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  • Turkey’s search for gold has a massive humanitarian and environmental impact.

    At least nine workers are still missing

    On February 13, a massive landslide that dislodged 10 million cubic meters of earth across a 200-meter slope at the #Çöpler_Gold_Mine in the town of #İliç, in Turkey, once again raised questions over the ruling government’s lack of oversight over private business operations in the country, including in mining industry. At least nine workers are reportedly still missing at the time of writing this story as a result of the landslide. There is increasing concern among environmental experts that some 1,000 hectares of land in the area were exposed to cyanide and sulfuric acid used at the mine for the extraction.

    This won’t be the first time the cyanide has leaked at the mine. In 2022, a burst cyanide-carrying pipe leaked “highly poisonous waste into the İliç Dam on the Euphrates River” — western Asia’s longest river stretching over 2,800 kilometers and flowing through Turkey, Syria, and Iraq. The company acknowledged the leak but refuted claims the leak damaged the river. The company went back to business as usual shortly after.

    The Environment Ministry assured that “no contamination” was “detected for now” and that it sealed off a stream running from the pit to the Euphrates.

    Environmental experts and engineers disagree. Metallurgical engineer Cemalettin Küçük, who spoke to Deutsche Well (DW) Turkish, said the chemicals in the soil has likely mixed into the Euphrates from beneath the ground, given the weight of the slide and the chemical pollution it causes to the environment in its piled form.

    Similarly, in an interview with DW Turkish, Turkish Foundation for Combating Soil Erosion (TEMA) Chairman of the Board of Directors Deniz Ataç said there was no membrane protecting the soil and, therefore, no way to prevent chemicals in the slide from mixing with the soil beneath. “We are looking at an area that is 30–40 meters high, at least 1 kilometer long and not very narrow in width. That cyanide soil is in direct contact with the soil,” said Ataç.

    Ilic Nature and Environment Platform, a local environmental group, said despite the Ministry’s assurances it has sealed off the river’s tributaries, the river is already contaminated. “Don’t seal off (the stream), seal off the mine,” said the group.

    Meanwhile, as state institutions vowed to investigate the cause of the landslide, the main culprit — the company operating the mine site — has yet to face serious repercussions. So far, it only suspended its work for a few days.

    In November 2023, the Union of Chambers of Turkish Engineers and Architects (TMMOB) filed a petition with a domestic court in Erzincan, “warning against demolition, sliding, and slipping risks at the mining facilities,” according to Gazete Duvar. The union filed several other similar petitions in the past.

    The union challenged Anagold Mining, the company that has been operating the mine since 2010. It is owned by Denver, Colorado-based SSR Mining and by Turkey-based Calik Holding.

    Despite the calls from the Union of Chambers of Turkish Engineers and Architects on the government to close the mine, as of February 19, not all of the company’s licenses were still revoked.

    According to the main opposition Republic People’s Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Deniz Yavuzyılmaz, responsible for the Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources, “although [the environmental ministry] cancelled the environmental permit and license of the company, six operating licenses given to Anagold by the Ministry of Energy were not.”

    In an interview with Bloomberg, Dersim Gul, secretary-general of the union, said, “We are facing a possible environmental disaster.”

    A former Anagold employee who spoke to Deutsche Welle Turkish said what happened at the mine was due to a lack of control by the state. The former employee also said it was not a landslide. “There is no such thing. It is not soil; it is leaching. In other words, there is ore in it, and it is contaminated with cyanide. At a minimum, two million cubic meters of this toxic soil have been scattered here and there. And half of it is in an uncontrolled area. Currently, there is a 99 percent chance that it will mix with groundwater through rainfall,” explained the former employee.

    A traditional method used by gold-mining companies is heap leaching — a process that dissolves the gold and extracts it from its ore with the help of cyanide — a deadly chemical that can harm surrounding flora and fauna in case of a spill.

    Keen to expand its mining sector, Turkey has developed a policy of inviting foreign investors and offering them special conditions to develop what it sees as a strategic economic priority. In 2000, the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA) and the Ministry of Energy started mapping mineral deposits. In 2004, the government also amended the Law on Mines, granting exploration licenses to companies, reducing taxes, and allowing operations in previously protected areas. Finally, in 2010, it began converting exploration licenses into operating licenses.

    According to Anagold’s website, the company proudly states the mine is “world-class,” operating the mine “safely” while “complying with Turkish and international regulations:”

    The safe operation of the mine and facilities is closely monitored by the government and Anagold officers. The operations of Anagold and its contractors have always been in compliance with regulations and continues to be a Turkish business delivering at the highest standard.

    In addition to the pipe spill in 2022, the mine was briefly shut down in 2020 following a cyanide leak into the Euphrates River. Then too, it went back to business shortly after paying a fine and completing a cleanup operation.

    None of the previous accidents stopped the government from shutting the mine down completely. In a country that has a poor mine safety record, will the third time be a charm?
    The culprits

    On February 18, police detained Cengiz Demirci, Turkey director and senior vice president of operations at the SSR. Demirci was released the following day. Earlier this week, eight other Çöpler mine employees were detained as part of an ongoing investigation, and six were formally arrested.

