country:niger

  • La #Mission_Eucap octroie à la police nationale du #Niger 6,5 Milliards FCFA pour le contrôle des frontières

    La #police nigérienne va bénéficier d’une enveloppe de 10 millions d’euros, soit 6,5 milliards FCFA, de la mission #Eucap_Sahel au Niger pour financer le projet de création de #Compagnies_mobiles_de_contrôle_des_frontières (#CMCF) dans toutes les régions du Niger. Ce, dans le but de lutter contre le crime organisé et la migration clandestine.

    Cette enveloppe est offerte précisément par les Pays-Bas à hauteur de 4 millions d’euros (2,6 milliards FCFA), et l’Allemagne 6 millions d’euros (3,9 milliards FCFA).

    « L’#Allemagne contribuera pour 6 millions et les #Pays-Bas pour 4 millions pour aider le gouvernement nigérien dans la lutte contre l’immigration irrégulière, le trafic de drogue et des armes. », a précisé le ministre des Affaires étrangères des Pays-Bas Stef Blok.

    La convention matérialisant cet appui a été signée le 31 octobre, en présence du Chef de la délégation de l’Union européenne Denisa-Elena Ionete, du Chef de la mission Eucap Sahel au Niger Frank Van Der Mueren, et du ministre des Affaires étrangères des Pays-Bas.

    Pour mémoire, la mission Eucap Sahel avait déjà offert du #matériel d’une valeur de 15 millions FCFA à l’Agence nationale de lutte contre la traite des personnes et le trafic illicite de migrants (#ANLTP / #TIM), toujours dans le cadre de la lutte contre le terrorisme, le crime organisé, la traite des personnes et la migration clandestine.

    Eucap Sahel Niger est un instrument de développement et de stabilité de l’Union européenne, mise sur pied dans le cadre de la politique de sécurité et de défense commune. Lancée en 2012 au Niger, elle contribue au renforcement des capacités des forces de défense et de sécurité nigériennes dans le cadre de la lutte contre le terrorisme et la criminalité organisée.

    En 2018, sa mission a été prolongée au Niger pour une période de deux ans.

    https://www.niameyetles2jours.com/la-gestion-publique/securite/0111-3043-la-mission-eucap-octroie-a-la-police-nationale-du-niger

    • L’Allemagne et les Pays-Bas vont financer une police de contrôle au Niger

      L’Allemagne et les Pays-Bas vont débloquer 10 millions d’euros au Niger pour mettre sur pied des forces spéciales chargées de contrôler les frontières du pays africain notamment contre l’immigration illégale, a annoncé jeudi la mission civile européenne Eucap Sahel.

      Le Niger, les Pays-Bas et Eucap Sahel - qui aide depuis 2012 le Niger à lutter contre le terrorisme et la criminalité organisée - ont signé mercredi à Niamey la convention pour le financement de cette force dénommée Compagnies mobiles de contrôle des frontières (CMCF), selon Eucap Sahel.

      « Les Pays-Bas contribueront pour 4 millions d’euros et l’Allemagne pour 6 millions d’euros. Nous travaillerons avec le gouvernement nigérien dans la lutte contre la migration irrégulière, le trafic de drogue et des armes », a précisé à la télévision Stef Blok, le ministre des Affaires étrangères des Pays-Bas en visite au Niger.

      Les fonds seront confiés à Eucap Sahel et serviront à la formation, l’entrainement et l’équipement de centaines de policiers nigériens qui composeront les compagnie, a-t-il dit.

      Dans une première phase, deux compagnies fortes de 250 policiers nigériens seront positionnés à Maradi et Birn’in Konni, deux régions proches de la frontière avec le Nigeria, un des gros pourvoyeurs de clandestins transitant par le Niger pour l’Europe, a expliqué une source sécuritaire à l’AFP.

      « Grosso modo c’est pour combattre tout ce que nous avons comme défis : la migration illégale, le trafic des être humains, la drogue, le terrorisme », a expliqué Souley Boubacar, le patron de la police nigérienne.

      Selon les statistiques européennes, environ 90% des migrants d’Afrique de l’Ouest traversent le Niger pour gagner la Libye et l’Europe.

      Mi-juillet, lors d’une visite au Niger, le président du Parlement européen Antonio Tajani s’était réjoui de la chute « de plus de 95% » du flux de migrants transitant par le Niger vers la Libye et l’Europe, entre 2016 et 2017.

      https://www.voaafrique.com/a/l-allemagne-et-les-pays-bas-vont-financer-une-police-de-contr%C3%B4le-au-niger/4638602.html

    • Germany, Netherlands back Niger border force to counter migration

      Germany and the Netherlands have pledged to fund special forces in Niger to control its border and prevent illegal migration, the EU’s security mission in the country said Thursday.

      Niger is a transit country for thousands of migrants heading to Libya and Algeria, key hubs for migrants trying to reach Europe.

      Under the new plan, the two European nations will disburse €10 million to finance the new force, according to EUCAP Sahel, which provides support for Niger security forces.

      The funds would be used for training and equipping hundreds of Niger police officers.

      “Roughly speaking, it is to combat all our challenges: illegal migration, human trafficking, drugs, terrorism,” said Souley Boubacar, head of the Niger police.

      In the first phase, two companies of 250 Niger police will be positioned at Maradi and Birnin Konni — two regions on the troubled frontier with Nigeria that have become a key crossing point for migrants heading for Europe — a security source told AFP.

      It came after Germany held talks with Niger earlier this year, which took in discussions on migration issues. Angela Merkel welcomed the President of Niger, Mahamadou Issoufou, to Meseberg Castle in Brandenburg during the talks.

      The EU has been grappling with massive migration from Africa and the Middle East since 2015.

      Niger has become one of the main crossing routes for poor migrants, with 90 percent of West African migrants passing through the country, according to the EU.

      The Saharan route is notorious for its dangers, which include breakdowns, lack of water and callous traffickers who abandon migrants in the desert.

      Niger introduced a law making people-smuggling punishable by a jail term of up to 30 years in 2015.

      In July, European Parliament President Antonio Tajani said the flow of migrants through Niger fell by 95 percent between 2016 and 2017.


      https://www.thelocal.de/20181101/germany-netherlands-back-niger-border-force-to-counter-migration
      #Allemagne #Pays-Bas

    • Appui de plus de 6,5 Milliards de FCFA de La Mission Eucap à la police nationale pour le contrôle des frontières

      Le Ministre des Affaires étrangères des Pays-Bas Monsieur STEF BLOK a procédé ce mercredi 31 octobre 2018 à la signature d’une convention avec le Chef de la mission Eucap Sahel au Niger Monsieur FRANK Van Der Mueren pour le compte de la police nationale du Niger représentée par son directeur général le Commissaire général de police Souley Boubacar et en présence du Chef de la délégation de l’Union Européenne Mme Denisa-Elena IONETE.
      D’un coût global de 10 millions d’euros dont 4 millions des Pays-Bas et 6 millions de l’Allemagne, ce mémorandum d’entente permettra de financer le projet de création de Compagnies Mobiles de Contrôle des Frontières (CMCF) dans toutes les régions du Niger.
      La création de ces nouvelles compagnies s’inscrit dans le cadre de la lutte contre la criminalité organisée et la migration irrégulière.
      Le Chef de la mission EUCAP SAHEL au Niger, Monsieur FRANK VAN DER MUEREN a tenu à souhaiter la bienvenue au Ministre STEF BLOK, à la délégation de la police nationale et aux participants à cette cérémonie.
      Il a, à cette occasion, souligné que ce projet s’inscrit dans le cadre ‘’des actions de l’Union Européenne au Niger’’ et ‘’c’est un geste politique très fort envers le Niger’’.
      Rappelons qu’EUCAP SAHEL est à son quatrième mandat au Niger dont le dernier court de 2018 à 2020. Sa mission principale est la lutte contre l’insécurité et la migration clandestine. EUCAP SAHEL au Niger emploie 115 agents internationaux et 15 nationaux.
      ‘’L’Allemagne contribuera pour 6 millions et les Pays-Bas pour 4 millions pour aider le gouvernement nigérien dans la lutte contre l’immigration irrégulière, le trafic de drogue et des armes’’ a indiqué le ministre STEF BLOK au cours d’un point presse animée juste après la signature de cette convention.
      Le Commissaire général de police Directeur général de la police du Niger Souley Boubacar a exprimé toute sa satisfaction après cette signature avant d’ajouter que ‘’c’est pour combattre tout ce qu’il y a aujourd’hui comme défis de l’heure tels le trafic de drogue, d’armes, l’immigration irrégulière, le banditisme transfrontalier’’.
      Lancée en 2012, EUCAP Sahel Niger est une mission civile de l’Union européenne promouvant une politique de sécurité et de défense commune, rappelons-t-on. Elle apporte ses appuis dans le cadre de renforcement des forces de sécurité nigériennes.

      http://www.anp.ne/?q=article/appui-de-plus-de-6-5-milliards-de-fcfa-de-la-mission-eucap-la-police-nationale-p
      #externalisation #contrôles_frontaliers

  • Burkina Faso: June – October 2018 Chronology of Violent Incidents Related to Al-Qaeda and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS)
    Sahel Memo
    http://www.sahelmemo.com/2018/11/01/burkina-faso-june-october-2018-chronology-of-violent-incidents-related-to

    Burkina Faso: June – October 2018 Takeaways and Trends
    – Militants activity in Burkina Faso have been on the rise for the past two years. Since June 2018 Sahel MeMo observed similar trend with an expansion from Northern parts bordering Mali and Niger, to the Est Region on the borders with Benin, Niger, and Togo. Militant groups have been trying to establish a base there since early 2016, explaining groups’ ability to carry complex deadly attacks, including the use of improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
    – Violence in the eastern part of Burkina Faso by militant groups most likely to continue. In addition to targeting security forces and intimidation acts against civil servants, militants will look to continue to disrupt gold mining in the area. In fact, security forces in charge of protecting gold mines or escorting staff have been subject to attacks by militants at least in August 2018. If this to continue, livelihoods of local communities benefiting from gold mining could be at risk if security situation continues to deteriorate in the region.
    – These attacks are mostly attributed rather than claimed by militant groups known to operate in Burkina Faso. These militant groups include Ansaroul Islam, Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen (JNIM), and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS). Out of the three only JNIM have been consistent releasing official claims of attacks. Thus analysts, observers, journalists, and Burkinabe authorities are contributing most of violent incidents based on the area where occurred and means used. Important to note that between June and October 2018 no incidents officially claimed by JNIM. This could be explained by difficulty of movement during rainy season (June – October) in the region.
    – October 3rd witnessed the first reported French airstrikes against militants after request of support from Burkinabe authorities. This was following a deadly attack against Inata gold mine gendarmerie post.


