Showing posts with label National Tsing Hua University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Tsing Hua University. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 July 2011

OVF's founder Joy Tang breaks the silence: "OVF is just me"!

Ever since this blog was launched in March 2011, revealing the reality that lies behind OVF rhetoric, the only person to respond has been Jeffrey Buderer of OVF in California. Despite the seriousness of the allegations brought forth - information based on the analysis of information made publicly available by the organization itself, or on testimonies of the many victims of the organization who wish to remain anonymous - OVF founder and director Joy Tang especially has remained strangely silent.

Now it would seem this silence is broken. Recently, a blog post was brought to our attention that was published earlier this month by Edward Cherlin, volunteer worker of the OLPC (One Laptop per Child) project. The post is a transcription of a conversation where he seeks to enrol OVF's assistance in producing education resources that can provide some contect for the OLPC program. The revealing conversation sheds light on how OVF's founder Joy Tang views and defines her own organization as of July 2011, which is why we have decided to refer to it here.

As the readers of our blog will remember from previous blog posts, despite its chameleonic nature, the OneVillage Foundation remains consistent in terms of its expressed high ambitions and its holistic approach, which is also called the OneVillage Initiative. As can be seen in the figure below, this is supposedly a multi-faceted approach that deals with everything from education, governance, economics and ecology, to wellness / healthcare, as well as culture and traditions. Further, OVF claims to be working with such diverse issues as AIDS relief, farming cooperatives, healthcare and the wellness industry, university activities, ecotourism and open source development. If this professed diversity is in any way to be taken seriously, it would be backed up by a solid, substantial organization including more than a handful full-time committed agricultural, medical, economic (to mention a few) specialists and volunteers, all the more so as OVF is claiming to be actively operating in four countries (the U.S., Taiwan, Ghana and Nigeria), and seeking to expand to at least one more (Kenya). Not to mention the facilities that would be required for any serious AIDS Relief or development healthcare to take place. No such expert organization does indeed exist, nor are any such facilities to be found at the locations where OVF claims to be active.

The OneVillage Holistic Approach of the oneVillage Foundation, presented at the ICOS Community Day in Taiwan on Sept. 27th, 2009 by Jeffrey Buderer of OVF

And yet, as Joy Tang states in July 2011 in response to Ed Cherlin's request, "OVF is just me". Bringing up her ability to make others do the work, Ms. Tang subsequently explains how OVF should be perceived:
Joy Tang 唐瑋: you do not have think of OVF as an organization – rather – it is a force that moves the concept
 From "Chat with a friend"


In other words, OVF as a global organization with any substance is merely a construction, a product of the mind of its originator in order to pose as a global development expert with specific knowledge about and passion for the plight of the African people. Though interestingly enough, the people's plight remains as always strangely absent from any OVF conversation.

As OVF's founder Joy Tang prepares for a visit to Africa starting with Kenya August 12-14th, another batch of students of the NTHU (National Tsing Hua University) in Hsinchu, Taiwan, will be leaving for Ghana to serve as volunteers for an organization which license to operate as a charitable trust is being revoked due to reported delinquencies. The volunteer service program run in partnership with OVF will take place for a third year in a row, amidst the information brought forth about OVF "projects" being at best non-existent and at worst fabrications designed to cover up the fact that any benefits are going straight into the pockets of people who serve OVF's interests. We can only hope that the top level of the university will this time be sending along a representative of their own to accompany the students.

Friday, 20 May 2011

Storytelling - OVF's specialty but for what purpose?

Ever since the news about the intention of the Attorney General’s office in the state of California to rebuke the registration of OneVillage Foundation (OVF) to operate as a charitable trust, the key OVF people in Taiwan, Ghana and the U.S. have been keeping a very low profile, as if they are hoping to discourage any accusations of fraud by their mere silence. Or as if they are demonstrating yet again their remarkable resilience by preparing to shed the OVF skin in order to resurface under a new label – as they did before with the Aids Relief Foundation. Though this time, the OVF people are making it quite clear that they have nothing to spare for charity, preferring henceforth to refer to their work as a “social enterprise” or a “private initiative”. However, no matter how many layers of skin are shed, no amount of creative labeling will change the true nature of the core. The key question for OVF and its people still remains; what about the giving?  You have been taking money under the pretext of making lives better – lives of people in Africa, lives of the most destitute like the orphans and the AIDS afflicted – but what have you been giving?