    Authorities also detained an environmental activist, Sedat Cezayirlioğlu, who has long been advocating against the mine, over his online criticism. “What else did you expect,” asked veteran journalist Özlem Gürses on her YouTube channel. “You were not expecting arrests of the actual culprits responsible for this accident, the ministries approving and handing out the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) reports, or the officials involved in alleged corruption with the mining company?”

    There are bigger fish to hold accountable, said the metallurgical engineer Cemalettin Küçük in an interview with DW Turkish. He was among the experts whose findings in the 2022 report warned of potential slides as well as contaminated soil when the company sought permission to expand capacity; however, they were ignored. The investigators must question the Provincial Directorate of Environment, the Ministry of the Environment, and the former minister Murat Kurum explained Küçük.

    Kurum served as the Minister for Environment and Urbanization between 2018 and 2023 and currently is the ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) candidate in local elections, running as a candidate for Istanbul’s mayoral seat.

    The former minister is being criticized for approving the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report during his tenure as the Minister despite expert warnings. Kurum refuted the criticism, saying the Ministry’s responsibility is to assess the environmental impact, not the company’s expansion, which is beyond its jurisdiction.

    There have been no other resignations by state officials.

    The country’s worst mining disaster took place in 2014, killing more than 300 mine workers. The disaster and domestic and international outcry prompted the AKP to finally ratify the 1995 International Labor Organization’s Convention on Mine Safety. However, documents and legal changes are meaningless when they are not implemented and monitored. The incident in İliç is a testament to the latter. As one local non-governmental organization, the Center for Spatial Justice described what happened in İliç not as a “landslide,” but a result of all actors involved, from the decision-making to mining companies and public institutions, acting contrary to scientific facts.

    https://globalvoices.org/2024/02/20/turkeys-search-for-gold-has-a-massive-humanitarian-and-environmental-i

    #extractivisme #or #Turquie #mines

  • Après le #Kosovo et l’#Albanie, c’est au tour de l’#Ouganda d’avoir accepté d’accueillir temporairement (dans l’attente d’un visa de la part des #USA) des réfugiés afghans :

    Uganda will host thousands of Afghan refugees

    Uganda is set to temporarily host Afghan 2,000 refugees following their home country’s rapid takeover by the Taliban.

    Uganda’s minister for relief, disaster preparedness and refugees, Esther Anyakun, told the country’s Daily Monitor newspaper that president Yoweri Museveni had granted a request by the US to let them stay in Uganda for three months. The US will then relocate them, she said, without specifying where.

    Uganda hosts more refugees than any other country in Africa. Around 1.5 million people have found asylum there, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, most of them from neighboring South Sudan. Uganda is known for having friendly policies that give refugees plenty of rights, including education, work, and property ownership.

    Meanwhile, for many years Ugandans have worked in war zones like Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia. “Armed guards are Uganda’s top export,” reported Bloomberg in 2016.

    The US has reportedly been holding talks with several different countries to get them to agree to temporarily host at-risk Afghans who worked for the American government. With the Taliban back in charge, and memories of the brutality of its former regime remaining strong, many Afghans are trying to flee the country, especially those who worked with foreign powers like the US and UK.

    https://qz.com/africa/2048615/uganda-will-host-hundreds-of-afghan-refugees

    –—

    Sur l’accord Kosovo / Albanie et #Etats-Unis :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/926161

    • Afghans in Uganda

      On Aug. 17, Ugandans woke up to the news that the government had agreed to temporarily host about 2,000 Afghan refugees following a request from the U.S government.

      Until then, many Ugandans had known about the long-running conflict in faraway Afghanistan. But few could have imagined their country somehow getting involved – albeit as a refuge of humanitarian assistance in the crisis.

      Instead, when the Taliban fighters swiftly swept through the country and took over the capital, Kabul in the middle of August, thousands of Afghans immediately started scampering for their lives when President Ashraf Ghani left Afghanistan and was widely quoted saying he did so to avoid bloodshed.

      Esther Davinia Anyakun, Uganda’s state minister for relief, disaster preparedness and refugees, broke the news that America had requested Uganda to host 2,000 of the fleeing Afghans.

      She said President Yoweri Museveni had ordered her to make preparations to host 2,000 refugees from Afghanistan who would be brought in shifts of 500.

      She revealed that the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) had secured the Imperial Group of hotels in Entebbe as a transit centre for the Afghans to arrive at and be screened. She said the Afghans are expected to stay in Uganda for at least three months before being relocated to a third country.

      In the early morning of Aug.25, a chartered flight carrying 51 evacuees from Afghanistan touched down at the old airport in Entebbe. The Independent understands the flight was organised by an Afghan-American services company known as #Sayara_International.

      The International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Uganda, an American humanitarian agency that has worked in Afghanistan for 30 years and in Uganda since 1998, received the Afghan evacuees and they will be helping them with accommodation, healthcare and general welfare services during their temporary stay in Uganda.

