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  • Boris Johnson compares Ukrainian resistance to invasion to UK vote for Brexit | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/boris-johnson-ukraine-russia-brexit-b2039615.html

    Boris Johnson has compared Ukrainian resistance to Russia to Britain voting to leave the European Union, in highly controversial comments at the Conservative spring conference.

    The prime minister also became the latest in a string of ministers to suggest that the seriousness of the situation in Ukraine should bring a halt to debates in Britain over supposedly “#woke” issues like preferred pronouns and the removal of statues linked to slavery. (...)

    “Now is the time to end the culture of self-doubt, the constant self-questioning and introspection, the ludicrous debates about language, statues and pronouns.

    (...) Brexit minister Jacob Rees-Mogg said the Ukraine crisis was “a reminder that the world is serious, and that there are serious things to be discussed and serious and difficult decisions for politicians to take, whether this is about reopening and having new licences for oil wells in the North Sea, or whether it is about getting away from the wokery that has beset huge sections of society”.

    Conservatives should refuse to adopt “socialist” language like saying “chair” instead of “chairman” and go back to saying Peking rather than Beijing, said Rees-Mogg (...)

    “We should be robust about how we use language. If we just cede the ground, then wokery advances.

    Comme le dit un certain Mike #Godwin :

    Drawing Bayesian inferences after extensive sampling, I’ve determined that it’s 99-percent certain that anyone who uses “woke” as pejorative will turn out to be a fuckhead. Please don’t blame me for pointing this out—it’s just science.

    https://twitter.com/sfmnemonic/status/1504687870006620163

  • Government spent £700k on company advising Afghans not to flee before Taliban takeover

    Exclusive: Company convinced Afghans to ‘avoid potentially deadly encounters on the journey to Europe’ months before the Taliban takeover.

    The government has given more than £700,000 to a company that advised Afghans not to flee the country before the Taliban takeover.

    An investigation by The Independent revealed that the Home Office has handed the “migration behaviour change” firm at least £702,000 since 2016, and it may have been given even more money by the Foreign Office during the same period.

    Despite the funding, Seefar’s name has never been mentioned in the Houses of Parliament, and the Home Office has refused to detail the work it commissioned.

    The government said it “makes no apology” and wanted to highlight the risks of irregular journeys using people-smugglers.

    #Seefar is behind multilingual websites including “On The Move” and “The Migrant Project”, which claim to “enable migrants and potential migrants to make informed decisions”.

    Earlier this year, the Hong Kong-based company said it had conducted a “migration communications campaign in Afghanistan” between February and December 2020.

    A press release said it had “successfully resulted in more than half of consultees making safer and more informed migration decisions, and avoiding potentially deadly encounters on the journey to Europe”.

    An unknown number of people left trapped in Afghanistan after the end of Britain’s evacuation operation in August have been murdered by the Taliban, and a promised scheme to resettle 20,000 refugees has not yet started.

    Seefar said it used “unbranded media outreach” to influence Afghans who wanted to flee before the takeover, and advised European governments not to publicly link themselves with such campaigns.

    “You should not brand your campaign with the name of the donors [such as governments] and/or international organisations if possible. Instead, your campaign will benefit from a standalone brand that is trusted in the communities,” said a “best practice” document published earlier this year.

    The government is due to give Seefar up to £500,000 more public money under a contract for a new “organised immigration crime deterrence and influencing communications strategy”.

    A public record of the deal, published in March, said it “includes proposals to deter migrants and signposting migrants to credible alternatives … through a multilingual website and telephone service”.

    The document gave the contract’s value as £500,000, but said the number was a “ceiling figure” rather than a committed spend.

    In August, Seefar was awarded a separate three-year contract to provide a “training provision framework”, for a department that “delivers strategic capability development programmes overseas on behalf of the Home Office”.

    Different companies have been given responsibility for different areas, and Seefar was handed the “borders, migration and asylum” section. The value of the contract has not been publicly disclosed.

    Appearing to pose as non-profit organisations, Seefar’s websites focus on “the risks of irregular migration” and encourage people to use “safe and legal alternatives” – without giving details of how to claim asylum or apply for resettlement in the UK.

    “You have a choice,” reads the On The Move website. “Don’t risk your life and waste hard-earned money trying to reach the UK.”

    The Home Office paid Facebook and Instagram over £23,000 for targeted adverts linking to the website between last December and April, as part of a campaign aiming to dissuade migrants from attempting Channel crossings.

    On The Move discloses no link to the British government in its “about us” section, which reads: “On The Move provides migrants in transit with free, reliable and important migration information. Reliable and trustworthy information on migration is very difficult to find.”

    Seefar’s company website lists supporters including the governments of Britain, Germany, Australia and the Netherlands, along with the European Commission.

    The company was founded in 2014 and describes itself as “a recognised leader in understanding migration behaviour change”, with “extensive experience developing and deploying innovative monitoring and evaluation approaches for irregular migration communication campaigns”.

    A Seefar booklet aimed at potential customers listed services including “Scripting lines for politicians to deliver, providing information and counselling face to face, over the phone or online, unacknowledged support to news media and documentary makers” and “advertising on billboards, television, radio or the internet”.

    Public Home Office spending records list 12 separate payments and grants to Seefar between 2016 and 2018, of up to £120,000 each, but do not detail what they were for.

    They are listed as from the Home Office’s “capability and resources group”, or for “advertising, media and publicity”.

    Tim Naor Hilton, the chief executive of Refugee Action, said: “We have seen this year the tragic consequences of what happens when ministers waste money on a hostile policy of trying to keep people out, rather than keep people safe.

    “The government must spend less time on these murky schemes and more on creating effective safe routes for refugees to claim asylum here.”

    The Home Office said it has robust processes in place to check projects are good value for money, and that spending records are published in accordance with regulations.

    A spokesperson added: “While lives are at risk, we make no apology for using every possible tool at our disposal to provide potentially lifesaving information to migrants.

