city:helsinki

  • La ’increíble’ medida en Finlandia para reducir el número de personas sin techo: darles un techo

    #Helsinki puso en marcha con éxito el programa ’Vivienda primero’, que consiste en dar pisos a personas sin hogar de manera permanente y con contrato de alquiler.
    A través del proyecto se ha creado vivienda pública y se han reformado edificios más antiguos. Ya solo hace falta un hostal para personas sin techo, con 50 camas.
    Autoridades y activistas destacan la importancia de la vivienda pública para erradicar los problemas relacionados y evitar la segregación por barrios.


    https://www.eldiario.es/theguardian/milagro-solucion-radical-Helsinki-mundo_0_906410053.html
    #Finlande #SDF #sans-abri

    • Programme #Housing_first :

      The Guide is a resource about Housing First in Europe. It has been designed to explain what Housing First is and how it actually works in a range of European contexts. It sets out the core principles of Housing First and shows how these are implemented in different settings.

      The Guide is the first European resource of its kind. As Housing First has taken off in Europe, a growing demand has emerged for knowledge and expertise. Until now, much of the available material has come from North America. There was a need for practical guidance bringing together existing knowledge and experience on doing Housing First in European contexts. That’s why we created this Guide. It complements similar manuals developed in the US (Tsemberis 2010) and Canada (Canadian Housing First Toolkit).


      http://housingfirstguide.eu/website

    • Finland’s Zero Homeless Strategy: Lessons from a Success Story

      Following a period when homelessness rose in many countries, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic prompted governments across the OECD area to provide unprecedented public support – including to the homeless. In the United Kingdom, for instance, people who had been living on the streets or in shelters were housed in individual accommodations in a matter of days. And in cities and towns across the OECD, public authorities worked closely with service providers and other partners to provide support to the homeless that had previously been considered impossible.

      How can countries build on this momentum and ensure more durable outcomes? The experience of Finland over the past several decades – during which the country has nearly eradicated homelessness – provides a glimpse of what can be possible with a sustained national strategy and enduring political will.

      The number of homeless people in Finland has continuously decreased over the past three decades from over 16 000 in 1989 to around 4 000, or 0.08% of the population (Figure 1). This is a very low number, especially considering that Finland uses a relatively broad definition of homelessness, whereby in particular it includes people temporarily living with friends and relatives in its official homelessness count. In 2020, practically no-one was sleeping rough on a given night in Finland.

      This is undoubtedly a remarkable success, even if comparing homelessness statistics across countries is fraught with difficulties (OECD, 2020). Many homeless people live precariously, with the implication that statistical tools such as household surveys typically fail to accurately measure their living conditions. Furthermore, countries define homelessness very differently, for instance counting people who temporarily live with friends or relatives as homeless (as Finland does) or excluding them from homelessness statistics. While there is no OECD-wide average against which to compare Finland’s homeless rate of 0.08%, other countries with similarly broad definitions of homelessness provide points of reference, such as neighbouring Sweden (0.33%) or the Netherlands (0.23%).1

      Finland’s success is not a matter of luck or the outcome of “quick fixes.” Rather, it is the result of a sustained, well-resourced national strategy, driven by a “Housing First” approach, which provides people experiencing homelessness with immediate, independent, permanent housing, rather than temporary accommodation (OECD, 2020). A key pillar of this effort has been to combine emergency assistance with the supply of rentals to host previously homeless people, either by converting some existing shelters into residential buildings with independent apartments (Kaakinen, 2019) or by building new flats by a government agency (ARA, 2021). Building flats is key: otherwise, especially if housing supply is particularly rigid, the funding of rentals can risk driving up rents (OECD, 2021a), thus reducing the “bang for the buck” of public spending.

      The Finnish experience demonstrates the effectiveness of tackling homelessness through a combination of financial assistance, integrated and targeted support services and more supply: using just one of these levers is unlikely to work. Financial assistance comes from the social benefits systems, which includes a housing allowance for low-income people (mostly jobless persons with no or low unemployment benefits) covering about 80% of housing costs (Kangas and Kalliomaa-Puha, 2019). Emergency social assistance funding can complement the housing allowance if it is insufficient. Social services provide housing before other interventions that are targeted to beneficiaries’ needs (such as, to pick one example, providing health services to help overcome substance abuse). These efforts require dwellings: investment grants by Finland’s Housing Finance and Development Centre financed the construction of 2 200 flats over 2016-19 for long-term homeless people (ARA, 2021). Indeed, investing in housing development should be a priority for OECD governments as they navigate the recovery from the crisis: over the past two decades, public investment in housing development has dropped to just 0.06% of GDP across the OECD on average (OECD, 2021b).

      Another important driver of Finland’s success is the integration of efforts to fight homelessness with other parts of the social safety net. When a housing need is identified in any part of the social service system, housing is provided first, to provide a solid basis for employment, long-term health and/or family assistance (OECD, 2020). This integrated approach avoids the pitfalls that can arise, for instance, when benefits are preconditioned on having an address, or when obtaining a flat requires a minimum income. There are indications that, by facilitating the integration of previously homeless people in society, the upfront Finnish investment that provides people with housing first, pays off by reducing subsequent costs incurred by social services. Evaluations point to annual savings in public expenditure in the range of EUR 9 600-15 000 per person who had previously experienced homelessness (Y-Foundation, 2017; Ministry of the Environment, 2011).

      Overall, Finland’s achievements illustrate the benefits of integration, balance and continuity in policies to tackle homelessness: integration across housing and social assistance programmes, balance between demand and supply, and political continuity over time have helped to maximise the results of the country’s investment to end homelessness. Not only has this approach resulted in a steady decline in homelessness, but it has also made the system more resilient to shocks, including the COVID-19 crisis. Indeed, the pandemic was less of a strain to Finland’s homeless support system compared to other countries, given that many vulnerable people were already housed and supported in individual flats (Fondation Abbé Pierre – FEANTSA, 2021).

      These lessons can be transposed to other OECD countries as they look to build on the momentum and lessons learned from the COVID crisis.

      References

      ARA (2021), Report 2021: Homelessness in Finland 2020, The Housing Finance and Development Centre of Finland (ARA). Fondation Abbé Pierre – FEANTSA (2021), Sixth Overview of Housing Exclusion in Europe, FEANTSA – Abbé Pierre.

