position:minister of interior

  • The #Houthis March South - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
    https://carnegieendowment.org/sada/79228

    However, the Houthi advance in the cities of central and southern Yemen is not only a result of own capability. Their advance has been aided by Riyadh and Abu Dhabi’s conflicting objectives and agendas, and their relationships with some of the groups backing the internationally recognized government. Notably, the coalition did not allow pro-government fighters to open up new fronts, such as in Qaniya (on the border between Bayda and Marib provinces) and in the Nihm district (northeast of Sanaa), which would have alleviated the pressure on forces in Bayda and Dalea. Instead, they only allowed some skirmishes in Saada province near the Saudi border.

    [...]

    Escalating tensions between the Yemeni government and Abu Dhabi also played a significant role in the Houthis’ military victories. The UAE apparently viewed the new parliament (which convened in Hadramout under the protection of Saudi troops), and its announcement of the National Alliance of Yemeni Political Forces, and the creation of the Southern National Coalition as a threat to its proxy forces—and even to the legitimacy of its intervention in #Yemen. In addition, several government ministers have recently been critical of the coalition’s actions. On May 5, Minister of Interior Ahmed al-Maysari (a member of the new SNC) described the Arab coalition as a partner in the war against the Houthi “revolutionaries,” but not a partner in administering liberated areas. Minister of Transportation Saleh al-Gabwani (likewise a top-ranking leader of the SNC) tweeted that the Arab coalition was refusing to grant permission to increase the number of flights from India to Yemen, even though all seats are being reserved by international organizations, saying, “What is left for us, coalition of brothers?”

  • The creation of preconditions for Croatia’s entry into #Schengen is visible in the both on the field and diplomacy - while the Croatian border police continues to prevent the entry of refugees into the country and does not restrain from using violent methods, Minister #Božinović received praises from Bavarian Minister of Interior, Sports and Integration, #Joachim_Herrman, on the work of Croatian #police and protection of Croatian Borders (http://hr.n1info.com/Vijesti/a401099/Bavarski-ministar-unutarnjih-poslova-pohvalio-hrvatsku-granicnu-policiju.). The border area of the European Union seems to have become a mirror in which politics sees only itself and those who “pat it on the back”, while they refuse to face with the reality.

    #route_des_balkans #Allemagne #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #Croatie #externalisation #contrôles_frontaliers #militarisation_des_frontières #buffer_zone #Balkans

    Une manière de contrôler la #frontière_sud-alpine

    Reçu via la mailing-list Inicijativa dobrodosli, le 15.05.2019

    ping @isskein

    • Un bon article de #Matteo_Villa qui résume ces questions, paru en septembre 2018 :

      Outsourcing European Border Control : Recent Trends in Departures, Deaths and Search and Rescue Activities in the Central Mediterranean

      In our previous blog post ‘Border Deaths in the Mediterranean: what we can learn from the latest data?’ on Border Criminologies (March 2017) we discussed the existing data sources on Mediterranean Sea migration and provided an analysis of key patterns and trends. We found that Search and Rescue (SAR) has little or no effect on the number of arrivals, and it is rather the absence of SAR that leads to more deaths. These results, which are in line with other research, were covered by various European media outlets and also resulted in a peer reviewed publication in Sociology (also available as a free preprint).

      These findings covered the period until December 2016. Since then, however, the context of European border policy has changed considerably:

      Through a mix of political pressure, financial incentives and military assistance, the EU has tried to induce transit countries in the Sahel to close their borders to Europe-bound migrants. According to European parliament president Tajani, this resulted in a 95% drop in crossings through Niger, a key transition point for migrants on the way to Libya, although it cannot be excluded that migrants are taking different, more dangerous routes in order to reach Northern African countries (either via Niger or through Algeria).
      From the beginning of 2017 onwards, the Italian government backed by the EU has increasingly cooperated with Libyan authorities to block depatures in exchange for financial and logistical support. The UN-backed government in Libya in turn, has allegedly forged deals with a number of militias.
      Increased European support for the Libyan Coast Guard (LCG), resulting in an increase in interceptions and the declaration of a Libyan SAR zone.
      Increasing legal and political attacks on NGOs engaged in SAR have culminated in Italy’s decision to declare its ports to be “closed” to NGO vessels and (temporarily) to EU rescue ships in June 2018.

      Each of these developments can be seen as part of a broader strategy to close the European borders by externalizing border control to third countries, a practice that was tried earlier with Turkey, and to relax commitments enshrined in international law, such as search and rescue at sea and non refoulement.

      In view of these recent developments, we document estimated trends in arrivals, deaths, mortality rates and rescue activities covering the most recent period, between January 2016 and July 2018. In doing so, we strongly rely on detailed statistical analyses conducted by the Italian research institute ISPI. Our analyses are based on publicly available data from the IOM and the UNHCR for arrivals and interceptions, and IOM’s Missing Migrants Project for deaths. It is important to note that recorded deaths are a lower bound estimate of the actual death toll, because some deaths are likely to remain unreported. We provide an extensive discussion of data sources, data quality and challenges for their interpretation in our academic article on the issue. Since most of the above developments relate to the situation in Libya, we focus on migrants departing from that country. Libya is also the only Northern African country where interceptions at sea by the Coast Guard are independently monitored by both IOM and UNHCR personnel at disembarkation points.

