• « Combien avez-vous été rémunéré par #Servier ? » : au procès du #Mediator, le défilé des consultants du laboratoire
    https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2019/11/02/combien-avez-vous-ete-remunere-par-servier-au-proces-du-mediator-le-defile-d

    Toute la semaine, il a été question de « néoglucogenèse » et des « récepteurs 5-HT2B », des « ramifications cylindraxiles » et de l’« accolement des vésicules à la membrane des boutons synaptiques des neurones », des « enzymes monoamines oxydases », de la « valve tricuspide » qu’il ne faut évidemment pas confondre avec les valves « aortique et mitrale », ou encore du « captage de glucose » dont il est – mais faut-il le préciser ? – « fantaisiste de penser qu’il est contrôlé par la pyruvate kinase ».

    La formidable complexité des débats qui caractérise le procès du Mediator a atteint un pic au cours de la bataille d’#experts qui occupe pour quelques jours encore la 31e chambre du tribunal correctionnel de Paris.

    A tel point que Me Charles Joseph-Oudin, avocat de plusieurs centaines de parties civiles, a fini par se demander tout haut si elle n’était pas savamment orchestrée par la défense, dans « une stratégie du trouble » destinée à instiller l’idée « que les choses sont beaucoup plus complexes que ce que le bon sens nous a jusqu’ici permis de comprendre ».

    Stéphane Horel sur Twitter :
    "#Mediator
    Me Charles Joseph-Oudin à Jean-Pol Tassin, (ex #Inserm et #Collège_de_France) :
    – "Pouvez-vous préciser le montant des honoraires que vous avez perçu de la part de Servier ?
    – TTC ?
    – Comme vous voulez.
    – Depuis 2011, de l’ordre de 300 000 euros." /
    Twitter
    https://twitter.com/stephanehorel/status/1190930652658569216

    #conflit_d'intérêt #criminel #corruption #institutions

  • Entretien avec Eugenia, secrétaire du Comité du Croissant-Rouge Kurde de Suisse [Heyva sor a Kurdistanê Swêsre : http://heyvasor.ch/fr/accueil/]. 20.10.2019.

    Situation et actions du #Croissant-Rouge. Comprendre la tragédie là-bas et comment se solidariser depuis ici :

    Aide d’urgence. Quelques conseils et suggestions par Eugenia :
    _Parler, expliquer, sensibiliser, alerter et interpeller quant à la situation du Rojava.
    _Faire suivre ce lien au plus grand nombre
    _Si l’on peut et à sa mesure, procéder à un don et/ou devenir membre du Croissant-Rouge Kurde en Suisse


    http://libradio.org/?p=7190
    L’audio :
    http://libradio.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/CRK_Master.mp3

    #Kurdistan #Kurdes #conflit #Kurdistan_syriens #Turquie #guerre #audio #Rojava

  • Entretien téléphonique avec #Lougar, depuis la #Commune_Internationaliste à #Derik, nord-est du #Rojava. Organisation, position, activités, projet et aspirations de la #Commune_libre et considération sur l’agression turque, ses enjeux et la résistance qui a cours.

    http://libradio.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/CommInternationaliste_Master.mp3

    #Syrie #Kurdistan #guerre #conflit #Kurdes #Turquie

  • British orphans found trapped in Syria IS camp

    The war in Syria has been reignited on new fronts by Turkey’s incursion into the north east of the country.

    In camps across the regions are thousands of terrified children whose parents supported the Islamic State group, but most of their countries don’t want them home.

    In one camp, the BBC has discovered three children, believed to be from London, whose parents joined IS five years ago, and were subsequently killed in the fighting.

    The children - Amira, Heba and Hamza - are stranded, in danger and they want to come home.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-middle-east-50030567/british-orphans-found-trapped-in-syria-is-camp
    #enfants #enfance #ISIS #EI #Etat_islamique #camps #orphelins #Syrie #conflit #guerre #combattants_étrangers

    • Gli svizzeri della Jihad

      Chi sono gli jihadisti elvetici, di che reti facevano parte e cosa li ha spinti a partire? Da Winterthur a Ginevra, dai palazzi popolari ai quartieri borghesi, siamo andati a cercare i giovani che si sono uniti all’ISIS.

      Sono svizzeri e sono partiti per fare la jihad. Molti di loro hanno combattuto per lo stato islamico, altri sono entrati in contatto con gli attentatori che hanno colpito l’Europa. Sono stati catturati in Siria e adesso si trovano nelle prigioni nel nord del paese.Con loro ci sono donne e bambini. Per ora nessun tribunale sta giudicando i loro crimini, tutti quanti sono in attesa che i rispettivi paesi d’origine decidano come procedere nei loro confronti. Uno stallo che sembra però sbloccarsi: secondo alcune indiscrezioni Berna starebbe considerando l’ipotesi di far rientrare le donne e i bambini.Una squadra di Falò è stata nei campi di prigionia che ospitano donne e bambini dell’ISIS; tendopoli al collasso in cui l’ideologia radicale sta risorgendo. Ma ci sono anche svizzeri che hanno fatto parte dello Stato Islamico e sono già rientrati in Svizzera.Chi sono questi jihadisti elvetici, di che reti facevano parte e cosa li ha spinti a partire? Da Winterthur a Ginevra, dai palazzi popolari ai quartieri borghesi, siamo andati a cercare i giovani che si sono uniti all’ISIS. Alcuni si dicono pentiti, altri sembrano aver mantenuto dei legami con gli ambienti radicalizzati. A che punto stanno i processi nei loro confronti? Chi si occupa di sorvegliare le loro attività? Quanto pericolosi li dobbiamo considerare?

      https://www.rsi.ch/play/tv/falo/video/gli-svizzeri-della-jihad----------?id=12256843
      #documentaire #film #suisse #femmes #al-Hol #camps_de_réfugiés #détention #prison

    • UK special forces may help British orphans escape Syria

      Home Office reverses stance and says it will consider repatriating children in camps.
      https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/d0a1d88ba6202391e12730afd5aac7dc8694af18/0_235_5616_3370/master/5616.jpg?width=620&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=204f73a9482a4debc42258

      Britain will consider repatriating orphans and unaccompanied children in north-east Syria if they are alerted to their presence by local military or aid agencies.

      Home Office officials said the UK would assist British orphans trapped in Syria after the Turkish invasion, reversing a previous policy that children had to be taken out of the country before they might get any help.

      Officials would not say exactly how children might be extracted from the country, implying that SAS or other special forces, still understood to be based in the region, could be involved in the repatriations.

      They said children thought to be British would be assessed on a case-by-case basis once removed from Syria and only orphans and unaccompanied children would be eligible to be brought back to the UK.

      The shift in policy comes after a BBC reporting team found three English-speaking orphans aged 10 or under in a Syria camp over the weekend. The children are believed to have been taken by their parents to live under Islamic State five years ago.

      The eldest, Amira, 10, told the film crew that their parents and other immediate adult family members were killed in an air assault on Baghouz, the last Isis stronghold, which fell in March, and she wanted to return to the UK.

      Save the Children, one of the few charities operating in north-east Syria, said the Home Office developments were a step in the right direction but more detail was required.

      “For this to translate into a real change of policy, we need to know that the government is working on how to bring all British children to the UK while we still can, not just those featured in the media,” the charity said.

      It is not clear how many British unaccompanied children remain in the crowded refugee camps in the Kurdish region of Syria. Some unofficial estimates put the figure at around 30.

      Any child born to a Briton – whether inside or outside the UK – is a British citizen. Before the Turkish invasion the government had said it was too risky to try to attempt any rescue children with a legitimate claim.

      When Shamima Begum was deprived of her UK citizenship in February, the British government said her infant son was still British. After the child died at a Syrian refugee camp at the age of three weeks, Jeremy Hunt, then foreign secretary, said it had been too dangerous for British officials to attempt to a rescue.

