person:ban

  • L’idylle insolite de Donald Trump, artisan du « Muslim Ban » avec la dynastie wahhabite : 2/2
    https://www.madaniya.info/2019/06/06/lidylle-insolite-de-donald-trump-artisan-du-muslim-ban-avec-la-dynastie-w

    Un conseiller du prince héritier d’Abou Dhabi incuclpé aux Etats Unis pour détention de matériel pornographique.

    Coup dur pour la stratégie d’endiguement de l’Iran, un des missi dominici américain en direction de l’Arabie saoudite et des Emirats Arabes Unis, Georges Nader, homme d’affaires américain d’origine libanaise, a été inculpé pour détention de matériel pornographique.

    Son arrestation est intervenue le 4 juin 2019 une semaine après l’échec du triple sommet de la Mecque (islamique, arabe et Golfe), fin mai, et la décision de Benyamin Netanyahu d’organiser de nouvelles élections législatives israéliennes en septmebre, faute de pouvoir former un gouvernement. Deux echecs qui ont renvoyé aux calendes grecques le lancement de la transaction du siècle, conconctée sous l’égide de Jared Kusgner, le gendre présidentiel américain.

    Agé de 60 ans, Georges Nader a été conseiller du prince héritier d’Abou Dhabi, Mohamamd Ben Zayed et son chargé de mission auprès de l’équipe de campagne présidentielle de Donald Trump, en vue d’établir un partenariat privilégié entre les Emirats arabes Unis et les Etats Unis.

    L’intermédiaire libano américain avait entrepris des démarches similaires auprès d’Israël, la Russie et l’Arabie saoudite.

    Georges Nader avait été entendu par Robert Mueller chargé de l’enquête sur les interérecnes russes de la campagne présidentielle américaine.

    Objet d’une première interpellation en 1987, il a été arrêté le 4 juin 2019 à son arrivée à l’aéroport John F. Kennedy de New York, en vertu d’un mandat d’arrêt délivré en 2018, en raison du fait que « sur son portable, il conservait des photos de mineurs en position obscène ».

    • Un homme d’affaires américano-libanais arrêté à New York pour possession d’images pédopornographiques
      https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1173549/un-homme-daffaires-americano-libanais-arrete-a-new-york-pour-possessi
      https://s.olj.me/storage/attachments/1174/800_950951.png/r/800

      M. Nader avait aidé à mettre en œuvre une rencontre, aux Seychelles en janvier 2017, entre Erik Prince, un partisan de M. Trump qui avait fondé la société de sécurité privée Blackwater, et un responsable russe proche de Vladimir Poutine, rappelle le Washington Post. « L’objet de cette rencontre a suscité un intérêt particulier de la part des enquêteur du procureur Mueller, et certaines questions restent sans réponse, même après la publication du rapport Mueller », ajoute le quotidien américain.

    • Mars 2018 : Les Emirats accusés d’influencer Trump : un homme d’affaires américano-libanais dans le collimateur
      https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1102941/les-emirats-accuses-dinfluencer-la-politique-etrangere-de-trump-un-ho

      Selon le quotidien, les enquêteurs de M. Mueller, qui mène l’enquête sur une possible collusion entre l’équipe du président Donald Trump et la Russie pendant la campagne présidentielle de 2016, ont interrogé M. Nader qui aurait tenté d’influencer la politique étrangère des Etats-Unis en faveur des Emirats, notamment en « donnant de l’argent en soutien à Trump durant la dernière campagne présidentielle ».

      L’Arabie saoudite et les Emirats arabes unis, de même que Bahreïn et l’Egypte, ont rompu en juin dernier leurs relations diplomatiques avec le Qatar, qu’ils accusent de promouvoir le terrorisme, ciblant aussi dans cette initiative l’Iran, ennemi juré de Riyad.

      Le New York Times cite le cas d’une relation de M. Nader, Eliott Broidy, un mécène de la campagne de Trump, très proche du Premier ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu, qui a des centaines de millions de dollars de contrats avec la famille régnante émirati. M. Broidy a oeuvré ces derniers mois pour pousser l’administration Trump à se rapprocher des Emirats.

    • George Nader (businessman) - Wikipedia
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Nader_(businessman)

      Nader has been charged with multiple crimes involving the sexual exploitation of minors, and convicted of several of them. A 1985 charge of receiving from the Netherlands films and magazines depicting pre and post-pubescent boys engaged in sexual acts, was dismissed due to an invalid search warrant.[18] A federal court in Virginia in 1991 gave him a six-month sentence on a felony charge of transporting from Germany, pornographic videotapes of boys about 13 or 14 years old.[18] Prosecutors agreed to put the case under seal “due to the extremely sensitive nature of Mr. Nader’s work in the Middle East.”[18]

      In 2003, he was convicted in Prague, Czech Republic for sexually abusing 10 boys, for which he served one year in prison.[1][18] A spokesperson of the court told press that the crimes occurred between 1999 and 2002. In one case, at his room in Hilton Prague Hotel, he requested oral sex from a 14-year-old boy and after he refused, Nader masturbated in front of him, paying him 2,000 koruna.[1]

      On June 3, 2019, Nader was arrested by federal agents for possession of child pornography as well as bestiality[19] and, for a second time, transportation of child pornography. These charges stemmed from his January 2018 questioning by FBI agents working on behalf of special counsel Robert Mueller, at which time child pornography was incidentally found on one of his three cell phones as agents inspected it pursuant to a warrant.[20][21] He was ordered to be held pending his extradition to Virginia.[22]

  • Taxi loan abuses part of a broader pattern in New York | American Banker
    https://www.americanbanker.com/opinion/taxi-loan-abuses-part-of-a-broader-pattern-in-new-york

    An investigation by The New York Times earlier this week suggested that the massive collapse in New York City taxi medallion prices since 2014 was not primarily the result of new competition from Uber and Lyft. Instead it was the inevitable outcome of unsustainable lending practices.

    Low-paid cab drivers who dreamed of becoming their own bosses took out loans that required them to pay $1 million or more. The payments often covered only the interest that borrowers owed, and interest rates spiked if the loans were not repaid within a few years. From the lenders’ standpoint, the loans only made sense as long as medallion prices continued to rise.

    Cabbies, many of them immigrants, suffered harsh consequences after taking out loans with terms they did not fully understand.

    Cab drivers who dreamed of becoming their own bosses took out loans that required them to pay $1 million or more.

    Since the articles were published, various politicians have floated potential responses that are narrowly targeted at taxi medallion lending.

    New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio ordered a probe of taxi loan brokers. Other local officials suggested that the city should buy onerous loans at discounted prices and then forgive much of the debt.

    Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., asked the National Credit Union Administration to conduct a review of supervisory practices at institutions that engage in taxi medallion lending.

    But taxi drivers are not the only businesspeople who regularly get deceived by unscrupulous lenders. So do contractors, restaurateurs and the owners of various other kinds of struggling small businesses. Many high-cost business lenders are based in New York, where unusually favorable laws provide a haven to these companies.

    Some aspects of the New York City taxi loan market were unique. For example, local officials had a vested interest in keep medallion prices high, since the city was generating revenue from the proceeds of sales. Indeed, the Times showed that government officials enabled lending that has put many borrowers in dire straits.

    “The City of New York, more or less, is our partner,” Andrew Murstein, president of Medallion Financial, said in a 2011 interview.

    But in other ways, the loans to cab drivers resembled deceptively marketed loans that have ensnared a wide variety of cash-strapped small-business owners.

    Because the New York City taxi loans were classified as business loans, rather than consumer loans, they did not have to include standard disclosures regarding interest rates. They often included large fees and terms that unsophisticated borrowers did not understand.

    And according to the Times, some taxi medallion lenders used a tool that under New York law offers a uniquely powerful way to collect on business debt. Lenders in the Empire State can require applicants for small-business loans to sign a document called a confession of judgment, which prevents them from contesting any subsequent allegation that they have fallen behind on their payments.

    A Bloomberg News investigation last year found that merchant cash advance companies, which offer high-cost financing to small businesses across the country, have at times abused New York’s court system by forging documents and lying about how much money they are owed in order to obtain speedy judgments that cannot be contested by the borrower.

    Small businesses that use merchant cash advances are required to make daily payments based on a percentage of their daily revenue. The merchant cash advance firms avoid complying with New York’s strict usury rules by classifying their financing not as a loan, but rather as a purchase of the company’s future credit card receipts.

    The Bloomberg articles also chronicled the role of New York City marshals — mayoral appointees who enforce the court judgments, get a cut of the proceeds, and have been accused in some cases of improperly seeking to collect money outside of the city.

    As evidence of business lending abuses in New York has mounted, little change has occurred at the state level, though there does appear to be a growing appetite for reform.

    Last year, the New York State Department of Financial Services argued in a report that borrower protection laws and regulations should apply equally to all consumer lending and small-business lending activities.

    The Bloomberg investigation reportedly sparked probes by the New York attorney general’s office and the Manhattan district attorney’s office. On Thursday, Bloomberg reported that the Federal Trade Commission has also opened an investigation of potentially unfair or deceptive practices in the merchant cash advance industry.

    The loan practices that hurt taxi drivers are part of a broader pattern in New York, which has become the nation’s capital for predatory business lending. It remains to be seen whether state lawmakers and regulators will connect the dots.

    Bankshot is American Banker’s column for real-time analysis of today’s news.

    #USA #New_York #Taxi #Betrug #Ausbeutung

  • Suffering unseen: The dark truth behind wildlife tourism
    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2019/06/global-wildlife-tourism-social-media-causes-animal-suffering

    I’ve come back to check on a baby. Just after dusk I’m in a car lumbering down a muddy road in the rain, past rows of shackled elephants, their trunks swaying. I was here five hours before, when the sun was high and hot and tourists were on elephants’ backs.

    Walking now, I can barely see the path in the glow of my phone’s flashlight. When the wooden fence post of the stall stops me short, I point my light down and follow a current of rainwater across the concrete floor until it washes up against three large, gray feet. A fourth foot hovers above the surface, tethered tightly by a short chain and choked by a ring of metal spikes. When the elephant tires and puts her foot down, the spikes press deeper into her ankle.

    Meena is four years and two months old, still a toddler as elephants go. Khammon Kongkhaw, her mahout, or caretaker, told me earlier that Meena wears the spiked chain because she tends to kick. Kongkhaw has been responsible for Meena here at Maetaman Elephant Adventure, near Chiang Mai, in northern Thailand, since she was 11 months old. He said he keeps her on the spiked shackle only during the day and takes it off at night. But it’s night now.

    I ask Jin Laoshen, the Maetaman staffer accompanying me on this nighttime visit, why her chain is still on. He says he doesn’t know.

    Maetaman is one of many animal attractions in and around tourist-swarmed Chiang Mai. People spill out of tour buses and clamber onto the trunks of elephants that, at the prodding of their mahouts’ bullhooks (long poles with a sharp metal hook), hoist them in the air while cameras snap. Visitors thrust bananas toward elephants’ trunks. They watch as mahouts goad their elephants—some of the most intelligent animals on the planet—to throw darts or kick oversize soccer balls while music blares.

    Meena is one of Maetaman’s 10 show elephants. To be precise, she’s a painter. Twice a day, in front of throngs of chattering tourists, Kongkhaw puts a paintbrush in the tip of her trunk and presses a steel nail to her face to direct her brushstrokes as she drags primary colors across paper. Often he guides her to paint a wild elephant in the savanna. Her paintings are then sold to tourists.