      Although each of these individual developments have been reported elsewhere, together they paint a picture of Europe’s resolve to close its external borders and deter irregular migration, regardless of the (human) cost.

      Trend #1: A sharp drop in departures

      Figure 1 plots trends in the number of migrants departing irregularly from Libya by sea since January 2016. Until mid-2017, migrant departures show a remarkably regular seasonal pattern, with around 20,000 departures during the summer months. As of July 2017, however, the number of arrivals dropped dramatically, and it has stayed at comparatively low levels up to the present. The decrease in arrivals occurred after alleged ’deals’ between Libyan authorities and the militias in Western Libya that control the smuggling networks, and a few months after the signing of a memorandum of understanding between Italy and Libya. Convergent diplomatic action induced some militias to switch from smuggling to preventing departures. Other factors, such as the activity of the LCG, private and public SAR providers, or dynamics in the rate of dead and missing along the route, are relevant per se but appear to play no significant role in the decrease in arrivals to Europe. Europe’s efforts to block migrants passing though transit countries may have played a role as well, but evidence is still too sparse to be reliably assessed.

      Trend #2: An increased risk of interception by the Libyan Coast Guard

      The Libyan Coast Guard plays a pivotal role in Europe’s strategy of externalizing migration control to third countries. A report by Human Rights Watch suggests that in recent months “the Italian Maritime Rescue Coordination Center (IMRCC) has routinized a practice, tested since at least May 2017, of transferring responsibility to Libyan coast guard forces in international waters even when there are other, better-equipped vessels, including its own patrol boats or Italian navy vessels, closer to the scene.” This practice has been termed ’refoulement by proxy’ because the LCG is financed, equipped and instructed by the Italian and European authorities, as described in this recent investigative report. Migrants who are forcibly returned to Libya are imprisoned in detention centres for indefinite periods, and they face systematic violence—including torture and rape—as has been documented in numerous reports.

      The new Italian government intensified and formalized the policy of transferring responsibility to the LCG. Since June, it has instructed ships undertaking rescues in the Libyan SAR zone to refer all emergency calls to the Libyan authorities, who will then arrange their interception and pull-back to Libya. The declarations that Italian ports are “closed” to NGO ships are also part of this strategy, as their operations are considered to interfere with LCG interceptions. In late July, this practice resulted in the first instance of a non-Libyan vessel, the Asso Ventotto, being instructed to coordinate with the Tripoli Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre (JRCC). The ship ultimately disembarked the rescued persons on Libyan territory and thus effectively engaged in refoulement and collective expulsion of migrants.

      The practice of outsourcing European border control to the Libyan Coast Guard has brought about a sharp increase in its activity: by the end of July 2018, the LCG had intercepted 12,490 migrants at sea compared to 8,851 during the same period in the previous year, which amounts to a 41% increase. In combination with the drop in departures, this policy has resulted in a rapid increase in the risk of interception. To illustrate this fact, in July 2017 just 6% of migrants leaving Libya by sea ended up being caught and brought back, while almost 94% made it to Europe. In July 2018, instead, 71% of migrants leaving Libya’s shores were intercepted and brought back, while just 24% arrived safely in a European country (see Figure 2).

      Trend #3: An increase in the absolute and relative mortality rate between mid-June and July 2018

      In this section, we look at trends in absolute mortality (the number of dead and missing people at sea) and relative mortality (the risk of crossing) of migrants departing from Libya. In particular, we analyse the widely reported spike in deaths that occurred in late June 2018, after virtually all SAR NGOs had been prevented from operating as a result of policies introduced by the new Italian Minister of Interior Salvini from the far-right Lega and the continued denial by the Maltese authorities to offer Valetta as a port of entry. On June 10, Italy unilaterally decided to declare its ports to be “closed” to NGO rescue ships, as well as (temporarily) to commercial and EU vessels carrying rescued migrants. Also Malta tightened its position on rescue activities and cracked down on two SAR NGOs in early July. Since then, rescue operations close to the Libyan coast have been almost entirely delegated to the LCG.

      First, we look at trends in the absolute mortality rate. Figure 3 shows a reduction in the monthly number of deaths since July 2017, commensurate with the reduction in the number of departures described above. For example, 20 deaths were recorded in April 2018, and 11 in May (Figure 3). In June, however, an estimated 451 migrants died on their way from Libya to Europe—of which 370 between 16 and 30 June. It is important to note that these deaths occurred during a time when departures were comparatively low. As a result, the risk of crossing has increased from 2.8% in the previous months to a staggering 7% since mid-June 2018 (Figure 4). These findings are also robust to using different time frames for the pre-NGO absence period, including the entire period since the drop of arrivals in July 2017 until the NGO ban. Whereas relative mortality has fluctuated in recent years, 7% constitute an extraordinary spike.

