Search This Blog

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Danga Maari Oodhari - Anegan


'Timbuktu' is one of the most important movies ever made about terrorism

Violent jihadism as a governing ideology has been a significant feature of the global scene for nearly two decades.
There are certainly differences between say, the nature Al Shabaab's control over Somalia in the early 2010s, the Taliban state's governance of Afghanistan from 1996 until the US-led invasion in 2001, and ISIS's "caliphate" in the present day. 
But militant groups spurred by a combination of religious radicalism, violent disenchantment with the existing state system, revisionist philosophies of Islamic history, and a rejection of secularism and Enlightenment value systems have morphed into territorial political units with alarming frequency in recent years.



One such instance was in Mali in early 2012, when jihadists piggybacked on a long-simmering Tuareg autonomy movement — itself empowered by the collapse of Mali's government in the wake of a shocking military coup — in order to take control of several population centers in Mali's desert north. Among them was Timbuktu, a legendary center of trade and Islamic scholarship.
The jihadist occupation of Timbuktu was brutal but thankfully brief: In early 2013, a French-led coalition liberated the city after 10 months of militant control. Now, the rule of Al Qaeda-allied militants over the city is the topic of what might be the important movie of the past year.
The hypnotic and visually overwhelming "Timbuktu," the work of Mauritanian director Abderrahmane Sissako and an Oscar nominee for best foreign language film, is an intimate and terrifying inquiry into one of the defining authoritarian ideologies of the 21st century, as told from the perspective of the people who are actually suffering under its yoke. (The film is currently playing in New York and LA and will open in various other US cities in February and March.)
US movie audiences have usually met jihadists through the lenses of American sniper rifles, or lying prone in front of CIA interrogators. "Timbuktu" is hardly the only movie that's portrayed them as political and social actors. "Osama," a multi-national production about a girl living in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan that won the 2004 Golden Globe award for best foreign-language film, and Iranian director Moshen Makhmalbaf's highly regarded "Kandahar," about a Afghan woman who sneaks into Taliban Afghanistan to try to stop her sister from committing suicide, succeed in giving viewers a first-hand look at the societies that jihadists create and the horrors this visits upon the people trapped in them.
In the wake of ISIS's takeover of a Belgium-sized slice of the Middle East, "Timbuktu" has more immediate resonance than either of those films. The movie opens with a pickup truck of fighters flying a black flag nearly identical to ISIS's. As the opening credits roll, the fighters eviscerate a row of traditional figurines in a hail of machine-gun fire.
But the firmest sign that jihadist rule is something external, alien, and deeply unwanted comes in the next scene, when gun-toting fighters enter a mud-brick mosque without taking their shoes off. They tell the imam that they have come to wage jihad. The imam replies that in Timbuktu, people wage jihad (which has the double meaning of spiritual reflection and self-purification, in addition to earthly holy war) with their minds and not with guns.
The next hour and a half is a grisly survey of what happened when this 1400-year-old precedent was inverted.
The jihadists ban music — one of the most celebrated aspects of Malian culture — and then whip violators in public. They ban soccer, and then break up a group of children miming a game in silent protest. The jihadists speak a smattering of local languages and broken Arabic; their leader bans smoking only to sneak cigarettes under the cover of the town's surrounding sand dunes.
In one of the more illustrative scenes, a female fish seller is told by one jihadist that women can no longer appear in public without wearing gloves. She explains to him that she can't work unless she's barehanded and then dares the fighter to cut her hands off on the spot.
In "Timbuktu," the jihadists are power-tripping, thuggish and hypocritical. They are in the city to create a totally new kind of society and revel in their own insensitivity to local concerns.
But crucially they are not entirely outsiders, and some of the film's most affecting scenes involves a local Tuareg who joins with the jihadists occupying the town, a reminder that there are local dynamics at play. Just as importantly, the film hints at the context of state collapse and social chaos that allowed the jihadists to take over in the first place.
The movie's primary narrative follows a Tuareg herder who accidentally kills a fisherman from a different ethnic group during an argument over his cows' access to drinking water along a disputed riverbank. The film's central conflict encapsulates the unresolved questions of ethnicity and resources that kept northern Mali in a state of crisis that the jihadists later exploited.
The herder's treatment at the hands of Timbuktu's new overlords depicts imposition of an an outside ideology. But the killing is itself is a pointed example of how social turmoil can feed into a violent, totalitarian mania seemingly without warning. It harkens back to ISIS's swift takeover of Iraq this past summer, a national-level instance of the dynamics that "Timbuktu" manages to boil down to an intimate, dramatic scale.
"Timbuktu" has a happy ending. Even if it isn't depicted in the movie, the city was eventually liberated from jihadist control. The film depicts a now-extinct regime. 
But the nightmare of "Timbuktu" is far from over. The liberation of the areas that ISIS rules will come at some indeterminate future date, and parts of Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, and Nigeria are still under the control of extremists whose ideologies are not categorically different from what's depicted in the film.
"Timbuktu" is maybe the best cinematic depiction ever made of what millions of people around the world are suffering through.


Wednesday, February 11, 2015

New bionic leaf harnesses bacteria to convert sunlight and carbon dioxide into fuel.

Harvard researchers have announced a method to turn sunlight and air into isopropanol (C3H8O). While mainly used as a solvent and in pharmaceuticals, isopropanol can also be used as a liquid fuel for transportation, or converted into even more convenient fuels.
Plants have been transforming sunlight into things that we can use for fuel for 1.6 billion years. However, with a few exceptions, they are still only about 1% efficient. Solar cells do much better, but the energy produced must either be used immediately or stored in ways that can be problematic. 
To address this, researchers are trying to find ways to turn the energy generated from sunlight into fuels that are easy to store. In 2011, Professor Daniel Nocera announced what he called the “artificial leaf,” a silicon strip coated with catalysts on each side. When placed in water and exposed to sunlight, the leaf splits the H2O to release oxygen on one side and hydrogen on the other.
Last year, Nocera boasted of achieving 7% efficiency, but a problem remains. The fuel that Nocera's leaf produces is hydrogen, which is very expensive, and sometimes dangerous, to store and transport. As he then admitted to The New York Times, “If I give you a canister of hydrogen that we got from the artificial leaf, you can’t use it right away.” Nocera's hope was that progress would be made in the quest for fuel cells that turn hydrogen back into energy in a controlled way.
Now, however, Nocera is part of a project taking a very different approach. In the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Nocera and Professor Pamela Silver announce what they call a bionic leaf, one that combines Nocera's catalysts with bacteria that turn the hydrogen into something easier to handle.
"The catalysts I made are extremely well adapted and compatible with the growth conditions you need for living organisms like a bacterium," says Nocera. Silver added the bacterium Ralstonia eutropha, which uses the hydrogen and carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as food to multipy.
MIT Professor Anthony Sinskey has previously demonstrated that R. eutropha can be engineered to make isopropanol as it grows, generating a fuel we can use. When the isopropanol is burnt, it will release CO2 into the atmosphere, but no more than is removed by the bacteria in the growth process.
So far, however, less than a seventh of the hydrogen produced gets turned into fuel by the bacteria. Silver is not arguing that the product is ready for commercialization, saying, "This is a proof of concept that you can have a way of harvesting solar energy and storing it in the form of a liquid fuel.” Nocera is even more upbeat. "We're almost at a 1% efficiency rate of converting sunlight into isopropanol," he says. "There have been 2.6 billion years of evolution, and Pam and I working together a year and a half have already achieved the efficiency of photosynthesis."
thanks http://www.iflscience.com/