• Deadly human smuggling through Mexico thrives in ‘perfect cycle of impunity’

    A new collaboration from ICIJ and media partners in Latin America, Europe and the United States documents nearly 19,000 migrants’ journeys to the U.S. border under dangerous conditions.

    Six days before Rafelín Martínez Castillo was sent flying from a trailer truck transporting him and 168 other migrants across Mexico, he was sanding wood in his cousin’s modest workshop in the Dominican Republic. The 31-year-old craftsman, his brother and cousin were working tirelessly to fulfill a large order of pilones, the popular mortar and pestle sets sold in souvenir stores and on roadsides in the Caribbean nation.

    “When I touched his hands the day we said goodbye, they were full of calluses and cuts from all the hours he spent sanding wood,” Martínez Castillo’s mother, Kenia Castillo, recalled during an interview in April 2023 at her house in Boqueron, a small, hilly region in the southern province of Azua. “I pleaded with him not to leave. I said we could get by eating rice and eggs if we had to. But he told me that just making pilones, we would never have anything.”

    The family used money from their pilones sales to pay part of the $26,000 to smugglers who had agreed to get Martínez Castillo to the United States. The trip would take him on a plane to Panama, then Guatemala, and from there he would cross the border into Chiapas, Mexico’s southernmost state.

    In recent years, tens of thousands of Dominicans have followed similar routes to reach the U.S. in an exodus that has become so ubiquitous it has turned into a popular culture reference, with the phrase “la vuelta es México” (“Mexico is the way”) showing up in rap and merengue songs and comedy sketches on national television. Generally, Dominicans have been flying to South and Central American countries with relaxed or no visa requirements. In 2022 and 2023, more than 3,000 people per month left the island on such flights, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data. The travel becomes much harder from there as they then make their way across several countries to arrive in Mexico; from Mexico they walk to the U.S.

    Martínez Castillo’s journey was supposed to culminate with him crossing into the United States. Instead, 25 days after leaving home, he returned in a casket.

    On Dec. 9, 2021, the 18-wheeler that had Martínez Castillo and his fellow migrants packed in like commodities overturned while speeding on a Chiapas highway. Fifty-six people died and 113 were wounded. The images of the bodies scattered across the highway surrounded by horrified onlookers spread around the globe.

    Following the trail of this and similar accidents involving migrants and trucks, a cross-border team of journalists found that the illegal use of these cargo vehicles to move migrants across Mexico has increased in the past several years as cartels have taken over the smuggling business, which has historically been controlled by a loose network of smugglers called coyotes or polleros. All of this has unfolded as the Mexican government, pressured by the United States, has toughened its policies to limit the record number of people crossing its territory in recent years, pushing migrants to find dangerous and often deadly ways to travel. As they make use of the cargo industry, which is supposed to be tightly regulated by government agencies, organized crime groups seem to operate with impunity. Today, the smuggling business is estimated to generate billions of dollars a year for the cartels.

    It also “has an enormous logistics apparatus and, of course, all the necessary complicities behind it,” said Tonatiuh Guillén López, who was appointed Mexico’s immigration chief in December 2018 and resigned six months later over disagreement with the shifting immigration policies of president Andres Manuel López Obrador. “Otherwise, how do … dozens of trucks travel undetected through the country?”

    Neither Mexico’s National Institute of Migration, its attorney general, the Secretariat of Defense, the National Guard and the National Chamber of Cargo Transportation, which represents the trucking industry, would comment or consent to interviews for this story.

    The team of reporters interviewed survivors, experts, migrants’ rights advocates and current and former Mexican officials, and reviewed thousands of pages of documents for this story. The reporters also created a database listing more than 170 trucks that carried migrants and were inspected, detained, involved in accidents or abandoned from 2018 to 2023. Due to the varying quality of the information, and because Mexican authorities have tracked cases only since 2022, after the Chiapas accident, the data reveals only a tiny portion of this human smuggling. But what it does show is that nearly 19,000 people — including more than 3,200 minors — were traveling in the trucks the reporters identified.

    The data also shows that at least 111 migrants traveling in trailers through Mexico in those six years died because of exposure to heat or lack of oxygen, or as a result of traffic accidents. On March 7, 2019, a trailer carrying about 80 migrants drove off the road and overturned in Chiapas, causing the deaths of 23 people, among them a 2-year-old and a 7-year-old. Three years later, 64 people were rescued from a trailer abandoned on the side of the road in the northern state of Coahuila. They had been traveling without water or ventilation and endured temperatures of 104 degrees Fahrenheit inside the trailer, authorities said. Fourteen people were hospitalized, and a Nicaraguan woman died and had a stillbirth.

    On Sept. 28, 2023, two migrants died and 27 were injured after the driver of a truck carrying 52 people lost control and the truck overturned on a highway in Mezcalapa, Chiapas. Three days later, nine Cuban women and a girl died and 17 other Cubans were injured after the truck carrying them crashed on a highway about 100 miles from the Guatemalan border.

    Given the volume of people passing through Mexico — U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows that more than 4.8 million foreign nationals were encountered at the southern border in the last two years alone — the number of migrants in trucks is undoubtedly higher than the reporters’ data analysis shows, according to experts and advocates for migrants’ rights.

    Guillén, the former immigration chief, said that while many migrants are misled by smugglers about the mode of transportation, others do understand the dangers of being locked for hours in a rolling steel container.

    “The situation of displaced people is so grave that they take all these risks,” Guillén said. He has a phrase to describe the despair and lack of options faced by migrants in Mexico and around the world. He calls it “the magnitude of hopelessness.”
    A ‘humane’ immigration policy?

    Large numbers of Central Americans have been passing through Mexico to reach the U.S. since at least the 1980s, fleeing civil wars or attracted by American companies’ demand for cheap labor. That migration continued in the late 1990s, when thousands left their countries after the devastation caused by Hurricane Mitch in 1998. Other waves followed, driven by economic crises, climate change, violence and political upheaval. Around 2010 a new trend emerged: Thousands of Asian and African migrants arrived in the south of Mexico after traversing the Americas en route to the U.S.

    To contain the flow, the U.S. and Mexico have beefed up the presence of law enforcement at their borders. With funding from the U.S., Mexico increased deportations, sending hundreds of thousands of people back to their countries and even deporting more than the United States has in particular years.

    Mexico became what experts call “a vertical border,” explained Gretchen Kuhner, director of the Institute for Women in Migration, a nonprofit advocacy group. This means that immigration inspections aren’t happening only at entry points at borders, airports and seaports, Kuhner said. Instead, stops and searches can happen anywhere. Soldiers and immigration agents began stopping people in parks and other public areas as far back as nearly 10 years ago, boarding buses and pulling over vehicles to catch undocumented migrants. (In 2022 the Mexican Supreme Court declared this practice unconstitutional after three Indigenous siblings who were racially profiled sued, but that hasn’t stopped the practice.)