      Figure 5 maps shipwreck events occurring between 16 June and 31 July 2018 with at least estimated 15 dead or missing persons, using geocoded data provided by IOM’s Missing Migrants Project. While the precise location of each shipwreck is only an estimate, as “precise locations are not often known” (as explained in the “Methodology” section of the Missing Migrants Project), such estimates do provide an indication of where such shipwrecks have taken place. In particular, IOM data shows that shipwrecks between 16 June and 31 July took place well within 50 nautical miles from Libya’s shores, an area which used to be patrolled by either the LCG or NGO vessels. Yet, during the time when deaths spiked, only two NGO vessels had been operating, and only discontinuously.

      These observations are reminiscent of what happened in 2015, when the withdrawal of competent SAR providers (the Italian mission Mare Nostrum) similarly created the conditions for avoidable loss of life. Although these findings are based on a relatively short time period, they are suggestive of the risk of leaving the Libyan SAR zone to the operations of the LCG alone. Continuous monitoring of the situation remains of utmost importance.

      Conclusion

      In combination, the three trends described above highlight the harsh realities of recent European migration policies, which seek to limit irregular migration regardless of the moral, legal and humanitarian consequences. The current European obsession with reducing migration at all costs is even less comprehensible when considering that arrivals decreased drastically prior to the most recent escalation of rhetoric and externalization of migration control. Arrivals to Italy in the first half of 2018 were down by 79% compared to the same time frame in 2017. Although increasingly inhumane policies are often cloaked in a rhetoric about reducing deaths at sea, it is important to remember that those who are prevented from crossing or forcibly returned are generally not safe but remain subject to precarious and often lethal conditions in countries of transit. Rather than providing a sustainable response to the complex challenges involved in irregular migration, Europe has outsourced the management of its migration ’problem’ to countries like Libya and Niger, where violence and death often remains hidden from the public view.

      https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2018/09/outsourcing

    • Arrivées en Europe via la Méditerranée :
      2018 :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/705781
      Arrivées en Europe toute frontière confondue :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/739902
      –-> attention, c’est les « crossings »... rappelez-vous de la question des doubles/triples contages des passages :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/705957

      Pour #2016 #2017 et #2018, chiffres de Matteo Villa :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/768142
      database : https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ncHxOHIx4ptt4YFXgGi9TIbwd53HaR3oFbrfBm67ak4/edit#gid=0
      #base_de_données #database

    • Arrivées par la #Méditerranée en #2019 :
      Europe : plus de 21.000 migrants et réfugiés arrivés par la Méditerranée depuis janvier

      Selon l’Agence des Nations Unies pour les migrations (OIM ), les arrivées de migrants en Méditerranée ont dépassé le seuil des 21.000, ce qui constitue une baisse d’environ un tiers par rapport aux 32.070 arrivés au cours de la même période l’an dernier.

      Ce sont exactement 21.301 migrants et réfugiés qui sont entrés en Europe par voie maritime à la date du 29 mai. Les arrivées en Espagne et en Grèce représentent 85% du total des arrivées, le reste des migrants et réfugiés de cette année ont pris la direction de l’Italie, de Malte et de Chypre.

      La Grèce a désormais surpassé l’Espagne au titre de première destination des migrants et des réfugiés rejoignant l’Europe via la Méditerranée. Selon l’Organisation internationale pour les migrations (OIM), le nombre total d’arrivées par mer cette année est de 10.200 dont 2.483 arrivées signalées entre le 1er et le 29 mai dernier.

      Le Bureau de l’OIM en Grèce a indiqué mercredi dernier que les garde-côtes helléniques ont confirmé que pendant plus de 48 heures entre le 28 et le 29 mai, il y eu sept incidents nécessitant des opérations de recherche et sauvetage au large des îles de Lesbos, Leros, Samos, Symi Kos et le port d’Alexandroupolis. Ils ont ainsi sauvé 191 migrants qui ont été transférés par la suite dans les ports respectifs grecs.

      De plus, à la date du 30 avril, ce sont 3.497 migrants qui ont réussi à atteindre la Grèce via sa frontière terrestre avec la Turquie.
      519 décès de migrants, dont plus de la moitié sur la route de la Méditerranée centrale

      L’Espagne reste la deuxième porte d’entrée des réfugiés en Méditerranée, avec 7.876 arrivées dont 1.160 hommes, femmes et enfants pour le seul mois de mai. Sur la même période l’an dernier, Madrid a comptabilisé 8.150 migrants et réfugiés ayant réussi à franchir la route de la Méditerranée occidentale. En outre, plus de 2.100 ont atteint l’Espagne via sa frontière terrestre avec le Maroc.

      Par ailleurs, l’OIM rappelle que les arrivées ont considérablement baissé en Italie où seuls 1.561 migrants ont réussi à franchir les côtes siciliennes.

      Mais la route de la Méditerranée centrale (Italie et Malte) reste tout de même la plus meurtrière avec 321 décès, soit plus de la moitié du total de migrants et réfugiés ayant péri en tentant d’atteindre l’Europe. Les décès enregistrés sur les trois principales routes de la mer Méditerranée pendant près de cinq mois en 2019 s’élèvent à 519 personnes, soit un quart de moins que les 662 décès confirmés au cours de la même période en 2018.

