Thursday 29 December 2011

valentines day flower delivery - How a Montreal company won the race to build the world's cheapest tablet


Somewhere in the sky between Amritsar and Toronto, Suneet Singh Tuli has just finished an in-flight vegetarian meal and is preparing to get some sleep. He is in first class, the only way the 6-foot-2 Brampton, Ontario-based businessman can accommodate a gruelling travel schedule that sees him require a fresh passport every 18 months. Before he drifts off, though, he picks up his copy of The Economic Times of India to catch up on the news.

And there, buried in its pink pages, is where he sees it: A tiny news brief announcing the Indian government’s extension of a contract tender to build an ultracheap tablet computer for the masses. Suneet, the 43-year-old CEO of a small Canadian wireless device maker called Datawind, knows immediately what this means. India, a country of 1.2 billion people, has the fastest-growing mobile market on the planet. More than 800 million people in India have mobile phones and more than 10 million are signing up each month. Yet the number of Indians with regular access to the Internet is shockingly low: about 10%. The Indian government is banking on a nationally subsidized mobile tablet to help pull millions of its disconnected citizens online and into the modern economy. For entrepreneurs like Suneet, who focus on low-cost digital products for the disenfranchised, markets like India (and China, Asia, Africa and Latin America) are what’s referred to as the “next billion.” And they are huge.

As soon as his plane touches down in wintry Toronto, Suneet flips open his laptop to Google the Indian state’s desired specifications. They are almost identical to those found in a super-affordable tablet that Datawind is designing at its Montreal office. “It was eerie,” Suneet recalls. “The specs were so close.”

And so Suneet resolves to embark on what would become his Great Game, a grand contest of empire-building proportions: to engineer, construct and deliver the world’s cheapest tablet computer to the Indian government. It will have to be mass-produced, mainly on the subcontinent—its cost subsidized for tens, perhaps hundreds, of millions of Indians. If he succeeds, it could vault his tiny company from obscurity into the big leagues of the global wireless industry. If he fails, Datawind will stumble back to the minors. It is Jan. 30, 2011. The Indian government’s deadline for bids is Feb. 14.

That leaves Suneet just two weeks—an impossibly short time frame in which he first has to convince his tight-knit board of directors, who have always done everything by consensus, that this unprecedented opportunity outweighs the risks of wading neck deep into the unpredictable Indian market, where everything seems to be cobbled together by red tape and bureaucracy; then, he will have to gear up to build 100 functioning test units of a tablet computer that, at this stage, exists only in design and scattered components; and, finally, get those tablets and himself to a dusty outpost in the deserts of Rajasthan, where his efforts will likely be blown apart and buried under the quick-shifting sands of India’s chugging, clanging, modern industrial economy.

Two weeks. Not exactly a lot of time.

********************************************************************

Datawind’s main office is located in a bland concrete tower block on René-Lévesque Ouest in downtown Montreal. There’s no sign of the company in the building lobby. The only indication of Datawind’s presence is a white sheet of paper taped to an 11th-floor door that reads, “Datawind Net Access Corporation.” Even that had only been posted for the benefit of a visitor. Behind the door, around 50 of the company’s 150 employees—many of them engineers—toil and tinker with motherboards and mobile operating systems.

Datawind was founded in 2000 by Suneet and his bother, Raja, who is two years his senior and holds the title of chief technology officer. The pair have had modest success building and selling wireless devices like the PocketSurfer (a small, clamshell mobile device) and the UbiSurfer (a mini-netbook), mainly in the United Kingdom for use on Vodafone Group’s network. The company has an office in London, and another in Amritsar, in the northern Indian state of Punjab, where it operates a call centre and handles some engineering, testing, accounting and HR duties. Although Suneet and his brother are Canadian citizens—born in India, they arrived when they were 12 and 14, respectively—Datawind is registered in the U.K. Suneet says this is largely because of Canada’s notoriously conservative venture capital market, the U.K.’s funding support for innovation and the fact that Canada’s wireless industry—dominated by just three companies—has had little incentive to supplement its own high-margin smartphones with the kinds of inexpensive Internet devices Datawind designs.