    “This way of doing immigration control is, from our perspective, one of the factors that pushes people to travel in a clandestine way and what allows organized crime groups that traffic people to flourish,” Kuhner said, because they offer a way to dodge the random stops and searches.

    Poor migrants who can’t pay smugglers or hire fixers to bribe authorities for expedited documents to move legally across Mexico have traditionally attempted the journey walking or hitchhiking. Many more risk injury or death by climbing atop the moving freight train nicknamed “The Beast” and the “Death Train,” part of a railway network that runs the length of Mexico. Seeking safety in numbers, thousands of people a year travel together on foot for hundreds of miles in so-called migrant caravans. Others, like Martínez Castillo, the Dominican woodworker, and the nearly 19,000 identified in the data analysis, end up crammed in the trailer trucks.

    For a brief period at the beginning of his presidency in 2018, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, a center-left liberal, followed his campaign promises to forge a more “humane” immigration policy than the one he had inherited. His administration granted thousands of humanitarian visas to allow migrants safe passage or work visas to stay in Mexico. During that period, a caravan was able to cross the country largely unimpeded. But he soon reversed course under pressure from the Trump administration that threatened to increase tariffs on Mexican imports.

    In the summer of 2019, López Obrador deployed nearly 21,000 agents from the National Guard, a security force he created, to Mexico’s borders with Guatemala and the U.S. to contain migrants. Later, Mexico also largely stopped issuing safe-passage documents to migrants. Notably, the government prohibited transportation companies from selling bus tickets to anyone who couldn’t show a valid immigration document allowing them to be in the country. Advocates point to that policy — which prevents people from traveling in a safer way — as one of the chief reasons that pushed migrants to seek dangerous alternatives to traverse Mexico. In October, a Mexican federal court declared the practice of asking for immigration documents illegal and discriminatory.

    ‘Children, babies and entire families’

    In Mexico — an export-oriented economy that has overtaken China as the United States’ top supplier — cargo trucks play a key role in keeping businesses running. The number of cargo trucks traveling annually on Mexican roads surpassed 600,000 in 2021.

    A reporter from En un 2×3 Tamaulipas who contributed to this story spent more than six weeks approaching companies and individuals who work in the trucking industry in the hopes of finding drivers who had carried migrants in trucks. Only one driver agreed to talk – on the condition that his identity be protected out of fear of retribution. The man, who has driven trucks loaded with migrants, said that drivers don’t necessarily seek out this kind of work. Instead, they are recruited at freight stations by those who work for cartels. Refusing the job can mean death, he said.

    “They arrive and tell you: ‘I need you to take this trip for me,’” he said. “Everything is already arranged.”

    He said migrants who manage to reach Mexico City, in the center of the country, from the south are approached at bus terminals by coyotes who offer them safe transportation to the U.S.-Mexico border. Migrants who find a way to get to Michoacan, a few hours west of Mexico City, pay to board the trailer trucks. From there, they are driven hundreds of miles to towns near the border with Texas, such as Reynosa or Matamoros.

    The driver, who has been transporting produce from Michoacan to other parts of the country since 2013, said he has driven up to 100 people at a time in trailers, in trips that last 15 hours — carrying “children, babies and entire families.” Drivers are prohibited from stopping along the way to check on migrants’ conditions, he said.

    In 2022, he said, he was approached by a man who told him that he was going to drive a group of Central American migrants to northern Mexico. He was going to be paid for it, but he also understood it wasn’t an offer he could turn down. “They threaten your family,” the driver said. “I can’t even imagine how big their reach is, but when they come and offer you the gig they tell you, ‘Look, if you refuse or if you betray me, we know that your family lives in such and such area.’”

    He said he’s given a phone to receive instructions during the trip. He is stopped at checkpoints by either the Army or the National Guard. He’s usually instructed to explain to the soldiers that he is carrying people. Then he is supposed to hand over the phone. “They communicate with each other, arrange their transactions, and that’s it,” the driver said. “Then [the soldiers] tell you, ‘You can go through.’”

    The Mexican Secretariat of Defense also declined to comment on the testimony of the driver, claiming it has no jurisdiction in immigration matters. Drivers may be offered between $4,800 and $6,000 (80,000 to 100,000 Mexican pesos) for each trip or “package delivered,” the driver said, but they usually get less than half the payment in the end. “It is not negotiable,” he said.

    However harrowing it is to be recruited to drive migrants in a truck, the experience can’t begin to compare to what it’s like being a passenger. In January 2019, Yanira Chávez traveled for four days inside a trailer truck with her young son and daughter and about 170 others.

    Four days into the new year, Chávez, now 36, and her children left their small town in northern Honduras. She had paid the first $5,000 to a local coyote who for $10,000 promised to take them to the United States, where Chávez’s husband was waiting for them. The coyote told them that once in Mexico, they were going to travel to the northern region by plane and instructed them to buy “luggage with wheels” to appear as tourists, not migrants.

    Chávez and her children traveled by bus from Honduras to northern Guatemala, and from there they crossed a river by boat into Mexico. “I’m a little bit closer to you,” she texted her husband at that point.

    In Mexico, Chávez soon realized they would not be catching any plane. The smugglers took away her phone and the phones of the migrants she was traveling with, threw away their suitcases and forced them to get inside a huge trailer, she said. Chávez and others initially refused to get in. “But at that point, it no longer depends on whether you want to or not,” said Chávez. “You have to do it because if you don’t, the threat is that they will hand you over to the cartel.”

    Inside the truck the heat was stifling, Chávez recalled. Men were sitting lined up one behind the other in the center. Women squatted against the walls, holding the children between their legs. Soon after the truck started moving, a boy, about 2 years old, began crying. “Either you keep him quiet or I keep him quiet,” one of the armed coyotes riding inside the trailer told the child’s mother, according to Chávez.

    There were plastic buckets at each end of the trailer in which to urinate. The stench flooded the space, she said. “People were fainting.”

    The migrants were taken out of the trailer three times during the 900 miles from Villahermosa to Reynosa, she said, in the state of Tamaulipas, near Texas. One of those times, Chávez said, they walked through the backwoods for several hours until nightfall to evade a police checkpoint.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ur19QsWddlg

    The ordeal didn’t end once the trailer truck dropped them off. In Reynosa, Chávez and her children were held hostage, first in a motel and then in a house for more than a week, until her husband managed to wire a total of $14,000 in small transactions to have them released, she said. Kidnappings are commonplace for migrants in Mexico when smugglers know they have relatives in the U.S. awaiting them.