      Opposition MPs questioned whether the change in stance would lead to more orphaned children getting help. Stephen Gethins, the SNP’s foreign affairs spokesman, said: “We know the UK government’s record on resettling refugees and vulnerable people leaves a lot to be desired. Beyond the rhetoric there is very little substance from the UK government.”

      On Tuesday the foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, had hinted at a change of policy when, during an urgent debate on the Syrian crisis, he said: “We are looking at whether orphans and unaccompanied minors who bear UK nationality can be given safe passage to return to the UK.”

      Further details were spelled out on Wednesday by the Home Office, which has been leading on repatriations from Syria.

      The government does not want former Isis fighters and adult supporters to return to the UK, although around 450 are thought to have previously done so, and it is suggesting they could be put on trial in the region.

      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/oct/16/uk-shifts-stance-on-helping-british-orphans-escape-syria?CMP=Share_iOSA
      #orphelins #rapatriement

  • Syria-Turkey briefing: The fallout of an invasion for civilians

    Humanitarians are warning that a Turkish invasion in northeast Syria could force hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes, as confusion reigns over its possible timing, scope, and consequences.

    Panos Moumtzis, the UN’s regional humanitarian coordinator for Syria, told reporters in Geneva on Monday that any military operation must guard against causing further displacement. “We are hoping for the best but preparing for the worst,” he said, noting that an estimated 1.7 million people live in the country’s northeast.

    Some residents close to the Syria-Turkey border are already leaving, one aid worker familiar with the situation on the ground told The New Humanitarian. Most are staying with relatives in nearby villages for the time-being, said the aid worker, who asked to remain anonymous in order to continue their work.

    The number of people who have left their homes so far remains relatively small, the aid worker said, but added: “If there is an incursion, people will leave.”

    The International Rescue Committee said “a military offensive could immediately displace at least 300,000 people”, but analysts TNH spoke to cautioned that the actual number would depend on Turkey’s plans, which remain a major unknown.

    As the diplomatic and security communities struggle to get a handle on what’s next, the same goes for humanitarians in northeastern Syria – and the communities they are trying to serve.

    Here’s what we know, and what we don’t:
    What just happened?

    Late on Sunday night, the White House said that following a phone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, “Turkey will soon be moving forward with its long-planned operation into Northern Syria,” adding that US soldiers would not be part of the move, and “will no longer be in the immediate area”.

    The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) – the Syrian-Kurdish-led militia that until now had been supported by the United States and played a major role in wresting territory back from the so-called Islamic State (IS) group in Syria – vowed to stand its ground in the northeast.

    An SDF spokesperson tweeted that the group “will not hesitate to turn any unprovoked attack by Turkey into an all-out war on the entire border to DEFEND ourselves and our people”.

    Leading Republicans in the US Congress criticised President Donald Trump’s decision, saying it represents an abandonment of Kurdish allies in Syria, and the Pentagon appeared both caught off-guard and opposed to a Turkish incursion.

    Since then, Trump has tweeted extensively on the subject, threatening to “totally destroy and obliterate the economy of Turkey” if the country does anything he considers to be “off limits”.

    On the ground, US troops have moved out of two key observation posts on the Turkey-Syria border, in relatively small numbers: estimates range from 50 to 150 of the total who would have been shifted, out of around 1,000 US soldiers in the country.
    What is Turkey doing?

    Erdogan has long had his sights on a “safe zone” inside Syria, which he has said could eventually become home to as many as three million Syrian refugees, currently in Turkey.

    Turkish Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said in August that only 17 percent of Turkey’s estimated 3.6 million Syrian refugees come from the northeast of the country, which is administered by the SDF and its political wing.

    Turkish and US forces began joint patrols of a small stretch of the border early last month. While Turkey began calling the area a “safe zone”, the United States referred to it as a “security mechanism”. The terms of the deal were either never made public or not hammered out.

    In addition to any desire to resettle refugees, which might only be a secondary motive, Turkey wants control of northeast Syria to rein in the power of the SDF, which it considers to be a terrorist organisation.

    One of the SDF’s main constituent parts are People’s Defense Units – known by their Kurdish acronym YPG.

    The YPG are an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK – a Turkey-based Kurdish separatist organisation that has conducted an insurgency against the Turkish government for decades, leading to a bloody crackdown.

    While rebels fight for the northwest, and Russian-backed Syrian government forces control most of the rest of Syria, the SDF currently rules over almost all of Hassakeh province, most of Raqqa and Deir Ezzor provinces, and a small part of Aleppo province.
    How many civilians are at risk?

    There has not been a census in Syria for years, and numbers shift quickly as people flee different pockets of conflict. This makes estimating the number of civilians in northeast Syria very difficult.

    The IRC said in its statement it is “deeply concerned about the lives and livelihoods of the two million civilians in northeast Syria”; Moumtzis mentioned 1.7 million people; and Save the Children said “there are 1.65 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in this area, including more than 650,000 displaced by war”.

    Of those who have had to leave their homes in Raqqa, Deir Ezzor, and Hassakeh, only 100,000 are living in camps, according to figures from the International Committee of the Red Cross. Others rent houses or apartments, and some live in unfinished buildings or tents.

    “While many commentators are rightly focusing on the security implications of this policy reversal, the humanitarian implications will be equally enormous,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, senior policy fellow at the Center for Global Development, and a former high-ranking Obama administration aid official.

    “All across Northern Syria, hundreds of thousands of displaced and conflict-affected people who survived the horrors of the… [IS] era will now face the risk of new violence between Turkish and SDF forces.”
    Who will be first in the firing line?

    It’s unlikely all of northeast Syria would be impacted by a Turkish invasion right away, given that so far the United States has only moved its troops away from two border posts, at Tel Abyad (Kurdish name: Gire Spi), and roughly 100 kilometres to the east, at Ras al-Ayn (Kurdish name: Serê Kaniyê).

    Depending on how far into Syria one is counting, aid workers estimate there are between 52,000 to 68,000 people in this 100-kilometre strip, including the towns of Tel Abyad and Ras al-Ayn themselves. The aid worker in northeast Syria told TNH that if there is an offensive, these people are more likely, at least initially, to stay with family or friends in nearby villages than to end up in camps.

    The aid worker added that while humanitarian operations from more than 70 NGOs are ongoing across the northeast, including in places like Tel Abyad, some locals are avoiding the town itself and, in general, people are “extremely worried”.
    What will happen to al-Hol camp?

    The fate of the rest of northeast Syria’s population may also be at risk.

    Trump tweeted on Monday that the Kurds “must, with Europe and others, watch over the captured ISIS fighters and families”.

    The SDF currently administers al-Hol, a tense camp of more than 68,000 people – mostly women and children – deep in Hassakeh province, where the World Health Organisation recently said people are living “in harsh and deplorable conditions, with limited access to quality basic services, sub-optimal environment and concerns of insecurity.”

    Many of the residents of al-Hol stayed with IS through its last days in Syria, and the camp holds both these supporters and people who fled the group earlier on.

    Last week, Médecins Sans Frontières said security forces shot at women protesting in a part of the camp known as “the annex”, which holds around 10,000 who are not Syrian or Iraqi.

    The SDF also holds more than 10,000 IS detainees in other prisons, and the possible release of these people – plus those at al-Hol – may become a useful bargaining chip for the Kurdish-led group.

    On Monday, an SDF commander said guarding the prisoners had become a “second priority” in the wake of a possible Turkish offensive.