But even though Datawind’s business model doesn’t really fit the Canadian market, its products are perfect for India. There, land-line infrastructure is practically non-existent, and desktop computers and laptops are not widespread. Mobile devices like Datawind’s offer the best hope for bringing broadband Internet to India’s citizens. While companies like Apple, Samsung and Research In Motion have focused their attention on upper-middle-class consumers and business clients with $500-plus devices, executives like Nokia’s Canadian CEO Stephen Elop are touting the potential of the world’s next billion Internet users. What emerging markets fail to offer in profit margins, the thinking goes, they’ll make up for in volume. Moreover, connecting this massive untapped market will do more than help bring developing countries online; it will give early market entrants a competitive advantage over global tech leaders like Apple.

Convincing Datawind’s board of directors to pursue the project means first convincing Raja and their 76-year-old father, Lakhbir. The current plan, as far as the board is concerned, involves slowly advancing into the U.S. and expanding in Europe. Raja sees the value in Suneet’s proposal, even though it will mean sacrificing weeks of human resources and management attention at a company too small to take many big risks. Like Raja, their father, who had previously run construction businesses in India, Canada and the Middle East, comes around to the idea quickly. But one director in Hong Kong is steadfast in his opposition. Datawind is already trying to bring a similar device into the commercial market. Why waste weeks on a government scheme in India, where contracts are known to be violated and contested, and the backlog in the courts is measured in years? Why put Datawind’s plans on hold for what is essentially a Hail Mary? Suneet pushes, but there is no give at all.

“I threatened to resign,” he recalls.

But, really, there is no time for that. While the company has always operated by board consensus, Suneet nonetheless asks Raja to start preparing prototypes.

********************************************************************

Behind the paper sign on the door, and down a hallway lined with overflowing cardboard boxes, Datawind’s Montreal headquarters becomes a dizzying blur of after-hours engineering. It is the kind of scene more common to bootstrapping Silicon Valley start-ups than a decade-old company run by a pair of seasoned entrepreneurs who have already listed two companies on the NASDAQ. Technicians like Cezar Oprescu, a heavy-set Romanian who not only wears two collared shirts but two pairs of glasses at the same time (they double as a microscope), work in rotating shifts, some lasting more than 36 hours, at desks littered with soldering irons, spare computer parts, discarded motherboards and fast food wrappers. Their monitors flicker with the drip of neon green code that looks like something from The Matrix. While one staff member, seated at an impossibly cluttered desk, sets about re-engineering the piece of hardware responsible for receiving WiFi signals, a colleague, stationed just a few feet away, adjusts the software drivers that will interact with it. Elsewhere, programmers are still testing the code that dictates how the touchscreen user interface deals with the drivers.

The pace is unrelenting. Not only are employees ordering in dinner, they’re ordering in breakfast, grappling in real time with the allergies and dietary restrictions of an incredibly diverse staff of Eastern Europeans, Indians, Chinese, Russians and French Canadians, several vegetarians and one person who is allergic to green peppers.

Part of the difficulty in engineering such a device is that the underlying goal—that its final price should be within the means of those who can’t afford high-priced tablets—dictates crucial engineering and component decisions. A piece of high-impact-resistant glass, such as the touchscreen face of an iPad, can cost upward of $20. Datawind’s touchscreen glass, which the company had engineered down the street, costs less than $2, though it won’t allow for luxuries like pinch-and-zoom finger swiping. There were also compromises on processing power: Datawind’s 366 megahertz processor costs less than $5, a fraction of the $15-plus price tag on the chips that power iPads and other comparable tablets. And while the decision to run Google’s free Android mobile operating system on the gadget saves money, it requires coders to dig deep into the Linux kernel that underpins the software, tweaking it until it runs smoothly on Datawind’s weaker processor.

“We were trying to build the device while we were still designing it,” Raja later explained. To understand just how intense Datawind’s challenge was, consider that, in November, IHS iSuppli, a supply chain analysis firm, tore apart Amazon’s newest tablet, the Kindle Fire—one of the lowest-priced devices in the North American market—and tallied its components to a hard cost of $209.63 (this for a product that retails at $199 U.S.). Datawind was aiming to come in at a quarter of that.

It helps, oddly enough, that Datawind is executing this near-impossible task in Montreal: The city is a mecca for immigrants, and Raja proudly proclaims that his employees, many of them new to the country, had arrived with obscure skill sets that proved immensely valuable to the company. As the days tick by through a haze of sleepless nights, cold pizzas, problems and workarounds, the seven-inch device finally takes shape. The finished tablets are carefully packed in boxes, one by one, and prepared for shipment to Indira Gandhi International Airport on the outskirts of New Delhi.