    “Last month’s tragedy is a devastating reminder of the dangers of Channel crossings. Highlighting the threats of these deadly journeys is vitally important in making clear that people risk their lives if they turn to people-smugglers.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/afghan-asylum-seekers-uk-websites-seefar-b1981905.html

    #propagande #migrations #dissuasion #asile #migrations #Afghanistan

    ping @karine4 @isskein

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste de #campagnes de #dissuasion à l’#émigration (même si cet événement est un peu différent, car il est organisé en soutien aux troupes qui « gardent la frontière ») :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/763551

  • Tories break ranks on immigration to demand safe routes to UK for asylum seekers

    Exclusive: Allowing asylum claims to be made outside the UK is ‘only viable alternative’ to deaths in Channel, says backbencher

    Senior Tories have demanded a radical overhaul of the asylum system to allow migrants to claim refuge at UK embassies anywhere in the world – rather than having to travel to the UK – in a bid to cut the numbers attempting dangerous Channel crossings.

    Ex-cabinet members #David_Davis and #Andrew_Mitchell are among those calling for the change, which marks a stark challenge to the punitive approach taken by Boris Johnson and Priti Patel, who are demanding tighter controls on French beaches and are threatening to “push back” small boats at sea.

    Mr Davis, the former shadow home secretary and Brexit secretary, and Mr Mitchell, the former international development secretary, also poured scorn on the home secretary’s plan to take on powers through her Nationality and Borders Bill to send migrants arriving in the UK to camps in third countries overseas for processing – something that has already been ruled out by Albania after it was named as a potential destination.

    Writing for The Independent, Pauline Latham, a Conservative member of the Commons International Development Committee, said that allowing migrants to claim asylum at embassies abroad was “the only viable alternative to the tragedy of deaths in the Channel and the chaos of our current approach”.

    Twenty-seven migrants, including three children and a pregnant woman, drowned off the coast of France in November when their boat sank, marking the single biggest loss of life of the crisis so far.

    The Home Office is opposing an opposition amendment to the borders bill, due for debate in the House of Commons this week, which would allow migrants to seek “humanitarian visas” in France, allowing them to be transported safely across the Channel to claim asylum.

    But Ms Latham’s proposal goes a step further, removing the need for asylum seekers to pay thousands of pounds to criminal gangs to smuggle them into Europe and then risk their lives in order to reach Britain to make their claim.

    The Mid Derbyshire MP said: “This feels to me like a genuine win-win. The customer base of the people smugglers would vanish, ending deaths in the Channel and ensuring that people seeking safety here can travel in a humane fashion.

    “The UK would be better able to control who arrives here, and anyone arriving without a visa or pre-approved asylum claim would face non-negotiable deportation.”

    Current government policy has “got it the wrong way round” and should be reshaped as a “global resettlement programme” similar to those set up in Syria and being established for Afghanistan, said Ms Latham.

    With the vast majority of those arriving in the UK by small boat having a legitimate claim for asylum, the question Ms Patel must answer is why the UK’s current policy requires them to put themselves in the hands of lawless gangs and then risk their lives in order to be able to submit their paperwork, she said.

    “Desperate people will continue to seek safety in the UK for as long as there is conflict and persecution elsewhere,” said Ms Latham. “But nobody puts their child in an overcrowded, flimsy dinghy on a cold November morning if they think a better alternative is available. So, when we talk about deterrence we have to talk about alternatives.”

    And Mr Davis said: “Instead of a policy which is built solely on keeping people out, the government should consider creating a legitimate route in for genuine refugees. Migrants fleeing repression in Iran or famine in war-torn Yemen are not able to apply at British embassies. The only options available to them are either illegal, or dangerous, or both.”

    The bill being debated in the Commons on Tuesday and Wednesday aims to deter small-boat crossings by restricting the rights of those who enter the UK by “irregular” routes, allowing “offshore” processing of claims in third countries, and speeding up the removal of failed asylum seekers.

    It would also give border and immigration staff powers to redirect boats out of UK territorial waters in a way that MPs and unions have warned could increase the risk of capsize and deaths.

    Mr Davis said that offshoring would represent a “moral, economic and practical failure”, inflicting a terrible ordeal on those fleeing terror and persecution.

    And Mr Mitchell said: “So far, Norway, Rwanda and Albania have all distanced themselves from suggestions that they would host a UK offshore processing centre. The bill seeks a power for a policy which the government is yet to define.

    “Even in Australia, 75 per cent of those sent to remote islands for processing eventually had their claims upheld. Indeed, most of the people crossing the Channel are also having their asylum claims upheld. Offshore processing looks like a policy which delays the inevitable. But at far greater cost to the taxpayer.”

    The Labour MP behind the humanitarian visa amendment, Neil Coyle, said Ms Patel’s proposals “will cause more dangerous routes and more risk to people seeking to reach the UK”. He told The Independent it was “garbage” for her to claim they would reduce the so-called “pull factors” attracting those fleeing war, civil conflict or persecution to Britain.

    “A humanitarian visa offers the government the chance to prove it means what it says, when it says it doesn’t want people to be subjected to gangs and criminality,” said Mr Coyle. “The amendment would save lives, help us meet our international obligations, and prevent money going to smugglers.”

    Stephen Farry of the Alliance Party, backing the amendment alongside MPs from the SNP, Liberal Democrats, Green Party and Labour, said: “Claiming asylum in the UK is a fundamental right, but asylum seekers are in a Catch-22, whereby asylum can only be claimed on UK soil yet the UK provides no safe and legal routes to enter the country for those purposes.

    “The home secretary doesn’t care about asylum seekers, but if she were serious about tackling people smuggling, this visa is a workable solution.”

    But a Home Office spokesperson said: “The government has noted the amendments relating to asylum visas for persons in France and they will be debated in parliament in due course.

