position:head of state

  • Sahle-Work Zewde becomes Ethiopia’s first female president - BBC News
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-45976620?ocid=socialflow_twitter

    Ethiopian members of parliament have elected Sahle-Work Zewde as the country’s first female president.

    Ms Sahle-Work is an experienced diplomat who has now become Africa’s only female head of state.

    Her election to the ceremonial position comes a week after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed appointed a cabinet with half the posts taken up by women.

    After being sworn in, President Sahle-Work promised to work hard to make gender equality a reality in Ethiopia.

    #femmes #Éthiopie #pouvoir #égalité

  • Macron’s massive fall from grace is perfectly encapsulated in the video of him humiliating a schoolboy

    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/emmanuel-macron-teenager-video-telling-off-france-mr-president-a84085

    The unnamed youngster features in a posted video in which he greets France’s head of state with the words: “All right, Manu?” 

    Using an affectionate abbreviation of a politician’s first name is likely to be considered entirely acceptable in countries such Britain and the US (“How’s it going, Tess?”, “What’s up, Don?”) but not so in a place where the president still affects quasi-monarchical status.

    “Mr President or Sir to you,” is the gist of Macron’s filmed response to the boy, who was also variously described as an imbecile, a revolutionary and a jumped-up little leftie who needed to pass his exams and learn how to earn a living before attempting any cheeky comments.

    As recently as March this year, Macron encouraged Indian students to “never respect the rules”, while during a trip to America a month later he told an audience at George Washington University: “Let’s disrupt the system together.” He even used coarse words usually ignored by politicians, such as “bulls**t”, presenting himself as a modern man of the people who never shied away from contemporary mores.

    Rather than an authoritative leader, Macron came across as petty and spiteful. This says everything about the way absolute power in France can turn the most enlightened politician into a pompous prig.

  • Israel uses Diaspora Jews as human shields

    Israel is happy to exploit the world’s Jews, but doesn’t care that its actions put them at risk

    Yossi Klein May 31, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-israel-uses-diaspora-jews-as-human-shields-1.6135014

    Israel is a danger to the world’s Jews. It calls itself their protector, but doesn’t care about the consequences for them of its actions. Jews abroad pay the price of hostility to Israel, yet the state insists on wrapping them around it like a suicide vest. You want to hurt me? Okay, but be aware that they’ll blow up first.
    The effects on overseas Jews aren’t part of Israel’s military calculations. It will do what it does even if it hurts them. But that won’t keep it from claiming to represent them, to speak in their name and to use them as hostages. They are the human shield. Your loyalty to your Judaism, it says, comes before your loyalty to your homeland.
    The Judaism in whose name the state speaks is not that of most Diaspora Jews. Israel limits or excludes their Judaism. Israel’s Judaism is that of a minority that took over the country, and in the United States it is more attentive to evangelical Christians than it is to Reform or Conservative Jews. The state fights them, yet uses them.
    Israeli governments always used Diaspora Jews. Israeliness hid behind Judaism. The dangers to which Israel exposed Diaspora Jews never deterred it. In 1956 it used Egyptian Jews to sabotage their state. It sent Jonathan Pollard to spy against his own country. It imposes itself on the world’s Jews, forcing them to debate their loyalties while insisting on equating criticism of Israel with an assault on Judaism and all Jews — that is, anti-Semitism. We have plenty of that kind of anti-Semitism right here. By this formula, half of Israel is anti-Semitic because it can’t stand the government. But the efficacy of accusing the world of anti-Semitism is waning. Overuse has worn out the shame mechanism and moved up its expiry date. Gone are the days we could justify a strike on Gaza with what was done to us in Auschwitz.
    Israel won’t admit this, but from its perspective there’s an upside to anti-Semitism: It “proves” foreign countries’ failure to protect their Jews. Their negligence underscores our excellence. The head of state, who is also the head of the world’s Jews, is proud of the security he gives his Jews. Three years ago, after terror attacks against French Jews, he called on the community to come to Israel because their country can’t protect them. (Some 5,000 Jews have died in terror attacks in Israel.)

  • The Rise and Fall Of the Watusi - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/1964/02/23/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-watusi.html
    En 1964 le New York Times publie un article sur l’extermination imminente des Tutsi. C’est raconté comme une fatalité qui ne laisse pas de choix aux pauvres nègres victimes de forces plus grandes qu’eux. Dans cette optique il s’agit du destion inexorable du peuple des Tutsi arrivant à la fin de son règne sur le peuple des Hutu qui revendique ses droits. L’article contient quelques informations intéressantes déformées par la vison colonialiste de l’époque.

    ELSPETH HUXLEYFEB. 23, 1964

    FROM the miniature Republic of Rwanda in central Africa comes word of the daily slaughter of a thousand people, the possible extermin­ation of a quarter of a million men, women and children, in what has been called the bloodiest tragedy since Hitler turned on the Jews. The victims are those tall, proud and graceful warrior­aristocrats, the Tutsi, sometimes known as the Watusi.* They are being killed

    *According to the orthography of the Bantu language, “Tutsi” is the singular and “Watutsi” the plural form of the word. For the sake of simplicity. I prefer to follow the style used in United Nations reports and use “Tutsi” for both singular and plural.