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On a morning only a few days before the Indian government’s valentines day flower delivery deadline, Kuljeet Singh, Datawind’s head of operations in India, makes the drive out to Indira Gandhi to pick up the tablets. The company has some experience doing business in India, having used the country as a test market for other products. The Tuli brothers had also long since hired local staff—and still had some family in the country. They knew, for instance, that the customs process in India can be unpredictable at best, and a nightmare at worst. Sometimes, shipments come through in a day or two; other times, they are held up for weeks.

Still, this day is special: Singh is not here as a lowly businessman; he is here by grand design—practically by government decree—to receive goods for a scheme that is designed to benefit the People. At Indira Gandhi, Singh morphs from Datawind’s main man in India to a type of soothsayer, spooning out prophecies to the harried customs officials about the tablets’ enormous potential. “I told them this was a project for the government,” Singh says, “that it would go in every house, even the guy earning 5,000 to 6,000 rupees per month”—about $100—“that they can have this....They got really excited.”

The shipment is received without hassle, and Singh loads the tablets into his Toyota Innova minivan to begin the 10-hour drive west, out of Delhi’s broad, chaotic avenues and into the deserts of Rajasthan, en route to Jodhpur, where the bidding process is set to take place. Singh doesn’t know, at this point, that there is still no board approval to do any of this, that a lone director in Hong Kong has yet to sign off.

Suneet arrives in Jodhpur, an ancient city of forts and palaces, on the afternoon of Feb. 13. He checks into the Hari Mahal, a hotel designed to resemble an ancient castle, and spends the evening on the phone with the company’s director in Hong Kong, who remains convinced Datawind will lose the contract and is wasting precious time. With nothing settled (the director will quit a few weeks later), Suneet goes to bed.

Bidding begins the next morning at a half-built university campus outside the city. The anxiety of the first day is taken over with mundane officialdom: the examination of incorporation documents, validation of financial statements, ensuring everyone’s $100,000 (U.S.) bid bond is in place. It is on the second day that things get interesting. Suneet is sequestered along with 14 other bidders, represented by about 20 or 30 people, in an antechamber with couches and coffee tables. As he awaits his 45-minute slot to pitch a committee of bureaucrats and prestigious Indian Institute of Technology professors, he takes the time—carpe diem—to network. None of the industry giants is in attendance. Though Suneet heard that the Indian government approached Apple, Samsung and most other major tablet makers, he can understand why they might be hesitant to design a device that would surely slice their profit margins to ribbons. Nevertheless, Datawind’s $10 million in annual revenues are dwarfed by several of the other bidders. Geneva-based STMicroelectronics, for instance, hauled in $10 billion last year—roughly 1,000 times what Datawind did. Suneet makes his presentation, and it goes well. He is asked back for the next day.

In the morning, Suneet and the remaining three bidders return to the same room. At the front, a 12-person committee shows off the submitted tenders, time-stamped and sealed with wax, before reading off each company’s bid—including the lowest estimate of what it would cost to make the Indian government’s dream: the cheapest tablet in the world.

When the presentation is finished, Datawind’s price tag—$52—is the lowest. The next cheapest bid is for $64. “I went white,” Suneet says now. “I thought, ‘We’ve missed something.’”

Feeling nauseous, he staggers out into the antechamber, where rival bidders lob wisecracks in his direction. “At that price, we’ll buy some,” one businessman says, laughing. Frantic, Suneet calls Montreal, where it is nearly 3 a.m., knowing he’ll wake up Raja. But his elder brother, who at times forgets how many patents he has to his name (more than 50) but never forgets product specs, reassures him that the final price accounts for every single component in the device. That’s when it sinks in: They’ve nailed this.

********************************************************************

When the media saw the mobile devices for the first time in October, the combination of tablets, international development and India made an enticing tale. The Tuli brothers were treated like rock stars. In Canada, it’s easy to draw comparisons to Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie, the famous co-CEOs of RIM: Raja, the brilliant, details-oriented engineer, and Suneet, the globe-trotting salesman selling not just a product but a vision of the future. When I met Raja in November, it was clear he sees it too: “RIM was a start-up once,” he told me.