    Nearly a month after she left Honduras, Chávez and her children crossed the Rio Grande and surrendered to the U.S. Border Patrol in McAllen, Texas, where they asked for asylum. Chávez says the case was recently closed, adding uncertainty to the family’s future, but for now they’re living a quiet life in Long Island, N.Y., where she works for a wood molding company. The bitter memories and guilt about what the children had to go through overwhelm her sometimes. It’s particularly hard, she said, when a trailer truck approaches her workplace to deliver materials.
    ‘A perfect cycle of impunity’

    Neither the victims of the smuggling business nor their surviving relatives often see justice, the reporting shows. From 2016 to 2023 there have been only 35 convictions for human trafficking in Mexican district courts, according to information obtained through a public records request to the Mexican Justice Department. Reporters compared the information from the Justice Department with the database created for this story. The analysis showed that some of the Mexican states where trucks smuggling migrants are most frequently detected — and where the most deaths are recorded annually — also have the fewest investigations into human trafficking open. In the state of Veracruz, the nation’s Attorney General’s Office only opened three cases from 2016 to October 2023, while there are no such open cases in either Chiapas or Nuevo León.

    Experts and human rights advocates say that in a country like Mexico, which often ranks poorly in reports about corruption, crimes against migrants are bound to go unpunished. “It is a perfect cycle of impunity,” said Mónica Oehler, a researcher in Mexico for Amnesty International.

    She said migrants rarely report crimes out of fear of being deported. They also risk retribution from smugglers. “It doesn’t even cross their mind when you ask them: ‘Have you reported this?’” Oehler said.

    For Kenia Castillo, the Dominican mother who lost her son in the December 2021 Chiapas accident, filing a crime report at the time was hardly foremost on her mind. “Our main worry was bringing his body home,” she said.

    Rafelín Martínez Castillo left a 4-year-old daughter whom Castillo is now raising and trying to legally adopt. There is also a mountain of debt from loans taken to pay for her son’s efforts to get to the U.S. As she grapples with those pressing realities, Castillo said, “Sometimes I think about how so many people have gone before and after him, and they made it.” She shrugged her shoulders, resigned to her son’s fate.

    The accident could have been a turning point in curtailing migrant smuggling but has instead become yet another tragic example of systemic failures. During a press conference the day after the accident, Mexico’s then-Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard, along with officials from the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras and the United States, announced the creation of a Grupo de Acción Inmediata, or Immediate Action Group, to investigate what happened to Martínez Castillo and his fellow travelers. The officials blamed the accident on “international human trafficking networks” and vowed to stop them. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it would present the “actions, progress and results” of the group’s work in a public report.

    Reporters found that the group met only once in January 2022 after its inaugural session the month before, and the report promised by the ministry has never been released. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Mexico did not respond to requests for comments about the Immediate Action Group’s work. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security didn’t answer specific questions about the group, but a spokesperson wrote in an email that Homeland Security Investigations works with Mexico’s Transnational Criminal Investigative Unit to combat human smuggling and prosecute individuals involved in criminal activity “often resulting in disruptions of criminal enterprises.”

    Although arrests for the Chiapas accident were made in the Dominican Republic and Mexico, reporters have yet to find any evidence that, nearly 2½ years later, anyone, in any country, has been convicted.

    https://www.icij.org/inside-icij/2024/04/deadly-human-smuggling-through-mexico-thrives-in-perfect-cycle-of-impunity

    #impunité #mourir_aux_frontières #morts_aux_frontières #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #camions #cargo_truck #République_dominicaine #Chiapas #contrôles_frontaliers #The_Beast #The_Death_Train #train
    via @fil

  • Keep Out... Come Again. The underbelly of American-styled conservation in the Indian Himalayas.

    IN DECEMBER, THE ROAD leading to the #Tirthan_Valley entrance archway of the #Great_Himalayan_National_Park (#GHNP), a #UNESCO World Heritage site in India’s mountain state of Himachal Pradesh, is a potholed mudslide: For miles, a fleet of excavators and tunnel-boring machines are lopping and drilling the mountains to widen and extend the highway. Most of the traffic passing through a big, dark tunnel blasted through the mountain is headed to Manali — the mass-tourist hub of the Western Himalayas, about an hour’s drive farther north.

    My partner and I pass through the archway and weave the motorcycle along a cliffside road into the gorgeous, narrow valley. Villages and orchards dot the ridges. The first snow is melting off the roofs, and far below the Tirthan River runs free and fast. This is still the off-beaten path. But around every turn, we see signs that development is on the rise. Guesthouses, campsites, cottages, hotels, and resorts are sprouting up outside the park’s boundaries. Trucks carrying construction material drive traffic off onto the shoulder. On the opposite ridge, a new helipad access road is being carved out. The area appears to be under construction, not conservation.

    It seems that by putting this once little-known national park on the global map, conservationists have catalyzed a massive wave of development along its border. And ecotourism, though ostensibly a responsible form of development, looks over here, as one researcher put it, more like “old wine in a new bottle.”

    In the two decades since it was formed, the park has displaced over 300 people from their land, disrupted the traditional livelihoods of several thousand more, and forced yet more into dependence on a risky (eco)tourism industry run in large part by outside “experts.” In many ways, the GHNP is a poster child of how the American national park model — conceived at Yellowstone and exported to the Global South by a transnational nexus of state and nonstate actors, continues to ignore the sociopolitical and cultural realities of a place. As a result, protected areas around the world continue to yield pernicious impacts on local communities, and, to some extent, on the local ecology as well. It also raises the question: If protecting one piece of land requires moving its long-time human residents out, developing adjacent land, and flying in tourists from around the world — what is actually being conserved?

    IN THE EARLY 1980s, at the invitation of the Himachal government, a team of Indian and international wildlife biologists led by a British researcher named Tony Gaston surveyed the Western Himalayas for a possible location for the state’s first national park. The state government had been eyeing the Manali area, but after a broad wildlife survey, Gaston’s team recommended the Upper Tirthan and Sainj valleys instead.

    The ecosystem was less disturbed, home to more wildlife, and thus had “excellent potential for attracting tourists”— especially foreign tourists — who might constitute both a “substantial source of [park] revenues” as well as “an enormous input to the local economy,” the team’s report said.

