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● 09.11.11


●● Cablegate: Gates Foundation Sends Team to Install ‘Free’ Software in the Health Ministry


Posted in Apple, Bill Gates at 10:45 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


“There’s free software and then there’s open source… there is this thing called the GPL, which we disagree with.”


–Bill Gates, April 2008


Summary: Cable in Cablegate mischaracterises the role of the Bill Gates lobby (calling proprietary software “free software”)


THE Gates Foundation is more like a lobbying group and, according to this Cablegate cable, it is allowed to control health systems through software, too. “He spoke of assistance from the Gates Foundation,” says this cable, “in developing the province’s e-government capacity, including a team that was arriving to install free software in the health ministry for the management of medication supplies.” Is it anything like those Microsoft applications that Gates puts inside libraries before leaving those libraries stranded? And schools too? We have addressed this subject in posts such as:


↺ Gates Foundation


Libraries Burned by Microsoft and the Gates Foundation as Another Project/Product DiesGates Foundation (and Microsoft) Take the Libraries Takeover GlobalHow the Gates Foundation Blocks GNU/Linux and Free Software in National Libraries, Then Inherits EducationGates Foundation Joins Microsoft and Attacks Free Software in GreeceHow the Gates Foundation Makes People “Addicted” to Microsoft


Here is the full cable.


>



VZCZCXYZ0000

RR RUEHWEB


DE RUEHBU #0609/01 1282137

ZNR UUUUU ZZH

R 072137Z MAY 08

FM AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES

TO SECSTATE WASHDC 0985


UNCLAS BUENOS AIRES 000609


SIPDIS

SENSITIVE


E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON PREL OEXC OTRA SCUL SENV AR


SUBJECT: AMBASSADOR'S VISIT TO LA PLATA: A UNIVERSITY TOWN AND HOME

TO BUENOS AIRES GOVERNOR DANIEL SCIOLI


SUMMARY

-------


¶1. (U) The Ambassador reaffirmed the USG commitment to strengthening

bilateral ties with Argentina and discussed investment, drugs, and

local issues during an April 30 meeting with Buenos Aires Governor

Daniel Scioli and series of meetings in the provincial capital. The

Ambassador visited a parish school serving disadvantaged children;

met with La Plata municipal leaders and officials from the

Universidad Nacional de La Plata and the Universidad Catolica de La

Plata; opened the U.S. Embassy sponsored photo exhibit "Landmarks of

New York"; and visited the La Plata Natural History Museum during

his first official trip to the capital of Buenos Aires Province. La

Plata's universities are the second largest employer after

government and have an influencial role in local policy making. END

SUMMARY.


GOVERNOR DANIEL SCIOLI

----------------------


¶2. (SBU) Scioli said he was looking to develop agreements with other

countries' states and provinces facing similar challenges in

generating jobs, protecting the environment, improving education.

The Ambassador agreed that international relations were no longer

the exclusive domain of national governments but increasingly

involved a growing range of subnational actors. The Ambassador

mentioned several state trade delegations coming soon to Argentina,

including missions from Alabama, Florida, and Texas.


¶3. (SBU) Scioli expressed great interest in the U.S. elections and

said he had attended Democrat and Republican conventions. As on

previous occasions, Scioli stressed to us his admiration and

sympathy for the U.S., claiming these feelings dated back to his

first job as a Frigidaire salesman. He noted that business and

sports had taken him frequently to the U.S., and once he entered

politics he continued looking to the U.S. for inspiration.


¶4. (SBU) Scioli, preoccupied throughout the lunch by the previous

day's disappearance of human rights activist Juan Puthod (who

reappeared several hours after the lunch ended), said he was struck

on a recent visit to Miami by Mayor Manny Diaz's presentation on

inroads they had made against crime, and he was particularly

impressed by the importance that Police Chief John Timoney gave to

rebuilding the trust and confidence of citizens to gain their

cooperation and participation in stopping crime. The Ambassador

noted that Baltimore had also made dramatic strides in curbing

violent crime and offered embassy assistance to identify best

practices and lessons learned there.


¶5. (SBU) Scioli's brother Jose Antonio, the Secretary General for

the provincial government, summoned some statistics to show the

Ambassador what the Scioli administration's law enforcement had

accomplished in the first four months of government with tips

provided by citizens calling in to a new, well-advertised hotline.

They had recovered 15,000 stolen vehicles, confiscated over 5,000

unregistered weapons, seized 159 kg of cocaine and 1,612 kg of

marijuana, leading to 7,864 arrests.


¶6. (SBU) Scioli noted his strong interest in improving highway

safety. He believed strongly in the utility of imposing heavier

sanctions on infractions, greater enforcement, and new legislation

to enhance vehicle registration and facilitate infrastructure

improvements. The Ambassador noted California's positive results

from higher fines as well as broader use of radar by highway

patrols. The Ambassador also offered embassy assistance in seeking

statistics and best practices from the National Highway Traffic

Safety Administration (NHTSA) in the U.S. Department of

Transportation.


¶7. (SBU) Scioli said investment promotion was high on his agenda,

even though his province already produced 40% of Argentina's GDP.

