country:kazakhstan

  • Meet the Robin Hood of Science | Big Think
    http://bigthink.com/neurobonkers/a-pirate-bay-for-science

    On September 5th, 2011, Alexandra Elbakyan, a researcher from Kazakhstan, created #Sci-Hub, a website that bypasses journal #paywalls, illegally providing access to nearly every scientific paper ever published immediately to anyone who wants it. The website works in two stages, firstly by attempting to download a copy from the LibGen database of pirated content, which opened its doors to academic papers in 2012 and now contains over 48 million scientific papers. The ingenious part of the system is that if LibGen does not already have a copy of the paper, Sci-hub bypasses the journal paywall in real time by using access keys donated by academics lucky enough to study at institutions with an adequate range of subscriptions. This allows Sci-Hub to route the user straight to the paper through publishers such as JSTOR, #Springer, Sage, and #Elsevier.

    #science #femme #hacker #open_publication #robin_des_bois #libgen

  • New Law Allows Foreign Agricultural Businesses to Lease Kazakh Land for 25 Years - The Astana Times
    http://astanatimes.com/2016/02/new-law-allows-foreign-agricultural-businesses-to-lease-kazakh-land-for

    “Chinese companies are interested in establishing joint ventures in Kazakhstan for processing agricultural products (meat, oil, grains and tomato processing plants) and establishing feedlots, with further promotion of the Kazakh products for export,” noted the ministry.

    The Ministry of Agriculture is working to attract Chinese companies to Kazakhstan, in particular such large multinational corporations as Rifa Holding Group, CITIC, AIJIU and COFCO.

    Rifa Holding Group will invest in the construction of the East Kazakhstan region meat processing plant. The facility will have an annual capacity of 17,000 tonnes of lamb and beef feedlots, while simultaneously feeding 50,000 head of sheep and goats and 1,000 head of cattle.

    In total, 80 percent of the companies will be focused on exporting to China. The total project cost is estimated at 7.9 billion tenge (US$21.5 million), with Rifa Holding Group’s share amounting to 49 percent. The company also intends to cooperate with a number of Kazakh companies in beef production.

    #Kazakhstan #Chine #terres #agro-industrie #viande

  • Tajikistan cedes land to China - BBC News (janvier 2011)
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-pacific-12180567

    China and Tajikistan say that they have settled a century-old border dispute, after the Central Asian nation agreed to cede land to China.
    The Tajik parliament voted on Wednesday to ratify a 1999 deal handing over 386 square miles (1,000 sq km) of land in the remote #Pamir mountain range.
    The Tajik foreign minister said that this represented 5.5% of the land that Beijing had sought.
    China said the move thoroughly resolved the border dispute.
    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei gave no details on the treaty.
    But he said the dispute was solved “according to universally recognised norms of international law through equal consultations”.

    #Haut-Badakhchan
    #Gorno-Badakshan

    Note : la frontière entre le #Tadjikistan et la #Chine ne semble toujours pas avoir été délimitée. Je n’en trouve pas le tracé actuel et Gg:maps non plus qui la laisse en pointillé (sur une longeur d’un peu plus de 100 km. On notera la proximité immédiate de la (très) stratégique #Route_du_Pamir (M41 sur la carte)

  • A lire absolument, le dernier article de « Sy » Hersh dans la London Review of Books, « Military to military » :
    http://www.lrb.co.uk/v38/n01/seymour-m-hersh/military-to-military
    Je tente un long résumé avec citations, mais ce serait plutôt à lire in extenso.

    A partir de l’été 2013, des membres haut placés dans l’appareil militaire américain (notamment le chef de la DIA M. Flynn et le chef d’état-major M. Dempsey) commencent à s’alarmer des conséquences du programme de la CIA d’armement des « rebelles syriens » en collaboration avec les pétromonarchies et la Turquie. Selon leurs informations il renforcerait les groupes les plus radicaux (parmi lesquels al-Nusra et Da’ich) :

    The military’s resistance dates back to the summer of 2013, when a highly classified assessment, put together by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, then led by General Martin Dempsey, forecast that the fall of the Assad regime would lead to chaos and, potentially, to Syria’s takeover by jihadi extremists, much as was then happening in Libya. A former senior adviser to the Joint Chiefs told me that the document was an ‘all-source’ appraisal, drawing on information from signals, satellite and human intelligence, and took a dim view of the Obama administration’s insistence on continuing to finance and arm the so-called moderate rebel groups. By then, the CIA had been conspiring for more than a year with allies in the UK, Saudi Arabia and Qatar to ship guns and goods – to be used for the overthrow of Assad – from Libya, via Turkey, into Syria. The new intelligence estimate singled out Turkey as a major impediment to Obama’s Syria policy. The document showed, the adviser said, ‘that what was started as a covert US programme to arm and support the moderate rebels fighting Assad had been co-opted by Turkey, and had morphed into an across-the-board technical, arms and logistical programme for all of the opposition, including Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State. The so-called moderates had evaporated and the Free Syrian Army was a rump group stationed at an airbase in Turkey.’ The assessment was bleak: there was no viable ‘moderate’ opposition to Assad, and the US was arming extremists.

    Ces militaires américains, persuadés que dans ces conditions la chute d’Assad mènerait au chaos, vont tenter de convaincre l’administration Obama de changer de politique en Syrie ; mais en vain.

