Ce thème est attribué manuellement par les auteurs des messages.

#mamantravaille et thèmes voisins

 
  • In AP surveillance case, the real scandal is what’s legal
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/05/14/in-ap-surveillance-case-the-real-scandal-is-whats-legal

    U.S. law allows the government to engage in this type of surveillance—on media organizations or anyone else—without meaningful judicial oversight.

    The key here is a legal principle known as the “third party doctrine,” which says that users don’t have Fourth Amendment rights protecting information they voluntarily turn over to someone else. Courts have said that when you dial a phone number, you are voluntarily providing information to your phone company, which is then free to share it with the government.

    Un amendement de la constitution US fait donc l’objet d’une sur-interprétation loufoque quand il s’agit de légaliser la corruption des représentants de la nation par des affairistes véreux (exemple du premier amendement dans l’affaire Citizens United versus Federal Election Commission), et d’une sous-interprétation non moins loufoque quand il s’agit de légaliser l’aliénation des citoyens.

    Et il apparaît que les seules fuites garanties par le quatrième amendement sont celles dont le divulgateur est le gouvernement lui-même.


  • Haniyeh welcomes Bahrain parliament delegation | Maan News Agency
    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=593775
    9 May 2013

    http://www.maannews.net/images/PhotoViewer/217648.jpg

    GAZA CITY (Ma’an) — Gaza premier Ismail Haniyeh welcomed on Wednesday a parliamentary delegation from Bahrain ahead of their three-day official visit to the coastal enclave.

    The delegation, which includes Bahrain Parliament Speaker sheikh Khalifa bin Ahmed al-Dhahrani, was greeted by Haniyeh in a tent erected on the ruins of the cabinet building in Gaza City, a statement read.

    Haniyeh applauded bilateral relations between Palestine and Bahrain, praising the gulf state’s continued financial aid to Palestinians.

    According to the Bahrain News Agency, the visit is being held to strengthen parliamentary relations between both sides.

    Eight other members of the Bahrain parliament are among the delegation, the BNA reported, including the chairman of the legislative and legal affairs committee and member of the Bahraini-Palestinian Fraternity Committee Ali Otaish, Chairman of the Committee for the Support of the Palestinian People MP Ali Ahmed and Acting Secretary-General Jamel Zuwaid.

    Other MPs include Hassan Bu Khammas, Abdulhameed al-Meer, Jassim al-Saidi, Mohammed Buquais and Abdulla bin Huwail, the BNA reported.

    Bahrain was among the first countries to donate to reconstruction efforts following Operation Cast Led, contributing $5.4 million to UNRWA, the Palestine refugee agency.


  • Démission de Salam Fayyad, premier ministre démissionnaire de l’Autorité palestinienne (suite et pas fin)

    Classique malentendu/ manipulation entre la presse et un politique qui va convaincre les convaincus que Salam Fayyad servait davantage les intérêts des Israéliens et des Américains que ceux des Palestiniens. Le premier article est le démenti de ses propos publié par l’agence de presse officielle palestinienne (WAFA), le second article, du New York Times, est l’article incriminé.

    Article 1
    Fayyad denies statements in the New York Times article
    http://english.wafa.ps/index.php?action=detail&id=22289

    “RAMALLAH, May 4, 2013 (WAFA) – Outgoing Prime Minister Salam Fayyad’s office Saturday denied statements slamming the Palestinian leadership which were attributed to Fayyad in an interview with the New York Times.

    Fayyad’s office said in a statement, “The statements in the article are just journalist Roger Cohen’s personal impressions, and certainly not the words of Fayyad, who did not make any statements or conduct interviews for the New York Times or any other newspaper or agency since his resignation.”

    The New York Times published on May 3 an article titled “Fayyad Steps Down, Not Out” by Cohen, in which Fayyad allegedly described the Palestinian leadership as “failed”.

    Cohen quoted Fayyad saying “It is incredible that the fate of the Palestinian people has been in the hands of leaders so entirely casual, so guided by spur-of-the-moment decisions, without seriousness. We don’t strategize, we cut deals in a tactical way and we hold ourselves hostage to our own rhetoric.”

    Cohen’s article caused an uproar among Palestinians while Fayyad’s office said that this article must not be published as an interview with Fayyad.”

    Article 2
    Op-Ed Columnist
    Fayyad Steps Down, Not Out
    By Roger Cohen
    Published: May 3, 2013

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/04/opinion/global/Roger-Cohen-Fayyad-Steps-Down-Not-Out.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

    « (…) Yet the Fatah old guard with their sweet deals wants Fayyad gone; Hamas hates him as a supposed American stooge, and Abbas has tired of this U.S.-educated “turbulent priest.” So the president hesitates. He mumbles about a “unity government” with Hamas. He does little. And Fayyad is at his desk when he might be eating sweet pastries with his family.

    “Our story is a story of failed leadership, from way early on,” Fayyad tells me. “It is incredible that the fate of the Palestinian people has been in the hands of leaders so entirely casual, so guided by spur-of-the-moment decisions, without seriousness. We don’t strategize, we cut deals in a tactical way and we hold ourselves hostage to our own rhetoric.” (…) “This party, Fatah, is going to break down, there is so much disenchantment,” Fayyad predicts. “Students have lost 35 days this year through strikes. We are broke. The status quo is not sustainable.”


  • Le Spaceship Two de Richard Branson fait son premier vol propulsé (vidéo embedded)

    Video : Virgin Galactic spaceship completes successful Mojave Desert test flight - Telegraph
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/10026650/Virgin-Galactic-spaceship-completes-successful-Mojave-Desert-test-fligh

    The mothership climbed to about 47,000 feet, then released the spacecraft, which ignited its engine for 16 seconds, climbed to about 55,000 feet and then glided to a safe landing.


