Sunday, December 7, 2008

Celebrating Obama, Arunachal Pradesh.

pix:Sunset in the backdrop of Dibang Valley Jungle Camp
I think it was after 6pm on the 5th of November, 2008, Helmut suddenly appeared out of the dark and said ‘any news about Obama, guys’. We were six travellers, the famous German travel writer couple Renate & Stefan Loose, and the Malaysian couple from the legendary Singhasana lodge: Marina & Donald, travelling singly were Helmut & Sylvie from the German travel house Aerticket & I. All five of us relaxing in the veranda of Dibang Valley Jungle Camp after the wonderful excursion to Myodia Pass, looked at each other’s face. There was hardly any electricity or telephone connection in this out of the world place, the nearest internet booth would be a day away. Mukut, the camp in-charge confirmed, ‘Rajda, sometimes you do get a weak signal in the BSNL mobile connection’. I immediately took out my laptop and mobile, and felt at that moment, as if that was the most important thing that the world was looking forward to. Fortunately, I could connect to the internet through a very weak signal in that candle light and through the Google search downloaded the first news and read it aloud to the others like a radio news


History as Obama elected America's first black president
36 minutes ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) — Barack Obama on Wednesday faces up to the daunting task of forging the change he has promised after Americans emphatically elected him as their country's first black president.


Before I could read this first line everyone broke into a loud cheer, breaking the silence of the jungles louder than the Hoolock Gibbons did every morning. Everyone was hugging each other madly. I continued again


"Tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America," Obama told a euphoric crowd of 240,000 tearful supporters late Tuesday after defeating Republican John McCain.
Obama, 47, will be inaugurated the 44th US president on January 20, 2009, and inherit an economy mired in the worst financial crisis since the 1930s, two wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and a nuclear showdown with Iran.


We did not want to wait so long and discussed why not from today, as there will be lot of changes in the world by then, I still continued


"The road ahead will be long, our climb will be steep, we may not get there in one year or even one term, but America -- I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there," Obama said in his hometown of Chicago.
"I promise you -- we as a people will get there."
Television networks projected Obama's win over McCain after Senator Obama solidified traditional Democratic states and cut deep into the Republican territory which his rival needed to control to win the White House.
Obama's win was greeted with euphoria across the United States and reverberated around the world.
New York's Times Square exploded in joy at a moment of healing for America's racial scars and a crowd gathered outside the White House. In Kenya, where Obama's father was born, President Mwai Kibaki called his win "momentous."
Democrats also made huge strides in Congress, and will hold an unshakeable monopoly in power in Washington after a rare generational and political realignment.
After a bilious campaign, McCain was gracious in defeat, and noted that his election was a moment to cherish for African Americans.
"The American people have spoken, and they have spoken clearly. A little while ago, I had the honor of calling Senator Barack Obama to congratulate him on being elected the next president of the country that we both love," he said.
"Though we fell short, the failure is mine, not yours," he told a crowd of supporters in Phoenix in his home state of Arizona.
President George W. Bush who has steered his country through eight turbulent years also congratulated Obama.
"Mr President-elect, congratulations to you," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino quoted the president as saying in a phone call to Obama.
"What an awesome night for you, your family and your supporters. Laura and I called to congratulate you and your good bride."
Obama's inauguration will complete a stunning ascent to the pinnacle of US and global politics from national obscurity just four years ago and close an eight year era of turbulence under President George W. Bush.
Obama is promising to renew bruised ties with US allies, and to engage some of the most fierce US foes like Iran and North Korea. He has vowed to tackle climate change and provide health care to all Americans.
His presidency also marks a stunning social shift, with Obama, the son of Kenyan father and white mother from Kansas, the first African American president of a nation still riven by racial divides.
Forty-five years after civil rights icon Martin Luther King laid out his "dream" of racial equality, Obama's election broke new barriers and may have helped heal the moral wounds left by slavery and the US civil war.
When he launched his campaign on a chilly day in Illinois in February 2007, Obama forged a mantra of change which powered him throughout the longest, most costly US presidential campaign in history.
Early on on Tuesday he captured the state of Pennsylvania, the key battleground which McCain needed to win to keep his long-shot hopes of victory alive.
And in a sweet moment for Democrats, he also seized the midwestern battleground states of Ohio, Iowa and Indiana as well as the southwestern state of New Mexico, all states won by Bush in 2004 to close out McCain's possible route towards the White House.
McCain had argued Obama was too inexperienced to be US commander in chief and would pursue "socialist" redistribution policies that would leave the economy mired in recession.
McCain, 72, an Arizona senator, would have been the oldest man ever inaugurated for a first term in the White House.
Obama gave early notice of the way the night would unfold by capturing the key northeastern state of Pennsylvania -- McCain's best hope of winning a Democratic state and stopping his rival from claiming the White House.
He later added Ohio, the decisive state which swept Bush to victory in 2004 and another Republican state, Virginia, which had not voted Democrat since 1964. He also won Florida, ground zero of the 2000 recount debacle.
So far he had won 28 states including the district of Columbia for 349 electoral votes.
McCain had won 20 states but had not broken out of the Republican heartland and the south for 159 electoral votes.
In the Senate, Democrats wrested control of five seats including in the traditionally Republican state of Virginia, followed by New Hampshire, North Carolina and New Mexico, reaching a 56 seat majority in the 100-seat chamber.
Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell clung on in Kentucky, meaning Democrats were unlikely to win the 60 seats they need in the 100-seat chamber needed to frustrate Republican obstruction tactics.
Senate races in Alaska, Minnesota, Georgia and Oregon however were still too close to call.
Democrats also won 20 seats in the House of Representatives, solidifying their majority to 251 against 171 of the Republicans. Six House races were still too close to call as of 1000 GMT.

Three different nationalities, everyone burst in joy and we celebrated the evening with all that we had with the rest of the camp people. We were in this exploratory trip of the East Himalaya covering places and people in remote Northeast India. None of this information is available in the regular travel maps and guide books. After a late night party in the jungle, it was really impossible to wake up the next day early morning and get into the planned activity, but we had no other option then to manage. For the next few days of the trip, we all discussed about the coming of Obama as a new hope for one world in peace and not in pieces.