    Who are the Tutsi and why is such a ghastly fate overtaking them? Is it simply African tribalism run riot, or are outside influences at work ? Can nothing be done?

    The king‐in‐exile of Rwanda, Mwamni (Monarch) Kigeri V, who has fled to the Congo, is the 41st in line of suc­cession. Every Tutsi can recite the names of his 40 predecessors but the Tutsi cannot say how many centuries ago their ancestors settled in these tumbled hills, deep valleys and vol­canic mountains separating the great

    Nor is it known just where they came from—Ethiopia perhaps; before that, possibly Asia. They are cattle folk, allied in race to such nomadic peo­ples as the Somali, Gatlla, Fulani and Masai. Driving their cattle before them, they found this remote pocket of cen­tral Africa, 1,000 miles from the In­dian Ocean. It was occupied by a race of Negro cultivators called the Hutu, who had themselves displaced the ab­original pygmy hunters, the Twa (or Batwa). First the Tutsi conquered and then ruled the Hutu. much as a ??r‐man ruling class conquered and settled

    In the latest census, the Tutsi con­stitute about 15 per cent of Rwanda’s population of between 2.5 and 3 mil­lion. Apart from a handful of Twa, the rest are Hutu. (The same figures are true of the tiny neighboring king­dom of Burundi.)

    For at least four centuries the Tutsi have kept intact their racial type by inbreeding. Once seen, these elongated men are never forgotten. Their small, narrow heads perched on top of slim and spindly bodies remind one of some of Henry Moore’s sculptures. Their average height, though well above the general norm, is no more than 5 feet 9 inches, but individuals reach more than 7 feet. The former king, Charles III Rudahagwa, was 6 feet 9 inches, and a famous dancer and high jumper—so famous his portrait was printed on the banknotes—measured 7 feet 5 inches.

    THIS height, prized as a badge of racial purity, the Tutsi accentuated by training upward tufts of fuzzy hair shaped like crescent moons. Their leaps, bounds and whirling dances delighted tourists, as their courtesy and polished manners impressed them.

    Through the centuries, Tutsi feudal­ism survived with only minor changes. At its center was the Mwami, believed to be descended from the god of lightning, whose three children fell from heaven onto a hilltop and begat the two royal clans from which the Mwami and his queen were always chosen. Not only had the Mwami rights of life and death over his subjects but, in theory, he owned all the cattle. too — magnificent, long‐horned cattle far superior to the weedy native African bovines. Once a year, these were ceremonially presented to the Mwami in all their glory — horns sand‐polished, coats rubbed with butter, foreheads hung with beads, each beast attended by a youth in bark‐cloth robes who spoke to it softly and caught its dung on a woven straw mat.

    “Rwanda has three pillars.” ran a Tutsi saying: “God, cows and soldiers.” The cows the Mwami distributed among his subchiefs, and they down the line to lesser fry, leaving no adult Tutsi male without cows.

    Indeed, the Tutsi cannot live with­out cattle, for milk and salted butter are their staple food. (Milk is con­sumed in curds; the butter, hot and perfumed by the bark of a certain tree.) To eat foods grown in soil, though often done, is thought vaguely shame­ful, something to be carried out in private.

    THE kingdom was divided into dis­tricts and each had not one governor, but two: a land chief (umunyabutaka) and a cattle chief (umuuyamukenke). The jealousy that nearly always held these two potentates apart prompted them to spy on each other to the Mwami, who was thus able to keep his barons from threatening his own au­thority.

    Below these governors spread a net­work of hill chiefs, and under them again the heads of families. Tribute — milk and butter from the lordly Tutsi, and

    Just as, in medieval Europe, every nobleman sent his son to the king’s court to learn the arts of war, love and civil­ity, so in Rwanda and Burundi did every Tutsi father send his sons to the Mwami’s court for instruction in the use of weapons, in lore and tradition, in dancing and poetry and the art of conversation, in manly sports and in the practice of the most prized Tutsi virtue —self‐control. Ill‐temper and the least display of emotion are thought shameful and vul­gar. The ideal Tutsi male is at all times polite, dignified, amiable, sparing of idle words and a trifle supercilious.