    Flynn told me. ‘We understood Isis’s long-term strategy and its campaign plans, and we also discussed the fact that Turkey was looking the other way when it came to the growth of the Islamic State inside Syria.’ The DIA’s reporting, he said, ‘got enormous pushback’ from the Obama administration. ‘I felt that they did not want to hear the truth.’
    ‘Our policy of arming the opposition to Assad was unsuccessful and actually having a negative impact,’ the former JCS adviser said. ‘The Joint Chiefs believed that Assad should not be replaced by fundamentalists. The administration’s policy was contradictory. They wanted Assad to go but the opposition was dominated by extremists. So who was going to replace him? To say Assad’s got to go is fine, but if you follow that through – therefore anyone is better. It’s the “anybody else is better” issue that the JCS had with Obama’s policy.’ The Joint Chiefs felt that a direct challenge to Obama’s policy would have ‘had a zero chance of success’.

    Ils vont alors tenter de contre-balancer celle-ci, sans rentrer en franche dissidence vis à vis de Washington, en faisant parvenir du renseignement par des canaux indirects (des militaires allemands, israéliens et russes) à Damas :

    So in the autumn of 2013 they decided to take steps against the extremists without going through political channels, by providing US intelligence to the militaries of other nations, on the understanding that it would be passed on to the Syrian army and used against the common enemy, Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State.
    Germany, Israel and Russia were in contact with the Syrian army, and able to exercise some influence over Assad’s decisions – it was through them that US intelligence would be shared. Each had its reasons for co-operating with Assad: Germany feared what might happen among its own population of six million Muslims if Islamic State expanded; Israel was concerned with border security; Russia had an alliance of very long standing with Syria, and was worried by the threat to its only naval base on the Mediterranean, at Tartus. ‘We weren’t intent on deviating from Obama’s stated policies,’ the adviser said. ‘But sharing our assessments via the military-to-military relationships with other countries could prove productive.

    L’article se poursuit avec un paragraphe rappelant l’ambition partagée par l’administration G.W. Bush et Obama de renverser Assad depuis au moins 2003, avec les différentes actions entreprises, malgré une coopération sécuritaire de Damas appréciée par les cercles militaires et de renseignement américains (choses assez bien connues).
    Ensuite Hersh balance une sacrée révélation : à partir de l’automne 2013, dans un contexte où l’effort financier turco-qataro-saoudien augmente et où l’ensemble de l’opération de déstabilisation d’Assad semble échapper aux Américains, ces militaires « dissidents » vont jouer un coup : en remplaçant la ligne d’approvisionnement principale libyenne des rebelles et des jihadistes en Syrie, par une ligne venue de Turquie, ils vont réussir à abaisser la qualité de l’armement obtenu par ceux-ci :

    The CIA was approached by a representative from the Joint Chiefs with a suggestion: there were far less costly weapons available in Turkish arsenals that could reach the Syrian rebels within days, and without a boat ride.’ But it wasn’t only the CIA that benefited. ‘We worked with Turks we trusted who were not loyal to Erdoğan,’ the adviser said, ‘and got them to ship the jihadists in Syria all the obsolete weapons in the arsenal, including M1 carbines that hadn’t been seen since the Korean War and lots of Soviet arms. It was a message Assad could understand: “We have the power to diminish a presidential policy in its tracks.”’
    The flow of US intelligence to the Syrian army, and the downgrading of the quality of the arms being supplied to the rebels, came at a critical juncture.

    Par la suite en 2014, Brennan (directeur de la CIA) tente de reprendre la main dans ce maelström. Il réunit les chefs du renseignement des Etats « arabes sunnites » et leur demande de ne soutenir que l’opposition modérée. Il obtient un oui poli mais non suivi d’effet, tandis que la ligne générale de l’administration Obama reste la même :

    Brennan’s message was ignored by the Saudis, the adviser said, who ‘went back home and increased their efforts with the extremists and asked us for more technical support. And we say OK, and so it turns out that we end up reinforcing the extremists.’

    Et reste le problème des Turcs, moins faciles à manipuler, qui soutiennent à la fois al-Nusra et Da’ich :

    But the Saudis were far from the only problem: American intelligence had accumulated intercept and human intelligence demonstrating that the Erdoğan government had been supporting Jabhat al-Nusra for years, and was now doing the same for Islamic State. ‘We can handle the Saudis,’ the adviser said. ‘We can handle the Muslim Brotherhood. You can argue that the whole balance in the Middle East is based on a form of mutually assured destruction between Israel and the rest of the Middle East, and Turkey can disrupt the balance – which is Erdoğan’s dream. We told him we wanted him to shut down the pipeline of foreign jihadists flowing into Turkey. But he is dreaming big – of restoring the Ottoman Empire – and he did not realise the extent to which he could be successful in this.’

    Suit un long exposé, d’une part sur les relations américano-russes, que certains du côté de ces « dissidents » perçoivent comme trop marquées du côté de Washington par une mentalité anti-russe anachronique venue de la guerre froide, et sur les raisons de la peur de la Russie du phénomène jihadiste, amplifiée depuis la mort de Kadhafi, d’autre part. Evoqué aussi le traitement médiatique hostile aux USA à l’intervention russe en Syrie.
    Reprise du récit. Après l’attentat de novembre dernier en France et le bombardier russe abattu par la chasse turque, Hollande tente d’amener Obama à un rapprochement avec la Russie mais sans succès, la ligne d’Obama restant départ d’Assad, opposition à l’intervention russe en Syrie, soutien à la Turquie, et maintien de l’idée d’une réelle opposiotn modérée :