So far, Datawind has manufactured about 10,000 of its ultracheap devices, and has subcontracted more factories in India to gradually churn out a volume of tablets that still seems unbelievable to the founders. The Indian state plans to subsidize the tablets down to between $20 and $35 (U.S.), to be sold to college and university students, and wants to roll the devices out to around 12 million users over the next 12 months. After that, the goal is to place one of these tablets in the hands of each of the country’s 80 to 100 million high school students. The process, despite the hype, is still in a nascent stage, unfolding slowly.

But things got stranger. Shortly after the announcement, Suneet was invited to meet with Thailand’s Minister for Information Communications Technology (who was so interested in purchasing 10 million tablets that he attended their meeting even as flood waters descended on Bangkok). Calls arrived from Turkey (which wants 15 million tablets), Sri Lanka, Trinidad and Tobago, Panama and Egypt. At one point, the Swedish embassy in Canada called: Would Suneet possibly have time to meet the Swedish foreign minister, Carl Bildt? And would it be possible to send out a press release to announce that the meeting was happening? “Why are you asking me?” Suneet asked them, flabbergasted.

Later that month, Suneet is on another Delhi-to-Toronto flight when an Indian woman suddenly goes into labour. A pediatrician is on board and delivers the baby girl in mid-flight. The parents name her Aakash, the Hindi word for “sky.” It is the same name the Indian government decided to give its tablet—a startlingly hopeful device, a computer designed to connect more people to the Internet than ever, that might one day put Datawind in the rarefied air of other Canadian tech pioneers.

“My life is just so surreal,” says Suneet. valentines day flower delivery

Wednesday 28 December 2011

valentines day flower delivery - More woes trail Ebonyi Speakers removal


RATHER than checkmate corruption, incompetence and abuse of office in the Ebonyi State House of Assembly, the removal of the Speaker, Ikechukwu Nwankwo, has instead worsened the state of affairs in the House.

Following the questionable removal of the former Speaker, Ikechukwu Nwankwo, over alleged fraudulent activities like looting the treasury of the House, abuse of office and incompetence in handling legislative matters, the house had been in one turbulent moment or the other. 

Though not convincing enough, Ikechukwu Nwankwo from the day he was sworn in as the speaker of the fourth state House of Assembly on June 7, 2011, was seen to be very innocent of perpetrating such alleged crime, but who knows if those he had stepped on their toes before have decided to pay him back in his own coin, or could it be that he failed to play his cards very well? 

From all indications, Nwankwo representing Ebonyi North/ West constituency was one of the lucky eight House members who, out of the 24 members that made up the third Assembly, failed in their comeback bid during the January 2011 primary election in the state but surprisingly returned to the fourth Assembly. 

He was also lucky to have been elected as the speaker of the fourth Assembly following the high level of experience, courage, brevity, loyalty, dedication to service of humanity and most importantly, he was seen as a man whose unalloyed performance elevated him to a greater height. 

Notable people in the state confirm that his work rate as a speaker, was of exclamatory proportion and managerial ability remains positively intact. 

That sounds very interesting, meaning that his constituency could count on his truthfulness even in challenging periods.

Obviously, Ebonyi State from its creation in 1996 by the than military administrator Sani Abacha, is known to be civic, peaceful and united in handling issues of either political disparity or interest, religious clashes, community boundary crisis and other forms of abnormality that have capacity to destroy the policies and programmes of the state government. 

But as it stands now, there is a strong belief that the removal of the embattled speaker was not unconnected with the clash of interest between two cabals that head the ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters (A) and ministry of Grants and Donor agencies (B).

Believably, this cabal makes decisions for the Ebonyi State Government and had since the inception of the administration of Governor Martin Elechi in 2007 till date, been at a dagger drawn over whose candidates become the speaker, state chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), commissioners,  senators representing the three senatorial zones and the six federal constituencies or whose candidates occupy other federal positions. 

However, the most pitiable about these upheavals is that these two cabals were from the same Ikwo local government area with the governor.

Convincingly, the tussle was music to the heart of all the people, no matter their political affiliations, religious denominations, and kindred, even most at times may have the tendency of affecting government wills to make decipherable decisions. 

This is because a family on fire may not be disposed to fight a common course, mostly when the father of the house is divided of which battle to fight first. 

Is it the opposition parties or the aide’s controversy? 

To make matters even worse, the clash of political interest between the two has left the Ebonyi peasantries to the vagaries of political quagmire where those in power would spend the resources, which may have been stolen from the economy of the state either to buy over members of the house to take decision in their favor. 