Storytelling, OVF's core capability
Like so many others, we – the editors of this site – have been struggling to make sense of what it is that OVF actually brings to the table. We see promises and expectations that are not fulfilled. We see the way they use “charity” in order to promote their own networking interests. But what is in fact their core capability? Recently, it was brought to our attention by one of our readers that the OneVillage Initiative is mentioned in the book “Wake me up when the data is over” edited by Lori Silverman, where contributor Michael J. Margulis, a professional in the field of brand storytelling, promotes OVF and Joy Tang’s story as an example of an organization that uses storytelling as a key strategic instrument for its operations. (It is reasonable to assume this example would not have been included in the book had the editor been aware of the strong concerns regarding OVF beforehand.) 

OVF's founder Joy Tang at
TED x Youth Day in Taipei in 2010
Indeed, as OVF founder Joy Tang herself writes in a proposal to the Dharma Drum University in Taipei, storytelling is a key activity for OVF in order to implement "Community Development & Organizational Change". What this means in practice is that storytelling is used aggressively as a tool to diffuse the image of OVF as dedicated to a greater cause of the common good. This image contrasts sharply with  examples published here showing work that is dubious in nature (see the orphanage case), not about any greater cause at all than creating profitable business opportunities for the OVF people themselves (see the Jukwa farm case), or in fact mere fiction. Besides actively networking and holding workshops and seminars to promote the image of OVF, the OVF people have literally spammed the Internet with their own wikis and a massive amount of blogs in order to create and maintain the illusion that they are a social movement dedicated to real-life betterment, when indeed they can at best be called a network of people looking to promote themselves as social agents for change and sharing some common interests, notably in drumming and in the belief in the power of Internet communication. Most of the wikis, as well as video presentations published on the internet, have been created by student volunteers from the National Tsing Hua University (NTHU) in Hsinchu, Taiwan upon the request of OVF's founder as part of their voluntary service assignment. The students themselves seem unaware of the true nature of what they are writing about, dazzled by the opportunity of an international experience in a country that is to them exotic.

Storytelling as a powerful tool
Storytelling can be a beautiful thing, and is a part of most cultural traditions. Stories are powerful tools that add color and texture to our lives and in many parts of the world, the ability to tell a good story - especially orally – is highly valued by most communities. By activating our imagination, stories make history come alive, serve as instruments for socializing people into what is politically correct and socially acceptable, and promote local values and traditions amidst a world of mass culture. Children in particular are very open and thus it is a tool that is being increasingly used as a way of educating the youngest in our society. By targeting the intuitive rather than the logical part of the brain, storytelling is a way of communication that does not activate people’s evaluative capacity but seeks to interact with an “open state of mind”, i.e. to encourage receptiveness rather than critical thinking. The intentions of the storytellers with what is being communicated are thus of utmost importance, in order to ensure that the quality of what is communicated in terms of ethics and trustworthiness is maintained – especially when the stories are directed toward those groups in the global community who are particularly receptive to what is communicated by a storytelling authority simply because they lack their own frames of reference that will allow them to assess and evaluate what is told. 

The obvious appeals of stories should not allow us to forget, however, that they have been used effectively throughout history for instigating racism between different ethnic groups or religions, by transmitting prejudices and myths based on the fears or aversions of one particular ethnic group toward another. Storytelling can have an impact far beyond our imagination. The Nazi regime in Germany encouraged the propagation of stories that defined Jews as vermin rather than human beings, and it is no secret that the bloody conflicts between the Hutu and the Tutsi people in Rwanda were fueled by radio stories aimed at making people believe that they had to be the first to slaughter lest they be slaughtered themselves. What is supposed to contain stories within the realm of what we deem to be civilized are hence the moral and ethical codes and values that we adhere to.

When story-telling masks the truth
In 2007-2008, as the country of Kenya was undergoing a difficult crisis, many organizations initiated various efforts to help the Kenyan people. The OVF joined an effort for peace called the "Pyramid of Peace" through Joy Tang, who quickly became an active promoter. Her roll call was "Please join us in any way you can. We need the stories to be told and people connected."

Joy Tang promoting the Pyramid of Peace on the Global Voices Online website
Though this initiative remained very visible at the time, little has been said of it since, and with cause. Despite fund-raising efforts, it never actually did contribute to peace in Kenya in any way on the ground and in many instances, it brought out the worst in people who saw a quick opportunity to gain support for their own interests. So much for the value of story-telling, once the hype was gone. However, a self-critical assessment of this story-telling effort has yet to be found. 

It is interesting to see the amount of effort that is being put into writing history by the OVF people. One notable example is the Doug Bontempy story called "Doug Bontempi's life on earth", with its own dedicated Flickr album on the internet.