    The Paris attacks on 13 November that killed 130 people did not change the White House’s public stance, although many European leaders, including François Hollande, advocated greater co-operation with Russia and agreed to co-ordinate more closely with its air force; there was also talk of the need to be more flexible about the timing of Assad’s exit from power. On 24 November, Hollande flew to Washington to discuss how France and the US could collaborate more closely in the fight against Islamic State. At a joint press conference at the White House, Obama said he and Hollande had agreed that ‘Russia’s strikes against the moderate opposition only bolster the Assad regime, whose brutality has helped to fuel the rise’ of IS. Hollande didn’t go that far but he said that the diplomatic process in Vienna would ‘lead to Bashar al-Assad’s departure … a government of unity is required.’ The press conference failed to deal with the far more urgent impasse between the two men on the matter of Erdoğan. Obama defended Turkey’s right to defend its borders; Hollande said it was ‘a matter of urgency’ for Turkey to take action against terrorists. The JCS adviser told me that one of Hollande’s main goals in flying to Washington had been to try to persuade Obama to join the EU in a mutual declaration of war against Islamic State. Obama said no. The Europeans had pointedly not gone to Nato, to which Turkey belongs, for such a declaration. ‘Turkey is the problem,’ the JCS adviser said.

    Hersh s’appuie ensuite sur l’ambassadeur syrien en Chine pour évoquer la cas de la Chine qui soutient aussi Assad. L’occasion de mentionner le Parti islamique du Turkestan Oriental, allié d’al-Qaïda et soutenu par les services turcs, et qui offre à des combattants notamment Ouïghours l’occasion de mener le jihad en Syrie avant peut-être de retourner le pratiquer dans le Xinjiang ce qui inquiète Pékin :

    Moustapha also brought up China, an ally of Assad that has allegedly committed more than $30 billion to postwar reconstruction in Syria. China, too, is worried about Islamic State. ‘China regards the Syrian crisis from three perspectives,’ he said: international law and legitimacy; global strategic positioning; and the activities of jihadist Uighurs, from Xinjiang province in China’s far west. Xinjiang borders eight nations – Mongolia, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India – and, in China’s view, serves as a funnel for terrorism around the world and within China. Many Uighur fighters now in Syria are known to be members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement – an often violent separatist organisation that seeks to establish an Islamist Uighur state in Xinjiang. ‘The fact that they have been aided by Turkish intelligence to move from China into Syria through Turkey has caused a tremendous amount of tension between the Chinese and Turkish intelligence,’ Moustapha said. ‘China is concerned that the Turkish role of supporting the Uighur fighters in Syria may be extended in the future to support Turkey’s agenda in Xinjiang.

    L’article se finit sur le sort de ces « dissidents ». Flynn se fera virer en 2014, tandis que Dempsey et les autres au sein de l’état-major, qui ont été moins insistants, resteront en poste.

    General Dempsey and his colleagues on the Joint Chiefs of Staff kept their dissent out of bureaucratic channels, and survived in office. General Michael Flynn did not. ‘Flynn incurred the wrath of the White House by insisting on telling the truth about Syria,’ said Patrick Lang, a retired army colonel who served for nearly a decade as the chief Middle East civilian intelligence officer for the DIA.

    Dempsey finira par partir en retraite en 2015, mettant fin à cette « dissidence douce » au sein du Pentagone :

    The military’s indirect pathway to Assad disappeared with Dempsey’s retirement in September. His replacement as chairman of the Joint Chiefs, General Joseph Dunford, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee in July, two months before assuming office. ‘If you want to talk about a nation that could pose an existential threat to the United States, I’d have to point to Russia,’ Dunford said.

    Conclusion :

    Obama now has a more compliant Pentagon. There will be no more indirect challenges from the military leadership to his policy of disdain for Assad and support for Erdoğan. Dempsey and his associates remain mystified by Obama’s continued public defence of Erdoğan, given the American intelligence community’s strong case against him – and the evidence that Obama, in private, accepts that case. ‘We know what you’re doing with the radicals in Syria,’ the president told Erdoğan’s intelligence chief at a tense meeting at the White House (as I reported in the LRB of 17 April 2014). The Joint Chiefs and the DIA were constantly telling Washington’s leadership of the jihadist threat in Syria, and of Turkey’s support for it. The message was never listened to. Why not?

  • La ville de Sibérie qui voudrait élire un chat à la mairie · Global Voices en Français
    https://fr.globalvoices.org/2015/12/16/192914

    L’administrateur de la communauté Altaï Online s’est donné pour pseudo “Altaïskii Seyatel” (Paysan de l’Altaï). RuNet Echo lui a demandé ce qu’il pensait de toute cette attention de l’establishment russe pour son chat, et de l’enthousiasme des partis d’opposition pour l’attaque par Barsik contre la routine. “Barsik le Chat doit son succès au fait que personne dans cette ville ne sait qui sont les autres candidats”, a expliqué Paysan de l’Altaï. “On ne connaît pas leurs programmes, leurs raisons de se présenter, leurs projets pour la ville. On se demande pourquoi l’opposition se réjouit ainsi, alors qu’elle n’a même pas été capable d’avancer un candidat connu et compris de électeurs”.