    “However, there is the risk of creating a wider pull factor, putting vulnerable people in danger by encouraging them to make dangerous journeys across the Mediterranean and overland to France in order to make claims to enter the UK, motivating people to again entrust themselves to heinous smugglers.”

    The chief executive of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, Minnie Rahman, dismissed this argument.

    “Like people who travel to the UK for work or study, people seeking protection in the UK deserve safe ways of getting here,” she said. “If the government were serious about preventing dangerous crossings and upholding our commitment to refugee protection, they would back this amendment. Instead it seems they’re happy to continue driving refugees into smugglers’ boats.”

    And Bridget Chapman, of the Kent Refugee Action Network, said: “The simple fact is that those who have made this journey tell us that they never wanted to leave their homes in the first place. It wasn’t the ‘pull factors’ that made it happen, it was violent ‘push factors’, such as war, conflict and persecution.

    “Once displaced, most people stay close to their country of origin and only a relatively small number come to the UK. There is no evidence whatsoever that making their journey to the UK marginally more safe would be a ‘pull factor’, and we cannot allow that to be used as a reason not to give them better and safer options.”

    Bella Sankey, director of Detention Action, said: “This humanitarian visa amendment would help to prevent deaths in the Channel and undermine the dangerous boat journeys offered by people smugglers.

    “If the government is concerned about a so-called ‘pull factor’, they should show clear evidence of it and then expand this amendment to include refugees further upstream.”

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/migrants-channel-borders-latham-patel-b1969795.html

    #ambassades #Angleterre #UK #asile #migrations #réfugiés #
    #offshore_asylum_processing #ambassade

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur l’#externalisation de la #procédure_d'asile dans des #pays_tiers :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/900122

    • Dismay at UK’s offshore detention plans for asylum seekers

      Detainees and workers from Australia’s offshore detention camps say Britain is ignoring the failings and financial costs of that system.

      As people who were detained indefinitely in Australia’s offshore camps on Nauru and Manus Island, Papua New Guinea, and as professionals who were employed there, we are deeply concerned that the UK government will attempt this week to grant itself the same power to send people seeking asylum to offshore detention centres.

      We have watched with dismay as the UK government has drafted legislation that allows for the indefinite detention offshore of women, men and children, refused a probing amendment to exclude survivors of trafficking and torture from being sent to offshore detention centres, and ignored the failings and financial costs of the Australian experiment, which saw the Australian government spend £8.6bn to detain 3,127 people in appalling conditions, while failing to end dangerous boat journeys.

      Two of us lost a combined 13 years of our lives trapped in offshore camps, with no indication of when we would be free. Others in the same situation lost their lives. The authorities insisted we would never reach Australia. Now, like more than two-thirds of the people detained offshore, we are recognised refugees, living in the US and Australia. We cannot imagine why any country would replicate such a cruel, costly and ultimately futile system.

      Finally, consider why a government that has no intention of detaining children offshore would give itself the power to do so. Or why any law that claims to protect people entitled to asylum would instead hide them away in offshore detention camps.

      Authors: Thanush Selvarasa and Elahe Zivardar Former offshore detainees, Dr Nick Martin and Carly Hawkins Former medical officer and former teacher, Nauru detention centre

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/dec/05/dismay-at-uk-offshore-detention-plans-for-asylum-seekers?CMP=Share_iOSA

  • SOUS L’ŒIL DE L’ÉTAT

    Le QR code s’est imposé partout en France. Il l’est depuis longtemps dans les pays asiatiques. Imaginé par l’industrie automobile, il sert aujourd’hui à « contrôler les humains ». Retour sur l’histoire de cette technologie détournée.

    Noir sur fond blanc, le petit pictogramme a une allure anodine. Mais ce hiéroglyphe des temps modernes remodèle peu à peu notre rapport au monde. À la faveur de la pandémie, le QR code s’est imposé à nos vies. Jusqu’à devenir incontournable avec le passe sanitaire. Il régit désormais l’ensemble de nos mouvements et accompagne nos gestes, comme un sésame ou une passerelle entre l’univers numérique et le monde réel.

    On le retrouve partout, dans le train, à l’entrée des bars, aux musées. Son usage s’est généralisé. On le voit sur les panneaux publicitaires, on l’utilise à l’école pour valider des réponses à des questionnaires ou aux abords des parcs naturels surfréquentés. Il remplace également les menus dans les restaurants ou guide nos achats dans les supermarchés. Cet essor, inimaginable il y a quelques années, est loin d’être anecdotique : le QR code incarne « la société du sans contact ». Cette technologie accélère notre dépendance au numérique et nous fait entrer de plain-pied dans l’ère du flash, un monde peuplé de scanners, d’écrans et de code-barres, un monde illisible à l’œil nu où nous déléguons notre regard aux machines.

    « Il n’est pas certain que nous sortions de ce monde une fois la pandémie passée, pense l’historien François Jarrige. Il y a des chances que certaines habitudes restent. Le QR code continuera à coloniser les espaces sociaux. Flasher un QR code est devenu un réflexe pour une majorité de la population. C’est une évidence pratique, physique et corporelle. » Les chiffres en témoignent. Le lecteur de QR code est l’une des applications les plus téléchargées sur smartphone. L’achat de boîtier pour les lire a également explosé depuis l’été dernier avec une augmentation des ventes de 40 à 60 %.