    “All their families are located in the border area,” General Mazloum Kobani Abdi told NBC News of the SDF fighters who had been guarding the prisoners. “So they are forced to defend their families.”

    https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news/2019/10/08/syria-turkey-briefing-fallout-invasion-civilians
    #Syrie #Turquie #guerre #conflit #civiles #invasion #al-Hol #Kurdistan #Kurdes #camps #camps_de_réfugiés
    ping @isskein

    • Il faut stopper Erdogan

      Les Kurdes de Syrie ont commencé à payer le prix de la trahison de l’Occident. Une pluie de bombes s’est abattue mercredi après-midi sur les villes frontière, précédant de peu une offensive terrestre de l’armée turque et de ses alliés islamistes de Syrie. Le macabre décompte des victimes peut débuter. On imagine l’effroi qui a saisi les habitants du #Rojava déjà durement éprouvés par plusieurs années de guerre contre les djihadistes.

      Le tweet dominical de Donald Trump avait annoncé la trahison ultime des Etats-Unis. Mais l’offensive turque répond à une logique plus profonde. A force de voir l’Union européenne lui manger dans la main, à force de jouer sans trop de heurts la balance géopolitique entre Moscou et Washington au gré de l’opportunisme des deux grandes puissances, Recep Tayyip Erdogan a des raisons de se sentir intouchable. Lorsqu’en 2015 et 2016, il faisait massacrer sa propre population dans les villes kurdes de Cizre, Nusaybin, Silopi ou Sur, le silence était de plomb.

      L’offensive débutée hier, le sultan l’annonce de longue date, sans provoquer de réaction ferme des Européens. La girouette Trump a bon dos : en matière d’allégeance à Ankara, les Européens sont autrement plus constants.

      Il faudra pourtant stopper Erdogan. Laisser le #Kurdistan_syrien tomber aux mains des milices islamistes et de l’armée turque reviendrait à cautionner un crime impardonnable. A abandonner des centaines de milliers de civils, dont de très nombreux réfugiés, et des milliers de combattants de la liberté à leurs bourreaux. Ce serait également la certitude d’une guerre de longue durée entre la Turquie et sa propre minorité kurde, environ un cinquième de sa population.

      Plusieurs pays européens ont réclamé une réunion du Conseil de sécurité de l’ONU. Le signe d’un sursaut ? L’espoir d’un cessez-le-feu rapide ? Ou des jérémiades d’arrière-garde, qui cesseront dès que la Turquie aura atteint ses objectifs ?

      Comme souvent, la superpuissance étasunienne détient les cartes maîtresses. Et Donald Trump n’en est pas à son premier virage intempestif. S’il a donné son feu vert à Erdogan, le républicain se retrouve coincé entre les interventionnistes et les isolationnistes de son propre parti. Hier, le premier camp s’indignait bruyamment. Exerçant une pression redoutable pour un président déjà affaibli par le dossier ukrainien.

      Il faudra qu’elle pèse aussi sur les dirigeants européens. La solidarité avec le Rojava doit devenir une priorité du mouvement social et des consciences.

      https://lecourrier.ch/2019/10/09/il-faut-stopper-erdogan

    • #Al-Hol detainees attack guards and start fires as Turkish assault begins

      Camp holding thousands of Islamic State suspects thrown into ’chaos’, says Kurdish official

      The Turkish assault on northeast Syria has prompted Islamic State group-affiliated women and youth in al-Hol’s camp to attack guards and start fires, a Kurdish official told Middle East Eye.

      Kurdish-held northeastern Syria has been on high alert since the United States announced on Sunday it would leave the area in anticipation of a Turkish offensive.

      Over the three days since the US announcement, chaos has broken out in the teeming al-Hol camp, Mahmoud Kro, an official that oversees internment camps in the Kurdish-run autonomous area, told MEE.

      Some 60,000 people suspected of being affiliated or linked to the Islamic State (IS) group, the majority women and children, are being held in the camp.

      “There are attacks on guards and camp management, in addition to burning tents and preparing explosive devices,” Kro told MEE from Qamishli.

      The status of al-Hol’s detainees has been a major concern since Turkey began making more threats to invade northeast Syria this year.

      In the phone call between Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Donald Trump on Sunday that precipitated the United States’ pullout, the US president pressed his Turkish counterpart on the fate of foreign IS suspects in Kurdish custody, MEE revealed.
      ‘Targeting our existence as Kurds’

      Turkey launched its assault on northeastern Syria on Wednesday alongside its Syrian rebel allies, aiming, it says, to push the Kurdish YPG militia at least 32km from the border.

      Ankara views the YPG as an extension of the outlawed PKK militant group.

      However, the YPG is a leading component of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) militia, which has been Washington’s principal partner on the ground in the fight against IS.

      SDF fighters guard al-Hol, but Kro said the Turkish attack would draw them away to join the battle.

      “Any war in the region will force the present forces guarding the camp to go defend the border,” he said. “This will increase the chance of chaos in the camp.”

      Kro said that the administration in al-Hol has not made any preparations for a war with Turkey because the SDF’s priority is protecting northeast Syria and Kurds.

      “In terms of preparations, our first priority is protecting our region and existence,” he said. “The Turks are targeting our existence as Kurds to the first degree.”

      Some officials from the Syrian Democratic Council (SDC), the political wing of the SDF, agree with Kro’s assessment that the detainees in al-Hol could get out.

      “If fighting breaks out between the SDF and Turkey, security at prisons will relax and prisoners could escape,” Bassam Ishak, the co-chair of the SDC in the US, told MEE ahead of the offensive.

      Meanwhile, SDC spokesman Amjad Osman said, as other Syrian Kurdish officials have, that a Turkish attack on northeast Syria would negatively affect the continuing war on IS in the country.

      “We are committed to fighting terrorism,” he told MEE. “But now our priority is to, first of all, confront the Turkish threats. And this will have a negative effect on our battle against Daesh,” using the Arabic acronym for IS.

      However, Turkey has bristled at the suggestion that the camps and fight against IS will be endangered by Ankara’s offensive.

      “This blackmail reveals the true face of the YPG and demonstrates how it has no intent of fighting against IS,” a Turkish official told MEE.

      Some residents of northeast Syria are already starting to flee. Many fear yet another war in the country that is still dealing with the conflict between government and rebel forces, and lingering IS attacks.

      Osman stopped short of saying the SDF would pack up and leave al-Hol. However, it will be hard for the group to keep holding the Syrian, Iraqi and international detainees during such a war, he said.

      “We are trying as much as possible to continue protecting the camps,” Osman said. “But any attempt to drag us into a military battle with Turkey will have a dangerous impact.”

      https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/al-hol-detainees-attack-guards-and-start-fires-turkish-assault-begins
      #ISIS #Etat_islamique #EI

  • La viande rouge pas mauvaise pour la santé ? Une analyse met en doute de nombreuses études
    https://www.20minutes.fr/sciences/2617247-20191001-viande-rouge-mauvaise-sante-analyse-met-doute-nombreuses-

    La #viande rouge ne serait pas mauvaise pour la #santé ? Vraiment ?
    https://www.futura-sciences.com/sante/actualites/nutrition-viande-rouge-ne-serait-pas-mauvaise-sante-vraiment-77795

    La critique des auteurs est que les preuves ne font pas partie de ce que l’on considère en science médicale comme un haut niveau de preuves, qui s’obtient grâce à beaucoup d’essais cliniques randomisés en double aveugle. Et ils ont raison. Sauf que les effets santé d’un régime alimentaire - à l’inverse d’une médication ou de la prise d’un complément alimentaire - ne peuvent tout simplement pas être jugés de la sorte. En effet, il est impossible que le patient ne sache pas quel régime il suit et qu’il adhère sans faille à un régime sur le long terme. Un ensemble de conditions qui rend infaisable l’expérimentation en double aveugle sur le long terme en nutrition, et théoriquement extrêmement coûteux.