Obviously, it was not too long the relationship lasted. 

This has generated a lot of questions from elites and stakeholders of the state on reasons for the sack of the speaker now. 

Even when it is a known fact that it is not the best time for the members of the house to impeached the erstwhile speaker, considering that the congress of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to which most of members belong, will kickstart on January 7, 2012. 

Although most members of the party would say it is a calculated attempt to remove the speaker by cabal (B) who has an interest in the chairmanship of the party. 

Though there is a strong belief that the speaker was replaced by another notable party stalwart that hails from the same constituency with him to head the party as the chairman. 

This is because Nwankwo couldn't  be speaker while somebody from the same constituency becomes the party chairman.

 It is on this ground that Nwankwo was edged out by cabal (B). 

Convincible as it seems, a source close to the State House of Assembly alleged that the members of the house may have been rewarded with N7 million each by cabal (B) and their allies whom the erstwhile speaker had stepped on their toes for blatantly refusing him supply the monetised cars for the members of the House.

To this end, the erstwhile speaker before the impeachment, had revealed that he had no enemy to fight and wondered why people should be after him. 

He also noted that it was not the best time to fight political enemies and dismissed the allusion that the House members were divided over the choice of official vehicles being offered them to buy. 

‘I wish to state without fear of contradiction that there had never been a time the present Fourth Assembly was divided on the issue of monetised car. 

You are hearing from the Speaker by the grace of God and I do not wish to be misquoted.

‘The Fourth Assembly was inaugurated on the 7th of June 2011.

Immediately after the inauguration I thought it wise that members that had no individual or private cars were entitled to a car. 

We sat as one house, as one family and agreed in strict accordance with the provisions of Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission that a car should be provided to the House, which will be off-set through the salaries. 

‘That is what the constitution said and there was never and there will never be a time that there will be division in that aspect. We have made our choice and our choice is in accordance with the provisions of this law. 

Whatever rumours that is being peddled in town or whatever write-up in the local dailies is but fallacies. They are what I term as “balderdash,” Nwankwo said.

To substantiate his claims he said that the fourth Assembly was not the first to have opposition parties other than the PDP dominated members, saying that there were opposition political parties that won election and became members of Ebonyi State House ofAssembly during the first Assembly. 

‘The records are there for you to not only investigate but to properly educate the uninformed. 

By the will of God, in the fourth Assembly, we have two members of the opposition party (ANPP) that emerged victorious, so to speak, in the last concluded April general elections, they are with us and ever since the inauguration of this present House of Assembly there had been no bickering, there had been no back-biting, there had been no in-fighting, the House is intact, the House is mature,’ he said.

To his greatest surprise even as he pledged to run an open door policy and to partner with every body in the state to ensure effective legislation in the State House of Assembly but his foes were elsewhere planning for his downfall and indeed, luck ran out of him on the earlier hour of Wednesday December  21, 2011, when the members of the House gave him (Ikechukwu Nwankwo) a distressed phone call that the House has reviewed his stewardship and found him incompetent, fraudulent to pilot the affairs of the fourth Assembly.

This followed a motion moved by Ali Odefia a member represented Onicha East constituency, seconded by the Chief Whip of the House Mr.Kingsely Ikoro, supported by 20 members out of the 24 members of the House and presided over by the deputy speaker, valentines day flower delivery

The impeachment was based on the renovation of the state House Chambers which according to report was single handedly managed by the former speaker without the collaboration of the members where huge amount of money was spent.

Indeed, Ali Odefia said “24 out of the 24 members of the House endorsed the impeachment and the immediate removal of the speaker and we do so in line with section 92 (2c) of the 1999 Constitution as amended which gives us power to remove any speaker, at the point we feel necessary provided we have the considered mandate of the 2/3. 

‘About twenty members signed in, agreedand endorsed in for the immediate removal of the speaker, that was done and it has been fully effected and the new speaker is Rt. Hon. Chukwuma Nwazunku.  

This is the new speaker of the Ebonyi State House of Assembly.’ 

‘May we also warn that no one has, by the constitution of Nigeria, only the governor of the state and the deputy governor has the immunity to prosecution, if you think you are smart, remember you have no immunity, if the former speaker threatens us or attempts to threaten the peace of the state, he has to explain to the Anti-craft agency ICPC, EFCC and he has a lot of cases to answer. 