  • Autorité palestinienne.
    Du bon usage des banalités par un ancien de la CIA, Paul Pillar, à l’occasion de la démission du premier ministre palestinien, Salam Fayyad (les parenthèses ne sont pas de Pillar):

    – Salam Fayyad avait tout pour séduire les Américains (dit et tant répété que cela n’a pu que le desservir);
    – Il aura été (à son corps défendant) le « bon » Palestinien à opposer au « mauvais » Palestinien qu’était le Hamas ;
    – L’Autorité palestinienne aura constitué un trompe-l’œil dissimulant la véritable ambition de la politique israélienne et un pion aux mains des différents premiers ministres israéliens qui n’ont eu de cesse de retarder indéfiniment l’apparition d’un Etat palestinien (réalité toujours valable depuis les accords d’Oslo en 1993 jusqu’à aujourd’hui);
    – L’Autorité palestinienne aura incarné l’idée selon laquelle les Palestiniens devaient créer leur Etat, mais sans jamais avoir la possibilité d’accomplir cette mission du fait de la politique israélienne (toute avancée sur la voie de l’Etat étant ralentie, dénoncée, empêchée ou sanctionnée par Israël) ;

    Paul Pillar ne dit pas que la politique menée par Salam Fayyad a permis des progrès économiques - limités dans le contexte de la contrainte extérieure, israélienne ou internationale, mais réels – mais a contribué également à réduire les revendications palestiniennes nationales en engageant un processus de rattrapage économique et social auquel les Palestiniens ne pouvaient qu’adhérer. Ce processus avait été engagé dès avant la disparition d’Arafat (avec l’actif soutien financier de la communauté internationale, surtout européenne), conforté par Abou Mazen arrivé au pouvoir sur un programme électoral de non-violence, et mis en œuvre par Salam Fayyad en qualité de ministre des Finances puis de premier ministre.

    Enfin, on peut ne pas être d’accord avec Paul Pillar sur l’avenir de fayyad. Il n’est pas acquis qu’il quitte définitivement la politique. On pourrait le revoir à la tête du gouvernement, ou de l’Autorité palestinienne ou de toute autre forme de direction politique des Palestiniens.

    A Good Man Leaves the Plantation
    Paul Pillar
    April 13, 2013

    http://nationalinterest.org/blog/paul-pillar/good-man-leaves-the-plantation-8348

    Salam Fayyad has been just about everything that U.S. administrations could have hoped for in a Palestinian prime minister. The American-educated economist is competent, honest and moderate. In his six years as prime minister of the Palestinian Authority he made admirable progress in instilling order in the bureaucracy that he led. It is no surprise that the Obama administration and Secretary of State Kerry tried hard, ultimately unsuccessfully, to keep him in the job. For similar reasons the Israelis were happy to have him around.

    The Palestinian Authority or PA is a strange entity that nonetheless—at the time it was created by the Oslo accords that Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat signed 20 years ago—made sense. It was to be a transitional mechanism that would facilitate a change of the Palestinian leadership and political structure from a resistance movement (it was as head of the Palestine Liberation Organization that Arafat signed the accords) to a government. But Rabin, whom an Israeli extremist assassinated in response to his making peace with the PLO, is long gone. For many years now the strange entity has functioned as a stooge of a different sort of Israeli leadership, a leadership whose objective is to delay indefinitely the creation of a Palestinian state and to cling permanently to land conquered through a military invasion 46 years ago. It is misleading to consider the Palestinian Authority still to be a transitional mechanism as it was originally conceived, given that many years have gone by since, according to the timetable in the Oslo accords, a Palestinian state should already have been established. The PA, regardless of what may have been the skills and good intentions of some of those who have led it, is a Potemkin village—a prop that supports a deceptive Israeli story about peace, land, political power and especially the Israeli government’s intentions.

    No matter how much one might understandably consider the Oslo accords to be dead, having the PA still around serves several purposes for Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. Most fundamentally, it preserves the fiction that the Israeli government actually supports a two-state solution. It also appears to relieve Israel from accountability for failing to live up to its responsibilities under international law as the occupying power in territory conquered in war. Of course, Israel really is the true power over all of the West Bank, but by being able to point to another entity that supposedly has administrative responsibilities it can say that problems and deficiencies are someone else’s fault.

    The PA, especially with leaders as respectable as Fayyad, has functioned for Israel as the “good” Palestinians in contrast to the “bad” Palestinians of Hamas, enabling the Israelis to continue to pretend to want to make peace with Palestinians even though it has refused to deal with fairly elected Palestinian leaders when those leaders happen to be from Hamas. Meanwhile, the purpose of indefinite postponement of a Palestinian state is served by pointing to a Palestinian movement that does not appear to have its act together while Israel simultaneously does everything possible to prevent reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah, the dominant party in the PA, and thus to keep the movement divided.
    The Palestinian Authority embodies the concept, articulated by American advocates for the Israeli government such as Elliott Abrams, that Palestinians must “build” a state rather than merely being “granted” one. But the “building” phase continues indefinitely, with an actual state always remaining out of reach. If the PA seems to be getting too close to statehood, the Israelis can, and do, easily kick it back. After the PA’s move to upgrade its status at the United Nations, Israel punished it by withholding tax revenue that belongs to the Palestinians. This exacerbated a financial crisis that has been one of the biggest challenges for Fayyad’s administration. The Israelis also, of course, can use their first-choice policy tool—military force—as they did in 2002 when they demolished many of the PA’s offices as well as other administrative infrastructure such as police stations. This action made it all the more difficult for the Palestinians to function in a way that demonstrates they are “building” a state. Even without Israeli use of something as blatant as the 2002 action, the many everyday restrictions Israel places on transportation and other aspects of Palestinian life make it impossible for the PA to work in a way that would ever force Israel to acknowledge that a state had been “built.”