    LE QR CODE SERT À GÉRER ET SURVEILLER LE TROUPEAU HUMAIN

    Les pays occidentaux rattrapent leur retard. Ou, disons plutôt qu’ils copient leurs voisins asiatiques. En Chine, en Corée du Sud, au Japon, le QR code est déjà une institution. Il recouvre les surfaces urbaines comme une seconde peau. C’est un avatar de la smart city qui sert à fluidifier les échanges. On le retrouve dans les taxis, les parcs et même les toilettes. En Chine, près de 940 millions de personnes échangent de l’argent en scannant des QR codes, de manière dématérialisée, via les applications WeChat et Alipay. Des chercheurs parlent d’une « QR code-isation de la société ».
    https://sfsic2020.sciencesconf.org/325620/document

    Cela n’est pas sans conséquence. À l’origine, le QR code a été créé pour accroître l’automatisation dans le milieu industriel et répondre aux besoins du commerce. « En vingt ans, nous sommes passés d’un outil pour intensifier la logistique à un outil pour régir et contrôler les humains dans tous les aspects de leur vie, constate François Jarrige. Le QR code, qui s’appliquait d’abord aux flux de marchandises, sert désormais à gérer et surveiller le troupeau humain. » Une forme de réification est à l’œuvre. Avec ces dispositifs de traçage numérique, on s’occupe des humains comme des choses.

    L’histoire du QR code est éclairante sur ce point. Cette technologie a d’abord prospéré dans les soutes de la société marchande. Elle fut inventée en 1994 par le Japonais Masahiro Hara, un ingénieur de Denso Wave, une filiale de Toyota qui fabriquait des pièces automobiles. Les ingénieurs souhaitaient alors mieux suivre l’itinéraire des pièces détachées à l’intérieur des usines.
    https://www.liberation.fr/economie/economie-numerique/qr-code-la-grande-histoire-du-petit-carre-20211023_VFBRCE4PBVCQBIP36CLMGP

    Le QR code est une sorte de super code-barres. Son nom signifie en anglais « quick response code », « code à réponse rapide ». Il se lit en effet dix fois plus rapidement que le code-barres. Grâce à ses deux dimensions, il peut être lu quel que soit l’angle de lecture. Il contient aussi 200 fois plus de données qu’un code-barres classique. Son usage a permis à Toyota de déployer sa stratégie au tournant des années 2000. La multinationale cherchait un moyen d’identification automatique pour accélérer la cadence. L’idée était de produire à flux tendu — « just in time » — avec une coordination constante entre la tête des firmes et l’ensemble des sous-traitants, des fournisseurs aux revendeurs. Pour améliorer ses marges et son pouvoir, Toyota a créé une obsession de la traçabilité en tout point.

    Cette évolution répondait aussi à un objectif politique. « Les projets d’automatisation de la production avaient pour but essentiel de renforcer le contrôle managérial sur la force de travail bien plus que d’augmenter les profits », analyse le groupe Marcuse dans le livre La liberté dans le coma. Les auteurs estiment que les dispositifs comme le QR code, la puce RFID ou la biométrie ont participé à une vaste « contre-insurrection ». L’informatisation de l’organisation industrielle aurait dépossédé la classe ouvrière de ses savoir-faire, détruit les solidarités dans l’usine et accru la surveillance au profit d’un projet cybernétique où les machines communiquent entre elles et où les hommes deviennent quantité négligeable.
    https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2020/01/TREGUER/61229
    https://reporterre.net/Puces-RFID-aujourd-hui-nos-moutons

    LE CONTRÔLE EST PASSÉ AU STADE TECHNOLOGIQUE

    Ce modèle dystopique triomphe aujourd’hui au sein des entrepôts Amazon, où tout est flashé, scanné et identifié. Même les « scannettes » portatives équipées pour lire les code-barres ont un code-barres. Les travailleurs, eux, sont transformés en automates, leurs gestes et leurs déplacements ne laissent rien au hasard. Ils sont optimisés pour gagner en productivité. Comme le soutient l’écrivain Jasper Bernes, « la révolution logistique n’est rien d’autre que la guerre continuée par d’autres moyens, par les moyens du commerce ».
    https://reporterre.net/Le-reve-d-Amazon-des-robots-pour-se-passer-des-travailleurs
    https://lundi.am/Du-code-barres-au-QR-Code

    Ces logiques issues du monde des entreprises s’étendent maintenant à la vie courante, se glissent dans la sphère intime et privée. « N’en déplaise à une croyance tenace, ces technologies ne sont pas neutres. Elles structurent des formes de pouvoir », rappelle le journaliste Olivier Tesquet. Elles portent en elles le rêve industriel d’identification et de traçage total.
    https://www.telerama.fr/debats-reportages/le-qr-code-on-ne-sen-passe-plus-6962387.php

    L’association la Quadrature du net a d’ailleurs tiré la sonnette d’alarme. Jusqu’à peu, la surveillance avait des limites pratiques, explique-t-elle. Mais avec les nouveaux dispositifs comme le QR code, la surveillance passe « à l’échelle technologique ». Au cours de la dernière décennie, la majorité de la population française (84 % en 2020) s’est équipée en téléphone muni d’un appareil photo et capable de lire des code-barres en 2D comme les QR codes. En parallèle, l’administration s’est largement approprié ces outils et la cryptographie afin de sécuriser les documents qu’elle délivre — avis d’imposition, carte d’identité électronique, etc.
    https://www.laquadrature.net/2021/08/19/passe-sanitaire-quelle-surveillance-redouter

    L’ÉTAT A LES MOYENS MATÉRIELS
    POUR IMPOSER UN CONTRÔLE PERMANENT DES CORPS

    « Si ces évolutions ne sont pas particulièrement impressionnantes en elles-mêmes, leur concomitance rend aujourd’hui possible des choses impensables il y a encore quelques années, souligne Bastien Le Querrec, de la Quadrature du net. Elle permet notamment de confier à des dizaines de milliers de personnes non formées et non payées par l’État (mais simplement munies d’un smartphone) la mission de contrôler l’ensemble de la population à l’entrée d’innombrables lieux publics. Et ce, à un coût extrêmement faible pour l’État, puisque l’essentiel de l’infrastructure (les téléphones) a déjà été financé de manière privée. Soudainement, l’État a les moyens matériels pour réguler l’espace public dans des proportions presque totales et imposer un contrôle permanent des corps. »