      “The IRC is proud to be complementing the efforts of the Government of Uganda and US embassy to receive and support 51 Afghan evacuees that arrived in Uganda at 7.53am this morning,” Elijah Okeyo, the IRC Uganda Country Director said shortly after the Afghan evacuees’ arrival in Uganda.

      “The evacuees from Afghanistan will stay temporarily in Uganda whilst in transit whilst applying for asylum to countries of resettlement such as the US.”

      “Uganda has a long history and tradition of welcoming refugees from all over the world and is one of the world’s largest refugee hosting countries, with 1.5 million refugees mainly from South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

      The Foreign Affairs ministry said the evacuees who included men, women and children underwent the necessary security screening as well as the mandatory COVID-19 testing and the required quarantine procedures.

      A statement from the American embassy in Kampala noted that as the largest bilateral supporter of refugees in Uganda and their Ugandan host communities, the United States appreciates the Ugandan people for their generosity and hospitality toward these communities.

      “The Government of Uganda has once again demonstrated a willingness to play its part in matters of international concern. We commend its efforts and those of the local and international organizations in Uganda who are providing humanitarian support in partnership with the Government of Uganda for these evacuees from Afghanistan.”

      “The United States appreciates the Government of Uganda’s offer to provide temporary assistance to Afghanistan evacuees and commends international organization representatives in Uganda for their partnership and for lending their expertise and support to Afghanistan evacuees,” the spokesperson of the US mission in Kampala told The Independent in an email.

      https://www.independent.co.ug/afghans-in-uganda

    • Afghan refugees might complicate Ugandan politics

      Ugandans worry the US will ignore human rights violations

      Uganda is often praised as a model of hospitability for refugees. The country is home to at least 1.5 million refugees and has a remarkable open border tradition that spans decades, despite dealing with high domestic poverty levels. But the news that Uganda might be a destination country for Afghan refugees following the US withdrawal from that country in August 2021 has raised alarms in Uganda. Some local human rights defenders are concerned that accepting Afghan refugees might excuse President Yoweri Museveni’s continued authoritarian rule.

      (...)

      https://globalvoices.org/2021/09/27/afghan-refugees-might-complicate-ugandan-politics

  • How global tech companies enable the Belarusian regime — and the Belarusian revolution
    https://globalvoices.org/2020/12/15/how-global-tech-companies-enable-the-belarusian-regime-and-the-belarus

    Can anything be done against companies whose tools facilitate repression ? Belarusians continue to protest against longtime ruler Alyaksandr Lukashenka, braving police violence and the cold. As the EU prepares its third package of sanctions against Belarusian officials and enterprises, demands are growing for the West to apply greater economic pressure, in particular to consider banning the supply of certain IT products. Could such sanctions really work ? It’s true that disentangling the (...)

    #Broadcom #Intel #Nvidia #Oracle #Sandvine/Procera #Seagate #DeepPacketInspection-DPI #activisme #finance #surveillance (...)

    ##Sandvine/Procera ##GlobalVoices

  • Avec des reportages issus des régions isolées de Russie, un nouveau magazine fait frissonner le public · Global Voices en Français
    https://fr.globalvoices.org/2020/11/10/258380

    Nous sommes une agence médiatique qui s’intéresse à la Russie réelle ; ce travail est impossible à accomplir si nous ne couvrons pas les histoires difficiles qui se déroulent sur notre territoire. La Russie est un pays pauvre, avec un haut niveau de violence et très peu de libertés. Il est impossible de l’ignorer. Nous tentons d’écrire sur celles et ceux qui n’ont pas le pouvoir de parler eux-mêmes ouvertement de leurs problèmes. Ce sont des situations marquées par l’injustice, l’indifférence et le dangereux déséquilibre des pouvoirs entre l’individu et l’État. Dans le même temps, d’autres sujets attirent bien sûr notre attention, des phénomènes sociaux intéressants et les histoires de gens désespérés. Nous avons écrit sur tout le monde, sur les incels, sur un homme qui a étudié les ours polaires pendant trente ans, sur les sectes, sur un policier qui a jeté toutes ses médailles. Nous avons écrit à propos de la violence effroyable de la police anti-émeutes dans les manifestations.

    https://holod.media
    https://redkollegia.org/archives/text/doroga-v-askiz
    #média_indépendant #Russie

  • A Chinese city withdraws ’civility code’ following online criticism
    https://advox.globalvoices.org/2020/09/14/a-chinese-city-withdraws-civility-code-following-online-criticis

    Despite censorship, criticism of the plan flooded Chinese social media Building upon the successful implementation of its “health code” system in restricting citizens’ movement during COVID-19 pandemic, Suzhou — a Chinese city near Shanghai — attempted to launch a “civility code” in early September to rank citizens’ civility and award or punish them accordingly. But strong reactions from netizens forced authorities to postpone the plan. The health code is a coding system that keeps track of an (...)

    #Alipay #QRcode #smartphone #censure #SocialCreditSystem #COVID-19 #santé #SocialNetwork #surveillance (...)

