country:costa rica

  • La Cour internationale de justice reconnaît le droit à réparation des dommages à l’environnement
    https://www.actu-environnement.com/ae/news/prejudice-ecologique-reparation-dommages-cour-justice-internatio

    Les dégâts causés par les guerres doivent être concernés donc.

    Par une décision rendue le 2 février, la Cour internationale de justice (#CIJ) a admis qu’un Etat était tenu de réparer les #dommages à l’#environnement causés à un autre Etat. Une décision qualifiée d’"historique" par le professeur de droit Laurent Neyret, spécialiste de la responsabilité environnementale.

    « Pour la première fois, une juridiction internationale décide d’allouer une #réparation pour la #dégradation des biens et services rendus par la nature, en sus des frais de restauration de la nature abîmée », commente Sébastien Mabile, président de la commission droit et politiques environnementales de l’UICN. Cela va dans le sens de la responsabilité environnementale reconnue au niveau européen et de la réparation du préjudice écologique dans la législation française, ajoute l’avocat.

    En l’espèce, la juridiction internationale condamne le Nicaragua à indemniser le Costa Rica pour les dommages environnementaux résultant du creusement de deux canaux dans une zone qui s’est révélée être sous souveraineté costaricaine.

  • The Latin American Seeds Collective presents the documentary “Seeds: commons or corporate property?”
    https://www.grain.org/article/entries/5874-the-latin-american-seeds-collective-presents-the-documentary-seeds-commo

    Jointly produced by eight Latin American organisations and edited by Radio Mundo Real, the documentary “Seeds: commons or corporate property?” draws on the experiences and struggles of social movements for the defence of indigenous and native seeds in Ecuador, Brazil, Costa Rica, Mexico, Honduras, Argentina, Colombia and Guatemala.

    The main characters are the seeds - indigenous, native, ours - in the hands of rural communities and indigenous peoples. The documentary illustrates that the defence of native seeds is integral to the defence of territory, life and peoples’ autonomy. It also addresses the relationship between indigenous women and native seeds, as well as the importance of seed exchanges within communities. Exploring the historical origins of corn, and the appreciation and blessing of seeds by Mayan communities, this short film shows the importance of seeds in ceremonies, markets and exchanges, as well as local experiences of recovery and management of indigenous seeds. It also shows the significant and ongoing struggles against seed laws, against UPOV 91 and the imposition of transgenic seeds. Whilst condemning the devastation that such laws bring, this film captures the resistance to aerial spraying and the advancement of agribusiness.

    The documentary is available in Spanish; with English, Portuguese, and French subtitles. [1] We invite you to watch it and to share it widely in order to continue defending the seeds which are peoples’ heritage, and which serve humankind on the path towards food sovereignty.

    https://vimeo.com/240217030

    #semences #peuples_autochtones #documentaire

  • La tempête #Nate fait 22 morts en Amérique centrale et menace les Etats-Unis -
    afp , le 06/10/2017 à 11h45La Croix
    https://www.la-croix.com/Monde/tempete-Nate-fait-22-morts-Amerique-centrale-menace-Etats-Unis-2017-10-06-

    La tempête tropicale Nate a fait 22 morts et près de 30 disparus en Amérique centrale et menace désormais le Mexique et les Etats-Unis où elle pourrait se transformer en ouragan.

    Apportant des pluies diluviennes, Nate a provoqué la mort de onze personnes au Nicaragua, huit au Costa Rica et trois au Honduras, selon les autorités locales.

    Le bilan reste provisoire, car sept personnes sont portées disparues au Nicaragua, 17 au Costa Rica et trois au Honduras.

    Les pluies ont causé des scènes dantesques d’arbres déracinés, de ponts effondrés, de routes transformées en rivières et de maisons inondées dans les trois pays affectés.

    #climat

  • Un #rapport qui date de 2009, que je suis en train de lire, et qui est vraiment très bien fait et encore très actuel... je signale ici pour ceux qui s’intéressent à cette thématique et pour archivage :
    Human Development Report (2009) : Overcoming barriers : Human mobility and development
    http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/reports/269/hdr_2009_en_complete.pdf
    #ouverture_des_frontières #frontières #migrations #réfugiés #asile #pauvreté
    cc @reka

    • Migration, Poverty Reduction Strategies and Human Development

      This paper focuses on the specific question of how Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) address migration and its potential to enhance human development at the national level. Based on a review of PRSPs completed since 1999, it argues that migration often remains poorly recognised or analysed in poorer countries in terms of its impacts on poverty reduction, whilst attitudes towards migration in these countries are often highly negative and/or based on limited evidence, especially in relation to internal migration. Analysis of how both internal and international migration are treated in PRSPs is also placed in the context of a broader understanding of the purpose of, and constraints faced by the PRS process. The paper goes on to highlight the extent to which in Sub-Saharan African countries, successive drafts of PRSPs have shown increasing attention to migration. It also considers how analysis of the problems and opportunities associated with different types of migration are converted into policy initiatives, highlighting the lack of good practice in terms of the incorporation of migration into human development policy.

      http://hdr.undp.org/fr/content/migration-poverty-reduction-strategies-and-human-development

    • Comment les immigrés contribuent à l’économie des pays en développement

      Le rapport Comment les immigrés contribuent à l’économie des pays en développement est le fruit d’un projet mené conjointement par le Centre de développement de l’OCDE et l’Organisation internationale du travail, avec le soutien de l’Union européenne. Il couvre les dix pays partenaires – l’Afrique du Sud, l’Argentine, le Costa Rica, la Côte d’Ivoire, le Ghana, le Kirghizistan, le Népal, la République dominicaine, le Rwanda et la Thaïlande – de ce projet, « L’évaluation de la contribution économique des migrations de travail dans les pays en développement comme pays de destination », visant à apporter des preuves empiriques – à la fois quantitatives et qualitatives – des multiples façons dont les immigrés influent sur leurs pays d’accueil.


      Ce rapport met en avant l’impact relativement limité des migrations de travail sur les performances des travailleurs autochtones sur le marché du travail, la croissance économique et les finances publiques dans les dix pays partenaires. Cela signifie que la crainte que les immigrés génèrent des effets négatifs s’avère souvent injustifiée, mais aussi que la plupart des pays de destination ne tirent pas suffisamment parti du capital humain et de l’expertise que les immigrés ont à offrir. Les politiques publiques peuvent jouer un rôle déterminant pour accroître la contribution des immigrés au développement de leur pays d’accueil.

      http://www.oecd.org/fr/publications/comment-les-immigres-contribuent-a-l-economie-des-pays-en-developpement-978926

      #économie #développement #Sud #pays_du_sud

  • Climate Change is Turning Dehydration into a Deadly Epidemic | JSTOR Daily
    https://daily.jstor.org/climate-change-dehydration-deadly-epidemic

    Richard J Johnson, a kidney specialist at the University of Colorado, helped organise the World Congress of Nephrology in Canada in 2011. There, he learned about the strange new form of chronic kidney disease spreading through Central America. Researchers from various countries were beginning to get together and discuss the evidence. Like others, Johnson began to think about possible causes.

    His own research was focused on the sugar #fructose – identifying its role in obesity, high blood pressure and heart disease. When a person eats fructose, the liver bears most of the brunt, but some of the sugar eventually ends up in the kidney. With each meal, fructose enters the kidney tubules, where it is metabolised into uric acid and causes oxidative stress, both of which can damage the kidney.

    At first, Johnson thought people in the sugarcane fields could be eating so much of the plant itself that they were generating high levels of uric acid and oxidative stress in their kidneys. But, he calculated, even sucking on sugarcane all day wouldn’t produce enough fructose to cause disease. Then he discovered that, under certain conditions, the body processes regular carbohydrates to make its own fructose. And one of the triggers of this deadly alchemy is simple dehydration.

    Until that point, nephrologists had thought that dehydration could only cause acute kidney injury, but Johnson’s findings put a new spin on the role of insufficient water intake. Could dehydration day in, day out be causing continuous fructose overproduction that, in turn, could be leading to long-term kidney damage?

    Johnson took his theory to the lab, where his team put mice in chambers and exposed them to hours of heat at a stretch. One group of mice was allowed to drink unlimited water throughout the experience, while a second group had water only in the evenings. Within five weeks the mice with a restricted water intake developed chronic kidney disease. During the day, loss of salt and water caused the mice to produce high levels of fructose, and crystals of uric acid would sometimes form as water levels dropped in their urine. When the scientists disabled the gene that metabolises fructose and repeated the experiment, neither group developed chronic kidney disease.

    Johnson took these results to a meeting of the Program on Health and Work in Central America, or SALTRA, in Costa Rica in 2012, where they caught the attention of García-Trabanino: “I was astonished. His animal models were absolutely in line with our findings.”

    The two collaborated to investigate the biochemical effects of dehydration on workers in the fields of El Salvador. Levels of uric acid started high in the morning and increased throughout the day. “Some patients just had sheets of uric acid crystals in their urine,” Johnson says.

    From these studies, Johnson believes that heat stress and dehydration drive the production of fructose and vasopressin, which also damages the kidney. However, he believes that another mechanism may also play a part in the epidemic: rehydration with sugary drinks. Frequently, not trusting the quality of local drinking water, workers drink sodas and soft drinks, and experimental evidence suggests that doing so can lead to even more kidney damage.

    “At this stage, that heat stress and dehydration might be causing this problem is still a hypothesis,” Johnson admits. “Although it is a strong one.”