    #Burkina #Terrorisme

  • Pays basque, la nouvelle route de l’exil

    De plus en plus de migrants entrent en Europe par l’Espagne et franchissent la frontière dans le Sud-Ouest. Reportage.

    Le car est à peine garé le long du trottoir que, déjà, ils se pressent à ses portes. Ils regardent avec anxiété la batterie de leur téléphone, elle est presque à plat, il faut qu’elle tienne quelques minutes encore, le temps de présenter le billet. Quatre jeunes filles s’inquiètent, leur ticket affiche un prénom masculin, le chauffeur les laissera-t-il passer ? Ou vont-elles perdre les 100, 200 ou 300 euros qu’elles ont déboursés à des « frères » peu scrupuleux - la valeur officielle est de 35 euros - pour acquérir ce précieux sésame vers Paris ? Chaque soir depuis quelques semaines, le même scénario se répète au terminus des « bus Macron » sur la place des Basques, à #Bayonne. Une centaine de jeunes, pour la plupart originaires d’Afrique francophone, plus rarement du Maghreb, monte par petits groupes dans les cars en partance pour Bordeaux ou Paris, dernière étape d’un périple entamé depuis des mois. Ils ont débarqué la veille d’Irun, en Espagne, à 40 kilomètres plus au sud, après un bref passage par la ville frontalière d’Hendaye.

    De #Gibraltar, ils remontent vers le nord de l’Espagne

    Les arrivées ont commencé au compte-gouttes au printemps, elles se sont accélérées au cours de l’été. Depuis que l’Italie se montre intraitable, l’Espagne est devenue le principal point d’entrée en Europe, avec 48 000 nouveaux exilés depuis le début de l’année. Croisés à Irun ou à Hendaye, qu’ils viennent de Guinée-Conakry, de Côte d’Ivoire ou du Mali, ils racontent la même histoire. Thierno est guinéen, il a 18 ans. Il a tenté la traversée par la Libye, sans succès, il a poursuivi par l’Algérie et le Maroc, puis fini par franchir le détroit de Gibraltar en bateau après deux échecs. Tous évoquent la difficulté à travailler et à se faire payer au Maroc, les violences, parfois, aussi. Puis ils parlent de l’Espagne, d’Algesiras, Cadix ou Malaga, en experts de la géographie andalouse. Parfois, la Croix-Rouge espagnole, débordée au Sud, les a envoyés en bus vers ses centres de Madrid ou Bilbao, leur assurant une partie de leur voyage. Aboubacar, 26 ans, est, lui, remonté en voiture, avec des « frères ».

    Personne n’en parle, les réseaux sont pourtant bien là, à prospérer sur ces flux si lucratifs. On estime à 1500 euros le prix de la traversée à Gibraltar, 100 ou 200 euros le passage de la frontière française depuis #Irun. Tous n’ont qu’un objectif, rejoindre la #France, comme cette femme, sénégalaise, qui demande qu’on l’emmène en voiture et suggère, si on se fait contrôler, de dire qu’elle est notre bonne. La quasi-totalité veut quitter l’Espagne. Parce qu’ils n’en parlent pas la langue et qu’ils ont souvent en France sinon de la famille, au moins des connaissances. Parce qu’il est plus difficile de travailler dans la péninsule ibérique, où le taux de chômage reste de 15 %. Parce qu’enfin ceux qui envisagent de demander l’asile ont intérêt à effectuer les démarches en France, où 40 575 protections ont été accordées en 2017, plutôt qu’en Espagne (4 700 statuts délivrés).

    Alors, ils essaient, une fois, deux fois, trois fois, dans un absurde jeu du chat et de la souris avec les policiers français. Les 150 agents de la #police_aux_frontières (#PAF) en poste à #Hendaye tentent, avec l’aide d’une compagnie de #CRS, de contrôler tant bien que mal les cinq points de passage. Depuis le début de 2018, 5600 réadmissions ont été effectuées vers l’Espagne, contre 3520 en 2017, mais, de l’aveu même d’un officiel, « ça passe et ça passe bien, même ». Si l’autoroute est gardée quasiment toute la journée, il reste un créneau de deux heures durant lequel elle ne l’est pas faute d’un effectif suffisant. Chaque nuit, des taxis espagnols en profitent et déposent des gens sur la place des Basques à Bayonne. La surveillance des deux ponts qui enjambent la #Bidassoa et séparent Irun d’Hendaye est aléatoire. A certaines heures, le passage à pied se fait sans difficulté. Il ne reste plus ensuite aux migrants qu’à se cacher jusqu’au prochain passage du bus 816, qui les conduira à Bayonne en un peu plus d’une heure.

    Les agents de la Paf ne cachent pas leur lassitude. Même si la loi antiterroriste de 2017 autorise des contrôles renforcés dans la zone frontière, même si des accords avec l’Espagne datant de 2002 leur permettent de renvoyer sans grande formalité les personnes contrôlées sans papiers dans un délai de quatre heures, ils ont le sentiment d’être inutiles. Parce qu’ils ne peuvent pas tout surveiller. Parce que l’Espagne ne reprend que contrainte et forcée les « réadmis », les laissant libres de franchir la frontière dès qu’ils le souhaiteront. Certains policiers ne prennent même plus la peine de raccompagner les migrants à la frontière. Gare d’Hendaye, un après-midi, le TGV pour Paris est en partance. Des policiers fouillent le train, ils trouvent trois jeunes avec billets mais sans papiers, ils les font descendre, puis les laissent dans la gare. « De toute façon, ça ne sert à rien d’aller jusqu’à la frontière, dans deux heures, ils sont de nouveau là. Ça ne sert qu’à grossir les chiffres pour que nos chefs puissent faire de jolis camemberts », lâche, avec aigreur, l’un des agents.

    La compassion l’emporte sur le rejet

    L’amertume n’a pas encore gagné le reste de la population basque. Au contraire. Dans cette zone où l’on joue volontiers à saute-frontière pour aller acheter des cigarettes à moins de cinq euros ou du gasoil à 1,1 euro, où il est fréquent, le samedi soir, d’aller boire un verre sur le littoral espagnol à San Sebastian ou à Fontarrabie, où près de 5000 Espagnols habitent côté français, où beaucoup sont fils ou petits-fils de réfugiés, la compassion l’emporte sur le rejet. Même le Rassemblement national, qui a diffusé un communiqué mi-août pour dénoncer « une frontière passoire », doit reconnaître que son message peine à mobiliser : « Les gens commencent à se plaindre, mais je n’ai pas entendu parler de débordements, ni rien d’avéré », admet François Verrière, le délégué départemental du parti. Kotte Ecenarro, le maire socialiste d’Hendaye, n’a pas eu d’écho de ses administrés : « Pour l’instant, les habitants ne disent rien, peut-être parce qu’ils ne les voient pas. » Lui, grand joggeur, les aperçoit lorsqu’il va courir tôt le matin et qu’ils attendent le premier bus pour Bayonne, mais aucun ne s’attarde dans la zone frontière, trop risquée.

    Chaque soir, place des Basques à Bayonne, des migrants embarquent dans les bus pour Paris.

    Le car est à peine garé le long du trottoir que, déjà, ils se pressent à ses portes. Ils regardent avec anxiété la batterie de leur téléphone, elle est presque à plat, il faut qu’elle tienne quelques minutes encore, le temps de présenter le billet. Quatre jeunes filles s’inquiètent, leur ticket affiche un prénom masculin, le chauffeur les laissera-t-il passer ? Ou vont-elles perdre les 100, 200 ou 300 euros qu’elles ont déboursés à des « frères » peu scrupuleux - la valeur officielle est de 35 euros - pour acquérir ce précieux sésame vers Paris ? Chaque soir depuis quelques semaines, le même scénario se répète au terminus des « bus Macron » sur la place des Basques, à Bayonne. Une centaine de jeunes, pour la plupart originaires d’Afrique francophone, plus rarement du Maghreb, monte par petits groupes dans les cars en partance pour Bordeaux ou Paris, dernière étape d’un périple entamé depuis des mois. Ils ont débarqué la veille d’Irun, en Espagne, à 40 kilomètres plus au sud, après un bref passage par la ville frontalière d’Hendaye.
    Des dizaines de bénévoles se succèdent pour apporter et servir des repas aux migrants, place des Basques, à Bayonne.