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has sometimes spoken of abolishing the Palestinian Authority if Netanyahu’s government doesn’t take real steps toward a peace settlement. Abolition would end a charade, but it would also come with a cost to the Palestinians, mostly in the form of handing the Israelis an argument, to be used in perpetuity, that it was the Palestinians who destroyed the Oslo accords and gave up on peace. The charade is also a trap.
    One can only imagine Fayyad’s deepest thoughts at the moment. His resignation reportedly involved disagreements with Abbas, as well as significant opposition to Fayyad within Fatah. But he surely must be feeling some personal relief. He is too smart and too honest not to perceive the stooge-like quality of the enterprise he has been involved in. No one should complain if he were to retire from public life and move into a comfortable academic position somewhere.


  • Conférence de presse lors de la visite du PM qatarien, Hamad Bin Jassem à Berlin :"les FM sont arrivés au pouvoir par les urnes non par le fait de l’aide qatarienne"

    The premier was speaking after a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin.

    “Don’t be alarmed. We are very conscious about our actions. We only support the will of the people. We don’t interfere in the governance of states,” Shaikh Hamad said at a joint news conference with Merkel.

    He argued that advances by Islamists in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya were the result of free elections, not Qatar’s doing.

    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/qatar/qatar-denies-brotherhood-bias-1.1171524


  • Rien ne sert de discourir, il vaut mieux mentir à point ?

    Syrie. Perspective différente des événements de Syrie offerte par l’agence de presse iranienne Fars News Agency. Dans un premier article qui reprend des informations de l’agence syrienne SANA, elle fait valoir les réussites militaires du régime. On notera qu’elle se contente de signaler qu’un « grand nombre de personnes » ont été tuées depuis mars 2011 sans mention d’un quelconque chiffre. Dans le second article, elle se fait également l’écho des déclarations des autorités de Damas (en l’occurrence le vice-ministre des affaires étrangères Faisal al-Miqdad ) pour critiquer la France et la Grande Bretagne qui soutiennent al-Qaïda puisque ces deux pays « soutiennent des groupes armées » en Syrie.

    (I) Syrian Forces Kill More Militants, Seize Arms

    TEHRAN (FNA)- The Syrian Army said it has killed more foreign-sponsored militants and seized their weapons during an operation across the country .
    2013-04-16

    http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=9107161312

    Syrian government forces launched attacks against militants in the governorates of Homs, Idlib, Daraa, Latakia, Hama, Deir ez-Zor, Aleppo, and Damascus, on Monday and killed dozens of them, the official SANA news agency reported.

    In addition, the Syrian armed forces captured many machine guns, sniper rifles, rocket launchers, hand-made rockets, mortar shells and anti-tank missiles.

    (…) The troops dismantled five Turkish-made anti-armor mines and captured thirteen explosive devices planted on the road between Khan Shekhun and Ma’art al-Nouman in Idlib governorate.
    (…) The Syria crisis began in March 2011, and many people, including large numbers of soldiers and security personnel, have been killed in the violence. The Syrian government says that the chaos is being orchestrated from outside the country, and there are reports that a very large number of the militants are foreign nationals. In an interview recently broadcast on Turkish television, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said that if the militants fighting against the Syrian government take power in his country they could destabilize the entire Middle East for decades. “If the unrest in Syria leads to the partitioning of the country, or if the terrorist forces take control... the situation will inevitably spill over into neighboring countries and create a domino effect throughout the Middle East and beyond,” he added.

    (II) Syria Slams France, UK for Supporting Al-Qaeda

    TEHRAN (FNA)- The Syrian government criticized Britain and France for supporting al-Qaeda terrorists in their fight against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

    http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=9107161318

    “Britain and France were complacent about supporting al-Qaeda directly or indirectly,” Syria’s Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal al-Miqdad said in an interview on Monday, press tv reported. Miqdad described the UK and France as “new colonialists” for giving political and military support to the armed groups in Syria. The Syrian official also criticized Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar for acting to ensure western interests. Miqdad said he hoped Jordan would not boost its involvement in the unrest in Syria. “The same forces that are killing innocent people in Syria are in Jordan too… We have stupid Arabs who are facilitating what the others are planning for the region. But the conspiracy begins in the west,” he added. In an interview recently broadcast on Turkish television, Assad accused Turkey of harboring terrorists and transferring them into Syria. Damascus says Ankara has been playing a key role in fueling the unrest in Syria by financing, training, and arming the militants since violence erupted in the Arab country in March 2011. Assad also warned that if his country “is partitioned, or if terrorist forces take control of the country, there will be direct contagion of the surrounding countries.” Many people, including large numbers of army and security personnel, have been killed in the violence in Syria.


  • Pour le New York Times la démission du premier ministre Salam Fayyad ouvre la voie à un gouvernement de réconciliation nationale qui pourrait bien rebuter la communauté internationale. Même composé de « technocrates », il n’aurait pas plus de valeur aux yeux d’Israël qu’une direction politique dans laquelle siègerait le Hamas.

    The New York Times
    A Resignation Means More Uncertainty for the Palestinians
    By ISABEL KERSHNER

    Published: April 14, 2013

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/world/middleeast/fayyads-resignation-means-uncertainty-for-palestinians.html?pagewanted=all

    “JERUSALEM — Salam Fayyad, the internationally respected Palestinian politician and economist, is widely credited for ending the chaos in the West Bank and putting things in order in his six years as prime minister. But his resignation over the weekend, the result of internal power struggles, has left the Palestinian Authority suspended in political ambiguity and confusion.