    Meena’s life is set to follow the same trajectory as many of the roughly 3,800 captive elephants in Thailand and thousands more throughout Southeast Asia. She’ll perform in shows until she’s about 10. After that, she’ll become a riding elephant. Tourists will sit on a bench strapped to her back, and she’ll give several rides a day. When Meena is too old or sick to give rides—maybe at 55, maybe at 75—she’ll die. If she’s lucky, she’ll get a few years of retirement. She’ll spend most of her life on a chain in a stall.

    Wildlife attractions such as Maetaman lure people from around the world to be with animals like Meena, and they make up a lucrative segment of the booming global travel industry. Twice as many trips are being taken abroad as 15 years ago, a jump driven partly by Chinese tourists, who spend far more on international travel than any other nationality.

    Wildlife tourism isn’t new, but social media is setting the industry ablaze, turning encounters with exotic animals into photo-driven bucket-list toppers. Activities once publicized mostly in guidebooks now are shared instantly with multitudes of people by selfie-taking backpackers, tour-bus travelers, and social media “influencers” through a tap on their phone screens. Nearly all millennials (23- to 38-year-olds) use social media while traveling. Their selfies—of swims with dolphins, encounters with tigers, rides on elephants, and more—are viral advertising for attractions that tout up-close experiences with animals.

    For all the visibility social media provides, it doesn’t show what happens beyond the view of the camera lens. People who feel joy and exhilaration from getting close to wild animals usually are unaware that many of the animals at such attractions live a lot like Meena, or worse.

    Photographer Kirsten Luce and I set out to look behind the curtain of the thriving wildlife tourism industry, to see how animals at various attractions—including some that emphasize their humane care of animals—are treated once the selfie-taking crowds have gone.

    After leaving Maetaman, we take a five-minute car ride up a winding hill to a property announced by a wooden plaque as “Elephant EcoValley: where elephants are in good hands.” There are no elephant rides here. No paint shows or other performances. Visitors can stroll through an open-air museum and learn about Thailand’s national animal. They can make herbal treats for the elephants and paper from elephant dung. They can watch elephants in a grassy, tree-ringed field.

    EcoValley’s guest book is filled with praise from Australians, Danes, Americans—tourists who often shun elephant camps such as Maetaman because the rides and shows make them uneasy. Here, they can see unchained elephants and leave feeling good about supporting what they believe is an ethical establishment. What many don’t know is that EcoValley’s seemingly carefree elephants are brought here for the day from nearby Maetaman—and that the two attractions are actually a single business.

    Meena was brought here once, but she tried to run into the forest. Another young elephant, Mei, comes sometimes, but today she’s at Maetaman, playing the harmonica in the shows. When she’s not doing that, or spending the day at EcoValley, she’s chained near Meena in one of Maetaman’s elephant stalls.

    Meena Kalamapijit owns Maetaman as well as EcoValley, which she opened in November 2017 to cater to Westerners. She says her 56 elephants are well cared for and that giving rides and performing allow them to have necessary exercise. And, she says, Meena the elephant’s behavior has gotten better since her mahout started using the spiked chain.
    Read MoreWildlife Watch
    Why we’re shining a light on wildlife tourism
    Poaching is sending the shy, elusive pangolin to its doom
    How to do wildlife tourism right

    We sit with Kalamapijit on a balcony outside her office, and she explains that when Westerners, especially Americans, stopped coming to Maetaman, she eliminated one of the daily shows to allot time for visitors to watch elephants bathe in the river that runs through the camp.

    “Westerners enjoy bathing because it looks happy and natural,” she says. “But a Chinese tour agency called me and said, ‘Why are you cutting the show? Our customers love to see it, and they don’t care about bathing at all.’ ” Providing separate options is good for business, Kalamapijit says.

    Around the world Kirsten and I watched tourists watching captive animals. In Thailand we also saw American men bear-hug tigers in Chiang Mai and Chinese brides in wedding gowns ride young elephants in the aqua surf on the island of Phuket. We watched polar bears in wire muzzles ballroom dancing across the ice under a big top in Russia and teenage boys on the Amazon River snapping selfies with baby sloths.

    Most tourists who enjoy these encounters don’t know that the adult tigers may be declawed, drugged, or both. Or that there are always cubs for tourists to snuggle with because the cats are speed bred and the cubs are taken from their mothers just days after birth. Or that the elephants give rides and perform tricks without harming people only because they’ve been “broken” as babies and taught to fear the bullhook. Or that the Amazonian sloths taken illegally from the jungle often die within weeks of being put in captivity.

    As we traveled to performance pits and holding pens on three continents and in the Hawaiian Islands, asking questions about how animals are treated and getting answers that didn’t always add up, it became clear how methodically and systematically animal suffering is concealed.

    The wildlife tourism industry caters to people’s love of animals but often seeks to maximize profits by exploiting animals from birth to death. The industry’s economy depends largely on people believing that the animals they’re paying to watch or ride or feed are having fun too.

    It succeeds partly because tourists—in unfamiliar settings and eager to have a positive experience—typically don’t consider the possibility that they’re helping to hurt animals. Social media adds to the confusion: Oblivious endorsements from friends and trendsetters legitimize attractions before a traveler ever gets near an animal.

    There has been some recognition of social media’s role in the problem. In December 2017, after a National Geographic investigative report on harmful wildlife tourism in Amazonian Brazil and Peru, Instagram introduced a feature: Users who click or search one of dozens of hashtags, such as #slothselfie and #tigercubselfie, now get a pop-up warning that the content they’re viewing may be harmful to animals.

    Everyone finds Olga Barantseva on Instagram. “Photographer from Russia. Photographing dreams,” her bio reads. She meets clients for woodland photo shoots with captive wild animals just outside Moscow.

    For her 18th birthday, Sasha Belova treated herself to a session with Barantseva—and a pack of wolves. “It was my dream,” she says as she fidgets with her hair, which had been styled that morning. “Wolves are wild and dangerous.” The wolves are kept in small cages at a petting zoo when not participating in photo shoots.

    The Kravtsov family hired Barantseva to take their first professional family photos—all five family members, shivering and smiling in the birch forest, joined by a bear named Stepan.

    Barantseva has been photographing people and wild animals together for six years. She “woke up as a star,” she says, in 2015, when a couple of international media outlets found her online. Her audience has exploded to more than 80,000 followers worldwide. “I want to show harmony between people and animals,” she says.

    On a raw fall day, under a crown of golden birch leaves on a hill that overlooks a frigid lake, two-and-a-half-year-old Alexander Levin, dressed in a hooded bumblebee sweater, timidly holds Stepan’s paw.

    The bear’s owners, Yury and Svetlana Panteleenko, ply their star with food—tuna fish mixed with oatmeal—to get him to approach the boy. Snap: It looks like a tender friendship. The owners toss grapes to Stepan to get him to open his mouth wide. Snap: The bear looks as if he’s smiling.

    The Panteleenkos constantly move Stepan, adjusting his paws, feeding him, and positioning Alexander as Barantseva, pink-haired, bundled in jeans and a parka, captures each moment. Snap: A photo goes to her Instagram feed. A boy and a bear in golden Russian woods—a picture straight out of a fairy tale. It’s a contemporary twist on a long-standing Russian tradition of exploiting bears for entertainment.

    Another day in the same forest, Kirsten and I join 12 young women who have nearly identical Instagram accounts replete with dreamy photos of models caressing owls and wolves and foxes. Armed with fancy cameras but as yet modest numbers of followers, they all want the audience Barantseva has. Each has paid the Panteleenkos $760 to take identical shots of models with the ultimate prize: a bear in the woods.

    Stepan is 26 years old, elderly for a brown bear, and can hardly walk. The Panteleenkos say they bought him from a small zoo when he was three months old. They say the bear’s work—a constant stream of photo shoots and movies—provides money to keep him fed.

    A video on Svetlana Panteleenko’s Instagram account proclaims: “Love along with some great food can make anyone a teddy :-)”

    And just like that, social media takes a single instance of local animal tourism and broadcasts it to the world.

    When the documentary film Blackfish was released in 2013, it drew a swift and decisive reaction from the American public. Through the story of Tilikum, a distressed killer whale at SeaWorld in Orlando, Florida, the film detailed the miserable life orcas can face in captivity. Hundreds of thousands of outraged viewers signed petitions. Companies with partnership deals, such as Southwest Airlines, severed ties with SeaWorld. Attendance at SeaWorld’s water parks slipped; its stock nose-dived.

    James Regan says what he saw in Blackfish upset him. Regan, honeymooning in Hawaii with his wife, Katie, is from England, where the country’s last marine mammal park closed permanently in 1993. I meet him at Dolphin Quest Oahu, an upscale swim-with-dolphins business on the grounds of the beachfront Kahala Hotel & Resort, just east of Honolulu. The Regans paid $225 each to swim for 30 minutes in a small group with a bottlenose dolphin. One of two Dolphin Quest locations in Hawaii, the facility houses six dolphins.

    Bottlenose dolphins are the backbone of an industry that spans the globe. Swim-with-dolphins operations rely on captive-bred and wild-caught dolphins that live—and interact with tourists—in pools. The popularity of these photo-friendly attractions reflects the disconnect around dolphin experiences: People in the West increasingly shun shows that feature animals performing tricks, but many see swimming with captive dolphins as a vacation rite of passage.

    Katie Regan has wanted to swim with dolphins since she was a child. Her husband laughs and says of Dolphin Quest, “They paint a lovely picture. When you’re in America, everyone is smiling.” But he appreciates that the facility is at their hotel, so they can watch the dolphins being fed and cared for. He brings up Blackfish again.

    Katie protests: “Stop making my dream a horrible thing!”

    Rae Stone, president of Dolphin Quest and a marine mammal veterinarian, says the company donates money to conservation projects and educates visitors about perils that marine mammals face in the wild. By paying for this entertainment, she says, visitors are helping captive dolphins’ wild cousins.

    Stone notes that Dolphin Quest is certified “humane” by American Humane, an animal welfare nonprofit. (The Walt Disney Company, National Geographic’s majority owner, offers dolphin encounters on some vacation excursions and at an attraction in Epcot, one of its Orlando parks. Disney says it follows the animal welfare standards of the Association of Zoos & Aquariums, a nonprofit that accredits more than 230 facilities worldwide.)

    It’s a vigorous debate: whether even places with high standards, veterinarians on staff, and features such as pools filled with filtered ocean water can be truly humane for marine mammals.

    Dolphin Quest’s Stone says yes.

    Critics, including the Humane Society of the United States, which does not endorse keeping dolphins in captivity, say no. They argue that these animals have evolved to swim great distances and live in complex social groups—conditions that can’t be replicated in the confines of a pool. This helps explain why the National Aquarium, in Baltimore, announced in 2016 that its dolphins will be retired to a seaside sanctuary by 2020.

    Some U.S. attractions breed their own dolphins because the nation has restricted dolphin catching in the wild since 1972. But elsewhere, dolphins are still being taken from the wild and turned into performers.

    In China, which has no national laws on captive-animal welfare, dolphinariums with wild-caught animals are a booming business: There are now 78 marine mammal parks, and 26 more are under construction.

    To have the once-in-a-lifetime chance to see rare Black Sea dolphins, people in the landlocked town of Kaluga, a hundred miles from Moscow, don’t have to leave their city. In the parking lot of the Torgoviy Kvartal shopping mall, next to a hardware store, is a white inflatable pop-up aquarium: the Moscow Traveling Dolphinarium. It looks like a children’s bouncy castle that’s been drained of its color.