      Kaakinen, J. (2019), “Time to act: Let’s end homelessness for good,” OECD Forum Network Series on the New Societal Contract.

      Kangas, O. and L. Kalliomaa-Puha(2019), “ESPN Thematic Report on National Strategies to Fight Homelessness and Housing Exclusion: Finland”, European Social Policy Network (ESPN), European Commission, Brussels.

      Ministry of the Environment (2011), Asunnottomuuden vähentämisen taloudelliset [Economic effects of reducing homelessness], Ympäristöministeriön.

      OECD (2020), “Better data and policies to fight homelessness in the OECD”, Policy Brief on Affordable Housing, OECD, Paris, http://oe.cd/homelessness-2020.

      OECD (2021a), Brick by Brick: Building Better Housing Policies, OECD, Paris.

      OECD (2021b), OECD Affordable Housing Database, indicator PH1.1, OECD, Paris.

      Pleace, N. et al. (2021), European Homelessness and COVID 19, European Observatory on Homelessness.

      https://oecdecoscope.blog/2021/12/13/finlands-zero-homeless-strategy-lessons-from-a-success-story

  • Les antibiotiques polluent désormais les rivières du monde entier
    https://www.latribune.fr/entreprises-finance/industrie/energie-environnement/les-antibiotiques-polluent-les-rivieres-du-monde-entier-818590.html


    Crédits : Pixabay

    Quatorze antibiotiques ont été retrouvés dans les rivières de 72 pays, d’après une étude britannique inédite révélée lundi 27 mai. Les concentrations d’antibiotiques trouvés dépassent jusqu’à 300 fois les niveaux « acceptables ». Un risque majeur puisque ce phénomène accentue le phénomène de résistance aux antibiotiques qui deviennent moins efficaces pour traiter certains symptômes.

    Aucune n’est épargnée. Une étude présentée lundi 27 mai révèle que, de l’Europe à l’Asie en passant par l’Afrique, les concentrations d’antibiotiques relevées dans certaines rivières du monde dépassent largement les niveaux acceptables. La nouveauté de cette étude résulte du fait qu’il s’agit désormais d’un « problème mondial » car si, autrefois, les niveaux tolérés étaient le plus souvent dépassés en Asie et en Afrique - les sites les plus problématiques se trouvent au Bangladesh, Kenya, Ghana, Pakistan et Nigeria - l’Europe et l’Amérique ne sont plus en reste, note le communiqué de l’équipe de chercheurs de l’université britannique de York responsable de l’étude.

    Les scientifiques ont ainsi analysé des prélèvements effectués sur 711 sites dans 72 pays sur six continents et ont détecté au moins un des 14 antibiotiques recherchés dans 65% des échantillons. Les chercheurs, qui présentaient leurs recherches lundi à un congrès à Helsinki, ont comparé ces prélèvements aux niveaux acceptables établis par le groupement d’industries pharmaceutiques AMR Industry Alliance, qui varient selon la substance.

    Résultat, le métronidazole, utilisé contre les infections de la peau et de la bouche, est l’antibiotique qui dépasse le plus ce niveau acceptable, avec des concentrations allant jusqu’à 300 fois ce seuil sur un site au Bangladesh. Le niveau est également dépassé dans la Tamise. La ciprofloxacine est de son côté la substance qui dépasse le plus souvent le seuil de sûreté acceptable (sur 51 sites), tandis que le triméthoprime, utilisé dans le traitement des infections urinaires, est le plus fréquemment retrouvé.

    • Est-ce que c’est des antibiotiques qu’on prescrit aux humain·es ou aux non-humain·es ?
      J’ai trouvé une liste des médicaments réservé aux humains et la métronidazole et la ciprofloxacine n’en font pas partie.

      ANNEXEII -MEDICAMENTS HUMAINS CLASSES AIC NON AUTORISES EN MEDECINE VETERINAIREFAMILLE D’APPARTENANCE DE LA SUBSTANCENOM DE LA SUBSTANCECéphalosporinesdetroisièmeoudequatrièmegénérationCeftriaxoneCéfiximeCefpodoximeCéfotiamCéfotaximeCeftazidimeCéfépimeCefpiromeCeftobiproleAutrescéphalosporinesCeftarolineQuinolones de deuxième génération (fluoroquinolones)LévofloxacineLoméfloxacinePéfloxacineMoxifloxacineEnoxacinePénèmesMéropènèmeErtapénèmeDoripénemImipénème+inhibiteurd’enzymeAcidesphosphoniquesFosfomycineGlycopeptidesVancomycineTeicoplanineTélavancineDalbavancineOritavancineGlycylcyclinesTigécyclineLipopeptidesDaptomycineMonobactamsAztréonamOxazolidonesCyclosérineLinézolideTédizolideRiminofenazinesClofaziminePénicillinesPipéracillinePipéracilline+inhibiteurd’enzymeTémocillineTircacillineTircacilline+inhibiteurd’enzymeSulfonesDapsoneAntituberculeux/antilépreuxRifampicineRifabutineCapréomycineIsoniazideEthionamidePyrazinamideEthambutolClofazimineDapsone+ferreuxoxalate

      http://www.ordre.pharmacien.fr/content/download/346633/1695541/version/2/file/Fiches-pratiques_pharmacie-v%C3%A9t%C3%A9rinaire.pdf

    • Le site de l’équipe qui a coordonné les travaux, Université d’York

      Antibiotics found in some of the world’s rivers exceed ‘safe’ levels, global study finds - News and events, The University of York
      https://www.york.ac.uk/news-and-events/news/2019/research/antibiotics-found-in-some-of-worlds-rivers
      https://www.york.ac.uk/media/news-and-events/pressreleases/2019/Global rivers feat.jpg

      Concentrations of antibiotics found in some of the world’s rivers exceed ‘safe’ levels by up to 300 times, the first ever global study has discovered.
      […]
      Researchers looked for 14 commonly used antibiotics in rivers in 72 countries across six continents and found antibiotics at 65% of the sites monitored.

      Metronidazole, which is used to treat bacterial infections including skin and mouth infections, exceeded safe levels by the biggest margin, with concentrations at one site in Bangladesh 300 times greater than the ‘safe’ level.