Doug Bontempi in the home of OVF's founder Joy Tang,
a framed picture of the two of them in the background
Doug Bontempi was Joy Tang’s cohabitant whom she claimed after his death was not her lover but her best friend. Interestingly, as his "best friend" she inherited quite a bit of his money after his death although he himself was still married to another woman at the time. For some reason, accounts of how OVF’s founder transformed this out-of-prison, former head of the local Hells Angels chapter in California into an African drum lover found their way onto the Internet after he passed away in the summer of 2009. The accounts were written by Joy Tang herself with help of her good friend and the brother of Doug Bontempi, Art Goodtimes, and make no mention of the money. Was such post mortem storytelling indeed a tribute or a necessity, i.e. a proactive attempt to direct people's attention towards that part of the story that might be to one's favor, as a way of getting around and making people forget a truth that was far from glorious? 


Thanks to the early sensibility of the OVF network in the U.S. to the potential of Internet as a marketing tool, the OVF people have long enjoyed a privileged position on the Internet where the number of promotional stories diffused through various blogs and wikis as well as other web sites is huge. The voices of those for whom OVF collaboration has left a bitter aftertaste remain mostly silent, but for a few exceptions. For the most part,  the victims of OVF and its founder Joy Tang have been most reluctant to express their concerns and tell their stories for fear that their names would be smeared in the networks where they wish to remain active. And sadly where former collaborators have voiced concerns, retaliation has indeed occurred more than once. Hence the need for an arena for discussion that would stand on its own, welcoming any response by the OVF people regarding the disclosed information, while showing those who have been used and exploited by OVF that they are not alone. 

Joy Tang of OVF promoted as a storytelling authority
On May 27th-29th 2011, Joy Tang will be the moderator for the annual storytellers' meeting organized by the center for storytelling in Yunlin, Taiwan (run by her friend and collaborator LiFang Tang), with the OVF experience being part of the program.

OVF Founder Joy Tang and fellow storyteller LinFang Tang
It is most telling that the OVF key people - including Joy Tang, Mark Roest and the latest addition Emmanuel Richardson - all refer to themselves as "storytellers". But however powerful a tool stories may be for diffusing an image of what one does not want people to see, an illusion can only be maintained as long as people actually believe in it. As one famous story goes, it only took the words of a small boy to break the charms as the people awoke to find that their emperor was, in fact, stark naked! Sooner or later, people do break free of the illusion, and when that happens, no story in the world can shield an ugly reality from the truth.

Thursday, 24 March 2011

Farmer Mus and the OVF Farming Bluff

According to the oneVillage Foundation (OVF), the Jukwa Farmers Coop in Ghana is a successful farming cooperative established, run and promoted by the OVF. Its only online reference to this co-op, however, is from the onevillage wiki, which is run by the OVF itself.

According to this wiki, the Jukwa Farmers Coop was founded in 2004 based on the vision of a "a thriving market in Africa to produce healthy food sustainably". Also refered to as the Srowi Mixed Farmers Cooperative Society (SMFCS) in Jukwa, the goals of the co-op were "providing a livelihood for local farmers", to expand to other communities (!) and to teach villagers and farmers "how to market traditionally-produced crops as organic". This is a project that the OVF has been raising funds for, as stated on its blog:
Additional Funding Needed: We still need funding to complete the project. This includes completing the building, installing the hardware and paying for staff and fuel to operate the facility. If you can help please email us at info@onevillagefoundation.org
http://blog.onevillage.tv/?p=1437 (September 2009)
Throughout OVF's numerous websites, there is a lot of talk about the impact that OVF is having on the Ghana agricultural society, but nothing specific. These facts do not seem to disturb the OVF in any way, who, glorify their impact amongst local farmers in the following terms:
The enormous economic, social, financial and ecological benefits to be derived from the implementation of this project in the life of the project beneficiaries – Jukwa farmers, cannot be underestimated. Progress Report on Srowie Mixed Farmers Cooperative in Jukwa-Cape Coast, Ghana
During the 2009 Service and Learning Program, the 10 visiting university students from the National Tsing Hua University (NTHU) were taken to Jukwa to visit the OVF's farming activities and to interview the people at the site. As part of their assignment given by the OVF, the students' reports and findings were compiled into a short video entitled Jukwa rural farming. In the video, the students refer to the OVF agricultural interest in Jukwa as a "model of social innovation and enterprise incubation". Having observed the "farming work", the students write about their experience:

"It is a story from Taiwan to Ghana... It is also a story from the urban to the rural village... We lived in the Jukwa. In the beginning, we visited the palm oils factory, to know how to make palm oils."
Jukwa rural farming
Although the topic is farming, the students are taken to a palm oil factory site, where they are introduced to a local farmer, whom they get to know as "Farmer Mus". The NTHU student in charge of the interview asks this Ghana farmer what he thinks about the "brain drain", to which Farmer Mus replies that:
"Sometimes they don't want to enter the farm... they don't want to face the problem again... That's why some of the youth don't want to enter the farm. It's very nice as a youth, even you are educated, you have to enter farm - because farming work is the backbone of every countries. As a youth, if you don't enter it, we are grown-up, we shall go, ...even practice it, who is going to feed you they need to enter farming work."
Farmer Mus, Jukwa rural farming


In another summary, one of the students shared his impression in meeting with farmer Mus and another Ghana farmer named Stephen:
"In the process, I know the two local farmers, Mus and Stephen. They were really nice and kind. I am in charge of the Jwuka farming, so I had the chance the interact with them. I love them. They smelled just like the earth. That was the taste of living with the earth, embracing the deep life energy."
http://www.slideshare.net/joytang/nthu-international-volunteers-for-onevillage-ecotour-service-and-learning-program-2009-summary-report
From the documentary and the student's reaction, one would assume that "Farmer Mus" must be an authentic farmer living an ordinary life working the land in a small community Southern Ghana, but what story doesn't tell is that "Farmer Mus" - whose real name is Mustapha Adjepong - is a very active member of the oneVillage Foundation crew and figures in a number of different roles on web pages associated with the OVF's work in Ghana.
"Farmer Mus": part of the OVF crew in Winneba, Ghana
On the picture above taken outside the OVF's so-called Winnebar Open Digital Village (WODIV), Mustafa "Farmer Mus" Adjepong can be seen wearing an OVF t-shirt, standing between OVF country director Kafui Prebbie and OVF founder Joy Tang together with the rest of OVF staff in a group photo with the NTHU 2009 students.  
Farmer Mus: a part of Denkyira family
What the story also fails to tell is that Mustafa "Farmer Mus" Adjepong, who creatively told the students about the challenges of being a local farmer in a small community in Ghana, is also connected to the royal family of Denkyira - with whom OVF's founder Joy Tang shares several years of personal connections. 
OVF founder Joy Tang and "farmer Mus" attending a wedding
One can only assume that he is either a member of the royal family himself or part of its close entourage. 

"Farmer Mus" OVF founder Joy Tang at a Denkyira ceremony
Mustafa "Farmer Mus" Adjepong's multiple involvement in promoting OVF's agricultural profile earned him an official thank you note by the OVF crew:
Moose, a farmer from Jukwa warmly hosted NTHU students during their visit in Jukwa, a rural village in Ghana where oneVillage Foundation setup a rural farming co-ops project. Moose also is a tailor by trade and well-respected opinion leader in his community. He is a role model as a team player and selfless services. Thanks, Moose!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2913044922/in/photostream/
In an interview made by friend and fellow blogger Ulrike Reinhard during the latter's visit to Jukwa in the late summer of 2010, OVF's agricultural project and its cooperation with farmers Mus [called Moss in the video] and Stevenson are introduced.
"Joy Tang, a "true believer" in the internet for the good and founder of oneVillageFoundation on how ICT can help farmers. One of her projects on farming in Ghana is located in Jukwa, Ghana. At the end she is interviewing two of the Jukwa farmers: Moss and Stevenson."
Joy Tang on how ICT can help farmers
, produced and directed by Ulrike Reinhard
Joy Tang presenting "Farmer Mus" for the camera

In this video, Joy Tang presents Farmer Mus as “one of the dear farmers in our group in the coop, his name is Mustapha.” Why would the OVF and its founder Joy Tang disguise one of its own co-workers, elsewhere referred to also as a secretary for OVF activities, as a farmer in Jukwa? The need to mislead the public in having OVF people pose as farmers in order to present the agricultural work of the OVF to the volunteer team from NTHU as well as to the broader public raises serious doubts as to whether the OVF in fact has ever engaged in any serious work with real-life farmers in Ghana at all? And why would one claim accomplishments in farming, when the professed purposes of the OVF are firstly people affected by AIDS and secondly the concern with connecting people to the Internet?
Left: OVF worker Mus pretending to be a farmer Right: OVF founder Joy Tang bringing the students to the "farm"

The OVF needs to come clean with these explicit deceptions of students entrusted to them as volunteers by prestigious universities such as the NTHU, as well as the greater public. There are real problems and real farmers in Africa and elsewhere which can be properly addressed by people who are actually motivated by helping them, rather than by making a name for themselves in the international community and soliciting funds based on falsehoods. Africa and all struggling farmers in the world certainly deserve better.