    Des dizaines de bénévoles se succèdent pour apporter et servir des repas aux migrants, place des Basques, à Bayonne.

    Les arrivées ont commencé au compte-gouttes au printemps, elles se sont accélérées au cours de l’été. Depuis que l’Italie se montre intraitable, l’Espagne est devenue le principal point d’entrée en Europe, avec 48 000 nouveaux exilés depuis le début de l’année. Croisés à Irun ou à Hendaye, qu’ils viennent de Guinée-Conakry, de Côte d’Ivoire ou du Mali, ils racontent la même histoire. Thierno est guinéen, il a 18 ans. Il a tenté la traversée par la Libye, sans succès, il a poursuivi par l’Algérie et le Maroc, puis fini par franchir le détroit de Gibraltar en bateau après deux échecs. Tous évoquent la difficulté à travailler et à se faire payer au Maroc, les violences, parfois, aussi. Puis ils parlent de l’Espagne, d’Algesiras, Cadix ou Malaga, en experts de la géographie andalouse. Parfois, la Croix-Rouge espagnole, débordée au Sud, les a envoyés en bus vers ses centres de Madrid ou Bilbao, leur assurant une partie de leur voyage. Aboubacar, 26 ans, est, lui, remonté en voiture, avec des « frères ».

    Personne n’en parle, les réseaux sont pourtant bien là, à prospérer sur ces flux si lucratifs. On estime à 1500 euros le prix de la traversée à Gibraltar, 100 ou 200 euros le passage de la frontière française depuis Irun. Tous n’ont qu’un objectif, rejoindre la France, comme cette femme, sénégalaise, qui demande qu’on l’emmène en voiture et suggère, si on se fait contrôler, de dire qu’elle est notre bonne. La quasi-totalité veut quitter l’Espagne. Parce qu’ils n’en parlent pas la langue et qu’ils ont souvent en France sinon de la famille, au moins des connaissances. Parce qu’il est plus difficile de travailler dans la péninsule ibérique, où le taux de chômage reste de 15 %. Parce qu’enfin ceux qui envisagent de demander l’asile ont intérêt à effectuer les démarches en France, où 40 575 protections ont été accordées en 2017, plutôt qu’en Espagne (4 700 statuts délivrés).

    Un migrant traverse le pont de St Jacques à Irun en direction de la France.

    Alors, ils essaient, une fois, deux fois, trois fois, dans un absurde jeu du chat et de la souris avec les policiers français. Les 150 agents de la police aux frontières (PAF) en poste à Hendaye tentent, avec l’aide d’une compagnie de CRS, de contrôler tant bien que mal les cinq points de passage. Depuis le début de 2018, 5600 réadmissions ont été effectuées vers l’Espagne, contre 3520 en 2017, mais, de l’aveu même d’un officiel, « ça passe et ça passe bien, même ». Si l’autoroute est gardée quasiment toute la journée, il reste un créneau de deux heures durant lequel elle ne l’est pas faute d’un effectif suffisant. Chaque nuit, des taxis espagnols en profitent et déposent des gens sur la place des Basques à Bayonne. La surveillance des deux ponts qui enjambent la Bidassoa et séparent Irun d’Hendaye est aléatoire. A certaines heures, le passage à pied se fait sans difficulté. Il ne reste plus ensuite aux migrants qu’à se cacher jusqu’au prochain passage du bus 816, qui les conduira à Bayonne en un peu plus d’une heure.
    Un groupe des migrants se fait arrêter à Behobie, côté français, après avoir traversé la frontière depuis Irun en Espagne.

    Un groupe des migrants se fait arrêter à #Behobie, côté français, après avoir traversé la frontière depuis Irun en Espagne.

    La compassion l’emporte sur le rejet

    L’amertume n’a pas encore gagné le reste de la population basque. Au contraire. Dans cette zone où l’on joue volontiers à saute-frontière pour aller acheter des cigarettes à moins de cinq euros ou du gasoil à 1,1 euro, où il est fréquent, le samedi soir, d’aller boire un verre sur le littoral espagnol à #San_Sebastian ou à #Fontarrabie, où près de 5000 Espagnols habitent côté français, où beaucoup sont fils ou petits-fils de réfugiés, la compassion l’emporte sur le rejet. Même le Rassemblement national, qui a diffusé un communiqué mi-août pour dénoncer « une frontière passoire », doit reconnaître que son message peine à mobiliser : « Les gens commencent à se plaindre, mais je n’ai pas entendu parler de débordements, ni rien d’avéré », admet François Verrière, le délégué départemental du parti. Kotte Ecenarro, le maire socialiste d’Hendaye, n’a pas eu d’écho de ses administrés : « Pour l’instant, les habitants ne disent rien, peut-être parce qu’ils ne les voient pas. » Lui, grand joggeur, les aperçoit lorsqu’il va courir tôt le matin et qu’ils attendent le premier bus pour Bayonne, mais aucun ne s’attarde dans la zone frontière, trop risquée.

    Des migrants sont accueillis en face de la mairie d’Irun par des associations de bénévoles.

    Le flux ne se tarissant pas, la solidarité s’est organisée des deux côtés de la #Bidassoa. A Irun, un collectif de 200 citoyens a répondu aux premiers besoins durant l’été, les autorités jugeant alors qu’organiser de l’aide était inutile puisque les migrants ne rêvaient que d’aller en France. Elles ont, depuis, changé d’avis. Mi-octobre, un centre de la Croix-Rouge proposait 70 places et un hôpital, 25. « Ils peuvent rester cinq jours dans chaque. Dix jours, en général, ça suffit pour passer », note Ion, un des piliers du collectif. Dans la journée, ils chargent leurs téléphones dans un coin de la gare ou patientent, en doudounes et bonnets, dans un campement installé face à la mairie. Dès qu’ils le peuvent, ils tentent le passage vers la France.

    A Bayonne aussi, l’improvisation a prévalu. Le réseau d’hébergeurs solidaires mis en place depuis 2016 n’était pas adapté à cette situation d’urgence, à ces gens qui n’ont besoin que d’une ou deux nuits à l’abri avant de filer vers Paris. Chaque soir, il a fallu organiser des maraudes avec distribution de repas et de vêtements, il a fallu trouver des bénévoles pour loger les plus vulnérables - des femmes avec de jeunes enfants sont récemment apparues. Sous la pression de plusieurs collectifs, la mairie vient de mandater une association locale, Atherbea, pour organiser l’aide. A proximité du terminal des bus, vont être installés toilettes, douches, lits, repas et prises de téléphone - un équipement indispensable à ces exilés, pour qui le portable est l’ultime lien avec leurs proches. La municipalité a promis des financements, mais jusqu’à quand ?

    Longtemps discret sur la situation, le gouvernement affiche désormais son volontarisme. Depuis quelques semaines, des unités en civil ont été déployées afin d’identifier les filières de passeurs. Dans son premier entretien comme ministre de l’Intérieur au JDD, Christophe Castaner a dit s’inquiéter de la pression exercée dans la zone et promis un « coordonnateur sécurité ». Les policiers espèrent, eux, surtout des renforts. « Il faudrait 30 à 40 agents de la police aux frontières de plus », juge Patrice Peyruqueou, délégué syndical Unité SGP Police. Ils comptent sur la nomination de Laurent Nuñez comme secrétaire d’Etat au ministère de l’Intérieur pour se faire entendre. L’homme n’a-t-il pas été sous-préfet de Bayonne ? N’a-t-il pas consacré son premier déplacement officiel au Pays Basque, le vendredi 19 octobre ? Mais déjà les voies de passage sont en train de bouger. De nouvelles routes se dessinent, à l’intérieur des Pyrénées, via Roncevaux, le tunnel du Somport ou la quatre-voies qui relie Saragosse, Pau et Toulouse, des accès moins surveillés qu’Irun et Hendaye. Le jeu du chat et de la souris ne fait que commencer.

    https://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/societe/pays-basque-la-nouvelle-route-de-l-exil_2044337.html

    #pays_basque #asile #migrations #réfugiés #routes_migratoires #parcours_migratoires #Espagne #frontières #solidarité #contrôles_frontaliers

    via @isskein

    • Entre l’Espagne et la France, la nouvelle route migratoire prend de l’ampleur

      L’Espagne est devenue la principale porte d’entrée en Europe pour des personnes originaires d’Afrique de l’Ouest qui tentent de gagner la France.

      L’Espagne est devenue la principale porte d’entrée en Europe en 2018. La majorité des personnes qui arrivent sont originaires d’Afrique de l’Ouest et tentent de gagner la France.

      Emmitouflé dans un manteau, la tête abritée sous un bonnet, Boris disparaît dans la nuit, sous la pluie. Ce Camerounais de 33 ans, qui parle un français parfait, « traîne » à Irun de puis un mois. Dans cette petite commune du pays basque espagnol, il attend de pouvoir traverser la frontière et rejoindre la France, à quelques mètres de là. L’aventure a trop peu de chances de réussir s’il la tente à pied, et il n’a pas l’argent pour se payer un passage en voiture. Il aimerait rejoindre Paris. Mais il doute : « On me dit que c’est saturé. C’est vrai ? Est-ce qu’il y a des ONG ? Vous connaissez Reims ? »

      Parti depuis un an de son pays, Boris a traversé le Nigeria, le Niger, l’Algérie et le Maroc avant de gagner l’Europe par la mer. Comme de plus en plus de personnes, il a emprunté la route dite de la Méditerranée occidentale, qui passe par le détroit de Gibraltar. Le passage par la Libye, privilégié ces dernières années, est devenu « trop dangereux » et incertain, dit-il.