    ##santé ##GlobalVoices

  • Labour, migrant rights under spotlight as Thailand wrestles with COVID-19 impact · Global Voices
    #Covid-19#Thailande#travail#droit#migrant#migration

    https://globalvoices.org/2020/05/22/labour-migrant-rights-under-spotlight-as-thailand-wrestles-with-covid-

    The Thai Ministry of Labour has invoked an Emergency Decree to prohibit labor strikes and lockouts during the COVID-19 outbreak. Any labour disputes will be now be transferred to the Labour Relations Committee appointed by Chatumongol Sonakul, the Minister of Labour.

  • Kenya now has a data protection law. What does this mean for netizens ?
    https://globalvoices.org/2019/12/24/kenya-now-has-a-data-protection-law-what-does-this-mean-for-netizens

    Kenya’s new data protection law was long overdue On November 8, 2019, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta ascended the 2019 Data Protection Bill into law. Kenya now joins 25 out of 54 African countries that have so far implemented laws on personal data protection with Zambia and Zimbabwe soon joining their ranks. Kenya’s new data protection law, modeled around the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), has been long overdue. Despite earning the title of Africa’s Silicon (...)

    #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #législation #data #marketing #géolocalisation (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##profiling

  • Is Taiwan an unrecognized country? · Global Voices

    https://globalvoices.org/2020/01/09/is-taiwan-an-unrecognized-country

    The legal status of Taiwan is one of the most contested issues in international relations. In Taiwan itself, the majority of its 23 million inhabitants view their island as a sovereign state under the label of the Republic of China (ROC), while a fraction of the population calls for it to declare full independence. In China, the position of the government is that Taiwan is a province that is part of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), even though it is not currently under its political or administrative control. Beijing strongly opposes any description of Taiwan as a sovereign or independent state. Citizens in mainland China hold a variety of views on Taiwan’s status, but at least publicly, tend to align with their government’s views. The issue is also strongly debated in the campaign leading to the January 2020 Presidential elections in Taiwan.

    #taïwan #chine #frontières #souveraineté

  • In Prague, a bleeding monument reopens old wounds · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2019/08/23/in-prague-a-bleeding-monument-reopens-old-wounds

    As Prague residents mark the 51st anniversary of the Soviet invasion of then Czechoslovakia, a new controversy has emerged following the defacing with red paint of a statue of Soviet Marshal Ivan Konev in the municipal district of Prague 6.

    The statue has been similarly vandalised before, but on the night from August 21 into August 22, a day after the commemoration of the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia, this time the red paint was accompanied by the words “Ne krvavému maršálovi! Nezapomeneme [ “No to the bloody Marshal! We won’t forget.] and “45”, “’56”, “’61”, “’68”, clearly references the years 1945, 1956, 1961 and 1968.

    #printemps_de_prague

  • Eden Bay à Ramlet el-Baïda : une seule solution, la démolition - Raja NOUJAIM - L’Orient-Le Jour

    https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1121011/eden-bay-une-seule-solution-la-demolition.html

    https://s.olj.me/storage/attachments/1122/113114_761078.jpg/r/800

    Plus d’un an et demi après l’attribution par le mohafez de Beyrouth, Ziad Chbib, du permis de construire à la société Eden Bay Resort SAL sur la parcelle 3689 Moussaitbé, à Ramlet el-Baïda, le scandale perdure. Le promoteur est en passe d’achever l’hôtel et continue d’empiéter illicitement sur les biens publics en édifiant sur le sable un grand escalier fixe en béton et pierres ; en aménageant une route vers la plage pour ses véhicules ; et surtout en haussant graduellement le niveau du sol sableux tout le long de son projet, le polluant par le rajout de terre afin de créer des passages… Tout ceci afin de pouvoir réserver le bénéfice exclusif de la plage à l’ouest de son bâtiment à son profit et celui de ses clients éventuels !

    #beyrouth #liban #immobilier #scandale_immobilier #Ramlet_el_Bayda

    • A Ramlet el-Baïda, l’Eden Bay Resort inauguré sur fond de manifestations - Suzanne BAAKLINI - L’Orient-Le Jour
      https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1122651/inauguration-de-leden-bay-resort-sur-fond-de-manifestations.html
      https://s.olj.me/storage/attachments/1123/114327_756866.jpg/r/800

      C’était une scène surréaliste hier à Ramlet el-Baïda (plage de sable de Beyrouth). D’un côté le très controversé projet d’Eden Bay Resort inauguré en grande pompe, et de l’autre les militants de plusieurs groupes de la société civile qui manifestaient contre ce complexe touristique construit à même la plage, qu’ils combattent depuis bientôt deux ans. Le groupe de protestataires s’avance très loin sur la plage pour mieux se faire entendre de la foule sur la terrasse, jusqu’à se heurter au « mur » d’agents de l’ordre qui l’empêche d’aller plus loin, malgré sa contestation du fait que la plage forme une continuité indivisible. Bien que les agents aient affirmé que la mesure était « exceptionnelle », en raison de la « célébration » en cours, Ali Darwiche, président de Green Line, assure que « des pêcheurs ont essayé de traverser devant le projet hier (dimanche) et en ont été empêchés par des vigiles sur place ».