    Analysts said Sunday that by accepting Mr. Fayyad’s resignation, the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, has put himself in a political bind just as the Obama administration has been trying to restart long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

    That, many Palestinians say, is because the vacuum created by Mr. Fayyad’s resignation presents an opportunity for renewed reconciliation efforts between Mr. Abbas’s Fatah party and its bitter rival, Hamas, the Islamic militant group that controls Gaza. While healing the rift would be a popular course of action among Palestinians, it could complicate peace efforts and cause some Western donor nations to consider withholding much-needed funds, fearing that they could be used by Hamas. Hamas is classified as a terrorist organization by Israel, the United States and the European Union” (…)


  • Barak Ravid (Haaretz) détaille les raisons qui ont conduit le président Abou Mazen à se défaire de son premier ministre: son aura internationale, son refus de la corruption et du népotisme, la jalousie qu’il éveillait chez les envieux, la rancœur du président à son égard parce qu’il avait jugé en novembre dernier que la reconnaissance de la Palestine aux Nations Unies n’avait qu’une valeur symbolique, l’affrontement des deux autour de la récente démission de Nabil Qassis, ministre des Finances. L’auteur de l’article voit dans cette démission le signe d’une désintégration de l’Autorité palestinienne et s’interroge sur l’attitude des bailleurs de fond internationaux – notamment américains -qui pourraient être réticents à l’idée d’accorder leurs aides au prochain gouvernement palestinien. Il y voit aussi le résultat de l’attitude ambiguë adoptée par Netanyahu à l’égard de Salam Fayyad : reconnaissance de ses compétences mais aussi inquiétude de voir qu’il réussissait à construire les infrastructures de l’Etat palestinien.

    Fayyad’s resignation: The beginning of the end of the PA?

    It was actually the PA prime minister’s successes that eventually led to his downfall. His effective management and relative popularity meant he was a threat to too many people.

    By Barak Ravid | Apr.14, 2013 | 1:24 AM | 41
    Haaretz

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/middle-east/fayyad-s-resignation-the-beginning-of-the-end-of-the-pa-1.515292

    “The resignation of Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Salam Fayyad on Saturday is a dramatic development. Its ramifications won’t just reverberate in the part of the West Bank under Palestinian control, but also affect Israel and the Obama administration’s efforts to renew the peace process, as well as the European Union’s policy towards the Palestinians.

    For Israel’s government and defense establishment, the U.S., and the EU, which both regularly provide economic aid to the Palestinian Authority, Fayyad was the go-to man. The former International Monetary Fund economist was educated in the U.S. and was a symbol of good governance and the war on corruption. His plan to build Palestinian state institutions from the bottom up received much international support.

    But it was this success that itself bore within it the seeds of his demise. Fayyad, who served as prime minister since 2007, resigned after his relations with PA President Mahmoud Abbas deteriorated, reaching an unprecedented low. The crisis of confidence between the two leaders was sharp and irreparable. Abbas and the Fatah party’s old guard that surround him saw Fayyad as a political rival who needed to be eliminated.

    Fayyad’s resignation is another sign of the PA’s internal disintegration and the deep political crisis it is struggling with. In order to survive, Abbas imposed a semi-autocratic regime in the West Bank styled after that of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Journalists and bloggers are sent to prison, demonstrations and criticism are suppressed with an iron fist and the government doesn’t function while the ruler travels the globe.”

    #Salam_Fayyad #Obama #Mahmoud_Abbas #Fatah #Palestinian_independence #Nabil_Kassis #Netanyahu


  • 44 dont 11
    premier cas confirmé à Pékin

    First human #H7N9 bird flu case in Beijing confirmed - The Times of India
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/china/First-human-H7N9-bird-flu-case-in-Beijing-confirmed/articleshow/19523938.cms

    BEIJING: A seven-year-old girl was confirmed as Beijing’s first human case of H7N9 bird flu on Saturday, local authorities said, as China’s outbreak of the disease spread to the capital.

    The girl, whose parents are poultry traders, was in a stable condition in hospital, the Beijing health bureau said. Her mother and father had been quarantined for observation but had shown no symptoms so far, it added.


  • Grosse prestation du sénateur républicain, candidat potentiel pour 2016, à l’Université Howard ( an historically Black college in Washington, D.C. )

    Rand Paul Says The Lack Of Black GOP Voters Stems From The Great Depression During Speech At Howard University : Politics : Latinos Post
    http://www.latinospost.com/articles/16360/20130410/rand-paul-lack-black-gop-voters-stems-great-depression-during.htm

    Après avoir étalé son ignorance en ne se « rappelant pas » le nom du premier sénateur noir, pourtant ancien élève de cette même Université…

    The Kentucky senator also drew groans when he asked the crowd if they knew that Black Republicans founded the NAACP in the early 1900s.  “We know our history!,” an audience member yelled out.

    Puis, il continue en analysant le vote des noirs en faveur des démocrates,

    Just as painful was hearing Paul’s recounts of Black history. According to him, Republicans lost a majority of Black votes not because the party made efforts to appease white Southern voters, but because African Americans became ‘impatient for economic equality’ and thus gravitated toward Democrats who offered <stroke> free stuff </stroke> ‘unlimited federal assistance.’
    “I think what happened during the Great Depression was that African Americans understood that Republicans championed citizenship and voting rights but they became impatient for economic emancipation,” stated the Kentucky senator.
    ‘African Americans languished below white Americans in every measure of economic success and the Depression was especially harsh for those at the lowest rung of poverty,’ continued the first term congressman.
    ‘The Democrats promised equalizing outcomes through unlimited federal assistance while Republicans offered something that seemed less tangible-the promise of equalizing opportunity through free markets.’

    C’est sûr qu’avec le discours « vous vous êtes laissés bernés par les sirènes de l’État-Providence, au lieu de faire fonctionner les mécanismes de marché pour réduire les inégalités », il va mobiliser les masses pour le GOP…

    De façon intéressante, ce compte-rendu critique, saluant tout de même le courage de Rand Paul, est fait sur le site Latinos Post


  • Camarades féministes, je vous rends hommage | A contrario
    http://www.acontrario.net/2013/04/06/camarades-feministes-je-vous-rends-hommage

    Et être féministe, c’est ne pas avoir peur. Ni d’être seule, ni d’être plusieurs, ni d’être avec, ni d’être contre, ni d’être trop, ou pas assez, ou pas correctement.