      In the River Thames and one of its tributaries in London, the researchers detected a maximum total antibiotic concentration of 233 nanograms per litre (ng/l), whereas in Bangladesh the concentration was 170 times higher.

      Trimethoprim
      The most prevalent antibiotic was trimethoprim, which was detected at 307 of the 711 sites tested and is primarily used to treat urinary tract infections.

      The research team compared the monitoring data with ‘safe’ levels recently established by the AMR Industry Alliance which, depending on the antibiotic, range from 20-32,000 ng/l.

      Ciproflaxacin, which is used to treat a number of bacterial infections, was the compound that most frequently exceeded safe levels, surpassing the safety threshold in 51 places.

      Global problem
      The team said that the ‘safe’ limits were most frequently exceeded in Asia and Africa, but sites in Europe, North America and South America also had levels of concern showing that antibiotic contamination was a “global problem.”

      Sites where antibiotics exceeded ‘safe’ levels by the greatest degree were in Bangladesh, Kenya, Ghana, Pakistan and Nigeria, while a site in Austria was ranked the highest of the European sites monitored.

      The study revealed that high-risk sites were typically adjacent to wastewater treatment systems, waste or sewage dumps and in some areas of political turmoil, including the Israeli and Palestinian border.

      Monitoring
      The project, which was led by the University of York, was a huge logistical challenge – with 92 sampling kits flown out to partners across the world who were asked to take samples from locations along their local river system.

      Samples were then frozen and couriered back to the University of York for testing. Some of the world’s most iconic rivers were sampled, including the Chao Phraya, Danube, Mekong, Seine, Thames, Tiber and Tigris.

    • Le résumé de la présentation à Helsinki, le 28 mai

      Tracks & Sessions – SETAC Helsinki
      https://helsinki.setac.org/programme/scientific-programme/trackssessions

      3.12 - New Insights into Chemical Exposures over Multiple Spatial and Temporal Scales
      Co-chairs: Alistair Boxall, Charlotte Wagner, Rainer Lohmann, Jason Snape 

      Tuesday May 28, 2019 | 13:55–15:30 | Session Room 204/205 

      Current methods used to assess chemical exposures are insufficient to accurately establish the impacts of chemicals on human and ecosystem health. For example, exposure assessment often involves the use of averaged concentrations, assumes constant exposure of an organism and focuses on select geographical regions, individual chemicals and single environmental compartments. A combination of tools in environmental scientists’ toolbox can be used to address these limitations.

      This session will therefore include presentations on experimental and modelling approaches to better understand environmental exposures of humans and other organisms to chemicals over space and time, and the drivers of such exposures. We welcome submissions from the following areas:
      1) Applications of novel approaches such as source apportionment, wireless sensor networks, drones and citizen science to generate and understand exposure data over multiple spatial and temporal scales,
      2) Advancements in assessing exposures to multiple chemicals and from different land-use types, as well as the impact of an organism’s differing interactions with its environment, and
      3) Quantification of chemical exposures at regional, continental and global geographical scales.

      This session aims at advancing efforts to combine models and measurement to better assess environmental distribution and exposure to chemical contaminants, reducing ubiquitous exposures and risks to public and environmental health.

  • Finland-Norway rail link planned to fit Arctic sea routes - Reuters
    https://af.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idAFKCN1SF0YE


    The sun shines low in the sky just after midnight over a frozen coastline near the Norwegian Arctic town of Longyearbyen, April 26, 2007.
    REUTERS/Francois Lenoir/File Photo

    A Finnish company said on Thursday it planned to develop a railway connection between north Finland and Norway’s Kirkenes port to link with potential Arctic shipping routes at an estimated cost of between 3-5 billion euros (2.6-4.3 billion pounds).
    […]
    Finland’s Finest Bay Area Development said it had signed a memorandum of understanding with Norway’s Sør-Varanger Utvikling to investigate how to build a railway and its impact on the environment, society and the economy.

    An Arctic railway would connect Finland to the Northeast Passage,” Kustaa Valtonen, a director at Finest Bay Area Development, said in a statement. “We will provide a faster trade route between Asian and European markets.

    The company also plans an undersea tunnel between Finland’s capital Helsinki and Estonia’s capital Tallinn.
    […]
    Last year, a Finnish government study concluded a railway connection to Kirkenes would take at least 15 years to build and would not be economically viable.

    We expect to see a significant increase in cargo traffic between Europa and Asia. Their study did not cover it too well,” Valtonen told Reuters.

    Finest’s planned 100 km (60 mile) tunnel for linking Helsinki with Estonia’s capital Tallinn got in March a provisional 15 billion euros in financing from China’s Touchstone Capital Partners.

    EDIT : j’avais oublié la légende de la photo. D’illustration ! on est à plus de 1000 km et 8°30’ plus au nord que Kirkenes… Presque la distance Helsinki - Kirkenes.

  • Les Finlandais votent, inquiets pour leur modèle social (La Croix)
    https://www.crashdebug.fr/international/15906-les-finlandais-votent-inquiets-pour-leur-modele-social-la-croix

    En Finlande, les électeurs s’apprêtent à sanctionner la politique de coupes budgétaires du gouvernement sortant

    Juha Sipilä

    Helsinki

    De notre envoyé spécial

    Du haut de ses 20 ans, Ada s’approche de l’isoloir du centre Ohjaamo d’Helsinki, vaste espace entièrement dédié à la jeunesse. Ce n’est pas encore le jour des élections en Finlande. Le scrutin national, dans ce pays de 5,5 millions d’habitants, a lieu dimanche 14 avril. Si le matériel électoral est là, c’est plus pour sensibiliser les jeunes adultes à leur devoir civique.

    Génération burn-out

    Fidèle à sa tradition d’innovation sociale, l’État a mis en place ce lieu expérimental où les moins de 30 ans peuvent régler ici n’importe quel tracas administratif : remboursements de santé, difficultés à se loger, recherche d’emploi, accompagnement psychologique… Ici, un (...)

    #En_vedette #Actualités_internationales #Actualités_Internationales

  • Finland’s basic income trial boosts happiness but not employment | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-finland-basic-income/finlands-basic-income-trial-boosts-happiness-but-not-employment-idUSKCN1PX0
    https://s4.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20190208&t=2&i=1354502227&w=1200&r=LYNXNPEF170XW

    HELSINKI (Reuters) - Finland’s basic income scheme did not spur its unemployed recipients to work more to supplement their earnings as hoped but it did help their wellbeing, researchers said on Friday as the government announced initial findings.