    #sucre #reins #climat #déshydratation

  • Fin de la production d’hydrocarbures en France : les failles de la loi Hulot
    https://www.bastamag.net/Fin-de-la-production-d-hydrocarbures-en-France-les-failles-de-la-loi-Hulot

    Après le Costa Rica, c’est au tour de la France de vouloir mettre fin à la recherche et à l’exploitation des hydrocarbures. Nicolas Hulot a présenté le 6 septembre en Conseil des ministres un projet de loi qui « amorce la sortie progressive et irréversible de la production de pétrole et de gaz sur le territoire français à l’horizon 2040 ». Ce projet de loi peut apparaitre symbolique, les énergies fossiles extraites du sol français ne représentant que 1 % de la consommation énergétique nationale. Mais ce (...)

    En bref

    / #Le_défi_du_réchauffement_climatique, #Multinationales, #Climat

  • One dead, boy missing in migrant boat capsize off Costa Rica

    At least 19 migrants, said to be from Africa and Mongolia, were on board the small vessel when it tipped over in #Salinas_Bay, in northwest Costa Rica close to the Nicaraguan border, Costa Rica’s public security ministry said, according to the newspaper La Nacion


    #asile #migrations #réfugiés #mourir_en_mer #Costa_Rica #migrants_africains #migrants_mongoles #morts #Nicaragua #routes_migratoires #parcours_migratoires #Afrique #Mongolie #Amérique #Amérique_latine

    cc @reka : des migrants africains et mongoles au large du costa Rica...

  • Carnet de voyages #féministe n°1 : Le Costa Rica | Simonæ
    http://simonae.fr/au-quotidien/societe/carnet-voyages-feministe-1-costa-rica

    Sous la pluie battante de juin, je découvre que le pays le plus riche d’Amérique Centrale cache plein de contradictions. Si l’écologie est un sujet qui semble préoccuper toute la population – après tout, le Costa Rica est LE pays de l’écotourisme, les politiques restent hermétiques à toute critique visant à aller plus loin dans ce domaine. Alors qu’il se targue d’être le pays des droits humains – tout comme « La France, pays des droits de l’homme » –, car il n’y a par exemple plus d’armée depuis près de 70 ans, l’avortement et la pilule d’urgence sont formellement interdits. Le conservatisme catholique, dans un pays qui se dit progressiste, empêche de grandes avancées, notamment au niveau de la santé et de la liberté sexuelle.

  • L’ONU adopte un traité bannissant l’arme atomique, boudé par les Etats nucléaires
    http://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2017/07/07/l-onu-adopte-un-traite-bannissant-l-arme-atomique-boude-par-les-etats-nuclea

    Un #traité interdisant les #armes_nucléaires a été adopté vendredi 7 juillet aux Nations unies, mais les puissances nucléaires ont refusé de participer au processus. Ce texte reste donc largement symbolique, au moment où la Corée du Nord accélère son programme d’armement.

    Le traité a été adopté par 122 votes pour, une voix contre – celle des Pays-Bas, membre de l’Otan – et une abstention. Ses partisans y voient une réalisation historique, mais les Etats nucléaires le jugent irréaliste, estimant qu’il n’aura aucun impact sur la réduction du stock mondial actuel, de quelque 15 000 têtes nucléaires.
    141 Etats impliqués

    Des applaudissements ont retenti dans la salle de conférence de l’ONU après le vote, qui met un terme à trois semaines de négociations par 141 Etats, portées par l’Autriche, le Brésil, le Mexique, l’Afrique du Sud et la Nouvelle-Zélande.

    Le traité, qui préconise une interdiction totale du développement, du stockage et de la menace d’utilisation d’armes nucléaires, ne s’appliquera qu’aux signataires. Il sera ouvert à ratification à partir du 20 septembre et entrera en vigueur après sa signature par 50 pays.

    Ses partisans espèrent qu’il accentuera la pression sur les Etats nucléaires afin qu’ils prennent le désarmement plus au sérieux. « Nous avons réussi à semer les premières graines d’un monde sans armes nucléaires », s’est félicitée l’ambassadrice du Costa Rica, Elayne Whyte Gomez, qui a présidé la conférence de l’ONU sur le traité.

    Aucun des neuf pays détenteurs de l’arme nucléaire (Etats-Unis, Russie, Royaume-Uni, Chine, France, Inde, Pakistan, Corée du Nord et Israël) n’a pris part aux négociations. Même le Japon, seul pays à avoir connu une attaque atomique en 1945, les a boycottées, ainsi que la plupart des pays de l’Otan. La France, les Etats-Unis et le Royaume-Uni estiment dans un communiqué commun que ce texte « méprise clairement les réalités de l’environnement sécuritaire international ».

    #nucléaire_militaire #symbole

  • Record Numbers Of Venezuelans Seek Asylum In The U.S. Amid Political Chaos

    Some 8,300 Venezuelans applied for U.S. asylum in the first three months of 2017, which, as the Associated Press points out, puts the country on track to nearly double its record 18,155 requests last year. Around one in every five U.S. applicants this fiscal year is Venezuelan, making Venezuela America’s leading source of asylum claimants for the first time, surpassing countries like China and Mexico.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/political-chaos-sends-record-number-of-venezuelans-fleeing-to-us_us_
    #asile #migrations #réfugiés #réfugiés_vénézuéliens #USA #Etats-Unis #Venezuela

    • Colombie : violence et afflux de réfugiés vénézuéliens préoccupent l’UE

      La Colombie est confrontée à deux « situations humanitaires », en raison de l’afflux de réfugiés fuyant « la crise au Venezuela » et d’"un nouveau cycle de violence" de divers groupes armés, a dénoncé le commissaire européen Christos Stylianides.

      https://www.courrierinternational.com/depeche/colombie-violence-et-afflux-de-refugies-venezueliens-preoccup
      #Colombie

    • Half a million and counting: Venezuelan exodus puts new strains on Colombian border town

      The sun is burning at the Colombian border town of Cúcuta. Red Cross workers attend to people with dehydration and fatigue as hundreds of Venezuelans line up to have their passports stamped, covering their heads with clothing and cardboard to fashion what shade they can.

      https://www.irinnews.org/feature/2018/03/07/half-million-and-counting-venezuelan-exodus-puts-new-strains-colombian-bor

    • Venezuelans flee to Colombia to escape economic meltdown

      The Simon Bolivar bridge has become symbolic of the mass exodus of migrants from Venezuela. The crossing is also just one piece in the complex puzzle facing Colombia, as it struggles to absorb the increasing number of migrants prompted by its neighbour’s economic and social meltdown.

      Up to 45,000 migrants cross on foot from Venezuela to Cúcuta every day. The Colombian city has become the last hope for many fleeing Venezuela’s crumbling economy. Already four million people, out of a population of 30 million, have fled Venezuela due to chronic shortages of food and medicine.

      http://www.euronews.com/2018/03/26/colombia-s-venezuelan-migrant-influx

    • Venezolanos en Colombia: una situación que se sale de las manos

      La crisis venezolana se transformó en un éxodo masivo sin precedentes, con un impacto hemisférico que apenas comienza. Brasil y Colombia, donde recae el mayor impacto, afrontan un año electoral en medio de la polarización política, que distrae la necesidad de enfrentarla con una visión conjunta, estratégica e integral.


      http://pacifista.co/venezolanos-en-colombia-crisis-opinion

      via @stesummi

    • Hungry, sick and increasingly desperate, thousands of Venezuelans are pouring into Colombia

      For evidence that the Venezuelan migrant crisis is overwhelming this Colombian border city, look no further than its largest hospital.

      The emergency room designed to serve 75 patients is likely to be crammed with 125 or more. Typically, two-thirds are impoverished Venezuelans with broken bones, infections, trauma injuries — and no insurance and little cash.

      “I’m here for medicine I take every three months or I die,” said Cesar Andrade, a 51-year-old retired army sergeant from Caracas. He had come to Cucuta’s Erasmo Meoz University Hospital for anti-malaria medication he can’t get in Venezuela. “I’m starting a new life in Colombia. The crisis back home has forced me to do it.”

      The huge increase in Venezuelan migrants fleeing their country’s economic crisis, failing healthcare system and repressive government is affecting the Cucuta metropolitan area more than any other in Colombia. It’s where 80% of all exiting Venezuelans headed for Colombia enter as foreigners.

      Despite turning away Venezuelans with cancer or chronic diseases, the hospital treated 1,200 migrant emergency patients last month, up from the handful of patients, mostly traffic collision victims, in March 2015, before the Venezuelan exodus started gathering steam.

      The hospital’s red ink is rising along with its caseload. The facility has run up debts of $5 million over the last three years to accommodate Venezuelans because the Colombian government is unable to reimburse it, said Juan Agustin Ramirez, director of the 500-bed hospital.

      “The government has ordered us to attend to Venezuelan patients but is not giving us the resources to pay for them,” Ramirez said. “The truth is, we feel abandoned. The moment could arrive when we will collapse.”

      An average of 35,000 people cross the Simon Bolivar International Bridge linking the two countries every day. About half return to the Venezuelan side after making purchases, conducting business or visiting family. But the rest stay in Cucuta at least temporarily or move on to the Colombian interior or other countries.

      For many Venezuelans, the first stop after crossing is the Divine Providence Cafeteria, an open-air soup kitchen a stone’s throw from the bridge. A Roman Catholic priest, Father Leonardo Mendoza, and volunteer staff serve some 1,500 meals daily. But it’s not enough.

      One recent day, lines stretched halfway around the block with Venezuelans, desperation and hunger etched on their faces. But some didn’t have the tickets that were handed out earlier in the day and were turned away.

      “Children come up to me and say, ’Father, I’m hungry.’ It’s heartbreaking. It’s the children’s testimony that inspires the charitable actions of all of us here,” Mendoza said.

