city:mumbai

  • Israël est comme « cul et chemise » avec le régime ultra-nationaliste hindou
    Robert Fisk - 28 février 2019 – The Independent – Traduction : Chronique de Palestine – Lotfallah
    http://www.chroniquepalestine.com/israel-est-comme-cul-et-chemise-avec-le-regime-ultra-nationalist

    (...) Pendant des mois, Israël s’est aligné assidûment aux côtés du gouvernement nationaliste indien du Bharatiya Janata Party [BJP – Parti du Peuple Indien] dans une coalition inavouée – et politiquement dangereuse – de « lutte anti-islamiste », une alliance non officielle, tandis que l’Inde est devenue le plus grand marché pour le commerce d’armement israélien.

    Ce n’est donc pas un hasard si la presse indienne vient de déclarer que les « bombes intelligentes » Rafael Spice-2000 de fabrication israélienne ont été utilisées par les forces aériennes indiennes pour attaquer les « terroristes » de l’organisation Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) au Pakistan.

    Comme dans le cas de nombreuses vantardises israéliennes sur des cibles similaires, l’aventure indienne au Pakistan tient peut-être plus de l’imagination que d’un succès militaire. Les « 300 à 400 terroristes » supposés avoir été éliminées par les bombes à guidage GPS fabriquées et fournies par les Israéliens pourraient ne s’avérer être guère plus que des rochers et des arbres.

    Mais il n’y avait rien d’irréel dans l’embuscade sauvage des troupes indiennes au Cachemire le 14 février, qui a été revendiquée par le JeM et qui a coûté la vie à 40 soldats indiens. Ni la destruction d’au moins un jet indien cette semaine.

    L’Inde était le plus gros client d’armes d’Israël en 2017 et ce pays a versé 530 millions de livres sterling pour la défense aérienne, les systèmes radar et les munitions de fabrication israélienne, y compris des missiles air-sol testés pour la plupart lors des offensives militaires israéliennes contre des Palestiniens et des cibles en Syrie.

    Israël lui-même tente d’expliquer ses ventes ininterrompues de chars, d’armes et de bateaux à la dictature militaire du Myanmar – tandis que les pays occidentaux imposent des sanctions au gouvernement qui a tenté de détruire sa minorité et le peuple majoritairement musulman Rohingya. Mais le commerce des armes entre l’Israël et l’Inde est légal, au-dessus des frontières et très prisé des deux côtés.

    Les Israéliens ont filmé des exercices conjoints entre leurs propres unités de « commando spécial » et celles envoyées par l’Inde pour être entraînées dans le désert du Néguev, toutes les compétences prétendument acquises par Israël à Gaza et sur d’autres champs de bataille remplis de civils.

    Au moins 16 commandos indiens « Garud » – appartenant à une délégation militaire indienne de 45 personnes – étaient basés pendant un certain temps sur les bases aériennes de Nevatim et de Palmachim en Israël. Lors de sa première visite en Inde l’année dernière, précédée d’une visite en Israël du Premier ministre nationaliste indien Narendra Modi, le Premier ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu a rappelé les attentats islamistes de 2008 à Mumbai au cours desquels près de 170 civils ont été tués. « Les Indiens et les Israéliens connaissent trop bien la douleur des attaques terroristes », a-t-il déclaré à Modi. « Nous nous souvenons de l’horrible sauvagerie de Mumbai. Nous serrons les dents, nous nous défendons, nous ne cédons jamais. » C’était aussi les déclarations du BJP. (...)

    #IsraelInde
    traduction de cet article : https://seenthis.net/messages/763950

  • Richard Branson’s Virgin #Hyperloop partners with backer #DP_World to launch logistics startup | TechCrunch
    https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/29/richard-bransons-virgin-hyperloop-partners-with-backer-dp-world-to-launc

    Virgin Hyperloop One and DP World are launching a new joint venture, #DP_World_Cargospeed, two years after the high-speed transportation technology developer tapped the UAE-based shipping company in a $50 million financing.

    The company’s stated goal is to deliver palletized cargo more efficiently by combining super high-speed promise of hyperloop transportation with new logistics technologies to accelerate deliveries along Virgin Hyperloop One’s planned routes between Mumbai and Pune in India; in Saudi Arabia, and in the United Arab Emirates.

    Announced with much fanfare and in the presence of Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem and Virgin Hyperloop chairman Richard Branson, the new company is basically built on buzzwords like “on-demand” and the promise of future performance.

    Right now there’re only 10 kilometers of Virgin Hyperloop track being built (and they’re all in India).

    Although there’s not much more than a bunch of pontificating palaver around hyperloop technologies now, the startup companies and their corporate backers do present an compelling vision of the future of transportation.

    Introducing DP World Cargospeed
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQIihCOrvZY

  • GfK releases new digital maps for Asia

    http://gisuser.com/2018/03/gfk-releases-new-digital-maps-for-asia

    GfK has released a new, completely overhauled digital map edition for all of Asia. The edition features coverage of 49 countries, ranging from the three BRICS nations Russia, India and China to smaller countries such as Bhutan. In addition to more granular coastlines, the digital maps depict the latest status of administrative and postal regions. Detailed, up-to-date digital maps are a prerequisite for accurate location-based market analyses.

    Apparemment une importante sorce d’information sur les nouvells limits administratives dans ds pays « sensils »

    China

    Administrative: There have been adjustments to all administrative levels. The new map edition includes the latest boundaries for China’s 33 provinces, 343 prefectures and 2,879 counties.
    Postal: Six-digit postcodes are available for China’s 50 largest metropolitan regions. This corresponds to 6,215 six-digit postcodes in the new map edition. The edition also includes comprehensive coverage of the country’s two-, three- and four-digit postcodes.
    Topographic: The newly digitized maps feature substantially more detail in cities and along coastlines. Boundaries match the street/house level in cities for which six-digit postcode boundaries are available.

    India

    Administrative: For the first time, the India edition includes a map of the country’s subdistricts, which encompass 6,027 regions. In terms of the nation’s superordinate districts, 42 have been dissolved, 87 newly created and 51 newly named. All 707 regions received new IDs. At the federal state and union territory level, one state was divided, making 36 regions in total.
    Postal: There have been only minor changes at the level of India’s more than 19,000 six-digit postcodes (PIN Codes). Exceptions are the states of Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai, which have been completely overhauled.
    Topographic: Most changes in this category affect the various city map layers. In terms of India’s cities with more than 5 million inhabitants, six new ones have been added since 2014. As a result, there are now eight cities in this population bracket. Among cities with between one and five million inhabitants, eight have been added, making 38 in total. There have also been many changes to the smaller cities, reflecting India’s dynamic structural development with its more than 1.3 billion inhabitants.