    The two-year trial, which ended a month ago, saw 2,000 Finns, chosen randomly from among the unemployed, become the first Europeans to be paid a regular monthly income by the state that was not reduced if they found work.

    Finland — the world’s happiest country last year, according to the United Nations — is exploring alternatives to its social security model.

    The trial was being watched closely by other governments who see a basic income as a way of encouraging the unemployed to take up often low-paid or temporary work without fear of losing their benefits. That could help reduce dependence on the state and cut welfare costs, especially as greater automation sees humans replaced in the workforce.

    Finland’s minister of health and social affairs Pirkko Mattila said the impact on employment of the monthly pay cheque of 560 euros ($635) “seems to have been minor on the grounds of the first trial year”.

    But participants in the trial were happier and healthier than the control group.

    “The basic income recipients of the test group reported better wellbeing in every way (than) the comparison group,” chief researcher Olli Kangas said.

    Chief economist for the trial Ohto Kanniainen said the low impact on employment was not a surprise, given that many jobless people have few skills or struggle with difficult life situations or health concerns.
    Owner Sini Marttinen poses for a picture at her coffee shop she founded while benefitting from Finland’s basic income scheme in Helsinki, Finland January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Philip O’Connor

    “Economists have known for a long time that with unemployed people financial incentives don’t work quite the way some people would expect them to,” he added.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL BOOST

    Sini Marttinen, 36, had been unemployed for nearly a year before “winning the lottery”, as she described the trial.

    Her basic income gave her enough confidence to open a restaurant with two friends. “I think the effect was a lot psychological,” the former IT consultant told Reuters.

    “You kind of got this idea you have two years, you have the security of 560 euros per month ... It gave me the security to start my own business.”

    Her income only rose by 50 euros a month compared to the jobless benefit she had been receiving, “but in an instant you lose the bureaucracy, the reporting”, Marttinen said.

    Mira Jaskari, 36, who briefly found a job during the trial but lost it due to poor health, said losing the basic income had left her feeling more insecure about money.

    The center-right government’s original plan was to expand the basic income scheme after two years as it tries to combat unemployment which has been persistently high for years but reached a 10-year low of 6.6 percent in December.

    That followed the imposition of benefits sanctions on unemployed people who refused work.

    The basic income has been controversial, however, with leaders of the main Finnish political parties keen to streamline the benefits system but wary of offering “money for nothing”, especially ahead of parliamentary elections due in April.
    Slideshow (2 Images)
    TAX BIND

    Prime Minister Juha Sipila’s Centre Party has proposed limiting the basic income to poor people, with sanctions if they reject a job offer, while Conservative finance minister Petteri Orpo says he favors a scheme like Britain’s Universal Credit.

    The higher taxes that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) says would be needed to pay for basic income schemes might also be off-putting for voters.

    In a review of the Finnish scheme last year, the OECD warned that implementing it nationally and cost-neutrally for the state would imply significant income redistribution, especially towards couples from single people, and increase poverty.

    The researchers have acknowledged that the Finnish pilot was less than realistic because it did not include any tax claw-back once participants found work and reached a certain income level.

    Swiss voters rejected a similar scheme in 2016. Italy is due to introduce a “citizens’ wage” in April in a major overhaul of the welfare state, which will offer income support to the unemployed and poor.

    Trial participants were generally positive, however, with Tuomas Muraja, a 45-year-old journalist and author, saying the basic income had allowed him to concentrate on writing instead of form-filling or attending jobseekers’ courses.

    He said the end of the two-year trial, during which he published two books, had made it difficult again for him to accept commissions, because “I ... can earn only 300 euros per month without losing any benefits”.

    “If people are paid money freely that makes them creative, productive and welfare brings welfare,” Muraja told Reuters about his experience of the pilot.

    “If you feel free, you feel safer and then you can do whatever you want. That is my assessment.”

    ($1 = 0.8817 euros)

  • En Finlande, de la nourriture bientôt fabriquée à partir de rien ou presque, seulement des bactéries
    https://www.crashdebug.fr/sciencess/15492-en-finlande-de-la-nourriture-bientot-fabriquee-a-partir-de-rien-ou-

    Après la viande à base de cellules souches, les bactéries.... miam, miam.... L’avenir serat vertigineux...

    À Helsinki, le monde fabuleux des bactéries est à l’étude dans un laboratoire qui compte bien les transformer, de façon simple et peu onéreuses.

    En Finlande, une entreprise d’Helsinki, Solar Foods, veut remplir nos assiettes avec des protéines issues de bactéries. Les essais se font en laboratoire, avec l’objectif de créer une usine dans deux ans.

    L’élément de base, ce sont des bactéries, des micro-organismes que vous mettez dans de l’eau où circule un courant électrique, ce qui va produire de l’hydrogène et de l’oxygène. Ces gaz vont servir de sources d’énergie et permettre aux bactéries d’utiliser le CO2, dioxyde carbone, et surtout le carbone, pour le transformer en protéines. Le (...)

    #En_vedette #Actualités_scientifiques #Sciences

  • Hacked European Cables Reveal a World of Anxiety About Trump, Russia and Iran
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/18/us/politics/european-diplomats-cables-hacked.html

    Hackers infiltrated the European Union’s diplomatic communications network for years, downloading thousands of cables that reveal concerns about an unpredictable Trump administration and struggles to deal with Russia and China and the risk that Iran would revive its nuclear program. In one cable, European diplomats described a meeting between President Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Helsinki, Finland, as “successful (at least for Putin).” Another cable, written after a (...)

    #NSA #spyware #écoutes #hacking

  • On a visité une « prison ouverte » en Finlande
    https://usbeketrica.com/article/finlande-prison-ouverte-suomenlinna

    Cent hommes purgeant leur peine au milieu des visiteurs, des touristes et des oiseaux, en surplomb des eaux glaciales de la mer Baltique, à vingt minutes de bateau du centre d’Helsinki. Suomenlinna : une forteresse édifiée en 1748 sur un chapelet d’îlots rocailleux afin de protéger la capitale des invasions maritimes, devenue aujourd’hui l’adresse atypique du centre pénitentiaire ouvert le plus avant-gardiste du pays.