      The precise number of Venezuelan migrants who are staying in Colombia is difficult to calculate because of the porousness of the 1,400-mile border, which has seven formal crossings. But estimates range as high as 800,000 arrivals over the last two years. At least 500,000 have gone on to the U.S., Spain, Brazil and other Latin American countries, officials here say.

      “Every day 40 buses each filled with 40 or more Venezuelans leave Cucuta, cross Colombia and go directly to Ecuador,” said Huber Plaza, a local delegate of the National Disasters Risk Management Agency. “They stay there or go on to Chile, Argentina or Peru, which seems to be the preferred destination these days.”

      Many arrive broke, hungry and in need of immediate medical attention. Over the last two years, North Santander province, where Cucuta is located, has vaccinated 58,000 Venezuelans for measles, diphtheria and other infectious diseases because only half of the arriving children have had the shots, said Nohora Barreto, a nurse with the provincial health department.

      On the day Andrade, the retired army sergeant, sought treatment, gurneys left little space in the crowded ward and hospital corridors, creating an obstacle course for nurses and doctors who shouted orders, handed out forms and began examinations.

      Andrade and many other patients stood amid the gurneys because all the chairs and beds were taken. Nearby, a pregnant woman in the early stages of labor groaned as she walked haltingly among the urgent care patients, supported by a male companion.

      Dionisio Sanchez, a 20-year-old Venezuelan laborer, sat on a gurney awaiting treatment for a severe cut he suffered on his hand at a Cucuta construction site. Amid the bustle, shouting and medical staff squeezing by, he stared ahead quietly, holding his hand wrapped in gauze and resigned to a long wait.

      “I’m lucky this didn’t happen to me back home,” Sanchez said. “Everyone is suffering a lot there. I didn’t want to leave, but hunger and other circumstances forced me to make the decision.”

      Signs of stress caused by the flood of migrants are abundant elsewhere in this city of 650,000. Schools are overcrowded, charitable organizations running kitchens and shelters are overwhelmed and police who chase vagrants and illegal street vendors from public spaces are outmanned.

      “We’ll clear 30 people from the park, but as soon as we leave, 60 more come to replace them,” said a helmeted policeman on night patrol with four comrades at downtown’s Santander Plaza. He expressed sympathy for the migrants and shook his head as he described the multitudes of homeless, saying it was impossible to control the tide.

      Sitting on a park bench nearby was Jesus Mora, a 21-year-old mechanic who arrived from Venezuela in March. He avoids sleeping in the park, he said, and looks for an alleyway or “someplace in the shadows where police won’t bother me.”

      “As long as they don’t think I’m selling drugs, I’m OK,” Mora said. “Tonight, I’m here to wait for a truck that brings around free food at this hour.” Mora said he is hoping to get a work permit. Meanwhile, he is hustling as best he can, recycling bottles, plastic and cardboard he scavenges on the street and in trash cans.

      Metropolitan Cucuta’s school system is bursting at the seams with migrant kids, who are given six-month renewable passes to attend school. Eduardo Berbesi, principal of the 1,400-student Frontera Educational Institute, a public K-12 school in Villa de Rosario that’s located a short distance from the Simon Bolivar International Bridge, says he has funds to give lunches to only 60% of his students. He blames the government for not coming through with money to finance the school’s 40% growth in enrollment since the crisis began in 2015.

      “The government tells us to receive the Venezuelan students but gives us nothing to pay for them,” Berbesi said.

      Having to refuse lunches to hungry students bothers him. “And it’s me the kids and their parents blame, not the state.”


      #Cucuta

      On a recent afternoon, every street corner in Cucuta seemed occupied with vendors selling bananas, candy, coffee, even rolls of aluminum foil.

      “If I sell 40 little cups of coffee, I earn enough to buy a kilo of rice and a little meat,” said Jesus Torres, 35, a Venezuelan who arrived last month. He was toting a shoulder bag of thermoses he had filled with coffee that morning to sell in plastic cups. “The situation is complicated here but still better than in Venezuela.”

      That evening, Leonardo Albornoz, 33, begged for coins at downtown stoplight as his wife and three children, ages 6 months to 8 years, looked on. He said he had been out of work in his native Merida for months but decided to leave for Colombia in April because his kids “were going to sleep hungry every night.”

      When the light turned red, Albornoz approached cars and buses stopped at the intersection to offer lollipops in exchange for handouts. About half of the drivers responded with a smile and some change. Several bus passengers passed him coins through open windows.

      From the sidewalk, his 8-year-old son, Kleiver, watched despondently. It was 9:30 pm — he had school the next morning and should have been sleeping, but Albornoz and his wife said they had no one to watch him or their other kids at the abandoned building where they were staying.

      “My story is a sad one like many others, but the drop that made my glass overflow was when the [Venezuelan] government confiscated my little plot of land where we could grow things,” Albornoz said.

      The increase in informal Venezuelan workers has pushed Cucuta’s unemployment rate to 16% compared with the 9% rate nationwide, Mayor Cesar Rojas said in an interview at City Hall. Although Colombians generally have welcomed their neighbors, he said, signs of resentment among jobless local residents is growing.

      “The national government isn’t sending us the resources to settle the debts, and now we have this economic crisis,” Rojas said. “With the situation in Venezuela worsening, the exodus can only increase.”

      The Colombian government admits it has been caught off guard by the dimensions — and costs — of the Venezuelan exodus, one of the largest of its kind in recent history, said Felipe Muñoz, who was named Venezuelan border manager by President Juan Manuel Santos in February.

      “This is a critical, complex and massive problem,” Muñoz said. “No country could have been prepared to receive the volume of migrants that we are receiving. In Latin America, it’s unheard of. We’re dealing with 10 times more people than those who left the Middle East for Europe last year.”

      In agreement is Jozef Merkx, Colombia representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which is taking an active role in helping Colombia deal with the influx. Central America saw large migrant flows in the 1980s, but they were caused by armed conflicts, he said.

      “Venezuelans are leaving for different reasons, and the mixed nature of the displaced crisis is what makes it a unique exodus,” Merkx said during an interview in his Bogota office.

      Muñoz said Colombia feels a special obligation to help Venezuelans in need. In past decades, when the neighboring country’s oil-fueled economy needed more manpower than the local population could provide, hundreds of thousands of Colombians flooded in to work. Now the tables are turned.

      Colombia’s president has appealed to the international community for help. The U.S. government recently stepped up: The State Department announced Tuesday it was contributing $18.5 million “to support displaced Venezuelans in Colombia who have fled the crisis in their country.”

      Manuel Antolinez, director of the International Committee of the Red Cross’ 240-bed shelter for Venezuelans near the border in Villa de Rosario, said he expects the crisis to get worse before easing.

      “Our reading is that after the May 20 presidential election in Venezuela and the probable victory of President [Nicolas] Maduro, there will be increased dissatisfaction with the regime and more oppression against the opposition,” he said. “Living conditions will worsen.”

      Whatever its duration, the crisis is leading Ramirez, director of the Erasmo Meoz University Hospital, to stretch out payments to his suppliers from an average of 30 days to 90 days after billing. He hopes the government will come through with financial aid.

      “The collapse will happen when we can’t pay our employees,” he said. He fears that could happen soon.

      http://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-venezuela-colombia-20180513-story.html

    • The Venezuelan Refugee Crisis : The View from Brazil

      Shadowing the Maduro regime’s widely condemned May 20 presidential election, Venezuela’s man-made humanitarian crisis continues to metastasize, forcing hundreds of thousands of families to flee to neighboring countries. While Colombia is bearing the brunt of the mass exodus of Venezuelans, Brazil is also facing an unprecedented influx. More than 40,000 refugees, including indigenous peoples, have crossed the border into Brazil since early 2017. The majority of these refugees have crossed into and remain in Roraima, Brazil’s poorest and most isolated state. While the Brazilian government is doing what it can to address the influx of refugees and mitigate the humanitarian risks for both the Venezuelans and local residents, much more needs to be done.


      As part of its continuing focus on the Venezuelan crisis, CSIS sent two researchers on a week-long visit to Brasilia and Roraima in early May. The team met with Brazilian federal government officials, international organizations, and civil society, in addition to assessing the situation on-the-ground at the Venezuela-Brazil border.

      https://www.csis.org/analysis/venezuelan-refugee-crisis-view-brazil
      #Boa_Vista #camps_de_réfugiés

    • Le Brésil mobilise son #armée à la frontière du Venezuela

      Le président brésilien Michel Temer a ordonné mardi soir par décret l’utilisation des forces armées pour « garantir la sécurité » dans l’Etat septentrional de Roraima, à la frontière avec le Venezuela.

      Depuis des mois, des milliers de réfugiés ont afflué dans cet Etat. « Je décrète l’envoi des forces armées pour garantir la loi et l’ordre dans l’Etat de Roraima du 29 août au 12 septembre », a annoncé le chef de l’Etat.

      Le but de la mesure est de « garantir la sécurité des citoyens mais aussi des immigrants vénézuéliens qui fuient leur pays ».
      Afflux trop important

      Plusieurs dizaines de milliers d’entre eux fuyant les troubles économiques et politiques de leur pays ont afflué ces dernières années dans l’Etat de Roraima, où les services sociaux sont submergés.

      Michel Temer a ajouté que la situation était « tragique ». Et le président brésilien de blâmer son homologue vénézuélien Nicolas Maduro : « La situation au Venezuela n’est plus un problème politique interne. C’est une menace pour l’harmonie de tout le continent », a déclaré le chef d’Etat dans un discours télévisé.

      https://www.rts.ch/info/monde/9806458-le-bresil-mobilise-son-armee-a-la-frontiere-du-venezuela.html

      #frontières #militarisation_des_frontières

    • The Exiles. A Trip to the Border Highlights Venezuela’s Devastating Humanitarian Crisis

      Never have I seen this more clearly than when I witnessed first-hand Venezuelans fleeing the devastating human rights, humanitarian, political, and economic crisis their government has created.