      En 2018, l’Espagne est devenue la principale porte d’entrée en Europe. Quelque 50 000 personnes migrantes sont arrivées sur les côtes andalouses depuis le début de l’année, en provenance du Maroc, ce qui représente près de la moitié des entrées sur le continent.

      Sous l’effet de la baisse des départs depuis la Libye et des arrivées en Italie, les routes migratoires se redessinent. Et bien que les flux soient sans commune mesure avec le pic de 2015, lorsque 1,8 million d’arrivées en Europe ont été enregistrées, ils prennent de court les autorités et en particulier en France, qui apparaît comme la destination privilégiée par ces nouveaux arrivants originaires majoritairement d’Afrique de l’Ouest et du Maghreb.

      80 à 100 arrivées quotidiennes

      A Irun, Txema Pérez observe le passage en nombre de ces migrants et il le compare à l’exil des réfugiés espagnols lors de la guerre civile en 1939 : « On n’a pas vu ça depuis la Retirada », lâche le président de la Croix-Rouge locale.

      Face à cet afflux, l’organisation humanitaire a ouvert cet été plusieurs centres d’accueil temporaire sur l’itinéraire des migrants, dans plusieurs communes du Pays-Basque mais aussi à Barcelone à l’autre extrémité des Pyrénées, où ils font étape quelques jours avant de tenter de gagner la France.

      Cette semaine, une trentaine de personnes ont dormi dans l’auberge de la Croix-Rouge d’Irun. « Ils reprennent des forces et disparaissent, constate Txema Perez. Ils finissent tous par passer la frontière. 90 % d’entre eux parlent français. Et ils voient Paris comme un paradis. »

      Sur le chemin qui mène ces personnes jusqu’à une destination parfois très incertaine, Bayonne et en particulier la place des Basques dans le centre-ville, s’est transformée dans le courant de l’été en point de convergence. C’est là qu’arrivaient les bus en provenance d’Espagne et en partance pour le nord de la France. Si, au début, une dizaine de personnes seulement transitaient par la ville chaque jour, aujourd’hui la mairie parle de 80 à 100 arrivées quotidiennes. Et autant de départs. « C’est la première fois qu’on constate un tel afflux », reconnaît David Tollis, directeur général adjoint des services à la mairie.

      « Ils sont en majorité originaires de Guinée et il y a notamment beaucoup de gamins qui se disent mineurs. On a l’impression que le pays se vide », confie Alain Larrea, avocat en droit des étrangers à Bayonne. « Les jeunes hommes évoquent la pauvreté qui a explosé mais aussi les risques d’arrestations et d’enfermements arbitraires, ajoute Julie Aufaure, de la Cimade. Les femmes fuient aussi les risques d’excision. »

      « Je ne sais pas encore ce que je vais faire »

      Face à l’augmentation des arrivées et à la dégradation des conditions météorologiques, la municipalité a commencé à s’organiser il y a une dizaine de jours. « Je ne me pose pas la question du régime juridique dont ces personnes relèvent. Simplement, elles sont dans une situation de fragilité et il faut leur venir en aide, justifie Jean-René Etchegaray, le maire UDI de Bayonne. Nous avons dans l’urgence tenté de les mettre à l’abri ». Après avoir mis à disposition un parking puis, le week-end dernier, une école, la municipalité a ouvert, lundi 29 octobre, les locaux désaffectés d’un ancien centre communal d’action sociale. Des douches y ont été installées, des couvertures et des repas y sont fournis. Dans le même temps, la mairie a déplacé les arrêts des bus aux abords de ce lieu, sur les quais qui longent l’Adour.

      Mercredi 31 octobre, plusieurs dizaines de personnes faisaient la queue à l’heure de la distribution du déjeuner. Parmi elles, Lamine, un Guinéen de 19 ans, raconte son voyage vers l’Europe entamé il y a trois ans : « Je suis resté trois mois au Mali, le temps de réunir l’argent pour pouvoir ensuite aller en Algérie. » En Algérie, il travaille encore deux ans sur des chantiers. « On avait entendu qu’il fallait environ 2 000 euros pour passer du Maroc à l’Espagne », poursuit-il.

      A la frontière entre l’Algérie et le Maroc, il dit s’être fait confisquer 1 000 euros par des Touaregs. Arrivé à Rabat, il travaille à nouveau sur un chantier de construction, payé 100 dirhams (environ neuf euros) par jour, pour réunir les 1 000 euros manquants au financement de sa traversée de la Méditerranée. Il y reste presque un an. En octobre, il part pour Nador, une ville côtière au nord-est du pays. « On est resté caché une semaine dans la forêt avant de prendre le bateau, témoigne-t-il. On était 57 à bord. Des Maliens, des Guinées, des Ivoiriens. Un bateau de la Croix Rouge nous a porté secours au bout de quatre heures de navigation ».

      Comme la plupart de ceux qui arrivent sur les côtes espagnoles, Lamine s’est vu remettre un document par les autorités du pays, lui laissant un mois pour régulariser sa situation. Le jeune homme a ensuite rejoint en car, Madrid puis Bilbao et Irun. Il tente une première fois le passage de la frontière en bus mais se fait renvoyer par la police française. La deuxième fois, en échange de 50 euros, il trouve une place dans une voiture et parvient à gagner la France. « Je ne sais pas encore ce que je vais faire, reconnait-il. Je n’ai pas de famille qui finance mon voyage et je ne connais personne ici ».

      10 500 refus d’entrée prononcés en 2018

      Face à l’augmentation des traversées, les autorités françaises ont renforcé les contrôles aux frontières. Depuis le début de l’année 2018, 10 500 refus d’entrée ont été prononcés à la frontière franco-espagnole, soit une augmentation de 20 % par rapport à 2017. « La pression la plus forte est observée dans le département des Pyrénées-Atlantiques, où les non-admissions sont en hausse de 62 % », explique-t-on au ministère de l’intérieur. Dans les Pyrénées-Orientales, l’autre voie d’entrée majeure en France depuis l’Espagne, le nombre de non-admissions est reparti à la hausse depuis l’été, mais dans une moindre mesure.

      « Beaucoup de monde arrive par ici, assure Jacques Ollion, un bénévole de la Cimade basé à Perpignan. Les gares et les trains sont contrôlés parfois jusqu’à Narbonne. Et les cars internationaux aussi, au péage du Boulou (à une dizaine de kilomètres de la frontière). Ça, c’est la pêche miraculeuse. »

      Le nombre de non-admissions reste toutefois très inférieur à celui remonté de la frontière franco-italienne. En Catalogne comme au Pays basque, tout le monde s’accorde à dire que la frontière reste largement poreuse. Mais certains s’inquiètent d’une évolution possible à moyen terme. « Dès qu’il y a une fermeture, cela démultiplie les réseaux de passeurs et les lieux de passage, met en garde Corinne Torre, cheffe de mission France à Médecins sans frontières (MSF). Dans les Pyrénées, il y a énormément de chemins de randonnée ». Des cas d’arrivée par les cols de montagne commencent à être rapportés.

      Dans le même temps, les réseaux de passeurs prospèrent face aux renforcements des contrôles. « Comme les migrants ne peuvent pas traverser à pied, ils se retournent vers les passeurs qui les font traverser en voiture pour 150 à 350 euros », témoigne Mixel Bernadet, un militant de l’association basque Solidarité migrants - Etorkinekin.

      Une fois qu’ils sont parvenus à rejoindre le territoire, à Bayonne, Paris ou ailleurs, ces migrants n’en sont pas moins en situation irrégulière et confrontés à une difficulté de taille : enregistrés en Espagne au moment de leur arrivée en Europe, ils ne peuvent pas demander l’asile ailleurs que dans l’Etat par lequel ils sont entrés, en tout cas pas avant une période allant de six à dix-huit mois. Ils sont donc voués à être renvoyés en Espagne ou, plus vraisemblablement, à errer des mois durant, en France.

      Julia Pascual (Bayonne et Irun – Espagne –, envoyée spéciale)

      Poursuivi pour avoir aidé une migrante sur le point d’accoucher, le parquet retient « l’immunité humanitaire ». Le parquet de Gap a annoncé vendredi 2 novembre avoir abandonné les poursuites engagées contre un homme qui avait porté secours à une réfugiée enceinte, durant l’hiver à la frontière franco-italienne. Le 10 mars, Benoît Ducos, un des bénévoles aidant les migrants arrivant dans la région de Briançon, était tombé sur une famille nigériane, un couple et ses deux jeunes enfants, et deux autres personnes ayant porté la femme, enceinte de huit mois et demi, durant leur marche dans le froid et la neige. Avec un autre maraudeur, il avait alors décidé de conduire la mère en voiture à l’hôpital de Briançon. En chemin, celle-ci avait été prise de contractions et à 500 mètres de la maternité, ils avaient été arrêtés par un contrôle des douanes ayant retardé la prise en charge médicale selon lui, ce que la préfecture avait contesté. Le bébé était né dans la nuit par césarienne, en bonne santé. Une enquête avait ensuite été ouverte pour « aide à l’entrée et à la circulation d’un étranger en situation irrégulière ».

      https://mobile.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2018/11/03/entre-l-espagne-et-la-france-la-nouvelle-route-migratoire-prend-de-l-

    • #SAA, un collectif d’accueil et d’accompagnement des migrants subsahariens aux frontières franco-espagnoles