    Oui, ils se baladent à l’air libre, un boîtier GPS accroché à la cheville. Ils prennent le bateau quand bon leur semble, pour aller travailler, rendre visite à des proches ou faire quelques emplettes dans la capitale. Ils se mêlent au million de visiteurs parcourant chaque année cette île vedette du tourisme local, prisée aux beaux jours pour les pique-niques autant que pour les photos de mariage. Surtout, ce sont eux qui, revêtus de la doudoune jaune fluo des agents municipaux, ont pour mission de réparer les dégâts du temps passé sur les murailles de l’île – un monumental bastion classé au patrimoine mondial de l’Unesco.

    #prison #incarcération #taule

  • Info prise chez Nova dont je ne suis pas sur du rapport à l’underground.

    « Underground Radio Directory, et recense des radios underground de 28 différents pays, de Tokyo a Glasgow en passant par Kansas City mais aussi Marrakech et São Paulo, il y en a pour tous les goûts et on y fait de très belles découvertes. »

    Underground Radio Directory.
    http://www.undergroundradiodirectory.com/stations

    Number of stations : 86

    10TwentyRadio

    Bristol, England

    more info...

    199Radio

    London, England

    more info...

    20ft Radio

    Kiev, Ukraine

    more info...

    2Day Radio

    Aberdeen, Scotland

    more info...

    8 Ball Radio

    New York City, USA

    more info...

    8K.NZ

    Christchurch, New Zealand

    more info...

    Automat Radio

    Worldwide

    more info...

    Balamii

    London, England

    more info...

    Basso Radio

    Helsinki, Finland

    more info...

    BBC Radio 6 Music

    London, England

    more info...

    Berlin Community Radio

    Berlin, Germany

    more info...

    Bloop

    London, England

    more info...

  • Migration: the riddle of Europe’s shadow population
    Lennys — not her real name — is part of a shadow population living in Europe that predates the arrival of several million people on the continent in the past few years, amid war and chaos in regions of the Middle East and Africa. That influx, which has fuelled Eurosceptic nativism, has if anything complicated the fate of Lennys and other irregular migrants.

    Now she is using a service set up by the Barcelona local administration to help naturalise irregular migrants and bring them in from the margins of society. She is baffled by the anti-immigrant rhetoric of politicians who suggest people like her prefer living in the legal twilight, without access to many services — or official protection.❞

    The fate of Lennys and other irregulars is likely to take an ever more central role in Europe’s deepening disputes on migration. They are a diverse group: many arrived legally, as Lennys did, on holiday, work or family visas that have since expired or become invalid because of changes in personal circumstances. Others came clandestinely and have never had any legal right to stay.

    The most scrutinised, and frequently demonised, cohort consists of asylum seekers whose claims have failed. Their numbers are growing as the cases from the surge in migrant arrivals in the EU in 2015 and 2016 — when more than 2.5m people applied for asylum in the bloc — work their way through the process of decisions and appeals. Almost half of first instance claims failed between 2015 and 2017, but many of those who are rejected cannot be returned to their home countries easily — or even at all.

    The question of what to do about rejected asylum applicants and the rest of Europe’s shadow population is one that many governments avoid. Bouts of hostile rhetoric and unrealistic targets — such as the Italian government’s pledge this year to expel half a million irregular migrants — mask a structural failure to deal with the practicalities.

    Many governments have sought to deny irregular migrants services and expel them — policies that can create their own steep human costs. But authorities in a growing number of cities from Barcelona to Brussels have concluded that the combination of hostile attitudes and bureaucratic neglect is destructive.

    These cities are at the frontline of dealing with irregular status residents from Africa, the Middle East and elsewhere. Local authorities have, to varying degrees, brought these populations into the system by offering them services such as healthcare, language courses and even legal help.

    The argument is part humanitarian but also pragmatic. It could help prevent public health threats, crime, exploitative employment practices — and the kind of ghettoisation that can tear communities apart.

    “If we provide ways for people to find their path in our city . . . afterwards probably they will get regularisation and will get their papers correct,” says Ramon Sanahuja, director of immigration at the city council in Barcelona. “It’s better for everybody.”

    The size of Europe’s shadow population is unknown — but generally reckoned by experts to be significant and growing. The most comprehensive effort to measure it was through an EU funded project called Clandestino, which estimated the number of irregular migrants at between 1.9m and 3.8m in 2008 — a figure notable for both its wide margin of error and the lack of updates to it since, despite the influx after 2015.

    A more contemporaneous, though also imprecise, metric comes from comparing the numbers of people ordered to leave the EU each year with the numbers who actually went. Between 2008 and 2017, more than 5m non-EU citizens were instructed to leave the bloc. About 2m returned to countries outside it, according to official data.

    While the two sets of numbers do not map exactly — people don’t necessarily leave in the same year they are ordered to do so — the figures do suggest several million people may have joined Europe’s shadow population in the past decade or so. The cohort is likely to swell further as a glut of final appeals from asylum cases lodged since 2015 comes through.

    “The volume of people who are in limbo in the EU will only grow, so it’s really problematic,” says Hanne Beirens, associate director at Migration Policy Institute Europe, a think-tank. “While the rhetoric at a national level will be ‘These people cannot stay’, at a local community level these people need to survive.”

    Barcelona: cities seek practical solutions to ease migrant lives

    Barcelona’s pragmatic approach to irregular migration echoes its history as a hub for trade and movement of people across the Mediterranean Sea.

    It is one of 11 cities from 10 European countries involved in a two-year project on the best ways to provide services to irregular status migrants. Other participants in the initiative — set up last year by Oxford university’s Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society — include Athens, Frankfurt, Ghent, Gothenburg, Lisbon, Oslo, Stockholm and Utrecht.

    A report for the group, published last year, highlights the restrictions faced by undocumented migrants in accessing services across the EU. They were able to receive only emergency healthcare in six countries, while in a further 12 they were generally excluded from primary and secondary care services.

    Some cities have made special efforts to offer help in ways that they argue also benefit the community, the report said. Rotterdam asked midwives, doctors, and schools to refer children for vaccinations, in case their parents were afraid to reveal their immigration status.

