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  • Globe editorial: The new reality of a country on fire - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/editorials/article-the-new-reality-of-a-country-on-fire

    None of this is brand new. People in the West know it all too well. British Columbians brace themselves each summer. Toronto has at times seen summer days ruined by wildfire smoke. But the scale is something new. Canada is on track for its worst-ever fire year. As of last week, 3.8 million hectares had burned across the country. It’s a huge amount of land: five times larger than the sprawl of the Greater Toronto Area. And it’s way higher than the annual average of 2.9 million hectares burned in the 2010s, which was way higher than the 1.7 million hectares annually from 2000 to 2009. Escalation is obvious. The 1980s saw three years of two million-plus hectares burned; in the 1990s, three; in the 2000s, four; in the 2010s, seven; and twice so far in the 2020s.

    #Canada #feux #climat

  • Negotiated peace with Russia that accepts loss of Crimea is not an option, says Zelensky aide
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/article-ukraine-says-negotiated-peace-with-russia-is-not-an-option-

    The independent Ukrainska Pravda news website reported on Tuesday [22 novembre] that the United States had proposed a peace deal to the Kremlin that would have Russia withdraw from all Ukrainian territory, except Crimea, which would hold a referendum on its future after seven years. In return, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization would agree not to integrate #Ukraine as a member for the same seven-year period. The proposal was dismissed by the Kremlin.

  • Le Canada a formé des éléments d’un régiment ukrainien lié à l’extrême droite Simon Coutu - Radio Canada
    https://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/1873461/canada-regiment-ukrainien-lie-extreme-droite-azov

    Le Canada a dépensé près d’un milliard de dollars pour former des forces ukrainiennes depuis 2014. Des militaires du régiment Azov, connu pour ses liens avec l’extrême droite, ont profité de cet entraînement, selon des documents analysés par Radio-Canada.

    Fondé par un néonazi notoire, le régiment Azov s’est fait connaître pour ses faits d’armes en 2014 contre les séparatistes prorusses, notamment à Marioupol, là où il combat de nouveau aujourd’hui. D’ailleurs, avec le repositionnement des forces russes dans le sud et dans l’est de l’Ukraine, le bataillon pourrait avoir un rôle central à jouer dans les futurs combats.

    Lorsque Vladimir Poutine avance vouloir “dénazifier” l’Ukraine en envahissant ce pays, il fait notamment référence à cette unité controversée. Si l’effectif du bataillon s’est diversifié depuis son intégration au sein de la Garde nationale ukrainienne (GNU), il entretient toujours des liens avec l’extrême droite.

    C’est en raison de ces affiliations fascistes qu’Ottawa répète d’ailleurs, depuis 2015, que jamais les Forces armées canadiennes (FAC) ne fourniront ou n’ont fourni d’entraînement ou de soutien à ce régiment ni à des unités affiliées.

    Pourtant, des photos prises au centre de formation de Zolochiv de la garde nationale ukrainienne , dans l’ouest de l’Ukraine, montrent le contraire. Les Forces armées canadiennes ont bel et bien contribué à la formation des soldats du régiment Azov en 2020, au point où cette unité se targue maintenant de pouvoir former ses propres militaires selon les standards occidentaux.

    Sur deux clichés publiés sur les réseaux sociaux de la Garde nationale ukrainienne (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.facebook.com/ngutrainingcentr/posts/2178291778970663 le 20 novembre 2020, on aperçoit deux militaires qui portent sur leur uniforme un écusson fourni par le régiment Azov au moment où ils participent à un entraînement auprès des Forces armées canadiennes. Il s’agit de l’emblème du test Spartan, un tournoi avec des épreuves de force. L’écusson est aussi frappé du logo du régiment Azov, qui évoque la Wolfsangel, un symbole qui a été utilisé par plusieurs unités nazies.

    Selon Oleksiy Kuzmenko, un journaliste spécialiste de l’extrême droite ukrainienne, la présence de ces écussons suggère fortement que le régiment Azov a eu accès à l’entraînement militaire canadien.

    “L’écusson en question est fermement et exclusivement associé au régiment Azov”, dit-il. “Ces éléments de preuve démontrent que les militaires canadiens n’ont pas mis en place les mécanismes qui empêcheraient cette unité militaire d’extrême droite d’accéder à l’aide occidentale fournie aux forces militaires et de sécurité”, dit le reporter, qui collabore notamment avec le média d’investigation en ligne Bellingcat (Nouvelle fenêtre). https://www.bellingcat.com

    Chercheur à l’Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (INALCO), spécialiste de l’Ukraine, de l’extrême droite et du nationalisme ukrainien, Adrien Nonjon reconnaît lui aussi ce symbole sur les photos.

    “Je peux vous assurer avec une certitude absolue que c’est un écusson d’Azov”, fait-il observer. “Ce régiment se présente comme une formation d’élite et essaie d’inculquer ce modèle de dépassement de soi à ses combattants. Cela dit, on peut aussi imaginer que l’individu qui porte cet écusson est un ancien membre du régiment.”

    Sur une autre image (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.flickr.com/photos/cfcombatcamera/50562875068/in/photostream

    Flickr
    prise lors du même entraînement, cette fois-ci par une photographe des Forces armées canadiennes, on aperçoit un soldat ukrainien qui porte un écusson aux couleurs de la 14e division de la Waffen-SS, créée en 1943 par le régime nazi d’Adolf Hitler pour combattre l’Union des républiques socialistes soviétiques avec des volontaires ukrainiens. Une cérémonie destinée à rendre hommage à cette division a d’ailleurs été condamnée en 2021 (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.president.gov.ua/news/shodo-akciyi-u-kiyevi-do-richnici-stvorennya-diviziyi-ss-gal-68225 par le président Volodymyr Zelensky.

    Sur cette photo prise par les Forces armées canadiennes, on aperçoit un militaire ukrainien qui porte un écusson de la 14e division de la Waffen-SS.


    Photo : Avr Melissa Gloude, Forces armées canadiennes. Photomontage : Charlie Debons, Radio-Canada

    Si, historiquement, cette division de la Waffen-SS n’a pas participé aux massacres de Juifs en Ukraine durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, il n’en reste pas moins que l’image du lion doré et des trois couronnes est très controversée.

    “On ne s’en sort pas : [la Waffen-SS], c’est une bande de nazis”, affirme le professeur et titulaire de la Chaire en études ukrainiennes de l’Université d’Ottawa, Dominique Arel. “En tant que division, ils ont été créés trop tard pour participer à l’Holocauste et ont été utilisés comme de la chair à canon par les Allemands.
    Mais il n’en demeure pas moins que la symbolique est forte. Les SS, c’est le groupe le plus criminel du 20e siècle.”

    Opération Unifier
    Depuis 2015, le Canada a contribué à former 33 346 candidats des Forces de sécurité de l’Ukraine, dont 1951 éléments de la garde nationale ukrainienne , dans le cadre de l’opération Unifier, selon le ministère de la Défense nationale (Nouvelle fenêtre). https://www.canada.ca/fr/ministere-defense-nationale/services/operations/operations-militaires/operations-en-cours/operation-unifier.html Le coût de ce programme s’élève à plus de 890 millions de dollars. Tous les six mois, environ 200 membres des Forces armées canadiennes se relaient pour offrir de l’aide en matière d’instruction sur la force de sécurité. Tout ce personnel a été temporairement déplacé en Pologne jusqu’à ce que les conditions permettent une reprise de l’entraînement.