    #asie #cartographie #inde #chine #Indonésie

  • They were sold a fantasy of middle-class life. Now Ola and Uber drivers face a brutal reality
    https://qz.com/1230993/the-reality-of-driving-for-ola-and-uber-in-india-debt-slashed-pay-multiple-jobs

    Tanveer Pasha, a 33-year-old taxi driver in Bengaluru, is in a dilemma. As president of the OTU (Ola, Taxiforsure, and Uber) Drivers and Owners Association, he’s keen on joining his colleagues in Mumbai and New Delhi in their March 19 strike against mobile app-based cab aggregators over dwindling earnings. Yet, he just can’t afford to. “Every Rs100 is important to drivers today and we need to earn it by driving,” Pasha told Quartz. “Today, we are not able to meet our needs from Ola and Uber.” (...)

    #Uber #travail #Ola #Taxiforsure

  • Women farmers join ’long march’ to Mumbai to demand land, forest rights | PLACE
    http://www.thisisplace.org/i/?id=7ee778e9-0a57-4fb7-8ca6-9ff7cb1dd694&cid=social_20180316_75836317&a

    Thousands of women farmers marched into Mumbai alongside their male peers on Monday demanding the government recognises their rights over forests and stops the takeover of land for industrial projects.

    The protesters, who over several days walked 180 kilometres (112 miles) from the town of Nashik, northeast of Mumbai, also demanded waivers of farm loans, and higher prices for cereals and vegetables.

    Among the more than 30,000 protesters, many wearing red caps and waving communist party flags, were groups of women farmers. Many till land they do not own, often because their husbands have migrated to the cities for jobs or committed suicide.

    #Inde #agriculture #protestation #droit_foncier #foncier_rural #terres

  • Indian Farmers March Against Govt’s Neoliberal Policies | News | teleSUR English
    https://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/India-Tens-of-Thousands-of-Farmers-March-Against-Govts-Neoliberal-Policie

    Nearly 35,000 farmers in India continued Sunday their 180-km long march in the southwestern state of Maharashtra demanding agrarian reform from the government of right-wing Bhartiya Janta Party, BJP.

    The farmers’ march is part of an ongoing series of the ’long march’ which began from the southwestern city of Nashik to Mumbai on Mar. 6, and after walking for nearly 140 hours, tens of thousands of peasants reached Mumbai late Sunday night.

    The farmers are uniting and calling upon the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to implement pro-peasant reforms. Some of the important demands laid out by the farmers in the ongoing march include debt waivers, better pay, and implementation of the Swaminathan Committee Report.

    Swaminathan Commission report is a 2004 National Commission on Farmers which was formed to address the farmers’ suicides. In recent years, due to lack of government accountability and agrarian reforms, thousands of low-income farmers have taken their lives to escape the debt.

    #Inde #agriculture #manifestation #dette #suicide

  • World’s Most Expensive House Built – PropGoLuxury - Property News
    http://www.propgoluxury.com/en/propertynews/india/1296-world-most-expensive-house-built.html

    Une maison à 1 milliard usd. En #Inde...

    India’s richest man, and Forbes’s fourth richest man, Mukesh Ambani, has built the world’s most expensive house in Mumbai. It is estimated to be worth $1 billion.

    #on_en_est_là

  • Absolute hell: the toxic outpost where Mumbai’s poorest are ’sent to die’ | Cities | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/feb/26/mumbai-poor-mahul-gentrification-polluted

    Absolute hell: the toxic outpost where Mumbai’s poorest are ’sent to die’

    More than 30,000 slum residents have been forced to the ‘critically polluted’ area of Mahul as the city clears land around a water pipeline and plans a bike lane to stop residents moving back

    by Puja Changoiwala in Mumbai

    #inde #pollution #mumbai

  • Exclusive: #Walmart in talks to buy more than 40 percent of India’s Flipkart - sources
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-flipkart-walmart/exclusive-walmart-in-talks-to-buy-more-than-40-percent-of-indias-flipkart-s
    https://s4.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20180216&t=2&i=1232029344&w=1200&r=LYNXNPEE1F0FY

    MUMBAI (Reuters) - Walmart Inc is in talks to purchase a stake of more than 40 percent in Indian e-commerce firm Flipkart, a direct challenge to Amazon.com Inc in Asia’s third-largest economy, two sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

    #commerce #multinationales #toujours_plus_gros

  • Colonialism can work – just look at Singapore | Jeevan Vasagar | Opinion | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jan/04/colonialism-work-singapore-postcolonial-british-empire

    Bombay is Mumbai, Léopoldville is Kinshasa, Cecil Rhodes has been hoisted from his plinth by a crane; but when I moved to Singapore a few years ago it quickly became clear that much of its colonial legacy had been left intact.
    The history of empire isn’t about pride – or guilt
    James McDougall
    Read more

    There is a gleaming white statue of Thomas Stamford Raffles, founder of modern Singapore, at the riverside spot where he is said to have landed. Unusually for a colonial figure, it was put up in 1969, four years after Singapore became an independent republic.

    The country’s founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew once said the statue reminds his people of Raffles’ vision of Singapore becoming “the emporium of the east”, adding that Singapore was different from most of its south-east Asian neighbours because it had “no xenophobic hangover” from colonialism.

    #colonialisme

  • A bold plan to house 100 million people

    #Mumbai, #Delhi, #Chennai, #Kolkata — all the major cities across India have one great thing in common: they welcome people arriving in search of work. But what lies at the other end of such openness and acceptance? Sadly, a shortage of housing for an estimated 100 million people, many of whom end up living in informal settlements. Gautam Bhan, a human settlement expert and researcher, is boldly reimagining a solution to this problem. He shares a new vision of urban India where everyone has a safe, sturdy home. (In Hindi with English subtitles)

    https://www.ted.com/talks/gautam_bhan_a_bold_plan_to_house_100_million_people

    #Inde #villes #urban_matter #bidonvilles #logement #hébergement

  • The environment is in crisis. We’re launching a new Livable Planet desk to cover it. | Public Radio International
    https://www.pri.org/stories/2017-11-14/environment-crisis-were-launching-new-livable-planet-desk-cover-it

    Our country has become much more polarized in recent years, and the word “environment” has itself become one of the fault lines, increasingly more of an ideological indicator than a broadly shared value. The word has also diminished over time — what was once a powerful new way of understanding how humans are damaging our world and ourselves has, for many, become a box that holds marginal concerns that aren’t part of our daily lives.

    Livable Planet is a new frame for reporting on these evermore important challenges. It’s about people as part of the natural world instead of apart from it. It’s about finding ways for human communities and enterprise to coexist alongside the healthy natural systems that support us. It’s about what we can agree on and aspire to, rather than just what we fight over. It’s about what we need to have a future.

    https://www.pri.org/verticals/livable-planet
    Le crédit de la magnifique photo:
    A young girl gets drenched in a large wave during high tide at a sea front in Mumbai, India, May 24, 2016.
    Credit: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

  • Inondations : « Ce qui arrive était exactement prévu »
    http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2017/09/01/climat-ce-qui-arrive-etait-exactement-prevu_5179536_3244.html

    Le secrétaire général du PNUE se focalise sur le changement climatique, que je ne nie pas. Mais comment peut-on ne pas parler, à Houston comme à Mumbai ou ailleurs, de l’étalement urbain qui aggrave considérablement les impacts par l’augmentation de l’imperméabilisation du sol, la multiplication des obstacles aux écoulements, etc.?