      Last July, I stood on the Simon Bolivar bridge that connects Cúcuta in Colombia with Táchira state in Venezuela and watched hundreds of people walk by in both directions all day long, under the blazing sun. A suitcase or two, the clothes on their back — other than that, many of those pouring over the border had nothing but memories of a life left behind.

      https://www.hrw.org/video-photos/interactive/2018/11/14/exiles-trip-border-highlights-venezuelas-devastating

    • Crises Colliding: The Mass Influx of Venezuelans into the Dangerous Fragility of Post-Peace Agreement Colombia

      Living under the government of President Nicolás Maduro, Venezuelans face political repression, extreme shortages of food and medicine, lack of social services, and economic collapse. Three million of them – or about 10 percent of the population – have fled the country.[1] The vast majority have sought refuge in the Americas, where host states are struggling with the unprecedented influx.
      Various actors have sought to respond to this rapidly emerging crisis. The UN set up the Regional Inter-Agency Coordination Platform for Refugees and Migrants from Venezuela, introducing a new model for agency coordination across the region. This Regional Platform, co-led by the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), has established a network of subsidiary National Platforms in the major host countries to coordinate the response on the ground. At the regional level, the Organization of American States (OAS) established a Working Group to Address the Regional Crisis of Venezuelan Migrants and Refugees. Latin American states have come together through the Quito Process – a series of diplomatic meetings designed to help coordinate the response of countries in the region to the crisis. Donors, including the United States, have provided bilateral assistance.


      https://www.refugeesinternational.org/reports/2019/1/10/crises-colliding-the-mass-influx-of-venezuelans-into-the-dang

      #rapport

  • How immigration detention compares around the world

    The US has the highest number of incarcerated non-citizens in the world: a population which grew from around 240,000 in 2005 to 400,000 in 2010. Since 2009, there has been a congressional mandate to fill 34,000 immigration detention beds each night. More than half of these beds are placed in privately run detention facilities, run by companies such as CoreCivic (formerly the Corrections Corporation of America), who lobbied for the passing of this mandate.
    The number of detainees, according to the latest numbers, has also been growing in many EU countries since the 1990s. The UK held 250 people in detention in 1993 and 32,163 in March 2016. France detained 28,220 in 2003 and 47,565 in 2015. Sweden placed 1,167 immigrants in detention in 2006 and 3,959 in 2015. In the past ten years or so Australia’s detainee population has fluctuated. In 2009, there were 375 detainees, a number that sharply rose to 5,697 in 2013, and then dropped to 1,807 in January 2016.
    Statistics for Greece and Italy, the two main first countries of entry for asylum seekers to the EU, are not readily available. In 2015 Italy detained 5,242 people, while Greece had a detention capacity of 6,290 in 2013.

    https://theconversation.com/how-immigration-detention-compares-around-the-world-76067
    #détention_administrative #chiffres #statistiques #rétention #asile #migrations #réfugiés #monde #Europe #USA #Etats-Unis

    • ¿Qué esperamos del futuro?: Detención migratoria y alternativas a la detención en las Américas

      The study is the result of numerous efforts to collect and compare information on policy and practice related to immigration detention and alternatives to detention in 21 countries in the Americas region: Argentina, the Bahamas, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Trinidad and Tobago and the United States. Although data collection and analysis are by no means exhaustive, the study does identify the main patterns of human rights violations related to the use of immigration detention, and also highlights key policy and practice that represent positive components of alternatives to detention


      http://idcoalition.org/publication/informe_regional_americas_2017
      #Amériques

      Pour télécharger le rapport: idcoalition.org/publication/download/informe_regional_americas_2017

  • Africans Face Dead End After Death-Defying Odyssey to U.S.

    The number of Africans crossing the Americas to seek refuge in the U.S. grew tenfold last year. Now survivors of that long, expensive and dangerous journey face shrinking prospects of reaching the U.S. and more hardships in Mexico amid Trump’s immigration crackdown.

    In the Mexican border town of Tapachula, near the Guatemalan border, a 27-year-old Somali man made inquiries at a grotty inn called the Imperial Hotel. He had arrived in Mexico a day earlier.

    Nadir C. fled Somalia several years ago after falling in love with a woman from a rival tribe. Pursued by her family, he escaped to Kenya, before traveling on to Uganda and South Sudan.


    https://www.newsdeeply.com/refugees/articles/2017/03/02/africans-face-dead-end-after-death-defying-odyssey-to-u-s
    #parcours_migratoires #migrants_africains #asile #migrations #réfugiés #itinéraires_migratoires #Mexique #USA #Etats-Unis #migrerrance
    cc @reka

    • The New Coyote Trail : Refugees Head West to Bypass Fortress Europe

      Europe’s closing borders and the death toll in the Mediterranean are forcing asylum seekers to look further afield. An investigation into the migration routes out of Latin America into the U.S. and Canada finds Africans, Afghans and Iraqis enduring great risks.

      https://www.newsdeeply.com/refugees/articles/2017/12/19/the-new-coyote-trail-refugees-head-west-to-bypass-fortress-europe
      #réfugiés_afghans #réfugiés_irakiens #Canada #Equateur

    • More Migrants From Far-Flung Lands Crossing US-Mexico Border

      The young man traversed Andean mountains, plains and cities in buses, took a harrowing boat ride in which five fellow migrants drowned, walked through thick jungle for days, and finally reached the U.S.-Mexico border.

      Then Abdoulaye Camara, from the poor West African country of Mauritania, asked U.S. officials for asylum.

      Camara’s arduous journey highlights how immigration to the United States through its southern border is evolving. Instead of being almost exclusively people from Latin America, the stream of migrants crossing the Mexican border these days includes many who come from the other side of the world.

      Almost 3,000 citizens of India were apprehended entering the U.S. from Mexico last year. In 2007, only 76 were. The number of Nepalese rose from just four in 2007 to 647 last year. More people from Africa are also seeking to get into the United States, with hundreds having reached Mexican towns across the border from Texas in recent weeks, according to local news reports from both sides of the border.

      Camara’s journey began more than a year ago in the small town of Toulel, in southern Mauritania. He left Mauritania, where slavery is illegal but still practiced, “because it’s a country that doesn’t know human rights,” he said.

      Camara was one of 124 migrants who ended up in a federal prison in Oregon after being detained in the U.S. near the border with Mexico in May, the result of the Trump administration’s zero tolerance policy.

      He was released October 3, after he had passed his “credible fear” exam, the first step on obtaining asylum, and members of the community near the prison donated money for his bond. He was assisted by lawyers working pro bono.

      “My heart is so gracious, and I am so happy. I really thank my lawyers who got me out of that detention,” Camara said in French as he rode in a car away from the prison.

      Camara’s journey was epic, yet more people are making similar treks to reach the United States. It took him from his village on the edge of the Sahara desert to Morocco by plane and then a flight to Brazil. He stayed there 15 months, picking apples in orchards and saving his earnings as best he could. Finally he felt he had enough to make it to the United States.

      All that lay between him and the U.S. border was 6,000 miles (9,700 kilometers).

      “It was very, very difficult,” said Camara, 30. “I climbed mountains, I crossed rivers. I crossed many rivers, the sea.”

      Camara learned Portuguese in Brazil and could understand a lot of Spanish, which is similar, but not speak it very well. He rode buses through Brazil, Peru and Colombia. Then he and others on the migrant trail faced the most serious obstacle: the Darien Gap, a 60-mile (97-kilometer) stretch of roadless jungle straddling the border of Colombia and Panama.

      But first, he and other travelers who gathered in the town of Turbo, Colombia, had to cross the Gulf of Uraba, a long and wide inlet from the Caribbean Sea. Turbo, on its southeast shore, has become a major point on the migrant trail, where travelers can resupply and where human smugglers offer boat rides.

      Camara and about 75 other people boarded a launch for Capurgana, a village next to the Panamanian border on the other end of the gulf.

      While the slow-moving boat was far from shore, the seas got very rough.

      “There was a wave that came and tipped over the canoe,” Camara said. “Five people fell into the water, and they couldn’t swim.”

      They all drowned, he said. The survivors pushed on.

      Finally arriving in Capurgana after spending two nights on the boat, the migrants split into smaller groups to cross the infamous Darien Gap, a wild place that has tested the most seasoned of travelers. The thick jungle hides swamps that can swallow a man. Lost travelers have died, and been devoured, boots and all, by packs of wild boars, or have been found, half out of their minds.

      Camara’s group consisted of 37 people, including women — two of them pregnant, one from Cameroon and one from Congo — and children.

      “We walked seven days and climbed up into the mountains, into the forest,” Camara said. “When it was night, we slept on the ground. We just kept walking and sleeping, walking and sleeping. It was hard.”

      One man, who was around 26 and from the African nation of Guinea, died, perhaps from exhaustion combined with thirst, Camara said.

      By the sixth day, all the drinks the group had brought with them were gone. They drank water from a river. They came across a Panamanian man and his wife, who sold them some bananas for $5, Camara said.

      Once he got out of the jungle, Camara went to Panamanian immigration officials who gave him travel documents enabling him to go on to Costa Rica, which he reached by bus. In Costa Rica, he repeated that process in hopes of going on to Nicaragua. But he heard authorities there were not so accommodating, so he and about 100 other migrants took a boat around Nicaragua, traveling at night along its Pacific coast.