    Les militaires canadiens ont travaillé en collaboration avec le Centre de formation de la Garde nationale ukrainienne à Zolochiv du 20 février 2019 au 13 février 2022, selon les Forces armées canadiennes.

    Interrogé sur la présence de ces écussons sur l’uniforme de militaires ukrainiens durant un entraînement mené par les Forces armées canadiennes, le ministère de la Défense nationale a formellement nié avoir formé des membres du régiment Azov.

    “Les Forces armées canadiennes n’ont jamais donné quelque formation que ce soit aux membres du bataillon Azov”, assure par courriel le ministère de la Défense nationale. “Les militaires participant à l’op Unifier ont toujours reçu l’ordre de ne pas s’entraîner avec les membres du bataillon Azov et de n’avoir aucun contact avec eux.”

    Le porte-parole du ministère convient cependant que “les membres de l’op Unifier n’exercent aucune surveillance sur les personnes choisies pour assister aux cours ou aux séances de formation”.

    Des membres de la Garde nationale ukrainienne suivent une séance de formation de la part de militaires canadiens de l’opération Unifier le 22 janvier 2021.


    Photo : Avr Melissa Gloude, Forces armées canadiennes

    Selon le ministère, il incombe à l’Ukraine d’effectuer les vérifications requises en ce qui concerne les militaires en formation.

    “Les Forces armées canadiennes n’ont ni le pouvoir ni le mandat de faire enquête sur les militaires d’autres pays. Toutefois, le personnel de l’op Unifier a toujours eu l’obligation et le droit de demander au personnel de commandement des installations d’entraînement ou des académies militaires ukrainiennes de retirer des cours donnés ou supervisés par des membres des Forces armées canadiennes tout soldat ukrainien qu’ils soupçonnent d’être inadéquat du point de vue des valeurs canadiennes ou du droit international.”

    Contacté par courriel, un représentant de la garde nationale ukrainienne a réfuté que des éléments du régiment Azov aient pu participer à une formation auprès de militaires canadiens, malgré les écussons particuliers du régiment observés sur leurs propres photos. “Quant à la période que vous mentionnez [novembre 2020], cette unité n’y a pas fait d’exercice”, écrit un porte-parole. “Et cette pièce ne fait pas partie de leur uniforme.”

    Les membres du régiment Azov n’ont pas répondu à nos requêtes par courriel ni sur le réseau Telegram.

    Des membres du régiment Azov de la Garde nationale ukrainienne ainsi que des activistes du parti d’extrême droite Corps national et du groupe radical Secteur droit ont participé à un rassemblement pour marquer la Journée des défenseurs de l’Ukraine, à Kiev, en octobre 2016.


    Photo : Reuters / Gleb Garanich _

    Former Azov par la bande
    Le 18 août 2021, un communiqué publié sur le site web de la garde nationale ukrainienne avançait par ailleurs que des éléments du régiment Azov (aussi connu sous le nom “de détachement spécial de l’unité militaire 3057”) avaient reçu un entraînement auprès d’instructeurs formés selon un programme élaboré avec la participation de représentants de l’opération Unifier, appelé “PR-1”.

    “Le premier groupe de chasseurs de l’unité militaire 3057 a commencé à s’entraîner dans le cadre du programme de formation de base des soldats selon les normes de l’Organisation du traité de l’Atlantique nord [...]”, peut-on y lire. “Un tel cours en Ukraine n’a lieu qu’au Centre de formation de la Garde nationale ukrainienne à Zolochiv [...]. Le programme de formation de base des soldats est la première étape de la croissance du système de formation professionnelle de la Garde nationale d’Ukraine. Il a été élaboré conjointement avec des représentants de l’opération Unifier selon les normes de l’Organisation du traité de l’Atlantique nord.”

    Un communiqué publié sur le site web du régiment Azov au mois d’août 2021 précise que 35 combattants ont participé à cette formation.

    Au mois d’octobre, Azov se targuait de former 33 cadets selon le programme PR-1, mais cette fois-ci dans ses propres installations, grâce aux entraînements reçus à Zolochiv. On y mentionne aussi que, “pour le prochain cours, les instructeurs sont prêts à accepter deux fois plus de militaires et à dispenser régulièrement une telle formation”.

    Questionné sur cette formation offerte par des instructeurs d’Azov, “élaborée avec des représentants de l’opération Unifier selon les normes de l’Organisation du traité de l’Atlantique nord”, le ministère canadien de la Défense nationale affirme “ne pas être au courant”.

    La garde nationale ukrainienne et toutes ses sous-organisations, comme le Centre de formation de Zolochiv – où les membres des Forces armées canadiennes opéraient –, “ont toujours été pleinement conscients et ont convenu que le ministère de la Défense nationale et les FAC ne formeraient pas les membres du régiment Azov et n’auraient pas de contacts avec eux”, indique un porte-parole par courriel. “De plus, la [garde nationale ukrainienne ] a toujours accepté de prendre des mesures pour éviter des interactions.”

    La garde nationale ukrainienne n’a pas donné suite à notre demande à ce sujet.

    Dépolitisé ou néofasciste ?
    Le régiment Azov, qui participe à la défense de la ville de Marioupol, dévastée par l’armée russe, est une unité très controversée en Ukraine, comme ailleurs.

    Les autorités russes utilisent le spectre d’Azov pour justifier l’invasion de l’Ukraine. Dans un discours diffusé quelques minutes avant le début de l’invasion, le 24 février, Vladimir Poutine avait déclaré chercher “à démilitariser et à dénazifier l’Ukraine”, alors que le président du pays, Volodymyr Zelensky, est juif. Le 10 mars, le ministre russe des Affaires étrangères, Sergueï Lavrov, a justifié le bombardement d’une maternité à Marioupol par la présence du “bataillon Azov et d’autres radicaux” sur place.


    Le président de la Russie, Vladimir Poutine, a déclaré chercher à démilitariser et à dénazifier l’Ukraine au cours d’un discours télévisé le 24 février 2022.
    Photo : Associated Press

    Créé par le néonazi Andriy Biletsky, le régiment Azov compterait aujourd’hui 10 000 combattants sur les quelque 200 000 soldats de l’armée ukrainienne, selon son fondateur.

    Il s’agit donc d’une entité minoritaire, bien loin de ce que laisse supposer la propagande de Vladimir Poutine.

    Les quelque 800 combattants qui le composaient à l’origine, durant la guerre du Donbass, ont contribué à reprendre la ville de Marioupol aux séparatistes prorusses en 2014. De nombreux volontaires étaient issus de la formation ultranationaliste Patriote d’Ukraine et de l’Assemblée sociale nationale, d’allégeance néofasciste.

    Andriy Biletsky a siégé au Parlement de 2014 à 2019. Si son discours s’est affiné depuis, il a mentionné en 2008 que la mission de l’Ukraine consiste à “ mener les races blanches du monde dans une croisade finale… contre les Untermenschen [les sous-humains] dirigés par les Sémites”.

    En juin 2015, le Canada a annoncé qu’il ne soutiendrait pas et n’entraînerait pas ce régiment. En visite à Kiev, le ministre de la Défense nationale de l’époque, Jason Kenney, l’avait alors qualifié  (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/kenney-says-nationalist-azov-group-shouldnt-tarnish-ukraines-image/article25157369 d’un “petit nombre de pommes pourries”.