      A cet égard, l’OIM rappelle que dans l’ouest de la Méditerranée, l’organisation non gouvernementale Alarme Phone a signalé qu’un jeune Camerounais avait disparu le 21 mai dernier. Selon les témoignages des huit survivants qui l’accompagnaient, il serait tombé en mer avant que leur navire ne soit intercepté par la marine marocaine. Son corps n’a pas été retrouvé.

      En Méditerranée centrale, des migrants interceptés et renvoyés en Libye le 23 mai ont également indiqué aux équipes de l’OIM que cinq hommes s’étaient noyés au cours de leur voyage. « Aucun autre détail concernant l’identité, le pays d’origine ou d’autres informations personnelles concernant les disparus n’est disponible », a souligné l’OIM dans une note à la presse.

      https://news.un.org/fr/story/2019/05/1044671

  • Two SOMO researchers denied entry into Israel on arbitrary grounds - SOMO - July 21, 2018
    https://www.somo.nl/two-somo-researchers-denied-entry-israel-arbitrary-grounds

    On Friday 20 July, two researchers of SOMO were denied access into Israel at Ben Gurion airport (Tel Aviv). The stated reason for the denial of entry was their alleged Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) activism. SOMO finds this decision, issued by the Israeli Minister of Interior, and the treatment of the researchers subsequent to their denial of entry, to be both incomprehensible and unacceptable.

    #expulsion #Israël

  • MARE CLAUSUM
    The Sea Watch vs Libyan Coast Guard Case
    6 November 2017.
    https://www.forensic-architecture.org/case/sea-watch

    On 6 November 2017, the rescue NGO Sea Watch (SW) and a patrol vessel of the Libyan Coast Guard (LYCG) simultaneously directed themselves towards a migrants’ boat in distress in international waters. The boat, which had departed from Tripoli a few hours earlier, carried between 130 and 150 passengers. A confrontational rescue operation ensued, and while SW was eventually able to rescue and bring to safety in Italy 59 passengers, at least 20 people died before or during these events, while 47 passengers were ultimately pulled back to Libya, where several faced grave human rights violations – including being detained, beaten, and sold to an other captor who tortured them to extract ransom from their families. The unfolding of this incident has been reconstructed in a video by Forensic Oceanography in collaboration with Forensic Architecture.

    To reconstruct the circumstances of this particular incident, however, Forensic Oceanography has produced a detailed written report which argues it is also necessary to understand the policies that shaped the behaviour of the actors involved, and the patterns of practices of which this event was only a particular instantiation. Before arriving on the scene, the LYCG liaised with the Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre of the Italian Coast Guard, which informed them of the presence of the boat in distress. The Ras Jadir, the very patrol vessel of the LYCG that engaged in reckless behaviour and thus contributed to the death of several passengers, was one of the four patrol boats that had been donated by Italy to the LYCG on the 15 May 2017, in presence of the Italian Minister of Interior. On board that vessel on the day of the events, 8 out of the 13 crew members had received training from the EU’s anti-smuggling operation, EUNAVFOR MED.

    Based on these elements, the Mare Clausum report argues that this particular incident is paradigmatic of the new, drastic measures that have been implemented by Italy and the EU to stem migration across the central Mediterranean. This multilevel policy of containment operates according to a two-pronged strategy which aims, on the one hand, to delegitimise, criminalise and ultimately oust rescue NGOs from the central Mediterranean; on the other, to provide material, technical and political support to the LYCG so as to enable them to intercept and pull back migrants to Libya more effectively. This undeclared operation to seal off the central Mediterranean is what we refer to as Mare Clausum.

  • AIDA 2017 Update: Challenging access and strict Dublin procedures in France and Switzerland*

    The updated AIDA reports on Switzerland and France document the latest developments on access to the territory for those in need of protection, the asylum procedure, the Dublin system, reception conditions, detention and content of protection.

    France registered 100,412 asylum seekers with the Office for Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons (OFPRA) in 2017, in addition to 41,500 asylum seekers placed under Dublin procedure. The situation of registration of asylum applications at the “single desks” of French Prefectures remains dire. In most areas, the Prefectures have been unable to register claims within the 3 working day deadline set by the law. To restore the 3-day time limit, the Minister of Interior published a Circular on 12 January 2018 which plans to increase the staff in Prefectures and OFII and to reorganise services.

    Switzerland, where the number of asylum seekers dropped to 18,088 last year, is proceeding with a restructuring of its asylum procedure which will enter into force in 2019. Ahead of this reform, State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) has confirmed the implementation of another pilot phase of the accelerated procedure in the federal centres of Boudry and Chevrilles.

    The two countries are among the main operators of the Dublin Regulation in Europe. France initiated 41,500 Dublin procedures to transfer people to other European countries, in addition to over 100,000 asylum seekers received throughout 2017. Switzerland issued 8,370 outgoing Dublin requests – “take charge” requests almost exclusively based on the documentation and entry criteria and “take back” requests – and implemented 2,297 transfers. The majority of procedures and transfers concerned Italy, followed by Germany and France.