    En revanche, d’énormes études d’observations de cohortes sont régulièrement entreprises dans le domaine de la nutrition. Si l’on ne peut rien conclure sur la base d’une étude (certaines parfois sujettes à des facteurs de confusions), lorsqu’elles se multiplient, que le faisceau de preuves tend vers la même direction et que des mécanismes biologiques sous-jacents (grâce à des études sur des modèles animaux et cellulaires) confirment ces corrélations, on doit leur accorder une crédibilité solide. À titre d’exemple, rappelons une énième fois que la nocivité du tabac (bien qu’elle ait été mise en évidence par des corrélations beaucoup plus grandes et donc plus fiables) n’a jamais été démontrée par des essais randomisés en double aveugle, pour des raisons éthiques évidentes. Rappelons qu’en nutrition, les effets statistiques observés sont généralement faibles, que ce soit pour les bénéfices comme pour les risques.

    Scientist Who Discredited Meat Guidelines Didn’t Report Past Food Industry Ties - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/04/well/eat/scientist-who-discredited-meat-guidelines-didnt-report-past-food-industry-t

    #conflit_d'intérêt #nutrition

  • Afrique Centrale et de l’Ouest : 9272 écoles déjà fermées à cause des conflits
    https://www.agenceecofin.com/hebdop2/0210-69728-afrique-centrale-et-de-l-ouest-9272-ecoles-deja-fermees-a-c

    Entre fin 2017 et juin 2019, le nombre d’écoles forcées de fermer en raison de l#'insécurité croissante dans les zones touchées par les #conflits en #Afrique Centrale et de l’Ouest a triplé. Dans sa note d’alerte publiée en août 2019, le Fonds des Nations Unies pour l’enfance (Unicef) souligne qu’au premier semestre 2019, 9272 écoles avaient déjà fermé.

    #enfants #scolarité

  • Yémen/ventes d’armes : 14 ONG dénoncent la convocation par la DGSI de l’ONG ASER
    27.09.2019
    https://www.ldh-france.org/yemen-ventes-darmes-14-ong-denoncent-la-convocation-par-la-dgsi-de-long-

    Communiqué commun

    « L’intimidation de représentants de la société civile est une atteinte grave à notre démocratie » – (ONG)

    Paris, 27 septembre 2019 – 14 ONG humanitaires et de défense des droits humains dénoncent la convocation par les services de renseignement français du président d’une ONG française demandant un véritable contrôle des ventes d’armes françaises à l’étranger.

    Benoît Muracciole, président d’Action Sécurité Ethique Républicaines (ASER), est convoqué par la direction générale de la sécurité intérieure (DGSI) le 2 octobre prochain, en raison d’une suspicion « d’avoir commis ou tenté de commettre l’infraction de compromission du secret de défense nationale. »

    Des journalistes avaient déjà fait l’objet de convocations similaires par la DGSI, comme Geoffrey Livolsi et Mathias Destal du média d’investigation Disclose, ainsi que Benoît Collombat de la cellule investigation de Radio France en mai dernier, pour avoir publié des notes classées « confidentiel défense » de la Direction du renseignement militaire (DRM).

    Celles-ci confirmaient que des équipements militaires français achetés par l’Arabie saoudite et les Émirats arabes unis sont engagés dans la guerre au Yémen, avec un risque majeur d’utilisation dans des attaques illégales contre des populations civiles, ce que nos organisations mettent en lumière depuis déjà plus d’un an.

    Benoît Muracciole, Président d’ASER, est inquiété pour avoir utilisé de manière responsable des informations publiques essentielles à une action juridique contre le gouvernement français, informations qui n’ont, en outre, révélé aucune opération militaire française en cours, ni mis aucun personnel français en danger. (...)

    ONG signataires : Acat-France, Action contre la faim, Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS), Care France, Fédération international des droits de l’Homme (FIDH), Handicap International – Humanity & Inclusion, Ligue des droits de l’Homme (LDH), Médecins du monde, Observatoire des armements, Oxfam France, Salam for Yemen, Sherpa, SumOfUs, Yemen Solidarity Network

    #armes #armement #armes_françaises #Yémen #guerre #conflit
    #intimidation #DGSI

  • À l’ONU, la France muette sur les droits de l’homme en Arabie saoudite
    Par Clothilde Mraffko - Vendredi 27 septembre 2019 | Middle East Eye édition française
    https://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/en-bref/lonu-la-france-muette-sur-les-droits-de-lhomme-en-arabie-saoudite

    Le 23 septembre, le Conseil des droits de l’homme de l’ONU a publié une déclaration qui s’inquiète des violations des droits humains dans le royaume saoudien. La plupart des grands pays européens l’ont signée, mais pas la France (...)

    #France_ArabieSaoudite

  • Quand la médecine change d’avis : 5 exemples de revirements spectaculaires | egora.fr
    https://www.egora.fr/actus-pro/recherche/51042-quand-la-medecine-change-d-avis-5-exemples-de-revirements-spectaculaires

    (sous #paywall, trouvé ailleurs (FB))

    Le Dr Vinay Prasad et ses collègues se sont employés à compiler des revirements médicaux spectaculaires, qui voient des pratiques médicales bien instituées contredites par la recherche clinique. Supplémentation post-partum en vitamine A, antidépresseurs chez les patients Alzheimer, chimio intra-hépatique… Florilège de ces moments où la médecine a dû se dédire.

    Les revirements de jurisprudences ont leur pendant en clinique : le revirement médical ("medical reversal"). Théorisé par le Dr Vinay Prasad, le revirement médical désigne ce moment où des années, voire des décennies, de pratique se trouvent soudain invalidées à la faveur d’un essai clinique randomisé de qualité. Les sociétés savantes se voient alors contraintes de plancher à nouveau sur leurs recommandations, et les cliniciens d’expliquer à leurs patients, bon an mal an, que le traitement d’hier est devenu inutile ou même dangereux.

    Dans une étude publiée cet été dans la revue eLife, Vinay Prasad et ses collègues des universités d’Oregon, de Chicago et du Maryland, se sont employés à documenter de tels revirements médicaux. Un travail de titan, qui a consisté à passer au crible 3000 essais parus dans un trio de revues médicales prestigieuses (NEJM, Lancet, Jama) et nécessité 7000 heures de travail. Une façon, pour ce pourfendeur infatigable des mauvaises pratiques en recherche clinique, de défendre son point de vue : il ne faut jamais hésiter à renoncer à une pratique inefficiente. Primum non nocere. En voici un florilège.

    • Rupture prématurée des membranes avant terme : mieux vaut attendre
    Pendant longtemps, les gynécologues-obstétriciens ont recommandé de déclencher l’accouchement en cas de rupture prématurée des membranes (RPM) avant terme à un stade avancé de la grossesse (34 semaines d’aménorrhée ou plus). La crainte d’une infection intra-utérine, en particulier si le nouveau-né était prématuré, commandait de hâter la délivrance. Le manuel Merck le conseille encore aujourd’hui. Mais en 2016, l’essai australien PPROMT a montré que l’attitude interventionniste ne permettait de réduire ni le risque septique, ni la morbimortalité néonatale, tandis que les nouveau-nés issus du groupe sous simple surveillance avaient (logiquement) moins de problèmes respiratoires. Revirement médical : sauf complication, il est aujourd’hui recommandé d’adopter une attitude expectative jusqu’aux 37 semaines règlementaires.

    • Les antidépresseurs dans la maladie d’Alzheimer : à oublier ?
    Les malades d’Alzheimer souffrant de trouble dépressif majeur ont longtemps fait l’objet d’une prise en charge médicamenteuse proche de celle des autres patients, notamment à base d’inhibiteurs sélectifs de la recapture de sérotonine (ISRS). Mais un essai contrôlé randomisé anglais (HTA-SADD), réalisé auprès de 228 patients Alzheimer, a renversé la tendance en 2011 : il a montré que ni la sertraline (ISRS) ni la mirtazapine (ISRSNA) n’étaient plus efficaces qu’un simple placebo pour réduire les symptômes dépressifs à court ou long terme (6 mois). Une autre étude a confirmé ce résultat pour la sertraline.