    Toutefois, en 2018, une délégation de militaires et de diplomates canadiens a rencontré des membres du régiment en Ukraine (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://ottawacitizen.com/news/national/defence-watch/canadian-officials-who-met-with-ukrainian-unit-linked-to-neo-nazis-fe malgré les mises en garde formulées un an plus tôt par les Forces armées canadiennes.

    Un rapport de 2016 du Haut-Commissariat aux droits de l’homme  (Nouvelle fenêtre)des Nations unies (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Countries/UA/Ukraine_13th_HRMMU_Report_3March2016.pdf accuse par ailleurs le régiment Azov d’avoir enfreint le droit international humanitaire. On l’accuse notamment d’avoir violé et torturé des détenus dans la région du Donbass et d’avoir déplacé des résidents après avoir pillé des propriétés civiles.

    Le bataillon Azov a été intégré à la garde nationale ukrainienne en 2014 à la suite des premiers accords de Minsk. Il serait donc “dépolitisé”, selon le chercheur à l’INALCO Adrien Nonjon. Il n’aurait alors plus de liens avec le Corps national, le parti du fondateur du régiment Azov, Andriy Biletsky.

    Des volontaires ukrainiens du bataillon Azov avec leurs drapeaux ont fait une démonstration de force lors de la Journée des volontaires ukrainiens à Kiev, en Ukraine, le samedi 14 mars 2020.

    “Tant les séparatistes que l’Ukraine se sont engagés dans une volonté de désescalade”, fait-il observer. “Ils ont intégré ces éléments subversifs pour pouvoir les surveiller et les contrôler. C’est un corps militaire comme un autre et je dirais même que c’est une unité d’élite au sein de la Garde nationale ukrainienne. On pourra toujours dire qu’il y a des liens qui existent, mais ils sont plutôt informels, basés sur une camaraderie, parce qu’ils ont tous été au front.”

    Toutefois, pour Oleksiy Kuzmenko, qui est aussi l’auteur d’un rapport pour l’université George Washington (Nouvelle fenêtre) https://www.illiberalism.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/IERES-Papers-no-11-September-2021-FINAL.pdf sur les contacts entre les militaires occidentaux et des membres du groupe d’extrême droite ukrainien Ordre militaire Centuria, il ne fait aucun doute que le régiment Azov entretient toujours des liens avec le parti d’extrême droite Corps national, malgré un vernis politiquement correct.

    “Pour commencer, jusqu’au début de la nouvelle agression de la Russie, le centre de recrutement du régiment à Kiev partageait un emplacement avec les bureaux du parti au centre ATEK d’Azov. Il est aussi important de souligner que le chef actuel du régiment, Denis Prokopenko, et son adjoint, Svyatoslav Palamar, sont tous deux membres depuis 2014 et ont servi sous Biletsky. Le fondateur du régiment Azov et d’autres leaders du Corps national ont d’ailleurs continué à visiter le régiment avant la guerre. J’ajouterais aussi qu’en 2019, le régiment s’est rangé du côté du mouvement civil lorsqu’il a perturbé la campagne de réélection du président Petro Porochenko. Finalement, la faction armée d’Azov a accueilli l’aile jeunesse du Corps national en août 2021 dans le cadre d’un entraînement.”

    Dans de récents communiqués publiés sur la plateforme Telegram, un porte-parole du régiment dénonce le manque d’implication de l’Occident dans le conflit qui oppose l’Ukraine à la Russie. “Une des unités les plus motivées de notre pays, le régiment Azov, est qualifiée de fasciste et de nazie [...]. On nous interdit d’obtenir des armes et de nous entraîner avec des instructeurs de l’Organisation du traité de l’Atlantique nord, nos réseaux sociaux ont été bloqués, etc. Les vrais fascistes sont non pas les combattants du régiment Azov mais bien les dirigeants russes et l’armée russe, qui ont eu l’audace d’appeler la guerre en Ukraine une "opération spéciale de "dénazification.”

    Il reste que, selon le chercheur Dominique Arel, le régiment Azov “n’est pas dépolitisé du tout”. Par contre, il s’interroge quant à la pertinence d’aborder cette question alors que l’Ukraine subit l’invasion russe.

    Des milliers de civils sont toujours coincés à Marioupol, qui est bombardée quotidiennement par les forces russes.
    Photo : afp via getty images / ARIS MESSINIS

    “C’est une branche qui est dangereuse”, admet-il. “Mais en ce moment, ils ne tabassent pas de Roms dans la rue : ils défendent leur pays. Les fascistes, ce sont les Russes qui terrorisent les populations civiles. Après la guerre, ça pourrait poser problème que l’extrême droite se retrouve armée. Mais actuellement, au-delà du régiment Azov, c’est une très bonne chose que l’Armée canadienne ait formé les forces ukrainiennes. On voit les résultats exceptionnels sur le terrain. Sur le sol, à Marioupol, l’armée, dont le régiment Azov, résiste toujours.”

    #Canada #azof #régiment_azof #ukraine #waffen-ss #armée #armée_canadienne #néonazi #ukronazi #zelinsky #pologne #Donbass #Marioupol #facisme #nazisme #dénazification #dominique_arel #otan

  • ‘We are not prepared’: The flaws inside Public Health that hurt Canada’s readiness for #COVID-19 - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-we-are-not-prepared-the-flaws-inside-public-health-that-hur

    The curtailing of GPHIN and allegations that scientists had become marginalized within the Public Health Agency, detailed in a Globe investigation this past July, are now the subject of two federal probes – an examination by the Auditor-General of #Canada and an independent federal review, ordered by the Minister of Health.

    #incurie

  • #JAN_REIMER : Les refuges pour femmes, obligés de s’adapter à la pandémie, sont essentiels au rétablissement de la société canadienne
    https://tradfem.wordpress.com/2020/10/20/7287

    En mars, lorsque la pandémie a provoqué une vague de fermetures d’entreprises et de services en Alberta, aucune organisation ne semblait à l’abri. Pendant la période de confinement, les détachements locaux de la GRC dans les petites villes de l’Alberta ont fermé leurs portes d’entrée aux visiteuses sans rendez-vous. Les bureaux des services à l’enfance ont fermé. Les banques alimentaires ont également fermé boutique.

    Mais pour les refuges pour femmes de l’Alberta, et même de la majorité du pays, la possibilité de fermer ou d’emballer le bureau pour travailler à domicile n’a jamais été envisagée. Dans le meilleur des cas, le voyage des femmes qui quittent une situation difficile pour se rendre dans un refuge n’est pas facile. C’est pourquoi, en ces temps sans précédent, le personnel des refuges savait qu’il devait être là pour toute femme qui avait besoin d’aide, même si les gouvernements disaient aux gens de rester chez eux.

    Entre-temps, on a beaucoup écrit sur la nature sexospécifique de cette pandémie. Les femmes ont subi le plus gros des pertes d’emploi ou font un triple travail, essayant d’être à la fois parents, enseignantes et travailleuses. L’économiste Armine Yalnizyan a déclaré qu’il n’y aurait pas de reprise économique sans une « reprise féminine ». Il est clair que nous devons soutenir les services de garde d’enfants et les autres services qui permettent aux femmes de retrouver un emploi.

