publishedmedium:paris match

  • What’s wrong with the French media? – Chayn – Medium
    https://medium.com/hack-for-chayn/whats-wrong-with-the-french-media-63081130589e

    On October 28th 2017, a 29-year-old woman, Alexia Daval disappeared in France. Her husband said she went jogging in the morning and never made it home.

    This started what seemed to be a perfect soap opera for the French media. Everyone from the local and national newspapers, the radio and TV programs, was talking about it. They wrote about how dangerous it could be for a woman to go jogging by herself, and how some women were using an app to go for a run in groups to feel safer. Some media outlets even advised women to never go for a run without their phone and/or a pepper spray. Others were talking about all those predators who had killed women joggers before.

    I think this is when I started to feel angry. All I was hearing, “She shouldn’t have gone jogging by herself.” But it got worse. Paris Match thought it would be interesting to interview a sport coach and quote him when he said that the women who run are not “particularly provocative.”

    You read that right. “Not particularly provocative.”

    If you thought that was upsetting, there’s more. The coach continues, “A woman jogger is often being harassed because she’s scared”. And the journalist concludes: “Isn’t it this ‘smell of fear’ that trigger aggressors to their prey, that excites predators?”

    There are so many things that were already wrong with the coverage of this story. The more I read about it, the angrier I got. But sadly, this was only the beginning.
    A couple of days later, the woman’s body was found, burnt in a forest near her home. The autopsy showed that there were marks of physical violence.

    So the media show continued. Every day, there was a new reason to put the story on the newspaper front page or to air it on the TV. The media was now covering the ongoing investigation. France had a new public enemy #1 — “the murderer of the young female jogger,” and everybody wanted to know who kills women who are jogging at 8 in the morning.

    At the same time, in the little town of Gray in Haute Saone, the woman’s family and friends were organising a silent march. Almost 10,000 people joined, more than the number of people living in the town. Her husband was leading the march. “She was my oxygen,” he said to the journalists, who came from all over the country to cover this drama.

    #metoo #viol #fémininice #violophilie #cocorico #femmes #deni

  • Emmanuel Macron has taken French voters for granted. Now he risks defeat | Olivier Tonneau | Opinion | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/may/01/emmanuel-macron-french-voters-marine-le-pen

    Voilà l’ #arrogance incarnée. Ce mec est complètement à l’est.

    Monday 1 May 2017 17.47 BST

    I had lunch in a Parisian cafe recently with a journalist who had spent the whole French presidential campaign vilifying the leftwing candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon and trumpeting the merits of the centrist Emmanuel Macron in the columns of a respected (if declining) centre-left weekly.

    I asked him if had there been a deliberate effort among intellectuals and mainstream politicians to engineer a run-off between Macron and the far-right Marine Le Pen in the second round of the presidential election. “Why, of course,” he laughed. “We’ve been at it for a year.” Considering how obvious the strategy had been, I cannot claim to have revealed much of a secret. Still, it’s nice to know I was not being paranoid.

    • We finished our lunch, the journalist commenting on every passing woman with the old-fashioned sexism characteristic of the French ruling class, while I reflected on the astonishing irresponsibility of the strategy. It may have seemed like a good idea: pitting Macron against the Front National leader was the surest way to ensure the former’s victory. Yet the tactic could be about to backfire, with terrifying consequences.

      The rise of Macron is characteristic of the age of spin doctors: it illustrates both their power and their limits. It is truly astonishing that the man who inspired (as personal secretary) and implemented (as finance minister) the policies of President François Hollande could be branded as something radically new.

      To achieve this feat, spin doctors resorted to celebrity-building in ways previously unknown in French political life. Macron was new because he was young and handsome, and because he had never been elected before. He appeared repeatedly on the front pages of Paris Match with his wife , whose name is chanted by his supporters at his rallies. In the final weeks of the campaign Macron was so careful not to expose the true nature of his programme (which amounts to little more than the unpopular liberalism-cum-austerity implemented by Hollande) that his speeches degenerated into vacuous exercises in cliche and tautology.

    • how many would have voted for him, and how many against her? Because it is impossible to answer this question, it would be impossible for Macron to take a hard line against social protests on the grounds that the election validated his programme.

      mouais, ça n’a pas empêché Chirac

    • A few weeks before the election, something important happened that was largely unnoticed: an opinion poll showed that the main concern of the people was neither unemployment nor immigration, but the reform of state institutions and the implementation of a radical sixth republic. There is a deep resentment towards a state they perceive as oppressive, corrupt and violent.

      Mélenchon achieved his impressive first-round result because he campaigned on the promise of a radical reform of the state. He was thus able to bring back to politics people who had abstained for years, and also to claw back Le Pen voters. (He cut her lead over him from seven percentage points in 2012 to less than two this year). These voters are not interested in the comparative merits of a Le Pen or a Macron government; their anger is directed at the “deep state” (police, justice, administration). They are even less inclined to vote Macron, because they know – everyone knows – that the second round was deliberately staged. They feel they were set up, and abstention seems to them a dignified act.