      Dans ce nouveau numéro de l’émission “Café des libertés”, la web radio du RAJ “Voix de jeunes” a reçu sur son plateau deux activistes du sud de la France plus exactement à Bayonne, il s’agit de Marie cosnay et Vincent Houdin du collectif SAA qui porte le prénom d’un jeun migrant guinéen décédé durant sa traversé de l’Espagne vers la France.
      Nos invités nous ont parlé de la création du collectif SAA, ses objectifs et son travail d’accueil et d’accompagnement des migrants subsahariens qui traversent la frontière franco-espagnole dans l’objectif d’atteindre les pays du Nord telle que l’Allemagne.
      Ils sont revenus également sur les difficultés que posent les politiques migratoires dans la région notamment celle de l’union européenne marquées par une approche purement sécuritaire sans se soucier de la question du respect des droits et la dignité des migrants.
      Ils ont aussi appelé au renforcement des liens de solidarité entre les peuples dans le monde entier.

      https://raj-dz.com/radioraj/2018/11/11/saa-collectif-daccueil-daccompagnement-migrants-subsahariens-aux-frontieres-

    • France : 19 migrants interpellés dans un bus en provenance de Bayonne et assignés à résidence

      Des douaniers français ont interpellé 19 personnes, dont un mineur, en situation irrégulière lundi dans un car au péage de #Bénesse-Maremne, dans les #Landes. L’adolescent de 17 ans a été pris en charge par le département, les autres ont reçu une #obligation_de_quitter_le_territoire (#OQTF) et sont assignés à résidence dans le département.

      Lors d’un contrôle lundi 12 novembre au péage de Bénesse-Maremne, sur l’autoroute A6 (dans les Landes), un car de la compagnie #Flixbus a été intercepté par des douaniers français. Après avoir effectué un contrôle d’identité à l’intérieur du véhicule, les autorités ont interpellé 19 personnes en situation irrégulière, dont une femme et un adolescent de 17 ans.

      Les migrants, originaires d’Afrique de l’ouest, ont été envoyés dans différentes #casernes de gendarmerie de la région (#Castets, #Tarnos, #Tartas, #Lit-et-Mixe) puis libérés quelques heures plus tard. Le mineur a quant à lui été pris en charge par le département.

      En attendant de trouver un #accord_de_réadmission avec l’Espagne, la préfecture des Landes a notifié aux 18 migrants majeurs une obligation de quitter le territoire français (OQTF). Ils sont également assignés à résidence dans le département des Landes et doivent pointer au commissariat trois fois par semaine.

      Un #accord signé entre la France et l’Espagne prévoit de renvoyer tout migrant se trouvant sur le territoire français depuis moins de quatre heures. Mais selon Jeanine de la Cimade à Mont-de-Marsan (à quelques kilomètres de Bayonne), ce n’est pas le cas de ces 18 migrants. « Ils ne peuvent pas être renvoyés en Espagne car ils ont passé quatre jours à Bayonne avant d’être arrêtés au péage », précise-t-elle à InfoMigrants.

      Les migrants sont assistés d’avocats du barreau de Dax, dans les Landes, et un bénévole de la Cimade est aussi à leurs côtés selon France Bleu.

      Cette opération des douanes a été menée le même jour que la visite du ministre français de l’Intérieur à la frontière franco-espagnole. Christophe Castaner s’est alors dit inquiet de « mouvements migratoires forts sur les Pyrénées » et a annoncé une coopération accrue avec l’Espagne.

      http://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/13368/france-19-migrants-interpelles-dans-un-bus-en-provenance-de-bayonne-et
      #assignation_à_résidence

      –------

      Commentaire :
      On peut lire dans l’article :
      "Un accord signé entre la France et l’Espagne prévoit de renvoyer tout migrant se trouvant sur le territoire français depuis moins de quatre heures. »
      --> c’est quoi cet accord ? Quand est-ce qu’il a été signé ? Quelqu’un a plus d’information ?

      C’est l’équivalent de l’accord bilatéral de réadmission entre la Suisse et l’Italie (signé en 2000 : https://www.admin.ch/opc/fr/classified-compilation/20022507/index.html) et qui a été « repêché » par la Suisse à partir de 2016 ?
      Ou comme celui qui a été apparemment signé entre la France et l’Italie récemment ?
      https://www.agi.it/estero/migranti_francia_salvini_respingimento_concordato-4511176/news/2018-10-20

      #accord_de_réadmission #accord_bilatéral

    • A Bayonne, nouvelle porte d’entrée des migrants, « l’urgence fait exploser les frontières politiques »

      Une fois la frontière franco-espagnole franchie, des migrants affluent par milliers à Bayonne. Là, le maire de centre-droit et des militants de gauche ont bricolé, main dans la main, un hébergement d’urgence sous le nez du préfet. Les exilés s’y reposent des violences subies au Maghreb, avant de sauter dans un bus et de se disperser aux quatre coins de France. Reportage dans les #Pyrénées.

      https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img/1075002126915518464/L_aQEp7o?format=jpg&name=600x314

      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/181218/bayonne-nouvelle-porte-d-entree-des-migrants-l-urgence-fait-exploser-les-f

    • A Bayonne, nouvelle route migratoire, l’impressionnante #solidarité des habitants malgré les carences de l’État

      La route de la Libye et de l’Italie étant coupée, de plus en plus de migrants arrivent en Europe via le Maroc et l’Espagne. Certains passent ensuite par le Pays Basque. En deux mois, 2500 réfugiés ont déjà transité par un centre d’accueil ouvert à Bayonne. La démarche, d’abord spontanée, bénéficie désormais du soutien de la mairie. L’État a quant à lui exercé des pressions sur les chauffeurs de taxi ou les compagnies d’autobus, en exigeant notamment l’identité des voyageurs. Basta ! a passé la nuit du 31 décembre au 1er janvier aux côtés des bénévoles de la « Pausa », et des réfugiés qui appréhendent un avenir incertain.

      A peine investi, il a fallu trouver un nom au lieu. « Ça fait un peu stalag », remarque Joël dans un sourire navré [1]. Planté dans la cour de ce bâtiment désaffecté de la Légion, sous les lumières aveuglantes qui semblent plonger depuis des miradors invisibles, le salarié d’astreinte hésite encore à proposer aux migrants l’entrée d’un édifice tout en grillage et en barreaux. Sur le parvis goudronné, encadré par de hauts murs et surplombé par la citadelle militaire de Bayonne, l’ombre fuyante des lignes ferroviaires prolonge ce décor figé par le froid. Cependant, le panneau « Terrain militaire - défense de pénétrer » est déjà égayé d’une série colorée d’autocollants antifascistes, et de bienvenue aux migrants. A l’intérieur, derrière les vitres polies, la lumière se fait aussi plus chaleureuse.

      Le lieu s’appellera finalement « Pausa », la pause en basque. Comme le premier bâtiment d’accueil, à vingt mètres de là, trop exigu et qu’il a fallu abandonner aux premiers jours de décembre. Mais aussi comme cette authentique pause, au milieu d’un périple exténuant qui dure parfois plusieurs années. Bayonne est devenue en 2018 une nouvelle étape essentielle sur les chemins de l’exil vers la France ou le nord de l’Europe. Une porte d’entrée en terre promise. C’est ici qu’aura lieu, ce soir, le nouvel an des réfugiés. Comme un symbole d’espoir, celui d’une vie dans laquelle il serait enfin possible de se projeter, laissant de côté les embûches de la route déjà accomplie.

      Un répit salutaire de trois jours

      Kébé vient de Guinée, comme beaucoup d’arrivants ces dernières semaines. Au milieu des préparatifs de la fête, il lit, imperturbable dans sa couverture, le récit autobiographique d’un jeune footballeur camerounais qui rêve de gloire sportive mais ne connaît que désillusions. Kébé ne veut pas être footballeur. Ainé d’une famille nombreuse restée à Conakry, il voudrait reprendre l’école et apprendre le métier de coiffeur à Bayonne. Parce que, dit-il, « c’est une ville très jolie et d’importance moyenne ». Il a déjà commencé un dossier pour faire valoir sa minorité et prétendre à une scolarité. Mais le temps lui est compté au centre d’accueil des réfugiés, où l’on s’efforce de ne garder les migrants que trois jours. Le temps d’un répit salutaire pour faire le point, quand le quotidien des migrants n’est fait que de recherche d’argent, de nourriture, de transport, d’hébergement, de passeurs, de policiers, ou bien pire. Initialement en route pour Paris, sans rien connaître de la capitale et sans contact, il a trouvé, juge-t-il, sa destination.

      C’est aussi le cas d’Ibrahim, parti de Sierra Leone il y a deux ans, qui fixe les premiers spots colorés de la soirée, comme une célébration de son arrivée à bon port. « Ici on est bien accueilli », constate-t-il. Lui aussi a 17 ans. Sa vie n’est que succession de petits boulots pour financer des kilomètres vers l’Europe. Il a appris le français en route, et ne souhaitait pas rester en Espagne, « à cause du problème de la langue ». Il continue d’explorer, sur son smartphone, les possibilités sans doute infinies que lui promet sa nouvelle vie, en suivant avec intérêt les préparatifs de la fête.