Joy Tang, Stephen & Mus brings the NTHU students to visit the Denkyira King
To see more of "Farmer Mus" and "farmer Stephen", see the following links:

OVF worker Mus brings the students to the palm oil production site: http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2880375385/
Mus the Tailor with a newly made dress for OVF founder Joy Tang: http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2977177758/
Mus the Tailor and OVF founder Joy Tang discussing fabric: http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2977174438/in/photostream/
OVF worker Mus accompanies the NTHU students to see the chief of Jukwa: http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2912277267/
OVF worker Mus with OVF founder Joy Tang and OVF worker Stephen at the beach http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2977200038/
OVF worker Mus at the beach http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2976328739/in/photostream/
Mus & with the students at a restaurant: http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2922625231/
The Mus Family with the NTHU students http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2922625223/in/photostream/

Mus with members of the Royal family of Denkyira and OVF founder Joy Tang http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2977791535/in/set-72157608420084610/
Mus with members of the Royal family of Denkyira and OVF founder Joy Tang http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2977794299/in/set-72157608420084610/ 
Farmer Stephen with Joy Tang http://www.flickr.com/photos/1village/2976307975/in/photostream/

Learning what and when to applaud: Students socialized by OVF through volunteer programs

In previous posts, serious concerns have been raised regarding the partnership between the Tsing Hua university (the NTHU) in Taiwan and the Joy Tang/oneVillage Foundation for a volunteer program for the university students to Ghana.

The NTHU is not the only university leaving part of its organized volunteer services for students in the hands of Joy Tang and the oneVillage Foundation. Also the Leavitt School of Business at the Santa Clara University lists the oneVillage Foundation as a partner for its Global Fellowship Program, and OVF's application for 2011 can be found online here. (However, to this day it would seem that only one volunteer from this university has visited OVF, accompanying OVF representative in the U.S. Jeffrey Buderer on a visit to Taipei in the fall of 2009.)

As any organization working with interns or volunteers would know, taking care of people with very little experience in a particular field can be both challenging and time-consuming. The upside is of course the potential benefits that can be gained through low-cost assistance and especially of future positive ambassadors for one's organization at the end of the term. It is a commitment that few organizations would enter into without a clear purpose for what they want out of the exchange.

The question then is what motivates the OVF to take such an interest in students? In a conversation with fellow blogger Ulrike Reinhard over Skype, OVF's founder Joy Tang explains her concern with the Taiwanese students who have been received yearly by the OVF people in Ghana since 2008:
"My own experience with working with Taiwanese young people. Just in a very short period of time, less than two full years, this collective learning, the consciousness or ... space of learning for them has really expanded. From the very beginning, they would ask a question like: "Are they barbaric?" This kind of shocking language, almost to your face you want to cry for them! But you cannot really punch them in their face! And how, where is this from, where is this coming from? Is it from media, is it from your parents? Is it from your school? Is it from your peers? You ask them; in their very sincere way I think they will listen with their hearts. And then provide methods, guide them, walk with them, coach them, going through this process of investigation. So that before you even deliver this bundle of treasures ... to another group of people you know that they have already prepared themselves in the best of themselves. And they are trying to do that, I think whatever they pretend is to be applauded. And I think that is what we need to give to our young people - all over, everywhere!"
http://www.catboant.com/category/conversations/joy-tang/ (Can we learn to applaud each other? Conversation between Joy Tang and Ulrike Reinhard, Dec. 22nd 2009; 30:45-32:30)

Through the partnership with OVF, universities submit their students to the guidance of Joy Tang and her team of OVF people who present these young people with very limited experience of the international community and no prior knowledge of Africa to sites and people approved and selected by the OVF. The OVF will introduce their visitors to representatives of the real people they claim to be helping, who instead turn out to be OVF staff in disguise or personal friends. The result is such blatant "mishaps" as the report on the Stoughton Home Orphanage, where the students were fed the story of how this came to be but had no frame of reference of their own that would allow them to question whether wild elephants are in fact to be found trampling around the fields in Ghana...