    While authorities have taken strict measures to implement more transfers, courts have intervened to uphold legal safeguards in the operation of the Dublin system, particularly in relation to detention of asylum seekers awaiting a transfer. Following the Al Chodor ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union, the French Court of Cassation ruled that the detention of asylum seekers under the Dublin procedure is illegal due to the absence of legally defined criteria for a “significant risk of absconding”. In practice, however, even before the adoption of a new law defining those criteria, some Prefectures continued to order detention of asylum seekers under a Dublin procedure. For its part, the Swiss Federal Court ruled that the order of administrative detention pronounced by the canton of Zoug against an Afghan family whose three young children were simultaneously subject to a placement in a foster care, constituted a violation of the right to family life. In its judgment of 28 April 2017, the Federal Court recalled that such a measure is only admissible as an ultima ratio and after a thorough examination of other less coercive measures.

    https://www.ecre.org/aida-2017-update-challenging-access-and-strict-dublin-procedures-in-france-and
    #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Dublin #règlement_dublin #France #Suisse #comparaison
    Le #modèle_suisse se diffuse en France... sic
    ping @isskein

  • Le #modèle_suisse des #renvois_Dublin s’élargit à l’#UE
    Quand les mobilisations l’élargissent (6)

    Les expulsions des personnes hébergées dans les Centres d’Accueil et d’Orientation (CAO – voir ici, ici, ici et là) vers le pays responsable de leur demande d’asile selon le règlement européen Dublin III se multiplient. Les résistances aussi (voir ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici, ici et là).

    https://passeursdhospitalites.wordpress.com/2017/06/11/quand-les-mobilisations-lelargissent-6
    #Europe #Dublin #EU #asile #migrations #réfugiés
    cc @stesummi

    • J’ai fait ce commentaire sur FB (en réponse à un commentaire de @isskein) :

      L’Europe en train de suivre le modèle suisse... :-( pendant des années le « champion incontesté » (sic) des renvois Dublin. Efficacité suisse oblige. C’était en 2014... la seule grande flèche était celle que depuis la Suisse pointait sur l’Italie...


      https://asile.ch/2015/07/08/la-carte-du-jour-les-transferts-dublin-en-europe

    • L’Europe tentée par un système d’asile plus directif

      #France :

      Or les consignes se durcissent à l’heure où le gouvernement prépare un plan dans lequel le renvoi des migrants « dublinés » figurera en bonne place. En 2016, la France a opéré 1 293 renvois effectifs et avait obtenu des accords de réadmission pour 14 000 autres.

      http://www.lemonde.fr/immigration-et-diversite/article/2017/06/12/l-europe-tentee-par-un-systeme-d-asile-plus-directif_5142986_1654200.html

    • Reçu via la mailing-list Dublindeportations. Intéressant...

      we have just discussed the same thing on another mailing list and here is what a French activist answered us:

      Let’s see what’s behind the rumours.

      – when an asylum claim is registrated, the fingerprints are systematicly taken and checked in #EURODAC database;

      – to obtain the collaboration of some charities to send migrants away from Calais, the minister of interior promissed that migrants going away from Calais in accommodation and orientation centers and asking for asylum will have their asylum claim processed in France even if have their fingerprints in another country. This promisse has been more or less respected, but it was anyway for people from Calais in a certain xontext and in a certain period - now it’s finished.

      – other than that, they apply the Dublin procedure and exceptions are rare.

      – untill last year French authorities were not puting a lot of energy to deport people in Dublin procedure, and it was possible to wait untill the 6 month delay finishes to have your asylum claim proceeded in France. Now they are deporting more and more, including people who are in the last weeks of their purgatory six month, and consider more and more people “on the run” ("en fuite") in order they have to wait 18 month before their claim to be proceeded.

      And you have to add the delay to have to have your asylum claim registrated - period you spend usually in the street - and other difficulties to have your rights respected. French authorities have a repulsive policy to deter people to ask for asylum - or to ask for protection as unaccompagnied minor.

      #empreintes_digitales #Calais #France
      cc @isskein

  • Poland : Asylum Seekers Blocked at Border

    (Budapest) – Polish authorities routinely deny asylum seekers at the Belarus-Poland border the right to apply for asylum and instead summarily return them to Belarus, Human Rights Watch said today. Since 2016, large numbers of asylum seekers, mostly from the Russian Republic of Chechnya, but also from Tajikistan and Georgia, have tried to apply for asylum in Poland at the border with Belarus.


    https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/03/01/poland-asylum-seekers-blocked-border
    #Pologne #asile #migrations #réfugiés #fermeture_des_frontières #Biélorussie #frontières #push-back #refoulement

    –-> @reka : une autre frontière à épaissir sur les cartes...

  • Why ex-minister’s return to prison may ease Lebanon’s political deadlock - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/04/michel-samaha-hariri-military-court-sectarian-strife.html

    the voices that once supported Samaha are muffled. Even Jamil al-Sayyed, one of the most hard-line figures in the Axis of Resistance — the anti-West alliance between Hezbollah, Iran and Syria — and within the ranks of the March 8 Alliance, has nothing good to say. Sayyed tweeted Jan. 15, a day after Samaha’s release, “Michel Samaha betrayed my trust and erred against me when he accompanied me from Damascus with him knowing what he was hiding in his car.” Sayyed reaffirmed that stance in another Twitter posting April 8, the day the court handed Samaha his prison term.