      Internet, ce fil de vie qui relie les continents

      Les bénévoles ne ménagent pas leur peine pour faire de cette soirée de réveillon une réussite : pâtisserie, riz à la piperade, bisap à gogo, sono, lumières, ballons... seront de la partie. Un « Bonne année 2019 » gonflable barre l’allée centrale du vaste dortoir, et s’achève vers un minuscule renfoncement aménagé en salle de prière. Les affiches de la Légion n’ont pas disparu. Elles indiquent par exemple le lieu où devaient être soigneusement pliées les « chemises arktis sable ». Mais l’ordre militaire a largement été chamboulé. La pièce principale sert à la fois de dortoir, de réfectoire, de cuisine, de magasin de produits d’hygiène, de bureau.

      Une borne wifi assure le flux Internet, précieux fil de vie durant un voyage au long cours. La nouvelle connexion déleste au passage les bénévoles, auparavant contraints de connecter une flopée d’appareils sur leurs propres smartphones, pour improviser des partages de connexion. Les écrans des téléphones sont autant de lueurs qui recréent des foyers dans les recoins les plus sombres de ce camping chauffé. Des gamins jouent au foot dans la cour, et la musique résonne jusque sur le quai de l’Adour. L’avantage, c’est que chacun peut programmer sa musique et la défendre sur le dance floor, avant de retourner tenir salon dans la semi-pénombre ou disparaître sous une couverture. Le temps de quelques sourires, sur des masques d’inquiétude.

      Près de 450 bénévoles, militants aguerris ou nouveaux venus

      Les bénévoles ont trouvé le bon tempo, après avoir essuyé les plâtres des arrivées massives. Aux premiers jours d’ouverture de ce nouveau centre, début décembre, il fallait encore faire le tour complet d’une cuisine chaotique pour servir un seul café aux réfugiés qui arrivaient affamés et par paquets, jusqu’au milieu de la nuit. A Bayonne, on sent le sac et le ressac de la Méditerranée pourtant lointaine, et le tempo des traversées se prolonge au Pausa, au gré de la météo marine du détroit de Gibraltar. Les bénévoles ont intégré le rythme. Ils sont désormais près de 450, regroupés au sein de l’association Diakité, mélange improbable de militants associatifs aguerris et de présences spontanées, gérant l’urgence avec la seule pratique de l’enthousiasme.

      Cet attelage bigarré s’est formé à la fin de l’été 2017. Les premiers bayonnais ont commencé à descendre spontanément des gamelles et des vêtements sur la Place des Basques, de l’autre côté du fleuve. C’est là que se faisait le départ des bus long-courriers, avant que le vaste chantier du Tram’bus ne les déplace sur le quai de Lesseps. Puis l’automne est arrivé et les maraudes ont commencé, pour réchauffer les corps congelés et organiser, dans l’improvisation, un accueil d’urgence, qui prenait la forme d’un fil WhatsApp paniqué. Les bayonnais ont ouvert leurs portes, les dons de vêtements ont afflué, submergeant les bénévoles qui n’en demandaient pas tant.

      Le maire UDI de Bayonne, Jean-René Etchegaray, est entré dans la danse, arrondissant les angles jusqu’à ouvrir, dès le mois de novembre, un premier bâtiment municipal promis à destruction. L’évêque est arrivé bon dernier, et s’est fait éconduire par des bénévoles peu indulgents avec ses positions traditionalistes, notamment sur l’avortement ou les droits LGBT. Dommage pour le parc immobilier du clergé, que les bayonnais présument conséquent. Mais il y avait ce vaste entrepôt de l’armée, dans l’alignement du quai, qui sera bientôt entièrement requalifié. Sa capacité de 300 lits fait régulièrement le plein, et impose aux bénévoles une organisation rigoureuse, notamment pour assurer des présences la nuit et le matin.
      Pressions de l’État sur les compagnies de bus

      L’inquiétude courrait pourtant en cette fin d’année : les bénévoles risquaient la démobilisation et le centre promettait d’être bondé. En période de vacances scolaires, les prix des billets de bus s’envolent, clouant certains migrants à quai. Dans les dernières heures de 2018 en revanche, les tarifs chutent brutalement et les voyageurs fauchés en profitent pour s’éclipser. Cette nuit du 31 décembre, 40 migrants ont repris la route, laissant le centre investi par près de 140 pensionnaires et une tripotée de volontaires soucieux de porter la fête dans ce lieu du marasme et de la convalescence. Vers 23h, les candidats au départ sont regroupés. Le bus est en bas, la troupe n’a que quelques mètres à faire. L’équipe de nuit accompagne les migrants.

      Il y a quelques semaines, la tension est montée d’un cran lorsque les chauffeurs de la compagnie Flixbus ont exigé les identités des voyageurs, après qu’une vingtaine de sans-papiers aient aussi été débarqués d’un autocar par les forces de l’ordre, au premier péage après Bayonne. Le maire de la ville, Jean-René Etchegaray, est monté au créneau, sur place, pour s’insurger contre ces pratiques. Cet avocat de profession a dénoncé une discrimination raciale, constatant un contrôle qui ne concernait que les personnes de couleur. Il a aussi laissé les bénévoles stupéfaits, voyant leur maire de centre-droit ériger une barricade de poubelles pour barrer la route au bus récalcitrant. La direction de la compagnie a dû dénoncer les faits, et le climat s’est apaisé.

      N’en déplaise au préfet des Pyrénées-Atlantiques qui maintient la pression sur les professionnels, notamment les chauffeurs de taxi, en promettant amende, prison et confiscation de véhicule pour qui aide à la circulation des « irréguliers ». Mais les chauffeurs de bus connaissent leurs droits, et même certains bénévoles, à force de passages tous les deux ou trois jours. En cette soirée du nouvel an, les chauffeurs sont espagnols, et semblent assurés que le monde contemporain est suffisamment inquiétant pour qu’eux mêmes ne se mettent en prime à contrôler les identités. Fraternité, salutations, départ. Les migrants, après quelques sourires gratifiants, replongent inquiets dans leurs téléphones. Retour au chaud et à la fête, qui cette fois, bat son plein.
      « Et c’est peut-être cela qui m’empêche de dormir la nuit »

      Le camping a toutefois des allures d’hôpital de campagne, avec sa piste de danse bordée de lits de camps occupés. Les migrants arrivent souvent épuisés, et la présence d’enceintes à quelques mètres de leurs couvertures ne décourage pas certains à s’y enrouler. Les femmes, plus discrètes, regagnent un dortoir séparé qui leur offre une intimité bienvenue. Dans les lumières tournoyantes, bénévoles et migrants se mêlent en musique. Jessica est venue avec sa jeune fille, après plusieurs jours sans avoir pu se libérer pour donner un coup de main. Aziz est avec sa famille, en visiteur du quartier. Saidou, Baldé, Ibrahima, exultent en suivant les convulsions d’une basse ragga.

      Cyril, bénévole de la première heure, est attablé un peu plus loin et se repasse le film des derniers mois dans le répit de la liesse. Peut-être pense t-il à l’enfant récupéré sous un pont de Saint-Jean-de-Luz, dans une nuit glaciale et sous des trombes d’eau, que les bras de sa mère protégeaient avec peine. Aux trois filles prostrées, qui voyageaient ensemble depuis trois ans et dont deux étaient mystérieusement enceintes. Ou aux trois guinéennes stupéfaites, atterrées et terrorisées, qu’il a fallu convaincre longtemps, dans une nuit glacée, pour enrouler une couverture sur leurs épaules. A celle qui a dû abandonner ses enfants en Guinée et finit par « bénévoler » de ses propres ailes dans le centre, rayonnante dans sa responsabilité retrouvée. A celui qui a perdu sa femme, enceinte, dans les eaux noires de la méditerranée « et c’est peut-être cela qui m’empêche de dormir la nuit », dit-il. Et à tous ceux qui se perdent sur cette route sans fin.
      L’appui de la mairie, qui change tout sur le terrain

      Sur la piste de danse, Nathalie rayonne. Elle a débarqué il y a quelques jours de Narbonne, avec une fourgonnette pleine de matériel de première nécessité. Le problème des réfugiés lui tordait le ventre. Elle a organisé une collecte et souhaitait livrer Gap, dans les Hautes-Alpes, avant d’entendre parler de Bayonne et d’avaler 450 km pour sonner au centre, le 25 décembre, avec des couvertures, de la nourriture, des produits d’hygiène. Elle y est devenue bénévole à temps plein, pendant une semaine, avant de regagner ses théâtres où elle est costumière et perruquière. Mais elle note tout et promet un compte rendu complet aux structures militantes de sa région, à l’autre bout des Pyrénées. Notamment du côté de Perpignan où, dit-elle, « un jour ou l’autre ils arriveront et je ne suis pas sûre qu’ils seront accueillis de la même manière ». « Émerveillée par la solidarité des basques », elle relève surtout l’appui de la mairie aux bénévoles, qui change tout sur le terrain. « Vous êtes extraordinaire » a t-elle lancé au maire quelques jours auparavant.

      Jean-René Etchegaray, maire de Bayonne et président de la Communauté d’agglomération Pays Basque, est aussi venu saluer les migrants ce 31 décembre. Il est justement question qu’il tisse des liens avec d’autres maires qui s’investissent dans l’accueil des migrants, tel Mathieu Carême (écologiste) à Grande-Synthe. Un accompagnement politique qui est aussi, du point de vue de certains habitants, un gage de sécurité et de tranquillité publique. Si Jean-René Etchegaray reconnait avoir reçu « quelques lettres anonymes sur un ton plutôt FN », sourit-il, il constate aussi que, depuis que le centre a ouvert, les plaintes des habitants se sont tues. L’accueil organisé des migrants leur fournit un point de chute, aidant à les soustraire aux circuits de passeurs ou aux appétits mafieux, et à assurer leur propre sécurité. Le contraire de cette « jungle de Calais » que les premiers détracteurs de l’accueil brandissaient, un peu vite, comme une menace.
      Un soutien financier de la communauté d’agglomération, en attendant celui de l’État ?