    Ce qui arrive aujourd’hui était exactement prévu et correspond aux projections du Groupe d’experts intergouvernemental sur l’évolution du climat (GIEC) : alors que les températures augmentent, nous devons nous attendre à des événements climatiques extrêmes plus fréquents, accompagnés d’excès ou de manque d’eau. On ne l’observe pas seulement à Houston ou à Bombay, mais dans une large partie de l’Inde, du Népal, du Bangladesh, du Niger ou du Yémen, qui font face à de graves inondations, ou en Somalie, victime de sécheresses de plus en plus fréquentes.

    LM : La communauté internationale a peu réagi aux drames subis par les régions du Sud, comme si la situation indienne était moins dramatique que l’ouragan Harvey…

    Il faut certainement être plus attentif à ce qui se passe sur l’ensemble de la planète. Le dérèglement du climat est un problème global, nous devons être capables d’appréhender l’étendue de la situation. Il ne s’agit pas de faits isolés : pourquoi cela arrive-t-il et que pouvons-nous faire ? Nous devons aussi nous poser cette question-clé : s’agit-il de désastres naturels ou causés par l’homme ? Le consensus scientifique nous dit que le changement climatique n’est peut-être pas directement responsable de ces événements extrêmes, mais qu’il les aggrave et les multiplie.

    Peut-on hiérarchiser ces événements en fonction de critères tels que le nombre de victimes, le coût économique, l’impact environnemental ?

    Tous ces points sont importants. Nous devons évidemment prendre en compte leurs impacts humains, estimer la charge financière et la perte des moyens de subsistance, évaluer les conséquences sur l’environnement et sur notre cadre de vie. Mais il faut regarder aussi quels sont ceux qui payent le plus lourd tribut. Ce sont les catégories les plus vulnérables de nos sociétés, partout dans le monde, qui sont les plus touchées : les pauvres, les femmes, les personnes en situation de handicap.

    Les réponses du PNUE sont-elles identiques dans des situations aussi différentes que Houston ou Bombay ?

    Il n’y a pas de potion magique, de solution unique pour combattre le changement climatique, mais tout un éventail d’actions à mettre en œuvre, comme travailler avec les villes sur l’efficacité énergétique et la réduction de la pollution, stopper la déforestation, préserver la biodiversité, endiguer la dégradation de nos océans. Nous travaillons avec les marchés financiers et le secteur privé pour créer de l’investissement et de l’innovation et, bien sûr, avec les gouvernements pour garantir de bonnes politiques environnementales.

    #inondations #Houston #Mumbai #changement_climatique #environnement #sprawl

    • Un autre super intéressant sur le sujet :
      https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/08/why-cities-flood/538251
      Outre l’argument général sur l’imperméabilisation développé ci dessus, l’article cite un expert qui préconise d’organiser des écoulements plus lents, très localisés...

      One problem is that people care about flooding, because it’s dramatic and catastrophic. They don’t care about stormwater management, which is where the real issue lies. Even if it takes weeks or months, after Harvey subsides, public interest will decay too. Debo notes that traffic policy is an easier urban planning problem for ordinary folk, because it happens every day.

      So does stormwater—it just isn’t treated that way. Instead of looking for holistic answers, site-specific ones must be pursued instead. Rather than putting a straight channel through a subdivision, for example, Debo suggests designing one to meander through it, to decrease the velocity of the water as it exits.

  • In their rush to become “global”, cities risk creating spatial apartheid, by Melissa Tandiwe Myambo
    http://theconversation.com/in-their-rush-to-become-global-cities-risk-creating-spatial-aparthe

    Maboneng represents one strand of the type of urban “development” that’s advocated for by the proponents of “global cities”. The problem with this type of development is that it often leads to cities becoming more spatially unequal as urban regeneration or gentrification displaces people.

    The city’s core areas are occupied by the wealthy. Low-income residents are pushed to the urban peripheries in search of affordable housing. This trend is intensifying around the world: in New York, London, Sydney, Los Angeles and Vancouver as well as in globalising or emerging cities like Johannesburg, Accra, Beijing, Cape Town, Jakarta, Mumbai and Shanghai.

    We have seen this model before. It was called the apartheid city.

    #urban_matter #gentrification #afrique_du_sud #global_cities #apartheid

  • Les habitants de Mumbai transforment leur plage grâce à une gigantesque opération de nettoyage bénévole · Global Voices en Français
    https://fr.globalvoices.org/2017/07/01/212316

    En octobre 2015, Shah a emménagé dans son nouvel appartement près de la plage de Versova et a remarqué les déchets de plastique sur la plage, dont certains tas atteignaient plus de 1,6 m de hauteur. Il a commencé à nettoyer la plage avec son voisin de 84 ans, Harbansh Mathur. Constatant leurs efforts, des douzaines d’habitants volontaires se sont joints à eux et environ 50 tonnes de déchets furent enlevés pendant la première opération de nettoyage des 2,5 km de plage.

  • Revue Projet » Voyage dans le ventre de Mumbai
    http://www.revue-projet.com/articles/2017-02_claudio_marradi_voyage-dans-le-ventre-de-mumbai

    Et s’il existait, même pour les objets d’usage quotidien, un lieu où expier les péchés ? Flacons de plastique et bidons, montres et colliers, portables et machines à laver, réfrigérateurs, postes de télévision et ordinateurs. L’enfer des marchandises ! Si un endroit de ce genre existait réellement, il se trouverait en plein cœur de Bombay. Ou plutôt de Mumbai, comme a été rebaptisée en 1995, sur un mode nationaliste, la capitale économique de l’Inde. Là, sous une autoroute aérienne qui la traverse de part en part, s’ouvre l’étendue grise de toits de tôle ondulée du bidonville de Dharavi, le plus grand d’Asie. Peut-être le lieu qui connaît la plus haute densité de population du monde : sur 220 hectares s’entassent autour d’un million de pauvres diables. La majorité d’entre eux se consacre, avec des moyens totalement artisanaux, au recyclage des déchets de tout genre et de toute nature, générant un Pib annuel estimé à 650 millions de dollars. Ils offrent ainsi, à leur manière, une solution à un problème qui, selon la Banque mondiale, coûte environ 205 milliards de dollars par an – une estimation qui, en l’espace d’une quinzaine d’années, pourrait carrément être doublée. En même temps, se trouvent réunies là, cas unique au monde, les contradictions de la consommation de masse et celles d’un développement urbain anarchique.