    Ces données invitent à mettre l’accent sur les interventions psychosociales dans la dépression associée à la maladie d’Alzheimer, et à ne pas se faire d’illusion sur l’efficacité d’une prise en charge médicamenteuse. Elles suggèrent également que les mécanismes de la dépression en jeu chez ces patients se démarquent de ceux à l’œuvre en population générale.

    • Chimiothérapie intra-hépatique : une bonne idée, mais pas de plus-value
    Dans la prise en charge des métastases hépatiques dans le cancer du côlon, l’administration d’une chimiothérapie par voie intra-artérielle hépatique (CIAH) était fréquemment employée. Le rationnel était très convaincant : la vascularisation des métastases étant principalement artérielle, cette voie d’administration devait permettre de maximiser l’exposition des cellules tumorales aux agents cytotoxiques, tout en limitant les effets systémiques de la chimiothérapie.
    Mais en 2003, un essai randomisé européen a montré que la voie intraveineuse classique et la voie intra-hépatique n’induisaient aucune différence en matière de survie sans progression ou de survie globale. Plus complexe et coûteuse, et nécessitant la pose d’un cathéter dans l’artère hépatique, la voie intra-hépatique n’a donc plus de raison d’être employée en routine. Revirement médical.

    • Insomnie du sujet âgé : une bonne thérapie vaut mieux qu’un bon somnifère
    L’insomnie du sujet âgé appelle-t-elle une prise en charge médicamenteuse ? En 2006, une étude norvégienne s’est penchée pour la première fois sur la question en comparant un hypnotique non benzodiazépinique (zopiclone) avec une intervention non médicamenteuse. Cette dernière, de type cognitivo-comportementale (TCC-I), repose sur plusieurs axes : ancrer des comportements mieux adaptés (contrôler les stimuli associés à l’insomnie, réduire le temps au lit, améliorer l’hygiène de sommeil…), corriger les croyances erronées sur le sommeil et apprendre des techniques de relaxation.
    De faible taille (46 sujets), l’essai norvégien a néanmoins permis de conclure que la TCC-I améliorait le sommeil à court et à long terme, quand le zopiclone échouait à faire mieux qu’un placébo. Au regard des effets secondaires associés au zopiclone (somnolence, confusion) et à tous les hypnotiques, ce résultat, de niveau de preuve certes modeste, invite à privilégier l’approche interventionnelle dans la prise en charge de l’insomnie du sujet âgé.

    • Supplémentation en vitamine A : inutile contre la mortalité infantile
    La carence en vitamine A est un problème de santé publique majeur dans les pays à faible revenu, où elle provoque des troubles ophtalmiques (xérophtalmie, cécité nocturne) et affaiblit le système immunitaire. Sur la base de ces éléments, la supplémentation des mères pendant la période postnatale a ainsi été largement employée dans les pays d’Asie du Sud-est et d’Afrique, pour son effet supposément protecteur sur la mortalité infantile.

    En 2015, trois grands essais contrôlés randomisés se sont attaqués à la question, au Ghana, en Tanzanie et Inde. Au Ghana, la supplémentation tendait à accroître la mortalité infantile et les cas de fontanelle bombée ; en Inde (Haryana), elle réduisait la mortalité mais augmentait aussi les cas de fontanelle bombée ; en Tanzanie, elle n’avait aucun effet démontrable. Ces résultats ont mis fin à la pratique de la supplémentation en vitamine A en post-partum. La supplémentation est en revanche toujours conseillée chez les enfants entre 6 mois et cinq ans.

    La liste est encore longue : le Dr Prasad et ses collègues ont identifié 228 revirements médicaux, qui viennent s’ajouter à une précédente étude de la même équipe pour aboutir à quelque 396 pratiques médicales désavouées par la recherche clinique. Tous les domaines de la médecine sont concernés, de la cardiologie à la chirurgie, en passant par la cancérologie et la neurologie. Dans l’ensemble, les auteurs estiment que 13 % de tous les essais cliniques publiés donnent lieu à un revirement médical – et environ un tiers de ceux publiés dans les revues les plus prestigieuses.
    Point intéressant : la grande majorité (64 %) des revirements médicaux identifiés proviennent d’études indépendantes, les essais industriels ne représentant que 9 % du total. « Les revirements mettent en lumière l’importance de financer la recherche clinique de façon indépendante, publique et non entachée de conflits d’intérêts », concluent les auteurs.

    La démarche des chercheurs est également un plaidoyer en faveur d’une recherche clinique plus exigeante. « Incorporer de nouveaux traitements dans la pratique médicale sans données sur leur efficacité représente en danger », jugent-ils, d’autant que l’abandon des pratiques courantes s’avère souvent « lent et difficile ». Ils en appellent à mieux évaluer les traitements avant leur généralisation afin d’éviter « de porter atteinte aux patients comme à la réputation du champ médical »"

  • Fonction publique : c’en est fini de la déontologie !
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/270919/fonction-publique-c-en-est-fini-de-la-deontologie

    La réforme de la fonction publique prévoit la fusion de la Commission de déontologie et de la Haute Autorité pour la transparence de la vie publique. Sous cette réorganisation se cache une disposition gravissime peu remarquée : en cas de pantouflage, ce sera le plus souvent la seule autorité hiérarchique qui sera amenée à émettre un avis. Ce qui fait peser un risque de corruption sur toute la haute fonction publique.

    #CONFLITS_D'INTÉRÊTS #Emmanuel_Macron,_Commission_de_déontologie,_Fonction_Publique,_Haute_autorité_pour_la_transparence_de_la_vie_publique

  • War and the City. Urban Geopolitics in Lebanon

    War and the City examines the geopolitical significance of the Lebanese Civil War through a micro-level exploration of how the urban landscape of Beirut was transformed by the conflict. Focusing on the initial phase of the war in 1975 and 1976, the volume also draws significant parallels with more recent occurrences of internecine conflict and with the historical legacies of Lebanon’s colonial past.

    While most scholarship has thus far focused on post-war reconstruction of the city, the initial process of destruction has been neglected. This volume thus moves away from formal macro-level geopolitical analysis, to propose instead an exploration of the urban nature of conflict through its spaces, infrastructures, bodies and materialities. The book utilizes urban viewpoints in order to highlight the nature of sovereignty in Lebanon and how it is inscribed on the urban landscape. War and the City presents a view of geopolitics as not only shaping narratives of international relations, but as crucially reshaping the space of cities.

    https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/war-and-the-city-9781780767147
    #urban_matter #livre #guerre #villes #Liban #géopolitique #géographie_politique #guerre_civile #conflit #conflits #Beirut #histoire #géographie_urbaine

    Le compte twitter de l’auteure: #Sara_Fregonese
    https://twitter.com/SaraFregonese

    ping @cede @karine4 @reka

  • Deforestation increase dovetails with armed conflict in Colombia, study finds
    https://news.mongabay.com/2019/09/deforestation-increase-dovetails-with-armed-conflict-in-colombia-study-finds/?n3wsletter

    One of the study’s main conclusions was that “[d]eforestation was positively associated with armed conflict intensity and proximity to illegal coca plantations,” especially in the Colombian Amazon. Higher amounts of deforestation were also associated with proximity to mining concessions, oil wells, and road networks.


    #Colombie #déforestation #forêt #conflits_armés #coca

  • Un régulateur bancaire européen prend la direction d’un lobby financier
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/economie/170919/un-regulateur-bancaire-europeen-prend-la-direction-d-un-lobby-financier

    La finance semble manifestement étrangère à toute notion de conflit d’intérêts. Après l’arrivée d’un lobbyiste à la tête de l’autorité de régulation bancaire européenne, le numéro deux de cette même autorité de régulation part pour prendre la direction d’un des plus puissants lobbies financiers. La capture des institutions continue.