    Inside the puffy dome, parents buy their kids dolphin-shaped trinkets: fuzzy dolls and Mylar balloons, paper dolphin hats, and drinks in plastic dolphin tumblers. Families take their seats around a small pool. The venue is so intimate that even the cheapest seats, at nine dollars apiece, are within splashing distance.

    “My kids are jumping for joy,” says a woman named Anya, motioning toward her two giddy boys, bouncing in their seats.

    In the middle of the jubilant atmosphere, in water that seems much too shallow and much too murky, two dolphins swim listlessly in circles.

    Russia is one of only a few countries (Indonesia is another) where traveling oceanariums exist. Dolphins and beluga whales, which need to be immersed in water to stay alive, are put in tubs on trucks and carted from city to city in a loop that usually ends when they die. These traveling shows are aboveboard: Russia has no laws that regulate how marine mammals should be treated in captivity.

    The shows are the domestic arm of a brisk Russian global trade in dolphins and small whales. Black Sea bottlenose dolphins can’t be caught legally without a permit, but Russian fishermen can catch belugas and orcas under legal quotas in the name of science and education. Some belugas are sold legally to aquariums around the country. Russia now allows only a dozen or so orcas to be caught each year for scientific and educational purposes, and since April 2018, the government has cracked down on exporting them. But government investigators believe that Russian orcas—which can sell for millions—are being caught illegally for export to China.

    Captive orcas, which can grow to 20 feet long and more than 10,000 pounds, are too big for the traveling shows that typically feature dolphins and belugas. When I contacted the owners of the Moscow Traveling Dolphinarium and another operation, the White Whale Show, in separate telephone calls to ask where their dolphins and belugas come from, both men, Sergey Kuznetsov and Oleg Belesikov, hung up on me.

    Russia’s dozen or so traveling oceanariums are touted as a way to bring native wild animals to people who might never see the ocean.

    “Who else if not us?” says Mikhail Olyoshin, a staffer at one traveling oceanarium. And on this day in Kaluga, as the dolphins perform tricks to American pop songs and lie on platforms for several minutes for photo ops, parents and children express the same sentiment: Imagine, dolphins, up close, in my hometown. The ocean on delivery.

    Owners and operators of wildlife tourism attractions, from high-end facilities such as Dolphin Quest in Hawaii to low-end monkey shows in Thailand, say their animals live longer in captivity than wild counterparts because they’re safe from predators and environmental hazards. Show operators proudly emphasize that the animals under their care are with them for life. They’re family.

    Alla Azovtseva, a longtime dolphin trainer in Russia, shakes her head.

    “I don’t see any sense in this work. My conscience bites me. I look at my animals and want to cry,” says Azovtseva, who drives a red van with dolphins airbrushed on the side. At the moment, she’s training pilot whales to perform tricks at Moscow’s Moskvarium, one of Europe’s largest aquariums (not connected to the traveling dolphin shows). On her day off, we meet at a café near Red Square.

    She says she fell in love with dolphins in the late 1980s when she read a book by John Lilly, the American neuroscientist who broke open our understanding of the animals’ intelligence. She has spent 30 years training marine mammals to do tricks. But along the way she’s grown heartsick from forcing highly intelligent, social creatures to live isolated, barren lives in small tanks.

    “I would compare the dolphin situation with making a physicist sweep the street,” she says. “When they’re not engaged in performance or training, they just hang in the water facing down. It’s the deepest depression.”

    What people don’t know about many aquarium shows in Russia, Azovtseva says, is that the animals often die soon after being put in captivity, especially those in traveling shows. And Azovtseva—making clear she’s referring to the industry at large in Russia and not the Moskvarium—says she knows many aquariums quietly and illegally replace their animals with new ones.

    It’s been illegal to catch Black Sea dolphins in the wild for entertainment purposes since 2003, but according to Azovtseva, aquarium owners who want to increase their dolphin numbers quickly and cheaply buy dolphins poached there. Because these dolphins are acquired illegally, they’re missing the microchips that captive cetaceans in Russia are usually tagged with as a form of required identification.

    Some aquariums get around that, she says, by cutting out dead dolphins’ microchips and implanting them into replacement dolphins.

    “People are people,” Azovtseva says. “Once they see an opportunity, they exploit.” She says she can’t go on doing her work in the industry and that she’s decided to speak out because she wants people to know the truth about the origins and treatment of many of the marine mammals they love watching. We exchange a look—we both know what her words likely mean for her livelihood.

    “I don’t care if I’m fired,” she says defiantly. “When a person has nothing to lose, she becomes really brave.”

    I’m sitting on the edge of an infinity pool on the hilly Thai side of Thailand’s border with Myanmar, at a resort where rooms average more than a thousand dollars a night.

    Out past the pool, elephants roam in a lush valley. Sitting next to me is 20-year-old Stephanie van Houten. She’s Dutch and French, Tokyo born and raised, and a student at the University of Michigan. Her cosmopolitan background and pretty face make for a perfect cocktail of aspiration—she’s exactly the kind of Instagrammer who makes it as an influencer. That is, someone who has a large enough following to attract sponsors to underwrite posts and, in turn, travel, wardrobes, and bank accounts. In 2018, brands—fashion, travel, tech, and more—spent an estimated $1.6 billion on social media advertising by influencers.

    Van Houten has been here, at the Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp & Resort, before. This time, in a fairly standard influencer-brand arrangement, she’ll have a picnic with elephants and post about it to her growing legion of more than 25,000 Instagram followers. In exchange, she gets hundreds of dollars off the nightly rate.

    At Anantara the fields are green, and during the day at least, many of the resort’s 22 elephants are tethered on ropes more than a hundred feet long so they can move around and socialize. Nevertheless, they’re expected to let guests touch them and do yoga beside them.

    After van Houten’s elephant picnic, I watch her edit the day’s hundreds of photos. She selects an image with her favorite elephant, Bo. She likes it, she says, because she felt a connection with Bo and thinks that will come across. She posts it at 9:30 p.m.—the time she estimates the largest number of her followers will be online. She includes a long caption, summing it up as “my love story with this incredible creature,” and the hashtag #stopelephantriding. Immediately, likes from followers stream in—more than a thousand, as well as comments with heart-eyed emoji.

    Anantara is out of reach for anyone but the wealthy—or prominent influencers. Anyone else seeking a similar experience might do a Google search for, say, “Thailand elephant sanctuary.”

    As tourist demand for ethical experiences with animals has grown, affordable establishments, often calling themselves “sanctuaries,” have cropped up purporting to offer humane, up-close elephant encounters. Bathing with elephants—tourists give them a mud bath, splash them in a river, or both—has become very popular. Many facilities portray baths as a benign alternative to elephant riding and performances. But elephants getting baths, like those that give rides and do tricks, will have been broken to some extent to make them obedient. And as long as bathing remains popular, places that offer it will need obedient elephants to keep their businesses going. 


    In Ban Ta Klang, a tiny town in eastern Thailand, modest homes dot the crimson earth. In front of each is a wide, bamboo platform for sitting, sleeping, and watching television.

    But the first thing I notice is the elephants. Some homes have one, others as many as five. Elephants stand under tarps or sheet metal roofs or trees. Some are together, mothers and babies, but most are alone. Nearly all the elephants wear ankle chains or hobbles—cuffs binding their front legs together. Dogs and chickens weave among the elephants’ legs, sending up puffs of red dust.

    Ban Ta Klang—known as Elephant Village—is ground zero in Thailand for training and trading captive elephants.

    “House elephants,” Sri Somboon says, gesturing as he turns down his TV. Next to his outdoor platform, a two-month-old baby elephant runs around his mother. Somboon points across the road to the third elephant in his charge, a three-year-old male tethered to a tree. He’s wrenching his head back and forth and thrashing his trunk around. It looks as if he’s going out of his mind.

    He’s in the middle of his training, Somboon says, and is getting good at painting. He’s already been sold, and when his training is finished, he’ll start working at a tourist camp down south.

    Ban Ta Klang and the surrounding area, part of Surin Province, claim to be the source of more than half of Thailand’s 3,800 captive elephants. Long before the flood of tourists, it was the center of the elephant trade; the animals were caught in the wild and tamed for use transporting logs. Now, every November, hundreds of elephants from here are displayed, bought, and sold in the province’s main town, Surin.

    One evening I sit with Jakkrawan Homhual and Wanchai Sala-ngam. Both 33, they’ve been best friends since childhood. About half the people in Ban Ta Klang who care for elephants, including Homhual, don’t own them. They’re paid a modest salary by a rich owner to breed and train baby elephants for entertainment. As night falls, thousands of termites swarm us, attracted to the single bulb hanging above the bamboo platform. Our conversation turns to elephant training.

    Phajaan is the traditional—and brutal—days- or weeks-long process of breaking a young elephant’s spirit. It has long been used in Thailand and throughout Southeast Asia to tame wild elephants, which still account for many of the country’s captives. Under phajaan, elephants are bound with ropes, confined in tight wooden structures, starved, and beaten repeatedly with bullhooks, nails, and hammers until their will is crushed. The extent to which phajaan persists in its harshest form is unclear. Since 2012, the government has been cracking down on the illegal import of elephants taken from the forests of neighboring Myanmar, Thailand’s main source of wild-caught animals.

    I ask the men how baby elephants born in captivity are broken and trained.

    When a baby is about two years old, they say, mahouts tie its mother to a tree and slowly drag the baby away. Once separated, the baby is confined. Using a bullhook on its ear, they teach the baby to move: left, right, turn, stop. To teach an elephant to sit, Sala-ngam says, “we tie up the front legs. One mahout will use a bullhook at the back. The other will pull a rope on the front legs.” He adds: “To train the elephant, you need to use the bullhook so the elephant will know.”

    Humans identify suffering in other humans by universal signs: People sob, wince, cry out, put voice to their hurt. Animals have no universal language for pain. Many animals don’t have tear ducts. More creatures still—prey animals, for example—instinctively mask symptoms of pain, lest they appear weak to predators. Recognizing that a nonhuman animal is in pain is difficult, often impossible.

    But we know that animals feel pain. All mammals have a similar neuroanatomy. Birds, reptiles, and amphibians all have pain receptors. As recently as a decade ago, scientists had collected more evidence that fish feel pain than they had for neonatal infants. A four-year-old human child with spikes pressing into his flesh would express pain by screaming. A four-year-old elephant just stands there in the rain, her leg jerking in the air.

    Of all the silently suffering animals I saw in pools and pens around the world, two in particular haunt me: an elephant and a tiger.

    They lived in the same facility, Samut Prakan Crocodile Farm and Zoo, about 15 miles south of Bangkok. The elephant, Gluay Hom, four years old, was kept under a stadium. The aging tiger, Khai Khem, 22, spent his days on a short chain in a photo studio. Both had irrefutable signs of suffering: The emaciated elephant had a bent, swollen leg hanging in the air and a large, bleeding sore at his temple. His eyes were rolled back in his head. The tiger had a dental abscess so severe that the infection was eating through the bottom of his jaw.

    When I contacted the owner of the facility, Uthen Youngprapakorn, to ask about these animals, he said the fact that they hadn’t died proved that the facility was caring for them properly. He then threatened a lawsuit.

    Six months after Kirsten and I returned from Thailand, we asked Ryn Jirenuwat, our Bangkok-based Thai interpreter, to check on Gluay Hom and Khai Khem. She went to Samut Prakan and watched them for hours, sending photos and video. Gluay Hom was still alive, still standing in the same stall, leg still bent at an unnatural angle. The elephants next to him were skin and bones. Khai Khem was still chained by his neck to a hook in the floor. He just stays in his dark corner, Jirenuwat texted, and when he hears people coming, he twists on his chain and turns his back to them.