    Traduction :#Tradfem
    Version originale : https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-womens-shelters-forced-to-adapt-again-during-this-pandemic-

  • Growing up in Quarantineland: Childhood nightmares in the age of germs prepared me for coronavirus
    Margaret Atwood
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-growing-up-in-quarantineland-childhood-nightmares-in-the-ag

    Any child growing up in Canada in the 1940s, at a time before there were vaccines for a horde of deadly diseases, was familiar with quarantine signs. They were yellow and they appeared on the front doors of houses. They said things such as DIPHTHERIA and SCARLET FEVER and WHOOPING COUGH. Milkmen – there were still milkmen in those years, sometimes with horse-drawn wagons – and bread men, ditto, and even icemen, and certainly postmen (and yes, they were all men), had to leave things on the front doorsteps. We kids would stand outside in the snow – for me, it was always winter in cities, as the rest of the time my family was up in the woods – gazing at the mysterious signs and wondering what gruesome things were going on inside the houses. Children were especially susceptible to these diseases, especially diptheria – I had four little cousins who died of it – so once in a while a classmate would disappear, sometimes to return, sometimes not.

    #Margaret_Atwood #quarantaines #épidémies #covid-19

  • Freeland mum on whether Hong Kong asylum seekers will be granted refuge as bigger wave predicted - The Globe and Mail
    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#Canada#asile#HongKong

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-freeland-mum-on-whether-hong-kong-asylum-seekers-will-be-gr

    Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, asked about dozens of asylum claims made by Hong Kong protesters in Canada, praised the rich contribution immigrants from this former British colony have made to this country but declined to indicate whether Ottawa would grant the applicants refuge.

  • Behind the fence: How the world’s displaced are dealing with COVID-19 - The Globe and Mail
    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#Monde#refugie#camp

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/article-behind-the-fence-how-the-worlds-displaced-are-dealing-with-

    Together, the world’s 71 million forcibly displaced people are numerous enough to constitute the 20th most populous country on Earth, a little smaller than Germany. Scattered around the world by state-ordered bloodshed and genocidal campaigns, they are people of numerous languages, religions and geographies. Some have been stripped of citizenship. All have been stripped of homes. Many have been barred from the most basic elements of self-sufficiency.

  • Opinion: Alberta’s COVID-19 crisis is a migrant-worker crisis, too - The Globe and Mail
    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#Canada#travail

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-albertas-covid-19-crisis-is-a-migrant-worker-crisis-too

    The 500 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and one death tied to an Albertan meat-packing plant are unquestionably tragic. The Cargill plant in High River, Alta., temporarily ceased operations last week following the most serious COVID-19 outbreak in Canada, with cases linked to that plant constituting about a quarter of all cases in the province.

  • Les États-Unis et la situation du travail pendant la pandémie:

    10 Million Americans Lost Their Jobs In Two Weeks Because of Coronavirus
    https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/g5xeb7/10-million-americans-lost-their-jobs-in-two-weeks-because-of-coronavirus

    Postal Workers and COVID-19
    https://rampantmag.com/2020/04/01/postal-workers-and-covid-19

    After 10 Workers Get COVID-19, 1,000 Meatpackers Walk Off the Job in Colorado
    https://paydayreport.com/1000-immigrant-meatpackers-walk-off-the-job-in-colorado

    Oregon Grocery Workers Demand Safer Working Conditions During COVID-19 Pandemic
    https://www.portlandmercury.com/blogtown/2020/03/31/28225204/oregon-grocery-workers-demand-safer-working-conditions-during-covid

    ‘Essential’ Farm Workers Are Putting Food on Your Table With No Insurance, No Sick Pay, and Few Safety Regulations
    https://www.vice.com/en_ca/article/akw9j5/essential-farm-workers-are-putting-food-on-your-table-with-no-insurance-no-sic

    Amazon Employee Says He Was Fired for Staging Walkout to Protest Unsafe Conditions
    https://www.theroot.com/amazon-employee-says-he-was-fired-for-staging-walkout-t-1842584349

    Trader Joe’s Workers Are Terrified Not Enough Is Being Done To Keep Them And Customers Safe
    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/amphtml/juliareinstein/coronavirus-trader-joes

    Bonus avec un article sur le Canada:

    Alberta government makes moves to lay off more public employees — this time provincial public service members
    https://albertapolitics.ca/2020/03/alberta-government-makes-moves-to-lay-off-more-public-employees-this

    Voir compile des effets délétères indirects de la pandémie :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/832147

    #coronavirus #travail #USA #Canada

  • En temps de crise, il est urgent de sauver... l’industrie pétrolière...

    Ottawa prepares multibillion-dollar bailout of oil and gas sector
    Robert Fife, Emma Graney, Kelly Cryderman, The Globe and Mail, le 19 mars 2020
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-ottawa-prepares-multibillion-dollar-bailout-of-oil-and-gas-

    One senior Alberta source said the province is expecting Ottawa to provide $15-billion in relief to an industry that has been hammered by the COVID-19 crisis and the price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia that has cratered oil prices and energy-company stocks.

    #coronavirus #Canada #Pétrole #salops #qu'ils_choppent_tous_Ebola

  • Sidewalk Labs document reveals company’s early vision for data collection, tax powers, criminal justice
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-sidewalk-labs-document-reveals-companys-early-plans-for-dat

    A confidential Sidewalk Labs document from 2016 lays out the founding vision of the Google-affiliated development company, which included having the power to levy its own property taxes, track and predict people’s movements and control some public services. The document, which The Globe and Mail has seen, also describes how people living in a Sidewalk community would interact with and have access to the space around them – an experience based, in part, on how much data they’re willing to (...)

    #SidewalkLabs #Alphabet #Google #fiscalité #technologisme #justice #BigData #data #discrimination (...)

    ##fiscalité ##urbanisme

  • “Joker”, un film “détestable”. Et les “élites” de nos sociétés ultra-libérales et consuméristes détestent qu’on leur mette le nez dans leur caca.

    TIFF 2019: Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker is the antihero the alienated and angry have been waiting for, and that’s precisely the problem - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/film/tiff/article-tiff-2019-joaquin-phoenixs-joker-is-the-antihero-the-aliena

    TIFF 2019: Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker is the antihero the alienated and angry have been waiting for, and that’s precisely the problem

    https://www.revolutionpermanente.fr/Le-Joker-entre-le-desespoir-du-capitalisme-et-l-espoir-de-l-eme

    Le Joker : entre le désespoir du capitalisme et l’espoir de l’émeute

    Toutes les critiques américaines ont détesté le Joker : elles le voient comme un film sans message, ou comme une source d’inspiration pour le terrorisme de droite. Quel film ont-elles vu ? En réalité, son message ne pourrait pas être plus clair : les travailleurs doivent diriger leur rage contre les riches.

    • A lire les critiques je constate qu’il y a des chiens de Pavlov partout. En contenant ses réflexes conditionnels on arrive à regarder l’oeuvre comme telle.

      Le film ressemble étrangement à Bad Lieutenant d’Abel Ferrara où Harvey Keitel nous expose au processus de décomposition d’un caractère aliéné.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ir8Y4iFrWk8

      Le joker ne subit pas sa décomposition, bien au contraire il provoque la Aufhebung de sa souffrance dans un soulèvement de masse clownesque. Le dernier rempart contre sa révolte est une psychiatre noire intégrée au système carcéral. Finalement elle est aussi impuissante comme la police et les médias contre les puissances qui font du Joker l’expression d’un malaise concernant tout le monde.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxkBTqQY9vk

      Solution pratique pour mieux comprendre ce film : Consacrez sept minutes à une introduction dans la pensée de Hegel, ce qui est peu de temps mais c’est un début.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5JGE3lhuNo

      Le film se termine par une chanson de Frank Sinatra qui désigne le Joker comme incarnation actuelle de l’américain idéal. Elle explique la morale de l’histoire. J’y découvre beaucoup d’ironie, mais c’est uniquement mon impression personnelle. Et la vôtre ?