    It appears that the irreversible decision came against the backdrop of uninterrupted bilateral dialogue sessions between the Future Movement Party (part of the March 14 Alliance) and Hezbollah (part of the March 8 Alliance) that started in December 2014. The dialogue has been ongoing despite the political sparring between Future Movement and Hezbollah over the war in Syria and the emerging crisis with Saudi Arabia; the next session is scheduled for May 10. Two items on the agenda are easing sectarian tensions and finding a solution to the two-year presidential vacuum.

    One of the outcomes of this dialogue so far is Minister of Interior and Municipalities Nouhad al-Machnouk’s rejection of the Arab Interior Ministers’ decision March 2 to brand Hezbollah a terrorist organization.

    Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/04/michel-samaha-hariri-military-court-sectarian-strife.html#ixzz47gLuCpHy

  • Par Are you syrious :
    https://www.facebook.com/areyousyrious/photos/a.542222625926625.1073741829.537310533084501/581620575320163/?type=3&theater


    “BREAKING: This morning, Croatian Minister of Interior Vlaho Orepić has announced direct refugee trains from Greek/Macedonian border to Austria. Slavonski Brod camp will be closed, probably some Serbian and Slovenian camps as well. According to this info from Croatian government, screening and registration will be done on Macedonian border, with presence of police officers from another countries. Refugees will be given food and water and won’t be able to get off the train, unless they will have medical emergency and/or ask for asylum in one of the countries they will be passing (Macedonia, Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia). Trains will only stop for changes of locomotives and police personnel. No additional registration will be imposed until they arrive to Austria. Exact date is still unclear, but 20 Croatian officers were deployed to Macedonia today. Procedural details will be arranged between Macedonian, Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and Austrian police. More info soon - we’ll keep updating this post.”

  • Progress Report on the Implementation of the #hotspots in Italy

    On 29 September 2015, the Commission adopted a Communication outlining the immediate operational, budgetary and legal measures under the European Agenda on Migration, and calling for the full roll-out of the Relocation Scheme and Migration Management Support Teams working in ’hotspot’ areas. At the request of the Commission, Italy soon after submitted its Roadmap for relocation and for the Support Teams for the ’hotspots’.

    However, the implementation of European Union Law with regard to building a Common European Asylum System has been proceeding too slowly in the Member States. As a result, on 14 October, the Commission presented a Communication on the state of play of the implementation of the Priority Actions under the European Agenda on Migration.

    In particular, the Commission called on Italy to operationalise all hotspots on schedule, to ensure full use of the existing detention capacity and consider reforms of existing norms regarding detention, as well as a swift transfer of migrants from the hotspot areas to the second-line reception facilities, or to detention facilities.

    Since then, the migration flows through Italy have continued to decline. According to Frontex, 3,227 migrants arrived in Italy in November compared to 8,529 arrivals in October. This is in line with seasonal patterns. The arrival of migrants of the nationalities eligible for relocation is limited for the time being. The Triton Joint Operation has continued to support search and rescue operations.

    Despite consistent encouragements by the Commission, at present only one of the six designated hotspot areas is fully operational, in Lampedusa. The Commission expects that two other facilities, namely Pozzallo and Porto Empedocle/Villa Sikania, will be opened within days as soon as the Italian Government gives its agreement. At the Justice and Home Affairs Council meeting on 4 December, the Italian Minister of Interior already announced the opening of a second hotspot. Relevant European agencies are alerted and ready to deploy additional staff as needed. The roll-out of hotspots in Taranto, Trapani and Augusta require major works and will not be ready before early 2016. In these locations, reception capacities have to be built as registration is currently happening in tents and there is no place to accommodate people.

    The relatively low level of arrivals provides an opportunity to ensure that the hotspot concept is thoroughly rolled out and that any shortcomings identified so far are addressed. Infrastructure, equipment, staffing, and the organisation of the hotspot have to be stepped up. It should be ensured that the hotspots are as efficient as possible to cover screening, documents check, fingerprinting and registration. The implementation of the hotspot concept will also guarantee that migrants are properly informed and channelled to either the asylum procedure (including relocation) or return procedures. Security features should be improved as a matter of priority. The formal opening of further hotspot locations is essential to guarantee that all migrants disembarked in Italy go through this hotspot procedure.

    The effectiveness of hotspots at times of high demand will also depend on the readiness of Member States to deploy more experts to Italy. In parallel, further efforts are needed by the Italian government on the legal framework for hotspot activities of all stakeholders working on the ground. A Commission team of 3 officials is now permanently stationed in Italy to assist coordination.