    #ville #ghetto #inégalités #exclusion

  • India becomes “frontline” state in US war plans against China - World Socialist Web Site
    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/03/07/inus-m07.html

    India becomes “frontline” state in US war plans against China
    7 March 2017

    India is to become a major service and repair hub for the US Seventh Fleet—the armada that is at the center of US war preparations against China.

    Last month the Pentagon awarded a contract, said to be worth up to $1.5 billion over the next five years, to a shipyard in Gujarat to maintain the Seventh Fleet’s warships, patrol and service vessels.

    This is a strategic move aimed at giving flesh and blood to last August’s agreement opening India’s military bases and ports to routine use by the US military for the resupply and repair of its warplanes and warships.

    #inde #chine #Tats-unis #thalassocratie #géopolitique #géostratégie

    • Ils ont intérêt à vérifier plutôt deux fois qu’une le boulot effectué dans les chantiers navals !

      La frégate a chaviré lors de la remise à flot du dock.

      Indian Navy frigate INS Betwa capsized in dock, two missing
      https://www.fleetmon.com/maritime-news/2016/16247/indian-navy-frigate-ins-betwa-capsized-dock-two-mi

      On Dec 5 Indian Navy frigate INS Betwa slipped off blocks in a dry dock, while leaving dock, and capsized. 14 crew injured, 2 missing, one of them believed to remain trapped inside. The ship was undergoing refit at the Naval Dockyard in Mumbai. On a photo from dnaindia.com capsized frigate.
      INS Betwa (F39) is a Brahmaputra-class guided missile frigate of Indian Navy, displacement 3850 tons, armament missiles, guns, torpedoes, crew 440-450, commissioned in 2004.

      Elle vient tout juste d’être redressée.

      Indian Naval Ship Righted After Dock Accident
      http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/indian-naval-ship-righted-after-dock-accident

      Resolve was contracted to conduct an immediate dive survey, then to stabilize, block and support the vessel to allow the drydock to be fully dewatered. Working alongside the Indian Navy, crews inspected all compartments of the vessel, then proceeded to patch and repair all damages, and secure all openings.

      With a sophisticated engineering plan in place, salvage teams were able to complete extensive repairs to the internal tanks as well as the side shell of the vessel. By systematically flooding and pumping compartments, the vessel was rolled upright and done so without the use of any external lifting force.

      The entire salvage operation was concluded in less than two months and required complex hydrodynamic calculations and the use of intricate measuring and monitoring systems.

      The news of the vessel’s righting comes as a board of inquiry constituted to investigate how the INS Betwa toppled found that human error had led to the accident. The incident is reported to have occurred due to a miscalculation of the load distribution equilibrium.

      INS Betwa is expected to be operational by April 2018.

  • Large-scale changes in land use land cover weakening Indian monsoon: IIT study - MUMBAI - The Hindu
    http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-mumbai/largescale-changes-in-land-use-land-cover-weakening-indian-monsoon-iit-study/article9028996.ece?CID=ENV_TT_forestideas_EN_EXT

    Large-scale changes of land use land cover (LULC) from forest land to crop land and the loss of green cover in north-east and north-central India has caused the weakening of the monsoon, a new study carried out by the Interdisciplinary Program in Climate Studies (IPCS) at the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, has revealed.

    Led by Professor Subimal Ghosh and Supantha Paul of IPCS, the study looks at changes and variability of Indian monsoon and its association with local factors such as recent changes of land use land cover. The study has been published in Scientific Reports by Nature Publishing Group.

    #couverture_végétale #forêt #climat #Inde #mousson

  • Encore des analyses intéressantes sur le Brexit :

    Celle ci d’une professeure indienne :

    Right, Left and Right : From Great Britain to Little England, via Brexit
    Radha D’Souza, The Economic and Political Weekly (Mumbai), le 18 juin 2016
    http://www.epw.in/journal/2016/25/web-exclusives/right-left-and-right-brexit-and-rise-little-england.html

    Celle ci de Solidaires :

    BREXIT : So what ?
    Commission Economique de Solidaires, le 29 juin 2016
    https://solidaires.org/BREXIT-So-what

    #brexit

  • L’« infobésité » des services secrets britanniques
    http://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2016/06/08/l-infobesite-des-services-secrets-britanniques_4942305_4408996.html

    L’accumulation massive de données personnelles renforce-t-elle la sécurité des Etats ? Le site The Intercept s’est procuré une présentation confidentielle qui met en lumière l’inflation des données collectées par l’un des programmes secrets du GCHQ, les services secrets britanniques. « Contrairement à [l’attentat de] Mumbai, la majeure partie des données utiles lors du G20 de Londres ont été recueillies par les moyens classiques », se félicite la présentation. Mais elle révèle aussi une ombre – de taille – au tableau : seule une infime partie (3 %) des informations collectées a été réellement « vue » par des agents.
    […]
    Ce document et d’autres, fournis par le lanceur d’alerte Edward Snowden, montrent que les services britanniques souffrent depuis la fin des années 2000 d’« infobésité » : trop de données, trop peu d’agents, et trop de « bruit » numérique qui ne permet pas d’isoler les informations significatives.
    « A l’exception des enquêtes les plus prioritaires, le manque d’effectifs et d’outils fait que les enquêteurs se retrouvent confrontés à des données brutes et non filtrées, note un autre rapport britannique datant de 2010. La plupart du temps, ces informations ne sont pas traitées complètement, en raison du temps nécessaire pour les analyser. »
    […]
    Mais un autre document Snowden, publié lundi 6 juin, montre qu’en 2012, les services de renseignements britanniques estimaient ne pas avoir besoin d’un nouveau cadre légal, notant toutefois que d’autres agences de maintien de l’ordre, dont la police, étaient confrontées à davantage de difficultés.Pour la police, qui ne dispose pas des mêmes capacités que les espions, les surveillances des flux Internet, plus complexes à mettre en place que les surveillances téléphoniques, se traduisaient par un « déclin significatif » des capacités d’écoutes, estimait alors le GCHQ.
    […]
    Ces révélations mettent en difficulté une partie de l’argumentaire utilisé par la ministre de l’intérieur, Theresa May, pour défendre le nouveau projet de loi sur la surveillance électronique. Le texte prévoit toute une batterie de mesures, dont la plus emblématique est l’obligation faite aux fournisseurs d’accès à Internet de tenir à la disposition de la police l’historique Internet de tous leurs abonnés, sur une durée d’un an.

  • Inde : un quart de la population est touché par une grave sécheresse
    http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2016/04/22/inde-un-quart-de-la-population-est-touche-par-une-grave-secheresse_4906970_3

    Après deux années d’une faible mousson, au moins le quart de la population indienne doit faire face à la sécheresse, a reconnu mardi 19 avril un avocat du gouvernement indien devant la Cour suprême. Dans l’est de l’Inde, une centrale thermique à charbon a cessé de fonctionner pendant dix jours par manque d’eau de refroidissement en provenance d’un canal relié au Gange.