      “All we could see were the lights of Nicaragua,” he said. Then it was over land again, in cars, buses and sometimes on foot, across Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico, all the way to the U.S. border at Tijuana. He was just about out of money and spent the night in a migrant shelter.

      On May 20, he crossed into San Ysidro, south of San Diego.

      “I said, `I came, I came. I’m from Africa. I want help,”’ he said.

      He is going to stay with a brother in Philadelphia while he pursues his asylum request.

      https://www.voanews.com/amp/more-migrants-far-flung-lands-crossing-us-mexico-border/4651770.html?__twitter_impression=true
      #parcours_migratoire #nouvelle_Méditerranée

    • For African migrants trying, and dying, to reach north America, the Darién Gap is the “new Mediterranean”

      By the time Basame Lonje made it out of the jungle, he was beyond exhausted. The 35-year-old from Cameroon had gone four days out of seven without food, surviving each day on a single biscuit. He drank from rivers flowing with debris and death, carrying the corpses of an unknown number of people who have perished in the Darién Gap, a remote stretch of jungle between Colombia and Panama known as the most dangerous in the world. “I barely survived,” Basame says. “People had sores on the soles of their feet and they had nobody to carry them. They were left there. Do you know what it means to walk for days?”

      As a result of tough migration policies in traditional destination countries in Europe, Basame is one of thousands of so-called‘extracontinental migrants’ taking the desperate decision to try and traverse the American continent in the hope of seeking asylum in the United States or Canada. In previous times this route was used almost exclusively by central American migrants. More recently it has seen a surge in migrants from African countries like Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Eritrea, Mauritania, Nigeria, Ghana and Burkina Faso, as well as people from Asian and Middle Eastern countries such as India, Pakistan, Syria and Nepal. Mexico authorities apprehended around 3,000 Africans and some 12,000 extracontinental migrants in total in 2018, according to the Migrant Policy Unit of Mexico’s Interior Ministry. Most are escaping a mix of conflict, political repression and crumbling economies.

      They fly to visa-friendly countries such as Ecuador, Brazil and Guyana, before navigating their way up north to Mexico, sometimes with the help of smugglers, other times with the aid of social media posts of those who have gone before them. They spend thousands of dollars on flights and bus tickets for journeys that can take months.

      Basame was a teacher back in Cameroon but says he fled the bloody conflict that has been raging in parts of his country since 2016 after he was abducted by armed groups fighting for the secession of the English-speaking parts of the country. His crime? Daring to hold classes.

      New migration regulations have rolled out swiftly and unpredictably since Trump took office in January 2017. Military troops were deployed to the border in October 2018, when some 7,000 people from central America fleeing gang violence and poverty approached on foot. In January 2019, the Migration Protection Protocols (MPP), known as ‘Remain in Mexico’ went into effect: as a result, asylees that arrive in the US via Mexico are now sent back to wait while their cases are processed, instead of being released on parole in the US as prescribed by US law. Rights organisations point out that sending asylum seekers back to Mexico, where they often face deportation, is a violation of the 1951 Refugee Convention.

      This February, Trump declared a state of emergency and accessed emergency funds to begin construction of a physical wall between the US and Mexico. He has also pursued agreements with El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras under which all migrants who pass through these countries must first seek refuge and be rejected in them before placing claims in the US. The agreement disregards the fact that not only do these countries lack the capacity to process large-scale asylum claims but that many people are fleeing violence and poverty from these same countries.

      Cumulatively, these policies have seen thousands of people waiting in shelters in US-Mexico border towns like Tijuana and Matamoros where conditions are deteriorating. A ‘metering’ system sees US customs officials attend to about three people daily. Mexico’s northern towns are also notorious for violence, and migrants are vulnerable to exploitation by drug cartels and human traffickers.
      Externalising borders

      In July 2019, Mexico signed an agreement with the US after President Trump threatened to impose trade sanctions if migration flows were not brought to a minimum. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador agreed to deploy 6,000 troops from the newly-formed National Guard to police its borders, adopting the US border militarisation strategy and sealing Mexico’s fate as President Trump’s outer wall.

      Since then, Mexican immigration officials have stopped issuing exit permits to extracontinental migrants arriving at the southern border, trapping many like Basame in a country they have no desire to stay in. With fewer people able to reach the US, Mexico – a transit country – is becoming an unintentional final destination. Although Mexico has refused to sign a third safe country agreement with the US, it has been forced to field over 60,000 asylum claims – double the number received last year. It has been estimated that 60 per cent of these applications are made in Tapachula.

      With no work permit, and even if he had one, with few opportunities available to him as an African migrant and a non-Spanish speaker, Basame is clear about his options: “Mexico can’t give me that.”

      But Mexico’s immigration agency has denied his application for a visitor’s visa that would help him move north. Officials are only issuing permanent residency cards, a document that he fears will affect his asylum claim in the US.

      By 09.00, hundreds of men and women from over two dozen countries were waiting in the blistering sun. Their voices were a cacophony of languages – Spanish, English, Portuguese, French, Tigrinya and Haitian Creole – clashing with the wails of hot, hungry children hanging from their parents. Migrants of Asian origin are mostly absent from these daily crowds: since Mexico deported 310 Indian migrants in an “unprecedented” move this October, they have been keeping a low profile for fear of suffering a similar fate.

      An immigration officer appeared behind the gate, looked at the crowd and shook his head in frustration. A fight broke out when the gates opened as people rushed to get in. Despite his punctuality, Basame was not seen that day.
      “My friends died there”

      Narrating his long, treacherous journey from Cameroon to Mexico, Basame tells Equal Times that after fleeing the captivity of armed rebels this March, he headed to Nigeria before deciding to try to reach the safety of the US. He wanted better opportunities than Nigeria could offer and feared the rebels could easily reach him there. First, he took a flight to Ecuador, then by bus he moved through Colombia. In the north-western town of Capurgana on the Colombian-Panamanian border, he met fellow Cameroonian migrants, as well as Haitians and Cubans. As they prepared to enter the Darién, villagers living at the mouth of the jungle warned them: “If you start this journey, you must finish it, otherwise it is bad news,” alluding to the dangers of the wild animals, poisonous insects and armed kidnappers marauding inside the impenetrable rainforest that breaks up the Pan-American Highway.

      Basame spent seven days in the dense thickness of the Darién, battling the rain and cold, moving from morning until nightfall with nothing but a bag of clothes and some snacks. “You do not stop in the Darién. You keep moving,” he says. He walked with a group of other migrants. Many didn’t make it out of the jungle due to exhaustion. Others were swept away in the fast-moving rivers. “My friends died there,” Basame remembers soberly. One of his worst memories is of walking past the corpse of a dead baby left in a backpack.

      Basame is one of the lucky ones. After reaching Panama, exhausted and starving, he regained his strength before moving up through Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. After crossing the Suchiate River into Mexico by raft, he arrived in Tapachula in July. He spent a week at an immigration detention centre there before he was given an exit permit to leave the country.

      It wasn’t until he got pulled from a bus to Tijuana by the National Guard that he realised that he could not legally leave Tapachula unless he was heading south, back to Guatemala. The US-Mexico deal took effect on 10 July and he was amongst the first people stranded by Mexico’s new regulations. Basame’s permit would force him back through the jungle of death he had barely survived.
      Death and disease in Mexico

      Judeline Romelus sits with her friends in Tapachula’s main square watching as they braid the hair of her 10-year-old daughter, Mariska. Nearby, Ghanaian and Guinean flags announce African food at restaurants, alongside Mexican and Honduran colours. Haitians and Africans give locals a trim in makeshift barbershops.

      But the general atmosphere of warmth masks the apprehension many locals feel. Despite being in one of the country’s poorest regions, Tapachula has tried to bear the weight of its new migrant population but some people are concerned that government agencies and NGOs are focusing their attention on these new arrivals when the needs of the locals are also many.

      Like Basame, Judeline and Mariska are stranded. Judeline applied for a humanitarian visa so that she can travel north with her daughter, but she must wait for her appointment in February 2020. The 28-year-old mother packed her bags and left Haiti three months ago. Economic stagnation and recent political unrest have caused many to flee the small Caribbean nation. “There are no opportunities in Haiti and I cannot work,” she says, even with a diploma. Judeline says she is looking for a better life in the US where friends are waiting for them in Florida. She relies on their monthly remittances of US$50 to pay for the small room the mother and daughter share.

      The unsanitary living conditions in overcrowded shelters such as these have caused a spike in health problems. “Women are presenting diseases related to sexual and reproductive health,” says Claudia León, regional head at Jesuits Refugee Service, a humanitarian non-profit providing legal and psychosocial assistance to refugees. Many were assaulted in the Darién. “The situation is critical. They have no clean water to wash with and those who are pregnant are at risk.”

      Migrants of all nationalities are suffering from invisible illnesses too. A spokesperson for the medical humanitarian NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) says it is dealing with many cases of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and trauma. Poor living conditions coupled with the memories of the treacherous journey to Mexico and the general uncertainty is causing some to self-harm. “We are in an emergency,” says León. “I have seen people outside the immigration centre hurting themselves because they are in such extreme conditions.”

      The desperation to get to the US has led to the exploration of dangerous alternative routes. A boat smuggling Cameroonian migrants capsized off the coast of Mexico in October, killing one man. “We knew him,” one migrant tells Equal Times at the restaurant where the deceased once frequented. But even as they recall his tragic passing, another man says that he is also considering taking the same route to the US.
      “The new Mediterranean”

      All across the world, tough policies on migration are forcing the most vulnerable migrants and refugees to go underground and seek the services of smuggling gangs and human traffickers. Like the US, Europe has enforced stringent measures to stem migration flows. An increase in anti-immigrant sentiments from far-right, populist governments in the US and Europe in particular sees leaders like Trump and Hungary’s Viktor Orban routinely employ rhetoric that fuels racist anxieties and emphasises the building of walls to prevent a ‘migrant invasion’.