    The impact of some of these policies has still to be demonstrated. Ramon Sanahuja, director of immigration at the city council in Barcelona, says authorities there had an “intuition” their approach brought benefits, but he admits they need to do a cost-benefit analysis. As to the potential for the scheme to be exploited by anti-immigrant groups, he says Europe needs “brave politicians who explain how the world works and that the system is complicated”.

    “A lot of people in Barcelona are part of the system — they have [for example] a cleaning lady from Honduras who they pay €10 per hour under the counter,” he says. “Someone has to explain this, that everything is related.” Michael Peel

    https://www.ft.com/content/58f2f7f8-c7c1-11e8-ba8f-ee390057b8c9?segmentid=acee4131-99c2-09d3-a635-873e61754
    #naturalisation #villes-refuge #ville-refuge #citoyenneté #sans-papiers #migrerrance #régularisation #statistiques #chiffres #Europe #Etat-nation #limbe #pragmatisme #Barcelone

    cc @isskein

    –----

    Au niveau de la #terminologie (#mots, #vocabulaire), pour @sinehebdo:

    Belgian policy towards irregular migrants and undocumented workers has stiffened under the current government, which includes the hardline Flemish nationalist NVA party. It has prioritised the expulsion of “transmigrants”— the term used for people that have travelled to Europe, often via north Africa and the Mediterranean and that are seeking to move on from Belgium to other countries, notably the UK. Several hundred live rough in and around Brussels’ Gare du Nord.

    –-> #transmigrants

  • Portez vos données, citoyens !
    https://linc.cnil.fr/fr/portez-vos-donnees-citoyens

    Fin août 2018, Helsinki accueillait pour la troisième fois la conférence « My Data », événement central d’une communauté qui se réunit autour de l’idée que l’individu devrait être au cœur des questions de collecte et d’utilisation des données qui le concernent. Cette communauté est agitée par le même espoir que la démarche Mes Infos de la FING (co-organisatrice de MyData et largement initiatrice de ces visions), qui consiste à promouvoir une autre forme d’exploitation des données, à la main des utilisateurs. (...)

    #Microsoft #Google #Facebook #Twitter #terms #données #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #BigData (...)

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

  • Les #États-Unis ont refusé d’admettre de nouveaux vols d’observation du Tu-214 : : Politique : : RBC – Nouvelles Du Monde
    https://www.nouvelles-du-monde.com/les-etats-unis-ont-refuse-dadmettre-de-nouveaux-vols-dobservatio

    Le traité de ciel ouvert a été signé par les représentants de 23 pays membres de l’OSCE en 1992 à Helsinki. Selon le document, les pays signataires peuvent survoler leurs territoires respectifs pour être convaincus du manque de préparation à la guerre et de la violation des accords internationaux.

    Traité Ciel ouvert : les États-Unis certifient le Tu-214 russe - Sputnik France
    https://fr.sputniknews.com/international/201809191038149423-ciel-ouvert-usa-certification-russie

    La semaine dernière, la partie américaine avait refusé de donner son aval aux vols d’observations du nouvel avion russe Tu-214ON dans le cadre du traité Ciel ouvert.

    #Russie

  • Une découverte savoureuse !
    « L’Union n’est plus européenne, mais allemande »
    http://bruxelles.blogs.liberation.fr/2018/09/10/une-allemagne-europeenne-dans-une-europe-allemande

    L’Allemand Manfred Weber, 46 ans, espère succéder au Luxembourgeois Jean-Claude Juncker à la tête de la Commission européenne. Le patron du groupe PPE (parti populaire européen, conservateur) au Parlement européen et vice-président de la CSU bavaroise, l’aile droitière de la CDU, a annoncé, mercredi, qu’il était candidat à la candidature pour devenir tête de liste (Spitzenkandidat, en allemand) de son parti aux élections européennes de mai 2019. S’il l’emporte, lors du congrès du PPE qui aura lieu à Helsinki les 7 et 8 novembre il aura alors toutes ses chances, le Parlement européen ayant imposé en 2014 que la tête de la liste arrivée en tête aux élections soit automatiquement désignée président de l’exécutif européen.

    La candidature à la candidature de Manfred Weber, adoubée par la chancelière Angela Merkel, tout comme les visées germaniques sur la Banque centrale européenne, est symptomatique de l’Europe allemande qui se met impitoyablement en place depuis la crise de la zone euro de 2010. Déjà, le social-chrétien Jean-Claude Juncker, sans être l’homme choisi par Berlin, est extrêmement proche des intérêts allemands, comme il l’était déjà lorsqu’il était ministre des Finances puis Premier ministre du Grand Duché. L’homme qui l’a propulsé à la tête de la Commission et dont il a fait le haut fonctionnaire le plus puissant de l’Union en le nommant secrétaire général de la Commission, Martin Selmayr, est lui-même Allemand. D’ailleurs, il est frappant de constater que trois institutions sur quatre ont des secrétaires généraux allemands : outre la Commission, le Parlement européen (Klaus Welle) et le Service européen d’action extérieure (Helga Schmid). Cela aurait pu être quatre sur quatre si l’Allemand Uwe Corsepius n’avait pas préféré quitter son poste au Conseil des ministres pour retourner à la chancellerie allemande en 2015 après quatre ans passés à Bruxelles… Mieux, le secrétaire général adjoint du Parlement est lui-aussi Allemand, une institution qui a été dirigée pendant cinq ans par un Allemand (Martin Schulz, 2012-2017). Sur huit groupes politiques, quatre, dont les deux plus importants (PPE et PSE), sont présidés par des Allemands. Pour compléter ce tableau, il ne faut pas oublier que les présidents de la Cour des comptes européenne (Klaus-Heiner Lehne), de la Banque européenne d’investissement (Werner Höyer), du Mécanisme européen de stabilité (Klaus Regling), du Conseil de résolution unique des crises bancaires (Elke König) sont Allemands tout comme le commissaire européen chargé du budget, le nerf de la guerre, Gunther Ottinger. Et bien sûr, tous sont membres ou proches de la CDU d’Angela Merkel.