    The proposed 754.4-square-kilometer park included the upper mountain glacial and snow melt water source origins of the Jiwa Nal, Sainj Tirthan, and Parvati rivers, which are all headwater tributaries to the Beas River and subsequently, the Indus River. Given its location at the junction of two of the world’s major biogeographic realms — the Palearctic and Indomalayan — its monsoon-fed forests and alpine meadows sustain a diversity of plant, moss, lichen, bird, and mammal species, many of which are endemic, including the Himalayan goral, blue sheep, and the endangered western Tragopan pheasant and musk deer.

    The park’s boundary was strategically drawn so that only four villages needed to be relocated. But this glossed over the problem of resource displacement. To the northwest, the proposed park was buffered by high mountain systems that include several other national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, but the land in and around its southwest boundary was home to about 150 villages with a total population of at least 11,000 people, all of whom were officially dispossessed of the forests they depended on for centuries when the Indian government inaugurated The Great Himalayan National Park in 1999. These villages are now part of a 265.6-square-kilometer buffer, or so-called “ecozone,” leading into the park.

    A large majority of these families were poor. Many of them cultivated small parcels of land that provided subsistence for part of the year, and they relied on a variety of additional resources provided by the forestlands in the mountains around their homes to meet the rest of their food and financial requirements. That included grazing sheep and goats in the alpine meadows, extracting medicinal herbs that they could sell to the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industry, and collecting gucchi, or morel mushrooms, that fetched high prices in international markets.

    “IN THE INDIAN CONTEXT, the notion that you can have a landscape that is pristine and therefore devoid of humans is an artificial creation,” says Dr. Vasant Saberwal, a wildlife biologist and director of the Centre for Pastoralism, an organization based in Gujarat state that aims to enhance our understanding of pastoralist ecosystems. “India has [long] been a heavily populated country. So, when you think of alpine meadows at 15,000 feet above sea-level, they have been used by pastoral communities for several hundred years. You cannot now go into those landscapes and say we want a pristine alpine meadow. There’s no such thing.”

    In keeping with the lingering idea, tracing back to early American conservationism, that pastoral societies destroy their own land, the Gaston team’s original report claimed that firewood collecting, hunting, and especially overgrazing, were degrading habitat within the area. It recommended a ban on grazing and medicinal plant collection in order to maintain the park’s biodiversity.

    But Saberwal’s research shows that grazing practices in the park’s high alpine meadows — which constitute almost half the park’s area — were likely necessary to maintain its high levels of herb diversity. Before the area was closed off to people, traditional herders of the Indigenous Gaddi tribe would travel up to the alpine meadows with about 35,000 sheep and goats entrusted to them by individual families, and graze them in these meadows for six snow-free months from April through September.

    “So, when you talk to people and suggest to people that their use of the park leads to degradation, they say that we have been using these resources for the past 150-200 years,” he says. “They say, if our presence here has been such a threat, then why would there be biological diversity here?”

    Saberwal’s findings are consistent with reams of scholarship in recent years documenting how local and Indigenous communities, without external pressures, live convivially with nature.

    That is not to say that external pressures aren’t impacting the region. There has definitely been an uptick in morel and medicinal herbs extraction from the park area, especially since the early 1990s when India “liberalized” its economy. Yet today, without adequate enforcement, it remains unclear just how much the park actually helped curtail extraction of these herbs or instead just forced the market underground.

    Other threats include poaching, human-wildlife conflicts, and hydropower development. Ironically, a 10-square-kilometer area was deleted from the original map of the GHNP for building of a hydro-power project, underscoring a typical approach towards conservation “wherein local livelihoods are expendable in the interests of biodiversity, but biodiversity must make way for national development,” Saberwal says.

    India’s Wildlife Protection Act, which prohibits all human activities within a national park, does recognize people’s traditional rights to forest resources. It therefore requires state governments settle or acquire these rights prior to finalizing a new national park’s boundaries, either through financial compensation or by providing people alternative land where such rights can be exercised. But India’s record of actually honoring these rights has been sketchy at best. In GHNP’s case, the state chose to offer financial compensation to only about 300 of the 2,300 or so impacted households, based on family names listed in a colonial report with census data for the area dating back to 1894. It eventually provided the rest of the villagers alternative areas to graze their livestock, but this land was inadequate and nutrient-poor compared to the grasses in the high alpine meadows. Only a handful of families in these villages still have sheep and goat herds today.

    Saberwal, and many mainstream conservationists, says there is an argument to be made for allowing villagers into the park, and not only because it supports their livelihoods. “The presence of people with a real stake in the biological resources of the park can also lead to far greater levels of support for effective management of the park, including better monitoring of who goes into the park, for what, and at what times of the year. Poaching could be more effectively controlled, as could the excessive extraction of medicinal herbs,” he says.

    DESPITE STIFF LOCAL RESISTANCE, the forest department — with support from an international nonprofit called Friends of GHNP, as well as the World Bank, which chipped in a $2.5 million loan — developed an ecotourism industry in the area to help local communities adapt.

    Eco-development, of course, is the current cool idea for making exclusionary conservation acceptable. On paper, it requires community involvement to create “alternative livelihoods” to reduce locals’ dependence on a park’s resources. So, with the support of Friends of GHNP, the forest department helped form a street theater group. It developed firewood and medicinal herb plantations in an effort to wean villagers off of foraging for these the park. A women’s savings and credit collective called Sahara was set up to produce vermicompost, apricot oil, and handicrafts. The Forest Department also handed out “doles” — stoves, handlooms, televisions, pressure cookers — what Mark Dowie, in his book Conservation Refugees, calls “cargo conservation,” or the exchange of commodities for compliance.

    Yet, the project was mired in corruption and mismanagement. The male director of the women’s collective, for instance, was discovered to be siphoning off the collective’s funds. Meanwhile, local ecodevelopment committees set up to coordinate expenditure on livelihood projects were run by the most powerful people in the villages, usually upper-caste males of the devta (deity) community, and chose to spend the money on things like temple and road repairs. According to a 2001 study of the ecodevelopment project, 70 percent of the funds were spent on infrastructure initiatives of this kind. Much later, in 2002, in an attempt to distance itself from the program, the World Bank concluded ecodevelopment had left “very little or no impact … on the ground.”

    In 2014, the park, along with the adjacent Sainj and Tirthan wildlife sanctuaries, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, again in spite of more protests from the impacted local communities. Friends of GHNP wrote the application.

    If creating the park cracked the door to development in the Tirthan Valley, minting it a UNESCO World Heritage site flung it wide open.

    On the economic front, it’s certainly true that the influx of tourists has injected more money into the Tirthan Valley than ever before. And it’s true, too, that many locals, the youth especially, are excited, or at least hopeful, that the industry will improve their lives and alleviate poverty. But on the whole, locals are losing opportunities to outside entrepreneurs who come with deeper pockets, digital marketing savvy, and already established networks of potential clientele.