    A l’autre extrémité du pays, dans l’Etat du Maharashtra, dont Bombay est la capitale, des trains spéciaux ont été affrétés pour approvisionner en eau plusieurs districts ruraux. Les réservoirs de cette région ne sont remplis qu’à 19 %, contre 32 % à la même date il y a un an. La Haute Cour de justice de Bombay a dû ordonner, mi-avril, aux autorités organisatrices du championnat de cricket d’organiser temporairement leurs matchs au-dehors de l’Etat pour éviter l’arrosage des terrains, qui consomme 6 millions de litres d’eau.

    grr, #paywall (ou la #sécheresse des médias) va trouver ailleurs

    • intéressant

      Le Maharashtra souffre d’un grave problème, bien humain celui-là : les millions d’euros investis pour développer l’irrigation depuis dix ans ont été siphonnés par un réseau sophistiqué de corruption venant du plus haut niveau de l’administration régionale. Et enfin, cet Etat comprend énormément de champs de canne à sucre, une plante qui requiert beaucoup d’eau, une aberration dans une région aussi sèche. Mais les barons du sucre dirigent également l’un des principaux partis politiques locaux. Et ne semblent pas vouloir assécher leur industrie, même si cela met en danger la vie de milliers d’autres paysans.

      http://www.rfi.fr/asie-pacifique/20160411-inde-maharashtra-secheresse-agriculteurs-suicide-corruption

    • Sècheresse des médias français peut-être

      http://indianexpress.com/tag/drought

      –—

      India drought: ’330 million people affected’ - BBC News
      http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-36089377

      India drought: ’330 million people affected’

      20 April 2016
      From the section India

      Image copyright EPA
      Image caption India is heavily dependant on monsoon rains which have been poor for the past two years

      At least 330 million people are affected by drought in India, the government has told the Supreme Court

      Authorities say this number is likely to rise further given that some states with water shortages have not yet submitted status reports.

      The drought is taking place as a heat wave extends across much of India with temperatures crossing 40C for days now.

      An 11-year-old girl died of heatstroke while collecting water from a village pump in the western Maharashtra state.

      –---

      Indian drought ’affecting 330 million people’ after two weak monsoons | World news | The Guardian
      http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/apr/20/india-drought-affecting-330-million-people-weak-monsoons

      Indian drought ’affecting 330 million people’ after two weak monsoons

      Government says quarter of the population suffering, as NGO asks supreme court to order Modi government to do more to help
      People from the drought-affected districts of Maharashtra collect water from a tank in Mumbai.
      People from the drought-affected districts of Maharashtra collect water from a tank in Mumbai. Photograph: Divyakant Solanki/EPA

      Agence France-Presse in Delhi

      Wednesday 20 April 2016 12.07 BST
      Last modified on Wednesday 20 April 2016 12.36 BST

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      About 330 million people are affected by drought in India, the government has said, as the country reels from severe water shortages and desperately poor farmers suffer crop losses.

      A senior government lawyer, PS Narasimha, told the supreme court that a quarter of the country’s population, spread across 10 states, had been hit by drought after two consecutive years of weak monsoons.

      Narasimha said the government had released funds to affected regions where a crippling shortage of rainfall had forced the rationing of drinking water to some communities.

      As summer hits India, reports of families and farmers in remote villages walking long distances to find water after their wells dried up have dominated local media.

      Narasimha gave the figures on Tuesday after an NGO filed a petition asking the top court to order Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to step up relief to the hardest-hit areas.

      High temperatures have hit parts of eastern, central and southern India in recent weeks, with scores of deaths reported from heatstroke.

      Every year hundreds of people, mainly the poor, die at the height of summer in India, but temperatures have risen earlier than normal, increasing concerns about this year’s toll.

      “We had never recorded such high temperatures in these months in more than 100 years,” said PK Mohapatra, the special relief commissioner in Orissa state.

  • Liberal, Harsh Denmark
    Hugh Eakin

    A cartoon published by the Danish newspaper Politiken showing Inger Støjberg, the country’s integration minister, lighting candles on a Christmas tree that has a dead asylum-­seeker as an ornament, December 2015
    Anne-Marie Steen Petersen