  • Kazakhstan Considers a Plan to Snoop on all Internet Traffic
    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/12/kazakhstan-considers-plan-snoop-all-internet-traffic

    In an unusually direct attack on online privacy and free speech, the ruling regime of Kazakhstan appears to have mandated the country’s telecommunications operators to intercept citizens’ Internet traffic using a government-issued certificate starting on January 1, 2016. The press release announcing the new measure was published last week by Kazakhtelecom JSC, the nation’s largest telecommunications company, but appears to have been taken down days later—the link above comes courtesy of the (...) #Hacking-Team #malware #surveillance #Kazakhstan

  • Le Kazakhstan instaure la surveillance généralisée
    http://www.linformaticien.com/actualites/id/38756/le-kazakhstan-instaure-la-surveillance-generalisee.aspx

    ❝A partir du 1er janvier prochain, chaque internaute habitant ce pays devra installer une « #backdoor » sur son ordinateur permettant ainsi aux autorités de surveiller tout ce qu’il fait sur internet. C’est simple, pas cher et il suffisait d’y penser. Plutôt que s’embêter à pister les flux de communications de manière légale ou non pour surveiller les communications de ses ressortissants à la manière du Great Firewall des Chinois, pourquoi ne pas installer directement un mouchard sur chaque poste de (...) backdoor, #surveillance, #Kazakhstan

  • An Israeli Pivot to Eurasia? | The Diplomat
    http://thediplomat.com/2015/12/an-israeli-pivot-to-eurasia

    There are limits to Israel-Kazakhstan cooperation, however. Iran is the most conspicuous area of divergence between Astana and Jerusalem. The Kazakh government consistently resists demands from both Iran and Israel to take a side in their longstanding disputes. In sharp contrast with Israel, Kazakhstan greeted the nuclear deal between Iran and the P5+1 powers with praise. Kazakhstan greatly values its relationship with Iran and perceives Tehran as a natural partner on a range of projects. In the area of Europe-bound natural gas exports, Iran could provide the Central Asian republics with an alternative path to Russian-controlled pipelines and the ever-controversial Trans-Caspian route. Astana already cooperates with Tehran on other infrastructure projects. December 2014, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Iran inaugurated a new railway link, which could carry 20 million tons in trilateral trade by 2020 (compared to 3 million tons in 2014).

  • The old problem and the sea - AzerNews
    http://www.azernews.az/analysis/90339.html

    le vieux serpent de la mer (?) Caspienne

    At the time when the world leaders discuss the climate change issues in Paris, each country around the globe should think about its own contribution to the future of the planet.
    Providing stable ecological situation dos not mean to think about the situation in one country, but the region as a whole. In the Caspian region, this issue remains acute, as five littoral countries could not come to a single position on the Caspian Sea – a one-of-a-kind water basin, surrounded by Azerbaijan, Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Iran.
    […]
    The unresolved status has caused many problems, the most significant of which is increased pollution. Oil production and refining have adversely affected the environmental condition of the sea. Although oil production does not play an integral source of pollution in the Caspian.
    Recent studies have shown that the main source might be pollutants flowing in from rivers such as the Kura, Terek, and Volga. These major rivers bring about 75,000 tons of waste per year into the Caspian Sea, 90 percent of which flows from the Volga.
    Meanwhile, oil production releases only 111 tons of oil products into the sea.
    A third, but no less important source of the sea pollution, is industrial and household waste, especially in large cities.

  • #Kazakhstan Urges Russia, Turkey to Probe Jet Downing, Restore Ties - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2015/11/30/world/europe/30reuters-mideast-crisis-russia-turkey-kazakhstan.html

    Russia’s close ally Kazakhstan on Monday urged Moscow and Istanbul to create a bilateral commission to jointly investigate the downing of the Russian bomber jet by Turkey which has strained relations between the two countries.

    There is a need to form this commission in order to find and punish those responsible and restore the relations,” Nazarbayev said, delivering his annual address to the nation.

    Nazarbayev en M. Bons Offices

  • Un dossier sur le Nucléaire | Romain j. Garcier |

    http://www.garcier.net/?paged=2

    Et merci à @rumor de nous avoir fait connaître cet excellent blog

    http://www.cnrs.fr/cw/dossiers/dosnucleaire/index.htm

    sur la carte, le Niger est le deuxième fournisseur de la France. Mais le premier est le Canada et il y a fort à parier que depuis, le Kazakhstan a pris sa place… On n’est pas tout à fait ici dans ce que décrit l’article : « Le CNRS met ensuite en avant, pour justifier l’option nucléaire, « la diversité géographique et politique des pays producteurs d’uranium », oubliant délibérément que, depuis 40 ans, la France utilise prioritairement l’uranium du Niger qu’elle s’accapare à un tarif dérisoire grâce à une véritable politique néocoloniale ».

    #nucléaire

  • Kazakhstan : Plus de la moitié des antilopes saïgas ont disparu en moins d’un mois
    http://www.brujitafr.fr/2015/11/kazakhstan-plus-de-la-moitie-des-antilopes-saigas-ont-disparu-en-moins-d-u

    Les scientifiques estiment qu’au moins 211 000 saïgas, soit la moitié de la population, ont disparu en mai. Le nombre d’antilopes saïgas disparues au Kazakhstan pourrait être bien plus important que prévu. En mai, le Programme des Nations unies pour l’environnement...

  • Kashagan, ça fuit de partout !

    Kashagan Oil and Gas Field, Kazakhstan : Image of the Day
    http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=86890


    acquired September 20, 2015


    acquired September 20, 2015

    The infrastructure is captured in these images of Kazakhstan acquired by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 on September 20, 2015. In the top image, the pipeline connecting the offshore facilities to a land-based processing facility at Karabatan runs in a southwesterly direction. On land, the pipeline stands above ground, but the pipes run underground from the shoreline to the offshore infrastructure. In the detailed (lower) image, several smaller drilling islands are located around larger hub islands and protected by narrow, curved reef-like structures. Several sediment plumes are visible, possibly caused by ship wakes or by currents flowing around underwater infrastructure.