    • Le très contesté Lancaster Eden Bay vise un taux d’occupation de plus de 55% cet été

      https://www.lecommercedulevant.com/article/28492-le-tres-conteste-lancaster-eden-bay-vise-un-taux-doccupati

      Inauguré fin juin, l’établissement cinq étoiles bénéficie d’un accès direct à la plage de Ramlet el-Baïda, une localisation, sur l’une des dernières étendues publiques de Beyrouth, qui lui vaut d’être au cœur d’une vaste polémique.

    • Jad Tabet : 80 % de la côte libanaise a été privatisée
      https://www.lecommercedulevant.com/article/28384-jad-tabet-80-de-la-cote-libanaise-a-ete-privatisee

      Plusieurs affaires récentes sont venues rappeler l’appétit des promoteurs immobiliers pour le littoral. Trois projets de développement dans la région de Zouk Mosbeh, Zouk el-Kharab et Damour ont ainsi été approuvés par le Conseil des ministres, malgré leur rejet par le Conseil supérieur de l’urbanisme. En parallèle, à Enfé, l’évêché orthodoxe de Tripoli a lui aussi demandé l’autorisation d’utiliser le domaine public maritime, ranimant les craintes d’un projet de “village touristique” dans l’une des dernières régions préservées du pays. Entretien avec le président de l’ordre des ingénieurs et des architectes de Beyrouth, Jad Tabet, qui suit de près ces dossiers.

    • Itani: Some in municipality culpable in Ramlet al-Baida flooding | News , Lebanon News | THE DAILY STAR
      http://www.dailystar.com.lb//News/Lebanon-News/2018/Nov-17/469462-itani-some-in-municipality-culpable-in-ramlet-al-baida-flooding

      The Daily Star

      BEIRUT: Beirut Mayor Jamal Itani Saturday vowed to hold accountable some in the municipality who he said knew that a major sewer and storm drain had been blocked with concrete, but had remained silent about it.

      “There are people who knew and remained silent, or gave permission, and it’s true that nobody could have [poured this concrete] without someone seeing,” Itani said in a live interview on local news channel LBCI Saturday. The mayor Friday had called for an investigation into the matter after the blocked drain caused the main road at Beirut’s Ramlet al-Baida to flood following heavy rainfall.

    • The untouchable hotel | Executive Magazine
      https://www.executive-magazine.com/real-estate-2/the-untouchable-hotel

      While it is widely assumed that Lebanon’s real estate business is rife with unethical dealings, only a few detailed examples of wrongdoing actually come to light. In the case of Eden Bay, a resort situated along Ramlet al-Baida—Beirut’s last public beach—evidence of violations and fraud piled up throughout 2017.

      The disclosures culminated in the form of a report compiled mid-2017 by the president of the Beirut Order of Engineers and Architects (OEA), Jad Tabet. The report alleges eight violations related to Eden Bay and is informed by building documents released by the Municipality of Beirut. The report’s allegations range from the infringement of public property to the forgery of permit application material. As a whole, Tabet’s report portrays a development project for which legal obstacles were fudged or ignored entirely to deliver the lucrative seafront hotel. Public pressure from media coverage, a unified civil society movement, and even lawsuits initiated by NGOs and the environment ministry have not prevented the completion of the hotel.

    • Beirut’s last public beach: residents fear privatisation of Ramlet al-Baida | Cities | The Guardian

      https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/feb/02/beiruts-public-space-last-beach-residents-fear-privatisation-ramlet-al-

      A private development close to Beirut’s last remaining public beach is sparking anger among residents who fear companies will leave nothing for the poor and middle classes – encroaching further into a city that already lacks public space
      Cities is supported by
      Rockefeller Foundation
      About this content

      Alex Dziadosz in Beirut

      Thu 2 Feb 2017 07.15 GMT
      Last modified on Fri 11 May 2018 13.08 BST

      Take a stroll down the golden sands of Ramlet al-Baida, Beirut’s last public beach, and you’ll see families fishing and smoking shisha in ramshackle palm frond cabanas, boys kicking footballs under battered lamp-posts, and children building sandcastles in the waves. It is a rare outlet in a city where public spaces are few and far between. But at the beach’s southern end, the scene abruptly gives way to looming cranes and men in hard hats driving rebars into a rising edifice of concrete.

    • Beirut Destroys the City’s Last Public Beach
      https://www.oroom.org/forum/threads/beirut-destroys-the-city%E2%80%99s-last-public-beach.51610

      The controversy over the ownership of Ramlet El Bayda first made news headlinesback in 2012,and has since been at the center of a tug-of-war between activists, on the one hand, and real estate developers and officials, on the other.

      InJune 2016, government officials denied any speculation about the closure of the beach for real-estate-development purposes, after some of the installations were destroyed by excavators.