    « Il ne s’agit pas d’une volonté délibérée, mais simplement les Allemands considèrent qu’ils sont les meilleurs Européens et donc qu’ils doivent faire le job pour pallier l’absence des autres capitales », explique Dany Cohn-Bendit, ancien député européen (Grünen). Et il est vrai qu’en dehors de la présidence de la BCE, que vise le gouverneur de la Banque de France, François Villeroy de Galau, les candidats allemands ne rencontrent aucune opposition sérieuse et organisée. « En 1953, Thomas Mann tint à Hambourg un discours devant un parterre d’étudiants qu’il implorait d’aspirer non pas à une « Europe allemande », mais à une « Allemagne européenne », résume l’historien anglais Timothy Garton Ash. « Nous avons cependant aujourd’hui affaire à une variante (…) : une Allemagne européenne dans une Europe allemande ». Question : les peuples européens sont-ils prêts à accepter d’être ainsi dirigés par l’Allemagne ?

    • L’Europe va dans le mur, Juncker appuie sur l’accélérateur !

      Le président de la Commission européenne prononçait aujourd’hui un discours sur l’État de l’Union européenne devant le Parlement européen. Il a annoncé sur plusieurs points son objectif d’aggraver la déconstruction des États et des démocraties.

      Sur les accords commerciaux, Jean-Claude Juncker a invoqué « la nécessité de partager nos souverainetés ». En réalité, la négociation et la signature récente de l’accord avec le Japon (JEFTA) sont le symbole d’un vol de la souveraineté des peuples. Les députés européens n’ont pas été associés, les Parlements nationaux ne seront même pas consultés. Le véritable visage de la « souveraineté européenne » de Macron, reprise par Juncker apparaît ici en pleine lumière. C’est le retour de la « souveraineté limitée » de Léonid Brejnev.

      En matière d’immigration, sa principale proposition pour l’Afrique est un « accord de libre-échange de continent à continent » ! Cela revient à appauvrir toujours plus les pays africains et aggraver les causes qui poussent des centaines de milliers de gens à l’exil.
      jlm

      http://dictionnaire.sensagent.leparisien.fr/Doctrine%20Brejnev/fr-fr

      #Europe_contre_les_peuples #Juncker #Macron

  • Ethereal underworld: exploring Helsinki’s colossal new art bunker | Art and design | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/27/helsinki-amos-rex-art-museum

    In a vast expanse beneath the Finnish capital lies a soaring circus-top culture hub. Will the €50m Amos Rex art museum put the city at the forefront of Europe’s art scene?
    Oliver Wainwright

    Oliver Wainwright in Helsinki

    Mon 27 Aug 2018 08.00 BST

    Bulging white mounds rear up out of the ground in the middle of Helsinki, tapering to circular windows that point like cyclopean eyes around the square. Children scramble up the steep slopes while a skateboarder attempts to glide down one, past a couple posing for a selfie at the summit.

    This curious landscape of humps and funnels signals the arrival of Amos Rex, a €50m (£45m) art museum for the Finnish capital, which opens this week in a vast subterranean space that was once a bus station parking lot.

    “It is as if the museum didn’t quite agree to go underground,” says Asmo Jaaksi of local architecture firm JKMM, which masterminded the project, “and it’s somehow bubbling up into the square.”

    #art #musées #helsinki #finlande

  • JEAN MICHEL ROUX « L’ANGE DU NORD » (Pohjolan Enkeli)
    https://laspirale.org/video-578-jean-michel-roux- l-ange-du-nord-pohjolan-enkeli.html

    JEAN MICHEL ROUX « L’ANGE DU NORD » (Pohjolan Enkeli)Au cœur d’Helsinki, sur la place de la Gare Centrale, siège l’élégant bâtiment du musée d’art Ateneum. Ouverte à la lumière si fantastique ou si absente des pays du grand nord, sa plus belle salle, véritable écrin de verre, renferme les trésors de la peinture classique finlandaise. Parmi eux, L’Ange Blessé, tableau symboliste qu’Hugo Simberg peignit en hôpital psychiatrique, en 1903.

    Il représente deux enfants portant sur un brancard un ange aux yeux bandés, l’aile gauche tâchée de sang. L’auteur s’était toujours refusé à l’expliquer et à vrai dire, même à le nommer puisqu’à son dos, en lieu et place de titre, ne figure qu’une rature.

    Toujours est-il que cette peinture, connue de tous les finlandais, est à présent omniprésente dans la culture populaire du pays, (...)

    #laspirale

  • Les archéologues ont trouvé des traces de la colonisation de l’âge de pierre submergées dans le sud-est de la Finlande

    Le peuplement préhistorique submergé sous le lac Kuolimojärvi nous offre une image plus claire de l’occupation humaine en Carélie du Sud au cours de l’âge de pierre mésolithique et néolithique précoce (environ 10 000 à 6 000 ans) et ouvre une nouvelle voie de recherche en archéologie finlandaise.

    Au début de l’âge de pierre, les niveaux d’eau des petits lacs situés dans les parties méridionales du lac Kuolimojärvi et de Saimaa se situaient à plusieurs mètres sous les niveaux actuels. Après cette période, les niveaux d’eau ont commencé à augmenter en raison du soulèvement inégal des terres et un basculement des lacs et des rivières. L’augmentation des niveaux d’eau s’est terminée avec le débordement violent du fleuve Vuoksi à travers la crête de Salpausselkä, il y a environ 6 000 ans, lorsque les masses d’eau ont creusé un nouveau canal d’écoulement vers le sud-est vers le lac Ladoga.

    Avec la montée des niveaux d’eau, les zones situées sur la terre ferme au début de l’âge de la pierre ont été enterrées dans le fond du lac et ses dépôts littoraux.

    Les trois années d’étude menée par l’Université d’Helsinki avait pour but de trouver des traces de peuplements de l’âge de la pierre au début de l’âge sous les eaux et des zones humides des lacs Kuolimojärvi et Saimaa.

    « Cela signifie qu’il y a une énorme lacune dans nos connaissances archéologiques sur ce domaine particulier parce que nous n’avons pas encore trouvé les premiers sites de l’âge de pierre », explique Satu Koivisto, chercheur postdoctoral qui dirige le projet.

    Jusqu’à présent, les sites les plus anciens ont été occupés après la percée de la rivière Vuoksi (il y a 6000 ans et plus). Cependant, il y a des milliers d’années de peuplement dans cette région, comme le montrent les traces de plus de 10 000 ans découverts à Kuurmanpohja à Joutseno, plus au sud.