‘Moreover, let me reassure that we are pledging unalloyed corporation and working relationship with the Governor Elechi, and the executives’, Odefa stated.

Immediately after the impeachment of the speaker, a member representing Ebonyi North/ East constituency was elected as the new speaker of the House whereas the deputy speaker, the floor functionaries of the House remains same.

But, the fear of whether the leadership of the new speaker would last have come on the trail as groups in Ebonyi North senatorial zone know as Izzi Nnodo Youth Forum, (INYF), has condemned in totality the impeachment of the former Speaker by few selected member of the House.

They faulted the emergence of Mr. Nwazunku as the new speaker, saying that the impeachment is unheard of, unjust and alleged that it was carried out by some members and not a two/third majority as recommended by the law governing the operations of the House.

The chairman of the union, Prince Maurice Mbam and other 20 members after an emergency meeting held at Izzi Development Union hall, said the entire exercise was a desecration of the land, alleging that the national youth leader of PDP (names withheld) led some hoodlums into the State House of Assembly that broke into the Speaker’s office and made away with the mace. 

The action according to him paved way for the impeachment of Nwankwo.

‘The impeachment of the former Speaker was a clear testament that insecurity, political thuggery and politics of bitterness were common instruments used by some stakeholders to victimise citizens of the state at the least provocation’ but denied that the charges leveled against Mr. Nwankwo were fabricated in order to give him a bad name for his eventual dethronement from office.

‘That we hereby warn all the elected House of Assembly members of Izzi extraction to disassociate themselves from this gruesome and dastard act. 

We call on all our leaders and leaders of thought to rise and condemn this act as this is not good for this young state that is noted for peaceful coexistence and our governor who is an Ambassador of Peace”.  

He warned that if the state government should either delay to address or correct such injustice or should the purported new speaker enter the speaker’s office that his security is not guaranteed” he remarked.

To stage-manage the warning, there was riotous display of a group of aggrieved youths in front of the State House of Assembly last week to express their displeasure over the impeachment of the former Speaker, but unluckily the youths were dispersed by the men of the Nigerian Police who came in the company of the State Commissioner of Police; CP Adeola Adeniyi to give room to an inaugural sitting presided over by the new Speaker Rt. Hon. Chukwuma Nwazunku. 

To avoid the repeat of the similar mayhem in the state House , there should be adequate corporation between the new speaker and the members although there were rumours that the new speaker cannot take decision on his own except he is pushed to do so by people that installed him. 

But as brave as he is may, likely wish to work in tandem with the interest of the state governor Martin Elechi to as well, show the committed effort and competent to handle the 2012 budget of the state government.

The governor had at the weekend, given recognition to the new speaker contrary to the expectations of people who see the dethronement of  Nwankwo as injustice. 
But on the other side, it may be that he (Elechi) is still studying what led to the immediate sack of his son. 

Chief Elechi had said in a function that there is hardly any performance, competence and service delivery of those in power stressing that this accounts for the buck-passing and refusal of many top government functionaries to take decisions on various issues thatcome before them.

‘I want to use this opportunity to remind our top officers that the reality of their positions is that they are strategic leaders and decision makers. 

I wish to emphasise that leadership involves risk because every decision you take is open to criticisms and attacks.

‘I am convinced that in the contest of conflicting imperatives, it is better to take a bad decision than to take no decision at all. What is most important is that in taking decisions, we must be guided by the voice of our conscience and courage of our convictions’ he said.

Therefore, it should be noted with vigour that public servant in the state should shun all forms of corrupt practices and strive to ensure adequate accountability and transparency while taking decision to avoid creating unnecessary tension of impeachment either in the legislature, judiciary and most importantly the executives. 