      Ziad Chebib, the governor of Beirut, hadsaid:

      The Ramlet El Bayda public beach will not be closed and any form of restricting citizens from accessing the shores, be it for constructional purposes or by erecting fences to close off the area is strictly prohibited.

      In this case, activists have the law on their side. Indeed,“Article 2 of Order 144,” the lawregulating coastalproperties in Lebanon since 1925, stipulates that the seashore until the farthest area reached by the waves during winter as well as sand and rocky shores are considered public property.

      But despite this law,decree changes and loopholeshave allowed more and more development to happen on the Lebanese coast.

      This is not the first case of coastal development in Lebanon happening at the expense of public property. Just recently, activists heldprotestsagainst the government’s plans to transformKfarabida’s rocky beachin the Batroun district in Northern Lebanon to yet another Yacht Club.

      The legality of this project has also been the subject of much controversy, as many rules are being bent by using ministerial decrees to get the project approved. Six months earlier, the issue of theAdlounbeach in South Lebanon was raised by local media outlets. It was reported that the natural coast was being destroyed in order to be replaced by a port worth26.6 million USDand erasing, in the process, a Phoenician port site of high cultural and archeological value. The excavations began with no proper environmental impact assessment prompting a conflict between the Ministry of Public Works and the Ministries of Environment and Culture.

    • No One Wants to Take the Blame for Friday’s Sewage floods | Blog Baladi
      https://blogbaladi.com/no-one-wants-to-take-the-blame-for-fridays-sewage-floods

      Every time it rains in Lebanon, sewer lines are blocked causing floods all over the road but what happened on Friday was a different story. Ramlet el Baida and Bliss streets were flooded by sewage because the main sewer and wastewater drain lines were blocked illegally.

      Beirut Gov. Ziad Chebib rushed to blame Eden Bay and the Ghobeiri municipality but a daily star article revealed that the governor had stopped works to unblock the sewer line a day before. Moreover, almost everyone in Lebanon is aware that this resort has blocked a sewer line for months now yet no actions were taken. Weirdly enough, Beirut Mayor Jamal Itani wasn’t aware of that blockage and had called for an investigation which will probably be forgotten sometime soon.

    • Legal Agenda
      http://legal-agenda.com/en/article.php?id=3647
      http://legal-agenda.com/uploads/1493812554-Page 5 - ruines-achouriennes.png

      Editor’s note: The following article was written prior to the recent ruling on April 11, 2017, in which the State Shura Council reversed its earlier decision that suspended the construction permit of the Eden Bay resort.

      The Eden Bay resort project (commonly known as the Eden Rock resort), situated at the southern tip of Beirut, has been a major topic of interest for public opinion and the Lebanese media. This is certainly due to several factors, namely that it is one of the few cases related to the protection of maritime public property with a positive, even if initial, outcome. Having issued three successive rulings, the judiciary has asserted itself as a weapon of public action against powerful companies and financiers. Not only has the investing company’s ongoing construction work in defiance of judicial orders infuriated many citizens. It has led to significant implications at the judicial level: because of these actions, the case now is not just one about the environment and protecting a beach, but also about the judiciary’s independence and the fight against corruption.

      In this article, I shall reflect on some lessons that the activist community might be able to draw on from this experience.

      Lesson 1: Access to Information is an Essential Part of the Battle to Annul Administrative Decisions

    • Ramlet el Baida : débordement du Privé sur le domaine public maritime - Cynthia BOU AOUN
      https://libnanews.com/ramlet-el-baida-debordement-prive-domaine-public-maritime-cynthia-bou-aou

      Depuis quelques semaines, les travaux d’excavation défigurent la plage de Ramlet el Baida sur la partie à l’extrême sud de la dernière plage publique restante à Beyrouth en vue de la construction d’un autre complexe touristique, l’ « Eden Bay Resort », ce qui suscita une mobilisation des ONG et de la société civile qui considèrent que le site fait partie du domaine public maritime. Le chantier a démarré après que le gouverneur de Beyrouth Ziad Chbib a libéré les parcelles appartenant à la « Société foncière touristique Eden Rock s.a.l » [3689 – 3690 – 3691 – 3692] en juin 2016, qui justifie cette décision hâtive en affirmant qu’il s’agit de « parcelles privées car à l’origine, elles étaient de nature rocheuse mais le sable les a envahit suite à l’interruption des travaux ». Cette décision s’accompagne de la signature du propriétaire d’un engagement à limiter la construction sur 2 bien-fonds [3691 – 3692] à « 1m maximum au-dessus du terrain naturel » [en d’autres termes à ce que la loi de construction permet pour les sous-sols] et à modifier en conséquence le permis de construire de sorte à relocaliser le projet sur la partie nord de la parcelle [3689 – 2390]. Bizarrement, ce permis à été approuvé sur base de cet engagement, avant même de présenter un nouveau dossier de permis modifié !