Another word for what Joy Tang and the OVF are doing with the students is making them undergo a process of socialization - though the OVF terminology for this would be undergoing a transformation with the aim of freeing oneself from what the OVF considers is standing in the way of effective learning and development. Socialization is a process by which individuals learn to conform to the norms and roles that are required for integration into a particular community and network, based both on adhering to certain explicit rules but also on striving to meet the perceived expectations of the group in question. Though some degree of socialization is always to be expected and also desired, to the OVF this is more than the natural process of learning to function in a new environment. As Joy Tang explains in her interview, this is an objective in itself of the volunteer program: "And then provide methods, guide them, walk with them, coach them, going through this process of investigation. So that before you even deliver this bundle of treasures ... to another group of people you know that they have already prepared themselves in the best of themselves." In other words, by providing the methods, guidance, a continuous presence ("walking with the") and coaching, the students are made to see the OVF version of the world and how it should be interpreted.

When such a process explicitly targets people who lack the tools of critically understanding what they are experiencing because they are introduced to an environment far away from their own, then it comes dangerously close to brainwashing.

In her conversation with Ulrike Reinhard, Joy Tang brings up the issue of learning to applaud each other, of expressing and showing gratitude for the contribution of others. Though the idea of applauding as if working towards a better world would be best described as some kind of performance seems quite out of place, it is most worrying when put in the context of the kind of socialization bordering on brainwashing that is practiced by the OVF. Then it has to do with taking away the tools that people are naturally endowed with for thinking for themselves and making up their own minds about something by discouraging questions and dissident opinions, and creating a contained environment of people loyal to OVF with whom to interact.

Teaching what and when to applaud is a most useful way to disguise a fraud and make others see what you want them to see. It only takes one simple question, though, to come free of the illusion: why? True learning can only come from understanding the purpose.

Tuesday, 15 March 2011

The National Youth Commission sponsors OVF volunteer partnership at the NTHU


Since a few years, most universities in Taiwan have established student volunteer programs where the students are offered the opportunity to do volunteer service abroad for an NGO. Such volunteer programs have been strongly encouraged by the Taiwanese government, as a way of strengthening the international profile of a country that is still unrecognized as an independent nation by the international community. Consequently, these programs are partly subsidized by public funds through the National Youth Commission (the NYC).

The domain of international NGOs can be murky waters indeed, hence the need for codes of ethic and conduct (such as that of WANGO) to facilitate the assessment of potential NGO partners. At the National Tsing Hua University (NTHU) in Hsinchu, one of these programs involves Ghana and is run by Joy Tang and the OVF through a partnership with the NTHU. The case raises serious issues regarding how public funds are allocated to strengthen the international profile of prestigious Taiwanese public institutions:

1. How is it possible that public funds be allocated to establish the platform for a partnership with an organization that poses as an international NGO, when it is really a fraud, with no legal body in Taiwan and no office?

2. What control mechanisms exist that will ensure that no student of any public university in Taiwan is exploited by an NGO whose operations are both illegal and unethical?

3. What independent body is responsible for reviewing the partnership agreements between public universities and NGOs?

4. What are the means that enable the NYC to ensure that the public support that is allocated to volunteer programs involving NGOs is being used in an appropriate way, and meeting legal and ethical standards?

5. In what way are the relevant public officers brought up to date with issues of concern regarding international NGOs? Have they been made familiar with international moral and ethical standards? Do they know which documentation to ask for in order to make a solid evaluation of a potential partner?

6. Have the universities received the relevant guidelines for how to proceed regarding NGO partnerships, so that the reputation of both students and public universities is protected?

Sunday, 13 March 2011

Misleading information about a NTHU-sponsored orphanage in Ghana

The National Tsing Hua University (NTHU) has, according to its own account, a long and proud history. Originally established in Beijing in 1911, it was relocated to Taiwan in 1956 where it enjoys a solid reputation as a serious, high-quality public institution. It is located in the city of Hsinchu and is today "consistently ranked as one of the premier universities in Taiwan", as well as "widely recognized as the best incubator for future leaders in industries as well as academics."

On their website, the National Tsing Hua University presents its Learning by Service program, where students of the university are sent out to various sites around the world, with the aim of contributing to serious charity work and offering their knowledge to those in need. One of the available programs is in Ghana, and it is run by Joy Tang and the OneVillage Foundation since 2008.


But is the NTHU aware that their students are being set to work for a fraudulent organization, and that their activities are contributing to strengthening the illusion that OVF is a legitimate charity?

The National Tsing Hua University reports that in 2010, the students of the Ghana program raised funds for a local orphanage:
"A large portion of the fee collected from this operation went to the local orphanage to support their programs."
National Tsing Hua University, Cover Story: Learning by Service (2010)
The orphanage in question calls itself the "Stoughton's Horizon Children's Home" and has a wiki page on OVF's so called Open Digital Village Wiki, which has been set up by the NTHU students at the initiative of Joy Tang. It is run by an acquaintance of Joy Tang - Ms Agnes Ampong - and was set up in 2008; the same year that the NTHU - OVF Ghana partnership was established. Although they claim to have 12 "orphans" in their care, the "orphanage" is not legally registered (which was confirmed by telephone communication with Ms Ampong on March 12th, 2011) and is therefore operating illegally, under no supervision of the Ghana authorities.

