She planned to accomplish this by disarming the private armies that roamed the rural areas and establish industries there. Aquino said she would revitalize the sugar industry by breaking the monopoly. She acknowledged the special relationship with the United States but emphasized that her concern was with the
Filipinos, not the Americans.

Aquino knew her popularity would wane and that her leadership would be harshly criticized. At least seven coups were directed at her government during her tenure as president, many times by former allies who had helped her come to power. Besides dealing with factious parties both within her cabinet and in the nation, Aquino had to contend with natural disasters and frequent power failures.

In 1991, a constitutional amendment was passed by referendum which enabled Aquino to remain president until June 30, 1992. Her successor was Fidel Ramos, her former secretary of defense and Marcos' former deputy chief of staff of the armed forces. Ramos, who assisted Aquino in fending off the coup attempts, has continued to support Aquino's democratic ideals. Aquino has still retained her popularity with the Filipino people and works for reform by participating in cooperatives and non-governmental organizations in the Philippines.

Cory Aquino -- the mother of Democracy in the Philippines -- dies and is buried:
Do you remember the People Power revolution in the Philippines in 1985?
There has never been anything like it, either before or since.

An uprising of the Filipino people resulted in the overthrow and exile of a "strong-man" dictator -- Ferdiinand Marcos -- without a single person being killed or harmed. With martial law in place, with the full support of the military, with control of most of the media and the support of the United States, he still lost. And the resulting government was a Constitutional Democracy modeled on the United States form of government.

This revolution started with an exercise in brutal power. Ninoy Aquino -- Cory's husband -- was shot and killed as he got off the airplane in Manila after coming home from the United States, planning political opposition to the Marcos regime.
His wife, Cory, vowed to keep the battle going. She called for an open election for President. President Marcos called for a snap election as a way of shutting down the unrest raised by the murder of Ninoy Aquino.

Cory had everything going against her. She was a woman, Filipino's were macho, and did not believe a woman should be in power. She was in shock from the death of her husband, and continued to wear the yellow dress she had on when her husband was shot. The government was corrupt, and Marcos' minions openly went out offering money in exchange for votes, and were quite willing to "fix" the vote count. Another political figure -- Salvador Laurel -- was ready to throw his own hat in the ring, which would further split the vote, making it impossible to overthrow Marcos. President Ronald Reagan was a great fan of Marcos, and there was a large US military presence there, so there was even the possibility that the US military would step in and help keep Marcos in power.

But suddenly everything changed. Salvador Laurel, who had been adamant about wanting to be President himself, suddenly agreed to run in the Vice Presidential position with Cory Aquino. Cory's message that she was running to complete Ninoy Aquino's dream resonated with Filipino men, who could relate to the idea that if something happened to them, their own wives would want to continue going forward in their memory. The yellow of Aquino's dress became a symbol for the People Power revolution. Supporters wore yellow or yellow armbands to show their support. People responsible for counting the votes openly opposed a false recount and worked to preserve the paper ballots.

The military was mobilized. This could have easily been a real slaughter. Mobs of disorganized rioting people could have been gunned down and the revolution repressed. But instead of being met by angry mobs, they met something they could not handle. Young women came forth and draped the soldier's necks with garlands of flowers. An old woman in a wheelchair stopped in front of a tank to keep it from moving forward. In a time of heavy media coverage, all this was televised for the world to see.

And the people marched on Malacanan Palace. Adult children of powerful politicians were throwing their hat in the ring, supporting the people power revolution. Marcos and his military strong men were ready for a final confrontation, and again there was danger of a mass slaughter, because the crowds could not stand up to those weapons.
But even that was defused. A plane was offered to Marcos, and he and his family was allowed to leave in peace with anything they could carry with them. They took that option rather than staying to fight and face a revolution.

So Marcos, and martial law, was overthrown. A new Constitution was crafted, based on the US Constitution, but tailored for the unique differences of the Philippines.
The Philippines had real Democracy. It still is not perfect, there is still government corruption, there are still people wanting ultimate power, but it is still designed to be responsive to the will of the people. Cory Aquino was the new President, and the symbol for the victory of the people over the power of an entrenched dictatorship.