    THESE youths, gathered in the royal compound, were formed into companies which, in turn, formed the army. Each youth owed to his company commander an allegiance which continued all his life. In turn, the commander took the youth, and subsequently the man, under his protection. Every Tutsi could appeal from his hill chief to his army com­mander, who was bound to support him in lawsuits or other troubles. (During battle, no commander could step backward, lest . his army re­treat; at no time could the

    The Hutu were both bound and protected by a system known as buhake, a form of vassalage. A Hutu wanting to enter into this relationship would present a jug of beer to a Tutsi and say: “I ask you for milk. Make me rich. Be my father, and I will be your child.” If the Tutsi agreed, he gave the applicant a cow, or several cows. This sealed the bargain­

    The Hutu then looked to his lord for protection and for such help as contributions to­ward the bride‐price he must proffer for a wife. In return, the Hutu helped from time to time in the work of his pro­tector’s household, brought oc­casional jugs of beer and held himself available for service

    The densely populated king­doms of the Tutsi lay squarely in the path of Arab slavers who for centuries pillaged throughout the central Afri­can highlands, dispatching by the hundreds of thou­sands yoked and helpless hu­man beings to the slave mar­kets of Zanzibar and the Persian Gulf. Here the explor­er Livingstone wrote despair­ingly in his diaries of coffles (caravans) of tormented cap­tives, of burnt villages, slaugh­tered children, raped women and ruined crops. But these little kingdoms, each about the size of Maryland, escaped. The disciplined, courageous Tutsi spearmen kept the Arabs out, and the Hutu safe. Feudalism worked both ways.

    Some Hutu grew rich, and even married their patrons’ daughters. Sexual morality was strict. A girl who became pregnant before marriage was either killed outright or aban­doned on an island in the mid­dle of Lake Kivu to perish, unless rescued by a man of a despised and primitive Congo tribe, to be kept as a beast of burden with no rights.

    SINCE the Tutsi never tilled the soil, their demands for labor were light. Hutu duties included attendance on the lord during his travels; carry­ing messages; helping to re­pair the master’s compound; guarding his cows. The reia­tionsiiip could be ended at any time by either party. A patron had no right to hold an unwilling “client” in his service.

    It has been said that serf­dom in Europe was destroyed by the invention of the horse

    UNTIL the First World War the kingdoms were part of German East Africa. Then Bel­gium took them over, under the name of Ruanda‐Urundi, as a trust territory, first for the League of Nations, then under the U. N. Although the Belgian educational system, based on Roman Catholic mis­sions, was conservative in out­look, and Belgian adminis­trators made no calculated attempt to undo Tutsi feudal­ism, Western ideas inevitably crept in. So did Western eco­nomic notions through the in­troduction of coffee cultiva­tion, which opened to the Hutu a road to independence, by­passing the Tutsi cattle‐based economy. And Belgian authori­ty over Tutsi notables, even over the sacred Mwami him­self, inevitably damaged their prestige. The Belgians even de­posed one obstructive Mwami. About ten years ago, the Belgians tried to persuade the Tutsi to let some of the Hutu into their complex structure of government. In Burundi, the Tutsi ruling caste realized its cuanger just in time and agreed to share some of its powers with the Hutu majority. But in Rwanda, until the day the system toppled, no Hutu was appointed by the Tatsi over­lords to a chief’s position. A tight, rigid, exclusive Tutsi aristocracy continued to rule the land.

    The Hutu grew increasingly

    WHEN order was restored, there were reckoned to be 21,­000 Tutsi refugees in Burundi, 14,000 in Tanganyika, 40,000 in Uganda and 60,000 in the Kivu province of the Con­go. The Red Cross did its best to cope in camps improvised by local governments.

    Back in Rwanda, municipal elections were held for the first time—and swept the Hutu into power. The Parmehutu —Parti d’Emancipation des Hu­tus—founded only in October 1959, emerged on top, formed a coalition government, and after some delays proclaimed a republic, to which the Bel­gians, unwilling to face a colonial war, gave recognition in terms of internal self‐gov­ernment.

    In 1962, the U.N. proclaimed Belgium’s trusteeship at an end, and, that same year, a general election held under U.N. supervision confirmed the Hutu triumph. With full in­dependence, a new chapter be­gan — the Hutu chapter.

    Rwanda and Burundi split. Burundi has the only large city, Usumbura (population: 50,000), as its capital. With a mixed Tutsi‐Hutu govern­ment, it maintains an uneasy peace. It remains a kingdom, with a Tutsi monarch. Every­one knows and likes the jovial Mwami, Mwambutsa IV, whose height is normal, whose rule

    As its President, Rwanda chose Grégoire Kayibanda, a 39‐year‐old Roman Catholic seminarist who, on the verge of ordination, chose politics in­stead. Locally educated by the Dominicans, he is a protégé of the Archbishop of Rwanda whose letter helped spark the first Hutu uprising. Faithful to his priestly training, he shuns the fleshpots, drives a Volkswagen instead of the Rolls or Mercedes generally favored by an African head of state and, suspicious of the lure of wicked cities, lives on a hilltop outside the town of Kigali, said to be the smallest capital city in the world, with some 7,000 inhabitants, a sin­gle paved street, no hotels, no telephone and a more or less permanent curfew.

    Mr. Kayibanda’s Christian and political duties, as he sees them, have fused into an im­placable resolve to destroy for­ever the last shreds of Tutsi power—if necessary by obliter­ating the entire Tutsi race. Last fall, Rwanda still held between 200,000 and 250,000 Tutsi, reinforced by refugees drifting back from the camps, full of bitterness and humilia­tion. In December, they were joined by bands of Tutsi spear­men from Burundi, who with the courage of despair, and outnumbered 10 to 1, attacked the Hutu. Many believe they were egged on by Mwami Ki­geri V, who since 1959 had been fanning Tutsi racial prideand calling for revenue.