      Au-delà de la solidarité pour « des gens qui arrivent escroqués et épuisés » et « doivent bien s’habiller quelque part », le premier magistrat de la commune et de l’agglomération se tourne aussi vers l’État pour la prise en charge de ces exilés. Il dénonce une forme de « sous-traitance » de la politique migratoire et de « démantèlement de l’autorité de l’État », tant à travers les pressions exercées à l’encontre des professionnels du transport, que dans le manque de moyens utilisés pour faire face à cette crise. La police se contente bien souvent de raccompagner, en douce, les migrants derrière la frontière, à 30 km de là, comme en attestent de multiples témoignages ainsi que des images de la télévision publique basque ETB. La Communauté d’agglomération Pays Basque a voté à l’unanimité une aide de 70 000 euros par mois pour soutenir le centre Pausa, en particulier pour financer l’équipe de sept salariés recrutée parmi les bénévoles, et fournir un repas quotidien. « Mais il faudra bien que l’État nous aide », prévient Jean-René Etchegaray.

      Dans cette attente, l’édile continue ses tournées d’inspection quotidienne du centre Pausa. Il commence par l’accueil, demande le nombre d’arrivées et de départs, s’assure que le petit bureau d’information sur les départs fonctionne, puis se rend dans la pièce principale, scrutant les lits disponibles, l’état des couvertures, s’assurant que tout fonctionne, échangeant avec les bénévoles et les voyageurs, « des gens remarquables » dit-il, et suivant des yeux, amusé, les évolutions d’un petit groupe de migrants qui passe le balais, preuve que « tout se régule », sourit-il. Au-delà des problèmes de logistique, prestement résolus, Jean-René Etchegaray est en première ligne pour réclamer aux grandes enseignes de sa circonscription des vêtements, des couvertures, de la nourriture ou de petites urgences ponctuelles, comme des gants et des bonnets. Et assurer la fluidité de cette solidarité qui s’organise encore, et prend de l’ampleur chaque jour.
      2500 réfugiés ont déjà transité par la Pausa

      Pour l’heure, le temps s’arrête sur un compte à rebours déniché sur Internet. 3 - 2 - 1 - 0 ! Tout le monde s’embrasse dans la salle, au milieu d’autres corps terrés sous une masse de couvertures. Un élan qui mêle réfugiés et bénévoles pour conjurer le mauvais sort, valider le travail abouti, triompher de cette année qui a bouleversé Bayonne, et appréhender un avenir incertain où, d’un côté comme de l’autre, rien n’est gagné. Mais l’étape est belle. 2500 réfugiés ont transité par le centre Pausa en deux mois. La route du Maroc et de l’Espagne a été empruntée par plus de 50 000 personnes en 2018, à mesure que celle de la Libye se ferme sur des milliers de morts et d’exactions, et l’évacuation de 17 000 personnes par l’Office internationale des migrations.

      Le dispositif du Centre d’accueil de Bayonne est prévu jusqu’au mois d’août 2019, mais rien ne dit que le flux humain tarira. Le maire est en train de prévoir l’ouverture d’une annexe dans le bâtiment militaire voisin. Un stalag II, railleront les bénévoles, qui lui redonneront tout de même un nom plus reposant, des couleurs, et tout ce qui peut revigorer les âmes sans tanière sur leur route incertaine.

      https://www.bastamag.net/A-Bayonne-nouvelle-route-migratoire-l-impressionnante-solidarite-des-habit

  • #métaliste (qui va être un grand chantier, car il y a plein d’information sur seenthis, qu’il faudrait réorganiser) sur :
    #externalisation #contrôles_frontaliers #frontières #migrations #réfugiés

    Des liens vers des articles généraux sur l’externalisation des frontières de la part de l’ #UE (#EU) :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/569305
    https://seenthis.net/messages/390549
    https://seenthis.net/messages/320101

    Ici une tentative (très mal réussie, car évidement, la divergence entre pratiques et les discours à un moment donné, ça se voit !) de l’UE de faire une brochure pour déconstruire les mythes autour de la migration...
    La question de l’externalisation y est abordée dans différentes parties de la brochure :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/765967

    Petit chapitre/encadré sur l’externalisation des frontières dans l’ouvrage "(Dé)passer la frontière" :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/769367

    Les origines de l’externalisation des contrôles frontaliers (maritimes) : accord #USA-#Haïti de #1981 :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/768694

    L’externalisation des politiques européennes en matière de migration
    https://seenthis.net/messages/787450

    "#Sous-traitance" de la #politique_migratoire en Afrique : l’Europe a-t-elle les mains propres ?
    https://seenthis.net/messages/789048

    Partners in crime ? The impacts of Europe’s outsourced migration controls on peace, stability and rights :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/794636
    #paix #stabilité #droits #Libye #Niger #Turquie

    Proceedings of the conference “Externalisation of borders : detention practices and denial of the right to asylum”
    https://seenthis.net/messages/880193

    Brochure sur l’externalisation des frontières (passamontagna)
    https://seenthis.net/messages/952016

  • DOSSIER / URBANITÉS AFRICAINES
    http://www.revue-urbanites.fr/urbanites-africaines

    ARTICLES
    Le projet de reconversion du port de Tanger : entre urbanisme standardisé et jeux d’alliances locales ? par Brendan Blayac

    Le programme d’appui à la reconstruction de la Fédération Sénégalaise des Habitants – vers un urbanisme participatif et solidaire, par Lionel Chabot, Pape Ameth Keita et Bea Varnai

    Lagos, immensité et urbanité d’une ville d’Afrique subsaharienne fantasme dans les séries télévisées, par Pierre Denmat

    Les programmes de logement public à Yaoundé : entre laboratoire libéral et manifestations urbaines du clientélisme dans un Cameroun post-austérité, par Mathilde Jourdam-Boutin

    Déplacer et relocaliser les citadins à Lomé (Togo) : l’urbanité négociée, par Amandine Spire et Natacha Gourland

    Vivre avec l’insécurité hydrique dans une ville sahélienne : les stratégies d’adaptation à Niamey (Niger), par Sandrine Vaucelle et Hassane Younsa Harouna

    PORTFOLIOS
    Les chantiers à Yaoundé et Douala, poétique des villes camerounaises en construction, par Mathilde Jourdam-Boutin

    Rien ne se perd, tout se récupère ! Pour une reconnaissance des récupérateurs informels de Casablanca, par Pascal Garret et Bénédicte Florin

    Les toits du Caire, des espaces ressource ? par Marie Piessat

  • C.I.A. Drone Mission, Curtailed by Obama, Is Expanded in Africa Under Trump

    The C.I.A. is poised to conduct secret drone strikes against Qaeda and Islamic State insurgents from a newly expanded air base deep in the Sahara, making aggressive use of powers that were scaled back during the Obama administration and restored by President Trump.

    Late in his presidency, Barack Obama sought to put the military in charge of drone attacks after a backlash arose over a series of highly visible strikes, some of which killed civilians. The move was intended, in part, to bring greater transparency to attacks that the United States often refused to acknowledge its role in.

    But now the C.I.A. is broadening its drone operations, moving aircraft to northeastern Niger to hunt Islamist militants in southern Libya. The expansion adds to the agency’s limited covert missions in eastern Afghanistan for strikes in Pakistan, and in southern Saudi Arabia for attacks in Yemen.

    Nigerien and American officials said the C.I.A. had been flying drones on surveillance missions for several months from a corner of a small commercial airport in Dirkou. Satellite imagery shows that the airport has grown significantly since February to include a new taxiway, walls and security posts.

    One American official said the drones had not yet been used in lethal missions, but would almost certainly be in the near future, given the growing threat in southern Libya. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the secretive operations.

    A C.I.A. spokesman, Timothy Barrett, declined to comment. A Defense Department spokeswoman, Maj. Sheryll Klinkel, said the military had maintained a base at the Dirkou airfield for several months but did not fly drone missions from there.

    The drones take off from Dirkou at night — typically between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. — buzzing in the clear, starlit desert sky. A New York Times reporter saw the gray aircraft — about the size of Predator drones, which are 27 feet long — flying at least three times over six days in early August. Unlike small passenger planes that land occasionally at the airport, the drones have no blinking lights signaling their presence.

    “All I know is they’re American,” Niger’s interior minister, Mohamed Bazoum, said in an interview. He offered few other details about the drones.

    Dirkou’s mayor, Boubakar Jerome, said the drones had helped improve the town’s security. “It’s always good. If people see things like that, they’ll be scared,” Mr. Jerome said.

    Mr. Obama had curtailed the C.I.A.’s lethal role by limiting its drone flights, notably in Yemen. Some strikes in Pakistan and elsewhere that accidentally killed civilians, stirring outrage among foreign diplomats and military officials, were shielded because of the C.I.A.’s secrecy.

    As part of the shift, the Pentagon was given the unambiguous lead for such operations. The move sought, in part, to end an often awkward charade in which the United States would not concede its responsibility for strikes that were abundantly covered by news organizations and tallied by watchdog groups. However, the C.I.A. program was not fully shut down worldwide, as the agency and its supporters in Congress balked.

    The drone policy was changed last year, after Mike Pompeo, the C.I.A. director at the time, made a forceful case to President Trump that the agency’s broader counterterrorism efforts were being needlessly constrained. The Dirkou base was already up and running by the time Mr. Pompeo stepped down as head of the C.I.A. in April to become Mr. Trump’s secretary of state.

