• Nir Rosen explique désormais, de manière totalement caricaturale, exactement le contraire de ce qu’il racontait il y a deux ans. #on_a_les_experts_qu'on_mérite

    Sa position actuelle : Rewriting Syria’s War
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2014/12/18/syria-assad-ceasefires-surrender-nir-rosen-hd-centre-report

    Rosen, who has likely spent more time than any other researcher interviewing regime officials and supporters, attempts to partially rehabilitate the image of the Syrian regime. “While the Syrian state was not the most attractive one even before the 2011 uprising, it also was not the worst regime in the region,” he writes. “It has strong systems of education, health care and social welfare and compared to most Arab governments it was socially progressive and secular…. It had a solid infrastructure and a relatively effective civil service.”

    Such a description is dramatically at odds with most U.S. officials’ and independent analysts’ assessments of the regime. In the years before the uprising, the Assad regime stands accused of organizing a campaign of terror in Lebanon against its critics, building a secret nuclear power plant with North Korean assistance, and facilitating the flow of jihadis into Iraq to combat the U.S. occupation — to say nothing of its repression of dissent at home.

    Rosen also argues against the assumption that Assad presides over an Alawite-dominated regime. “Most of the regime is Sunni, most of its supporters are Sunnis, many [if] not most of its soldiers are Sunni,” he writes. “The regime may be brutal, authoritarian, corrupt and whatever else it is described as, but it should not be seen as representing a sect.”

    The sectarianism that does exist in Syria, Rosen argues, is preponderantly on the side of the anti-Assad opposition. The regime’s brutality toward the Sunni opposition, he writes, “was done more out of a fear of Sunni sectarianism than as a result of the regime’s own sectarianism.”

    For this reason, Rosen argues, the conventional wisdom that the Assad regime is dedicated to oppressing Syria’s Sunni majority is fatally flawed. “It is more accurate to view it as a staunchly secular regime ruling a sectarian population with an Alawite praetorian guard.”

    Et sa position il y a deux ans (février 2012) : Q&A : Nir Rosen on Syria’s armed opposition
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/02/201221315020166516.html

    The regime and its supporters describe the opposition, especially the armed opposition, as Salafis, Jihadists, Muslim Brotherhood supporters, al-Qaeda and terrorists. This is not true, but it’s worth noting that all the fighters I met - in the provinces of Homs, Idlib, Hama, Deraa and the Damascus suburbs - were Sunni Muslims, and most were pious.

    They fight for a multitude of reasons: for their friends, for their neighbourhoods, for their villages, for their province, for revenge, for self-defence, for dignity, for their brethren in other parts of the country who are also fighting. They do not read religious literature or listen to sermons. Their views on Islam are consistent with the general attitudes of Syrian Sunni society, which is conservative and religious.

    While the resistance is becoming increasingly well-armed, some groups complain they don’t have enough weapons
    Because there are many small groups in the armed opposition it is difficult to describe their ideology in general terms. The Salafi and Muslim Brotherhood ideologies are not important in Syria and do not play a significant role in the revolution. But most Syrian Sunnis taking part in the uprising are themselves devout. Many fighters were not religious before the uprising, but now pray and are inspired by Islam, which gives them a creed and a discourse. Many believe they will be martyred and go to paradise if they die. They are not fighting for Islam but they are inspired by it. Some drink alcohol, which is forbidden in Islam, and do not pray. And their brothers in arms do not force them to pray.

    Of the sheikhs who are important in the revolution, many are actually Sufis. I have met Sufi sheikhs who had established their own armed groups. Some fighters are also influenced by a general sense of Sunni identity, but others do not care about this. I encountered one armed Salafi group in Idlib. I also found some groups that indirectly receive financial assistance from Islamist exile groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood, though this has seemingly not yet influenced their ideology. Some fighters are the sons or nephews of people who were jailed during the 1980s for alleged membership of the Muslim Brotherhood.

    (Première partie via Angry Arab.)