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIiUqfxFttM

      Frank Sinatra – That’s Life Lyrics
      https://genius.com/Frank-sinatra-thats-life-lyrics

      [Verse 1]
      That’s life (that’s life), that’s what people say
      You’re riding high in April, shot down in May
      But I know I’m gonna change that tune
      When I’m back on top, back on top in June
      I said, that’s life (that’s life), and as funny as it may seem
      Some people get their kicks
      Stompin’ on a dream
      But I don’t let it, let it get me down
      Cause this fine old world it keeps spinning around

      [Chorus]
      I’ve been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet
      A pawn and a king
      I’ve been up and down and over and out
      And I know one thing:
      Each time I find myself flat on my face
      I pick myself up and get back in the race

      [Verse 2]
      That’s life (that’s life), I tell ya, I can’t deny it
      I thought of quitting, baby
      But my heart just ain’t gonna buy it
      And if I didn’t think it was worth one single try
      I’d jump right on a big bird and then I’d fly

      [Chorus]
      I’ve been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate
      A poet, a pawn and a king
      I’ve been up and down and over and out
      And I know one thing:
      Each time I find myself laying flat on my face
      I just pick myself up and get back in the race

      [Verse 3]
      That’s life, that’s life
      And I can’t deny it
      Many times I thought of cutting out but my heart won’t buy it
      But if there’s nothing shaking come here this July
      I’m gonna roll myself up in a big ball and die
      My, my

      That’s Life (song) - Wikipedia
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/That%27s_Life_(song)

      “That’s Life” is a popular song written by Dean Kay and Kelly Gordon and first recorded by Marion Montgomery. The most famous version is by Frank Sinatra, released on his 1966 album of the same name. Sinatra recorded the song after hearing an earlier cover of it by O.C. Smith; the song proved successful and reached the fourth spot on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. Following the success of Sinatra’s version, it was subsequently recorded by a number of artists including Aretha Franklin, James Booker, Shirley Bassey, James Brown, Van Morrison, David Lee Roth, Michael Bolton, Michael Bublé, Russell Watson, and Deana Martin and Holt McCallany. Sinatra’s version appeared in the 1993 film A Bronx Tale, the 2019 film Joker (2019 film), and the 2004 video game Tony Hawk’s Underground 2, while a cover by Bono was on the soundtrack of The Good Thief (2002).

      #film #cinéma #terrorisme #USA #band_dessinée #Batman #décadence #révolte #dialectique

  • Toronto defends short-term rental regulations as tribunal hearing gets underway
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-toronto-defends-short-term-rental-regulations-as-tribunal-h

    The regulations include restricting rentals to the owner’s principal residence and requiring short-term renters to register with the city and pay a 4-per-cent municipal accommodation tax. Housing advocates and property owners squared off as the local planning appeal tribunal began hearings, expected to last for at least the next week, after several residents appealed the changes. The city has argued the regulations are important to maintain the accessibility and affordability of long-term (...)

    #Airbnb #procès #domination #terms

  • When the gig economy become a public health issue - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-when-the-gig-economy-become-a-public-health-issue

    data for nearly 4,000 individuals in the United States starting from the age of 23 through to 35. Looking at income levels five times over that span, they also monitored individuals’ medical records during the same period. Their findings showed that individuals with the biggest fluctuations in personal income had nearly twice the risk of death and more than twice the risk of heart problems such as strokes and cardiac arrest as compared with those with more stable incomes. Their conclusion: The trend toward fluctuating incomes poses a threat to public health.

    #travail #revenu #précarité #santé_publique #uberisation

  • Why is Canada denying its indigenous peoples clean water? - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/why-is-canada-denying-its-indigenous-peoples-clean-water/article31599791

    Amanda Klasing, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, specializes in the right to clean water.

    “She likes to take a bath, but [the water] irritates her skin,” Susan said of her active two-year-old daughter. When the little girl was 18 months old, Susan started to notice rashes all over her daughter’s legs. “I thought it was something from the grass,” she said. Instead, a doctor informed her that the baby’s rash was probably from her water. Susan can’t bathe her daughter at home now; she takes her to a daycare centre or relative’s house.

    Susan lives in Grassy Narrows First Nation in Ontario, where I spoke to her and other families in February to learn about living under a “do not consume” water advisory.

    #canada #eau #premières_nations

  • #Moose_Jaw_tunnels reveal dark tales of Canada’s past

    One of the strangest stories in 20th-century Canadian history is coming to light thanks to excavations under the streets of Moose Jaw.

    For more than 75 years, city officials denied rumours of a network of tunnels located under this sleepy city, once one of the wildest frontier towns in the Canadian West.

    Now part of the network has been restored and is open to tourists. Promoted as The Tunnels of Little Chicago, the underground maze has become the city’s most popular tourist attraction, with more than 100,000 visitors to date.

    Local researchers have interviewed many of the city’s senior citizens to get at the long-hidden truth.

    “All of the accounts agreed on the main points,” said Penny Eberle, who has been closely involved in the restoration project.

    Eberle says work on the tunnels began in about 1908 after several Chinese railway workers were savagely beaten at the CPR railyards by whites who believed the Chinese were taking their jobs.

    This was the time when Western Canada was gripped by hysteria about the “yellow peril,” and Ottawa imposed its infamous head tax on Chinese would-be immigrants.

    Terrified and unable to pay the head tax, the Chinese workers literally went underground, digging secret tunnels where they could hide until the situation improved.

    Evidence suggests the tunnels were used for many years. The railway workers managed to bring women to live with them and even raised children in rat-infested darkness.

    Access to the tunnels was gained from the basements of buildings owned by legal Chinese immigrants. The underground residents would do work for above-ground laundries and restaurants and would obtain food and other supplies in payment.

    Because the tunnels were built adjacent to heated basements, they were livable in winter.

    The tunnels acquired a whole new purpose in the 1920s, when the United States and much of Canada embarked on Prohibition.

    As a major CPR terminus linked to the United States by the Soo Line, Moose Jaw was ideally situated to become a bootlegging hub. The city’s remote location also made it a good place to escape U.S. police.

    Moose Jaw became something of a gangsters’ resort, with regular visitors from the Chicago mob.

    “They came to lay in the sun,” says Laurence (Moon) Mullin, an 89-year-old Moose Jaw resident, who worked as a messenger in the tunnels as an 11-year-old boy.

    It didn’t hurt that the entire local police force, including Chief Walter Johnson, was in cahoots with the bootleggers. Local historians say Johnson ran Moose Jaw like a personal fiefdom for 20 years, and even the mayor dared not interfere.

    Mullin liked the bootleggers who frequently paid five cents rather than four, the official price, for the newspapers he sold on a downtown corner.

    The tunnels were used for gambling, prostitution and warehousing illegal booze. Mullin says one tunnel went right under the CPR station and opened into a shed in the rail yards. It was possible to load and unload rail cars without any risk of being seen by unfriendly eyes.

