Hi,<br><br>Greetings from Baghdad. <br><br>I've asked one of our translators about the availability of old out-of-copyright maps. He says that (in common with most commodities in the region) there is a market in the city that specializes in maps and that out-of-copyright maps can most probably be found there. Such a shopping trip would, however, be resource-hungry and dangerous.<br><br>There are a number of other issues that IMHO merit discussion. I am informed that any road may have up to 4 names (which may be the same or different):<br><br> 1) The pre-Saddam name<br> 2) The Saddam-era name.<br> 3) The "public" name - What the people who live there call it.<br> 4) The "Official" name - What the new Government calls it.<br><br>This situation is further complicated by language and social issues:<br><br> Language<br> 1) The roads are names
in Arabic.<br> 2) There is no fixed translation between the Arabic and Latin alphabets.<br><br> Social Issues:<br> 1) Sunnis tend to use the Saddam-era names<br> 2) Shia tend to rename streets and won't acknowledge Saddam-era names.<br> 3) Ethnic cleansing is changing the neighbourhoods and hence the names.<br> 4) Names (such as 14th July Bridge) will change later.<br><br><br>My translator's opinion is that street names are going to take at least 2-3 years to settle down.<br><br>I'm happy to contribute what I can to the effort but I'm not Arabic-speaking. Which alphabet (or both) should be used? What can be done to minimise any ethnic statement caused by the choice of which street name is chosen?<br><br>All the best,<br>Paul.<br> <br><p>
<hr size=1><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=49935/*http://games.yahoo.com">Bored stiff?</a> Loosen up...<br><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=49935/*http://games.yahoo.com">Download and play hundreds of games for free</a> on Yahoo! Games.