    1.
    In country after country across Europe, the Syrian refugee crisis has put intense pressure on the political establishment. In Poland, voters have brought to power a right-wing party whose leader, Jarosław Kaczyński, warns that migrants are bringing “dangerous diseases” and “various types of parasites” to Europe. In France’s regional elections in December, some Socialist candidates withdrew at the last minute to support the conservatives and prevent the far-right National Front from winning. Even Germany, which took in more than a million asylum-seekers in 2015, has been forced to pull back in the face of a growing revolt from Chancellor Angela Merkel’s own party and the recent New Year’s attacks on women in Cologne, allegedly by groups of men of North African origin.
    And then there is Denmark. A small, wealthy Scandinavian democracy of 5.6 million people, it is according to most measures one of the most open and egalitarian countries in the world. It has the highest income equality and one of the lowest poverty rates of any Western nation. Known for its nearly carbon-neutral cities, its free health care and university education for all, its bus drivers who are paid like accountants, its robust defense of gay rights and social freedoms, and its vigorous culture of social and political debate, the country has long been envied as a social-democratic success, a place where the state has an improbably durable record of doing good. Danish leaders also have a history of protecting religious minorities: the country was unique in Nazi-occupied Europe in prosecuting anti-Semitism and rescuing almost its entire Jewish population.
    When it comes to refugees, however, Denmark has long led the continent in its shift to the right—and in its growing domestic consensus that large-scale Muslim immigration is incompatible with European social democracy. To the visitor, the country’s resistance to immigrants from Africa and the Middle East can seem implacable. In last June’s Danish national election—months before the Syrian refugee crisis hit Europe—the debate centered around whether the incumbent, center-left Social Democrats or their challengers, the center-right Liberal Party, were tougher on asylum-seekers. The main victor was the Danish People’s Party, a populist, openly anti-immigration party, which drew 21 percent of the vote, its best performance ever. Its founder, Pia Kjærsgaard, for years known for suggesting that Muslims “are at a lower stage of civilization,” is now speaker of the Danish parliament. With the backing of the Danish People’s Party, the center-right Liberals formed a minority government that has taken one of the hardest lines on refugees of any European nation.
    When I arrived in Copenhagen last August, the new government, under Liberal Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, had just cut social benefits to refugees by 45 percent. There was talk among Danish politicians and in the Danish press of an “invasion” from the Middle East—though the influx at the time was occurring in the Greek islands, more than one thousand miles away. In early September, Denmark began taking out newspaper ads in Lebanon and Jordan warning would-be asylum-seekers not to come. And by November, the Danish government announced that it could no longer accept the modest share of one thousand refugees assigned to Denmark under an EU redistribution agreement, because Italy and Greece had lost control of their borders.
    These developments culminated in late January of this year, when Rasmussen’s minister of integration, Inger Støjberg, a striking, red-headed forty-two-year-old who has come to represent the government’s aggressive anti-refugee policies, succeeded in pushing through parliament an “asylum austerity” law that has gained notoriety across Europe. The new law, which passed with support from the Social Democrats as well as the Danish People’s Party, permits police to strip-search asylum-seekers and confiscate their cash and most valuables above 10,000 Danish kroner ($1,460) to pay for their accommodation; delays the opportunity to apply for family reunification by up to three years; forbids asylum-seekers from residing outside refugee centers, some of which are tent encampments; reduces the cash benefits they can receive; and makes it significantly harder to qualify for permanent residence. One aim, a Liberal MPexplained to me, is simply to “make Denmark less attractive to foreigners.”
    Danish hostility to refugees is particularly startling in Scandinavia, where there is a pronounced tradition of humanitarianism. Over the past decade, the Swedish government has opened its doors to hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and Syrians, despite growing social problems and an increasingly popular far-right party. But one of the things Danish leaders—and many Danes I spoke to—seem to fear most is turning into “another Sweden.” Anna Mee Allerslev, the top integration official for the city of Copenhagen, told me that the Danish capital, a Social Democratic stronghold with a large foreign-born population, has for years refused to take any refugees. (Under pressure from other municipalities, this policy is set to change in 2016.)
    In part, the Danish approach has been driven by the country’s long experience with terrorism and jihadism. Nearly a decade before the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris in January 2015, and the coordinated terrorist attacks in Paris in November, the publication of the so-called Muhammad cartoons by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten had already turned Denmark into a primary target for extremists. Initially driven by a group of Danish imams, outcry against the cartoons gave strength to several small but radical groups among the country’s 260,000 Muslims. These groups have been blamed for the unusually large number of Danes—perhaps as many as three hundred or more—who have gone to fight in Syria, including some who went before the rise ofISIS in 2013. “The Danish system has pretty much been blinking red since 2005,” Magnus Ranstorp, a counterterrorism expert who advises the PET, the Danish security and intelligence service, told me.
    Since the publication of the Muhammad cartoons, the PET and other intelligence forces have disrupted numerous terrorist plots, some of them eerily foreshadowing what happened in Paris last year. In 2009, the Pakistani-American extremist David Headley, together with Laskar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani terrorist organization, devised a meticulous plan to storm the Jyllands-Posten offices in Copenhagen and systematically kill all the journalists that could be found. Headley was arrested in the United States in October 2009, before any part of the plan was carried out; in 2013, he was sentenced by a US district court to thirty-five years in prison for his involvement in the Mumbai attacks of 2008.
    In February of last year, just weeks after the Charlie Hebdo attacks, a young Danish-Palestinian man named Omar Abdel Hamid el-Hussein tried to shoot his way into the Copenhagen meeting of a free-speech group to which a Swedish cartoonist, known for his caricatures of Muhammad, had been invited. El-Hussein succeeded in killing a Danish filmmaker at the meeting before fleeing the scene; then, hours later, he killed a security guard at the city’s main synagogue and was shot dead by police.
    Yet many Danes I talked to are less concerned about terrorism than about the threat they see Muslims posing to their way of life. Though Muslims make up less than 5 percent of the population, there is growing evidence that many of the new arrivals fail to enter the workforce, are slow to learn Danish, and end up in high-crime immigrant neighborhoods where, while relying on extensive state handouts, they and their children are cut off from Danish society. In 2010, the Danish government introduced a “ghetto list” of such marginalized places with the goal of “reintegrating” them; the list now includes more than thirty neighborhoods.
    Popular fears that the refugee crisis could overwhelm the Danish welfare state have sometimes surprised the country’s own leadership. On December 3, in a major defeat for the government, a clear majority of Danes—53 percent—rejected a referendum on closer security cooperation with the European Union. Until now, Denmark has been only a partial EU member—for example, it does not belong to the euro and has not joined EU protocols on citizenship and legal affairs. In view of the growing threat of jihadism, both the government and the opposition Social Democrats hoped to integrate the country fully into European policing and counterterrorism efforts. But the “no” vote, which was supported by the Danish People’s Party, was driven by fears that such a move could also give Brussels influence over Denmark’s refugee and immigration policies.
    The outcome of the referendum has ominous implications for the European Union at a time when emergency border controls in numerous countries—including Germany and Sweden as well as Denmark—have put in doubt the Schengen system of open borders inside the EU. In Denmark itself, the referendum has forced both the Liberals and the Social Democrats to continue moving closer to the populist right. In November, Martin Henriksen, the Danish People’s Party spokesman on refugees and immigration, toldPolitiken, the country’s leading newspaper, “There is a contest on to see who can match the Danish People’s Party on immigration matters, and I hope that more parties will participate.”
    2.