According to the report by the NHTU students, the orphanage home was set up under most peculiar circumstances. They were told that the home was established because wild elephants supposedly had trampled a large number of fields, resulting in Ghanaian families actually ABANDONING their children, (rather than leaving them in the care of the larger family network that is the basis for African society and which explains why one will find a small number of orphans who are not taken care of any family member even in the poorest of African countries; unless they have been ravaged by civil war). On the Stoughton Home's wiki page, the NTHU students write:
"As a result of many years of elephants destroying vast fields of crops and even cocoa pods in Kakum National Park surrounding villages, many children became homeless and abandoned."
WODIV, Horizon Orphanage, Project Justification (2009)
The OVF's own website presents the support of the Stoughton's Horizon Children's Home as one of its accomplishments in Ghana. There is no mention whatsoever, however, of the fact that the orphanage (in reality sponsored by the NTHU students and not by OVF) is not legally registered. The collaboration between OVF Ghana and the Stoughton's Horizon Children's Home is described as one of the programs outlined for the 2010 Ghana "OVF-NTHU Eco-Tour" and labeled an "orphanaged camp" activity.
"During the Orphanage Camp, the team will interact and have fun games with kids at the Stoughton Horizon Orphanage, Jukwa, whiles finding out their real needs and how OVF can help meet them."
oneVillage Foundation, Holistic ICT for Living: The 2010 HTSU students have arrived! (2010)
Although the oneVillage Foundation itself lacks a legal structure and is therefore itself raising money illegally, it refers to its Ecotour program as a "humanitarian project", which is focused on servicing orphanages in the central region of Ghana. According to OVF, the students:
"...documented the stories in the orphanages visited, to make their stories voiced via Information and Communication Technology (ICT) tools, such as blogs. With the information online, there is no doubt that people around the world can hear their stories, which helps to run these orphanages continuously and deliver endless hopes for children."
oneVillage Foundation, Holistic ICT for Living: The 2010 HTSU students have arrived! (2010)
According to the NTHU students, they serviced the Stoughton home with 320 books, 44 toys, 43 pieces of clothing, one "bag of stationary" and a first aid kit. More details are given by the OVF itself, writing that the NTHU students presented Ms Ampong with "books, toys and other items collected from donors and well wishers in Taiwan". They categorized the books and tried to teach two of the teenage boys to do so themselves. The students also taught the children in Ms Ampong's care how to play a Taiwanese game called "Tuoluo", do paper design cuttings and "other things". Further, the NTHU students provided the home with "some light bulbs for the reading corner and other rooms" while OVF itself "sponsored painting of the interior and exterior of the home."

The painting job sponsored by the OVF of the Stoughton home may very well have been necessary to make the building look more legitimate for the students' arrival.

According to Ms Ampong, it was the promises of Joy Tang of the OVF to support the orphanage financially in 2008 which led to the home being opened. But to this date, the Stoughton Home has yet to receive any funding from Ms Tang or the oneVillage Foundation, and are left to seek donations from elsewhere. Now, why the orphanage after three years of supposed operations still has not been legally registered with the authorities in Ghana is a question Ms Ampong cannot answer.

Any serious NGO would not be involved with an orphanage that does not stand under the supervision of any serious institution and the local authorities. Who will ensure that these children are not being exploited? Who is taking responsibility for their wellfare? Ms. Ampong herself is fully employed at her daytime job at the Kakum National Forest Park.


Is the National Tsing Hua University - a reputable institution with numerous partnerships - aware of the fact that it is sending trusting and eager students to a foreign country to volunteer at an UNREGISTERED charity (the Stoughton Home) through an organisation (OVF) that itself lacks the basic legal structure required by all NGOs to operate legally? There are several questions which the NTHU needs to consider: Questions for NTHU.

