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The Curry Report
January 27, 2011
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In This Issue
News Reports Do Not Mirror Reality in Côte d'Ivoire
President of Côte d'Ivoire Deplores Election Double-Standard
Gbagbo's Special Connection to Blacks in the U.S
CBC Braces for Redistricting
Former SCLC leader Rev. Raleigh Trammell indicted
Bernice King declines SCLC presidency
Why Are There No Black Oscar Nominees This Year?
The Unbearable Whiteness of Pro-Lifers and Pundits
Sam Yette: An Appreciation

News Reports Do Not Mirror Reality in Côte d'Ivoire 
Curry Headshot
 
 
By George E. Curry

NNPA Columnist        

 

ABIDJAN, Côte d'Ivoire - According to news accounts, Côte d'Ivoire is a tense, unsafe paralyzed West African country because of a contested presidential election in which incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo refuses to cede his office to Alassane Ouattara, whom the international community - especially France and the U.S. - has proclaimed the winner of the recent presidential election.

There are almost daily reports that the 15-member Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)  is drawing up military plans to invade the country and drive Gbagbo from his regal presidential palace.

On December 19, the U.S. State Department issued an advisory stating: "This Travel Warning is being issued to inform U.S. citizens that based on the deteriorating political and security situation in Côte d'Ivoire and growing anti-western sentiment, the Department of State has now ordered the departure of all non-emergency personnel and family members. The Department warns U.S. citizens to avoid travel to Côte d'Ivoire until further notice."

Charles Steele, Jr., a childhood friend and former president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and I were invited to visit Côte d'Ivoire by an African support group based in Paris.

Our association with them began after  Jean-Paul Guerlain, former president of the perfume company that bears his family's name, made an offensive comment last October 15 on French television. Recalling a conversation he had with his wife, Guerlain said:

"One day I told her - and I still called her Madame - 'What would seduce you if one was to make a perfume for you?' and she told me, 'I love jasmine, rose and sandalwood.' And for once I started working like a n-----. I don't know if n------ ever worked that hard."

A coalition of activists called "no to Guerlain! No to negrophobia" began weekly protests in front of one of Guerlain's boutiques to protest the comment and to demand a fuller apology from the perfume firm and its parent company, Hennessy-Louis Vuitton (LVMH).

Patrick Lozes, president of the Paris-based Council of Black Associations in France (CRAN), asked Al Sharpton to meet with company officials in Paris. Sharpton couldn't work the meeting into his schedule, but asked Steele and me to go in his place. After meeting separately with the protesters and company officials, we were able to broker a settlement that ended the public protests and brought both sides together to work on an expanded diversity initiative for LVMH.

When we were invited to visit Côte d'Ivoire by some members of the Paris collective to get a first-hand view of conditions there, we accepted. Charles Steele, who is more of an optimist than I am, saw this as a possible opportunity to repeat our success in Paris. But after reading about the African leaders who had tried to arrange a truce, I did not share my homeboy's unbridled optimism. At best, I thought, we would be able to observe events in Côte d'Ivoire for ourselves and draw our own conclusions.

Air France Flight #27 from Washington's Dulles Airport to Paris' Charles DeGaulle Airport on January 7 - exactly a month after we had first met with LVMH officials in Paris - had just lifted off when a flight attendant offered me a dozen or so newspapers, most of them written in French. I selected the Washington Post, the European edition of the Wall Street Journal and USA Today and reclined in seat 3L for what I thought would be an uneventful flight to Paris, where I would stay overnight before heading to Abidjan.

A four-paragraph Associated Press story in USA Today shattered that expectation. Under the headline, "U.S. hits Gbagbo with broad sanctions," it began: "The Obama administration imposed wide-ranging sanctions on Ivory Coast's Laurent Gbagbo and members of his inner circle as punishment for his refusal to step down after his defeat in November's presidential election."

It continued, "The sanctions bar U.S. citizens from doing business with Gbagbo; his wife, Simone Gbagbo; and allies Desire Tagro, Pascal Affi N'Guessan and Alcide Ilahiri Djedje. Any assets they have in the United States are frozen."