    • Development of public beaches sparks outrage in Lebanon
      https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2018/07/lebanon-public-beach-violations-hotel-tourism.html

      BEIRUT — Lancaster Eden Bay Hotel opened June 25 on Ramlet al-Baida seashore in Beirut, despite all the legal conflicts that occurred with the construction of the project. It had an invalid building permit, and the municipality of Beirut did not grant the hotel an occupancy permit. However, project owner Wissam Achour insisted on opening the hotel as a fait accompli.

      On May 9, Nahnoo — an NGO founded in 2009 that works to protect public property and cultural heritage in Lebanon — published a report b

    • http://lcps-lebanon.org/featuredArticle.php?id=111

      In a public statement last January, Beirut’s mayor reiterated his electoral promise to protect and harness the city’s coast as its most important resource. Yet, nine months after he assumed office, Mr. Itani has yet to make an announcement about how he will address forty illegal buildings that distort and privatize the city’s seafront.[1] In fact, Beirut’s municipal council has so far been publicly unresponsive to activists’ demands, namely that it intervene to stop encroaching development along the coast (and elsewhere). More alarming, the council and its president have remained mute about the Eden Rock/Eden Bay resort saga, the blatantly illegal seven-floor touristic development that was the subject of two decisions from the higher court council (Majlis al-Shura) before the city’s governor—ironically once a judge on the council himself—issued a statement ordering the developer to stop construction.

    • The last public beach in Beirut | 1843
      https://www.1843magazine.com/dispatches/dispatches/the-last-public-beach-in-beirut

      It’s one of the only spaces in Lebanon’s capital where people can mingle for free. But the shadow of private development looms large
      Ellie Violet Bramley | February 4th 2019

      On the afternoon I visit Ramlet al-Bayda beach, a young bride and groom are having their photograph taken. She holds her white dress up carefully, the voluminous skirt hovering a few inches above the sand like a frilly spaceship. Their friends and relatives buzz around them excitedly, playing music from their phones. Other beach-goers sit on plastic chairs close to the water’s edge, chatting, smoking argileh (the Lebanese word for shisha) and taking in the scene. Nearby, children are making the most of a seesaw and swings.

    • Beirut Municipality Removing Violations on #Ramlet_el_Bayda Beach | Blog Baladi
      https://blogbaladi.com/beirut-municipality-removing-violations-on-ramlet-el-bayda-beach

      It’s hard to mention violations on Ramlet el Bayda’s beach without the Eden Bay coming to mind, but it’s no longer a priority apparently or maybe they’re legit now (because Lebanon right?). Remember the sewage floods too last winter? Also forgotten.

      What seems to be a priority to the Beirut Municipality is removing a bunch of illegal bamboo beach bars and benches, set up on a beach infested by sewage waters and garbage, and surrounded by violating restaurants and cafes. Yes we’re all for removing violations but what’s the point of doing so when the beach poses serious health risks to all those swimming or sun-bathing?

      Now one can argue that it is not the municipality’s job to remove other violations, but what about the sidewalks? What about the garbage lying around? What about providing clean and free public beaches and green spaces to its residents? What about clean air? noise pollution? What about bicycle paths and safe pedestrian side walks? Where are we from all that?

      #liban #beyrouth #privatisation #côtes #plage

  • Une appli japonaise “traduisant” pour les maris les phrases de leurs femmes provoque des réactions en ligne violemment négatives · Global Voices en Français
    https://fr.globalvoices.org/2019/03/11/234038

    Un confiseur japonais a été accablé de reproches pour avoir consolidé les rôles traditionnels de genre et facilité les manipulations émotionnelles en lançant une campagne publicitaire et une application mobile pour aider les maris à “traduire” ce que disent leurs femmes. Une partie du contenu promotionnel a été depuis retiré de la toile, mais pas avant d’avoir allumé une remise en question des pré-supposés sur les différences biologiques entre hommes et femmes.

    #japon #genre #stéréotypes

  • Pourquoi le ‘prince de la torture’ de Bahreïn est toujours bienvenu au Royaume-Uni malgré les appels à son arrestation · Global Voices en Français
    https://fr.globalvoices.org/2019/02/09/232970

    Ce cas flagrant d’impunité a renouvelé la question de savoir si le Royaume-Uni est à la hauteur de ses obligations internationales, résultant en particulier de la Convention de l’ONU contre la Torture et les autres traitements et châtiments cruels, inhumains et dégradants de 1987, qui dispose que les États doivent criminaliser la torture et poursuivre les agents publics des autres pays qui se trouvent présents sur le territoire des dits États”.

    #torture #Bahreïn #impunité

  • Russian feminists flip the script on classic Soviet films · Global Voices

    Let’s talk about “Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears.” So how do you find this message: you can become a factory director, a Moscow city council member, a successful mother (and a single one at that), but you’ve only achieved success in life when you’ve fed some soup to your boozed-up plumber boyfriend?

    https://globalvoices.org/2019/01/10/russian-feminists-flip-the-script-on-classic-soviet-films-one-speech-b

    New Year’s Eve celebrations in Russia, a few post-Soviet countries and the diaspora abroad have a number of defining characteristics. One is the annual telethon of Soviet film classics such as Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears, a 1980 Mosfilm production which won the Academy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film and a few other accolades. The other absolute classic is The Irony of Fate (1976), traditionally broadcast on December 31 by a major national channel while millions of Russian families busily chop bucketloads of Olivier salad.