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Questions concerning the NTHU involvement with OVF and Joy Tang 對於新竹清華大學與OVF、唐瑋女士之間的幾點質疑

The National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu, Taiwan
位於臺灣新竹的國立清華大學
It has come to our attention that one of the volunteer programs at the NTHU supported by the NYC is run by Ms. Joy Tang and her OneVilllageFoundation. This organisation is an international network with no legal body neither in Taiwan nor in the U.S. where it claims to be based. It therefore operates illegally. Furthermore, many of the projects run by the OVF in Africa (Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya) simply do not exist.
我們注意到了臺灣行政院青輔會在新竹清華大學的一個志工計畫,是由唐瑋女士 和她的OVF機構執行的。 OVF這個組織是一個沒有合法實體的國際性網路, 無論在臺灣美國都沒有,雖然OVF宣稱自己是個美國機構。因此,它的運作並不合法。此外,很多OVF在非洲執行的計畫,實際上並不存在。  
Because the OVF is raising funds illegally, it has been reported to the IRS in the U.S. which are conducting an investigation. Furthermore, the OVF has strong links to the mafia and the Hell's Angels in the U.S. and because of extensive involvement with criminal organisations, the OVF and Joy Tang's associates in the U.S. are being investigated by the FBI. We are most concerned that Ms. Joy Tang is able to operate this international fraud out of Taiwan under an international cover, and that she is involving solid, reputable state institutions such as the Tsing Hua university in maintaining the illusion that the OVF is engaged in serious charity work.
由於OVF在非法募款,美國的國稅局(IRS,Internal Revenue Service)已經被報告此事而正展開調查。此外,OVF機構對於黑手黨及美國的飛車黨(Hell's Angels)的連結很強。廣泛涉入了犯罪組織,導致了OVF、唐瑋以及唐瑋的伙伴,正被聯邦調查局(FBI,Federal Bureau of Investigation)調查中。我們最在意的一件事,乃是唐瑋女士可以利用臺灣知名的國家機構,新竹清華大學,透過臺灣呈現出一種國際化、嚴謹而正派的慈善工作機構的樣貌。     
We assume that the public institutions in Taiwan are unaware of this fact, or they would not engage in any partnership with an organisation that is operating illegally and engaged with other criminal organisations. Regarding the Tsing Hua university and their volunteer program run by Ms. Tang involving OVF's center in Ghana, we wonder what they had investigated and what they knew about the OVF and the activities of Mr. Kafui Prebbie (OVF representative in Ghana who runs his own business and is very much involved in fraudulent activities) beforehand.
我們依然假定臺灣的政府機構並不知道前述事實,否則他們不會和非法運作的組 織(這組織甚至還和犯罪組織有牽連)進行合作。看看新竹清大和他們由唐 瑋女士執行,在非洲迦納OVF機構的中心運作的志工計畫, 我們很好奇,新竹清大在計畫付諸實現之前,到底調查過了些甚麼?又對OVF機構和Mr. Kafui Prebbie瞭解多少(Mr. Kafui Prebbie是OVF在迦納的業務代表,但同時也經營自己的事業,他深深的涉入詐騙活動之中)
The NTHU student program to Ghana, partnering OVF


Specifically, we have the following questions that we feel need to be answered by the university:
明白的說,我們有以下幾個問題想請教新竹清華大學:   
  1. Why was there no formal representative of NTHU accompanying Ms. Tang and the students to Ghana? 為何清華大學沒有正式的代表,隨著唐女士和學生赴迦納?
  2. Is there any formal agreement between OVF and the NTHU? OVF與清華大學之間,有任何正式協議嗎?
  3. The money that is raised by the students for the volunteer services, how is it handled? Do the students handle their own expenses or do they pass the funds on to Ms. Tang or Mr. Kafui Prebbie in Ghana? 因著志工服務所募得款項是如何處理?是學生自行運用呢?還是交給唐 女士或是迦納的Kafui Prebbie先生?
  4. What kind of quality control does the NTHU apply with regard to their volunteer programs? 清華大學如何進行志工計劃的品質管制?
  5. What information has the NTHU been given regarding OVF's operations in Ghana? Has any formal representative of NTHU ever visited the work in Ghana himself/herself? 有關OVF在迦納的運作,清華大學被告知了些什麼相關資訊?是否有 正式的代表親自去參訪過迦納那邊的工作?
  6. How big is the Ghana program compared to the other volunteer programs at NTHU (Tanzania, Indonesia), and what is the size of the cost budget for Ghana per student compared with that of the other programs? 與清華大學其它的志工計畫〈如坦尚尼亞、印尼〉比較起來,迦納志工 計畫的大小如何? 以平均每位學生所花預算來看,迦納計畫相較於其他志工計劃,又是如何?
  7. How much financial support for the Ghana program is provided by the NTHU itself or channeled through the university and how is this money then accounted for? 對於迦納計劃,有多少財務支援是清華大學本身提供或是透過清華大學 的管道而取得?這筆錢之後是如何報帳?