    Mullin says that Chief Johnson would occasionally stop by his newspaper stand. As Johnson paid his nickel he would whisper into Mullin’s ear: “There’s going to be a big storm tonight.”

    Mullin knew what those words meant: an imminent raid by Allen Hawkes of the Saskatchewan Liquor Commission, who did not share Johnson’s tolerant attitudes.

    The boy would rush to a hidden door under the Exchange Cafe, give a secret knock, run down a tunnel to a second door, and knock again. There he would be admitted to a room full of gamblers.

    “The smoke was so thick you could have cut it with a sharp knife and brought it out in squares,” he says, chuckling. “But everyone seemed quite comfortable.”

    Some say the bootleggers strong-armed the Chinese to take over the tunnels, but Mullin denies this. He says the Chinese and bootleggers worked together.

    There are anecdotes about Al Capone himself. Moose Jaw resident Nancy Gray has written that her late father Bill Beamish, a barber, was called to the tunnels several times to cut Capone’s hair.

    Mullin says he never saw Capone but did meet Diamond Jim Brady, whom he describes as Capone’s right-hand man.

    He says Brady was always impeccably dressed in a grey suit and liked to show off the gun he wore under his armpit; the diamonds embedded in his front teeth sparkled when he smiled.

    Mullin says he and the other messenger boys got 20 cents for every errand. The gangsters didn’t allow them to touch booze but taught them how to play poker.

    “The best teachers I had in this world were those men that weren’t supposed to be any good.”

    The boys held Brady in special awe: “He’d always tell us to stay on the straight and narrow. He had eyes just like a reptile and when he looked at you he almost paralysed you. I think he was absolutely fearless.”

    Mullin says some rotgut whisky was made in Saskatchewan but all the good stuff came from the Bronfman distillery in Montreal.

    As recently as the 1970s local officials denied the existence of the tunnels, but the denials became difficult to maintain when part of Main Street collapsed, leaving an unsuspecting motorist planted in a deep hole.

    “I always said some day a truck is going to break through, and it did,” Mullin says. Guided tours of the tunnels begin daily at the Souvenir Shop, 108 Main St. N. in downtown Moose Jaw. Tours last 45 minutes and cost $7 for adults. Senior, student and child rates, as well as group rates, also offered. Wheelchair access not available. Information: (306) 693-5261

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/moose-jaw-tunnels-reveal-dark-tales-of-canadas-past/article4158935
    #migrations #chinois #Canada #souterrain #sous-terre #histoire #tunnels #tourisme #dark_tourism

  • Shadowy Black Axe group leaves trail of tattered lives - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/shadowy-black-axe-group-leaves-trail-of-tattered-lives/article27244946

    Canadian police say they are fighting a new kind of criminal organization.

    The signs began to appear two years ago: photos on Facebook of men wearing odd, matching outfits.

    Then there were stories, even old police files, attached to the people in the photos: a kidnapping, a man run over by a car, brutal beatings over what seemed to be a small slight.

    Mapping a secret criminal hierarchy for the first time is a rare kind of detective work. So when two Toronto police officers and an RCMP analyst in British Columbia started documenting the existence of something called the “Black Axe, Canada Zone,” they could not have predicted it would take them to funerals, suburban barbecue joints and deep into African history before they understood what they were seeing.

    The Black Axe is feared in Nigeria, where it originated. It is a “death cult,” one expert said. Once an idealistic university fraternity, the group has been linked to decades of murders and rapes, and its members are said to swear a blood oath.

    Most often, the group is likened to the Mob or to biker gangs, especially as it spreads outside Nigeria.

    An investigation by The Globe and Mail that included interviews with about 20 people found that “Axemen,” as they call themselves, are setting up chapters around the world, including in Canada.

    Like any criminal organization, it focuses on profit, police say. But instead of drug or sex trafficking, it specializes in a crime many consider minor and non-violent: scamming.

    What police have also learned is that, when done on an “industrial” level as part of a professional global network, scams ruin lives on a scale they have rarely seen.

    Two weeks ago, at a news conference attended by FBI officers, Toronto police announced they had taken part in an international crackdown on a money-laundering network through which more than $5-billion flowed in just over a year. Two local men charged with defrauding a Toronto widow of her life’s savings will eventually face extradition to the United States on money-laundering charges, they said.

    Online fraud is fluid, global and hard-to-track, but it often requires local operatives. Several Toronto-area residents have been defrauded of at least $1-million each in the past two years, and police allege the money was wired with the help of Canadian residents linked to the Black Axe, and sometimes it was handed to the group’s associates in person. The recipients then sent the money ricocheting through bank accounts around the globe, with trusted members in countries on every continent helping with the transfers before it disappeared.

    The sophistication of the money-laundering scheme reflects the efficiency of the scams, in which several people assume false identities and mix reality – bank accounts, real names and real websites – with fake documents.

    The police added an extra charge for one of the men they arrested, Akohomen Ighedoise, 41: “participating in a criminal organization.”

    Officers said in an interview they seized documents that will prove in court that Mr. Ighedoise separately helped a network of fraudsters launder money, that the fraudsters are members of the Black Axe and that he is their bookkeeper. The charge is the first time a Canadian has been publicly linked to the group.

    Interviews with police, gang experts and Nigerian academics paint a picture of an organization both public and enigmatic, with an ostensible charitable purpose as well as secret codes and a strict hierarchy. Police say it has grown to 200 people across Canada.

    Officers in Canada first heard the name “Black Axe” less than two years ago, said Tim Trotter, a detective constable with the Toronto Police Service. They are working quickly, trying to stop the group from becoming entrenched.

    “I mean, 100 years ago, law enforcement dealt with the same thing, the Sicilian black hand, right? It meant nothing to anybody except the Sicilian community,” Det. Constable Trotter said. “And that’s what we have here – that’s what we believe we have here.”

    **

    Many scam victims lose a few thousand dollars. Soraya Emami, one of Toronto’s most recent victims, lost everything, including many friends.

    In 1988, Ms. Emami fled her native Iran with her four sons. Her husband was jailed by the regime and his passport was held for years. Ms. Emami flew to Canada and became a real estate agent in North York.

    It took 30 years to save for a nice house in quiet Stouffville, Ont. The rest of her earnings went to her boys, who grew up to be a doctor, an engineer, a computer engineer and a bank manager. Last year, the youngest – a fifth son, born in Canada – began university. She and her husband had never reunited, and for the first time in decades, Ms. Emami thought about dating.

    “My kids grow up, and I feel lonely,” said the 63-year-old, who has long, wavy black hair. “I didn’t know how, and because I’m not [used to] any relationship, I feel shy.”

    Ms. Emami saw a TV commercial for Match.com and joined, hesitantly. A few days later, she told a friend she had heard from a tanned, white-haired, very nice geologist. Fredrick Franklin said he lived just 45 minutes away, in Toronto’s wealthy Bridle Path neighbourhood.

    He had spent years in Australia, and when they talked on the phone, she could not always understand his thick accent at first. He called her several times a day from Vancouver, where he was on a business trip, then from Turkey, where he travelled on a short contract. He was to fly home via Delta airlines on May 5. She would pick him up from the airport, and they would finally meet.

    “I am a simple man in nature, very easy going,” he wrote in an e-mail, telling her about his son and granddaughters. “I have done the Heart and Stroke ride in Toronto for the past 2 years, have also done the MS ride from London to Grand Bend.”