    #Satu_Koiv­isto #Université d’Helsinki #Mésolithique #Néolitique #Habitat_lacustre #10000BP

    https://www.helsinki.fi/en/news/language-culture/archaeologists-found-traces-of-submerged-stone-age-settlement-in-southeast-

  • Retraite dans la mauvaise poésie
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/retraite-dans-la-mauvaise-poesie

    Retraite dans la mauvaise poésie

    Cela fait plus de deux semaines que Poutine a parlé à Trump à Helsinki, et le brouhaha autour de cette réunion s’est un peu calmé, ce qui a permis de rassembler quelques réflexions sur ce qui s’y était dit. Évidemment, il y avait beaucoup à discuter pour ces deux chefs d’État, simplement pour éviter que la situation internationale ne devienne incontrôlable, et peut-être l’ont-ils fait. Et, de toute évidence, la seule chose que ces deux pays n’auraient pas pu faire est d’empêcher la situation politique aux États-Unis de devenir incontrôlable.

    Peut-être plus important encore, ils ont décidé de relancer le processus visant à remettre sur les rails les pourparlers sur la limitation des armements stratégiques. En réponse à l’abandon par les États-Unis du Traité antimissile (...)

  • Israël très content d’avoir Assad comme voisin
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/israel-tres-content-davoir-assad-comme-voisin

    Israël très content d’avoir Assad comme voisin

    Le ministre de la défense israélien Avigdor Lieberman a acté on dirait “officiellement” l’accord officieux établi par les Russes entre leurs partenaires syriens et iraniens d’une part, et Israël d’autre part, d’une sorte de modus vivendi après les dernières victoires en date de l’armée syrienne. Il semble que cet accord “officiel-officieux” ait été confirmé lors de la rencontre Poutine-Trump d’Helsinki.

    L’accord devrait impliquer, – c’était le revendication sine qua non des Israéliens, – le non-engagement et le non-stationnement de forces iraniennes et du Hezbollah sur un territoire donné en Syrie (les précisions géographiques ne sont pas divulguées officiellement et l’on en reste aux supputations). On notera que les déclarations du ministre israélien vont plus loin (...)

  • Russia. Winning in Syria and the Middle East - By David W. Lesch and Kamal Alam - Syria Comment

    https://www.joshualandis.com/blog/25520-2

    Winning in Syria and the Middle East
    By David W. Lesch and Kamal Alam
    For Syria Comment – July 16, 2018

    The common perception today is that Russia has won in Syria, having supported the government of Bashar al-Assad, which is now steadily reasserting its control over previously lost territory. As a result, Russia has inserted itself as the power broker in Syria, if not the entire Middle East. The summit between Presidents Trump and Putin on Monday in Helsinki, where the subject of Syria was high on the agenda, seems to have consecrated Russia’s victory. Countries tend to gravitate toward winners, not losers.

    Kamal Alam

    The United States, on the other hand, directly and indirectly intervened in multiple conflicts in the Middle East since 9/11, first in Afghanistan, then Iraq, followed by involvement in a series of upheavals brought on by the Arab Spring: Libya and Syria most notably. No one would say the US has won in any of these cases—far from it.

    On the surface, this is difficult to comprehend. After all, the US has by far the most powerful military on earth. The image of Russia’s only aircraft carrier limping toward, breaking down, and being towed in the eastern Mediterranean in support of Assad’s forces was a stark reminder of this reality. So how did Russia win—and why did the US fail over and over again?

    There is one outstanding difference in the Russian versus American military interventions in internal national conflicts in the Middle East: in Syria, the Kremlin supported the entrenched state. In Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria, the US supported opposition forces seeking the overthrow of the entrenched state.

    For the sake of argument, let’s say the US and NATO reversed their policy and actually wanted Libyan President Muammar Gadafi to remain in power against the opposition forces unleashed by the Arab spring. Is there any doubt that with US military support he would still be in power today? Perhaps he too would be mopping up pockets of resistance much as Assad is doing today in Syria. However illogical or immoral it may have seemed at the time to most in the West, let’s say Washington wanted Assad to stay in power seven years ago when the Arab spring hit Syria. Would not the US be the one crowning its success there, not Russia? Ironically, the US supported the Iraqi state against ISIS—and won. But the US is not going to get much credit for solving a problem it largely created when it dissolved the state via the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and its chaotic aftermath.

  • L’amnésie massive de leur simulacre
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/lamnesie-massive-de-leur-simulacre

    L’amnésie massive de leur simulacre

    Le déferlement de condamnations de Trump pour le sommet d’Helsinki, de la part essentiellement de la presseSystème US, dans un mouvement collectif et extrême au-delà de l’extrême, instantané, sans aucune connaissance ni évaluation des faits, ni enquête, ni consultation, constitue un événement impressionnant qui relève directement de la métahistoire et d’une influence hors de toute capacité humaine s’exerçant sur les personnes impliquées (les choses qu’on nomme journalistes et presseSystème). Nous sommes en présence d’une attitude collective d’automaticité qui ne peut s’expliquer par la seule logique ni par des consignes élaborées ; l’élan est collectif et comme inspiré du dehors du monde habituel.

    Dès le jour même du sommet, le 16 juillet, peut-être avant le terme du (...)

  • State Department Silent on #MH17 Anniversary Following Trump-Putin Firestorm – Foreign Policy
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/07/18/state-dept-mh17-ukraine-russia-netherlands-malaysian-airlines

    Every year since a Russian missile downed Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine on July 17, 2014, killing all 298 passengers and crew, the U.S. State Department has issued a statement to mark the anniversary.

    But on the anniversary this year—a day after U.S. President Donald Trump met in Helsinki with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin—the State Department was conspicuously silent about it.

    Officials there prepared a draft statement that was sharply critical of Russia for its alleged role in the attack. But for reasons the State Department has not explained, it was never issued.

    Based on a cached version of the U.S. embassy’s website in Moscow, it appeared on the homepage briefly on Tuesday but then was quickly taken down. One U.S. official confirmed this account to Foreign Policy.
    Four years after the downing of MH17, the world still awaits Russia’s acknowledgement of its role,” read the draft, a copy of which was obtained byForeign Policy.

    It is time for Russia to cease its callous disinformation campaign and fully support the next investigative phase … and the criminal prosecution of those responsible for the downing of flight MH17.