    Effective hotspots are also essential to make relocation work. At the same time, the active participation of all participating Member States is an obligation. In parallel, eligible asylum seekers must be adequately informed about their rights and obligations to participate in the scheme. Until now, only 19 Member States have appointed Liaison Officers to facilitate the implementation of the relocation scheme and only 12 Member States have made places available for relocation candidates – a total of 1,041 places. The pace of relocation needs to be stepped up in view of the 154 asylum applicants relocated so far from Italy.

    http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?qid=1394708797280&uri=COM:2015:679:FIN
    #hotspot #Italie #réfugiés #migrations #asile

  • The Weaponized Architecture of Paris Northern Banlieue Police Stations
    http://thefunambulist.net/2015/10/26/the-weaponized-architecture-of-paris-nothern-banlieue-police-station

    “For an important amount of the banlieues inhabitants, in particular the Black and Arab youth, the police incarnate a daily reminder of the structural antagonism at work against their neighborhood and their bodies. As explained in a past article entitled “The Banlieue Battleground: Designing the French Suburbs for Police/Military Interventions,” this antagonism reached its peak during the nine years of Nicolas Sarkozy’s executive mandates (four years as Minister of Interior and five as President) between 2003-2004, and 2005- (see the Karsher declaration, only a few days before the death of Bouna and Zyed) 2012, but it never really dissolved since then — the current Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, also formerly Minister of Interior shares a certain amount of similarities with Sarkozy’s politics, despite being part of the Socialist Party. The strategy of the State vis-a-vis the cités (high density public housing in a low density urban fabric) consists in a gradual withdrawal of its service and an increase of police control. The latter’s violence is characterized by disrespectful discourse, systematic identity control, random chase and/or arrests, and sometimes, the use of a potentially lethal arsenal coming from a prolific security market. The following photographs attempt to show that architecture as well constitutes a weapon both symbolic and effective reinforcing the strong antagonism developed by the police against the banlieue youth. The police stations’ architectures, through their spatiality, their aesthetics and the care in the materials used (brick for the Aubervilliers one, and even some marble imitation for the Pierrefitte one, see below) attempt to present them as authored works, designed by architecture offices that also conceive libraries, schools, housing, etc. However, the agenda of this architecture is fairly explicit to anyone who knows their antagonizing context: these police station are built to respond to the potentiality of a “siege” undertaken against them — a rather odd hypothesis when one knows the police arsenal — by what they imagine to be hordes of barbarian youth (paranoia is necessary to maintain the antagonism). The walls of these stations are thus opaque with various degrees of inclination (a well-known technique by 17th-century fortress architects!), the more transparent parts are elevated, out-of-reach, and the sidewalks in front of their entrances are made inaccessible for vehicles through the presence of metallic cones (ubiquitous on the Paris sidewalks). Architecture is weaponized here again, and architects should be held accountable for the responsibility of their contribution to the antagonism developed by the State and its police towards the banlieue inhabitants.”

    #Architecture #Design #Cartography #History #Loi

  • #Civil_marriage Struggle in #Lebanon Back to Square One
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/23598

    Under the pretext of “fighting extremism” by “eliminating excuses,” Minister of Interior and Municipalities #Nouhad_al-Machnouk is determined to return the issue of civil marriage to square one, reversing all the progress made by non-sectarian forces. Former interior ministers #Ziad_Baroud and #Marwan_Charbel confirm that the procedures they followed to cross out confessional identities on civil registry records, and allow the registration of civil marriage contracts in Lebanon, were entirely legal, and that the reluctance to implement (or desire to annul) them is tantamount to stripping a segment of Lebanese citizens of their civil (...)

    #Articles #Culture_&_Society

  • Civil marriage in Lebanon
    http://angryarab.blogspot.fr/2015/01/civil-marriage-in-lebanon.html

    The pro-West March 14 Minister of Interior in Lebanon, Nuhad Mashnuq, announced the other day that civil marriage won’t be permitted in Lebanon. If this minister belonged to Hizbullah or its allies, all Western correspondents in Lebanon would flock to write long articles about how Hizbullah is imposing a strict religious vision for Lebanon. But because this minister belongs to their camp, there will not be a whimper.

  • #Tunisia: Tunisians Implicated in Iraq War Crimes | Human Rights Watch
    http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/06/25/tunisians-implicated-iraq-war-crimes

    Recent Atrocity Highlights Need for investigations

    Tunisia, a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC) since 2011, should enact legislation on war crimes, integrate the ICC statute into national law, and take urgent measures to investigate and prosecute Tunisians implicated in abuses amounting to war crimes or crimes against humanity in Syria or Iraq, Human Rights Watch said. On June 24, the Minister of Interior, Lotfi Ben Jeddou, said in a press conference that at least 2400 Tunisian jihadists are fighting in Syria, most of them fighting with Al Nusra Front and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

    In early February, Interior Minister Lotfi Ben Jeddou said that the government has prevented more than 8,000 Tunisian men from traveling to Syria to fight.