    LE MONDE NOUS EST PEU À PEU CONFISQUÉ

    Avant même le Covid-19, certains régimes autoritaires comme la Chine n’ont pas hésité à utiliser massivement le QR code. En 2017, l’ONG Human Rights Watch dénonçait déjà son usage pour réprimer la minorité musulmane ouïghoure. Dans le Xinjiang, les autorités et la police imposent en effet son installation sur les portes des maisons pour contrôler le déplacement de ses habitants et le passage de leurs invités. Elles font aussi graver des QR codes sur la lame du moindre couteau acheté en quincaillerie. Ces dispositifs forment une immense toile d’araignée digitale. « Les QR codes sont l’un des éléments du répertoire d’outils numériques de surveillance dont la Chine est devenue un laboratoire », explique François Jarrige. Le mouvement s’est accéléré avec la pandémie. En Chine, le QR code est désormais exigé à l’entrée des immeubles, avant même d’entrer chez soi ou au travail. Un code couleur atteste de la bonne santé de la personne ou de sa maladie.
    https://reporterre.net/Le-totalitarisme-numerique-de-la-Chine-menace-toute-la-planete
    https://www.france24.com/fr/20190218-chine-ouighour-surveillance-xinjiang-reconnaissance-faciale-qr-co
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/china-uyghur-muslims-xinjiang-province-qr-codes-security-crackdown-hr

    En France, le grand chantier de l’identité numérique est lui aussi engagé. La nouvelle carte nationale d’identité électronique (CNIE), délivrée dans tout le pays depuis le 2 août, compte notamment des données biométriques intégrées dans une puce et une signature électronique dans un QR code. Les autorités rêvent d’une « identité totalement numérique » portée par un « État plateforme ». Dans un rapport publié en juin dernier, des sénateurs y voyaient un outil indispensable pour pallier les futures crises. « Au lieu de repérer une fraction dérisoire des infractions mais de les sanctionner très sévèrement, il serait théoriquement possible d’atteindre un taux de contrôle de 100 % », écrivaient-ils.
    https://www.senat.fr/rap/r20-673/r20-67312.html
    https://www.senat.fr/rap/r20-673/r20-673.html

    Avec les QR codes, la numérisation intégrale de la société est en marche. Les conséquences en sont multiples, profondes, mais rarement étudiées. Pour l’éditeur Matthieu Amiech, « cette situation renforce l’identification des individus à la mégamachine et l’évidence du numérique comme nécessité pour exister ». Notre écran devient un outil de médiation pour se rapporter au monde et entrer en contact avec la réalité. « Le monde nous est peu à peu confisqué », poursuit-il.
    https://reporterre.net/Sous-le-masque-du-Covid-la-numerisation-integrale-de-la-societe

    Selon ce chercheur, nous vivons un nouveau stade du capitalisme. Après avoir privé les populations de leur terre et de leur moyen autonome de subsistance, au XIXe siècle, le capitalisme cherche aujourd’hui à accroître sa domination politique et économique « en rendant les personnes dépendantes d’un appareillage sur lequel ils n’ont pas de prise », estime-t-il. « Nous subissons des enclosures existentielles. Pour avoir accès au monde et participer à la vie sociale, nous devons désormais passer par ces outils. Nous en sommes complètement prisonniers. »

    https://reporterre.net/QR-code-toujours-sous-l-oeil-de-l-Etat
    --

  • Facebook launches ‘smart glasses’ that take photos of what you’re seeing, and warns that people will try and use them inappropriately | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/facebook-rayban-smart-glasses-photos-b1913757.html

    The other major concern users might have over the Ray-Ban Stories is Facebook’s history of data privacy. The company has been repeatedly criticised over its failure to protect users’ data, and the amount on information that it collects as people use its services.

    Moreover, smart glasses as a technology have also been infamous for their inherent risk to privacy. Ray-Ban Stories collects data about battery status, and the email address and password of the users’ Facebook account, and additional data like the number of images captured or how long a user spends taking videos can also be provided to Facebook.

    Preempting this response, Facebook says that it designed the glasses with “privacy in mind” and claims it will not use this data to target users with ads. One of these privacy-focused design choices is a small LED light hardwired to the camera (like the green light on Apple’s Mac computers) that shines white when the camera is taking a photo.

  • Hundreds of Afghan refugees housed in hotels ‘at risk of missing vital health and education services’

    Charities concerned about level of support provided to families in hotels.

    Hundreds of Afghan refugees who have arrived in the UK in recent months are being forced to live in hotels and are at risk of missing out on vital health and education services, charities have warned.

    (#paywall)

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/afghan-hotels-families-home-office-uk-b1905889.html

    #hôtels #asile #migrations #réfugiés #UK #Angleterre #réfugiés_afghans

    –-
    ajouté à la métaliste #migrations et #tourisme :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/770799
    et plus précisément ici :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/770799#message987328

  • CDC to hold ‘emergency meeting’ over cases of heart inflammation following second Covid vaccine | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/myocarditis-covid-vaccine-heart-inflammation-b1864343.html#Echobox=16

    Myocarditis is a condition that causes inflammation of the heart muscle. It typically develops from a viral infection, and it can cause symptoms like fatigue, fever and chest pain.

    Preliminary data indicates cases of heart issues following vaccination were happening in those ages 16 to 24, with young men impacted more than women. Most of the cases came after the second dose of either Pfizer or Moderna’s vaccine, the preliminary data revealed.

    This information comes one month after Israel’s health ministry said there was a “probable link” between Pfizer’s vaccine and inflammation of the heart muscles in young men.

  • Le rail privé britannique, ce mort-vivant… Michaël Verbauwhede

    Trains hors de prix, en retard, souvent annulés : même le gouvernement de Boris Johnson doit reconnaître que la privatisation du rail anglais est un échec. Mais plutôt que de le renationaliser comme le demandent deux tiers des Britanniques, il a décidé de relooker la privatisation du rail. Explications.