      In 2016, Turkey signed an agreement with the European Union and a bilateral agreement with Greece to keep some three million refugees fleeing the Syrian war from crossing the Aegean Sea into Greece. The agreement saw the European Union send back anyone who crossed without documents after 20 March 2016.

      A similar agreement between Italy and Libya in 2017 was extended this November. Italy is training and funding the Libyan Coast Guard to stop African and Middle Eastern migrants on the Mediterranean and return them to Libya, a country at war.
      Interception numbers have dropped from 181,000 in 2016 to only 8,000 this year, according to UNHCR. Thousands are held in detention centres run by armed factions battling for control since the Arab uprisings of 2011. African migrants have been enslaved, tortured and sold. They have also been caught in the crossfire of the battle for Tripoli. In July, a bomb fell on one detention centre, killing 44 people.

      The number of asylum claims in Mexico keeps rising and is expected reach 80,000 by the end of the year. Although most Africans initially refused to seek asylum in Mexico, more people are applying, particularly from Cameroon. The number of asylum claims from Africa is currently around 500.

      The influx of migrants and refugees has split Mexico politically, with many accusing President Obrador of yielding to President Trump and rescinding on human rights promises he made when he campaigned last year.

      Human rights organisations condemn the US and Mexico’s strategies. “Those seeking safety want the same thing any of us would want if we were in their shoes,” says Isa Sanusi, of Amnesty International in Nigeria. “Mexico and the US must ensure that these migrants from Africa and other parts of the world are not denied the rights guaranteed to them by international law.”

      For now, Basame is stuck between a rock and a hard place. Even if he had the money, it would be too dangerous for him to go home, and yet he currently has no way out of Mexico. As he struggles to stay afloat, his hopes are fading fast. “I’m running out of cash and I’m running out of patience. I’m sick and I don’t have anywhere to live,” he says. “How will I survive?”

      https://www.equaltimes.org/for-migrants-trying-and-dying-to?lang=en

    • Es cosa suya: entanglements of border externalization and African transit migration in northern #Costa_Rica

      Starting from the idea that border externalization – understood as the spatial and institutional stretching of borders – is enmeshed with the highly contextual humanitarian and securitarian dynamics of migrant trajectories, this article addresses the reach of border externalization tentacles in Costa Rica. Although Costa Rica does not formally engage in border externalization agreements, it is located in a region characterized by transit migration and transnational securitization pressures. Moreover, externalization efforts across the Atlantic have contributed to a relatively new presence of so-called extra-continental migrants. Given these circumstances, we aim to interrogate the ways in which border externalization plays a role in Costa Rica’s discourses, policies and practices of migration management. We do so by analysing a migrant reception centre in the northern Costa Rica border region, and by focusing on African transit migration. Our analysis is based on exploratory field research at the centre as well as on long-term migration research in Central America. Building on these empirical explorations and the theoretical notions of mobility regimes, transit and arterial borders, the article finds that Costa Rica’s identity as a ‘humanitarian transit country’ – as enacted in the migrant reception centre – both reproduces and challenges border externalization. While moving towards increased securitization of migration and an internalization of its border, Costa Rica also distinguishes itself from neighbouring countries by emphasizing the care it extends to African migrants, in practice enabling these migrants to move further north. Based on these findings, the article argues for a deeper appreciation of the role of local-regional histories, perceptions, rivalries, linkages and strategies of migration management. This allows for a better grip of the scope and shape of border externalization across a diversity of migration landscapes.

      https://comparativemigrationstudies.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40878-019-0131-9

    • New contested borderlands: Senegalese migrants en route to Argentina

      This article sheds novel, light on how Senegalese men and women adapt to European border governance by finding new ways to ‘look for life’ (chercher la vie) in Latin America, as an alternative to the perilous clandestine routes to Europe. The article follows how Senegalese migrants’ mobility to Argentina has evolved over the last two decades. It particularly focuses on the migrants’ journey to Argentina and explores the migrants’ accounts of their experiences en route and compares them to how different intersecting state-driven national and supranational migration policies become entangled in their mobility. By analytically focusing on the changing migration infrastructure and the different forms of friction the migrants encounter and respond to while moving, the article shows how the risk and uncertainty along the journey increasingly mirror the struggles which African migrants face at EU–African borderlands, and thus how similar features of global mobility regimes seem to be reproduced along this new route from West Africa to Latin America. In this way the politics and hierarchies of mobility are brought to the fore. Yet the article also points to how migrants find new openings and ways to contest the hindrances that aims to stop them as they move through these newly traversed borderlands.

      https://comparativemigrationstudies.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40878-018-0109-z
      #migrants_sénégalais #Argentine #Sénégal

  • Renouvelables : la transition avance dans certains pays bien plus vite qu’en France
    http://www.bastamag.net/Energies-renouvelables-la-transition-avance-dans-certains-pays-beaucoup-pl

    L’arrivée au pouvoir de Donald Trump aux États-Unis fait redouter un retour en arrière dans la lutte contre le réchauffement climatique. Mais tout n’est pas perdu. Car en matière de transition énergétique, des pays avancent, partout sur le globe, vers un mix énergétique avec moins de pétrole, de gaz, de nucléaire ou de charbon. Au Costa Rica, pays de cinq millions d’habitants en Amérique centrale, 98 % de la consommation électrique vient désormais des énergies renouvelables !. En 2016, pendant 250 jours (...)

    En bref

    / #Energies_renouvelables, #L'enjeu_de_la_transition_énergétique, #Le_défi_du_réchauffement_climatique, (...)

    #Climat

  • Spark of Science : Rob Pringle - Issue 43 : Heroes
    http://nautil.us/issue/43/heroes/spark-of-science-rob-pringle

    When we think of a scientist at work, the first setting to come to mind is usually the laboratory: sterile equipment, controlled experiments, protective gear. Not so for Robert Pringle, an ecologist at Princeton University who studies the ecosystems of the “enchanting, enigmatic, and important” savannas of Africa, particularly in central Kenya and Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park. There, he has examined the interactions and patterns that play out among species ranging from termites to antelope and elephants. Pringle’s heroes in ecology, the husband-and-wife team of Daniel Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs, are focused on a smaller animal: the caterpillars of Costa Rica. But Pringle attributes his admiration for the pair not to the decades they’ve spent in the field, nor to the hundreds of (...)

  • Nuevo mapa muestra cómo los pueblos indígenas de Centroamérica ocupan y resguardan gran cantidad de bosques, ríos y aguas costeras | UICN
    https://www.iucn.org/es/content/nuevo-mapa-muestra-c%C3%B3mo-los-pueblos-ind%C3%ADgenas-de-centroam%C3%A9rica-

    Los pueblos indígenas ocupan vastas extensiones del territorio centroamericano, entre ellas más de la mitad de los bosques de la región y muchos de sus cursos de agua, lo que los convierte en guardianes de los ecosistemas más importantes de la región. Lo anterior se afirma con el nuevo mapa preparado por la Unión Internacional para la Conservación de la Naturaleza, la red ambiental más grande y diversa del mundo. El mapa fue presentado hoy en un evento paralelo realizado en el marco del Foro Permanente de las Naciones Unidas para las Cuestiones Indígenas, que se celebra en la sede de Naciones Unidas en Nueva York hasta el 20 de mayo.

    El mapa es el más completo que se haya producido en Centroamérica, una región que alberga a 80 diferentes pueblos indígenas a lo largo de los siete países que la componen, los cuales ocupan casi el 40% de la superficie terrestre y marina del Istmo.

    El área ocupada por los pueblos indígenas de la región, aproximadamente 282.000 kilómetros cuadrados, es más de cinco veces el tamaño de Costa Rica. Más de un tercio de las tierras ocupadas por pueblos indígenas cubre la tierra y las aguas que los gobiernos de la región han designado como protegidos.

    Le Congrès de l’UICN stimule les droits des peuples autochtones
    https://www.iucn.org/fr/news/le-congr%C3%A8s-de-l%E2%80%99uicn-stimule-les-droits-des-peuples-autochtones

    L’Assemblée des Membres de l’UICN a décidé aujourd’hui, lors d’une décision qui fera date, de créer une nouvelle catégorie de Membres pour les organisations de peuples autochtones. Cette catégorie renforcera la présence et le rôle des organisations autochtones au sein de l’UICN – une Union unique de Membres rassemblant 217 États et organismes gouvernementaux, 1066 ONG et des réseaux de plus de 16000 experts dans le monde.

    « La décision d’aujourd’hui de créer un espace particulier pour les peuples autochtones au sein du processus décisionnaire de l’UICN est une grande avancée vers la réalisation de l’utilisation équitable et durable des ressources naturelles » s’est ainsi réjouie la Directrice générale de l’UICN, Inger Andersen. « Les peuples autochtones sont des gardiens essentiels de la biodiversité mondiale. En leur donnant cette occasion cruciale d’être entendus sur la scène internationale, nous avons rendu notre Union plus forte, plus inclusive et plus démocratique. »

    #Amérique_centrale #peuples_autochtones #écosystèmes #conservation #cartographie

  • Désarmement nucléaire : la France va-t-elle s’opposer à la majorité du monde ? - RipouxBlique des CumulardsVentrusGrosQ
    http://slisel.over-blog.com/2016/11/desarmement-nucleaire-la-france-va-t-elle-s-opposer-a-la-majorite-
    http://www.bastamag.net/IMG/arton5903.jpg?1479371725

    Cela fait 71 ans que l’humanité vit avec la capacité de détruire la planète par la pression d‘un simple bouton. Fin octobre, grâce à l’action de la société civile et d’États courageux, l’Onu a franchi une étape historique vers la négociation d’un traité d’interdiction complète de l’arme atomique, voté par 123 États. Malheureusement, sans le soutien de la France, malgré les engagements de François Hollande en faveur de l’élimination totale des armes nucléaires. Celles-ci « sont les dernières armes de destruction massive à ne pas être soumises à une interdiction », rappelle Jean-Marie Collin, membre de la Campagne internationale pour abolir les armes nucléaires. Tribune.