      Macron has just days to take stock of their anger and adopt the only strategy that can secure his victory against Le Pen: showing humility, and reducing the severity of his programme. The only problem is that he might not be aware how serious the situation is. There is a certain Dangerous Liaisons charm about the microcosm of journalists, intellectuals and politicians who shape (or think they shape) the political destiny of France. According to my lunch companion, Macron has infinite confidence in his charisma and is blissfully unaware of the threat.

      Why, then, take the risk of allowing an individual such as Le Pen a path to power, I asked. I received no answer – another woman had caught his attention. France, no doubt, is in good hands.

    • @fil Exactement ! Ce dont je me souviens de l’entre deux tours de 2002, c’étaient des raisonnements du genre, il faut massivement voter pour Chirac comme cela ça va le contraindre à appliquer une politique de centre droit, et au contraire s’il passe avec de faibles pourcentages, il saura qu’il est élu par ses seules électeurs pour appliquer son seul programme. Et donc du coup il a plus ou moins appliqué le programme de Le Pen.

      Cette fois-ci faites bien ce que vous voulez.

    • @intempestive

      Si l’on pouvait s’en laver les mains, ce serait formidable. Mais c’est nous qui mesurons et qui vivons le vrai danger, c’est nous qui savons que ce n’est pas un jeu électoral, que c’est bien plus grave que ça.

      Je ne sais pas ce qu’est le nous que tu emploies car je me sens très seule sur tous les points.
      Il me semble que le vrai danger n’est pas pour « nous », les petits blancs ex-colonialistes assis devant leur télé qui croient former nation/république/pays/frontière/territoire dans cette tautologie serinée sans cesse du nous égoïste, ou le mot #politique ne veut plus rien dire. Non, il me semble que le danger est réel pour tous les invisibles, les #SANS, les migrants, tous les méprisés de ce système déjà fascisant … et tous ceux qui payeront ce blanc-seing déjà donné à une police avide de violence et fière d’un « nous » nauséabond.

  • Convicting Zika | The BMJ
    http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i1847

    Maintenant que les pseudo-liens avec les OGM et les produits chimiques se sont dégonflés, on ne parle plus beaucoup ici de #Zika, qui continue pourtant de provoquer des ravages au Brésil et dans un bassin de plus en plus large. Le consensus scientifique se renforce sur le rôle prééminent du virus dans l’épidémie de microcéphalie et autres pathologies flippantes, et qui touchent très majoritairement les pauvres. Avec l’équation jamais démentie et toujours renouvelée #virus + #moustiques + #inégalités = catastrophe sanitaire.

    The stream of new studies has even convinced some scientists who had been critical of the rush to judgment. In February, Glen Armstrong, professor of microbiology, immunology, and infectious diseases at the University of Calgary, cautioned against rushing to blame Zika, noting the link was based entirely on “circumstantial evidence.”7 But in an interview with The BMJ, he explained that while Zika’s link to microcephaly and other neurological disorders was still only a correlation, “I think the evidence is getting stronger and stronger in favour of the conclusion that the Zika virus is, if not the only major player, the major player.”

    #santé #recherche

  • VIDEO - Marche républicaine: quand #Netanyahu attend le bus
    http://www.bfmtv.com/societe/marche-republicaine-quand-netanyahu-attend-le-bus-856814.html

    On peut y voir le Premier ministre israélien, à quelques centimètres de la caméra de BFMTV, s’étonner de n’avoir pu prendre place dans le premier bus devant lui, quelques secondes après avoir court-circuité la file d’attente devant lui.

    Netanyahu’s Paris appearance was a PR disaster - Diplomacy and Defense Israel News | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.636737

    Netanyahu was captured by news cameras elbowing his way into the front row, gently pushing aside the President of Mali Ibrahim Boubacar Keita. The French weekly Paris Match later reported that Netanyahu’s place in the front row (alongside Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas) was in fact determined by the organizers of the rally, but by that point the videos showing Netanyahu’s break into the first row were already out. The damage was done.

    During the march Netanyahu was caught off-guard again, waving to the crowd in response to a pro-Israel shout from the audience, looking rather cheerful in comparison to his grim and somber compatriots, who kept their cool and did not respond to the crowd.

    Of course, Netanyahu’s biggest humiliation was a video that has since gone viral, in which he is seen waiting for a bus to take him to the rally, after missing the bus that ferried other world leaders to the march.

    The footage, captured by a French TV station, is remarkable: The prime minister of Israel looks nervous, dejected, beaten down, surrounded by his security detail yet still standing in the middle of the street, looking exposed to danger in a way world leaders should never be. Netanyahu appears furious, annoyed, confused, trying to busy himself with talking on his phone or fixing his hair, constantly looking over his shoulder to check whether his bodyguards are still there. Even the French news anchors had to sympathize with his distress.