    A few days before his return date, Mr. Franklin called Ms. Emami in a panic. His bank had told him someone had tried to gain access to his account, he said. He could not clear it up from rural Turkey, so would she mind calling the bank and reporting back with his balance? He e-mailed the phone number for SunTrust bank, a 10-digit account number and a nine-digit tax ID number.

    She spoke to a bank teller. The balance, she was told, was $18-million.

    A few days later, Mr. Franklin asked for a small favour – could she send him a new phone and laptop – saying he would repay her upon his return. She acquiesced, believing he could pay her back.

    Within a few weeks, she lost half a million dollars, and the scam would cost her the home in Stouffville.

    What perplexes police about some of the Toronto romance frauds is not how the victims could be so naive, but how the fraudsters could be so convincing.

    The SunTrust account appears to be real, The Globe determined after retracing the steps Ms. Emami took to access it. The bank said it could not verify the account’s existence, as that was client-related information.

    In the course of the scam, Ms. Emami spoke to at least five people other than the Aussie geologist, including two in person.

    In June, in what they called Project Unromantic, York Regional Police charged nine local people in several cases, including that of Ms. Emami, that added up to $1.5-million. They considered the criminals to be internationally connected. “We don’t know who’s at the top, but there seems to be a hierarchy,” Detective Courtney Chang said.

    The Toronto police believe the crimes that led to their charges against Mr. Ighedoise are linked to the ones in York Region.

    *

    Canadian police came across the Black Axe by happenstance. In 2013, an RCMP analyst in Vancouver was investigating a West Coast fraud suspect and found a photo of him on Facebook with another man, said Det. Constable Trotter (the analyst would not speak to The Globe). Both were wearing unusual clothes and seemed to be at a meeting in Toronto.

    The analyst discovered the second man was under investigation by Toronto financial crimes detective Mike Kelly, an old partner of Det. Constable Trotter. The analyst e-mailed Det. Constable Kelly to ask if he knew the significance of what the two men in the photo were wearing.

    The uniform of the Black Axe is a black beret, a yellow soccer scarf and high yellow socks. These items often have a patch or insignia showing two manacled hands with an axe separating the chain between them, which sometimes also says “Black Axe” or “NBM,” standing for “Neo-Black Movement,” another name for the group. They often incorporate the numbers seven or 147.

    The group tries to maintain a public image of volunteerism. It has been registered as a corporation in Ontario since 2012 under the name “Neo-Black Movement of Africa North America,” with Mr. Ighedoise among several people listed as administrators. In the United Kingdom, said Det. Constable Trotter, it has been known to make small donations – to a local hospital, for example – and then claim to be in a “partnership” with the legitimate organization.

    In the GTA, the group got itself listed publicly in 2013 as a member of Volunteer MBC, a volunteer centre serving Mississauga, Brampton and Caledon. But after expressing an interest in recruiting volunteers, the group involved never posted an ad, and staff at the centre said when they tried to follow up, they found the three yahoo.com addresses on file were no longer working.

    Police found plenty of photos on social media of men in Axemen uniforms at what were said to be conferences or events.

    Det. Constable Kelly and Det. Constable Trotter compiled a list of people in Canada photographed wearing Axemen outfits. From a car, they watched some of them attend a funeral. One mourner had yellow socks and a yellow cummerbund with NBM on it, Det. Constable Trotter said. The rest were dressed normally. Near the end of the ceremony, “all of a sudden the berets and everything came out, and then they put the coffin into the earth,” he said.

    As they added names to their list, the investigators checked each one for connections to previous cases.

    What they found were 10 to 20 episodes of serious violence over the past few years clearly linked to members of the group, many of them at a Nigerian restaurant in northwest Toronto, Det. Constable Trotter said. One man had been run over by a car; another was allegedly kidnapped and beaten with a liquor bottle for a day in an abandoned building; a man was knocked to the ground for refusing to fetch another man a beer. Witnesses generally refused to talk.

    In one incident, a group of men had insulted another man’s girlfriend, and when he objected, they “beat the living hell” out of him, leaving him with cranial fractures, Det. Constable Trotter said.

    “Without the understanding of the context, it’s just a bar fight,” he said. “But when we understand who those people were, and we realize, oh, they’re all affiliated to the group … that’s why no one called [911]. And that’s why, when the police came, suddenly, oh no, those cameras don’t work. And that’s why, out of a bar full of people, the only witness was his girlfriend.”

    That case and the kidnapping case are before the courts, Det. Constable Trotter said. The Globe tried to search for all court records linked to the bar’s address over the past few years, but was told such a search is impossible.

    Police have six criteria to identify members of the group, Det. Constable Trotter said. If a person meets three of the six, he is considered a likely member.

    Police have documents that show when certain people were “blended” or initiated into the group, including some in Toronto, he said. Members live mostly in Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver.

    “There’s evidence that they’ve been active since 2005, so that’s a decade’s worth of ability to lay under the radar and become ensconced in the criminal community,” he said.

    To set up scams, they work from cafés or home and are “fastidious” about deleting their online history, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    “They have names, titles, they show respect,” Det. Constable Trotter said. “They pay dues to each other. Individuals are detailed by higher-ranking individuals to do things.”

    As they learned of the group’s fearsome reputation in Nigeria, the officers began to equate it more with established Canadian organized crime. At Afrofest in Woodbine Park one summer, a group of Axemen walked through in full uniform – not something anyone from the Nigerian community would do lightly, Det. Constable Trotter said. “I wouldn’t wear a Hells Angels vest if I wasn’t a Hells Angel.”

    He began to worry the group’s brazenness would signify to the community that “Axemen are here. And they’re open about it, and the police are doing nothing.”

    *

    Fraternities such as the Black Axe were born during an optimistic time in Nigeria’s recent history, and at first they reflected it. In the postcolonial 1970s, they were modelled after U.S. fraternities. They attracted top students and were meant to foster pan-African unity and Nigeria’s future leaders.

    When the country descended into widespread corruption after its oil boom, the fraternities split into factions and violently sought power on campuses, trying to control grades and student politics and gain the loyalty of the richest, best-connected students.

    Through the 1990s and 2000s, the groups inspired terror: Students were hacked to death or shot in their sleep, and professors were murdered in their offices in what seemed to be random attacks. Researchers say such crimes were often assigned to new members in their late teens to prove their allegiance after a painful hazing in an isolated cemetery or forest.

    “Sometimes, they are given some tough assignments like raping a very popular female student or a female member of the university staff,” Adewale Rotimi wrote in a 2005 scholarly article.

    Raping the daughters of rich and powerful families, or the girlfriends of enemies, was another tactic of the groups to prove their dominance, Ifeanyi Ezeonu wrote in 2013.

    In addition to innocent victims, one West African organization fighting cult violence says more than 1,700 fraternity members died in inter-group wars in a 10-year span. The groups were outlawed, and much of their ritualistic element – night-time ceremonies, code words – seemed to evolve to avoid detection, said Ogaga Ifowodo, who was a student in Nigeria during the 1980s and later taught at Cornell and Texas State universities.

    “Early on … you could distinguish them by their costume,” he said. “The Black Axe, they tended to wear black berets, black shirt and jeans.”

    The transformation was not a coincidence, Mr. Ifowodo said.