    “Like he just wants to be swallowed by the wall.”

    #tourisme #nos_ennemis_les_bêtes

  • Skattjakt
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/schattenjacht/skattjakt

    artist - song

    richard steele - Folk Song for Michelle

    sandra bell - lost train

    Harmonia - Notre Dame

    Clark Hutchinson - Textures in 3-4

    Von Zamla - Tail of Antsong

    The Happy Dragon-Band - Disco American

    Keith Hudson - Darkest Night

    Caterina Barbieri - Pulchra

    Tonto’s Expanding Head Band - Beautiful You

    Minimal Compact - Statik Dancin’

    Charlie Haden & Carlos Paredes - Song for Ché

    Billy Bang & Dennis Charles - Air Traffic Control

    Clark Hutchinson - Acapulco gold

    David Mitchell & Denise Roughan - Jewel

    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/schattenjacht/skattjakt_06602__1.mp3

  • Militaristic and anti-democratic, Ukraine’s far-right bides its time - CSMonitor.com
    https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2019/0415/Militaristic-and-anti-democratic-Ukraine-s-far-right-bides-its-time

    Though few in number overall, far-right groups operate with a high degree of impunity in Ukrainian society, allowing them to harass and attack minorities and human rights advocates without repercussions.

    [..,]

    Many Ukrainian analysts argue that these new rightist groups are not “nationalist,” but rather racist, intolerant, and extreme social conservatives. But it may be a problem that more mainstream Ukrainian nationalists, such as the #Svoboda party – which does not participate in street violence – tend to make heroes of 20th-century “fighters for Ukrainian independence.” Those include Stepan #Bandera, whose fascist ideology, collaboration with the #Nazis, and participation in wartime ethnic cleansing against Poles and Jews makes him and those like him poor role models for modern Europe-bound Ukraine.

    The Ukrainian parliament has passed legislation making it illegal to deny the hero status of Mr. Bandera. In Kiev, a major boulevard was recently renamed “Bandera Prospekt.” It should be no surprise that groups like the Right Sector model themselves on such World War II-era Ukrainian nationalist fighters.

    #extrême_droite #ukraine #air_du_temps

  • #Liora_Farkovitz : Comment se défendre au tribunal de la famille face à un ex-conjoint agresseur
    https://tradfem.wordpress.com/2019/03/31/comment-se-defendre-au-tribunal-de-la-famille-face-a-un-ex-conjoi

    La 8e Conférence accueillait notamment, M. Lundy Bancroft, qui s’active depuis plus de dix ans dans des dossiers de mères victimes de violence conjugale ayant perdu la garde de leurs enfants face à leur agresseur au Tribunal de la famille. Bien connu comme co-fondateur du Battered Mothers Testimony Project (Projet de témoignage des mères violentées) au Massachusetts, M. Bancroft est également l’auteur de trois ouvrages sur la dynamique et les répercussions de la violence conjugale : Why Does He Do That ?, The Batterer as Parent et When Dad Hurts Mom. Il s’est mérité le Prix Pro Humanitate 2004, décerné par le North American Resource Center for Child Welfare, pour son livre The Batterer as Parent (L’agresseur comme parent).

    Les mères violentées tiennent tête aux préjugés

    Les sept conférences précédentes sur les enjeux de garde des mères violentées ont validé et quantifié une situation de crise émergente pour la justice et les droits de la personne dans nos tribunaux de la famille. Des juges livrent des enfants maltraités aux agresseurs mêmes auxquels leurs mères protectrices avaient de peine et de misère réussi à échapper. Mais pour la première fois dans l’histoire de la conférence, Bancroft a fait de l’autodéfense contre cette injustice le thème des rencontres et des allocutions de la conférence de cette année.

    Traduction : #Tradfem
    Version originale : http://www.suite101.com/content/author-lundy-bancroft-teaches-battered-mothers-to-fight-back-a331711#ixzz1
    #mères_violentées #violences_masculines #isolement #emprise #droits_de_la_personne

  • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez rappelle que le « Muslim ban » est toujours en vigueur :
    https://twitter.com/aoc/status/1106584578687406081

    Daily reminder that we have a *Muslim Ban* in this country made out of the President’s hostility to Muslim people w/ little-to-no supporting evidence, and a Republican Party that tolerates it.

    There is so much work to do. Repealing the Ban is square 1.

    The Fight Against Trump’s Muslim Ban Isn’t Over - Brennan Center for Justice
    https://www.brennancenter.org/blog/the-fight-against-trumps-muslim-ban-isnt-over

    Today, other immoral policies dominate the news. The Muslim ban has been in effect for over a year, upheld by the Supreme Court despite overwhelming evidence that it was motivated by religious animus not national security. The ban, once so unthinkable, almost seems normalized.

  • How Africa is seizing an AI opportunity, FastCOmpany, le 03.10.19
    https://www.fastcompany.com/90308114/how-africa-is-seizing-an-ai-opportunity

    Afjona would have been among them [at Montreal international conference], had the visas of Afjona and over 100 of the African researchers not been denied or not processed in time. She ended up having to do her presentation via a video call.

    Indeed..
    Visa Issues Darken Canada’s Moment in AI Spotlight, Bloomberg, By Jeremy Kahn and Sandrine Rastello
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-11-30/visa-issues-cast-shadow-on-canada-s-moment-in-the-ai-spotlight

  • Arabie : le pré-coup d’État ?
    https://www.presstv.com/DetailFr/2019/03/06/590295/Arabie--tentative-dun-coup-dtat-fortifie

    « Il y a des signes subtils et importants qui montrent clairement que quelque chose cloche dans le palais royal », a déclaré Bruce Riedel, directeur du Brookings Intelligence Project et ancien combattant de la CIA depuis 30 ans.

    Plutôt qu’un coup d’Etat de MBS contre son père, comme l’affirme The Guardian, Mujtahidd évoque dans ses derniers tweets une tentative d’assassinat commanditée par Bandar Bin Salmane, contre son frère (MBS), raison pour laquelle il serait désormais en prison (où il retrouve la propre mère de MBS et quelques autres membres de la famille royale).
    https://twitter.com/Ahdjadid/status/1102675077894733825
    من الأنباء التي لدينا بشأن اعتقال محمد بن سلمان لأخيه بندر بن سلمان .. أن الأخير كان يخطط لاستهداف ابن سلمان بعملية اغتيال، وكان من المفترض أن تُنفذ من قبل أحد الضباط الذين في القصر، إلا أن الضابط وشى بالأمر، فزُجّ ببندر في السجن، وتم مكافأة الضابط بمبلغ 10 مليون ريال.
    On ne s’ennuie pas en #Arabie_saoudite

  • Ballades en majesté
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/et-la-poesie-alors-/ballades-en-majeste

    Textes lus :

    Christine de Pisan, « Helas ! helas ! bien puis crier et braire... »

    Eustache Deschamps, « Amour, Amour, humblement vous mercÿe... »

    Charles d’Orléans, « Quelles nouvelles, ma Maistresse... »

    Guillaume de Machaut, « Puisque je voy que j’ay le temps perdu... »

    Clément Marot, D’un qu’on appelait frère Lubin

    Théodore de Banville, #Ballade pour la servante du cabaret

    Programmation musicale :

    Michel Colombier, Quart d’heure américain — Michel Legrand, Le bal du chat et des oiseaux — Clint Mansell, Marguerite Gachet at the piano — Michel Legrand, Les trois robes — Michel Colombier, Erotico-tico — Michel Colombier, Rocking Horse — Michel Legrand, Les mariés de l’An II

    Invitée : Daphné Liégeois

    Réalisation sonore : Bahilo

    Par Anna (...)

    #Poésie #Moyen-Âge #Poésie,Moyen-Âge,Ballade
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/et-la-poesie-alors-/ballades-en-majeste_06123__1.mp3

  • Dans l’ouest du Mali, l’arrêt du train siffle le départ des jeunes vers l’Europe

    Depuis la fin du transport de voyageurs entre Bamako et Dakar, l’#économie tourne au ralenti dans la région de #Kayes, poussant les habitants à émigrer.
    La gare de Mahina, dans l’ouest du Mali, le 30 octobre. MORGANE LE CAM
    Les trous sont larges et profonds, les voitures zigzaguent, parfois à contresens, pour les éviter et garder leurs quatre pneus. La seule route goudronnée reliant Bamako à Kayes, dans l’ouest du Mali, n’en est plus vraiment une. Des carcasses de cars et de voitures, abandonnées sur le bas-côté, en témoignent. Depuis l’arrêt du train, il y a un an et demi, la route est devenue l’unique moyen d’accès à cette région frontalière du Sénégal.
    Le premier train y est arrivé en 1924, apporté par les colons français. Une large partie de l’économie de cette zone de plus de 2 millions d’habitants tournait autour des rails. Mais à partir de 2005, les trains de voyageurs n’ont plus circulé que par intermittence. Et puis plus rien. En cause : l’absence de rentabilité du transport de voyageurs, à laquelle se sont ajoutés le manque d’investissements et la mauvaise gestion.
    En 2003, l’Etat s’est vu contraint de privatiser la ligne, qu’il a confiée à la société Transrail. Malgré sa promesse de maintenir le volet voyageurs en parallèle du transport de marchandises, le consortium franco-canadien s’en est détourné. Il en sera de même pour Dakar-Bamako Ferroviaire, la structure bi-étatique qui a repris la ligne en 2015. Conséquence : les populations locales s’appauvrissent et ne croient plus aux promesses de l’Etat.
    « Je ferai tout pour quitter cette ville »
    A #Mahina, commune de 23 000 habitants située à deux heures de route de Kayes, la population est à bout de nerfs. La gare y était le principal lieu de vie et de commerce. Aujourd’hui, elle n’est plus que l’ombre d’elle-même. Sur les rails menant côté ouest à Dakar, côté est à Bamako, l’herbe a poussé et les bâtiments se sont transformés en cimetière de charrettes. Ce mardi 30 octobre, quelques cheminots errent, attendant désespérément que le train revienne.
    Mahina et sa gare incarnent ce sentiment d’abandon partagé par de nombreux Maliens pour qui l’Etat a le regard tourné vers le nord du pays, en guerre, au détriment des habitants du sud. « On passe notre journée à regarder les rails, ce n’est plus possible », regrette Boubacar Sissoko, la trentaine, assis dans une des boutiques de la gare. Il n’a pas travaillé depuis dix jours. « Lorsque le train était là, tout allait à merveille, je me débrouillais pour gagner ma vie », se remémore-t-il. Torches, biscuits, jouets… Le long des 1 287 km de la ligne Bamako-Dakar, le jeune Malien vendait tout ce qu’il pouvait et cela marchait. « En un trajet, je pouvais faire jusqu’à 50 000 francs CFA [76 euros] », assure-t-il.