    #CONFLITS_D'INTÉRÊTS #autorité_de_régulation_bancaire,_Finance,_conflits_d’intérêts,_europe,_lobby

  • Paperless people of #post-conflict Iraq

    During the conflict with the Islamic State group (IS), six million Iraqi citizens were forced to flee their homes. Since the end of the conflict, more than four million have returned home, while 1.7 million people still live in displacement. These families struggle to access basic services and face often insurmountable roadblocks to either returning home or rebuilding a life elsewhere. Many, whether still in displacement or returned home, are unable to enjoy their rights as Iraqi citizens and fully engage in the recovery and reconstruction of post-conflict Iraq.

    A foundational reason for this is they do not have proof of their legal identity. Some people lost their documents as they fled their homes; others had them confiscated by various parties to the conflict; and yet others were issued IS documentation, which is of no value now. These paperless people, as a result of lacking critical state-issued civil documents, such as birth certificates, marriage certificates, nationality cards and civil IDs, find themselves denied human rights, barred from a range of public services and excluded from recovery and reconstruction efforts.

    Local and international humanitarian agencies like the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), the Danish Refugee Council (DRC) and the International Rescue Committee (IRC) have collectively helped tens of thousands of Iraqis over the last few years obtain, renew, or replace civil documents lost as a result of the most recent crisis. However, an estimated 80,000 families across the country still have family i members missing at least one civil document. The number of children missing documents is likely much higher. At least 45,000 displaced children living in camps alone are estimated to be missing birth certificates. Without these essential civil papers, they are at risk of statelessness and find it incredibly difficult to access services such as education and healthcare.

    This report, based on research conducted by NRC in partnership with DRC and IRC, through the Cash Consortium for Iraq (CCI) shows how a significant portion of Iraqi families living in urban areas formerly under IS control are being denied basic services because they are paperless.


    https://www.nrc.no/resources/reports/paperless-people-of-post-conflict-iraq
    #papiers_d'identité #réfugiés #asile #migrations #apatridie #Irak #guerre #conflit #IDPs #déplacés_internes
    #rapport

  • Tourismes macédoniens sur le Front d’Orient

    Le #front_d’Orient, et notamment la #Macédoine, est indissociable de l’idée de tourisme. Même pendant le #conflit, l’#exotisme emporte les combattants dans un ailleurs que prolongent leurs petits-enfants, partis se recueillir sur ces champs de bataille devenus autant de lieux de #mémoire. Mais, dans les Balkans comme ailleurs, le souvenir reconstruit et parfois même, dans le cas des Serbes, dans une étonnante relation extraterritoriale.


    http://enenvor.fr/eeo_revue/numero_14/tourismes_macedoniens_sur_le_front_d_orient.html
    #tourisme #Grande_Guerre #première_guerre_mondiale #cartes_postales
    C’est une sorte de #dark_tourism avant l’heure
    #tourisme_noir #tourisme_de_guerre

  • Fabrice Nicolino : « L’Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire fait partie du lobby des #pesticides »
    https://reporterre.net/Fabrice-Nicolino-L-Agence-nationale-de-securite-sanitaire-fait-partie-du

    Le titre ne ment pas, l’ouvrage se lit comme un polar. Le crime est presque parfait. L’enquête choc sur les #pesticides et les #SDHI (éditions Les Liens qui libèrent) nous donne pourtant d’emblée la victime — chacun de nous et la biodiversité en général — et le coupable — le lobby des pesticides. Mais la révélation des détails de son fonctionnement, des lacunes et accointances qui permettent d’autoriser l’épandage en plein air de produits potentiellement dangereux ne laisse pas d’étonner, d’indigner. La plume de Fabrice Nicolino porte avec agilité son propos dense et technique. Mais aussi politique : fondateur du mouvement des coquelicots, Nicolino demande l’interdiction de tous les pesticides de synthèse.

    Ce livre, qui paraîtra jeudi 12 septembre, apporte de précieuses informations au vif et actuel débat sur les pesticides. Des dizaines de communes ont depuis cet été pris des arrêtés antipesticides. Lundi 9 septembre, le gouvernement mettait en ligne, en consultation, son prochain règlement sur l’épandage de pesticides, préconisant 5 à 10 mètres de distance entre épandages et habitations selon les produits. Le projet de règlement s’appuie sur une étude de l’Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l’alimentation, de l’environnement et du travail (#Anses). Cette agence est au cœur de l’enquête menée par le journaliste sur ces pesticides dont on connaît le nom depuis à peine plus d’un an, les SDHI, ou « #fongicides inhibiteurs de la succinate déshydrogénase ».

    #santé #lobbyisme #conflits_d'intérêts #agriculture #fnsea

  • University of Basel seminar Urbanism in Conflict: Cities, Conflict and Contestation

    Seminar organised by the “Critical Urbanisms” group at Unibas, 09.09.–10.12.2019. https://criticalurbanisms.philhist.unibas.ch/events/urbanism-in-conflict-cities-conflict-and-contestat

    Conflict is associated both with democratic politics and with hegemonic forms of violence. This seminar and lecture series will explore how conflict shapes cities and citizenship, and how cities and citizenship are, in turn, shaped by conflict. We propose that conflict be considered as a mode of inhabiting cities—indeed, as a mode of citizenship—but also as potentially a mode of eroding citizenship and urban fabric through both violent and non-violent means. Guest lecturers from a range of disciplines in the social sciences will address how issues ranging from participatory democracy and environmental justice to ethnic violence and migration reshape cities. The roster of guest lecturers includes renowned representatives from the following fields: Critical geography, urban politics, architectural research, heritage studies and Black studies.

    #urbanism #conflict

  • Male rape survivors go uncounted in #Rohingya camps

    ‘I don’t hear people talk about sexual violence against men. But this is also not specific to this response.’
    Nurul Islam feels the pain every time he sits: it’s a reminder of the sexual violence the Rohingya man endured when he fled Myanmar two years ago.

    Nurul, a refugee, says he was raped and tortured by Myanmar soldiers during the military purge that ousted more than 700,000 Rohingya from Rakhine State starting in August 2017.

    “They put me like a dog,” Nurul said, acting out the attack by bowing toward the ground, black tarp sheets lining the bamboo tent around him.

    Nurul, 40, is one of the uncounted male survivors of sexual violence now living in Bangladesh’s cramped refugee camps.

    Rights groups and aid agencies have documented widespread sexual violence against women and girls as part of the Rohingya purge. UN investigators say the scale of Myanmar military sexual violence was so severe that it amounts to evidence of “genocidal intent to destroy the Rohingya population” in and of itself.

    But boys and men like Nurul were also victims. Researchers who study sexual violence in crises say the needs of male survivors have largely been overlooked and neglected by humanitarian programmes in Bangladesh’s refugee camps.

    “There’s a striking division between aid workers and the refugees,” said Sarah Chynoweth, a researcher who has studied male survivors of sexual violence in emergencies around the world, including the Rohingya camps. “Many aid workers say we haven’t heard about it, but the refugees are well aware of it.”

    A report she authored for the Women’s Refugee Commission, a research organisation that advocates for improvements on gender issues in humanitarian responses, calls for aid groups in Bangladesh to boost services for all survivors of sexual violence – recognising that men and boys need help, in addition to women and girls.

    Rights groups say services for all survivors of gender-based violence are “grossly inadequate” and underfunded across the camps – including care for people attacked in the exodus from Myanmar, as well as abuse that happens in Bangladesh’s city-sized refugee camps.

    Stigma often prevents Rohingya men and boys from speaking up, while many aid groups aren’t asking the right questions to find out.

    But there are even fewer services offering male victims like Nurul specialised counselling and healthcare.