    The videos posted on Facebook that appear to show a Tunisian fighter involved in killing Iraqi border guards is a wake-up call to Tunisian authorities to investigate and prosecute any war crimes by Tunisian nationals in Iraq and Syria.When a Tunisian extremist so brazenly boasts of his crimes online, the authorities should send a clear and unequivocal message to all Tunisians that they won’t tolerate such conduct.
    Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East and North Africa

    #Tunisie #Syrie #EIIL #ISIS

  • #Egypt gunmen kill interior ministry official
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/egypt-gunmen-kill-interior-ministry-official

    Gunmen killed a senior Egyptian Interior Ministry official outside his home in Cairo on Tuesday, security officials said. “General Mohamed Saeed, head of the technical office of the minister of interior, was targeted by gunmen inside a car who shot him and fled,” said one of the officials. Islamist militants have stepped up attacks on security forces since the army toppled president Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in July. The Interior Ministry confirmed Saeed’s killing. He was an aide to Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim, who survived an assassination attempt last year. read more

    #Top_News

  • Egypt’s Rebel campaign tells interior minister ’no return to state security era’ - Politics - Egypt - Ahram Online
    http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/77608.aspx

    Egypt’s “Rebel” (Tamarod) campaign issued a statement Sunday saying they are highly concerned with comments made by Minister of Interior Mohamed Ibrahim that they understood as foregrounding the possible return of the notorious Mubarak era state security apparatus.

    In a press conference held by the interior ministry Saturday, Ibrahim announced that departments of state security tasked with fighting extremism and monitoring political and religious activity, terminated after the January 25 Revolution, have been reinstated. He further added that a new police reshuffle will be announced Monday and will include police officers who have been excluded before.

    “Our campaign supports the state’s plans in fighting terrorism; however, we have earlier stressed that this support doesn’t include the taking of extraordinary measures, or the contradiction of freedoms and human rights,” said Mahmoud Badr, spokesman of the Rebel campaign, in a press statement.

    During the ministry’s press conference, which was held hours after deadly clashes between the police and supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi, leaving dozens killed, Ibrahim attributed the occurence of violence to the closing of the reinstated departments and the restructuring of the ministry in “a non-technical way” after the January 25 Revolution.

    Badr said that Ibrahim’s comments “are unacceptable” and contradict with the principles of the January 25 Revolution, where “freedom was one of its main goals.”

    “We will never accept the return of Mubarak’s state security [apparatus] or the chasing of political activists under any name,” added Badr.

    The state security apparatus, infamous for its practices of torture and arbitrary arrest against Mubarak opponents, was formally dissolved in March 2011, its functions transfered into the newly established National Security Agency.

    On 12 June, Hassan Abdel-Rahman, former head of the disbanded state security apparatus, was acquitted by a Giza criminal court of charges that he ordered the destruction of state security documents in the aftermath of the January 25 Revolution.

    Forty other security officers were also acquitted of charges related to the case.

  • Saudi Arabia bans “V for Vendetta” masks
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/saudi-arabia-bans-v-vendetta-masks

    Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Interior has called for the confiscation and destruction of all Guy Fawkes masks, Saudi media reported Thursday.

    Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef bin Abdulaziz has demanded that merchants stop importing the masks into Saudi Arabia, and that masks currently available in stores be confiscated and destroyed, according to newspaper al-Madina

  • Interior Ministry addresses sexual harassment

    http://www.dailynewsegypt.com/2013/05/19/interior-ministry-addresses-sexual-harassment

    Minister of Interior Mohamed Ibrahim issued a decision on Saturday to create a violence-against-women department within the ministry.
    The department would be part of the human rights sector within the Interior Ministry. Police officers competent in the field of women’s issues would be chosen for the new department, reported state-owned news agency MENA.
    Mohamed Al-Meleigy, the office head of the deputy minister of interior for human rights, said the establishment of the department was instigated by the country’s growing sexual harassment phenomenon.

    #EndSH

  • Building Solidarity for Georges Abdallah
    | Al Akhbar English
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/building-solidarity-georges-abdallah

    On 21 November 2012, a French court finally ordered the release of Georges Abdallah from prison and his immediate return to his country of origin, Lebanon. French Minister of Interior Manuel Valls was given until 14 January 2013 to sign the deportation papers, which he has refused to do until this day.

    For its part, the justice ministry appealed on the very same day, asking that Abdallah’s release from prison be overturned due to the fact that all the conditions for his release were not complete. The appeals judge responded on 10 January 2013, sticking to the 14 January 2013 deportation date.

    The justice minister appealed again, this time to France’s high court of cassation, which has yet to set a date for the hearing. Diplomatic and media sources suggest that the hearing will be held sometime in mid-March. This means that Abdallah’s deportation hearing, set for 28 February, is meaningless.

    This game of appeals and the postponement of hearings, combined with the dueling interventions of the interior and justice ministers could very well prolong Abdallah’s imprisonment.

  • Where Do The Children Play?
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/where-do-children-play

    General Ashraf Rifi, director of the Internal Security Forces (ISF), has issued orders to combat the trend of child beggars and street vendors, upon the instructions of Minister of Interior and Municipalities, Marwan Charbel.

    Rifi ordered police precincts to be strict, to arrest the children and place them in suitable social institutions. But the problem lies in the difficulty of turning theory into practical action.

    A security source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that the main obstacle hindering the police’s task is seeing the process through to completion.

    “Security forces began arresting the beggars, but found nowhere to put them,” he said. “There is no place that can accommodate even a small number, let alone all of them.”