His government had recently enacted new incentives to attract

investment, and he was looking for public-private partnerships in

strategic areas such as the ports. The Ambassador pointed out that

AES and other energy generators and distributors were balking at

additional investment until tariffs were adjusted. Scioli said he

was impressed by the diversity of U.S. investments in Buenos Aires

province, and he was pleased by recent news of R.C. Johnson & Son's

intention to invest $65 million in an aerosol production plant in

Buenos Aires. He spoke of assistance from the Gates Foundation,

agreed in Miami recently, in developing the province's e-government

capacity, including a team that was arriving to install free

software in the health ministry for the management of medication

supplies. Scioli expressed interest in attracting foreign

investment to develop tourist infrastructure. He also asked for

assistance in identifying U.S. companies that could help the

province tackle its growing garbage problem, particularly with waste

treatment and incineration.


SCHOOL VISIT & BOOK DONATION

----------------------------



¶8. (U) The Ambassador was warmly welcomed by students wearing

colonial period costumes and a cannon salute on his visit to Colegio

San Vicente de Paul School, a private Catholic school serving

disadvantaged children in La Plata. The Ambassador met with dozens

of school children, visited a woodworking and metal workshop, and

made a book donation to the school's library. The school complex

has five schools, including a kindergarden, primary, secondary and

technical schools and together has 2,500 students, most of whom are

poor children from the neighboring community. The school also

provides free meals to over 1,000 children daily through its

"comedor" or kitchen meals program.


LA PLATA - A UNIVERSITY TOWN WITH A GREAT MUSEUM

--------------------------------------------- ---


¶9. (SBU) The Ambassador met with two university leaders and visited

the La Plata Natural History Museum where he discussed expanding

exchange opportunities between the United States and Argentina,

intellectual property and scientific advances. University Nacional

de La Plata's (UNLP) Vice Rector Raul Anibal Perdomo and UNLP's

Museum of Natural History Director Dr. Silvia Ametrano hosted the

Ambassador and gave a brief private tour of the university's museum

which is currently closed for repairs. The UNLP is a leading

educational institution and currently has over 75,000 students

(Note: Current Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner

and former President Nestor Kirchner are former alumni at this

liberal institution, the third largest in Argentina. The meeting

was held in the museum instead of the main campus). Both Perdomo

and Ametrano noted that UNLP has strong scientist-to-scientist

exchange programs with museums and other institutions worldwide,

including the Smithsonian, but specifically requested the Embassy's

assistance in securing intellectual property rights training for its

museum staff. Ametrano noted that the museum needs help in

registering its collection, exhibits and replicas, and has sought

UNESCO assistance in this endeavor. The museum's varied collections

are vast, and include one of the largest collections of dinosaur

reproductions in the world.


¶10. (U) Next to UNLP, the Universidad Catolica de La Plata (UCALP)

is La Plata's second largest university and the Ambassador met with

UCALP Rector Rafeal Breide Obeid to discuss the university's

curriculum, the U.S. Speaker Program, and cultural exchanges. The

Ambassador also answered questions about the state of

Argentine-American relations, anti-American perceptions in Argentina

and U.S. foreign policy with students from UCALP's Institute of

Argentine-North American studies (CESPAN). CESPAN was created in

November 2006 to reach out to post-graduate students in an attempt

to provide them with information about U.S-Argentine relations and

to develop deeper social ties with academic and cultural

institutions. The students were critical of U.S. foreign policy but

were well aware of the ambassador's and Mission's programs to change

the negative perceptions of Argentines about the United States

through outreach, community engagement, and increasing the number of

exchanges between the two countries.


ART EXHIBIT & MEETING WITH LA PLATA MAYOR

-----------------------------------------


¶11. (U) The Ambassador opened an Embassy-sponsored photo exhibit

titled "Landmarks of New York" in the Darda Rocha Cultural Center

which was attended by many of the city's dignitaries, including

mayor Pablo Bruera. A lawyer by training, Bruera was previously a

Provincial legislator before being elected mayor of La Plata in Fall

¶2007. In his meeting with the Ambassador, Bruera stated that the

city is having tremendous difficulties in disposing of provincial

garbage due to the closure of several garbage dumps but noted that

he recently returned from Boston where he met with city officials

and visited a U.S. recycling plant. Bruere had participated in a

several week program for young leaders at Harvard's JFK School. He

also mentioned that the city's problems included a lack of public

transportation and security for its citizens, but he was optimistic

that the city's garbage woes could be resolved without giving

specific details. The Ambassador closed the meeting by stressing

the importance of increasing cooperation through cultural exchanges

and offer



We also wrote about Argentina early this morning. Separately, we showed how Gates was milking Argentina for patent money. Just PR and profit, that’s what it’s all about. Attack on the competition (Free/libre software) is a bonus. They wish to pretend to donate (to make more sales) and Apple intends to try that one too. Apple could really use some PR after its militant behaviour, which has just come under police investigation and had Conan O’Brien make a lot fun.


early this morning

how Gates was milking Argentina for patent money

↺ Apple intends to try that one too

its militant behaviour

↺ come under police investigation

↺ Conan O’Brien make a lot fun


“Samsung spends 6.5% of sales on R&D. Apple spends 2.2%,” points out this analyst, but Apple keeps trying to block this Linux-based competition from Korea.█


↺ this analyst

↺ keeps trying to block this Linux-based competition from Korea


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