As it appears, this would help to cushion the lingering looting of government treasury by erring politicians and as well, correct the assumed misshaped in the Ebonyi State House of Assembly, propel the new speaker to sit up in spite of the impending challengers that may unfold before him
valentines day flower delivery

Tuesday 27 December 2011

valentines day flowers delivery - Flower sales boom as scores mourn N. Korea's Kim


DANDONG, China — Business was booming for flower sellers in the Chinese border city of Dandong on Wednesday as mourners gathered at the North Korean consulate to pay their respects to late leader Kim Jong-Il.
Scores of stoney-faced mourners clutched bunches of yellow and white valentines day flower delivery as they entered the consulate, where large flat-screen televisions had been put up to show Wednesday's funeral.
Another 100 people crammed into a North Korean restaurant across the street -- which along with scores of others had been closed since Kim's death on December 17 -- that reopened its doors for people to watch the ceremony.
Dandong, a city of 2.5 million people in northeast China, is the main portal for trade with impoverished North Korea, which depends heavily on its wealthier neighbour for oil and food.
The city usually has a large temporary population of North Koreans, most of them traders, but Pyongyang has reportedly ordered its nationals to return home for Kim's funeral.
One Chinese national surnamed Xu, who was born in North Korea but moved to Dandong with his family as a teenager, said he had a "heavy heart" after Kim's death from a heart attack at age 69.
"I am very sad because the great leader who showed kindness and mercy to my whole family has died," Xu, 25, told AFP as he left the consulate. "If I have the opportunity I will go back to North Korea."
As preparations for the funeral were under way on Wednesday, an AFP reporter briefly gained access to the consulate, but was later ordered to leave, and security guards were stationed outside the building.
On Tuesday, dozens of mourners entered the consulate where they were allowed to linger long enough to leave their valentines day flower delivery and bow deeply before a portrait of a youthful-looking Kim and record their names in a book of condolences.
Flowers were still arriving at the consulate on Wednesday morning, shortly before the funeral ceremony began. A man riding a bicycle with a cart delivered a large wreathe of yellow and white flowers.
A florist surnamed Sun said he had been doing a roaring trade in the past nine days, selling "tens of thousands" of flowers to North Korean and Chinese mourners.
"Business is really good," Sun told AFP as he sat in a chair outside the consulate waiting to deliver another flower arrangement worth 800 yuan ($125). "I have delivered flowers here many times."
South Korean media reports said flowers had been airlifted from Shanghai to the border city, where stocks had run out due to heavy demand for chrysanthemums -- the traditional flower of mourning -- across the border.
A consular official said many people had visited to offer their condolences since Kim's death.
Yang Minshi, a North Korean living in Dandong with her Chinese husband, cried after paying her respects.
"I'm very sad," Yang, 39, told AFP, her eyes filled with tears and her lips trembling. "I'm North Korean. He was our president."
Her husband Gao Zhigang, 35, said he would never forget the late North Korean leader whom he described as the "son of a socialist country".
"I am very sad but my heart will never forget him. Kim Jong-Il will live in our hearts forever," Gao, who owns a processing business, told AFP.

Saturday 24 December 2011

Valentines Day Flower Delivery - Battle of the Best" goes 4-for-4



High school basketball games are notorious for "looking good on paper." Prep Spotlight's "Battle of the Best" certainly did, which is why there was standing room only at Southfield High School for Friday's nightcap. But unlike so many other events, all four of these games delivered. They were all close and exciting, and sometimes well-played too.valentines day flower delivery

Harper Woods Chandler Park beat Southfield 58-55.

Detroit Community over Saginaw Arthur Hill 55-53.

Class C No. 1 Detroit Consortium topped Birmingham Country Day 70-66.

In the marquee game Class B No. 1 Lansing Sexton beat Romulus 70-62.

Here are some players who helped make it a fun day of hoops.

Jeff Cain  6-0  Sr  Lansing Sexton
Bryn Forbes and Denzel Valentine had off shooting nights. Anthony Clemmons was the man offensively for Sexton, a role he now ably fills. The Iowa signee scored 19. Sexton also got some big shots from Cain in their win over Romulus. He scored 11. He's a good athlete and would be a 20 point per game scorer a lot of places, while being one of the smart ball-handlers Sexton coach Carlton Valentine wanted in there at crunch time.

Jordan Hare  6-10  Sr  Saginaw Arthur Hill
Some might tend to forget just how good he is. Hare can impact a game without scoring much (and yeah the points still come largely on dunks) and he did against Community with his defense presence (no on one in Michigan has his wingspan, and few players his height have gotten up as quickly); and smart high-post passing. Still skinny, but loved seeing Hare going out to lay wood with a mean screen.