    THE result of the attacks was to revive all the cumula­tive hatred of the Tutsi for past injustices. The winds of anti‐colonialism sweeping Af­rica do not distinguish be­tween white and black colo­nialists. The Hutu launched a ruthless war of extermina­tion that is still going on. Tut­si villages are stormed and their inhabitants clubbed or hacked to death, burned alive or herded into crocodile‐infest­ed rivers.

    What will become of the Tutsi? One urgent need is out­side help for the Urundi Gov­ernment in resettling the masses of refugees who have fled to its territory. Urundi’s mixed political set‐up is rea­sonably democratic, if not al­ways peaceful (witness the assassination of the Crown Prince by a political opponent

    In a sense the Tutsi have brought their tragic fate on themselves. They are paying now the bitter price of ostrich­ism, a stubborn refusal to move with the times. The Bourbons of Africa, they are meeting the Bourbon destiny—to be obliterated by the people they have ruled and patron­ized.

    The old relationship could survive no longer in a world, as E. M. Forster has described it, of “telegrams and anger;” a world of bogus democracy turning into one‐party states, of overheated U.N. assemblies, of press reports and dema­gogues, a world where (as in the neighboring Congo) a for­mer Minister of Education leads bands of tribesmen armed with arrows to mutilate women missionaries.

    THE elegant and long‐legged Tutsi with their dances and their epic poetry, their lyre­horned cattle and superb bas­ketwork and code of seemly behavior, had dwindled into tourist fodder. The fate of all species, institutions or individ­uais who will not, or cannot. adapt caught up with them. Those who will not bend must break.

    For the essence of the situ­ation in an Africa increasingly

    NOW, not just the white men have gone, or are going; far more importantly, the eld­ers and their authority, the whole chain of command from ancestral spirits, through the chief and his council to the obedient youth are being swept away. This hierarchy is being replaced by the “young men,” the untried, unsettled, uncer­tain, angry and confused gen­eration who, with a thin ve­neer of ill‐digested Western education, for the first time in Africa’s long history have taken over power from their fathers.

    It is a major revolution in­deed, whose first results are only just beginning to show up and whose outcome cannot be seen. There is only one safe prediction: that it will be vio­lent, unpredictable, bloody and cruel, as it is proving for the doomed Tutsi of Rwanda.

    #Ruanda #Burundi #histoire #Tutsi #Congo

  • Württ. Kunstverein Stuttgart: Titos Bunker

    The point of departure for this exhibition, on show at the Württembergischer Kunstverein from May 27 to August 6, 2017, is a particular place, Tito’s bunker in Konjic (Bosnia and Herzegovina), which is equally negotiated as concrete location and as open-ended metaphor.

    From 1953 to 1979, the former head of state in Yugoslavia, Josip Broz Tito, initiated the top-secret construction of a gigantic and—at least theoretically—nuclear-safe bunker in Konjic, a town situated around 40 kilometers south of Sarajevo (and today located in Bosnia and Herzegovina). This shelter, drilled 300 meters deep into the mountain and occupying a space of 6,500 square meters, was conceived for the survival of 350 chosen representatives of the country’s political and military elite of that time—including just one woman: Jovanka B. Broz, Tito’s wife. Tito himself outlived the accomplishment of the structure by just one year.
    Not until the 1990s did the existence of this construction project, which cost 4.6 billion US dollars, become public knowledge. At this time, still no global atomic war had happened, fortunately, but the nation (or more precisely: its “elites”) that was (were) to be rescued in this bunker had disappeared: it was quasi atomized.

    In 2011, the two artists Edo und Sandra Hozic succeed in launching the Project Biennial D-0 ARK, whose site was to be Tito’s Bunker. From the very beginning, their aim has been to amass a collection of art through the biennial that would ultimately serve as a basis for a museum in the bunker.


    http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/program/2017/exhibitions/titos-bunker
    http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/program/2017/exhibitions/titos-bunker/konjic

    #tito #bunker #art #exposition

  • Good luck checking on the #health of an African president
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/09/good-luck-checking-on-the-health-of-an-african-president

    For those with more than a passing interest in African #POLITICS, the incessant 24 hour news and social #Media chatter about the health of U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and that of her rival Donald Trump, may appear quaint. Because, when it comes to electoral politics or the health of a head of state in […]

    #Africa #Presidents

  • Tracking Hillary Clinton’s #health is much easier than African #Presidents’
    http://africasacountry.com/2016/09/tracking-hillary-clintons-health-is-much-easier-than-african-presid

    For those with more than a passing interest in African #POLITICS, the incessant 24 hour news and social #Media chatter about the health of U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and her rival Donald Trump’s health, may appear quaint. Because, when it comes to electoral politics or the health of a head of state in #Africa, […]

  • ’Yes, I Was Dead:’ Zimbabwe’s Mugabe Back After Disappearing - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2016/09/03/world/africa/ap-af-zimbabwe-mugabe.html

    Zimbabwe’s 92-year-old President Robert Mugabe arrived home Saturday after an overseas absence that led to rumors about a health crisis, joking to reporters that “Yes, I was dead.