    C’est refuser d’agir en fonction du droit des autres à nous prescrire la signification symbolique de nos actes. C’est s’affranchir de leur regard et en être plus heureuse, plus sereine, plus forte, plus égale en somme, même sous un déluge de haine.

    J’accueille aujourd’hui cette haine avec une indifférence si totale que j’ai presque du mal à me souvenir de ce que je ressentais, il y a encore 5 ans, quand on me promettait de me saigner comme une truie, ou de me violer parce que c’était tout ce que je « méritais ». Quand après une intervention publique je recevais des mails orduriers. Quand suite à un article on m’insultait copieusement. Quand ma famille me regardait avec horreur parce que j’avais repris mes études en laissant à mon mari le soin de s’occuper de nos enfants pendant que j’étais à la fac, après une journée/semaine de boulot. Quand certains de mes amis ont préféré se détourner de moi parce que j’étais devenue « pas marrante ».

    Aujourd’hui tout cela me laisse froide. On me traite toujours de grosse pute, de salope, de pourriture, de connasse, de mal baisée, et dans un registre plus calme, on m’explique toujours à quel point le féminisme c’est de la merde, à quel point je me fourvoie, à quel point nous avons toutes tort, à quel point « nous exagérons ». Je ne fais même plus semblant de m’en préoccuper, j’en ai fini avec le regard des autres. Il ne m’intéresse pas.

    • Oui, oui, oui, mille bravos à toutes celles qui tiennent encore le cap du #féminisme.
      Hier, une co-voitureuse (27 ans) m’explique que durant un an elle a cherché un emploi et que toujours revient la question qui n’est jamais posée qu’aux femmes « Est-ce que vous souhaitez un enfant ? » Dans la voiture, on s’offusque tous avec elle : « Et pourtant je ne suis pas féministe » lâche-t-elle. Mais ma grande, il serait temps que tu le deviennes, féministe !

    • En train de lire Lait noir, d’#Elif_Shafak, une auteure #turque : très belle réflexion sur l’#écriture et la #maternité - et plus généralement sur la condition féminine. Elle imagine que les « grands auteurs » aient eu des soeurs aussi douées qu’eux, et le sort qui leur aurait été réservé - et comment on a soigneusement écarté les #femmes de l’histoire littéraire (de l’histoire tout court) en leur faisant faire des gamins, la cuisine et le ménage. Elle-même, avec force tiraillements intérieurs qu’elle met très bien en scène, veut l’écriture et un enfant.


  • Beijing’s westward pivot will make the Gulf a critical ally
    http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/comment/beijings-westward-pivot-will-make-the-gulf-a-critical-ally

    Where does the Arabian Gulf fit in China’s emerging new diplomacy? Based on the recent flurry of diplomatic activities involving the Gulf and China (Chinese premier Wen Jiabao visited three Gulf states in January last year and the speaker of the Federal National Council of the UAE, Mohammed Al Murr, met last week in Beijing the head of the Chinese parliament), the Gulf remains an essential part of China’s resource-focused diplomacy.
    China, already the world’s largest importer of crude oil, depends on the Gulf for 44 per cent of its oil imports.

    Given the worsening air-pollution in China, Beijing must also find the Gulf’s abundant natural gas supply attractive. To be sure, China has massive deposits of shale gas, but the geological challenges, lack of infrastructure, scarcity of water and uncertain property rights make it unlikely that China will start tapping into its shale gas as a source of energy any time soon.
    In the meantime, any sensible Chinese official in Beijing knows that he must get his hands on as much clean natural gas as possible. Compared with Russian gas, which will not start shipping until 2018, gas from the Gulf can be imported immediately.

    To some, Beijing may even have a long-term military design on the Arabian Gulf. With its growing military might, China will naturally want to protect its own energy sources. However, it is unlikely that Beijing would risk confronting the Americans by deploying its navy to the Gulf (at the moment, it simply does not have a blue water navy capable of being deployed far away from China). The Chinese are experienced free-riders. As long as the United States is keeping the international shipping lanes open for them, China needs not waste its own money duplicating the task.


  • Adoption du premier traité sur le commerce international des armes conventionnelles.

    L’Assemblée générale de l’ONU vient d’adopter aujourd’hui le premier traité sur le commerce international des armes conventionnelles. La résolution – et donc le Traité – a recueilli 154 voix. 3 pays ont voté contre : Syrie, Corée du Nord et Iran. Plus grave, 23 pays ont choisi l’abstention dont de gros exportateurs d’armes comme la Russie et la Chine et d’importants acquéreurs comme l’Egypte, l’Inde, l’Indonésie ou le Pakistan. Chaque membre de l’ONU a la liberté désormais de signer le traité et de le ratifier. La Russie a déjà indiqué qu’elle ne le ferait pas.

    Tuesday, April 2, 2013
    We have an Arms Trade Treaty! But the hard work starts now...
    http://armstradetreaty.blogspot.fr

    On Tuesday, 2 April 2013, States gathered at the United Nations General Assembly for the adoption of the UN Arms Trade Treaty. As French President General de Gaulle famously said prior to referenda he put to the French people, “Je veux un ’oui’ massif !” And this is what was achieved today. The resolution—and thus the treaty—was adopted by an overwhelming margin: 154 votes to three with 23 abstentions.

    With the benefit of “20-20 hindsight”, we should therefore heartily thank the United States for having blocked agreement at the diplomatic conference in July 2012, as the treaty text that has ultimately been adopted is much better and stronger than the draft proposed by the then-Conference President, Ambassador Moritan.
    Here in the General Assembly, the treaty was considered directly in plenary meeting under Agenda Item 94 (General and Complete Disarmament). In the words of the General Assembly President, “The historic dimension of this day” is that a global arms trade treaty is “for the first time the subject of action in this Chamber.” He noted that the Conference on Disarmament had not produced significant results for more than a decade.