    Aujourd’hui, il prépare sa traversée de la Méditerranée. Il l’a déjà tentée l’an dernier. Mais une fois arrivé en Algérie après avoir franchi la frontière les yeux bandés dans un 4x4 pour la somme de 125 000 francs CFA, il a été mis en prison pendant cinq jours. Ce voyage périlleux ne l’a pas découragé pour autant : « Tant que le train ne circulera pas, je ferai tout pour quitter cette ville. Ici, nous survivons. Il faut que l’Etat sache que les populations du bord des rails vivent un enfer. »
    « Le président nous a menti »
    Le gouvernement est pourtant conscient de l’importance du train pour le développement économique de la région. Le 15 juillet, en pleine campagne électorale, le président Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta s’était rendu à Kayes pour annoncer la redynamisation du transport de voyageurs.
    Douze jours plus tard, le ministère des transports annonçait l’acquisition de trois locomotives en Afrique du Sud, pour un montant de 2 milliards de francs CFA (3 millions d’euros). « Attendues au Mali dans les meilleurs délais, ces trois locomotives vont certainement relancer l’activité du train voyageurs Bamako-Kayes et aussi le train marchandises, au grand soulagement des milliers de Kayésiens », précisait le communiqué. Depuis, silence radio. Contacté à plusieurs reprises, le ministère n’a pas donné suite à nos sollicitations.
    « Rien n’est vrai, le président nous a menti, l’Etat nous a bernés et ce n’est pas la première fois ! », tempête Makoro Coulibaly en rangeant son stand sur le marché. Cette commerçante de 40 ans a participé à la révolte qui a secoué Mahina en mars 2017. A l’époque, afin d’obtenir le rétablissement du train de voyageurs, un collectif, Sauvons les rails, avait décidé d’empêcher le train de marchandises de circuler pour faire pression sur les autorités.

    Deux mois plus tard, face aux pertes économiques engendrées par ce blocage, l’Etat s’était engagé à donner aux habitants ce qu’ils réclamaient : le retour du train de voyageurs. Le gouvernement promet alors un investissement de 4,6 milliards de francs CFA pour l’achat de trois locomotives. « La population a retrouvé espoir. Une locomotive est arrivée et a commencé à circuler. Mais au bout d’un mois à peine, le train est tombé en panne. Ils n’avaient fait que réparer de vieilles locomotives et les repeindre », dénonce Adama Bandiougou Sissoko, le maire de Mahina.
    L’élu est en colère : « La situation est catastrophique. Les rails, c’est toute notre vie. Depuis l’arrêt du train, les prix des denrées alimentaires ont augmenté d’une manière extraordinaire, car le transport routier est beaucoup plus cher », souligne-t-il. La route, 20 % plus coûteuse que le rail, a selon lui plongé des milliers de commerçants dans la pauvreté. « Aujourd’hui, nous n’attendons plus rien de l’Etat. Il nous a montré son vrai visage, il nous a abandonnés. L’arrêt du train a suscité beaucoup de départs vers l’Europe », déplore Adama Bandiougou Sissoko.

    Un migrant par famille
    Comme Boubacar, les trois enfants de Makoro Coulibaly préparent leur « aventure », une expression utilisée par les habitants de la région pour qualifier l’émigration vers l’Europe. La zone est réputée compter un migrant par famille. La migration y est une tradition, mais les habitants l’assurent : l’arrêt du train n’a fait qu’augmenter le nombre de départs.
    Makoro Coulibaly, dont les revenus ont été divisés par deux, a vu ses trois enfants partir travailler dans une mine d’or de la région, une façon de gagner beaucoup d’argent, rapidement, et ainsi financer la traversée de la Méditerranée. « Ce n’était pas mon souhait. J’ai peur qu’ils meurent, confie-t-elle, émue mais résignée. C’est comme ça. Les jeunes préfèrent mourir là-bas plutôt que de vivre dans la misère ici. »

    « J’ai vu les images en décembre 2017. Des enfants morts en mer ou alors bastonnés et vendus en Libye », se souvient Goundo Dembélé. Elle aussi est commerçante. Dans sa petite boutique, les trois frigos sont débranchés. Lorsque le train sifflait, ils fonctionnaient et étaient remplis de jus de gingembre, qu’elle vendait à la gare avec ses deux fils. Mais il y a quatre ans, ils sont partis. « Leur père venait de mourir et je n’avais plus de salaire depuis l’arrêt du train. Il n’y avait plus de travail pour eux non plus », raconte-t-elle.
    Coincés depuis en Libye, ils appellent leur mère chaque semaine. « Ils me supplient de trouver une solution pour les faire rentrer. Mais je n’en ai pas. Je n’ai pas d’argent pour les faire revenir et ils n’en ont pas assez pour traverser la mer, soupire Goundo Dembélé, les larmes aux yeux. S’il y avait encore le train, mes enfants ne seraient pas partis. Maintenant, je ne peux plus rien faire pour eux, à part prier. »

    https://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2018/11/13/dans-l-ouest-du-mali-l-arret-du-train-siffle-le-depart-des-jeunes-pour-l-eur

    #Mali #facteurs_push #facteurs-push #push-factors #train #transport

  • Un accord a été trouvé pour clore le dossier Khashoggi, par Abdelbari Atwan - Actuarabe
    http://actuarabe.com/un-accord-a-ete-trouve-pour-clore-le-dossier-khashoggi

    a question est maintenant de savoir qui sera le « bouc-émissaire » sacrifié à la place du Roi saoudien, du Prince héritier et des dirigeants du Royaume ? Quel est le prix à payer à la Turquie et aux Etats-Unis pour étouffer ce crime ?

    La transaction de Lockerbie
    Pour répondre à cette question, du moins en partie, il faut revenir à l’affaire de Lockerbie et la transaction qui a été trouvée pour sauver le Colonel Muammar Khadafi et lever le terrible blocus de la Libye. Il est d’ailleurs paradoxal que le Royaume d’Arabie saoudite et le prince Bandar Ben Sultan, son ambassadeur à Washington de l’époque, ait été parmi les principaux artisans de cette transaction.

    J’ai rencontré en personne le principal accusé, ou plutôt le « bouc-émissaire » libyen de cette affaire, Abdelbaset Al-Megrahi. C’était un agent des services de sécurité libyens, qui a été condamné à la prison à vie pour avoir mis une bombe dans une des valises de l’avion de la Pan Am qui a explosé au-dessus de l’Ecosse et fait environ 300 victimes. Al-Megrahi, qui m’avait invité à lui rendre visite dans sa prison à Glasgow, m’a affirmé qu’il n’avait rien à voir avec ce crime. Il souffrait d’un cancer de la prostate en phase terminale et n’avait plus que quelques mois à vivre. Il s’est alors mis à pleurer à chaudes larmes, comme jamais je n’ai vu quelqu’un pleurer.

    Al-Megrahi m’a dit qu’il aurait assez de courage pour dire qu’il avait commis ce crime car il n’avait plus rien à perdre mais m’a affirmé qu’il avait été sacrifié pour sauver d’autres personnes. Abdel Rahman Shalgham, ancien Ministre libyen des affaires étrangères et camarade de classe, m’a confirmé quelques semaines plus tard que la Libye n’avait rien à voir avec Lockerbie et qu’ils avaient payé environ trois milliards de dollars en compensation aux Etats-Unis afin que le blocus soit levé. Cet homme est toujours vivant…

  • Why #Banksy Is (Probably) a Woman - CityLab
    https://www.citylab.com/design/2014/11/why-banksy-is-probably-a-woman/382202
    https://cdn.citylab.com/media/img/citylab/2014/10/RTR4B5LY/facebook.jpg?1494540323

    Banksy Does New York, a new documentary airing on HBO on Nov. 17, opens on a bunch of scofflaws trying to jack an inflatable word balloon reading “Banksy!” from the side of a low-rise building in Queens. These hooligans weren’t Banksy. Neither were the police officers who took possession of the piece after the failed heist and denied that it was art. Nor in all likelihood was the silver-haired man who sold $420 worth of Banksy prints for $60 a pop in Central Park, or the drivers who slowly trawled New York streets in trucks tricked out with Banksy’s sculpture, or the accordionist accompanying one of Banksy’s installations. While the film shares a lot of insights about street art, media sensationalism, viral phenomena, and the people who make Banksy possible, it doesn’t cast a light on who Banksy is or what she looks like.

    #art_de_rue

  • Attribuée à 1,2 million d’euros, une œuvre de Banksy s’autodétruit en pleine vente
    https://www.lemonde.fr/arts/article/2018/10/06/attribuee-a-1-2-million-d-euros-une-uvre-de-banksy-se-detruit-en-pleine-vent

    La « Petite fille au ballon rouge » a été en partie découpée en morceaux juste après avoir été vendue, lors d’enchères organisées à Londres, vendredi. L’incident reste inexpliqué.

    Il pourrait s’agir du dernier canular mis en scène par l’artiste Banksy, célèbre pour ses pochoirs contestataires peints dans de nombreuses villes du monde. Lors d’une vente aux enchères organisée à Londres, vendredi 5 octobre, un tableau lui étant attribué, la « Petite fille au ballon rouge », a été vendu à 1,04 million de livres – près de 1,2 million d’euros en incluant la commission de la maison de vente.

    Une enchère exceptionnelle pour la maison Sotheby’s, à Londres – l’œuvre était estimée entre 230 000 et 341 000 euros –, mais qui ne s’est pas terminée comme prévu : un mécanisme caché dans le bas du cadre a commencé à broyer le tableau peu après la confirmation de l’enchère, ne s’arrêtant que pour laisser intact le ballon rouge en forme de cœur s’éloignant de la fillette, désormais découpée en plusieurs morceaux.

    La destruction pourrait être une bonne affaire

    Aucune explication n’a été fournie sur la destruction de l’œuvre, la maison de vente se disant incapable de confirmer si Banksy lui-même était impliqué. L’artiste a dans la nuit publié une photo de la vente – et de la surprise apparente du public – sur son compte Instagram, accompagné du commentaire : « En train de partir [allusion à la vente aux enchères], en train de partir, partie… » (« Going, going, gone… »).

    « Nous avons été “banksyé” », a de son côté ironisé Alex Branczik, directeur du département d’art contemporain à Sotheby’s, lors d’une conférence de presse après l’incident. « Nous n’avons jamais connu cette situation dans le passé, où une œuvre est découpée en morceaux, juste après avoir égalé un record de vente pour l’artiste. Nous travaillons à estimer ce que cela peut changer à la vente aux enchères », a-t-il expliqué.

    L’acheteur du tableau, contacté par la maison de vente, s’est dit « surpris » de la tournure des événements. Mais si la destruction de l’œuvre aurait pu mener à l’annulation de la vente, comme cela se ferait habituellement, l’opération pourrait se transformer en une bonne affaire, selon un analyse du Financial Times : « Il se pourrait que le tableau broyé prenne de la valeur, considérant qu’il est devenu l’objet de l’un des meilleurs canulars jamais organisés sur le marché de l’art. »

  • Saudi Arabia, Germany turn page on diplomatic dispute -
    The spat was triggered last November when Germany’s foreign minister at the time, Sigmar Gabriel, condemned ’adventurism’ in the Middle East

    Reuters
    Sep 26, 2018 5:39 PM

    https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/saudi-arabia-germany-turn-page-on-diplomatic-dispute-1.6511068

    Germany and Saudi Arabia have agreed to end a prolonged diplomatic row that prompted the kingdom to pull its ambassador from Berlin and punish German firms operating in the country.
    The spat was triggered last November when Germany’s foreign minister at the time, Sigmar Gabriel, condemned “adventurism” in the Middle East, in comments that were widely seen as an attack on increasingly assertive Saudi policies, notably in Yemen.
    The comments, which aggravated already tense relations caused by a moratorium on German arms exports to Saudi Arabia, led Riyadh to withdraw its ambassador and freeze out German companies, particularly in the lucrative healthcare sector.