    It is true that I was dead,” the world’s oldest head of state said. “And I resurrected. As I always do.

    Are we speaking to a ghost?” someone asked him.

    Once I get back to my country, I am real,” Mugabe said.

    The president had not been seen since leaving a regional summit early on Tuesday. Flight data showed his plane went to Dubai after the original flight path indicated a course toward Asia. Mugabe has received treatment in Singapore in the past.
    […]
    Recently, his wife, Grace, said Mugabe would rule from the grave.

  • Tight run for Estonian President
    Estonian parliament held on August 29 the first round of the presidential election, where no candidate received the necessary 68 votes from 101 MPs.

    ERR reports that the leader in the first round was Riigikogu speaker Eiki Nestor from Social Democratic Party with 40 votes, followed by the Center Party’s Mailis Reps with 26 and IRL and Free Party candidate Allar Jõks coming in last with 24 votes.

    The next voting round is to be held on August 30 when heavyweight Reform Party’s Siim Kallas is to step in the race.
    In case the second election round does not produce a successor to Toomas Hendrik Ilves, a special electoral college will convene to select the next head of state for a five-year term in office.

    http://bnn-news.com/tight-run-for-estonian-president-150059

    #Estonia #Igaunija #Presidential_elections #Elections2016

  • Ilves cannot grasp logic behind neighbours preferring agreements with U.S. over NATO
    Estonian head of state Toomas Hendrik Ilves has this week commented that he does not fully grasp the logic behind Finland and Sweden preferring to sign bilateral agreements with the U.S. over opting for NATO membership.

    In an interview with Estonia’s Vikerraadio, Ilves analysed that Russia’s displeasure with regard to NATO does not stem from the fact that NATO itself would be very dangerous, but rather the fact that the U.S.’s role within it is so large, ERR reports.

    http://bnn-news.com/ilves-cannot-grasp-logic-behind-neighbours-preferring-agreements-with-u-s-

    #Estonia #NATO #security #geopolitics #scandinavia

  • Twitter is the strange new kingmaker of the 21st century
    http://qz.com/748929/twitter-is-the-strange-new-kingmaker-of-the-21st-century

    Systematically excluded from the process were freelance journalists. Political figures in lesser-known countries have also complained about the difficulty of getting verified. Twitter apparently refuses to verify Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s head of state. Meanwhile, the blue “verified” check has been extended to countless teenagers with high follower counts on the video-sharing platform Vine (which Twitter owns) and B-list movie actors.
     
    Twitter’s verification process opened up again recently in order to help more users avoid impersonation. But so far, my timeline remains filled with complaints from freelance journalists, academics, and NGO employees whose requests have been denied.

    […]

    Even worse than Twitter’s king-making, however, is its ability to determine for the public what (or who) is or is not a valid news source. When freelancers or small independent news sites struggle to become verified, it is consequently more difficult for them to prove their identities (and trustworthiness) to potential sources, thus strengthening the existing divide between mainstream and independent media. And when some news sources are allowed to post certain kinds of content, but other, typically unverified users are not, Twitter crosses the line into censorship.

    • Difficulté ici : réclamer un élargissement des comptes validés revient à accepter la généralisation d’une « real name policy ». Cela revient aussi à accepter le principe qu’un réseau social soit un outil de certification des identités.

  • Les allégations contre Rousseff s’émoussent.
    http://www.humanite.fr/les-allegations-contre-rousseff-semoussent-610781

    Lundi encore, un rapport rédigé par trois experts du Sénat pour le compte de la Commission spéciale chargée du processus de destitution de la cheffe de l’État souligne que cette dernière n’est pas responsable de « pédalages fiscaux » (jeu d’écritures comptables). Le 12 mai, la Chambre haute l’avait suspendue de ses fonctions au motif qu’il s’agissait là d’un « crime » de « responsabilité ». Or, l’enquête stipule que Dilma Rousseff ne serait intervenue, de manière ni directe ni indirecte, dans le retard de paiements au plan Safra (de concession de crédits pour les agriculteurs) par le Trésor à la Banque du Brésil pour un montant de près de 1 million de dollars.

    À part l’Huma, ça n’intéresse apparemment personne en français.

    Audit report : Rousseff didn’t commit fiscal crime
    http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/216972/audit-report-rousseff-didn%E2%80%99t-commit-fiscal-crime

    According to a note released by the Senate, in-house analysts found no evidence that Rousseff participated in the arrears of the payment of loans to public banks, considered by Rousseff’s accusers as illegal fiscal manoeuvres that they say is a crime of responsibility, the principal accusation in their case to impeach the head of state and oust her.