  • Half of world’s rare antelope population died within weeks | Environment | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/nov/03/half-of-worlds-rare-antelope-population-died-within-weeks

    More than half of the world’s population of an endangered antelope died within two weeks earlier this year, in a phenomenon that scientists are unable to explain.

    At least 150,000 adult saiga antelopes were buried during a fortnight in May, but scientists say the actual figure will be significantly higher as many more carcasses were found but not counted as part of the burials. Calves were not counted, but it is thought that hundreds of thousands died too.

    Known for their distinctive cylindrical snout, bulging eyes and curled horns as well as their ability to survive dramatic changes in temperature, the animals are one of the most endangered species on the planet. Before the most recent die-off, the estimated population was between 250,000 and 320,000. The die-off has only occurred in the plains of Kazakhstan, where 90% of the global population resides.

  • CNPC and KMZ to double crude oil pipeline from Kazakhstan to China

    http://www.2b1stconsulting.com/cnpc-and-kmz-to-double-crude-oil-pipeline-from-kazakhstan-to-china

    Attention : Ces deux liens sont assez anciens (2007 et 2013) mais j’archive pour les références

    The joint venture between the national oil companies China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC or PetroChina) and the local KazMunaiGas (KMZ) is working on a second crude oil export pipeline from Kazakhstan to China.

    As the existing pipeline, the new one would connect Atyrau on the coast of the Caspian Sea, eastern Kazakhstan, to the Chinese boarder at the city of Alashankou in the Dushanzi District of the Xinjiang Province in China.

    –—

    The Geopolitics of Oil Pipelines in Central Asia
    http://www.sras.org/geopolitics_of_oil_pipelines_in_central_asia

    From the Silk Road to Chevron:
    The Geopolitics of Oil Pipelines in Central Asia
    by James Fishelson

    Kazakhstan has received much press recently as a result of the success of the comic film Borat. However, that movie got everything wrong in its depiction of Kazakhstan, with the exception of two things. The first is that the country is in a regional conflict with Uzbekistan. The second is the prevalence of prostitutes, which are everywhere in Kazakhstan. The country has become a target for immigrants practicing the profession, with women, girls, and even a few men flowing in from neighboring countries and farther abroad.[1] Since the 1979 discovery of the Tengiz field, a massive oil source under the North Caspian Sea,[2] and especially after the full-scale exploitation of that field and others during the post-Soviet era, Kazakhstan’s economy is booming and its citizens, in a frenzy of capitalism, are spending the influx of money liberally.

  • Low profits drive Turkish gas turbines to Africa
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/low-profits-drive-turkish-gas-turbines-to-africa.aspx?pageID=238&

    C’est aussi facile que ça de démanteler une centrale thermique, de la transporter et de la faire fonctionner ailleurs ???

    Many Turkish investors have started to dissemble gas-turbine power plants, which are no more profitable in Turkey due to the loss in Turkish Lira and lowering sector prices, and carry them abroad, mainly into Africa, according to sector representatives.

    This trend may, however, put the future supply into risk, they warned.

    A loss in the lira’s value, lowering electricity and natural gas receipts and increasing electricity supply in Turkey have put pressure on the power industry. Amid decreasing profits, some producers have recently chosen to dissemble their gas-fired power plants and go to other countries that are in urgent need of increasing their electricity supply, like Africa. This may, however, create a danger over the future supply of the Turkish market, according to sector players.

    “Gas prices are high. Some power plants, therefore, cannot meet their operational costs, initiating a natural selection and carrying their power plants abroad. Some African countries show great interest in these plants. It is also very advantageous to carry them to Iran as natural gas is cheap there,” said a source from the Energy Markets Regulation Board (EPDK).

    The same trend is also the case of several coal-fired turbines, which produce high emission levels and use expensive fuels.

    Saying that some 44 percent of Turkey’s power generation is based on natural gas turbines, Sarempet Enerji General Manager Ali Rıza Öner added, “There is no chance for combined cycled power plants with a productivity level under 58 percent to be profitable all the year around, except some months when prices are higher, such as winter months. While independent electricity producers made their financing feasibility calculations on 7,200 hours at minimum, this figure decreased to 2,500 hours in the last two years. Many gas-fired power plant owners have therefore tended to take their plants abroad, mainly Iran, Kazakhstan and western African countries, amid high natural gas prices and low electricity prices in Turkey. Most of the African regions have an energy deficit and their purchasing guarantees constitute lifeblood for the secondhand power plant market.”

    #Electricité #Centrale #Economie #Turquie

  • Poland Moves to Take in Ethnic Poles From Former USSR - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015/09/29/world/europe/ap-eu-poland-migrants.html

    Poland has earmarked funds to bring in tens of thousands of ethnic Poles now living in Kazakhstan, Ukraine and other former Soviet republics, its finance minister said Tuesday.

    The long-neglected issue was raised recently amid a heated debate over the European Union’s plan to share 120,000 refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia among its 28 members.

    Poland has said it will host 7,000 of them. Critics of the refugee program, however, say Poland’s first obligation is toward the ethnic Poles who Soviet dictator Josef Stalin expelled by hundreds of thousands from their homes, and to their descendants.

    Most of the expulsions took place during World War II, when Soviet authorities forcefully sent Poles from areas overtaken by the Red Army to Siberia or the bare steppes of Kazakhstan. The families were not allowed to return for decades under communism, both in the Soviet Union and Poland, until the 1990s.