    In no time, Netanyah’s anguish over the bus like was memefied and joked about. His gauche waving became the subject of scorn and derision, his apparent shoving the subject of intense criticism.

    “Such behavior as cutting in line, sneaking onto the bus by pushing and shoving, using elbows to get to the front at some event is so Israeli, so us, so Likud Party Central Committee, that I want to shout: "Je suis Bibi!” wrote my Haaretz colleague columnist Yossi Verter.

  • Asia-pacific - French ex-airline boss claims cover-up on #MH370 - France 24
    http://www.france24.com/en/20141218-dugain-malaysia-airlines-mh370-disappearance-diego-garcia-cover-u

    Former airline boss and famous French author Marc Dugain argued Thursday that there had been a cover-up in the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, speculating that the passenger jet could have been hacked and then shot down by the US.

    Dugain, a well-respected French author, argues that the Boeing 777 carrying 239 people crashed near #Diego_Garcia, a British island in the middle of the Indian Ocean used as a strategic air force and intelligence base by the US military, in the six-page article in Paris Match.

    The US has always officially denied that flight MH370 came anywhere near Diego Garcia.

    The latest theory into the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 on March 8, 2014 has all the ingredients of a spy thriller and has grabbed the French public’s attention.

    The former boss of Proteus Airlines travelled to the neighbouring Maldives where residents told local media that they had seen an airliner fly in the direction of Diego Garcia. Their claims were promptly dismissed by the authorities.

    I saw a huge plane fly over us at low altitude,” a fisherman on Kudahuvadhoo island told Dugain. “I saw red and blue stripes on a white background” – the colours of Malaysia Airlines. Other witnesses confirmed the sighting.

    Dugain speculates – adding to the numerous other existing hypotheses about what happened to flight MH370 – that a modern aircraft such as Malaysia Airlines’ Boeing 777 could have been hijacked by a hacker.

    In 2006, Boeing patented a remote control system using a computer placed inside or outside the aircraft,” he noted. This technology lead Dugain to the idea of a “soft” remote hijacking.

    But the writer also suggests that a fire could have led the crew to deactivate electrical devices, including transmission systems.

    Whatever the initial reasons for leaving its flight path, Dugain suspects that the plane then headed to Diego Garcia, where a number of scenarios may have played out – including the US Air Force shooting it down for fear of a September 11-style attack.

    Dugain met the mayor of neighbouring Baarah island, who showed him pictures of a strange device found on a beach two weeks after the plane had disappeared and before the Maldives military seized it. Two aviation experts and a local military officer concluded that the object was a Boeing fire extinguisher. Dugain points out that for the extinguisher to have floated, it must have been empty, having been automatically triggered by a fire. He adds that precedent exists in which fires on board aircraft caused all passengers and crew to die of asphyxiation, while the plane’s automated systems extinguished the blaze and kept it in the air.

    J’aime bien la notion de « voisin », à l’échelle de l’Océan Indien…


    en rose : Diego Garcia, en vert : Baarah, en orange : Kudahuvadhoo, complètement à l’est : Kuala Lumpur

    En tous cas, on sait sur quoi sera le prochain roman de Marc Dugain (La chambre des officiers, mais aussi Une exécution ordinaire sur le naufrage du Koursk)

  • Foreword - Bosnia 1992-1995
    http://www.bosnia-book.com/en
    „Authors : Alexandra Boulat/Sipa Press, Amel Emric, Andrew Reid/Gamma, Anja Niedringhaus, Antoine Gyori/Sygma, Anthony Loyd, Benoit Gysembergh/Paris Match, Boris Geilert/CARO Fotoagentur, Christopher Morris/VII Photo, Christophe Calais, Darko Bandic/AP, Enric Marti/AP, Enrico Dagnino, Eric Bouvet, Filip Horvat/Polaris, Gary Knight/VII Photo, Gilles Peress, James Mason, Jerome Delay/AP, James Nachtwey, Jon Jones/Sygma, Laurent Rebours/AP, Laurent Sazy, Mike Persson/AFP, Morten Hvaal, Nicolas Mingasson, Nina Berman/NOOR, Noel Quidu, Odd Andersen/AFP, Olivier Jobard/Myop, Patrick Chauvel, Patrick Robert/Corbis-Sygma, Paul Lowe/Panos, Peter Northall/AP, Rachel Cobb, Rikard Larma, Roger Hutchings, Ron Haviv/Vii Photo, Santiago Lyon/AP, Srdjan Ilic/AP, Steve Connors, Thomas Kern, Tom Haley, Tom Stoddart/Reportage by Getty Images, Laurent Van der Stockt, Wade Goddard, Yannis Behrakis/Reuters, John F. Burns, Janine di Giovanni, Jean Hatzfeld, Rémy Ourdan, Ariane Quentier, Kurt Schork, David Rohde“
    #bosnie #photo