Cory Aquino has now died. Corazon Aquino, the former President of the Philippines, died on August 1st, aged 76. This is an emotional time for the Philippines. It is the emotional equivalent of the death of John F. Kennedy in the United States, because more than anything else the death of this person is the death of a symbol for the best in everyone.

Cory's story is a story which should never be forgotten. It is a bigger than life story, a legend which is hard to believe, an example which shows that it IS possible for people to make a difference in their lives, and in their government. It is a legend which shows that sometimes the good guys win. It is Don Quixote tilting at the windmill -- and winning! It is an unbelievable fantasy made real.

The memory and the legend of Cory Aquino should live on. Generations from now people should still remember her name.
- the masoria papers

fredag 7. august 2009

Madonna´s first Concert in Oslo, Norway




Superstjernen sendte to personer for å hamstre varer fra helsekostbutikken på Manglerud senter i Oslo. Det skriver dagbladet.no. I følge avisens nettutgave bekrefter ekspeditøren i butikken det overaskende besøket.

– De handlet masse tørket frukt og sesamsnacks, rett og slett økologiske matvarer og snacks, sier ekspeditøren, som ikke vil oppgi navnet sitt.
Madonna (50) er kjent for sin sunne livstil og fokus på kropp og trening, og viste 40.000 publikumere på Valle Hovin at hun fortsatt er i storform.

Hun leverte et to timers langt show, men etter konserten var det rett i seng. Popdronningen og hennes følge ble eskortert i svarte limousiner direkte tilbake til Grand Hotel etter konserten.
I følge VG oppolder hun seg ikke lenger enn hun må i landet, og det planlagte norgesoppholdet er kraftig forkortet.
Klokken 21.20 kom hun på scenen, sittende på en kongestol og kledd i en svart body og lange nettingstrømper. Det er første gang Madonna står på scenen i Norge, og hennes norske fans sviktet henne ikke. Til tross for regnvær var det fullt på Valle Hovin, noe som betyr nærmere 40 000 publikummere. «Dronningen av pop» sviktet heller ikke «Kongen av pop», Michael Jackson. I likhet med tidligere på turneen hyllet hun den avdøde stjernen med å la en Jackson-imitator danse til «Billie Jean» og «Wanna Be Startin' Something» og fulgte opp med å si: -Long live the King (lenge leve kongen). Møtte tidlig store deler av publikum hadde møtt opp flere timer før heltinnen åpnet konserten med sangen «Candy Shop», rundt 50 minutter senere enn annonsert, og da Paul Oakenfold varmet opp var det allerede begynt å fylle seg opp. Og like før Madonna gikk på scenen tittet solen frem også. Da pop dronningen dro i gang konsertens andre låt, «Beat Goes On» fra hennes seneste album «Hard Candy», var stemningen elektrisk, og så å si ingen av Valle Hovins seter var i bruk.Stemningen og trøkket holdt seg høyt helt til hun sa «goodbye» fra scenen nærmere to timer senere. Da hadde 50-åringen trukket frem sanger fra hele sin karriere - i tidvis svært omarbeidede versjoner. Madonna fant også tid til en rekke kostymeskift mens danserne og lysshowet sørger for å underholde publikum. Under «4 minutes» fikk hun selskap av duettpartneren Justin Timberlake, om enn bare gjennom et videoopptak på storskjermen.