    Finance Minister Mateusz Szczurek said Tuesday the Cabinet has put aside funds for the repatriations — and the Interior Ministry said it would be 30 million zlotys ($8 million) in 2016 alone. The money — for housing, Polish language lessons and professional training — would go to local governments to encourage them to take in the arrivals.

    Under the EU refugee program, funds for people from Syria and Eritrea will come from the bloc.

    Democratic Poland started the ethnic repatriation program in the late 1990s but the reluctance of local governments has been a chief obstacle. So far, some 5,000 ethnic Poles have been brought to Poland from Kazakhstan, Georgia and Uzbekistan, according to the Interior Ministry. Another 180 were evacuated from war-torn eastern Ukraine in February.

    But tens of thousands more are waiting. There are at least 34,000 ethnic Poles in Kazakhstan alone, according to estimates.

  • Alors que la presse occidentale persiste à discuter d’un “possible soutien militaire russe” au président Bachar el-Assad, et nous sert des pseudos analyses telles François Heisbourg, éminent géopoliticien – “indépendant” ? on ne sait pas trop : voir l’épisode sur ses affirmations quant à l’existence d’ ADM en Irak où sa responsabilité est sérieusement engagée - hier soir sur France Inter http://www.franceinter.fr/emission-un-jour-dans-le-monde, bien “aiguillé” par le serveur de soupe Nicolas Demorand.

    Bref : Il semble que les Occidentaux n’ont toujours pas compris les conséquences de leur politique, et ne soient prêts à reconnaitre leur responsabilité criminelle.

    Mais voilà tout de même notre MAE qui nous apprend que maintenant, le président syrien ( élu démocratiquement, et soutenu d’après les enquêtes par 70% du peuple) aurait, le droit de vivre encore !!!!!
    On admire la formulation :
    “La question qui se pose est la suivante : quelles sont les perspectives ? Doit-on dire au peuple syrien que M. Bachar al-Assad détiendra le pouvoir exécutif au cours des quinze prochaines années ? Si on dit cela, il n’y a pas de solution possible. Entre dire cela et exiger le départ immédiat de M. Bachar al-Assad, il y a une marge. Cela s’appelle la diplomatie.” - Audition de Laurent Fabius au sénat, 9 septembre 2015.
    La diplomatie ! Comme ça,...tout d’un coup !!!
    Rien à voir avec l’infléchissement de la position des USA et son approbation implicite del’initiative de l’OTSC ‘’(toujours à appelée : “l’initiative russe”)
    ..... Non non...!!!
    L’analyse emberlificotée de Denis Sieffert, dans son édito de jeudi dernier, semble faire écho au propos officiel, et nous montre à quel point – je ne mettrai pas une seconde en doute l’indépendance du journaliste- même les plus éminents peuvent se faire embarquer, proprement dindonner, par cette propagande de guerre, de type néo-coloniale. (Et malheureusement : plus on se laisse bercer par le courant, plus on s’approche des rapides qui nous mènent au pire).
    Les leçons de Lénine et Jaurès sont pourtant restées terriblement actuelles, mais la peur de l’opprobre à vouloir y faire référence, ou s’y replonger même timidement, semble la plus forte.
    Pourtant en relisant : “ L’impérialisme stade suprême du capitalisme” on est saisi par la modernité, et l’actualité, du texte de Lénine, pourtant écrit dans un contexte beaucoup plus difficile qu’aujourd’hui !. (Voir Ici, c’est gratuit : http://marxiste.fr/lenine/imp.pdf)

    Pour aujourd’hui, Le ou les faits essentiels sont que :
    l’Organisation du Traité de sécurité collective (OTSC) a décidé de lutter contre le terrorisme en Irak et en Syrie

    l’Organisation du Traité de sécurité collective (OTSC)

    Regroupe :
    La Biélorussie, la Russie, l’Arménie, le Tadjikistan, le Kazakhstan, le Kirghizistan. À la différence de l’Otan et du Pacte de Varsovie, dans lesquels les États membres perdent leur souveraineté (au profit des États-Unis et du Royaume-Uni dans l’Otan, de l’URSS dans le Pacte de Varsovie —ce qui contrevient à la Charte des Nations unies—), les États membres de l’OTSC conservent leur pleine souveraineté, ne placent pas leurs armées sous le commandement de la principale puissance de leur alliance, et peuvent se désolidariser à tout moment de cette alliance [1]. L’Azerbaïdjan, la Géorgie et l’Ouzbékistan se sont ainsi retirés librement de cette organisation pour se tourner vers le Guam [2] et l’Otan.

    Donc :

    L’OTSC interviendra à partir d’octobre 2015 , à la fois en Irak et en Syrie, contre les individus classés comme « terroristes » par l’Onu, à savoir al-Qaïda, Daesh et tous les groupes qui se sont alliés à eux.

    L’OTSC ne cherche pas à venir en aide à Haïder al-Abadi ou à Bachar el-Assad, mais est directement menacée par les jihadistes.

    Les jihadistes ne sont pas en mesure de résister longuement à une alliance internationale si celle-ci inclut l’Irak et la Syrie.

    Les États-Unis, qui ont déjà mené secrètement une vaste opération conjointe avec l’Armée arabe syrienne à Hassaké, sont prêts à un accord avec l’OTSC.
    Leurs alliés britanniques et français sont prêts à renoncer à renverser la République arabe syrienne.

    • We must compromise with evil in Syria
      Gideon Rachman
      http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/96bf7e48-6041-11e5-a28b-50226830d644.html

      Establishing such a process is obviously fiendishly difficult. But there are some promising signs. The Americans have stopped insisting on the immediate removal of Mr Assad. And despite their military build-up in Syria, the Russians must surely understand the long-term risks of “boots on the ground” in Syria. They too need a diplomatic option.