    Chynoweth and others who work on the issue say stigma often prevents Rohingya men and boys from speaking up, while many aid groups aren’t asking the right questions to find out – leaving humanitarian groups with scarce data to plan a better response, and male survivors of sexual violence with little help.

    In interviews with organisations working on gender-based violence, health, and mental health in the camps, aid staff told The New Humanitarian that the needs of male rape survivors have rarely been discussed, or that specialised services were unnecessary.

    Mercy Lwambi, women protection and empowerment coordinator at the International Rescue Committee, said focusing on female survivors of gender-based violence is not intended to exclude men.

    “What we do is just evidence-informed,” she said. “We have evidence to show it’s for the most part women and girls who are affected by sexual violence. The numbers of male survivors are usually low.”

    But according to gender-based violence case management guidelines compiled by organisations including the IRC, services should be in place for all survivors of sexual violence, with or without incident data.

    And in the camps, Rohingya refugees know that male survivors exist.

    TNH spoke with dozens of Rohingya refugees, asking about the issue of ”torture against private parts of men”. Over the course of a week, TNH met 21 Rohingya who said they were affected, knew other people who were, or said they witnessed it themselves.

    When fellow refugees reached out to Nurul on behalf of TNH, he decided to share his experiences as a survivor of sexual violence: “Because it happened to men too,” he said.
    Asking the right questions

    After his attack in Myanmar, Nurul said other Rohingya men dragged him across the border to Bangladesh’s camps. When he went to a health clinic, the doctors handed him painkillers. There were no questions about his injury, and he didn’t offer an explanation.

    “I was too ashamed to tell them what had happened,” he said.

    When TNH met him in June, Nurul said he hadn’t received any counselling or care for his abuse.

    But Chynoweth says the problem is more complicated than men being reluctant to out themselves as rape victims, or aid workers simply not acknowledging the severity of sexual violence against men and boys.

    She believes it’s also a question of language.

    When Chynoweth last year started asking refugees if they knew of men who had been raped or sexually abused, most at first said no. When she left out the words “sexual” and “rape” and instead asked if “torture” was done against their “private parts”, people opened up.

    “Many men have no idea that what happened to them is sexual violence,” she said.

    Similarly, when she asked NGO workers in Bangladesh if they had encountered sexual violence against Rohingya men, many would shake their heads. “As soon as I asked if they had treated men with genital trauma, the answer was: ‘Yes, of course,’” she said.

    This suggests that health workers must be better trained to ask the right questions and to spot signs of abuse, Chynoweth said.
    Challenging taboos

    The undercounting of sexual violence against men has long been a problem in humanitarian responses.

    A December 2013 report by the Office of the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict notes that sexual and gender-based violence is often seen as a women’s issue, yet “the disparity between levels of conflict-related sexual violence against women and levels against men is rarely as dramatic as one might expect”.

    A Security Council resolution this year formally recognised that sexual violence in conflict also targets men and boys; Human Rights Watch called it “an important step in challenging the taboos that keep men from reporting their experiences and deny the survivors the assistance they need”.

    But in the Rohingya refugee camps, the issue still flies under the radar.

    Mwajuma Msangi from the UN Population Fund, which chairs the gender-based violence subsector for aid groups in the camps, said sexual violence against men and boys is usually only raised, if at all, during the “any other business” section that ends bimonthly coordination meetings.

    “It hasn’t really come up,” Msangi said in an interview. “It’s good you are bringing this up, we should definitely look into it.”

    TNH asked staff from other major aid groups about the issue, including the UN’s refugee agency UNHCR, which co-manages UN and NGO efforts in the camps, and the World Health Organisation, which leads the health sector. There were few programmes training staff on how to work with male survivors of sexual violence, or offering specialised healthcare or counselling.

    “The [gender-based violence] sector has not been very proactive in training health workers to be honest,” said Donald Sonne Kazungu, Médecins Sans Frontières’ medical coordinator in Cox’s Bazar. “I don’t hear people talk about sexual violence against men. But this is also not specific to this response.”

    "The NGO world doesn’t acknowledge that it happened because there is no data, and there is no data because nobody is asking for it.”

    No data, no response

    For the few organisations that work with male survivors of sexual violence in the camps, the failure to assess the extent of the problem is part of a cycle that prevents solutions.

    "The NGO world doesn’t acknowledge that it happened because there is no data, and there is no data because nobody is asking for it,” said Eva Buzo, country director for Legal Action Worldwide, a European NGO that offers legal support to people in crises, including a women’s organisation in the camps, Shanti Mohila.

    LAW trains NGO medical staff and outreach workers, teaching them to be aware of signs of abuse among male survivors. It’s also trying to solidify a system through which men and boys can be referred for help. Through the first half of the year, the organisation has interacted with 25 men.

    "It’s really hardly a groundbreaking project, but unfortunately it is,” Buzo said, shrugging her shoulders. “Nobody else is paying attention.”

    But she’s reluctant to advertise her programme in the camps: there aren’t enough services where male victims of sexual violence can access specialised health and psychological care. Buzo said she trusts two doctors that work specifically with male survivors; both were trained by her organisation.

    “It’s shocking how ill-equipped the sector is,” she said, frustrated about her dilemma. “If we identify new survivors, I don’t even know where to refer them to.”

    The issue also underscores a larger debate in the humanitarian sector about whether gender-based violence programmes should focus primarily on women and girls, who face added risks in crises, or also better include men, boys, and the LGBTI community.

    “If we identify new survivors, I don’t even know where to refer them to.”

    Buzo says the lack of services for male survivors in the Rohingya camps points to a reluctance to recognise the need for action out of fear it might come at the expense of services for women – which already suffer from funding shortfalls.

    The Rohingya response could have been a precedent for the humanitarian sector as a whole to better respond to male survivors of sexual violence, according to an aid worker who worked on protection issues in the camps in 2017 as the massive refugee outflow was unfolding.

    When she questioned incoming refugees about sexual violence against women, numerous Rohingya asked what could be done for men who had also been raped, said the aid worker, who asked not to be named as she didn’t have permission to speak on behalf of her organisation.

    “We missed yet another chance to open this issue up,” she said.

    Chynoweth believes health, protection, and counselling programmes for all survivors – female and male – must improve.

    “There aren’t many services for women and girls. The response to all survivors is really poor,” she said. “But we should, and we can do both.”

    http://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2019/09/04/Rohingya-men-raped-Myanmar-Bangladesh-refugee-camps-GBV
    #viol #viols #violences_sexuelles #conflits #abus_sexuels #hommes_violés #réfugiés #asile #migrations #camps_de_réfugiés #Myanmar #Birmanie

  • 67 books about making peace, not war

    Rethinking Peace and Conflict Studies | Oliver P. Richmond | Springer
    http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14500
    “This agenda-setting series of research monographs, now more than a decade old, provides an interdisciplinary forum aimed at advancing innovative new agendas for approaches to, and understandings of, peace and conflict studies and International Relations. Many of the critical volumes the series has so far hosted have contributed to new avenues of analysis directly or indirectly related to the search for positive, emancipatory, and hybrid forms of peace. New perspectives on peacemaking in practice and in theory, their implications for the international peace architecture, and different conflict-affected regions around the world, remain crucial. This series’ contributions offers both theoretical and empirical insights into many of the world’s most intractable conflicts and any subsequent attempts to build a new and more sustainable peace, responsive to the needs and norms of those who are its subjects.”

    #peace

  • Emerging evidence that armed conflict and coca cultivation influence deforestation patterns - ScienceDirect
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0006320718318779

    The effect of armed conflict on deforestation in biodiverse regions across Earth remains poorly understood. Its association with factors like illegal crop cultivation can obscure its effect on deforestation patterns. We used Colombia, a global biodiversity hotspot with a complex political history, to explore the association of both armed conflict and coca cultivation with deforestation patterns. We generated spatial predictions of deforestation pressure based on the period 2000–2015 to understand how armed conflict and coca cultivation are associated with spatial patterns of deforestation and assess the spatial distribution of deforestation pressure induced by armed conflict and coca cultivation.