    En 1994, la Royaume-Uni privatisait l’ensemble de son chemin de fer. Transport de passagers, vente de tickets, entretien des voies… tout allait mieux rouler avec le privé : moins de retards, plus de services, des tickets moins chers.


    Deux tiers des Britanniques demandent la renationalisation du rail anglais. (Photo : We own it)

    Mais très vite, le rail anglais dépérit : de nombreux accidents ont eu lieu, dont le terrible accident de Hatfield (4 morts) dus à un mauvais entretien des voies. Le service se dégrade et les tarifs sont de plus en plus chers. Les Britanniques dépensent en moyenne 14 % de leur salaire mensuel pour faire la navette https://www.latribune.fr/economie/union-europeenne/au-royaume-uni-la-privatisation-des-chemins-de-fer-deraille-628489.html , contre 2 % en France par exemple. Un jeune YouTubeur fait ainsi le calcul qu’il lui revient moins cher de faire le trajet de Sheffield (nord de l’Angleterre) à Essex (est de Londres) en passant par Berlin en avion, plutôt que de prendre le train. https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/teenager-flies-from-sheffield-to-essex-via-berlin-because-it-is-cheap

    Enfin, les conditions de travail se dégradent, comme en témoigne le splendide film de Ken Loach, The Navigators

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Gzdrqd4uQE


    The Navigators|2002| VOSTFR ~ WebRip

    Les opérateurs privés en ont par contre tiré des profits importants. Le syndicat anglais TUC a ainsi calculé que les actionnaires des compagnies privées avaient reçu un milliard de livres (environ 1,16 milliards d’euros) en dividendes entre 2013 et 2018.

    La privatisation du rail au Royaume-Uni en 1994 est donc un échec. Suite aux accidents à répétition, le gouvernement britannique avait déjà renationalisé la gestion de l’infrastructure en 2002, en créant Network Rail.

    Même la droite reconnait l’échec
    Mais les retards, les tarifs élevés et la mauvaise qualité du service n’ont pas arrêté pour autant. Les syndicats et voyageurs ont continué à dénoncer l’échec de la privatisation et à réclamer une renationalisation. Deux tiers de la population soutient cette reprise de contrôle public. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/rail-chaos-denationalisation-chris-grayling-labour-two-thirds-bmg-res Sous la direction de Corbyn, le Labour avait également fait campagne en ce sens.

    L’échec du système est visible par tous. Sous pression, de l’opinion publique et des syndicats, le gouvernement de Boris Johnson a été obligé de le reconnaître, dans un rapport qui vient de sortir. Il met donc fin au système tant décrié des franchises. Ce système donnait l’exclusivité à une compagnie privée de faire rouler des trains sur une région ou des lignes bien déterminées. Sur cette franchise, la compagnie fixait les tarifs qu’elle souhaitait.

    Même morte, la privatisation du rail britannique vit encore...
    Dorénavant, une structure ferroviaire nationale unique (Great British Railways) est rétablie, avec un seul système de billetterie. Mais le gouvernement n’en tire pas toutes les conclusions. Car les compagnies privées restent toujours impliquées pour la circulation des trains, par des délégations de services (le public fixe les horaires et tarifs et le privé exploite les trains).

    Le communiqué du gouvernement est assez clair à ce sujet : « ce n’est pas une renationalisation (…) mais une simplification. Si Great British Railways joue le rôle d’âme dirigeante pour coordonner l’ensemble du réseau, notre plan prévoit une plus grande participation du secteur privé ». Et de citer les façons dont le privé pourra s’impliquer dans le transport ferroviaire : faire circuler les trains, innover dans la vente de billets…

    Le gouvernement continue donc à financer les profits du privé avec de l’argent public et celui des voyageurs. Il reste dans une logique de marché. Le groupe d’action We own it, qui se bat pour la renationalisation de toute une série de services publics, estime que cette décision n’est qu’une « privatisation relookée ». Les syndicats soupçonnent qu’il y aura encore des coupes budgétaires et que les profits continueront à aller au privé. https://www.rfi.fr/fr/europe/20210520-royaume-uni-le-gouvernement-d%C3%A9voile-sa-r%C3%A9forme-du-rail

    L’Écosse montre qu’un autre modèle est possible
    Le débat sur la renationalisation du rail au Royaume-Uni fait rage depuis des années. Sous pression, l’Écosse et le Pays de Galle avaient été beaucoup plus loin. L’Écosse a ainsi décidé de renationaliser l’entièreté de son rail en mars 2021, car l’opérateur privé (Abellio filiale de la NS néérlandaise) n’atteignait pas ses objectifs. Fini le privé (contrairement au plan du gouvernement de Boris Johnson), c’est une entreprise publique qui fera désormais rouler les trains en Écosse. Cette entreprise conservera l’ensemble du personnel. Les syndicats et organisations de gauche attendent beaucoup de cette véritable renationalisation écossaise.

    La lutte pour la renationalisation du rail en Angleterre n’est donc pas terminée. Mais cette nouvelle tentative de la droite pour maintenir coûte que coûte la privatisation du rail britannique montre qu’elle est sur la défensive. Elle a du reconnaître que la privatisation des années ‘90 était un échec. Et les syndicats, voyageurs et mouvement de gauche ont déjà annoncé la couleur : ils continueront à se battre pour reconstruire un rail public.