    “That kind of investment and marketing involvement is difficult for locals for figure out,” says Manashi Asher, a researcher with Himdhara, a Himachal-based environmental research and action collective. “Basically, what many locals have done instead, is circumvent local ecotourism policies by turning their properties into homestay or other kinds of [tourist] lodgings and leasing them out to outsiders to run.”

    Though there are no official estimates yet, there’s a consensus among locals that outsider-run guesthouses have already cornered a majority of the valley’s tourism revenue. “City-based tourism operators are licking out the cream, while the peasantry class and unemployed youth earn a pittance from the seasonal, odd jobs they offer,” Dilaram Shabab, the late “Green Man” of Tirthan Valley who spearheaded successful movements against hydropower development on the Tirthan river, wrote in his book Kullu: The Valley of Gods.

    When I read this quote to Upendra Singh Kamra, a transplant from the northwestern state of Punjab who runs a tourism outfit for fishing enthusiasts called Gone Fishing Cottages, he emphasizes how, unlike at most properties, they don’t lay off their local staff during low season. Some have even bought motorcycles or cars. “Logically, you have nothing and then you have something and then you’re complaining that something is not enough. So it doesn’t make sense for me.”

    Many locals see it differently. Narotham Singh, a veteran forest guard, told me he leased his land for 30 years, but now worries for his son and grandchildren. “If they don’t study, what they’re going to be doing is probably cleaning utensils and sweeping in the guesthouses of these people. That’s the dark future.” Karan Bharti, one of Shabab’s grandsons, told me many youth are so ashamed to work as servants on their own land that they’re fleeing the valley altogether.

    More broadly, tourism is also a uniquely precarious industry. Global market fluctuations and environmental disasters frequently spook tourists away for years. (The Western Himalayas is primed for an 8.0-plus magnitude quake tomorrow). And when destination hotspots flip cold, once self-reliant shepherds turned hoteliers are left holding the bill for that high-interest construction loan.

    Sadly, this is exactly what’s happened. In Himachal, the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed just how dependent the state has become on tourism. After the borders were shut in late March, pressure to reopen to salvage a piece of the summer high season was palpable in the press. Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur proposed Himachal advertise itself for “Quarantine Tourism.” The hotel unions shot down the idea as absurd.

    THERE’S NO SIGN NOR ROAD to Raju’s Guesthouse. To get to it, you have to cross the Tirthan River in a cable basket or makeshift plank bridge and climb up the opposite bank into a fairytale. Vines climb the dark wood facade. There are flowers, fruit trees, and a fire pit. When I visit, kittens are playing around an old cherry tree and a pack of dogs bark up the steep south face; leopards, I learn, come over the ridge at night sometimes and steal dogs.

    Raju, in his late sixties, toothpick-thin, and wearing a baseball cap, is the pioneer of ecotourism in Tirthan Valley. He is also Shabab’s son. When I first spoke with him on the phone, he called the park an “eyewash.” What he meant was that most people don’t come to the park for the park. It’s a steep, half-day trek just to the official boundary, and, inside, the trails aren’t marked. Most tourists are content with a weekend kickback at a guesthouse in the ecozone.

    Still, if real ecotourism exists, Raju’s comes as close as I’ve ever seen. Food scraps are boiled down and fed to the cows. There’s fishing and birding and trekking on offer. No corporate groups allowed, even though that’s where the big bucks are. And no fume-expelling diesel generator, despite guests’ complaints after big storms. There’s a feeling of ineffable wholesomeness that has kept people coming back year after year, for decades now.

    In a 1998 report titled “Communtity-Based Ecotourism in the GHNP,” a World Bank consultant was so impressed by Raju’s that she recommended it be “used as a model for the whole area.” But this was a consultant’s fantasy. Rather than provide support to help locals become owners in the tourism industry, the government and World Bank offered them tour guide, portering, and cooking training. Today, similar second-tier job trainings are part of an $83 million project funded by the Asian Development Bank to develop tourism (mainly by building parking lots) across Himachal.

    Varun, one of Raju’s two sons who runs the guesthouse, doesn’t think any tourist property in the area is practicing ecotourism, even his own. People are illegally catching trout for guests’ dinners, cutting trees for their bonfires, and dumping their trash into the river, he says.

    In 2018, Varun founded the Tirthan Conservation and Tourism Development Association (https://www.facebook.com/Tirthan-conservation-and-tourism-development-association-101254861218173), a union of local guesthouses that works to “eliminate the commercialization of our neighborhood and retain the aura of the valley.” They do tree plantings, enforce camping bans around the river, and meet regularly to discuss new developments in the valley.

    Yet, Varun doesn’t see any way of stopping the development wave. “I mean, it’s inevitable. No matter how much you resist, you know, you’ll have to accept it. The only thing is, we can delay it, slow it down.”

    https://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/magazine/entry/keep-out...come-again
    #Inde #montagne #conservation_de_la_nature #nature #protection_de_la_nature #parc_national #Himachal_Pradesh #Manali #tourisme #colonialisme #néo-colonialisme #circulation_des_modèles #Hymalayah #Jiwa_Nal #Sainj_Tirthan #Parvati #rivières #Beas_River #paysage #conservationnisme #biodiversité #Gaddi #élevage #ressources #exploitation_des_ressources #Friends_of_GHNP #banque_mondiale #éco-tourisme #écotourisme #cargo_conservation #corruption #devta #deity #éco-développement #développement #World_Heritage_site #énergie_hydroélectrique #Asian_Development_Bank #Tirthan_Conservation_and_Tourism_Development_Association

    #ressources_pédagogiques

  • Cargo Culte
    http://romy.tetue.net/cargo-culte
    https://www.instagram.com/p/CCA0uLoo8g0

    En télétravail, comme beaucoup en ce moment, je me casse la nuque à regarder, à longueur de journée, l’écran incliné de l’ordinateur portable… J’en éprouve le besoin d’un autre écran, positionné face à moi, pour relever le museau, et plus grand, afin de maquetter sur une surface moins étriquée. Comme je n’arrive pas à choisir la taille ce écran secondaire, à évaluer la surface de travail qui m’est nécessaire ni l’encombrement que cela représentera dans mon espace intérieur, je prototype et teste : Contre toute…

    #Habiter #CargoCulte #prototypage

  • Mamzelle Paula, star d’un bar sans frontières - 7 Lames la Mer
    http://7lameslamer.net/mamzelle-paula-2212.html

    Née dans la #misère au Tampon en 1913, Paula est devenue l’un des personnages les plus célèbres de #LaRéunion [et même au-delà], a fait du #cinéma, n’a donné son cœur qu’à un seul homme et avait pour devise : « le chien qui ne marche pas ne ramasse pas d’os ». Paula, elle, marchait, même si sur la fin, elle devait s’aider de béquilles. Voici l’histoire de #PaulaOliviaCrezo, alias #MamzellePaula, truculente maîtresse des nuits portoises pendant plus de 40 ans.