    According to the indictment, the government systematically delayed sending funds to the Banco do Brasil, Caixa Económica Federal and the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), instead allegedly diverting the payments to pay for state social programmes in an election year.

    The fiscal manipulations, which date from 2014 and continued through to 2015, were the rallying cry to the charges that led to the opening of impeachment proceedings against Rousseff.

  • Until I Came to Live in Israel, I Was Sure That Jews Were Smart -
    Detaining the Washington Post for ’incitement’: Unable to stem the terror attacks that now number as many as eight per day, the government has clearly decided that incitement, its declared mortal enemy, can now be its best friend.

    Bradley Burston Feb 16, 2016

    Opinion - Haaretz - Israeli News Source Haaretz.com

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.703808

    Until I came to live in Israel, years and years and years ago, I was sure that Jews were smart.
    I thought that if Jews ever had a country of their own, these people – with their passion for learning, their tragic heritage of persecution and oppression and exile and mass murder, their openness to new ideas, their appreciation of the values of democratic freedoms and of minority rights, and their demonstrated talents for international relations – would run their country accordingly.
    Instead of running it into the ground.
    CAVEAT: Over time, I’ve learned that, by and large, the Israeli on the street is a person of considerable acumen, who would support efforts by the government – if those efforts actually existed at all – to honestly pursue peace through diplomacy, reconciliation between Jews and Arabs, widening of rights to minorities, and moderation over extremism. 
    For proof, you need look no further than the popularity of Israel’s formal head of state Reuven Rivlin, a rightist who champions these values.

  • Across Europe with Tommy Robinson: inside the new wave of anti-immigration protest coming soon to Britain
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/immigration/12031679/Across-Europe-with-Tommy-Robinson-inside-the-new-wave-of-anti-immigrati

    I was with Robinson – whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – as he travelled to the Czech Republic to meet representatives from Pegida and a similar Czech group called “Bloc Against Islam” (which grew out of the “Czech Defence League”, modelled on its English equivalent) to get them to sign up to this idea. Robinson was due to speak at a rally partly organised by the Bloc, but did not because at the last moment a new speaker was announced: the country’s President #Milos_Zeman, who is an outspoken critic of Islam, immigration and the EU. Six thousand people turned out in Prague to listen.

    That a head of state would turn up at all to this sort of rally is a sign of changing times – and the reason Robinson feels bullish [...]

    Following a minute’s silence for the victims of the Paris attacks, President Zeman launched a tirade against political correctness, against media manipulation, against the EU. “Brainwashing is harder now that it used to be, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist,” he said, in steady tones. “We must not be silenced with insults like ’Islamophobic’ or ’xenophobic’ or ’fascist’. An insult isn’t an argument! It just shows lack of thought!” ("Ha!" said Milan, the Prague leader of Bloc, while translating simultaneously for me. “This is our president!”).

    Zeman continued: “We have no problems with foreigners: there are half a million in the Czech Republic. But this culture [being brought by the refugees] is not compatible with ours. Ours is not a culture of murder or religious hatred!” ("Ha!" said Milan again, “that’s perfect”). “The immigrants are young men. Why are these men not fighting for the freedom of their country against Islamic State!?” (Cheers) “Why do they come to Europe? Why don’t they stay to make their own countries better?” (More cheers).

    #république_tchèque #islamophobie

  • Breaking : President Obama Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline
    http://ecowatch.com/2015/11/06/obama-rejects-keystone-pipeline

    We just made history together. Four years to the day after we surrounded the White House, President Obama has rejected the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline!

    This is huge.

    A head of state has never rejected a major fossil fuel project because of its climate impacts before. The President’s decision sets the standard for what climate action looks like: standing up to the fossil fuel industry and keeping fossil fuels in the ground.

    BREAKING: President Obama has REJECTED the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline! Victory!

    ...

    This fight started with First Nations in Canada where the tar sands are extracted, and spread to farmers, ranchers and tribal nations along the pipeline route. Since then people from all walks of life have joined hands against Keystone, and the 830,000 barrels per day of destructive tar sands oil it would have carried through the country to be burned.

    Together, we have shown what it takes to win: a determined, principled, unrelenting grassroots movement that takes to the streets whenever necessary, and isn’t afraid to put our bodies on the line.

    #non aux #sables_bitumineux

  • Lunch with the FT: Sepp Blatter
    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/5457de04-7e48-11e5-a1fe-567b37f80b64.html

    Blatter then drops a bombshell: he did try to rig the vote but for the US, not for Qatar. There had been a “gentleman’s agreement”, he tells me, among Fifa’s leaders that the 2018 and 2022 competitions would go to the “two superpowers” Russia and the US; “It was behind the scenes. It was diplomatically arranged to go there.”