    Gabriel’s successor Heiko Maas, egged on by German industry, had been working for months to resolve the dispute. Earlier this month, Berlin signed off on the delivery of four artillery positioning systems to Saudi Arabia, a step that officials say accelerated the rapprochement.
    Standing alongside his Saudi counterpart Adel al-Jubeir at the United Nations on Tuesday, Maas spoke of “misunderstandings” that had undermined what were otherwise “strong and strategic ties” between the countries, saying “we sincerely regret this”.
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    “We should have been clearer in our communication and engagement in order to avoid such misunderstandings between Germany and the kingdom,” he said. “We’ll do our best to make this partnership with the kingdom even stronger than before.”
    Jubeir said he welcomed Maas’ statement and invited him to the kingdom to intensify their ties. He spoke of a “a new phase of close cooperation in all areas” between Berlin and Riyadh.
    Officials told Reuters that the Saudi ambassador, Prince Khalid bin Bandar bin Sultan, son of longtime Saudi ambassador to the United States, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, was expected to return to Berlin soon.
    After weeks of delay, the new German ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Joerg Ranau, is now expected to receive his accreditation and take up his position in Riyadh.
    “The Gordian knot has been broken,” said Volker Treier, foreign trade chief at the German chambers of commerce and industry (DIHK), who is in Riyadh to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the local chamber.
    “The optimism is back. Diplomacy triumphed,” he said. “Everyone we have met here has made clear they want to work closely with us again.”
    The dispute hit trade between the countries. German exports to Saudi Arabia fell 5 percent in the first half of 2018. And companies like Siemens Healthineers, Bayer and Boehringer Ingelheim complained that they were being excluded from public healthcare tenders.
    In a strongly-worded June letter to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, European and U.S. pharmaceutical associations warned that the restrictions could hurt Saudipatients and dampen future investment in the kingdom.
    The dispute with Germany predates one that erupted between Canada and Saudi Arabia this summer after the Canadian foreign minister, in a tweet, called for the release of human rights activists in Saudi Arabia.
    The kingdom responded by expelling the Canadian ambassador, recalling its own envoy, freezing new trade and investment, suspending flights and ordering Saudi students to leave Canada.
    Saudi Arabia’s role in the Yemen war, in which Arab forces are fighting Iran-aligned Houthis, remains controversial in Germany.
    Chancellor Angela Merkel’s new government went so far as to write into its coalition agreement earlier this year that no arms could be sent to countries involved in the conflict. It is unclear how recent arms deliveries fit with this ban.

  • Banu Cennetoğlu: ’As long as I have resources, I will make The List more visible’ | World news | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jun/20/banu-cennetoglu-interview-turkish-artist-the-list-europe-migrant-crisis

    http://unitedagainstrefugeedeaths.eu

    http://unitedagainstrefugeedeaths.eu/about-the-campaign

    http://unitedagainstrefugeedeaths.eu/map

    http://unitedagainstrefugeedeaths.eu/about-the-campaign/fortress-europe-death-by-policy

    he artist Banu Cennetoğlu can remember precisely the moment she was overwhelmed by the List, a catalogue, made by volunteers, of those who had died in their attempt to make a new life in Europe. It was 2002. She was based at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, studying photography. Researching the architecture of border posts for a project, she stumbled across it on the website of United for Intercultural Action, a network of NGOs supporting migrants and refugees. Back then, it was a document of 15 pages and 6,000 names; now it has over 30,000. “I started to read, and that was it,” she says. It was the start of a relationship that still continues in all its original fervour. “I know,” she adds, “that as long as I have resources as an artist I will continue to make this list more visible.”

    Cennetoğlu, an intense, warm woman in her mid-40s, immediately realised that she wanted – needed – people to encounter the List, in all its terrible rawness and cumulative power. She printed it out and pressed it on to people she met, left copies in cafes, made stickers and stuck them on ATMs around the city. It didn’t seem enough. She liked the idea of hiring billboards – not enormous hoardings but the kind of eye-level, poster-size advertising sites that were dotted around Amsterdam. The question was where to get the money, though that seemed easy enough – the Netherlands, at the time, had plenty of money for artists. “But then there were five years of constant attempts and they all failed,” she says. The conversations with potential funders played out repetitively. “People would ask me, ‘Is it an artwork?’ I would reply that it wasn’t. And they would say, ‘Well, if it’s not art, we cannot give you the money.’”

    –---

    The Guardian publishes the full UNITED List of 34,361 Refugee Deaths on 20 June International Refugee Day

    In recognition of World Refugee day, The Guardian, in collaboration with artist Banu Cennetoglu, Chisenhale Gallery and Liverpool Biennial is distributing the full UNITED ’List of Deaths’ in its print and online edition.

    Since 1993, UNITED for Intercultural Action has recorded the reported names, origins and causes of death for more than 34,000 refugees and migrants who have died whilst trying to get into Europe due to the restrictive policies of “Fortress Europe”. The List, which currently contains 56 pages of names, will be included in full in print and available to download on The Guardian’s as well as the UNITED website.

    In a 64-page print supplement, The List is accompanied by thought pieces covering how the shape of the refugee crisis has changed over the years. There are also case studies taking a deeper look behind some of the names of those listed and an interview with artist Banu Cennetoglu, who since 2007, facilitates distribution of the List around the world.

    Free of charge copies of the newspaper with the 64-page supplement will be available at Chisenhale Gallery (28 June-26 August 2018) and Liverpool Biennial (14 July-28 October 2018).

    UNITED Campaign “Fatal Policies of Fortress Europe”: No More Deaths - Time for Change!
    Fortress Europe is nearly impenetrable. Several deals made over the last years, such as the EU-Turkey deal or the more recent Italy-Libya deal, as well as the continued construction of walls and fences increasingly close routes to a life in safety. As a last chance, many are forced to choose a journey of life and death crossing the Mediterranean. However, most Lifeseekers don’t get to the other side of the Mediterranean. Refugees die suffocated in trucks, crossing rivers and mountains or are shot by guards. They die due to the inhumane conditions of detention centers or lack of medical assistance, commit suicide out of despair, or are killed after being deported to their country. They are denied both protection of our authorities and recourse to justice. Rescue boats are stranded on the Mediterranean for weeks while their passengers try to survive under inhumane conditions until an EU member state agrees to accept them at their port, such as in the recent case of the Aquarius. As diverse as they may seem, all of these deaths are direct results of EU border militarization, asylum laws, detention policies and deportations.

    Many national governments throughout Europe have shifted to the right and changes in asylum legislation follow suit. Afghanistan today is categorised as a safe country of origin to deport people to, whereas European citizens are not advised to travel there claiming the country is one of the most dangerous in the world. Such explicit double standards are persistent and established in migration legislation throughout the European Union. Italy’s recent deal with Libya has resulted in severe human rights violations by the Libyan coast guards and increased the risk of [refugees to be subject to] human trafficking.

    Every human has the right to look for a safe place to live, and the EU needs to establish secure access and humane treatment for those seeking refuge in Europe. We demand that death by policy ends and all member states provide safety and dignity for all as a minimum standard of human rights.

    Mark Rice-Oxley, special projects editor, Guardian News & Media, said:
    “This List of Deaths is a startling and heroic piece of work by UNITED for Intercultural Action. It exposes a terrifying truth of mounting human misery, of utterly preventable death stretching back more than 25 years - and of a failure of imagination by the world’s biggest bloc of liberal democracies. That is why The Guardian is publishing it in full on 20 June.”

    Banu Cennetoglu, artist, said:
    “I believe the power of printed material and its possible impact especially in the case of this List. I hope the dissemination and the contextualisation through The Guardian and its editors will remind people of the capacity they do have in order to interfere with those fatal policies and their makers.”

    Geert Ates, UNITED, said:
    “Since 1993, we have recorded the names and incidents of refugee deaths to draw public attention to the deadly consequences of the building of a Fortress Europe. The dissemination of our full list by the world’s leading newspaper, The Guardian, on World Refugee Day, will help UNITED enormously to find wider support for the necessary change of policies: No More Deaths! Time for Change!”

    For more information, please contact:
    Geert Ates (UNITED)
    +31-6-48808808
    listofdeaths@unitedagainstracism.org

    #migrations #asile #Réfugiés #mourir_en_mer #forteresse_europe

  • Ramadan et ses pubs (3/3) : la princesse conduit le changement en Arabie saoudite. – Culture et politique arabes
    https://cpa.hypotheses.org/6608

    C’est rarement mentionné mais il se trouve que l’héroïne de la couverture de Vogue Arabia est, à la ville, l’épouse du très très sulfureux prince Bandar bin Sultan, longtemps à la tête, entre autres activités, des services secrets du Royaume et à ce titre très certainement au courant de la répression de celles et de ceux qui luttaient pour les droits des femmes au Royaume.

    #cpa

  • Collectif pour la santé des travailleurs et des travailleuses, pour ne plus perdre sa vie à la gagner ! 2ème édition.

    http://neplusperdresaviealagagner.org

    Le collectif « Ne plus perdre sa vie à la gagner » face à la disparition d’un certain nombre d’outils (dont le CHSCT) souhaite lancer des initiatives autour de la santé et des conditions
    de travail et enclencher des actions et campagnes collectives. C’est l’objectif de ces deuxièmes États généraux après le grand succès de ceux de mars 2016 qui avaient réuni plusieurs centaines de personne à la bourse du travail de Paris. De nombreux sujets seront abordés et travaillés dont les ordonnances Macrons, les violences faites aux femmes, les risques chimiques dont l’amiante et les pesticides, les questions de précarité, intérim et sous-traitance, de temps de travail et d’intensification, de restructurations, de réorganisations et de démocratie au travail. Au sortir de ces États généraux nous lancerons des campagnes et actions collectives.

    Les États généraux de la santé des travailleuses et des travailleurs auront lieu les 24 ET 25 MAI 2018 À PARIS
    Bourse du travail, 3 rue du Château d’eau - Paris 10 ème Métro République.

    Le collectif « Ne plus perdre plus sa vie à la gagner » pour la défense de la santé des travailleuses et des travailleurs existe depuis 2015 et réunit : Annie Thebaud Mony
    (Directrice de recherches honoraire à l’INSERM), Daniele Linhart (Sociologue, Directrice de recherches émérite au CNRS), l’Union syndicale Solidaires, le SAF, le SM, l’UD CGT 76,
    le SNPST, l’Association Santé Médecine du Travail, le SMTIEGCGT, le collectif CGT et UGICT-CGT médecins du travail, la FNATH, Attac, la Fondation Copernic, les syndicats CGT, FSU et Sud de l’inspection du travail, l’Association des experts agréés et des intervenants auprès des #CHSCT, les associations Henri Pezerat, Andeva, Ban Asbestos, Robin des toits, et tous les signataires de l’appel.

    https://seenthis.net/messages/469810
    #travailleuses #travailleurs #chômeurs #chômeuses #fainéants #fainéantes ne travailler jamais - j’suis d’accord mais je cherche du travail. Si, si... un peu de temps en temps, point trop n’en faut (le salaire me suffirai).