    #PaulaCrezo #974 #créole #CargopourLaRéunion #théâtre #théâtreVollard #LePort #prostitution #séga #rumba

  • Collection Sur Les Lieux De : Cargo

    J’ai embarqué sur un porte-conteneur pour une rotation complète entre l’Europe et la Chine.

    Au port du Havre, j’ai éteint mon téléphone. Sur mon répondeur et ma boîte mail j’avais laissé un message, ce ne serait pas la peine d’essayer de me joindre pendant 3 mois.

    https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/cruiser-production/static/culture/sons/2015/05/s22/RF_F92671AA-F526-4B34-9806-4DA935FE3F04_GENE.MP3

    https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/sur-les-docks-14-15/collection-sur-les-lieux-de-cargo

    #radio #franceculture #documentaire #documentairesonore #cargo #fret #porte-conteneur

  • Idiots utiles à Paris Le Devoir - 27 février 2017 - Jean-Benoît Nadeau
    http://www.ledevoir.com/international/actualites-internationales/492699/idiots-utiles-a-paris

    Ainsi, Made for Sharing sera le slogan officiel de la Ville de Paris pour sa candidature aux « Olympic Games » de « Twenty Twenty-Four ». On ne sait trop s’il faut rire ou pleurer. Made for joking or made for crying ?
     
    Lorsque j’ai appris la chose, j’ai tout de suite pensé à Aplusbégalix, ce personnage de chef gallo-romain assimilé, dans l’album Le combat des chefs, sans doute le meilleur de la série Astérix et certainement celui qui a le mieux vieilli.
     
    Goscinny et Uderzo ont brillamment utilisé les Romains pour incarner à la fois l’histoire récente (20 ans après la fin de l’Occupation allemande), mais aussi l’actualité du temps. L’album est paru l’année même (1964) où René Étiemble publiait l’essai Parlez-vous franglais ?.
     
    Le plus comique du slogan Made for Sharing est la réaction goguenarde de la presse anglo-américaine, dans le registre « On n’en demandait pas tant ». A-t-on vu un seul anglophone remercier Paris de se faire comprendre ? La Ville a produit un slogan qui ne lui donne rien, sauf le fait de se ridiculiser.
     
    On est frappé de l’indigence de l’argument du comité parisien : on ne peut vendre Paris au CIO qu’en anglais, alors que 16 des 95 membres votant viennent de pays francophones et que plus de la moitié ont certainement des notions de français. Après tout, la langue française est la plus enseignée au monde, après l’anglais. Et puis, le français est l’autre langue officielle du CIO.
     
    Au fond, les Parisiens jouent ici le rôle d’idiots utiles. S’il y a bien un moment dans l’histoire où l’anglais incarne le repli, c’est maintenant. En effet, la Ville de Paris fait la propagande de l’universalisme de l’anglais alors même que les Britanniques et les Américains, à travers le Brexit et l’élection de Trump, rejettent leur rôle de pays phares de l’internationalisme.
     
    Ce n’est pas la première fois que les Parisiens tiennent ce rôle. Dans les années 1950, les communistes français adoptaient des idéaux staliniens qu’ils savaient faux. Et si la France a renoncé à ses arpents de neige au Canada au XVIIIe siècle, c’est d’abord parce qu’une série de penseurs imbus d’idées anglaises défendaient une philosophie économique à laquelle les Anglais eux-mêmes n’adhéraient plus.
     
    Et, de Paris, nous assistons impuissants au lâchage du français alors même que cette langue commence à s’incarner dans un ensemble mondialisé francophone aux antipodes du repli identitaire.
     
    Le culte du cargo  
    Ce désamour a plusieurs causes, que j’ai déjà expliquées dans d’autres chroniques et que je ne répéterai pas. Mais à la réflexion, j’y vois aussi une fascination morbide évocatrice du « culte du cargo ».
     
    Le culte du cargo est une espèce de religion qui s’est développée dans les îles du Pacifique Sud sous l’effet de la colonisation européenne, et qui a connu son apogée pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Pour les insulaires frappés par la richesse et la puissance des Occidentaux et des Japonais, seule une faveur divine peut expliquer l’abondance et le perfectionnement des biens débarqués du bateau ou de l’avion. Une fois les conquérants repartis, les insulaires appelaient le cargo en construisant des avions en bois, des radios en noix de coco, des antennes en bambou.
     
    Il y a de ça dans la fascination des Français pour l’anglais : la tentation de singer la modernité incarnée par le monde « anglo-saxon » dans l’espoir d’en récolter les fruits. D’où les modes anglophiles souvent ridicules et l’abus d’anglicismes, comme un appel désespéré pour des bienfaits que l’on espère sans en comprendre l’essentiel.
     
    L’autre facteur, qui influence les Français à droite comme à gauche, c’est ce que j’appellerais le « réflexe universaliste », qui leur fait voir de l’universel jusque dans leur soupe. Ayant imaginé pendant quelques générations que le français était universel (ce qu’il n’a jamais été), ils attachent désormais cette propriété à l’anglais (qui ne l’est pas plus). Ce réflexe universaliste fait que les Parisiens, qui ont beaucoup de mal à s’enseigner les langues étrangères, imaginent que le monde est aussi peu doué qu’eux.
     
    Mais ce qui nuit le plus à la perception de la langue française parmi les élites parisiennes, c’est que celle-ci soit si mal défendue par de mauvais avocats, engoncés dans de vieux discours sur le génie de la langue ou dans un méchant purisme qui sert de prétexte pour exprimer les idées les plus rétrogrades et, trop souvent, le rejet de l’autre. Armés de leurs mauvais arguments, ils agissent comme repoussoir.
     
    Défendre le français ne consiste pas à rejeter l’anglais : après tout, les langues ont le propre de s’additionner. Mais défendre sa propre langue, c’est d’abord user du privilège de se dire dans celle-ci. French is made for saying.
    #PS #Paris #jeux_olympiques #olympic_games #ridicule #idiots_utiles #Français #Anglais #Francophonie #Cargo_culte #modernité #élites_parisiennes
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8myiPb233E

  • Un #cargo de Turquie débarque 12 migrants en #Slovénie

    La police slovène a indiqué mardi avoir découvert douze migrants syriens et irakiens dans un cargo en provenance de Turquie, un mode de traversée clandestine vers l’Europe inhabituel.