    According to many Danes I met, the origins of Denmark’s anti-immigration consensus can be traced to the national election of November 2001, two months after the September 11 attacks in the United States. At the time, the recently founded Danish People’s Party was largely excluded from mainstream politics; the incumbent prime minister, who was a Social Democrat, famously described the party as unfit to govern.
    But during the 1990s, the country’s Muslim population had nearly doubled to around 200,000 people, and in the 2001 campaign, immigration became a central theme. The Social Democrats suffered a devastating defeat and, for the first time since 1924, didn’t control the most seats in parliament. Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the ambitious leader of the victorious Liberal Party (no relation to the current prime minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen), made a historic decision to form a government with support from the Danish People’s Party, which had come in third place—a far-right alliance that had never been tried in Scandinavia. It kept Fogh Rasmussen in power for three terms.
    From an economic perspective, the government’s embrace of the populist right was anomalous. With its unique combination of comprehensive welfare and a flexible labor market—known as flexicurity—Denmark has an efficient economy in which the rate of job turnover is one of the highest in Europe, yet almost 75 percent of working-age Danes are employed. At the same time, the country’s extraordinary social benefits, such as long-term education, retraining, and free child care, are based on integration in the workforce. Yet many of the qualities about the Danish system that work so well for those born into it have made it particularly hard for outsiders to penetrate.
    Denmark is a mostly low-lying country consisting of the Jutland Peninsula in the west, the large islands of Funen and Zealand in the east, and numerous smaller islands. (It also includes the island of Greenland, whose tiny population is largely Inuit.) The modern state emerged in the late nineteenth century, following a series of defeats by Bismarck’s Germany in which it lost much of its territory and a significant part of its population. Several Danish writers have linked this founding trauma to a lasting national obsession with invasion and a continual need to assert danskhed, or Danishness.
    Among other things, these preoccupations have given the Danish welfare system an unusually important part in shaping national identity. Visitors to Denmark will find the Danish flag on everything from public buses to butter wrappers; many of the country’s defining institutions, from its universal secondary education (Folkehøjskoler—the People’s High Schools) to the parliament (Folketinget—the People’s House) to the Danish national church (Folkekirken—the People’s Church) to the concept of democracy itself (Folkestyret—the Rule of the People) have been built to reinforce a strong sense of folke, the Danish people.
    One result of this emphasis on cohesion is the striking contrast between how Danes view their fellow nationals and how they seem to view the outside world: in 1997, a study of racism in EU countries found Danes to be simultaneously among the most tolerant and also the most racist of any European population. “In the nationalist self-image, tolerance is seen as good,” writes the Danish anthropologist Peter Hervik. “Yet…excessive tolerance is considered naive and counterproductive for sustaining Danish national identity.”
    According to Hervik, this paradox helps account for the rise of the Danish People’s Party, or Dansk Folkeparti. Like its far-right counterparts in neighboring countries, the party drew on new anxieties about non-European immigrants and the growing influence of the EU. What made the Danish People’s Party particularly potent, however, was its robust defense of wealth redistribution and advanced welfare benefits for all Danes. “On a traditional left-right scheme they are very difficult to locate,” former prime minister Fogh Rasmussen told me in Copenhagen. “They are tough on crime, tough on immigration, but on welfare policy, they are center left. Sometimes they even try to surpass the Social Democrats.”
    Beginning in 2002, the Fogh Rasmussen government passed a sweeping set of reforms to limit the flow of asylum-seekers. Among the most controversial were the so-called twenty-four-year rule, which required foreign-born spouses to be at least twenty-four years old to qualify for Danish citizenship, and a requirement that both spouses combined had spent more years living in Denmark than in any other country. Unprecedented in Europe, the new rules effectively ended immigrant marriages as a quick path to citizenship. At the same time, the government dramatically restricted the criteria under which a foreigner could qualify for refugee status.
    To Fogh Rasmussen’s critics, the measures were simply a way to gain the support of the Danish People’s Party for his own political program. This included labor market reforms, such as tying social benefits more closely to active employment, and—most notably—a muscular new foreign policy. Departing from Denmark’s traditional neutrality, the government joined with US troops in military interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq; Denmark has since taken part in the interventions in Libya and Syria as well. (In his official state portrait in the parliament, Fogh Rasmussen, who went on to become general secretary of NATO in 2009, is depicted with a Danish military plane swooping over a desolate Afghan landscape in the background.)
    Yet the immigration overhaul also had strong foundations in the Liberal Party. In 1997, Bertel Haarder, a veteran Liberal politician and strategist, wrote an influential book called Soft Cynicism, which excoriated the Danish welfare system for creating, through excessive coddling, the very stigmatization of new arrivals to Denmark that it was ostensibly supposed to prevent. Haarder, who went on to become Fogh Rasmussen’s minister of immigration, told me, “The Danes wanted to be soft and nice. And we turned proud immigrants into social welfare addicts. It wasn’t their fault. It was our fault.”
    According to Haarder, who has returned to the Danish cabinet as culture minister in the current Liberal government, the refugees who have come to Denmark in recent years overwhelmingly lack the education and training needed to enter the country’s advanced labor market. As Fogh Rasmussen’s immigration minister, he sought to match the restrictions on asylum-seekers with expedited citizenship for qualified foreigners. But he was also known for his criticism of Muslims who wanted to assert their own traditions: “All this talk about equality of cultures and equality of religion is nonsense,” he told a Danish newspaper in 2002. “The Danes have the right to make decisions in Denmark.”
    3.
    Coming amid the Fogh Rasmussen government’s rightward shift on immigration and its growing involvement in the “war on terror,” the decision by the Danish paperJyllands-Posten in September 2005 to publish caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad seemed to bring into the open an irresolvable conflict. In the decade since they appeared, the cartoons have been linked to the torching of Western embassies, an unending series of terrorist attacks and assassination plots across Europe, and a sense, among many European intellectuals, that Western society is being cowed into a “tyranny of silence,” as Flemming Rose, the former culture editor of Jyllands-Postenwho commissioned the cartoons and who now lives under constant police protection, has titled a recent book.1 In his new study of French jihadism, Terreur dans l’hexagone: Genèse du djihad français, Gilles Kepel, the French scholar of Islam, suggests that the cartoons inspired an “international Islamic campaign against little Denmark” that became a crucial part of a broader redirection of jihadist ideology toward the West.
    And yet little about the original twelve cartoons could have foretold any of this. Traditionally based in Jutland, Jyllands-Posten is a center-right broadsheet that tends to draw readers from outside the capital; it was little known abroad before the cartoons appeared. Following reports that a Danish illustrator had refused to do drawings for a book about Muhammad, Rose invited a group of caricaturists to “draw Muhammad as you see him” to find out whether they were similarly inhibited (most of them weren’t). Some of the resulting drawings made fun of the newspaper itself for pursuing the idea; in the subsequent controversy, outrage was largely directed at just one of the cartoons, which depicted the Prophet wearing a lit bomb as a turban. Even then, the uproar began only months later, after the Danish prime minister refused a request from diplomats of Muslim nations for a meeting about the cartoons. “I thought it was a trap,” Fogh Rasmussen told me. At the same time, several secular Arab regimes, including Mubarak’s Egypt and Assad’s Syria, concluded that encouraging vigorous opposition to the cartoons could shore up their Islamist credentials.
    Once angry mass protests had finally been stirred up throughout the Muslim world in late January and early February 2006—including in Egypt, Iran, Sudan, Syria, Lebanon, and Afghanistan—the crisis quickly took on a logic that had never existed at the outset: attacks against Western targets led many newspapers in the West to republish the cartoons in solidarity, which in turn provoked more attacks. By the time of the Charlie Hebdo massacre in early 2015, there was a real question of what Timothy Garton Ash, in these pages, has called “the assassin’s veto,” the fact that some newspapers might self-censor simply to avoid further violence.2 Jyllands-Posten itself, declaring in an editorial in January 2015 that “violence works,” no longer republishes the cartoons.