  • Ghouta Orientale : Sac de noeud et chèvre des néocons – Salimsellami’s Blog
    https://salimsellami.wordpress.com/2018/03/06/ghouta-orientale-sac-de-noeud-et-chevre-des-neocons

    Les médias occidentaux pètent les plombs sur la situation en Ghouta Orientale. La propagande va crescendo et se vautre dans l’hystérie. Ou plutôt, elle est coordonnée pour préparer l’opinion publique à un type encore plus obscène d’intervention occidentale, à la mise en scène propagandiste endémique partout où on trouve ceux qu’on appelle « casques blancs ». Il n’y a pas le moindre reportage occidental en provenance d’Afrin, quotidiennement bombardée par les Turcs, alliés des Américains. Non, il n’est question que de la Ghouta, où les terroristes de l’Amérique et de l’OTAN sont en attente d’annihilation.Peu ou pas du tout d’informations non plus sur le carnage d’inspiration saoudienne au Yémen…

    Il est évident que les Forces du Tigre ne se lanceront pas à l’attaque tant que les groupes terroristes Al Qaeda, Hay’at Tahrir al-Cham, Jaych al-Islam, Faylaq al-Rahmane, et d’autres qui ne sont pas compris dans le cessez-le-feu négocié par Moscou, n’auront pas été pilonnés jusqu’à la déroute. On dit que le Major-Général Souheil al-Hassan a été démoralisé par le peu d’enthousiasme du Dr Assad de s’engager dans une victoire totale dans la Ghouta, certaines sources prétendant qu’il a été accueilli avec beaucoup d’affection par le Président, mais qu’on lui a dit de se retenir jusqu’à ce que l’atmosphère « politique » se soit améliorée. En réalité, rien de tout cela n’est vrai. On a laissé au général Al-Hassan toute latitude pour décider quand il convenait de lancer sa grande offensive, et il est évident qu’il a opté pour la continuation du processus de ramollissement, de manière à préserver ses propres acquis et la vie de ses hommes. Plus important encore, le général Al-Hassan est obligé de prendre en compte la vie des civils innocents, qu’on est en train de mettre dans des cages pour s’en servir comme boucliers humains. Mohamed « Allouche », criminel de guerre par excellence*, a donné l’ordre à ses gorilles de construire un millier de cages pour empêcher toute attaque aérienne.

    Sur la base d’informations que j’ai glanées chez mes propres sources, l’attaque a commencé comme manœuvre de sondage destinée à tester les défenses des rats retranchés. Certaines sources occidentales ont estimé le nombre des rongeurs enfermés dans la Ghouta à plusieurs milliers, un grand nombre d’entre eux ayant acquis des compétences non négligeables dans l’art de terroriser les populations. D’autres sources estiment que ces vermines sont moins d’un millier. Ma source ne peut pas se prononcer sur leur nombre mais estime qu’il est très « gérable ». Quoi qu’il en soit, si les lignes de défense sont aussi faibles qu’elles en ont l’air et si l’arsenal mis à la disposition des rongeurs a été épuisé avec peu de possibilités de réapprovisionnement du fait de l’encerclement de la Ghouta, alors, dans ce cas, l’opération ne devrait durer que peu de semaines et ce délai, à cause de la présence d’environ 400.000 civils.

    À en juger par les réactions à de nombreux d’articles des médias « mainstream », il est clair que personne ne croit aux contes occidentalo-sionistes. Presque tous les lecteurs qui postent des commentaires accusent les MM de diffuser des fables propagandistes. Si on se réfère au nombre de commentaires générés par la Syrie et si on les compare à ceux sur des sujets se rapportant davantage à la politique intérieure américaine, on peut en conclure que très peu de gens [aux USA, ndt] suivent les événements de Syrie. Ce que je veux dire, c’est que les MM ont misérablement échoué à sortir le public occidental de son apathie. Il semble qu’il ne trouve pas la Syrie aussi intéressante que le Super Bowl ou les massacres de Floride.

    Mohamed “Allouche” sait qu’il n’y a, pour lui, nul autre endroit où aller que l’enfer. Comme celles d’Abdullah al-Muhaysini, les traces de ses pas sont les marques sanglantes laissées par des milliers de civils innocents et de soldats gouvernementaux. Dès qu’ils seront morts, l’un et l’autre entreront dans l’oubli qu’ils méritent amplement et, au fur et à mesure que le temps passe, ils pourraient se mettre à soupçonner qu’Allah n’est pas du tout de leur côté et que peut-être… peut-être… l’Enfer plein de flammes promis aux pécheurs par le Coran ne demande qu’à être élargi pour les accueillir, eux et leurs sous-fifres.

    Les tanks T-72 font chauffer les moteurs et se préparent à entrer très bientôt en action, dans ce qui sera une avancée lente, étape par étape, et qui aura pour objectif de préserver au maximum les vies des civils et des soldats. Le dispositif de basculement anti-TOW a été énormément amélioré, rendant les plateformes anti-blindage de fabrication américaine inutilisables contre les tanks des Forces du Tigre. Les soldats syriens sont aguerris au combat et superbement entraînés sur le terrain où ils opèrent depuis près de sept ans. Voici venu le temps des comptes, où les cannibales qui infestent la Ghouta vont devoir se mettre à écrire leurs lettres d’adieu à leurs nuisibles parents de Tchétchénie, du Xinjiang ou d’Albanie, ou de n’importe lequel des pays qui les a engendrés – USA, France, Grande Bretagne, Allemagne ou Arabie Saoudite, entre autres.

    L’État d’Apartheid Sioniste, l’Arabie Saoudite, le Qatar, la France, l’Angleterre et le Koweit sont atterrés à l’idée qu’ils vont perdre la Ghouta et qu’elle va tomber aux mains du gouvernement. Une fois la Ghouta délivrée de la puanteur des chimpanzés wahhabites, l’Armée Syrienne, qui compte maintenant près d’un demi-million de combattants (si on y comprend les milices) aura les mains libres pour s’occuper d’Idlib et y mettre à mort les plans de Bandar ben Sultan, dont la tête est littéralement mûre pour être cueillie. Les États-Unis sont de toute évidence à la manoeuvre et participent au bruit et à la fureur dont le but est de subvertir les plans de la Syrie pour extirper la menace terroriste. Pourquoi ?

    Parce que la Russie et l’Iran ont gagné. Pour l’Iran, c’est le gazoduc, le Croissant Fatimide et le libre accès au Hezbollah et à la Palestine. Pour la Russie, c’est le rêve d’un port sur la Méditerranée et d’une base aérienne à Humaymim. Malgré des décennies de loyauté syrienne envers Moscou, il n’y a jamais eu un gouvernement syrien qui ait été disposé à louer un port ou une base aérienne pour cent ans. L’échec de l’Amérique à ralentir la croissance de cette nouvelle alliance : Russie-Iran-Irak-Chine-Syrie et Liban, vole en cercles concentriques, comme un grand albatros, autour des têtes des néocons, ou leur pend dessus comme une épée de Damoclès. Les Sionistes s’obstinent à poursuivre une politique totalement désespérée qui soulagerait leur amertume. Ils n’acceptent tout simplement pas leur défaite et sont plus que jamais déterminés à brutaliser la CIA pour obtenir qu’elle s’enfonce dans une misérable aventure étrangère de plus.

    Incapables d’exciter les passions du public américain pour lui faire soutenir une autre guerre étrangère, ils ont pris le parti d’utiliser les médias en guise de substitut chargé de fantasmer de stridentes démonstrations et de pousser avec insistance à une action militaire susceptible de stopper l’inévitable ascension de la nouvelle alliance. Les défaites succédant aux défaites, on ne peut que supposer que les jours des terroristes de la Ghouta sont comptés.

    *En français dans le texte.

    L’auteur, Ziad Fadel, est avocat depuis 35 ans, traducteur-juré et interprète (arabe-anglais) pour la Cour Suprême des États-Unis. Il est le rédacteur en chef de Syrian Perspective (The Real Syrian Free Press)

    Traduction : c.l. pour Les Grosses Orchades

    – Source : Syrian Perspective (Syrie)
     http://zejournal.mobi/index.php/news/show_detail/14685

  • Israel sets up secret firm with top ex-generals, envoys for online ’mass awareness’ campaign ’to fight delegitimization’

    Among the shareholders are former UN ambassador Dore Gold and ex-generals Amos Yadlin and Yaakov Amidror. The new initiative will not be subject to the Freedom of Information Law

    Noa Landau Jan 09, 2018 3:26 PM
    read more: https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.833817

    The Strategic Affairs Ministry has set up a public-benefit corporation to engage in what it calls “mass awareness activities” as part of “the struggle against the delegitimization campaign” against Israel internationally.
    Haaretz has obtained a list of the shareholders and directors of the company, Kella Shlomo, who include former Israeli ambassadors to the United Nations.
    The government recently allocated 128 million shekels ($37 million) to the initiative, in addition to the 128 million shekels it will raise from private donors around the world.
    The new initiative will not be subject to the Freedom of Information Law, in accordance with the secrecy policy of the ministry, which refuses to release detailed information about its activities.
    The shareholders and directors include former ministry director general Yossi Kuperwasser; former UN ambassador Dore Gold, who is also a former adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; and former UN ambassador Ron Prosor.

    Reuven Rivlin with Amos Yadlin. Mark Neiman

    FILE PHOTO: Protestors march behind a banner of the BDS organization in Marseille, southern France, on June 13, 2015George Robert / AP
    They also include businessman Micah Avni, whose father, Richard Lakin, was killed in a 2015 terror attack in Jerusalem; Maj. Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin, who heads the Institute for National Security Studies; and Col. (res.) Miri Eisin, who served as the prime minister’s adviser on the foreign press during the Second Lebanon War.
    skip - Israel Publishes BDS Blacklist

    Also on the list are a former National Security Council chief, Maj. Gen. (res.) Yaakov Amidror, and Sagi Balasha, a former CEO of the Israeli-American Council, which has casino magnate Sheldon Adelson as a major supporter.

    Most refused to discuss the initiative and referred questions to the office of Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan.
    The most recent data from the Companies Authority shows that the last report the company submitted to the authority came this past October. On December 28, the cabinet approved an allocation of 128 million shekels to the company over three years. The decision to provide the funding was made by the special procedure under which a government resolution is distributed to the ministers and goes into effect automatically if no one objects or demands a discussion.
    According to the government resolution, the funding was granted “to implement part of the ministry’s activities related to the struggle against the phenomena of delegitimization and boycotts against the State of Israel.” It says the agency will work to raise its portion of the financing for the initiative (around half) from “philanthropic sources” or “pro-Israel organizations.” A steering committee will be appointed for the initiative to comprise government representatives and representatives of the other funding partners.

    Ron Prosor at the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon oath ceremony forr his appointment as the Secretary-General of the United Nations for second termShachar Ezran
    Itamar Baz of the media watchdog website The Seventh Eye has been covering the Strategic Affairs Ministry, most of whose activities are concealed from the public. He reported Monday that while ministry officials have for months been advancing legislation that would exclude the company from being subject to the Freedom of Information Law, the law in any case does not apply to this new agency so its activities will be easy to hide.
    He also revealed that Liat Glazer, the ministry’s legal adviser, wrote in a legal opinion that the activities conducted through the company would be “those that require ‘non-governmental’ discussions with various target audiences.”
    According to a ministry document, Kella Shlomo people would work via social networks because “the enemy directs most of its awareness and motivating efforts to this area.” Similarly, the document, published by The Seventh Eye, says the organization was expected to carry out “mass awareness activities” and work to “exploit the wisdom of crowds,” an activity defined as “making new ideas accessible to decision-makers and donors in the Jewish world, and developing new tools to combat the delegitimization of Israel.”
    A report in the daily Yedioth Ahronoth the day after the cabinet approved the funding described the initiative positively, saying it would “raise the level of efforts in the struggle against BDS” — the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement. Yedioth said the new company would “provide a speedy and coordinated response to efforts to stain Israel’s image around the world,” for example, in the event of a military operation, terror attacks or UN votes against government policies.
    This would be done by launching online campaigns, lobbying, engaging organizations abroad and bringing delegations to Israel.
    The Strategic Affairs Ministry declined to clarify whether the company would act in accordance with the principles of the Freedom of Information Law.
    “This is a joint initiative that meets all the requirements of the law for this type of engagement and is similar to other government initiatives like Taglit [Birthright] and Masa,” the ministry said.
    “In the agreement with [the company] there are distinct control procedures, as defined by the Finance Ministry and the Justice Ministry during the joint work with them on setting up the project. It will be subject to auditing by the state comptroller,” it added.
    “In addition, as the ministry leading the initiative, one that attributes great importance to it as part of the campaign against the delegitimization of Israel, the ministry has allocated additional control tools and functions to what is required. Both the ministry’s legal adviser and its controller will sit on the steering committee managing the project.”
    skip - WTF is BDS?