    Les neuf Syriens et trois Irakiens avaient embarqué sur le cargo avec la complicité de deux membres d’équipage turcs qui ont été arrêtés, selon un communiqué de la police. Le bateau avait accosté à Koper, unique port maritime de Slovénie, situé sur l’Adriatique.

    Les migrants découverts lundi ont déposé une demande d’asile en Slovénie et ont été conduits dans une structure d’accueil dédiée.

    http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/998571/un-cargo-de-turquie-debarque-12-migrants-en-slovenie.html
    #routes_migratoires #itinéraires_migratoires #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Mer_Adriatique

  • Something Stunning Is Taking Place Off The Coast Of Singapore | Zero Hedge
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-05-20/something-stunning-taking-place-coast-singapore

    The red dots show ships either at anchor or barely moving, either oil tankers or cargo, which have made the Straits of Malacca, one of the world’s most important shipping lanes which carries about a quarter of all seaborne oil primarily from the Persian Gulf headed to China, into a “bumper to bumper” parking lots of ships with tens of millions of barrels in combustible cargo.

    it is also the topic of the latest Reuters expose on the historic physical crude oil glut which continues to build behind the scenes, and which so far has proven totally immune to dissipation as a result of the sharp increase in oil prices over the past three months.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/us-asia-oil-storage-idUSKCN0YA129

    #Singapour #pétrole #cargo #tanker #transport_maritime

  • En France, la revendication d’un revenu garanti s’est cristallisée lors de la fronde étudiante contre le projet de contrat d’insertion professionnelle (CIP) du gouvernement de M. Edouard Balladur, en 1994, avec la création, à Paris, du Collectif d’agitation pour un revenu garanti optimal (Cargo), bientôt intégré à Agir ensemble contre le chômage (AC !). Elle a resurgi lors du mouvement de chômeurs de l’hiver 1997-1998. A la même époque, le philosophe écologiste André Gorz se rallie à l’idée (7), qui trouve également un écho au sein du mouvement altermondialiste en cours de constitution (8). Alain Caillé, fondateur du Mouvement anti-utilitariste dans les sciences sociales (Mauss), en est lui aussi partisan.

    https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2013/05/CHOLLET/49054

    #revenu_garanti #revenu_universel #cargo #ac ! #CIP

  • Conteneurs : Le secteur commence à souffrir | Mer et Marine
    http://www.meretmarine.com/fr/content/conteneurs-le-secteur-commence-souffrir

    Le ralentissement économique, mais également la surcapacité déjà très prégnante sur les lignes entre l’Europe et l’Asie, commencent à plomber les comptes des compagnies. Et les prévisions d’entrées en service massives de maxi porte-conteneurs ne sont pas faites pour rassurer.

    #méganavires #transport_maritime

  • Les capitaines de cargos, démunis face aux sauvetages en Méditerranée | Mediapart

    http://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/070615/les-capitaines-de-cargos-demunis-face-aux-sauvetages-en-mediterranee?ongle

    L’Europe au défi des migrants Enquête

    Les capitaines de cargos, démunis face aux sauvetages en Méditerranée

    07 juin 2015 | Par Carine Fouteau

    La marine marchande est en émoi. Alors que les traversées s’accélèrent en Méditerranée (plus de 2 000 migrants ont été secourus samedi 6 juin, dix navires ont appelé au secours dimanche), les cargos sont de plus en plus mis souvent à contribution pour les opérations de sauvetage. Les risques encourus par les rescapés comme par les marins sont importants. Des capitaines pourraient être tentés de « regarder ailleurs », prévient le commandant Hubert Ardillon.

    Migrations #asile #Mourir_en_mer #méditerranée

  • Very interesting ! Pour ceux qui comprennent l’allemand, la vidéo de 13 minutes vaut la peine d’être regardéee, pour les autres, j’ai fait un petit résumé...
    Mais il y a là toute l’ambiguité sur la figure des passeurs...
    Flüchtlingsschiff : Wie #Frontex die Wahrheit verdreht

    Ein schrottreifes Flüchtlingsschiff, das offenbar ohne Besatzung auf die italienische Küste zusteuert. Panorama-Recherchen zeigen nun: Tatsächlich war es anders.

    http://www.ardmediathek.de/tv/Panorama/Fl%C3%BCchtlingsschiff-Wie-Frontex-die-Wahrh/Das-Erste/Video?documentId=26628654&bcastId=310918
    #smugglers #passeurs #smuggling #bateau_fantôme #bateaux_fantômes #cargo_fantôme #responsabilité #blue_sky_m #Mersin #Gallipoli #flagrant_délit #migration #Méditerranée #asile

    –-> ce qu’on dit dans ce reportage :
    – le Blue Sky M n’était pas un cargo-poubelle... son état de « santé » était ok pour la navigation... c’était un cargo pour les marchandises, bien sûr, et non pas pour les hommes mais en tout cas il n’était pas en mauvais état
    – cela ne serait pas vrai que le capitaine ait abandonné le cargo juste avant les côtes italiennes. Ils ont abandonné la cabine de pilotage pour éviter qu’ils soient détectés par la marine italienne, qui est venue en secours au cargo, comme des passeurs, mais ils n’ont pas abandonné le navire. Selon les témoignages dans la vidéo, ce n’était aucunement l’intention de l’équipage de laisser le cargo s’écraser contre les côtes italiennes

    Quand la porte-parole de Frontex est interrogée sur la différence entre ceux que Frontex a communiqué et les informations récoltées auprès de la marine italienne et du procureur général en Italie, elle répond : « C’est les informations que vous avez maintenant, mais juste après les événements, ce sont d’autres informations que nous avions à disposition. Vous pouvez dire cela, car maintenant les informations sont nouvelles »

    L’équipage du Blue Sky M est maintenant en prison à Lecce. Ils sont tous syriens, eux mêmes #réfugiés, donc !
    Dans le reportage, le journaliste parle avec la soeur d’un des « passeurs/réfugiés ». Toute l’ambiguïté fait surface...

    cc @reka

  • Originial. En 1998 déjà, des socialistes voulaient imposer un travail obligatoire aux RMIstes sous peine de radiation... Mais lorsqu’il prône aujourd’hui l’emploi forcé des RSAste, le parvenu N.S n’en dit mot.