    Source : https://www.solidaire.org/articles/le-rail-prive-britannique-ce-mort-vivant

    #royaume-uni #trains #banlieue #privatisation #Network_Rail #boris_johnson #Great_British_Railway #délégations_de_services #Écosse

  • Home Office’s rush to deport asylum seekers before Brexit was ‘inhumane’, watchdog finds

    ‘Unprecedented levels of self-harm and suicidal thoughts’ were recorded at the #Brook_House_Immigration_Removal_Centre in late 2020

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/brexit-asylum-seekers-home-office-b1850796.html
    #suicides #santé_mentale #UK #Angleterre #asile #migrations #réfugiés #détention_administrative #rétention #statistiques #chiffres #2020

    #paywall

  • Has anyone bothered to think about the staff working at quarantine hotels? | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/quarantine-hotels-covid-red-list-migrant-workers-b1802864.html

    The government’s quarantine scheme requires 11 days of hotel isolation for travelers entering the UK from a “red list” of countries. But the entire initiative risks being undermined by policies which make it impossible for workers in the hotel industry to protect themselves from the spread of infection.We need to confront the possibility of the virus spreading between guests and staff, who must be able to take time off work to isolate if there is a risk they could have come into contact with an infected person. However, a low rate of statutory sick pay, alongside restrictions, especially for migrant workers, on access to financial support, means isolating from work can lead to destitution for many people in these jobs.
    The government needs to raise statutory sick pay from £95 per week, one of the lowest in Europe and utterly insufficient to support a family for 10 days or more of isolation. It also needs to scrap No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF), which keeps migrant workers in poverty, and expand access to its one-off isolation payments of £500. Without these measures, workers in these hotels will face the impossible choice between isolating to protect their health and feeding their families. The hospitality sector in the UK has the highest proportion of migrant workers, making up 30 per cent of the workforce. Most migrants living and working in the UK are automatically subject to NRPF, leaving them unable to access the public safety net, including universal credit, child benefit, income support or housing benefit, regardless of their financial circumstances.
    Red list countries: Full list of 33 nations where hotel quarantine rules apply ‘I guess this means it is okay for me to be violated’ – migrant women have been forgotten in the domestic abuse bill. Long before the pandemic, NRPF conditions were causing severe financial hardship for migrants. For migrant workers in the hospitality sector, an industry hit particularly hard by the pandemic, job losses combined with NRPF conditions have meant they are unable to say “no” to high-risk working conditions and low pay. Throughout this pandemic, we have seen how frontline workers, often in low-paid work, have kept our country going. Yet these are the workers who are consistently undervalued by the government and by employers, despite the fact they have kept our shops open, our transports systems running and our shared spaces clean. The new mandatory hotel quarantine scheme is no exception. The responsibility for lowering Covid-19 transmission across our borders has fallen to low-paid hotel workers, security staff and cleaners. It is them ensuring that the scheme runs smoothly and safely. Low rates of sick pay and a reliance on the statutory minimum wage is prevalent in hospitality contracts, and even more so in cleaning and security contracts, which are often outsourced to agencies, and where insecure and zero-hours contracts are common.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#grandebretagne#sante#hotelquarantaine#travailleurmigrant#travailleurpremiereligne#frontiere#economie

  • Israel rebuffs WHO vaccine request for Palestinian medics, amid outcry over disparity
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israel-palestine-coronavirus-vaccine-b1784474.html

    Israel has refused a request from the World Health Organisation (WHO) to immediately make Covid-19 vaccines available to Palestinian medical workers to avert a health disaster, citing shortages of the jabs for their own citizens.

    The refusal comes amid growing criticism from rights groups of the massive discrepancy between the vaccine rollout in Israel and the occupied West Bank and Gaza, given Israel’s legal obligations as an occupying power.

  • Google in court again over ‘right to be above British law’ on alleged secret monitoring
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/google-challenges-high-court-decision-alleged-secret-monitoring-99114

    A legal battle involving Google resumed today in a landmark trial that will decide whether or not British courts are the appropriate forum for dealing with claims of ‘secret tracking’ by the internet giant. Facing allegations that it used “clandestine” tracking to monitor British users of the Safari web browser, Google unsuccessfully argued earlier this year that, while there were occasions when it could be sued in the UK, on this occasion the High Court did not have jurisdiction to try the (...)

    #Apple #Google #Safari #smartphone #Android #profiling #ICO-UK #écoutes #surveillance #iOS (...)

    ##microtargeting

  • Millionaire Kelly Loeffler mocked for ad claiming she knows what it ‘feels like waiting on that paycheck’
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-election-2020/kelly-loeffler-net-worth-georgia-senator-ad-b1764209.html

    Millionaire Senator Kelly Loeffler was mocked for an ad claiming she knows what “it feels like waiting on that paycheck.”

    Ms Loeffler, who is fighting to retain her Georgia seat, is married to the chairman of the New York Stock Exchange, Jeffrey Sprecher.

    She is reportedly the wealthiest member of congress with a fortune estimated at between $800m and $1bn, according to Forbes.

  • #Coronavirus : Scientists call for action after 50-fold rise in infections in schools | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/independent-sage-coronavirus-infection-schools-b1762906.html

    En #Angleterre multiplication par 50 des infections dans les #écoles ; les #enfants/adolescents de 11 à 16 ans sont désormais le groupe d’âge avec les niveaux d’infection les plus élevés.

    Professor Stephen Reicher of the University of St Andrews, of Independent Sage, said: “In the summer, the government effectively abandoned schools, requiring them to be safe but without providing the support or the resources to make this possible.

    “As a result, far too many of our children are left in crowded, badly ventilated classrooms; infections have increased 50-fold since September; one in five students are off school; and all this is now putting the whole community at risk.

    “The government must acknowledge its error and change direction. We must act urgently to make schools safe.”

    #sars-cov2 #covid-19

  • Domestic abusers winning time with children by accusing mothers of parental alienation, study finds | The Independent | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/domestic-abuse-parental-alienation-family-courts-brunel-study-a929472

    Dr Adrienne Barnett, who carried out the research, said these cases were just the “tip of the iceberg” as the study had not looked at the thousands of cases heard by district and magistrate courts every day that are not published in the official court reports she examined.

    “There will be thousands of cases where parental alienation is raised but we do not know what happens,” Dr Barnett, a senior lecturer in law who specialises in domestic abuse and the family courts, told The Independent.