    Had his electoral engineering succeeded, he would still be in charge, he says. “I would be [on holiday] on an island!” But at the last minute, the deal was off, because of “the governmental interference of Mr Sarkozy”, who Blatter claims encouraged Michel Platini to vote for Qatar. “Just one week before the election I got a telephone call from Platini and he said, ‘I am no longer in your picture because I have been told by the head of state that we should consider . . . the situation of France.’ And he told me that this will affect more than one vote because he had a group of voters.”

    Blatter will not be drawn on motives. He says he has only once spoken to Sarkozy since the vote and did not raise the issue. He does admit that the vote for the World Cup, carried out by a secret ballot of Fifa’s executive committee, was always open to “collusion”. “In an election, you can never avoid that, that’s impossible . . . when you are only a few in the electoral compound.”

    One month after Fifa’s 22-strong executive committee voted 14-8 in a secret ballot in Qatar’s favour, the Arab state announced that it had begun testing French Dassault Rafale fighter jets against rival aircraft for a fleet upgrade. In April 2015, Qatar bought 24 of the jets for $7bn, with an option to buy 12 more.

  • Sarkozy’s Russian fling – POLITICO
    http://www.politico.eu/article/sarkozy-russia-fling-putin-nato-united-states

    Once upon a time, Nicolas Sarkozy was such a fervent admirer of the United States that an American diplomat described him in 2009 as “the most pro-American French president since World War II,” according to a Wikileaks embassy cable.

    That version of Sarkozy seems to be lost, replaced by one whose gaze points east. On Thursday, the conservative leader of the “Républicains” party is heading with a small delegation to Moscow, where he will sit down for a face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    A party official traveling with Sarkozy to Moscow described the trip as little more than a courtesy visit to Putin, whom Sarkozy has taken to calling a “friend” since he left office three years ago.

    This is about a leader of the opposition who is going to meet a head of state with whom he worked very closely while he was president,” said Thierry Mariani, a Russophile MEP in Sarkozy’s party, as he was about to board a plane to Moscow. “[Putin] is one of the personal contacts that Sarkozy has kept since he left office.

    Il ne viendrait évidemment à l’idée de personne que le probable candidat futur à l’élection présidentielle viendrait demander un petit soutien à cet autre grand ami de la démocratie.

  • And when Abbas goes?, by Nadia Hijab and Alaa Tartir
    http://mondediplo.com/blogs/and-when-abbas-goes

    The Palestinian National Council (PNC) is expected to meet this month in its first session since 2009 to accept the resignation of Mahmoud Abbas as chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), along with more than half the Executive Committee’s 18 members. The PNC does of course have the option of rejecting some or all of the resignations, and in any case Abbas still wears several hats: he remains head of state, President of the Palestinian Authority, commander-in-chief, and head of the Fatah political party. Moreover, all those who resign are free to stand again. [#st]

    http://zinc.mondediplo.net/messages/6941 via Le Monde diplomatique

  • Soviet-era statues smashed as Ukraine likens Russia to Nazis - Yahoo News
    http://news.yahoo.com/soviet-era-statues-smashed-ukraine-likens-russia-nazis-144142951.html

    Kharkiv (Ukraine) (AFP) - Masked men smashed communist-era monuments in Ukraine’s second city overnight Friday after the country’s pro-Western parliament voted to purge the nation of Soviet symbols and its head of state compared today’s Russia to Nazi Germany.
    (…)
    Soviet WWII veterans will be entitled to continue to wear their medals, however, and graves will be left in peace, even if inscribed with the hammer-and-sickle or other Soviet insignia.

  • Poroshenko dismisses chief of center for special terrorist fighting operations at Security Service of Ukraine
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/poroshenko-dismisses-chief-of-center-for-special-terrorist-fighting-operat

    Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has dismissed Hennadiy Kuznetsov from the post of head of the center for special terrorist fighting operations of the Security Service of Ukraine.

    The decree of Jan. 23, 2015 has been posted on the website of the head of state.

    Kuznetsov was appointed to the post in March 2014 by former acting Ukrainian president and parliament speaker Oleksandr Turchynov.

    (intégralité de la brève)

    Conséquence des revers récents, on change le chef.

  • Iraqi politicians postpone presidential vote amid growing violence
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/iraqi-politicians-postpone-presidential-vote-amid-growing-violenc

    Iraqi lawmakers on Wednesday postponed choosing a new president for their ailing country while air strikes, suicide car bombs and summary executions yielded their daily grim crop of bodies. Parliament adjourned without even broaching the election of a new head of state and agreed to meet again on Thursday, their last chance to pick a new leader before the week-long Eid al-Fitr Muslim holiday. A government air raid on the jihadist-held town of Sharqat nearly 300 kilometers (180 miles) northwest of Baghdad killed at least three women and a child, a senior army official told AFP. read more

    #Iraq #Jalal_Talabani #Nouri_al-Maliki

  • Antonov : grandes manœuvres autour d’un fleuron aéronautique ukrainien ?