    Notre insertion contre la leur ! #CARGO (Collectif d’Agitation pour un Revenu Garanti Optimal)
    http://www.ac.eu.org/spip.php?article496

    Le 19 septembre dernier [en 1998, sous #Jospin] à Perpignan, une #manifestation organisée à l’initiative d’#AC ! s’est achevée par une tentative d’occupation du #Conseil_Général des Pyrénées-Orientales, peu avant d’être dispersée par la police. Le Président #socialiste du Conseil Général, Christian Bourquin, avait en effet annoncé vouloir imposer aux allocataires du #RMI du département des heures de #travail_non_rémunérées. (...) Ils nous veulent honteux et soumis nous choisissons l’arrogance et la fierté.
    Non, nous ne pleurnicherons pas pour obtenir des emplois, nous ne supplierons pas les patrons de nous exploiter, nous ne ramperons pas à genoux devant les #employeurs, histoire que les #salaires baissent encore un peu plus. Ce que fait le #travaillisme, c’est propager de la mauvaise conscience pour aiguiser la #concurrence dans l’obtention d’un poste, pour que le travail devienne une lutte de tous contre tous, et ce, pour le seul profit des exploiteurs. Le Workfare ne passera pas par nous, nous ne serons pas les « jaunes » des temps modernes dont les patrons se serviraient à volonté pour briser les grèves, détériorer les conditions de travail et faire baisser les salaires.

    #luttes_sociales #Archives #idéologie_du_travail

  • Traduction de l’italien (article original: http://www.internazionale.it/reportage/2015/01/13/seimila-euro-per-essere-abbandonati-in-mezzo-al-mare)
    À #Mersin, « port-fantôme » des migrants, par #Stefano_Liberti.

    Shaadi fume et attend : assis dans le hall de l’hôtel qui est devenu sa deuxième maison, il allume une cigarette après l’autre, regarde nerveusement son téléphone portable en attendant un appel. « Le bruit court qu’il en part un demain », dit-il sur un ton qui hésite entre espoir et résignation. Il vient d’avoir trente-quatre ans, il a une femme et deux enfants qu’il a laissés à Damas. C’est un ancien comptable, avec le sourire éteint d’un employé triste, et il a déjà versé six mille dollars aux passeurs pour s’embarquer à bord d’un navire qui l’emmènera directement en Italie, et « de là en Allemagne, où il obtiendra l’asile politique et fera venir sa famille ».


    http://dormirajamais.org/mersin
    cc @reka
    #cargo_fantôme #bateau_fantôme #migration #asile #Turquie #Mersin #réfugiés #Forteresse_Europe #Méditerranée #abandon #mourir_en_mer #dérive #mer

  • Spectral vessels

    Powerful institutional agendas have acted to bolster the ‘ghost ship’ obsession. Such symbolism renders the specificities of Mediterranean migration opaque.


    https://www.opendemocracy.net/can-europe-make-it/theodore-baird-thomas-spijkerboer-paolo-cuttitta/spectral-vessels
    #Ezadeen #Blue_Sky_M #cargo_fantôme #migration #asile #réfugiés #Méditerranée #Forteresse_Europe
    cc @albertocampiphoto @reka

    Conclusion :

    Just as migrants are abandoned every day to their fate by smugglers in small, unseaworthy vessels, migrants are also abandoned every day to their fate by the border policies of European countries. If we are to be publicly outraged over the suffering that occurs in the context of boat migration, we must express equal moral shock at the European policies which create the market for smuggling in which so many migrants die.

  • #Frontex: Update on Operation #Triton; Growing Use of Larger Vessels by Smugglers

    Frontex last week released updated information on Operation Triton since its launch on 1 November. Frontex also reported on the growing use by smugglers of older freighters and cargo vessels which are being obtained primarily in south-eastern Turkey and which are being used by smugglers to transport larger numbers of migrants – as occurred yesterday with the rescue of 500-700 migrants on board the Moldovan flagged Blue Sky M between Greece and Italy.

    http://migrantsatsea.org/2014/12/31/frontex-update-on-operation-triton-growing-use-of-larger-vessels-by-s
    #frontière #Méditerranée #asile #migration #réfugiés #BlueSkyM #Blue_Sky_M #bateau-fantôme #cargo_fantôme

  • #Italie : un #cargo_fantôme à la dérive avec 450 migrants à bord

    Un #navire_marchand transportant 450 immigrés clandestins et abandonné par son équipage dérivait dans la nuit de jeudi à vendredi près des côtes italiennes, en #panne de machines.


    http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-divers/un-cargo-abandonne-par-son-equipage-se-dirige-vers-les-cotes-italiennes-0

    #abandon #mourir_en_mer #dérive #migration #asile #réfugiés #mer #Méditerranée

    Mais, ARRGHHH... arrêtons de parler de #clandestins, car, à bord, il y aura probablement passablement de syriens, donc des #réfugiés_présumés
    –-> @reka : le concept de #réfugié_présumé est intéressant, Vivre Ensemble l’utilise toujours plus, je peux t’en dire plus, si tu veux, il a été forgé par un juriste dont je ne me rappelle plus le nom, mais que je peux facilement retrouver...

  • Cargo ship carrying ’700 migrants’ docks in Italy

    A cargo ship said to be carrying 700 clandestine migrants which was taken under Italian control at sea has docked in the Italian port of Gallipoli.


    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30639794
    #migration #asile #réfugiés #mourir_en_mer #Méditerranée #Forteresse_Europe #naufrage #sauvetage #Italie #cargo_fantôme #bateau_fantôme

  • Et voici le cargo du futur, le cargo qui marche essentiellement au vent, le plus écolo du monde

    Vindskip skal nytte skrog som segl - NRK - Viten

    http://www.nrk.no/viten/vindskip-skal-nytte-skrog-som-segl-1.11220910

    Vindskip kan bli framtidas miljøvenlege lasteskip

    Norsk gründer vil gjere sjøtransport miljøvenleg med lasteskip som skal fange vind med skroget.

    #transport_maritime #énergie_renouvelable #cargo_voilier

  • Boeing 787s to create half a terabyte of data per flight #bigdata #internetofthings (Nicolas Hoizey)
    http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/infrastructure/3433595/boeing-787s-create-half-terabyte-of-data-per-flight-says-virgin-atl

    Virgin Atlantic is preparing for a significant increase in data as it embraces the internet of things, with a new fleet of highly connected planes each expected to create over half a terabyte of data per flight.

    Source: Computerworld UK - Matthew Finnegan

    #technology_frontiers #cargo_containers #airline_company #boeing_747 #virgin_atlantic #bulman #boeing_787s #director_david #terabyte #computerworld #planes #economist #internet_connection #boeing #explosion #fleet #insight