    Conference President Peter Woolacott then took the floor. He noted that he had ruled that there was not a consensus in the Conference itself due to the objections of Iran, DPR Korea, and Syria. The final text is a compromise text but would make a difference to the broadest range of stakeholders. At this point, Costa Rica introduced the draft resolution that would adopt the treaty. The Costa Rican Ambassador stated that the treaty was a robust and balanced document.

    In explanations before vote (…) Syria stated that they “were not against the treaty” but said that “we were in need of a good treaty that we will not regret later”. It had wanted a reference in the text to the right to self-determination of peoples living under foreign occupation, and specifically cited Israel in this regard. It also wanted a categorical reference to non-supply to unauthorised non-state terrorists. It did not refer to aggression. The criteria for denying exports were selective, and also represented interference in the work of the UN Security Council.

    (...) Russia stated that the draft had a number of shortcomings, notably the lack of a specific prohibition on transfers to unauthorised non-state actors. It was particularly concerned about Article 6(3). Knowledge meant “full knowledge”—in Russian it would be translated as “possesses knowledge”. It would abstain in the vote.
    Sudan noted the lack of a specific prohibition on transfers to unauthorised non-state actors. It regretted the lack of definitions. It would abstain in the vote.

    (...) Egypt regretted the lack of consensus in the two diplomatic conferences and that a disarmament treaty was adopted by a vote. The provision of prohibitions should have included a reference to aggression. It also referred to resolutions of the Human Rights Council as being relevant for determinations of whether serious violations of human rights had occurred.

    (...) China stated that it had abstained and that the process of adoption of the ATT would not constitute a precedent for future arms negotiations.

    (...) The UAE welcomed the adoption of the treaty and had voted in favour of the resolution. It associated itself with the concerns to be expressed subsequently by Lebanon. It regretted the lack of a reference to the rights of people under foreign occupation.
    Lebanon regretted the lack of a reference to the rights of people under foreign occupation.

    (...) Iran stated that it had voted against the resolution. It had many objections (more than a dozen) to the text of the treaty, including the reference to the UN Security Council.

    Statement after the vote:
    The European Union stated its appreciation of the adoption of the treaty.

    Lebanon speaking on behalf of the Arab Group said that they had hoped to join support for the treaty but they found that the text was not balanced.


  • Ibrahim al-Amin (Al-Akhbar) énumère, de manière pas toujours logique, les ambitions de l’opposition syrienne qui vient de se donner un premier ministre par intérim, sous la « pression de certains pays comme la France, la Grande-Bretagne, la Turquie, le Qatar et l’Arabie saoudite » :
    – Unifier les diverses composantes politiques et militaires syriennes - y compris le Front Al-Nosra ;
    – Occuper le siège vacant de la Syrie au sein de la Ligue arabe et dans d’autres instances arabes ;
    – Etre perçue comme l’égal du régime de Damas dans la perspective de futures négociations et se présenter comme le seul et unique représentant du peuple syrien ;
    – Ecarter ceux qui, au sein de la coalition, ont accepté le principe d’un dialogue avec le régime, comme Moaz al-Khatib (Président de la Coalition Nationale Syrienne) ;
    – Obtenir des avancées sur le terrain de manière à contrecarrer toute velléité américano-russe, avec ou sans le truchement de Lakhdar Brahimi, de contraindre à un dialogue avec Damas.

    Why the Rush to Form a Syrian Opposition Interim Government?

    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/why-rush-form-syrian-opposition-interim-government

    By: Ibrahim al-Amin, editor-in-chief of Al-Akhbar.

    Published Thursday, March 21, 2013

    “Syrian opposition groups only took the step of naming a head of an interim transitional government as a result of pressure, on the one hand, from France and Britain, and Turkey, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia on the other.
    But what does this move signify, and what does it add to the agenda?
    They want the interim government to be the go-to place for any inquiries about the opposition – including armed groups on the ground. For one thing, the Syrian opposition’s sponsors believe it provides them with a fresh opportunity to unite various opposition groups. They see the process of forming an interim government as a means of bringing them all together by providing them with representation and resources.
    They want the interim government to be the go-to place for any inquiries about the opposition – including armed groups on the ground – as well as the sole provider and distributor of money, arms, and supplies. They hope that by channeling aid through it, all the political and paramilitary opposition factions will gradually be forced to accept it.”

    #Syria #interim transitional government #Syria opposition #Arab League #negotiation #Syria National Coalition #Al-Nusra Front #Turkey #France #Qatar #Saudi Arabia



  • Article intéressant sur le rôle des qatariennes dans le choix du premier ministre intérimaire de l’opposition syrienne

    “The Qataris achieved a major victory in the conflict to control a large part of the external Syrian opposition and to decide on its future path. In the next few days, Qatar will be working to achieve a new victory represented in granting the “interim cabinet” Syria’s seat at the Arab League… Several Syrian opposition sides agree on describing the events that took place in Istanbul two days ago as being a coup against the Qatari-Saudi agreement that had been reached in the last few weeks. The agreement had consisted of appointing the former Syrian Minister of Agriculture, Asaad Moustafa at the head of the “interim cabinet.”

    Le Safir

    http://www.assafir.com/Article.aspx?EditionId=2417&ChannelId=58155&ArticleId=2250&Author=%C3%A3%C3

    • Si les informations du Safir sont exactes, les qatariens sont un peu dans l’embarras désormais...

      “In this respect, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassem said that he hoped to see Al-Khatib reconsidering his position…. An ambassador who took part in the closed meetings that were held by the Arab ministers told Al-Hayat that the announcement made by Al-Khatib created wide controversy. He added: “Al-Khatib’s resignation followed by the decision taken by the Free Syrian Army not to recognize Hitto as the new prime minister created trouble and complicated the Arab position even further. This drove many sides to question the legitimacy of Hitto’s participation in the Arab summit. Let us not forget that many members in the Syrian National Coalition had decided to freeze their participation in the opposition bloc in protest against Hitto’s designation.” Al-Hayat has learned that no final decision has yet been taken regarding the participation of Hitto in the summit.