    Lost in the geopolitical fallout, however, was the debate over Danish values that the cartoons provoked in Denmark itself. Under the influence of the nineteenth-century state builder N.F.S. Grundtvig, the founders of modern Denmark embraced free speech as a core value. It was the first country in Europe to legalize pornography in the 1960s, and Danes have long taken a special pleasure in cheerful, in-your-face irreverence. In December Politiken published a cartoon showing the integration minister Inger Støjberg gleefully lighting candles on a Christmas tree that has a dead asylum-seeker as an ornament (see illustration on page 34).
    Explaining his own reasons for commissioning the Muhammad cartoons, Flemming Rose has written of the need to assert the all-important right to “sarcasm, mockery, and ridicule” against an encroaching totalitarianism emanating from the Islamic world. He also makes clear that Muslims or any other minority group should be equally free to express their own views in the strongest terms. (Rose told me that he differs strongly with Geert Wilders, the prominent Dutch populist and critic of Islam. “He wants to ban the Koran. I say absolutely you can’t do that.”)
    But Rose’s views about speech have been actively contested. Bo Lidegaard, the editor of Politiken, the traditional paper of the Copenhagen establishment, was Fogh Rasmussen’s national security adviser at the time of the cartoons crisis. Politiken, which shares the same owner and inhabits the same high-security building as Jyllands-Posten, has long been critical of the publication of the cartoons by its sister paper, and Lidegaard was blunt. “It was a complete lack of understanding of what a minority religion holds holy,” he told me. “It also seemed to be mobbing a minority, by saying, in their faces, ‘We don’t respect your religion! You may think this is offensive but we don’t think its offensive, so you’re dumb!’”
    Lidegaard, who has written several books about Danish history, argues that the cartoons’ defenders misread the free speech tradition. He cites Denmark’s law against “threatening, insulting, or degrading” speech, which was passed by the Danish parliament in 1939, largely to protect the country’s Jewish minority from anti-Semitism. Remarkably, it remained in force—and was even invoked—during the Nazi occupation of Denmark. According to Lidegaard, it is a powerful recognition that upholding equal rights and tolerance for all can sometimes trump the need to protect extreme forms of speech.
    Today, however, few Danes seem concerned about offending Muslims. Neils-Erik Hansen, a leading Danish human rights lawyer, told me that the anti–hate speech law has rarely been used in recent years, and that in several cases of hate crimes against Muslim immigrants—a newspaper boy was killed after being called “Paki swine”—the authorities have shown little interest in invoking the statute. During the cartoon affair, Lidegaard himself was part of the foreign policy team that advised Prime Minister Fogh Rasmussen not to have talks with Muslim representatives. When I asked him about this, he acknowledged, “The government made some mistakes.”
    4.
    Last fall I visited Mjølnerparken, an overwhelmingly immigrant “ghetto” in north Copenhagen where Omar el-Hussein, the shooter in last year’s attack against the free speech meeting, had come from. Many of the youth there belong to gangs and have been in and out of prison; the police make frequent raids to search for guns. Upward of half the adults, many of them of Palestinian and Somali origin, are unemployed. Eskild Pedersen, a veteran social worker who almost single-handedly looks after the neighborhood, told me that hardly any ethnic Danes set foot there. This was Denmark at its worst.
    And yet there was little about the tidy red-brick housing blocks or the facing playground, apart from a modest amount of graffiti, that suggested dereliction or squalor. Pedersen seems to have the trust of many of his charges. He had just settled a complicated honor dispute between two Somalian families; and as we spoke, a Palestinian girl, not more than six, interrupted to tell him about a domestic violence problem in her household. He has also found part-time jobs for several gang members, and helped one of them return to school; one young man of Palestinian background gave me a tour of the auto body shop he had started in a nearby garage. (When a delegation of Egyptians was recently shown the neighborhood, the visitors asked, “Where is the ghetto?”)
    But in Denmark, the police force is regarded as an extension of the social welfare system and Pedersen also makes it clear, to the young men especially, that he works closely with law enforcement. As last year’s shooting reveals, it doesn’t always work. But city officials in Copenhagen and in Aarhus, Denmark’s second city, describe some cases in which local authorities, drawing on daily contact with young and often disaffected Muslims, including jihadists returning from Syria, have been able to preempt extremist behavior.
    Across Europe in recent weeks, shock over the arrival of hundreds of thousands of refugees has quickly been overtaken by alarm over the challenge they are now seen as posing to social stability. Several countries that have been welcoming to large numbers of Syrian and other asylum-seekers are confronting growing revolts from the far right—along with anti-refugee violence. In December Die Zeit, the German newsweekly, reported that more than two hundred German refugee shelters have been attacked or firebombed over the past year; in late January, Swedish police intercepted a gang of dozens of masked men who were seeking to attack migrants near Stockholm’s central station. Since the beginning of 2016, two notorious far-right, anti-immigration parties—the Sweden Democrats in Sweden and Geert Wilders’s Party for Freedom in the Netherlands—became more popular than the ruling parties in their respective countries, despite being excluded from government.
    Nor is the backlash limited to the right. Since the New Year’s attacks by migrants against women in Cologne, conservative opponents of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s refugee policy have been joined by feminists and members of the left, who have denounced the “patriarchal” traditions of the “Arab man.” Recent data on the anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats, who in January were polling at 28 percent of the popular vote, shows that the party’s steady rise during Sweden’s decade of open-asylum policies has closely tracked a parallel decline in support for the center-left Social Democrats, the traditional force in Swedish politics. Confronted with such a populist surge, the Swedish government announced on January 27 that it plans to deport as many as 80,000 asylum-seekers.
    As the advanced democracies of Europe reconsider their physical and psychological borders with the Muslim world, the restrictive Danish approach to immigration and the welfare state offers a stark alternative. Brought into the political process far earlier than its counterparts elsewhere, the Danish People’s Party is a good deal more moderate than, say, the National Front in France; but it also has succeeded in shaping, to an extraordinary degree, the Danish immigration debate. In recent weeks, Denmark’s Social Democrats have struggled to define their own immigration policy amid sagging support. When I asked former prime minister Fogh Rasmussen about how the Danish People’s Party differed from the others on asylum-seekers and refugees, he said, “You have differences when it comes to rhetoric, but these are nuances.”
    In January, more than 60,000 refugees arrived in Europe, a thirty-five-fold increase from the same month last year; but in Denmark, according to Politiken, the number of asylum-seekers has steadily declined since the start of the year, with only 1,400 seeking to enter the country. In limiting the kind of social turmoil now playing out in Germany, Sweden, and France, the Danes may yet come through the current crisis a more stable, united, and open society than any of their neighbors. But they may also have shown that this openness extends no farther than the Danish frontier.
    —February 10, 2016

    #danemark #migrations #asile #réfugiés

  • Mapping female versus male street names | Mapbox
    https://www.mapbox.com/blog/streets-and-gender

    Places and streets named after personalities are indicators of social hierarchy in a city. Often they are as prestigious as the person they are named after. We wanted to study the distribution and location of gender in eponymous streets and made a map!

    We looked at the number of roads named after women versus men and their geographical distribution using OpenStreetMap data. To run the analysis we put together a light script using Turf.js and Tile Reduce and queried OSM QA Tiles.

    After filtering tokens like national highways (NH), state highways (SH), crosses, mains, margs, and salais we sent the names to NamSor - a robust API for applied onomastics.

    The results are fascinating, and maybe not surprising: streets named after men are more numerous and more centrally located than streets named after women in the metro areas we analyzed. Between Bengaluru, Chennai, London, Mumbai, New Delhi, Paris, and San Francisco, the percentage of streets named after women is an average of 27.5. Among the cities in India, Bengaluru tops the list with 39% of streets named after women.

    We’re still working hard to perfect the code and are taking requests for more cities on Twitter. Take a look below to see what we have so far and let us know what else you would like to see!