      It would clearly be best if Mr Assad stepped aside early on, as part of a Syrian peace process. But diplomacy cannot be held hostage by the question of Mr Assad’s future. Too many people have already died in Syria to make the search for peace dependent on the fate of one man, however evil.

    • L’extrait ci-dessous de la bio de Heibourg sur Wikipedia donne une idée de son « indépendance » ! membre du Centre d’analyse et de prévision du ministère des Affaires étrangères (1978-79), premier secrétaire à la représentation permanente de la France à l’ONU (1979-1981), conseiller pour les affaires internationales au cabinet du ministre de la Défense (1981-1984), directeur-attaché à Thomson-CSF (1984-1987), directeur de l’IISS (1987-1992), directeur désigné de l’Institut universitaire de hautes études internationales de Genève, directeur du développement stratégique de Matra Défense Espace (1992-1997), responsable d’une mission interministérielle sur la recherche et l’enseignement sur les questions internationales et de défense (1998-2000) et directeur de la Fondation pour la recherche stratégique (2001-2005). Il a fait partie du groupe des personnalités chargé par la Commission européenne de créer le programme européen de recherche de sécurité (PERS)

  • Brian Bonner: Bandits of Ukraine, keep stealing with impunity
    http://www.kyivpost.com/opinion/op-ed/bandits-of-ukraine-keep-stealing-with-impunity-398150.html

    Bandits of Ukraine, keep stealing with impunity. Nobody in authority is going to stop you – especially if you’re rich, powerful or able to pay hefty bribes to the right person.

    That’s my conclusion after listening to panel discussions at the 12th annual Yalta European Strategy from Sept. 10-12, taking place for the second year in Kyiv since Crimea’s Yalta remains under Russian occupation.

    I have been in Ukraine for a long time. But I can still appreciate the sad irony of a conference run by a billionaire oligarch, Victor Pinchuk, with another billionaire oligarch, Rinat Akhmetov’s DTEK, as a special partner, organizing a round-table talk called: “Rule of Law, De-Oligarchization, Fighting Corruption: Any News?

    Let me answer the question: No. There is no news. There is no de-oligarchization campaign and there is no fight against corruption under way – at least not one from people in the institutions that should be waging it: judges, prosecutors and police.

    Brian Bonner has served as the chief editor of the Kyiv Post since 2008.[…] He also worked as a member of the core teams with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe during six election observation missions in Ukraine, Belarus, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan.

  • Ukraine bans journalists who ’threaten national interests’ from country | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/16/ukraine-president-bans-journalists-from-country

    President Petro Poroshenko has banned two BBC correspondents from Ukraine along with many Russian journalists and public figures.

    The long-serving BBC Moscow correspondent Steve Rosenberg and producer Emma Wells have been barred from entering the country, according to a list published on the presidential website on Wednesday. The decree says those listed were banned for one year for being a “threat to national interests” or promoting “terrorist activities”.

    BBC cameraman Anton Chicherov was also banned, along with Spanish journalists Antonio Pampliega and Ángel Sastre, who went missing, presumed kidnapped, in Syria in July.
    […]
    Andrew Roy, the BBC’s foreign editor, said: “This is a shameful attack on media freedom. These sanctions are completely inappropriate and inexplicable measures to take against BBC journalists who are reporting the situation in Ukraine impartially and objectively and we call on the Ukrainian government to remove their names from this list immediately.’

    The reason for the BBC correspondents’ ban was not clear, but media coverage of the conflict with the rebels – whom the authorities and local media often call “terrorists” – has been a sensitive subject.

    Russian television has covered the Ukrainian crisis in a negative light, frequently referring to the new Kiev government as a “fascist junta”, while international media has focused on civilian casualties and the use of cluster munitions in populated areas by both sides.

    • Ah ben non !

      Ukraine’s ban of foreign journalists ignites international ire
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ukraines-ban-of-foreign-journalists-ignites-international-ire-398113.html

      Prominent foreign journalists briefly found themselves in the company of Kremlin cheerleader and Chechen strongman leader Ramzan Kadyrov in Ukraine’s recently released list of sanctioned individuals.

      The move ignited such a furor that President Petro Poroshenko immediately reversed the decision.

      The nearly 400 sanctioned individuals, announced on Sept. 16 by the presidential administration, face travel and financial restrictions for one year. Those on the list were said to represent an “actual or potential threat to national interests, national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine,” according to the decree.

      While figures like Kadyrov and separatist leaders Denis Pushilin and Igor Plotnitsky are justifiably on the list along with top Russian officials, several well-respected foreign journalists were inexplicably singled out.

      Many expressed shock and anger that BBC journalists Emma Wells, Steven Rosenberg and Anton Chicherov were categorized as a threat to Ukraine’s national security – especially considering that Rosenberg had been attacked in Russia last year for investigating the deaths of Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

      The Ukrainian authorities quickly switched to damage-control mode.

    • In Reversal, Ukraine Removes 6 Journalists From Banned List
      http://www.voanews.com/content/cpj-osce-blast-ukraine-on-foreign-journalists-entry-ban/2967882.html

      Ukraine has removed six European journalists from its list of persons banned from the country, but a leading press freedom watchdog says all journalists should be removed from the list.
      […]
      The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) welcomed the reversal, but said the Ukrainian government “should remove all journalists and bloggers from the list and allow them to cover the region freely.”