  • What Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury” says about Trump’s collusion with Israel
    https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/what-michael-wolffs-fire-and-fury-says-about-trumps-collusion-is

    However, the special counsel probe by Robert Mueller has indeed uncovered some collusion between the Trump team and a foreign power: Israel.

    In a plea agreement last month for making false statements to the FBI, Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn admitted that he had contacted foreign governments during the final weeks of the Obama administration to try to derail a UN vote condemning Israeli settlements.

    This possibly illegal effort to undermine the policy of the sitting administration was done at the direction of Kushner and at the request of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Yet mainstream pundits have shown little concern, just as they have shown little interest in any further revelations about what we might well call Israelgate coming out of the Wolff book.

    As the book’s publication was brought forward amid the media frenzy, I decided to take a look.

    It turns out that Fire and Fury contains evidence that Trump’s policy is not so much America First as it is Israel First.

    Wolff recounts an early January 2017 dinner in New York where Bannon and disgraced former Fox News boss Roger Ailes discussed cabinet picks.

    Bannon observed that they did not have a “deep bench,” but both men agreed the extremely pro-Israel neocon John Bolton would be a good pick for national security adviser. “He’s a bomb thrower,” Ailes said of Bolton, “and a strange little fucker. But you need him. Who else is good on Israel?”

    “Day one we’re moving the US embassy to Jerusalem. Netanyahu’s all in,” Bannon said, adding that anti-Palestinian casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson was on board too.

    “Let Jordan take the West Bank, let Egypt take Gaza. Let them deal with it. Or sink trying,” Bannon proposed. “The Saudis are on the brink, Egyptians are on brink, all scared to death of Persia.”

    Asked by Ailes, “Does Donald know” the plan, Bannon reportedly just smiled.

    Bannon’s idea reflected “the new Trump thinking” about the Middle East: “There are basically four players,” writes Wolff, “Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Iran. The first three can be united against the fourth.” Egypt and Saudi Arabia would be “given what they want” in respect to Iran, and in return would “pressure the Palestinians to make a deal.”

    Another key foreign policy relationship for the Trump administration has been with Mohammad bin Salman, the reckless crown prince and real power in Saudi Arabia, who has been willing to go along with the plan, especially by cozying up to Israel.

    According to Wolff, the lack of education of both Trump and MBS – as the Saudi prince is commonly known – put them on an “equal footing” and made them “oddly comfortable with each other.”

    Trump, ignorant and constantly flattered by regional leaders, appeared to naively believe he could pull off what he called “the biggest breakthrough in Israel-Palestine negotiations ever.”

  • Why is the West praising Malala, but ignoring Ahed?

    When 15-year-old Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by a member of Tehrik-e-Taliban, the reaction was starkly different. Gordon Brown, the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, issued a petition entitled “I am Malala.” The UNESCO launched “Stand Up For Malala.”

    Malala was invited to meet then President Barack Obama, as well as the then UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and addressed the UN General Assembly. She received numerous accolades from being named one of the 100 Most Influential People by Time magazine and Woman of the Year by Glamour magazine to being nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2013, and again in 2014 when she won.

    State representatives such as Hillary Clinton and Julia Gillard as well as prominent journalists such as Nicholas Kristof spoke up in support of her. There is even a Malala Day!

    But we see no #IamAhed or #StandUpForAhed campaigns making headlines. None of the usual feminist and rights groups or political figures has issued statements supporting her or reprimanding the Israeli state. No one has declared an Ahed Day. In fact, the US in the past has even denied her a visa for a speaking tour.

    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/west-praising-malala-ignoring-ahed-171227194606359.html

  • Nigeria pledges to restore nearly 10 million acres of degraded land
    https://news.mongabay.com/2017/12/nigeria-pledges-to-restore-nearly-10-million-acres-of-degraded-land

    The government of Nigeria has announced its plans to restore four million hectares, or nearly 10 million acres, of degraded lands within its borders.

    The West African nation is now one of 26 countries across the continent that have committed to restoring more than 84 million hectares (over 200 million acres) of degraded lands as part of the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR100), an effort that aims to bring 100 million hectares of land under restoration by 2030. These commitments also support the targets of the Bonn Challenge, a global initiative to restore 150 million hectares by 2020 and 350 million hectares by 2030.

    Nigeria’s economy is the largest in Africa, but deforestation has become widespread amidst the country’s rapid pace of urban development and population growth.

    “Nigeria is happy to be associated with the AFR100 initiative and Bonn Challenge. We are committed to restoring degraded forests to improve citizens’ livelihoods through food security, poverty alleviation, a sustainable environment and the achievement of the [UN] Sustainable Development Goals,” Bananda Aliyu, the director of the Drought and Desertification Amelioration Department at Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Environment, said in a statement.

    #Nigeria #restauration_des_sols

  • Revue Sociologie de l’Art 2011/2 | Cairn.info
    Les pratiques artistiques au prisme des stéréotypes du genre

    https://www.cairn.info/revue-sociologie-de-l-art-2011-2.htm

    Sommaire
    Marie Buscatto, Mary Leontsini
    Les pratiques artistiques au prisme des stéréotypes de genre

    Nelly Quemener
    Ces femmes qui font rire : du stéréotype féminin aux “nouvelles féminités” dans les talk-shows en France

    Viviane Albenga
    Stabiliser ou subvertir le genre ? Les effets performatifs de la lecture

    Marie-Carmen Garcia
    Les pratiques clownesques à l’épreuve des stéréotypes de la féminité

    Reguina Hatzipetrou-Andronikou
    Déjouer les stéréotypes de genre pour jouer d’un instrument
    Le cas des paradosiaka en Grèce

    Varia
    Émilie Salaméro, Nadine Haschar-Noé
    Fabriquer un artiste-créateur
    Formes et effets des dispositifs de socialisation à la création dans les écoles professionnelles de cirque

    Fiches de lecture
    Andréa Giesch
    Marie-Christine Bureau, Marc Perrenoud, Roberta Shapiro, L’artiste pluriel. Démultiplier l’activité pour vivre de son art
    Le regard sociologique, Presses Universitaires du Septentrion, 2009

    Pauline Vessely
    Marie-Christine Bureau, Marc Perrenoud, Roberta Shapiro (éds), L’artiste pluriel. Démultiplier l’activité pour vivre de son art
    Le regard sociologique, Presses Universitaires du Septentrion, 2009

    Résumés de Thèses

    La suite

    Revue Sociologie de l’Art 2011/3 | Cairn.info
    https://www.cairn.info/revue-sociologie-de-l-art-2011-3.htm

    Marie Buscatto, Mary Leontsini
    Éditorial

    Alison Faupel, Vaughn Schmutz
    From fallen women to Madonnas : Changing gender stereotypes in popular music critical discourse

    Marie Goyon
    Comment être artiste, femme et autochtone au Canada ?
    Du stigmate à son renversement dans l’art contemporain

    Clara Lévy, Alain Quemin
    Stéréotypes genrés dans l’œuvre, reconnaissance esthétique et succès marchand d’une artiste plasticienne : le cas de Marina Abramović

    Varia
    Hannah Abdullah, Jérôme Hansen
    “Even Clean Hands Leave Marks” : Testing the Edges of the Artwork at Tate Modern

    Fiches de lecture
    Catherine Dutheil-Pessin
    Jean-Pierre Esquenazi, Les séries télévisées. L’avenir du cinéma ?
    Armand Colin, Collection « Cinéma/Arts visuels », Paris 2010, 221 pages

    Norbert Bandier
    Perry Anderson, Les Origines de la postmodernité
    Les Prairies ordinaires, 2010

    Sylvia Girel
    Jean-Charles Bérardi, Prolégomènes à une sociologie de l’art. Les formes élémentaires de l’échange artistique et son procès, « Problématique et méthodologie » tome 1, « Analyse et modèle » tome 2
    L’Harmattan, « Logiques sociales », 2009

    Cécile Boëx
    Violaine Roussel (Dir.), Les artistes et la politique. Terrains Franco-américains
    Presses Universitaires de Vincennes, Université Paris 8, 2010

    Résumés de thèses

  • Purge anti-globaliste par inadvertance
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/purge-anti-globaliste-par-inadvertance

    Purge anti-globaliste par inadvertance

    Voici une thèse intéressante sur la Grande Purge saoudienne, avec adjonction de la crise Clinton-Brazile à “D.C.-la-folle”. Elle est développée par Jamie Wright, de Infowars.com et sans doute largement substantivée à partir d’informations et d’analyses de Roger Stone, un lobbyiste, stratège de tendance républicaine et homme d’influence de Washington qui s’est placé proche de Trump contre les démocrates. Stone, qui est cité une fois directement dans l’article de Wright, a sans aucun doute, en plus de son expérience des intrigues et des corruptions internes à “D.C.-la-folle”, une excellente connaissance des liens de corruption entre certains groupes et familles/“maisons” de l’establishment avec la maison des Saoud, notamment la maison des Clinton et la maison des Bush. (...)

    • L’article mêle la crise interne du parti démocrate, avec la rébellion de Donna Brazile contre les Clinton, et la crise en cours en Arabie, avec l’énorme purge anti-corruption lancée par le fils du roi, Prince Mohamed Ben Salman (on dit désormais MBS), frappant une belle brochette de Princes et autres dirigeants. L’article présente le comportement de Brazile ainsi que son livre qui sort ces jours-ci et dont des extraits ont été publiés dans Politico.com et dans le Washington Post, comme l’avant-garde d’une manœuvre approuvée par l’establishment démocrate pour éliminer les Clinton et leur clique dont les turpitudes plombent affreusement le parti. En attendant, Brazile est seule au charbon et elle est violemment mise en cause par l’équipe de campagne d’Hillary Clinton, agissant par communiqué sur consigne de la patronne. Elle n’en poursuit pas moins.

      Pour le côté saoudien, le même angle d’appréciation est choisi. On sait que l’interprétation générale est que cette Grande Purge, présentée comme une opération anti-corruption, a aussi sinon d’abord comme but d’affirmer et de verrouiller le pouvoir de MBS, qui est quasiment de direction centrale en raison de l’état de santé de son père, le roi Salman. L’appréciation est alors de constater que cette Grande Purge touche les relais et contacts saoudiens les plus “fidèles” des Clinton, et aussi des Bush qui sont dans le même circuit, avec le train de corruption extraordinaire qui suit. On en vient même à rappeler l’épisode de l’“exfiltration” des officiels saoudiens des USA juste après 9/11, “Prince Bandar”, dit “Bandar Bush” en tête... (Et, du coup, l’élimination de “Bandar Bush”, autour de 2013, apparaît, – sans qu’on l’ait voulu nécessairement et précisément dans ce sens mais soit, – comme un premier pas d’une élimination de toute une génération de corrupteurs-corrompus, autant du côté saoudien que du côté US.)