    #russie #cinéma #mosfilm #féminisme #image_des_femmes

  • Chinese authorities go after citizens for using VPNs, skirting online censorship - Global Voices Advox

    https://advox.globalvoices.org/2019/01/11/chinese-authorities-go-after-citizens-for-using-vpns-skirting-on

    Two Chinese internet users are currently facing punishment for doing what an estimated 1-3% of people living in mainland China do every day: access the global internet.

    Among other methods, many internet users in China depend on Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to skirt or circumvent China’s “Great Firewall”, the robust filtering system that blocks sensitive information and overseas websites from China’s domestic network.

    While #VPN use is permitted in certain contexts — mainly for government agencies and large private companies — China’s vigorous internet control regime has in recent years put significant resources towards preventing internet users from using these and other similar tools.

    #chine #censure #internet

  • Singapore government threatens critics and independent media with defamation claims · Global Voices

    https://globalvoices.org/2018/12/11/singapore-government-threatens-critics-and-independent-media-with-defa

    Two separate defamation cases against a news site and blogger in Singapore have put the country’s severe restrictions on free speech back in the spotlight.

    The cases, which target blogger Leong Sze Hian and the political news site The Online Citizen, re-raise longstanding concerns about the consequences of criminal defamation laws for freedom of expression. In Singapore, defamation is an offense that carries a maximum penalty of two-year imprisonment and a fine.

    #singapour #droits_humains #internet #média #censure

  • Zimbabwe’s black rhinos at risk as China reverses a 25-year ban on horns · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2018/11/10/zimbabwes-black-rhinos-at-risk-as-china-reverses-a-25-year-ban-on-horn

    On October 31, 2018, the Chinese government released a statement declaring the reversal of a 25-year ban on the use of tiger bones and rhino horns, making it legal to use parts “obtained from the animals in captivity for scientific, medical and cultural purposes”.

    The Chinese State Council said that powdered forms of rhino horn and bones from dead tigers could be used in “qualified hospitals by qualified doctors”. The animal products must be obtained from authorized farms, and animal parts classified as “antiques” can be used in “cultural exchanges if approved by the cultural authorities”.

    #rhino #zimbabwe #chine #rhinocéros

  • A 15-year-old rape victim is the latest collateral damage of Duterte’s drug war · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2018/11/02/a-15-year-old-rape-victim-is-the-latest-collateral-damage-of-dutertes-

    Philippines’ President Rodrigo #Duterte drug war has reached a new low this week when a police officer was arrested for raping the 15-year-old daughter of detained drug suspects in the capital Manila.

    Photos of officer Eduardo Valencia of the Philippine National Police (PNP) pleading with his superiors for having brought the teenager to a motel in exchange for the release of her parents have gone viral. Medical tests showed signs of rape.

    Critics of President Duterte say it is his misogyny, rape jokes, and repeated assurances to defend police and military in the course of his government’s anti-drug and counterinsurgency operations that has normalized a macho culture of sexual abuse.

    #philippines #viol #culture_du_viol #sexisme #machisme #violence

  • A project in #Nepal is documenting and sharing testimonials from the 10-year armed conflict · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2018/11/02/a-project-in-nepal-is-documenting-and-sharing-testimonials-from-the-10

    The Nepalese Civil War, known popularly as the Maoist conflict, was a bloody 10-year armed conflict between the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) and the government of Nepal which saw forced disappearances, rape, torture, death, and the displacement of thousands of Nepalese citizens.

    To ensure that the victims of this violence won’t be forgotten, an online multimedia project called Memory, Truth & Justice is documenting, archiving and sharing personal stories of survivors and families of the victims who were lost to the conflict.

    #guerre #conflits #mémoire

  • For Calypso History Month in #Trinidad_& _Tobago, #metoo does a double-take on empowering tunes · Global Voices
    https://globalvoices.org/2018/10/31/for-calypso-history-month-in-trinidad-tobago-metoo-does-a-double-take-

    In honour of Trinidad and Tobago’s Calypso History Month, the Global Voices Caribbean team put together a (non-comprehensive) list of songs whose lyrics empower women. The post drew a lot of attention, sparking wonderful discussion threads in which social media users added their own favourites, or questioned why one calypso or another was left out — or, in some cases, included.

    Activist and cultural enthusiast Tillah Willah disagreed with the inclusion of Kitch’s “Miss Tourist” and “Flag Woman”, as she thinks “they fall into the category of men giving women instructions about what to do with their bodies.”

    True, much of calypso and its spin-off, soca, is quite instructional and often zeros in on what women should and should not be doing. In the case of “Flag Woman”, though, it could be debated that the woman is the one who holds the authority:

    #caraïbs #droits_humains #droits_des_femmes