      Earlier Thursday, The Organization for Security and Cooperation (OSCE) in Europe called for Poroshenko “to amend his decree and exclude journalists from it,” adding that Ukrainian authorities “should facilitate the work of journalists and abstain from creating administrative obstacles to the entry.

      The OSCE called the ban “a severe threat to the rights of journalists to freely collect information.

      Poroshenko signed a decree Wednesday that imposed sanctions on 388 companies and individuals deemed to represent an “actual or potential threat to the national interests, national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.

      The 34 journalists and seven bloggers originally included on the sanctions list come from Bulgaria, Estonia, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Macedonia, Moldova, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain, Switzerland, and Britain. All but one are OSCE participating states.

      Le titre a été passablement adouci, puisque l’original était

      CPJ, OSCE blast Ukraine on foreign journalist entry ban

    • Foreign Ministry under fire for ‘incompetent’ sanctions list
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/foreign-ministry-under-fire-for-incompetent-sanctions-list-398216.html

      The scandal over Ukraine’s now notorious blacklist of prominent international journalists has flared up yet again, as the Foreign Ministry digs itself in deeper in trying to justify the move.

      Oksana Romaniuk of Reporters Without Borders on Sept. 18 published a list of journalists said to have been compiled by the Foreign Ministry in late February. The list, a photograph of which Romaniuk posted on Facebook after receiving the documents from an unknown source, apparently served as the basis for the sanctions list signed by President Petro Poroshenko on Sept. 16, which included BBC journalists Emma Wells and Steven Rosenberg, among others.

      The Foreign Ministry responded publicly to Romaniuk’s post, reminding her on Facebook that the documents she published, under Ukrainian legislation, were meant to stay confidential – apparent confirmation that the documents were legitimate. The ministry also noted that the list in question had not served as the basis for the finalized sanctions list.

      After the publication of the list of sanctioned journalists triggered international outrage, Poroshenko quickly backtracked and canceled the bans on six of them.

      But now the entire list is under scrutiny, as the documents provided by Romaniuk exposed a worrying detail: several international journalists were apparently sanctioned for their “anti-Ukrainian coverage of events,” with nobody quite sure how such determinations about a reporter’s work are made.

      The sanctioning of foreign journalists for “anti-Ukrainian coverage” follows “the Kremlin’s pattern of behavior all while they (Ukrainians) are declaring new principles,” Romaniuk told the Kyiv Post, saying the list was an “absolute embarrassment” for Ukraine at a time when Ukraine needs international support the most.

      We are having our lawyers prepare documents to send to the ministry to ask them who exactly decides what constitutes ‘anti-Ukrainian’ coverage, and what exactly the criteria are,” Romaniuk said.

      The best thing they could do now is admit that they made a mistake and promise that those responsible will be held to account,” she said, noting that she believed the list was hastily prepared at the last moment.

      Ukraine spent so much time preparing (to introduce) these sanctions … now they’ve released the sanctions and they are so badly prepared. I think they were designed for some internal reasons, to show that something big has been done ahead of elections,” she said.

      The plan backfired, she said, because whoever prepared the list exhibited negligence, incompetence, and a complete lack of understanding of the media.

  • Visite de Vladimir Poutine au Tadjikistan sur fond de menace jihadiste - Europe - RFI

    http://www.rfi.fr/europe/20150913-visite-vladimir-poutine-tadjikistan-fond-menace-jihadiste-rakhmon-russie-nazarzoda-k/?ns_mchannel=fidelisation&ns_source=newsletter_rfi_fr_monde&ns_campaign=email&ns

    Vladimir Poutine se rend au Tadjikistan ce lundi 14 septembre pour un sommet du traité de sécurité collective, une structure regroupant plusieurs pays de l’ex-URSS restés alliés de la Russie : la Biélorussie, l’Arménie, le Kazakhstan, le Kirghizstan et le Tadjikistan. Cette rencontre a lieu alors qu’une opération antiterroriste d’envergure est organisée dans le pays.

    #moscou #Poutine #russie #tadjikistan #djihadisme

  • Event horizon : scenes from the frontier of extraterrestrial exploration - The Calvert Journal
    http://calvertjournal.com/features/show/4653

    Vincent Fournier’s Space Project explores humanity’s yearning for worlds beyond our own. Over the course of the project, the Paris-based photographer has visited the key terrestrial bases of space exploration: the cosmonaut training centre of Star City outside Moscow, the Baikonour Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and Utah’s Mars Desert Research Station.

    Mais pas que.
    Site du photographe
    http://www.vincentfournier.co.uk/site

    #espace #frontière #photographie #Vincent_Fournier.

  • Iran launches first overseas farming plan
    http://farmlandgrab.org/post/view/25264-iran-launches-first-overseas-farming-plan

    Iran has launched agricultural cultivation in #Kazakhstan, marking its first farmland investment overseas as the Middle Eastern country seeks to secure food supplies amid a lingering drought.

    Cultivation has begun over eight hectares of farmland in the Central Asian country, with the next project expected to start in Ukraine in the next few months, Agriculture Ministry’s Mohammad Reza Shafeinia of Iran said.

    A similar plan is in the works for #Ghana whose agricultural sector accounts for over half of the African nation’s gross domestic product and is the world’s second largest cocoa producer.

    Water-intensive rice and corn crops as well as oilseeds and livestock inputs have been cited by Agriculture Ministry officials as the target products which Iran seeks to grow on farmlands overseas.

    The semi-arid country is awaking to its water shortage vulnerability, rushing through a series of exigency plans to tide over the problem.

    #Iran #Asie_centrale #eau #terres