      “Sources said that the final decision will be that of Prince of Qatar Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa who will be consulting the other Arab leaders on this matter before he announces his decision… Sources inside the Coalition told Al-Hayat that the executive office had not accepted Khatib’s resignation. The sources talking to Al-Hayat added: “The Coalition did not accept his resignation and it has rather asked the general assembly to give its decision on this matter. However, it is worth mentioning that the executive committee did not ask Al-Khatib to back down on his decision or to withdraw his resignation…” An assistant to Moaz al-Khatib told Al-Hayat that the latter had sent an internal memorandum following his resignation, in which he asked all the members to support Hitto in his mission…”

      Al-Hayat
      http://alhayat.com/Details/496442


  • Reward people who ’live healthily’, says think-tank - Health News - NHS Choices
    http://www.nhs.uk/news/2013/03March/Pages/Reward-people-who-live-healthily-says-think-tank.aspx

    Synthèse, mise en situation et revue des réactions faites par le NHS.

    Le rapport du think tank Demos suggère l’instauration dans les système de soins d’un système de type bonus-malus en fonction des habitudes de vie saines ou non. Par exemple, faire passer les « bons éléments » en premier dans les listes d’attente…

    Le NHS indique que ce n’est pas encore tout de suite que cette option sera intégrée dans les choix du système national de santé.

    The Demos report makes a series of recommendations based on engagement with experts, policy makers and politicians. In terms of public health, it argues that the health service should use a model of care similar to the insurance industry.
    For example, drivers with a good safety record are often ’rewarded’ with lower insurance premiums. The report suggests that people who commit to reducing their risk of developing chronic health disorders – by taking regular exercise or quitting smoking, for example – should also be rewarded.
    One reward proposed by the report, which has dominated many of the headlines, is that people who live healthily should be moved to the front of the queue for non-emergency NHS procedures. However, as these proposals have been put forward by a think-tank, they are unlikely to become NHS policy any time soon, if at all.

    L’article souligne que l’auteur principal de ce rapport, financé par une compagnie d’assurance, est responsable du projet Progressive Conservatism !…


  • Video: Dignity in Pregnancy for Asylum Seeking Women

    short film about the risks facing pregnant women in the asylum system in the UK. Unlike other women who find pregnancy an exciting and hopeful time, pregnancy for many asylum seeking women is a time of upheaval and distress due to the UK Border Agency’s policies of moving them across the country to where accommodation is available. This leads to women uprooted from their friends, family and healthcare, leaving them isolated and vulnerable. The Refugee Council and Maternity Action are calling for all women to be allowed Dignity In Pregnancy www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/dignityinpregn­ancy

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjdCLFs_vBs&feature=youtu.be

    #migration #asile #maternité #UK #Angleterre #dignité #femme


  • Au Pakistan commence le procès de l’incendie meurtrier de l’atelier de confection en septembre 2012 (environ 300 morts et des centaines de blessés graves). La qualification de l’accusation retenue par le tribunal (meurtre) a finalement été abandonnée sous la pression du premier ministre et des investisseurs locaux et internationaux...

    Murder charges dropped in Pakistani factory fire - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/04/paki-f04.html

    By Sampath Perera
    4 February 2013

    Pakistan prosecutors have dropped murder charges against the owners of a Karachi garment factory that burned down last September, killing nearly 300 workers. The charge sheet was changed after the intervention of Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, under pressure from domestic and international investors.

    Ashraf met leaders of Pakistan’s largest and most influential business lobby group, the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI), on December 29. The KCCI had protested against the murder charges initially laid against the Ali Enterprises owners, “simply because they owned” the factory, and argued they should instead face lesser counts of “negligence”.


  • #Google : les secrets de son département des ressources humaines - Slate.fr
    http://www.slate.fr/story/67685/google-la-boite-bonheur

    Frahad Manjoo nous amène au coeur du fonctionnement du département de ressources humaines de Google, le People Operation (Pops) dont le fonctionnement s’appuie sur un logiciel sophistiqué destiné au traitement des statistiques recueillies auprès des salariés. L’ambition ici est de dégager des certitudes empiriques sur chaque aspect de la vie des employés de Google –pas uniquement le niveau de salaire ou de prestations approprié mais également des détails d’apparence triviale, comme la taille ou la (...)

    #management

    • Il serait toutefois erroné de penser que Google distribue les bienfaits dans le seul but d’être sympa. POPS surveille attentivement des quantités de statistiques relatives à la façon dont les employés réagissent aux avantages octroyés : apparemment, l’entreprise ne jette pas l’argent par les fenêtres.

      Le congé maternité de cinq mois, par exemple, a permis à l’entreprise d’en gagner. Une fois mis en place, le taux de départs de Google chez les jeunes mères a rejoint la moyenne de l’entreprise. « Une baisse de 50 % –c’était énorme ! »

      #femmes #maternité #travail

    • Bien sûr, Google n’est pas sympa. Mais en matière de management, il a visiblement compris depuis longtemps qu’il faut donner une relative liberté à ses employés - une liberté bien contrôlé, nous sommes d’accord - ce qui est encore loin d’être le cas dans le management. Bien sûr, Google ne met pas en place toutes ces métriques pour rien. Le but c’est que cela lui rapporte, et le papier de Manjoo, le montre très bien.

    • Le fait que les femmes désertent l’entreprise n’était pas uniquement un problème de parité, mais surtout un souci pour le bénéfice net de l’entreprise. Contrairement à beaucoup de secteurs de l’économie, dans les hautes technologies, le marché du travail est extrêmement tendu, et encore plus sur le segment des employés de qualité.

      #femmes-du-web (un jour existeront des rencontres web avec un maximum de 7% d’hommes, triés sur le volet, cela va sans dire, et personne n’aura intérêt à demander pourquoi il y a autant de femmes !)