    #Colombie #déforestation #conflit_armé #coca

  • #Mau_Mau - #Con_chi_fugge

    Chi scappa perché c’è una guerra
    chi gli hanno preso la sua terra
    chi si è salvato da un inferno
    finendo in un C.I.E. moderno

    Non si vive non si vive così
    Che faresti se vivessi così?
    Per la gente di
    Mali Siria Eritrea
    Nigeria Senegal
    io griderò
    che con chi fugge io starò!

    Chi sarà sempre uno straniero
    chi sogna un lavoro vero
    chi cerca cibo e trova bombe
    e chi si è perso tra le onde

    Non si vive non si vive così
    che faresti se vivessi così?
    Per la gente di
    Gambia Palestina Bangladesh
    Egitto Libia
    urlerò
    che con chi fugge io starò!

    Chi comanda ha messo un muro 
    un confine immaginario
    si è spartito questa Terra
    l’esodo è planetario

    Attraverso i 7 mari
    c’è una schiavitù moderna
    gli interessi dei potenti
    e sangue sopra i continenti

    ma con chi fugge io starò

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


    #fuite #solidarité #asile #conflits #guerre #migrations #réfugiés #musique_et_politique #chanson #musique

    ping @sinehebdo

  • Article 370: India strips disputed Kashmir of special status - BBC News

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-49231619

    India’s government has revoked part of the constitution that gives Indian-administered Kashmir special status, in an unprecedented move likely to spark unrest.

    Article 370 is sensitive because it is what guarantees significant autonomy for the Muslim-majority state.

    There has been a long-running insurgency on the Indian side.

    Nuclear powers India and Pakistan have fought two wars and a limited conflict over Kashmir since 1947.

    The BBC’s Geeta Pandey in Delhi says that for many Kashmiris, Article 370 was the main justification for being a part of India and by revoking it, the BJP has irrevocably changed Delhi’s relationship with the region.

    Pakistan condemned India’s decision to revoke the special status of its part of Kashmir as illegal, saying it would “exercise all possible options” to counter it.

    “India is playing a dangerous game which will have serious consequences for regional peace and stability,” said Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

    #inde #cahemire #conflit #frontière

    • Gods, Guns, and Country
      July 30, 2019 Posted by Carol Schaeffer
      https://jewishcurrents.org/gods-guns-and-country

      Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (left) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Olga Beach in Israel, June 7th, 2017. Photo: Kobi Gideon/GPO

      ON NOVEMBER 28TH, 2018, speaking to a roomful of India’s most highly regarded defense strategists, the chief of staff of the Indian Army, Bipin Rawat, urged his colleagues and his country to shed their concerns about collateral damage. Look at Israel, he said: “When you talk of strike drones, how does the Israeli strike the Hezbollah . . . ?” A vehicle is marked, a drone takes off, and boom: “God help you if you’re in the following vehicle—you’re also gone.”
      (...)
      Less than 30 years ago, the very thought of a prominent Indian official openly admiring Israeli military policies toward Palestinians would have been an incredible scandal. But in a reversal of India’s official policy toward Israel for most of both country’s histories, relations have been quietly developing since the early 1990s and are now warmer than ever. Since Narendra Modi came to power five years ago as prime minister, India’s diplomatic policies have shifted dramatically in Israel’s favor, and away from India’s traditional alliance with the Palestinians.

      The partnership came to a public zenith when Modi became the first Indian prime minister to visit Israel, in July 2017. With frequent hugs, fond glances, and long walks on picturesque Israeli beaches, Modi and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put on an effusive display of personal and political affection. The “bromance” attracted a storm of media attention, and to many commentators signaled a new era of Middle East/Asian politics.

      On the historic visit, Modi and Netanyahu signed new cooperative deals on water, space technology, and agriculture. But the biggest and most significant deals have centered on defense. As South Asia’s sole nuclear power for decades, India could mostly deter threats from aggressive neighbors. But since Pakistan conducted nuclear tests in 1998, Indian military responses to attacks have been extremely limited, for fear of aggravating the possibility of a nuclear war. This has made reconnaissance, surveillance, and precision weaponry increasingly appealing for India. Israel’s specialization in high-tech weaponry, from drones to guided missiles—battle-tested in Palestine—has made officials like Rawat both envious and supportive of Israeli tactics, transforming Israel into a desirable international partner.

      Israel has proven to be a reliable weapons supplier, unburdened by moral questions about India’s use of its arsenal. Over the last two decades, India has become Israel’s largest customer. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, from 2014 to 2018 India accounted for a whopping 46% of all Israeli weapons sales (not including small arms). In 2018, Reuters reported that India buys around one billion dollars in weapons from Israel every year. (...)

      An Indian army officer displays the Tavor-21, an Israeli-made rifle which is in use by Indian enforcers in Kashmir. Photo: Fayaz Kabli/Reuters
      #IsraelInde #cachemire

    • Il y a 6 mois, #Arundhati_Roy nous prévenait...

      How to Think About Empire
      Arundhati Roy, Boston Review, le 3 janvier 2019
      https://seenthis.net/messages/795925

      The BJP has announced its plans to carry out this exercise in West Bengal, too. If that were ever to happen, tens of millions of people would be uprooted. That could easily turn into yet another Partition. Or even, heaven forbid, another Rwanda. It doesn’t end there. In the Muslim-majority State of Jammu and Kashmir, on the other hand, the BJP has declared that it wants to abrogate Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, which gives the state autonomous status and was the only condition under which it would accede to India in 1947. That means beginning a process of overwhelming the local population with Israeli-type settlements in the Kashmir Valley. Over the past thirty years, almost 70,000 people have died in Kashmir’s struggle for self-determination. Any move to eliminate Article 370 would be simply cataclysmic.

      It is interesting that countries that call themselves democracies— India, Israel, and the United States—are busy running military occupations. Kashmir is one of the deadliest and densest military occupations in the world. India transformed from colony to imperial power virtually overnight.

      #cachemire #israel

    • Le Premier ministre israélien Benyamin Netanyahou se rendra en septembre en Inde
      i24NEWS - 05 août 2019
      https://www.i24news.tv/fr/actu/israel/1564998586-le-premier-ministre-israelien-benyamin-netanyahou-se-rendra-en-se

      « Heureux #FriendshipDay2019 India ! », a écrit l’ambassade israélienne en Inde sur le réseau social. « Puisse notre amitié être toujours plus forte et notre partenariat pour la croissance atteindre de nouveaux sommets », a-t-elle ajouté.

      Ajoutée au message, une vidéo qui comprend de nombreuses photographies du Premier ministre Benyamin Netanyahou et de son homologue indien.

      Narendra Modi a répondu au message en écrivant en hébreu : « Merci. Je souhaite une bonne journée de l’amitié aux merveilleux citoyens d’Israël et à mon ami [Benyamin Netanyahou] ».

      « L’Inde et Israël ont prouvé leur amitié à travers les âges », a-t-il poursuivi. « Nos relations sont étroites et éternelles. Je souhaite que l’amitié de nos pays croisse et se développe davantage à l’avenir ».

      « Merci à mon ami, le Premier ministre indien @narendramodi », a répondu Netanyahou. « Je ne peux pas être plus d’accord avec toi. »

      « Le lien profond qui unit Israël et l’Inde est enraciné dans la solide amitié entre Israéliens et Indiens », a-t-il poursuivi. « Nous coopérons dans de nombreux domaines. Je sais que nos liens ne feront que se renforcer à l’avenir ! », a-t-il encore dit.