    “Playing the parental alienation card is proving more powerful than any other in silencing the voices of women and children resisting contact with abusive men. Parental alienation is not an equal counterpart to domestic abuse, it is a means of obscuring domestic abuse, and should be recognised as such”.

    Dr Barnett, who specialised in family law while practising as a barrister for more than 30 years, said the theory of parental alienation had been slated and discredited by many experts but was now becoming more mainstream.

  • Auf wiedersehen, #Tegel: the long goodbye to West #Berlin | The Independent

    https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/tegel-airport-berlin-brandenburg-british-airways-twa-pan-am-b1561253.

    Despite the mandatory mask, my final flight into Berlin Tegel airport was far more comfortable than the first.

    On Friday evening, I paid British Airways £71. On Saturday morning I caught a train to London Heathrow airport. An hour later, I boarded an Airbus A320 that climbed to 39,000ft, and above Hanover began a slow and gentle descent to the German capital.

    In January 1989, the experience was rather different. First I paid TWA £75 for a return flight from Gatwick to Frankfurt. Then I paid Pan Am £99 return to continue to West Berlin.

    The further the Cold War recedes into the past, the weirder it seems. At the start of the year in which the Berlin Wall came down, flying on one now-extinct US airline to West Germany then changing to another now-defunct American carrier for a domestic flight to reach a city divided by a lethal barrier seemed almost normal.

    #allemagne #aéroport #dfs #transports #avion #infrastructure #trop_tard

  • La fermeture des écoles est une des mesures les plus efficaces pour limiter la transmission du coronavirus, selon une étude comparée
    https://www.rtbf.be/info/societe/detail_la-fermeture-des-ecoles-est-une-des-mesures-les-plus-efficaces-pour-limi

    Après une semaine, les effets de la fermeture des écoles montrent qu’elle est tout aussi efficace que celle des entreprises et de l’interdiction des événements publics. Après 4 semaines, il s’avère que c’est cette dernière qui est la plus efficace (taux de reproduction ramené à 0,76), mais que la fermeture des écoles (taux à 0,85) reste plus utile que celle des entreprises (0,87).

    C’est toutefois la combinaison de ces mesures qui se montre le plus efficace : en combinant ces trois mesures et l’interdiction des rassemblements de plus de 10 personnes, la transmission est réduite à plus de 50% après 28 jours.

    Article basé sur cette étude publiée dans The Lancet : The temporal association of introducing and lifting non-pharmaceutical interventions with the time-varying reproduction number (R) of SARS-CoV-2 : a modelling study across 131 countries
    https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30785-4/fulltext

  • Nasa to make major announcement of ‘exciting news’ about the moon
    https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/nasa-moon-announcement-when-watch-mission-b1209506.html

    Nasa will hold a major event to announce an “exciting new discovery” about the Moon, it has said.

    The space agency did not reveal details about the discovery, but said that it “contributes to Nasa’s efforts to learn about the Moon in support of deep space exploration”.

    Là j’en suis certain : ils ont trouvé des artefacts extraterrestres. Ou une grande dalle noire. Ou un temple égyptien. Ou ils vont annoncer qu’ils y ont une base habitée dirigée par Martin Landau depuis les années 70. Ou qu’elle n’existe pas et qu’en fait c’est juste une image projetée sur l’immense écran LCD qui nous sert de ciel. Ou qu’ils y ont retrouvé les lunettes de Stanley Kubrick. Ou, évidemment, qu’elle est constituée de Wensleydale ou de Stilton.

    Arg, c’t’angoisse…

    • On pourra admirer, une fois de plus, la maîtrise de l’art de la communication par la NASA. Ce teasing de dingue sur le thème « On a découvert un truc super-important, mais on ne vous le dira que lundi », c’est tout de même quelque chose (de pas totalement scientifique)…

      On se croirait à un lancement d’iPhone chez Apple. Je serais pas surpris qu’ils annoncent leur découverte avec une vidéo remplie de gros plans sur des trucs qui tournent au ralenti, avec Jony Ive qui fait la voix off.

    • La Nasa ne fait pas mystère que parmi les experts invités pour présenter sa découverte ce lundi, il y aura Casey Honniball, postdoctorante au Goddard Space Flight Center de la Nasa (Greenbelt, Maryland).

      Google et la toile mondiale fournissent rapidement à son sujet des informations qui laissent peu de doutes à avoir. Casey Honniball a en effet passé sa thèse de doctorat sur la possibilité de détecter de l’eau sur la Lune grâce aux observations dans l’infrarouge possibles avec Sofia. Un des articles que l’astronome a publié est très révélateur également.

      https://www.futura-sciences.com/sciences/actualites/lune-nasa-va-t-elle-annoncer-decouverte-monolithe-noir-lune-83811

  • US push for Arab-Israel ties divides Sudanese leaders U.S. country Government israel ties
    Via AP news wire | 4 oct 2020 | The Independent
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/us-push-arabisrael-ties-divides-sudanese-leaders-us-government-ties-i

    While Sudan’s transitional government has been negotiating the terms of removing the country from the list for more than a year, U.S. officials introduced the linkage to normalization with Israel more recently.

    Top Sudanese military leaders who govern jointly with civilian technocrats in a Sovereign Council, have become increasingly vocal in their support for normalization with Israel as part of a quick deal with Washington ahead of the U.S. election.

    “Now, whether we like it or not, the removal (of Sudan from the terror list) is tied to (normalization) with Israel,” the deputy head of the council, Gen. Mohammed Dagalo, told a local television station on Friday.

    “We need Israel ... Israel is a developed country and the whole world is working with it,” he said. “We will have benefits from such relations ... We hope all look at Sudan’s interests.”

    Such comments would have been unthinkable until recently in a country where public hostility toward Israel remains strong. (...)

    #IsraelSoudan #Israfrique