    • POPS s’appuie sur un #logiciel sophistiqué destiné au traitement des statistiques recueillies auprès des salariés. L’ambition ici est de dégager des certitudes empiriques sur chaque aspect de la #vie des employés de Google –pas uniquement le niveau de salaire ou de prestations approprié mais également des détails d’apparence triviale, comme la taille ou la forme optimale des tables de la cafétéria, ou la longueur de la queue à l’heure du déjeuner.


  • Obsession : quand la grossesse ne pèse pas lourd - Grazia
    http://www.grazia.fr/societe/phenomenes/articles/obsession-quand-la-grossesse-ne-pese-pas-lourd-501021

    http://www.grazia.fr/var/grazia/storage/images/societe/phenomenes/articles/obsession-quand-la-grossesse-ne-pese-pas-lourd-501021/9352293-1-fre-FR/Obsession-quand-la-grossesse-ne-pese-pas-lourd_exact780x1040_p.jpg

    « J’étais enceinte de six mois quand j’ai compris que quelque chose clochait : je ne sentais plus mon bébé bouger. Quand les médecins ont posé les patchs de l’électrocardiogramme, son cœur ne battait déjà plus. Mon fils est mort de faim dans mon ventre. Et c’est ma faute : même enceinte, je voulais garder ma ligne à tout prix. » C’était en mai dernier. Sassou, 29 ans, a passé des heures en salle de travail. Il a fallu déclencher l’accouchement, et « expulser le fœtus mort », selon les termes médicaux. Ce bébé était désiré. Un berceau l’attendait dans une chambre fraîchement retapissée. Aujourd’hui encore, Sassou a la conviction « d’avoir tué [son] enfant, dit-elle. Même si je n’avais jamais imaginé que faire un régime, enceinte, pouvait avoir de telles conséquences. Les magazines sont pleins de photos de mannequins ou d’actrices hyper-minces alors qu’elles attendent un bébé ». Se mettre à la diète en attendant l’accouchement : une sorte de déni de maternité qui n’a rien à voir avec le déni de grossesse. Apparu aux États-Unis, le phénomène de la pregorexia (contraction de « pregnant » – enceinte – et « anorexia » – anorexie) gagne la France. Au désespoir des spécialistes de la santé.

    #femmes #maternité #poids


  • #Maternité : une discrimination fondamentale subsiste encore en Europe
    http://europe-liberte-securite-justice.org/2012/11/28/maternite-une-discrimination-fondamentale-subsiste-

    De plus, la question de rémunération durant le congé de maternité ne peut être dissociée du problème plus vaste de l’écart salarial entre hommes et femmes car les réductions de salaire durant le congé de maternité contribuent dans une large mesure à des inégalités salariales substantielles durant toute la vie des femmes.


  • Le dernier Populations et sociétés de l’#INED étudie l’activité des #femmes de #France et d’#Allemagne. Et pour une fois, c’est la France qui devrait servir de modèle.
    La conclusion de l’article de 4 pages :

    L’Allemagne affiche un taux d’emploi féminin en hausse sensible et désormais supérieur à celui de la France. Il faut cependant nuancer ce constat. La hausse du taux d’emploi allemand est avant tout due à l’essor du travail à temps partiel et ne s’est pas répercutée sur le taux d’emploi en
    équivalent temps plein. En d’autres termes, on assiste moins à un essor de l’emploi féminin qu’à un redéploiement. Le volume travaillé reste donc proportionnellement plus élevé en France où les femmes privilégient les emplois à temps plein, mais il y est réparti sur une proportion de femmes moins importante. Ce constat montre les limites des indicateurs utilisés par l’Union européenne dans ses recommandations. L’Allemagne a en effet atteint et dépassé l’objectif d’un taux d’emploi féminin de 60 % tandis que la France se situe juste en dessous. Les Françaises ne sont pas moins actives que les Allemandes, elles le sont autrement : elles entrent plus tard sur le marché du travail et en sortent plus tôt, elles sont proportionnellement moins nombreuses à travailler, mais ont des journées plus longues, elles sont plus touchées par le chômage, mais sont aussi plus réparties dans l’emploi. C’est en effet précisément parce que le travail des mères est depuis longtemps accepté en France et revêt une dimension de norme que les écarts dans la participation à l’emploi en fonction du niveau d’instruction ou de la situation familiale sont plus faibles qu’outre-Rhin. En Allemagne en revanche, l’acceptation du travail des mères est récente et encore fragile, ce qui explique les écarts importants dans les taux d’emploi en fonction du diplôme et de la situation familiale. Il faudra certainement du temps pour que le travail des mères trouve sa place dans la société allemande, permettant une répartition plus homogène des femmes dans l’emploi et un temps de travail plus long, pour que les mères ne soient pas réduites à un statut de « 
    salaire de complément », mais trouvent une place à part entière dans l’emploi.

    #Travail #Temps_partiel #Maternité #Enfants


  • Interrogations sur les marges de manœuvre du nouveau Premier ministre jordanien, présenté comme proche de l’opposition mais avec un passé d’allégeance au régime et devant faire face à des contraintes économiques très lourdes. La politique de réduction des subventions énergétiques devrait continuer

    ‘New gov’t likely to continue old policies’ | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/new-govt-likely-to-continue-old-policies

    Analysts point out that the new premier, who served in several Cabinets and as senator — was a career statesman before becoming an opposition figure.

    “Many people forget but that before Abdullah Ensour became an opposition figure, he was a statesman and he has always remained a patriot,” said Hussein Rawashdeh, Ad Dustour columnist and political observer.

    Du reste le ministre de l’énergie est le même que dans le précédent cabinet

    “Many in the opposition will feel betrayed after we see more of Ensour the moderate statesman and less of Ensour, the critical parliamentarian.”

    #Jordanie
    #énergie
    #subventions