    Les armes nucléaires sont des armes dites de destruction massive. L’histoire de leur utilisation, au Japon en 1945, mais aussi au fil de plus 2000 essais nucléaires à travers le monde, a montré leurs effets dévastateurs immédiats et sur le long terme, tant sur les populations que sur l’environnement.

    Nous savons que même un conflit nucléaire limité engendrerait des conséquences mondiales sur les productions alimentaires et le développement socio-économique. C’est en rappelant cette évidence que la société civile, principalement regroupée au sein de la Campagne internationale pour abolir les armes nucléaires (ICAN), est parvenue à mobiliser des États à travers le monde. Un grand nombre de pays ont ainsi compris que leur sécurité économique, humanitaire, culturelle… était mise en danger du fait de l’absence d’actions concrètes et réelles par les États détenteurs d’armes atomiques.

    Si le volume des armes nucléaires a bel et bien diminué depuis la fin de la Guerre froide (de 70 000 ogives nucléaires à 15 000 en 2016), les puissances nucléaires (États-Unis, Russie, Royaume Uni, France, Chine, Israël, Inde, Pakistan, Corée du Nord) se sont toutes lancées dans de vastes programmes de modernisation de leurs arsenaux. À titre d’exemple, la France a lancé des études pour renouveler ses sous-marins nucléaires lanceurs d’engins, ses missiles balistiques, et a débuté l’augmentation annuelle de son budget “dissuasion” dans le but d’arriver à un doublement – plus de 6 milliards d’euros – à l’horizon 2022.

    123 États en faveur d’un traité d’interdiction…

    Devant cette lenteur et cette mauvaise volonté, des États comme l’Autriche, le Mexique, le Costa Rica, la Malaisie, l’Afrique du Sud… accompagnés par ICAN, ont développé une stratégie pour parvenir à changer les règles du jeu. Fini le temps où les détenteurs d’armes atomiques maîtrisaient seuls le calendrier du désarmement nucléaire. Désormais, celui-ci est dicté par la majorité des États et des populations.

    Parvenir au désarmement nucléaire est un processus long et complexe. Toute initiative allant dans ce sens est positive, comme les négociations bilatérales américano-russes. Mais l’une d’elle n’a jamais encore été mise en œuvre, celle qui mettrait en place une interdiction globale et complète des armes nucléaires. Interdire, puis éliminer. C’est le processus qui a été suivi pour les armes biologiques (interdites par une convention de 1972) et chimiques (convention de 1993). Le futur traité d’interdiction des armes nucléaires est donc l’étape indispensable avant leur élimination. À ce jour, les armes atomiques sont en effet les dernières armes de destruction massive à ne pas être soumises à une interdiction.

    Pendant près d’une année entière de débats pour faire avancer les négociations multilatérales sur le désarmement nucléaire à l’ONU, les puissances nucléaires ont pratiqué le jeu de la chaise vide. Malgré tout, les discussions ont abouti le 27 octobre dernier au vote de la résolution L41. Celle-ci demande que les Nations unies organisent en 2017 une conférence pour négocier un instrument juridiquement contraignant interdisant les armes nucléaires, en vue de leur élimination complète. C’est une première.

    Malgré les pressions exercées à l’encontre notamment d’États africains (par la France) et d’Amérique latine et du Pacifique (par les États-Unis) pour qu’ils ne votent pas cette résolution, et en dépit de l’utilisation d’arguments sans fondement (selon lesquels ce traité pourrait remettre en cause le régime actuel de non-prolifération), le résultat du vote à l’ONU a été sans appel. Les trois-quarts des États de la planète (123 exactement) ont voté « oui » devant un refus de seulement 38 États (des puissances nucléaires et des États qui bénéficient d’une dissuasion élargie) et de 16 abstentionnistes, parmi lesquels se trouvent les Pays-Bas. Le premier pas pour l’interdiction est donc franchi. Rendez-vous est donné pour mars 2017.

    …Mais la France s’y est opposée

    Parmi les États qui ont voté non, on trouve la France. Dans son discours, le représentant français a affirmé que Paris était pour un monde sans armes nucléaires. Dans les faits, il en est autrement. La France s’est farouchement opposée à cette résolution, prétextant qu’un tel traité serait « inefficace et déstabilisateur » et qu’il valait mieux suivre la politique mise en œuvre depuis plus de 20 ans… Nous en voyons les résultats puisque la Conférence du désarmement, organe central de l’ONU censé travailler sur ce sujet, est en état de mort cérébrale depuis 1996. Par ailleurs, le ministère des Affaires étrangères français est allé jusqu’à faire pression sur les eurodéputés français afin qu’ils votent « non » à une résolution de soutien au processus de l’ONU proposée au Parlement européen !

    Cette posture va à l’encontre du discours sur la dissuasion que le François Hollande a tenu en avril 2015. Celui-ci appelait alors de ses vœux la naissance d’un contexte stratégique qui permettrait à terme l’élimination totale des armes nucléaires.

    La France peut et doit se rattraper. En décembre prochain, un vote de confirmation de cette résolution se déroulera à l’Assemblée générale de l’ONU. Pour que la France ne vote pas contre cette résolution en faveur de la paix et de la sécurité mondiale et qu’elle adopte une posture qui corresponde à son image de pays de la défense des libertés et des droits humains, les organisations Initiatives pour le désarmement nucléaire (IDN) et ICAN France ont lancé une pétition adressée au président de la République.

    À l’heure des commémorations du centenaire de la Première Guerre mondiale, un conflit marqué par l’usage massif de gaz chimiques aujourd’hui interdits, il serait des plus choquants que la France vote une deuxième fois contre cette résolution de l’ONU qui vise pourtant à interdire des armes de destruction massive.

    Jean-Marie Collin, membre de ICAN France - Campagne internationale pour abolir les armes nucléaires et vice-président de l’ONG Initiatives pour le désarmement nucléaire.

    Voir la pétition ici.

    Photo : cliché numérisé d’un essai nucléaire en Polynésie française en 1970.

    http://www.bastamag.net

  • Journal du 1er septembre 2016 | Canut Infos du Jeudi
    https://blogs.radiocanut.org/canutinfos-jeudi/?p=263

    Édito : « on est cerné par les cons »

    Ouzbékistan : Islam Karimov, mort ou vivant ?

    Suite aux Jo de Rio, Feyisa Lilesa n’est pas rentré en Éthiopie

    Gabon : ça flambe

    Venezuela : manifestation, répression, expulsion de journalistes

    Pesticides : le capitalisme avant tout

    Australie : méga mine Carmichael, nouveau recours rejeté

    Nucléaire et énergie : EDF ; Bure ; Costa Rica ; Ecosse ; Tahiti ; UE

    Les profiteurs : Lactalis

    Lyon : Défilé de la Biennale de la danse, Fête des lumières, piscine, école M.Servet

    Brésil

    Les profiteurs : Apple Durée : 1h11. Source : Radio Canut

    https://blogs.radiocanut.org/canutinfos-jeudi/files/2016/09/Canut_infos_jeudi1sept2016.mp3

  • French Coca-Cola Workers Find Smuggled Cocaine in Shipment - Bloomberg
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-08-31/french-coca-cola-workers-find-smuggled-cocaine-in-shipment

    Workers at a Coca-Cola factory in southern France opened a shipment of orange juice but found a huge shipment of cocaine instead.
    The Coca-Cola factory in the town of Signes, near the Mediterranean coast, produces concentrates for various drinks. A spokesman for Coca-Cola France says employees immediately notified police and judicial authorities have opened an investigation.
    Sacks containing 370 kilograms (815 pounds) of cocaine were hidden in a shipping container holding orange juice from Costa Rica, the spokesman said.

  • Situation des forêts du monde 2016 | FAO | Organisation des Nations Unies pour l’alimentation et l’agriculture
    http://www.fao.org/publications/sofo/2016/fr

    Stabilisateurs des #sols et du #climat, régulateurs des cours d’#eau, dispensateurs d’ombrage et d’abris ainsi que d’un habitat pour les #pollinisateurs et les ennemis naturels des ravageurs d’importance agricole, les #forêts et les #arbres sous-tendent la durabilité de l’agriculture. Source appréciable de nourriture, d’énergie et de revenu, ils contribuent également à la sécurité alimentaire de centaines de millions de personnes. L’#agriculture demeure cependant le principal moteur de la #déforestation dans le monde, et les politiques agricoles, forestières et foncières sont souvent en conflit les unes avec les autres.

    La Situation des forêts du monde 2016 montre, exemples à l’appui (Costa Rica, Chili, Gambie, Géorgie, Ghana, Tunisie et Viet Nam), qu’il est possible tout à la fois d’accroître la productivité agricole, de renforcer la #sécurité_alimentaire et d’arrêter – voire de faire reculer – la déforestation. L’équilibre à trouver entre les utilisations des #terres passe par une planification intégrée, s’appuyant sur des outils d’intervention appropriés de nature à favoriser la durabilité des forêts comme celle de l’agriculture.