  • Child brides blot tribal Pakistan - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/10/2012101792934276587.html

    Child marriage - known as “swara” in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, “vani” in Punjab, “sang chati” in Sindh, and “vani” and “lajai” in Balochistan - are enacted in disturbingly large swathes of Pakistan and reinforced by customs that treat women as commodities.

    #child #marriage #Pakistan #women

  • Forced sterilisations stoke Kenyan anger - Features - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/10/2012108132844521409.html

    In a tiny classroom in the heart of Kenya’s largest informal settlement, Kibera, it is Rose Njuguna’s turn to speak about what the doctor stole from her.

    Rose is a casual labourer, but the reason that brought her and 10 other women together is far graver than her daily struggle to put a meal on the table.

    The women have two things in common: they are all HIV-positive and, because of this, they say they were sterilised in different hospitals - without their consent.

    “Sometimes I look at other people’s children, and wonder how old my child would be today. I fantasise about being a mother, and the love I would give my baby,” Rose tells the group.

    #stérilisation_forcée #HIV #sida #Kenya #femmes (je ne crois pas qu’on stérilise les hommes parce qu’ils sont porteurs du virus)

  • Militarising education in Israeli schools - Features - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/06/2012624854285479.html

    Should Israeli girls be prevented from associating with Palestinians?

    This was among the questions asked in a new study guide for the end-of-year high school civics exam in Israel, prepared by a private company and approved by the country’s ministry of education.

    One of the proposed answers was that Israeli girls should stay away from Palestinians, because “Arab youths pose a threat to the lives of Jewish girls” and because “relationships between male Arab youths and female Jewish youths pose a threat to the Jewish majority in the country”.

    While the study guide has been condemned as encouraging racist stereotypes and promoting hatred, many activists argue it isn’t an isolated phenomenon. Indeed, they say it hints at a much deeper and ingrained problem: the ultra-nationalism that runs through the Israeli education system, and the negative impact this is having on Israeli youth.

    #Israël #éducation #militarisation #colonisation #nationalisme

  • Mah YarFri 8 Jun
    Mohammad, a 20-year-old from a small village in Hama province, left for work on Wednesday morning not knowing that he would find most residents of his town dead when he returned. When Mohammad came back to his house that night, he found the burned corpses of his mother, father, two sisters and one brother on the floor. “I lost all my family members, with the exception of my grandfather. I found him in his home unconscious. His house was partially destroyed from the shelling,” Mohammad told Al Jazeera... http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/06/20126720534968791.html

  • Venezuela’s indigenous university - Features - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/05/201251313573475737.html

    Maracas Pemon has abundant space on his university campus - it is located across 5,000 acres of forestland in Venezuela’s southern Bolivar State.

    He is one of 67 students who have classes in a thatched roundhouse, water sports in a river and, along with human rights and law, a curriculum that includes buffalo rearing.

    Trop cool, je veux bien retourner à l’école

    #indigènes #Venezuela #éducation #tradition

  • Revenge of the settlers - Features - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/03/201234124517796189.html

    A report published in January by the Washington-based Palestine Center revealed a 39 per cent increase in the number of settler attacks - from stone-throwing to arson and shootings - between 2010 and 2011.

    Furthermore, in the five-year period between 2007 and 2011, the occupied West Bank has witnessed a 315 per cent increase in settler attacks - while, over the same period, there has been a 95 per cent decrease in Palestinian violence against Israeli settlements and settlers.

    The report found “over 90 per cent of all the Palestinian villages which have experienced multiple instances of Israeli settler violence are in areas which fall under Israeli security jurisdiction”.

    “The violence scares the Palestinians into not moving around or using their land for farming and agriculture,” he said.

    Olive harvest reaps animosity in the West Bank

    Further OCHA statistics also state approximately 10,000 Palestinian-owned trees were damaged or destroyed by settlers in 2011, while 139 Palestinians were displaced due to settler attacks.

    The UN group also found that “80 communities with a combined population of nearly 250,000 Palestinians are vulnerable to settler violence, including 76,000 who are at high-risk”.

    #Cisjordanie #colonisation #Israël