For the first time, I seriously thought about the prospect of our being in physical danger. If things were as bad as they were saying, I thought, maybe it wasn't too late to back out. But the journalist in me and the fact that I had given my word to the activists in Paris propelled me to continue the trip. Charles, now an Atlanta businessman, met me in Paris and the following day we flew to Abidjan with Boston Goke, a member of the Paris collective, who is fluent in both French and English.

Except for the local and UN soldiers, there was nothing unusual about the airport in Abidjan. There were the usual whining overhead fans, taxi drivers looking for newly-arrived passengers, and lines of people boarding and exiting planes.

The ride downtown was a stark reminder that we were in a developing country. There were the usual tin shacks that make our wooden shotgun houses in the U.S. seem opulent. Some kids were running around in their birthday suits and reminders of poverty were everywhere. Unlike many Third World countries where visitors are besieged by beggars, people here were always trying to sell us something - water, batteries, DVDs, clothing and everything else imaginable.

No image stood out more than the piles and piles of garbage throughout the city, an example of the toll that a national crisis has exacted on residents. And people of all ages shifted through filthy trash. There were also wealthy sections of the city, recognized by marked a protective UN vehicles stationed nearby.

Prior to arriving in Côte d'Ivoire, I had visited four countries in Africa - Egypt, Ghana, Senegal, Nigeria - as well as the back roads of Cuba. But none of those trips came close to matching the sight of the glistening skyline that characterizes downtown Côte d'Ivoire. There are markets throughout the city, all crowded with local residents.

 

Unlike the western world, people here are not consumed with the nation's intractable political crisis.

"People here just want peace and jobs," a woman who divides her time between Paris and Côte d'Ivoire told me. "We've had the election. We want one of them to step aside so that we can go on with our lives."

Contrary to news reports, many are already doing just that.

 

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge.

 

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President of Côte d'Ivoire Deplores Election Double-Standard
Gbagbo and Charles Steele
 
Fomer SCLC President Charles Steele, Jr. (left) with Côte d'Ivoire President Laurent Gbagbo.  NNPA Photo/George E. Curry

 

By George E. Curry

NNPA Special Correspondent

© 2011 by George E. Curry. All rights reserved.

 

ABIDJAN, Côte d'Ivoire -- Laurent Gbagbo, the embattled president of Côte d'Ivoire, more popularly known as the Ivory Coast, says President Barack Obama, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and other western leaders should stop questioning the legitimacy of his re-election and accord the West African country the same respect the United States was given in the controversial 2000 presidential election contest between Al Gore and George W. Bush.

In an exclusive videotaped interview in his presidential residence, Gbagbo said: "You in the United States, in 2000, you had an election dispute between Al Gore and George W. Bush. They did a recount of the votes. Did we go get the NATO forces to come and attack America and impose democracy on America? This is a post-electoral dispute. That's why I'm [suspicious of] all those countries who are rushing in to condemn us. I don't trust them."

 

READ MORE 

 

 

Gbagbo's Special Connection to Blacks in the U.S.

Côte d'Ivoire map
 

 

 

 

ABIDJAN, Côte d'Ivoire - Laurent Gbagbo, who has served as president of Côte d'Ivoire for 10 years, has always had a special connection to the United States.

"I visited the United States many times," he recalled in an exclusive interview with the NNPA News Service. "The first time was in 1980." As part of his study abroad, he visited New York, Washington, Boston, Philadelphia and Memphis, which holds a special place in his heart.

"I visited Memphis, the city of the blues," he recalled. "...I saw B.B. King in Memphis, with his big earring and his guitar. I saw him perform. I saw John Hooker. I saw him perform. But the artist I loved dearly and I have all of his documented life is Ray Charles.

READ MORE

CBC Braces for Redistricting

 
James Clyburn

Rep. Clyburn Expects Redistricting to be "pretty painful."