    Honored test pilots hope Poroshenko supports protection of Antonov chief designer Kiva
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/honored-test-pilots-hope-poroshenko-supports-protection-of-antonov-chief-d

    A group of Ukrainian honored test pilots has sent an open letter to the head of state Petro Poroshenko asking to retain the possibility of developing Ukrainian aviation industry and reinstating Dmytro Kiva as chief designer of Antonov State Enterprise (Kyiv) dismissed by the government.

    Antonov, née en 1946 à Novosibirsk, relocalisée dans la banlieue de Kiev reçue par l’Ukraine dans l’héritage soviétique est toujours une société contrôlée à 100% par l’état.

    Son P.-D.G. (et concepteur en chef), issu de la filière soviétique, Dmytro Kiva a été éjecté par le gouvernement provisoire le 11 avril 2014. Une semaine après, le collectif de travail de l’entreprise a émis à l’unanimité le vœu de réintégration de son dirigeant (ainsi qu’un soutien tout aussi unanime au nouveau gouvernement).

    18-04-2014 / RESOLUTION of the ANTONOV Company collective’s joint meeting http://www.antonov.com/news/303

    Work collective resolves the following:

    1.The work collective expresses trust and support to Dmytro Kiva, President – General Designer. We require stopping any efforts to remove Dmytro Kiva from leadership of the ANTONOV Company and cancelling a decision No.18 of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine from 11 April 2014.

    During such difficult time of development of Ukraine, the Government of Ukraine has to do everything possible for not to loose and to preserve defense−industrial complex of the country that has been built for decades because of difficult work of generations that is to preserve aviation industry.

    2.Today all the actions, directed to shake stable state of the ANTONOV Company, will undermine independence and defense capability of Ukraine and will work in favour of Ukrainian’s enemies, the ANTONOV’s competitors – in favour of everyone who is against strong and stable Ukraine.

    The collective of the ANTONOV Company requires the Government of Ukraine to cancel the order No.340−p from 9.04.2014, for Dmytro Kiva, President – General Designer, remains a leader of the ANTONOV State Aviation Concern in such responsible time.

    3.Our enterprise’s collective and administration has always been and still are patriots and real citizens of Ukraine. The collective of the ANTONOV Company unanimously supports a decision of the Government in its actions, directed to political, economic and military defense of our State, expresses its firm readiness to protect political and economic independence of Ukraine by its work. We are sure, during such difficult time, knowing from experience and patriotism of Ukrainian specialists, Ukraine is going to overcome crisis and will come out of it as a winner.

    Voted unanimously.

    La société et ses salariés sont l’objet de convoitises multiples. Cf. interview de D. Kiva en 2012 qui mentionnent :
    • le débauchage des salariés
    • la prise de possession d’emprises foncières

    Aircraft designer Dmytro Kiva : Interview / 6 September 2012 | http://en.for-ua.com/interview/2012/09/06/165947.html

    Il se plaignait aussi de l’arrivée de logiques purement financières…

    When Ukraine had Ministry of industrial policy, it was engaged into the development of aircraft industry policy. Now we have the Agency on corporate rights and property, which cares about income only. But to earn something we must invest something first.

    et racontait les magouilles favorisant les importations d’avions au détriment de la production nationale.

    Еmbraer has more privileges in Ukraine than we do. Our aircraft industry does not provide for support system of national producer. On the contrary, foreign rivals have all privileges.

    According to the scheme, a plane is temporary imported on Ukraine’s customs territory. Then an airline rents this plane for a year without paying taxes and fees. After a year, one of the flights abroad gets documented as exportation and new importation of the plane back to Ukraine’s customs territory.

    To build a plane our plant, in turn, must pay 20% VAT for components bought in Ukraine and 20% customs fee for imported components. A plane costs about 25 million dollars, and 2.5 million out of the total are “negative preferences.”

  • Egypt: Sisi prepares for victory in low turnout presidential vote
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/egypt-sisi-prepares-victory-low-turnout-presidential-vote

    Former army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi is expected to emerge from a second and final day of voting on Tuesday as Egypt’s next head of state, returning the presidency to a military man as hopes for democracy fade three years after Hosni Mubarak’s downfall. Seeking to boost turnout that appeared low on the first day of voting, the government declared Tuesday a holiday and extended voting by an hour so that polls would close at 10:00 pm (1900 GMT). The central bank also declared a bank holiday. read more

  • Sisi calls for US military and economic aid to #Egypt
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/sisi-calls-us-military-and-economic-aid-egypt

    A file picture taken on May 4, 2014 shows Egypt’s ex-army chief and leading presidential candidate Abdel Fattah al-Sisi giving his first television interview since announcing his candidacy in Cairo. (Photo: AFP)

    Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the general who ousted elected Islamist president Mohammed Mursi and is set to become Egypt’s next head of state, called on the United States to help fight “terrorism.” In his first interview with an international news organization in the run-up to the May 26-27 vote, Sisi called for the resumption of US military aid, worth $1.3 billion a year, which was partially frozen after a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood. Asked what message he has for US President Barack Obama, Sisi said: “We are fighting a war against terrorism.” read (...)

    #Abdel_Fatah_al-Sisi #Top_News