To konserter:
Madonna holder to konserter i Norge, den andre torsdag kveld. I utgangspunktet var det meningen at superstjernen skulle bodd i Oslo mellom konsertene, men i stedet valgte hun å reise hjem til London. Madonna ankom Norge mandag kveld og ble kjørt inn bakveien til Grand Hotel. Her oppholdt hun seg frem til 16-tiden da hun forlot hotellet i en bil med sotede ruter. Sticky & Sweet-turneen startet i fjor. Da besøkte Madonna 58 byer og ble sett av drøye 2,4 millioner fans. Hun solgte billetter for 1,8 milliarder kroner, skriver Aften. Turneen er allerede historiens mest innbringende for en soloartist.
- the masoria papers

søndag 2. august 2009

Stolt som en Hana med Espen Hana




Espen Hana er artisten med musikk i smilet og sang i humoren. I teaterstykket "Stolt som en Hana" deler han noen av sine erfaringerog fantasier med oss. Han er åpen for at det private er artistens gullgruve, og åpner deler av gruven for oss.
Da jeg så dette teaterstykke nøt jeg hans skuespillertalent, men hvorfor blandet han hele tiden paven inn i stykket. Hvorfor hadde han anskaffet en pavebil som stod parkert utenfor teateret og hvorfor ringte han paven midt under teaterstykket. Jo for de to er de eneste i verden som har pavebil.
Espen Hana har levd et rikt liv og har mye å være stolt av. Dette teaterstykket var en midtoppsummering av hans liv.

Jeg så en lastebil med påskriften "Den stolte hane" og Arne Magnussen AS, "En del av Cardinal foods" og kom til å tenke på han. Var det dette som hadde gitt ham ideen om linken til paven.
I teaterstykket nevnte han også et tre ved Stavanger hvor foreldre henger smukkene til ungene når de er avvendt med smukk. De skulle også hatt et tre hvor de kan henge ølflasker når man ikke lenger er avhengig av å drikke.
Da jeg var i Stavanger bodde jeg, med følge, to netter på Rogalandsheimen og en natt på Rica Victoria Hotell. Begge overnattingsstedene var fine på sin egen måte. Rogalandsheimen lå like ved teateret og Victoria Hotell ved Vågen. Vi fløy til og fra Stavanger med Norwegian Air Shuttle (NAS).
Espen Hana deltok i den Norske Melodi Grand-Prix finalen i 2009, men nådde ikke helt opp. Vinneren ble jo Alexander Rybak, noe han ennå er bitter over. I alle fall ga han uttrykk for det i teaterstykket.
Espen Hana - Two of a kind (live MGP 2009)
- the masoria papers

Sergey Karaoglanov

Sergei Alexandrovich Karaganov (Russian: Сергей Александрович Караганов, born September 12, 1952) is a Russian political scientist who heads the Council for Foreign and Defense Policy, an independent and influential analytical institution whose members include a number of Russia's political, academic and economic elite. Karaganov is a close associate of Yevgeny Primakov, and has been Presidential Advisor to both Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin. Karaganov has been a member of the Trilateral Commission since 1998, and served on the International Advisory Board of the Council on Foreign Relations from 1995 until 2005. He has also been Deputy Director of the Institute of Europe at the USSR (now Russian) Academy of Sciences since 1989.
Karaganov is the only intellectual from the former Soviet Union listed in the 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll, and only one of four, with Pavol Demeš, Václav Havel and Slavoj Žižek, from Eastern Europe.

Sergey was recently in Norway, in Bergen and in Trondheim.
- the masoria papers

Wet T-shirt contest


Some contestants got pretty aggressive. Mojito Beach Bar, located on Trukhaniv Island on the Dnipro River, turned the heat way up on July 25 by hosting a Miss Wet T-Shirt beauty pageant. The contestants – 12 sexy girls – had to both demonstrate the beauty and grace of their body and make an impression on a jury by demonstrating their skills , including “acting abilities.” The show started with them strutting down a catwalk in bikinis and continued with a skipping rope contest. The last test for the girls was to spray one another with water through a hose. The ladies got almost too aggressive trying to put their rivals out of the game. Among the favorites of the contest was No. 7, a tanned brunette . However, the Miss Wet T-Shirt title was finally given to a 19-year-old blond, Tatyana Savitska . She was awarded with a free trip to a Turkish resort, courtesy of Turtess travel agency, and the right to appear on the cover of a popular men’s magazine. After the contest, guests felt the need to get refreshed right away, while the youngest guests had fun with contest water hoses.
- the masoria papers