    “At that time, we were under military dictatorships, and they had actually propped up the now-secret cults as a way of weakening the students’ movements,” he said. “It violates something that I think is sacred to an academic community, which is bringing into campus a kind of Mafia ethos.”

    But this does not explain whether, or how, the fraternities could morph into a sophisticated global crime syndicate.

    In Nigeria, the groups are not associated with fraud, said Etannibi Alemika, who teaches at Nigeria’s University of Jos. Mr. Ifowodo agreed. However, he also backed Toronto Police’s conclusion that Black Axe is one and the same as the Neo-Black Movement. In a briefing document posted online, Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board says the two are closely linked, but speculates that the Black Axe is a “splinter group” of the NBM.

    The NBM is known to carry out fraud, said Jonathan Matusitz, a professor at the University of Central Florida who has studied Nigerian fraternities. He said the group’s members have also been linked, mostly in Nigeria, to drug trafficking, pimping, extortion, and the falsification or copying of passports and credit cards.

    “I think that the NBM movement is more about scamming people, and it has some associations with the Black Axe, which kills people,” he said. “Have they joined forces to have like a super-group? I hope not.”

    Despite police fears, several people interviewed by The Globe, mostly business owners, said they had never heard of the Black Axe before the police news conference last week.

    Kingsley Jesuorobo, a Toronto lawyer who has many Nigerian-Canadian clients, said he has never heard of anyone being intimidated by the group.

    Mr. Jesuorobo said he is familiar with the Black Axe in the Nigerian context, but cannot imagine it posing a real threat in Canada. It is more likely that former members gravitate to each other for social reasons, he said.

    “It would be a case of comparing apples and oranges to look at how these guys operate – the impunity that characterizes their actions – in Nigeria, and then sort of come to the conclusion that they can do the same thing here,” he said.

    For Nigerian-Canadians, a cultural minority working hard to establish themselves, the idea is very troubling, he said.

    “If these things are true, it would be a bad omen for our community,” he said.

    *

    After confirming her love interest’s $18-million bank balance, Ms. Emami did not hear from him for a few days. When they spoke again, she told him she had worried. He responded that it was a sign of how close they had become; she had sensed something had happened.

    The geologist said that during his contract in Turkey, he had been in a mining accident. He was injured and could not get to Istanbul to replace his phone and laptop, which had been destroyed, so would she buy new ones and send them by courier? Ms. Emami went to the Apple Store at Fairview Mall and called him, asking if he could pay with his credit card over the phone. He said the store would not allow it, and the employee agreed. So she bought the $4,000 laptop and phone and shipped them.

    A few days later, he called again: He needed $80,000 to pay the salary of an employee, promising to repay with interest. She told him she would have to borrow from her son, but he reassured her, and she wired the money in several instalments.

    The day of his flight, a man called and said he was Mr. Franklin’s lawyer and was with him at the Istanbul airport. Someone injured in the mining accident had died, he said, and Mr. Franklin owed $130,000 to his family or he would go to jail.

    “He’s calling me, he’s crying to me,” she said. “I didn’t have any choice. I go to friends and everybody I know. Because you know, when you’re trying to be a good person, everybody trusts you. …Whatever I asked, they give me.”

    Even a friend of a friend, a cab driver, lent her thousands. “He told me, you know, dollar by dollar I collected this money,” she recalled.

    Mr. Franklin sent her details of his rebooked flight, and she promised to pick him up and cook a meal. He would love that, he said; he liked chicken.

    “You don’t believe how much food I make for him,” she said.

    She was waiting with the packed-up meal the morning of his flight when the phone rang again. It was another lawyer, this time at the Frankfurt airport, he said. Mr. Franklin owed $250,000 in tax before he could leave the country with a valuable stone.

    “My heart is just – crash,” she said. “I was crying on the phone. I said, ’Please don’t do this to me. … Why are you doing this to me? I told you from the first day, I’m borrowing this money from people.’”

    A man saying he was Mr. Franklin’s son, who also had an Australian accent, called and told her he had remortgaged his house to save his father and might lose custody of his children because of it. Ms. Emami pulled together $158,000. When her bank would not let her transfer the money, she was instructed to meet a man and a woman in person who deposited it into their accounts.

    Ms. Emami’s son and her manager at work persuaded her to go to police. When officers told her Mr. Franklin was not real and the money was likely gone for good, they called a psychiatrist to help her grasp the news.

    She cannot pay her bills or afford groceries, her credit rating is destroyed and she is hunting for work despite crippling headaches. On Oct. 27, she was served with notice that she will lose her house in Stouffville in 20 days.

    “I can’t sleep,” she said recently, crying.

    She had always considered it her “duty” to help people in need, she said. Now her friends, even her sons, are angry that the scam impoverished them as well.

    “It’s my life, it’s my relationships,” she said. “And after 30 years living here with five kids, you know, I can’t live in the street. I can’t go to the shelter.”

    *

    Other local women describe the lengths fraudsters went to to blend truth and fiction. One received a forged Ontario provincial contract. Two victims in York said the scammers impersonated an Edmonton mining executive. The fraudsters build Facebook and LinkedIn accounts that seem to be populated by friends and family.

    “When we Google them, they do seem real,” one woman said.

    Daniel Williams of the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, a federal intelligence-gathering agency on fraud, said the scammers profit from economies of scale. “What they did to you, they were doing to 8,000 people that day,” he said.

    The agency gets more calls from fraud victims a day than it can answer, sometimes exceeding 2,000. Staff look for waves of calls complaining of the same methods.

    Authorities estimate they are only ever aware of about 1 per cent to 5 per cent of fraud committed globally, Mr. Williams said. Many victims do not believe they have been scammed or will not report it out of embarrassment.

    Fraudsters, sometimes using credit checks, also home in on well-off victims for special treatment, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    “It’s just like, oh, we’ve got somebody on $100,000 level, let’s steer this to this person,” he said.

    The amount taken from Toronto victims alone is “absolutely astonishing,” he said.

    “If you were going to distribute cocaine, for example, you have to buy that cocaine from another smuggler somewhere, and you have to put up money for that,” he said.

    “In fraud, what is your put-up? What is your overhead? Your commodity that you’re trading in, that you’re selling, is BS. BS is cheap, it’s abundant, it’s infinite. You know, it can be replicated again and again and again and again. … And that’s why it’s a better business.”

    Fraudsters based in Canada work with people in Kuala Lumpur, in Tokyo, in Lagos, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    At the turn of the 20th century in New York, Italian-owned banks started suffering bombings, and homes were mysteriously burned down. Police heard the incidents happened after warnings from something called the “black hand.” But no officers spoke Italian, and investigations were stymied.

    It was not until the 1950s that widespread police crackdowns began. By that time, the group now known as the Mafia had spread around the world and made new alliances. The FBI estimates the organization has about 25,000 members and a quarter-million affiliates worldwide, including about 3,000 in the United States.

    Police hope the charge against Mr. Ighedoise will send an early message to Canada’s Axemen. York and Toronto officers are working to confirm connections between the fraud ring that impoverished Ms. Emami and the ring that Mr. Ighedoise is alleged to help lead.

    At their recent press conference, they appealed to the Nigerian community to report instances where the Black Axe has “intimidated” others.

    They want to know how ambitious the group really is, Det. Constable Trotter said, and how much it is feared.

    If Axemen rely on selling stories, he said, the most important one is for their own community: “That [they] have all the power and authority and the propensity for violence that [they] have back home, here in Canada.”

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