  • Bernie Krause, harmonies vivantes - Culture / Next
    http://next.liberation.fr/musique/2016/08/01/bernie-krause-harmonies-vivantes_1469754

    Depuis cinquante ans, le musicien et bioacousticien américain répertorie les bruits du monde animal menacé d’extinction par l’homme. Des artistes internationaux illustrent ses archives sonores à la Fondation Cartier.

    Le monde naturel disparaît à grands feux, juste sous nos oreilles. Lentement, sûrement, il s’évapore aussi sous nos yeux, mais à un rythme qui sert malheureusement trop bien à notre oubli et notre aveuglement. Alors depuis bientôt cinq décennies, le bioacousticien américain #Bernie_Krause en parcourt les derniers sanctuaires pour l’enregistrer, le comprendre, et nous apprendre à l’écouter. Des marais sauvages du Costa Rica aux profondeurs de l’océan Pacifique, des prairies californiennes à l’Amazonie, il traque les signatures sonores des larves, des grands singes, des anémones. Attrapé au cœur d’une catastrophe dont il ne mesurait pas l’ampleur quand il a posé pour la première fois un micro dans un champ, à la fin des années 60 (la sixième extinction de masse des espèces animales), ce guitariste passé par les studios de la Motown et le département de musique électronique du Mills College a troqué sa casquette de musicien contre une blouse de scientifique militant.

    http://fondation.cartier.com/?l=fr#/fr/art-contemporain/26/expositions/2638/en-ce-moment/2640/le-grand-orchestre-des-animaux

    Du 2 juillet 2016 au 8 janvier 2017, la Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain présente Le Grand Orchestre des Animaux, inspiré par l’oeuvre de Bernie Krause, musicien et bioacousticien américain. L’exposition, qui réunit des artistes du monde entier, invite le public à s’immerger dans une méditation esthétique, à la fois sonore et visuelle, autour d’un monde animal de plus en plus menacé.

    Avec : Pierre Bodo, Cai Guo-Qiang, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Raymond Depardon et Claudine Nougaret, Bernie Krause, JP Mika, Manabu Miyazaki, Moke, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Christian Sardet, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Shiro Takatani, TALLER Mauricio Rocha + Gabriela Carrillo, Tara Océans, Cyprien Tokoudagba, United Visual Artists, Agnès Varda, Adriana Varejão

    http://fondation.cartier.com/?l=fr#/fr/art-contemporain/26/expositions/2638/en-ce-moment/2714/sur-internet

    #bioacoustique #exposition #son

  • Message reçu via la mailing-list Migreurop :

    Ci-dessous et en pièce jointe (english version too), un communiqué de plusieurs associations colombiennes qui dénoncent la situation
    des personnes migrantes bloquées à la frontière entre la Colombie et le Panama.
    Des situations similaires se produisent à la frontière panaméenne avec le #Costa_Rica.

    Il faut savoir que la région où est située #Turbo est l’une des régions les plus pauvres et affectées par la violence
    en Colombie, toujours connue par une présence des groupes paramilitaires. De cas de violence à l’égard des
    migrants ont été déjà dénoncés par le passé et toujours d’actualité.

    COMMUNIQUÉ DE PRESSE

    CRISE HUMANITAIRE À LA FRONTIÈRE COLOMBO-PANAMÉENNE

    5 juillet 2016
    Nous, organisations de défense des droits humains et, en particulier, des droits des migrants, des
    réfugiés et des personnes nécessitant la protection internationale, et institutions académiques,
    exprimons notre profonde préoccupation face à l’actuelle crise humanitaire à la frontière colombo-
    panaméenne, suite à la fermeture de cette frontière par le gouvernement panaméen, le 9 mai
    dernier, et en raison de l’incapacité des gouvernements de la région de l’Amérique Latine à trouver
    des solutions en vue de protéger les droits humains des migrants par-delà l’approche de la sécurité
    et de la souveraineté nationale.

    Le président panaméen Juan Carlos Varela a justifié cette résolution en disant que son gouvernement veut
    bloquer le passage des migrants irréguliers par son territoire, après que ses deux homologues de
    Nicaragua et de Costa Rica aient fermé les frontières de leur pays. En conséquence, 326 à 520 migrants,
    dont la majorité est de nationalité cubaine et haïtienne et les autres sont originaires des pays l’Afrique et
    de l’Asie (des « extracontinentaux »), sont bloqués à la localité colombienne de Turbo, frontalière du
    Panama.

    Les migrants cubains cherchent à atteindre les États-Unis d’Amérique en vue de profiter des bénéfices de
    la « Ley de Ajuste Cubano » (ou Ley « pie seco, pie mojado » [en anglais, Cuban Adjustment Act, CAA])
    qui permet aux Cubains d’obtenir automatiquement la résidence américaine, simplement en foulant le sol
    de ce pays ; et ce, avant un éventuel rétablissement des relations entre le régime castriste et le pays nord-
    américain et –par voie de conséquence- avant l’abrogation de cette loi. De leur côté, les migrants haïtiens
    fuient le chômage au Brésil et la difficile situation politique et socio-économique qui sévit dans leur pays,
    en quête de meilleures conditions de vie aux États-Unis.

    D’autre part, face à la fermeture des frontières des pays de l’Union Européenne et au durcissement des
    politiques et lois migratoires et de l’asile par les pays membres de la communauté européenne, les
    migrants extracontinentaux, en particulier ceux et celles originaires du Congo, du Ghana, du Sénégal, de
    Népal, du Pakistan, de Mali, de la Guinée, de la Gambie, de la Somalie, du Bangladesh, de l’Angola, de
    l’Afghanistan, de l’Érythrée, du Cameroun, de la Sierra Léone et du Togo, cherchent de plus en plus
    l’opportunité d’émigrer aux États-Unis à travers l’Amérique Latine.

    Au cours de leur périple vers les États-Unis, ces migrants utilisent les frontières de l’Équateur, du
    Venezuela et du Brésil, en passant par des routes de plus en plus complexes et dangereuses, tels que les
    territoires en guerre des deux départements colombiens de Chocó et d’Antioquia. Se trouvant bloqués en
    Colombie, les étrangers, surtout les non Cubains, empruntent la côte et la forêt de Darien en vue de
    continuer leur parcours vers l’Amérique Centrale et ensuite vers les États-Unis.

    Du total des migrants bloqués à Turbo (chiffre qui change constamment puisqu’il s’agit de flux qui
    continuent d’arriver et d’abandonner la frontière), 25% sont des femmes et 75% des hommes ; jusqu’à la
    date du 15 juin, 11 enfants et un adolescent ont été accueillis dans le lieu d’accueil improvisé (appelé
    albergue en espagnol), en plus des femmes enceintes (de 3 à 5). Ont été également identifiées dans
    l’albergue des personnes atteintes de zika, de malaria, de pneumonie, d’hépatites et de grippe.

    Face à cette crise à l’échelle régionale, les réponses apportées par les autorités colombiennes sont, d’une
    part, insuffisantes puisque le Gouvernement de ce pays s’est limitée à déporter les migrants considérés
    comme irréguliers, sur la base de dialogues diplomatiques et techniques avec ses deux homologues
    cubains et équatoriens ; et, d’autre part, contradictoires puisque les autorités locales de Turbo octroient
    des sauf-conduits, documents permettant aux migrants de traverser vers le Panama, alors que les autorités
    centrales de Bogota utilisent la déportation comme mesure privilégiée pour faire face à la crise. Il faut
    également souligner que dans sa lutte acharnée contre le trafic illégal de migrants considéré comme le
    principal facteur de migration irrégulière dans cette zone, le Gouvernement central a criminalisé des
    actions solidaires et hospitalières de la population de Turbo envers les migrants, surtout ceux et celles qui
    sont les plus vulnérables. Par ailleurs, l’approche de sécurité qu’il adopte ne lui a pas permis d’identifier
    des migrants nécessitant l’assistance et la protection, dont des enfants et des femmes enceintes.
    Face à cette réalité ponctuée de plus en plus par des flux intra et extracontinentaux de migrants et aux
    crises frontalières et binationales à répétition, nous recommandons aux États de la région de promouvoir
    de manière active le dialogue et l’engagement pour garantir les droits humains des migrants dans la
    région, indépendamment des critères liés à la nationalité, à l’âge, à l’appartenance ethnique ou raciale, au
    sexe, etc., et ce en conformité avec les instruments internationaux et régionaux relatifs aux droits
    humains.

    Signataires :

    La Consultoría para los Derechos Humanos y el Desplazamiento-CODHES
    Instituto de Estudios Sociales y Culturales PENSAR de la Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
    Pastoral Social-Caritas Colombiana

    Contacts presse :
    Wooldy Edson Louidor, Instituto de Estudios Sociales y Culturales Pensar de la Pontificia Universidad
    Javeriana (Bogota, Colombie) : (57) 3204489112. wlouidor@javeriana.edu.co

    #migrations #asile #réfugiés #Colombie #Panama #frontières (fermeture des -)

  • Who really won the legal battle between Philip Morris and Uruguay?
    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/jul/28/who-really-won-legal-battle-philip-morris-uruguay-cigarette-adverts

    The question however is for whom is the system working? In investment arbitration cases, states never win. States can never file lawsuits against investors, so the best-case scenario for them is if the tribunal dismisses the investor’s accusations.

    In this case, although #Philip_Morris was required to contribute $7m for legal costs, #Uruguay will still have to pay a further $2.6m in financial costs and much more in terms of the non-material resources it has taken to fight this.

    [...] The arbitration panel’s decision to hear the case put a brake on the adoption of similar tobacco control measures in Costa Rica, Paraguay and New Zealand, among others.

    Moreover, the lawsuit may have encouraged legal threats and actions by other corporations, hopeful that they could secure either revision of government policies or financial compensation.

    #arbitrage