Vincent Hunter  6-6  Sr  Detroit Consortium
His "CCP" jersey was soaked a darker shade of gray in the second half. Because while Consortium's frontcourt is silly deep, Hunter's out there the most; and when he is, he plays hard. While he projects as a tweener forward so there are some skill and footwork issues to address, as a high school player Hunter's a monster because he's strong, athletic and with that motor. He wills his way to the rim as much as anything. He had 12 points, eight rebounds and, best of all, five blocked shots against Country Day.

Ray Lee  6-3  Sr  Romulus
Romulus lost to Sexton, but it wasn't because Lee didn't show up. He had 15 points on a few unguardable drives and jumpshots. Romulus' problems had nothing to do with what the star players did offensively. Their main problems were defensive break-downs and getting beat to rebounds and 50-50 balls by players with state championship rings.

Deandre Martin  6-3  Jr  Detroit Community
Arthur Hill played him as a shooter, and by his response Martin proved he's more than that, he's a scorer. He did most of his damage in the lane, from the baseline, tips; good hands. His best bucket came after sealing off and finishing below the state's elite shot-blocker, 6-10 Arthur Hill senior Jordan Hare.  Strong body, smart positioning to catch and finish. Martin shot 7-of-11 and 2-for-2 from the stripe for 16 points. He plays -- stylistically like -- Mitch Richmond. EMU got a good one early in this Ohio transfer.

Jarell Martin  6-6  Jr  Detroit Community
Renaissance transfer tries to dunk everything. Have no problem with that.

EC Matthews  6-4  Jr  Romulus
He scored a team-high 23 in the Eagles' loss to Romulus. He shot 9-of-12 from the stripe. Sexton had a hard time keeping him out of the lane, obviously. Passed it better than you'd know from assists alone. Some of his teammates killed dimes like they're FDR haters. Lefty shot is still scary, but within his perimeter, in his spots, EC's lefty three-pointers go in. If there's a category for busting tail back on D to block a shot after messing up offensively, he might lead the state. It's called, wanna stay in the game! Nebraska was there to see him, so that would make Matthews officially a Big Ten recruit.

Romel Robinson  5-10  Jr  Detroit Community
This kid has revolutionized his game 180 degrees and in so doing, he's given both Detroit Community a shot in the state tournament, and himself a college future. The last thing the basketball world needs is another 5-10 gunner, a past Robinson has disposed of to become a real point guard. Efficient, strong with the ball, can get to the hole; good defensive potential. His only three-pointer was a big one. It came with 28 seconds to play and gave Community a 55-53 win.

Edmond Sumner  6-1  So  Birmingham Country Day
Good as the Price Bros. are shooting the ball, this baby-faced assassin brings a different look entirely. He doesn't fear much and gets things going attacking the hoop and can knock in the three-pointer too. His offensive game is so free and aggressive, but at the same time it had calculation and balance, traits rare together in players Sumner's age. Totally impressed by this guy.

Earl Swith  6-3  Jr  Southfield
The homecourt Blue Jays start four juniors and are just figuring out how to play. They'll be good next year. Swith brings a Dorsey-Walker look, slender and slithery with a pretty pull-up jumper. Can finish stronger and become more of an all-around player.

Tre Tigner  6-6  Sr  Detroit Consortium
He set the tone early against Country day with an authoritative and increasingly diverse post game. Particularly dangerous as a lefty from the left block. Took folks by surprise with an explosive dunk for his first bucket. "Cheeze" had a vociferous personal cheering section, and for what he's been through and become, he deserves all that and more.

Derek Walton  6-0  Jr  Chandler Park Academy
The day began with a point guard clinic from Walton. He scored 21 points on 9-of-13 shooting, with five assists to one turnover. The Michigan pledge put the ball wherever he wanted against Southfield, with the dribble or pass. Despite being on the smaller side, he was usually the one initiating contact around the rim. A couple standout plays were, when he used a back-dribble to get away from Southfield's pressure and evaluate the situation, more kids should do this it's a legit and smart move if it's coming from a position of strength; and when Walton showed hustle, court awareness, quickness and balance, running down a ball going over the sideline and saving it ahead to a teammate. As well as Walton played, his efforts could have been waylaid by some of his teammates' shot selection. He needs to go Quinn Buckner and put his foot down to end that.

Troy Wilkins  5-10  So  Chandler Park Academy
When kvetching about some CPA gunners, Wilkins isn't on the hit list. He's probably Walton's most talented teammate. Quick inside-outside scorer. Like all young players, needs to more quickly move along from the last bad play no matter how bad.
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