 

By Alex Isenstadt

© Politico

January 26, 2011

 

Sharp population declines in big cities across the map have Congressional Black Caucus members anxiously monitoring redistricting developments, fearful that numerous African-American House members could find their districts dramatically altered for 2012.

The problem is expected to be most acute in economically hard-hit Northern states including Michigan, Missouri and Ohio - all of which saw population declines in inner cities over the past decade. In those places, black lawmakers are confronting not only the prospect of reconfigured seats that increase their political vulnerability but also possible primary election scenarios facing other Democratic incumbents.

READ MORE

Former SCLC leader Rev. Raleigh Trammell indicted

    Raleigh Trammell  

 

 

By Lynn Hulsey, Tom Beyerlein and Lou Grieco

© Dayton Daily News

January 13, 2011

 

DAYTON - The Rev. Raleigh Trammell, former local and national leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, was indicted Wednesday by a Montgomery County grand jury on 51 felony charges.

The charges include grand theft, forgery and tampering with government records. Trammell faces one count of grand theft, a fourth-degree felony; 25 counts of forgery, five of which are fourth-degree felonies and 20 are fifth-degree felonies; and 25 counts of tampering with government records. All are third-degree felonies.

All of the counts allege crimes that happened from 2005 to 2010 and stem from the SCLC's meal delivery program, according to Montgomery County Prosecutor Mathias H. Heck Jr.


READ MORE

Bernice King declines SCLC presidency

 Bernice King

By Rhonda Cook

© Atlanta Journal-Constitution

January 21, 2011

 

Fifteen months after her election, Bernice King, the youngest child of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., has declined the position of president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

She said in a written statement Friday that her decision came "after numerous attempts to connect with the official board leaders on how to move forward under my leadership, unfortunately, our visions did not align."

 

READ MORE

Why Are There No Black Oscar Nominees This Year?
 
Colored Girls movie
 No "Colored Girls" Oscar Nomination

  

By Gary Susman

© Moviefone.com

January 26, 2011

 

 

Notice something about the Oscar nominees announced on Tuesday? The list was awfully ... monochromatic.

This year marks the first time in 10 years that there have been no black acting nominees. Not since the 2001 Academy Awards have black actors been shut out of the Oscar race.

No one's suggesting that there should be racial quotas for the Oscars, nor are African-Americans the only under-represented minority among the nominees. Still, for the last decade, the Academy has recognized an explosion of black talent, and in numbers roughly proportional to the percentage of the U.S. population that's African-American. From 2002 to 2010, black stars earned 21 out of 180 acting nominations (that's 12 percent, about the same as their proportion among the general populace), and those nominations resulted in seven trophies for black performers. How does the Academy go from a tally like that down to zero?

 

READ MORE

The Unbearable Whiteness of Pro-Lifers and Pundits

Rick Santorum
 
Rick Santorum

 

By Ta-Nehisi Coates

© Atlantic

January 24, 2011

 

Last week Rick Santorum proved himself to be Rick Santorum:

"The question is -- and this is what Barack Obama didn't want to answer: Is that human life a person under the Constitution? And Barack Obama says no," Santorum says in the interview, which was first picked up by CBN's David Brody. "Well if that person, human life is not a person, then, I find it almost remarkable for a black man to say, 'We are going to decide who are people and who are not people.'"

READ MORE

Sam Yette: An Appreciation

Sam Yette

By Reginald Stuart

© Diverse Issues in Higher Education

January 25, 2011

 

When Samuel Yette arrived on the campus of Tennessee State University in Nashville from the small town of Harriman, Tenn., some of his fellow students sensed he was destined for a career of achievement.

Over the course of the next half century, Yette would make his mark in journalism, education, public service, photography and as an author. No dust would ever gather beneath his shoes. Yette, 81, died Friday evening at an assisted living facility in Laurel, Md., after a long battle with Alzheimer's, according to his family.

"Sam showed promise in college," says Xernona Clayton, founder and president of the Trumpet Awards and a classmate of Yette's. "He was focused. He knew that he was going someplace. He wanted to make it big and he did."

READ MORE

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