    The Pentagon’s Africa Command has carried out five drone strikes against Qaeda and Islamic State militants in Libya this year, including one two weeks ago. The military launches its MQ-9 Reaper drones from bases in Sicily and in Niamey, Niger’s capital, 800 miles southwest of Dirkou.

    But the C.I.A. base is hundreds of miles closer to southwestern Libya, a notorious haven for Al Qaeda and other extremist groups that also operate in the Sahel region of Niger, Chad, Mali and Algeria. It is also closer to southern Libya than a new $110 million drone base in Agadez, Niger, 350 miles west of Dirkou, where the Pentagon plans to operate armed Reaper drone missions by early next year.

    Another American official said the C.I.A. began setting up the base in January to improve surveillance of the region, partly in response to an ambush last fall in another part of Niger that killed four American troops. The Dirkou airfield was labeled a United States Air Force base as a cover, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential operational matters.

    The C.I.A. operation in Dirkou is burdened by few, if any, of the political sensitivities that the United States military confronts at its locations, said one former American official involved with the project.

    Even so, security analysts said, it is not clear why the United States needs both military and C.I.A. drone operations in the same general vicinity to combat insurgents in Libya. France also flies Reaper drones from Niamey, but only on unarmed reconnaissance missions.

    “I would be surprised that the C.I.A. would open its own base,” said Bill Roggio, editor of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Long War Journal, which tracks military strikes against militant groups.

    Despite American denials, a Nigerien security official said he had concluded that the C.I.A. launched an armed drone from the Dirkou base to strike a target in Ubari, in southern Libya, on July 25. The Nigerien security official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the classified program.

    A spokesman for the Africa Command, Maj. Karl Wiest, said the military did not carry out the Ubari strike.

    #Ubari is in the same region where the American military in March launched its first-ever drone attack against Qaeda militants in southern Libya. It is at the intersection of the powerful criminal and jihadist currents that have washed across Libya in recent years. Roughly equidistant from Libya’s borders with Niger, Chad and Algeria, the area’s seminomadic residents are heavily involved in the smuggling of weapons, drugs and migrants through the lawless deserts of southern Libya.

    Some of the residents have allied with Islamist militias, including Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, which operates across Algeria, Mali, Niger and Libya.

    Dirkou, in northeast Niger, is an oasis town of a few thousand people in the open desert, bordered by a small mountain range. For centuries, it has been a key transit point for travelers crossing the Sahara. It helped facilitate the rise of Islam in West Africa in the 9th century, and welcomed salt caravans from the neighboring town of Bilma.

    The town has a handful of narrow, sandy roads. Small trees dot the horizon. Date and neem trees line the streets, providing shelter for people escaping the oppressive midday heat. There is a small market, where goods for sale include spaghetti imported from Libya. Gasoline is also imported from Libya and is cheaper than elsewhere in the country.

    The drones based in Dirkou are loud, and their humming and buzzing drowns out the bleats of goats and crows of roosters.

    “It stops me from sleeping,” said Ajimi Koddo, 45, a former migrant smuggler. “They need to go. They go in our village, and it annoys us too much.”

    Satellite imagery shows that construction started in February on a new compound at the Dirkou airstrip. Since then, the facility has been extended to include a larger paved taxiway and a clamshell tent connected to the airstrip — all features that are consistent with the deployment of small aircraft, possibly drones.

    Five defensive positions were set up around the airport, and there appear to be new security gates and checkpoints both to the compound and the broader airport.

    It’s not the first time that Washington has eyed with interest Dirkou’s tiny base. In the late 1980s, the United States spent $3.2 million renovating the airstrip in an effort to bolster Niger’s government against Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, then the leader of Libya.

    Compared with other parts of Africa, the C.I.A.’s presence in the continent’s northwest is relatively light, according to a former State Department official who served in the region. In this part of Niger, the C.I.A. is also providing training and sharing intelligence, according to a Nigerien military intelligence document reviewed by The Times.

    The Nigerien security official said about a dozen American Green Berets were stationed earlier this year in #Dirkou — in a base separate from the C.I.A.’s — to train a special counterterrorism battalion of local forces. Those trainers left about three months ago, the official said.

    It is unlikely that they will return anytime soon. The Pentagon is considering withdrawing nearly all American commandos from Niger in the wake of the deadly October ambush that killed four United States soldiers.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/09/world/africa/cia-drones-africa-military.html
    #CIA #drones #Niger #Sahel #USA #Etats-Unis #EI #ISIS #Etat_islamique #sécurité #terrorisme #base_militaire

    • Le Sahel est-il une zone de #non-droit ?

      La CIA a posé ses valises dans la bande sahélo-saharienne. Le New-York Times l’a annoncé, le 9 septembre dernier. Le quotidien US, a révélé l’existence d’une #base_de_drones secrète non loin de la commune de Dirkou, dans le nord-est du Niger. Cette localité, enclavée, la première grande ville la plus proche est Agadez située à 570 km, est le terrain de tir parfait. Elle est éloignée de tous les regards, y compris des autres forces armées étrangères : France, Allemagne, Italie, présentes sur le sol nigérien. Selon un responsable américain anonyme interrogé par ce journal, les drones déployés à Dirkou n’avaient « pas encore été utilisés dans des missions meurtrières, mais qu’ils le seraient certainement dans un proche avenir, compte tenu de la menace croissante qui pèse sur le sud de la Libye. » Or, d’après les renseignements recueillis par l’IVERIS, ces assertions sont fausses, la CIA a déjà mené des opérations à partir de cette base. Ces informations apportent un nouvel éclairage et expliquent le refus catégorique et systématique de l’administration américaine de placer la force conjointe du G5 Sahel (Tchad, Mauritanie, Burkina-Faso, Niger, Mali) sous le chapitre VII de la charte des Nations Unies.
      L’installation d’une base de drones n’est pas une bonne nouvelle pour les peuples du Sahel, et plus largement de l’Afrique de l’Ouest, qui pourraient connaître les mêmes malheurs que les Afghans et les Pakistanais confrontés à la guerre des drones avec sa cohorte de victimes civiles, appelées pudiquement « dégâts collatéraux ».

      D’après le journaliste du NYT, qui s’est rendu sur place, les drones présents à Dirkou ressembleraient à des Predator, des aéronefs d’ancienne génération qui ont un rayon d’action de 1250 km. Il serait assez étonnant que l’agence de Langley soit équipée de vieux modèles alors que l’US Air Force dispose à Niamey et bientôt à Agadez des derniers modèles MQ-9 Reaper, qui, eux, volent sur une distance de 1850 km. A partir de cette base, la CIA dispose donc d’un terrain de tir étendu qui va de la Libye, au sud de l’Algérie, en passant par le Tchad, jusqu’au centre du Mali, au Nord du Burkina et du Nigéria…

      Selon deux sources militaires de pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest, ces drones ont déjà réalisé des frappes à partir de la base de Dirkou. Ces bombardements ont eu lieu en Libye. Il paraît important de préciser que le chaos existant dans ce pays depuis la guerre de 2011, ne rend pas ces frappes plus légales. Par ailleurs, ces mêmes sources suspectent la CIA d’utiliser Dirkou comme une prison secrète « si des drones peuvent se poser des avions aussi. Rien ne les empêche de transporter des terroristes de Libye exfiltrés. Dirkou un Guantanamo bis ? »

      En outre, il n’est pas impossible que ces drones tueurs aient été en action dans d’autres Etats limitrophes. Qui peut le savoir ? « Cette base est irrégulière, illégale, la CIA peut faire absolument tout ce qu’elle veut là-bas » rapporte un officier. De plus, comment faire la différence entre un MQ-9 Reaper de la CIA ou encore un de l’US Air Force, qui, elle, a obtenu l’autorisation d’armer ses drones (1). Encore que…

      En novembre 2017, le président Mahamadou Issoufou a autorisé les drones de l’US Air Force basés à Niamey, à frapper leurs cibles sur le territoire nigérien (2). Mais pour que cet agrément soit légal, il aurait fallu qu’il soit présenté devant le parlement, ce qui n’a pas été le cas. Même s’il l’avait été, d’une part, il le serait seulement pour l’armée US et pas pour la CIA, d’autre part, il ne serait valable que sur le sol nigérien et pas sur les territoires des pays voisins…

      Pour rappel, cette autorisation a été accordée à peine un mois après les événements de Tongo Tongo, où neuf militaires avaient été tués, cinq soldats nigériens et quatre américains. Cette autorisation est souvent présentée comme la conséquence de cette attaque. Or, les pourparlers ont eu lieu bien avant. En effet, l’AFRICOM a planifié la construction de la base de drone d’Agadez, la seconde la plus importante de l’US Air Force en Afrique après Djibouti, dès 2016, sous le mandat de Barack Obama. Une nouvelle preuve que la politique africaine du Pentagone n’a pas changée avec l’arrivée de Donald Trump (3-4-5).

      Les USA seuls maîtres à bord dans le Sahel

      Dès lors, le véto catégorique des Etats-Unis de placer la force G5 Sahel sous chapitre VII se comprend mieux. Il s’agit de mener une guerre non-officielle sans mandat international des Nations-Unies et sans se soucier du droit international. Ce n’était donc pas utile qu’Emmanuel Macron, fer de lance du G5, force qui aurait permis à l’opération Barkhane de sortir du bourbier dans lequel elle se trouve, plaide à de nombreuses reprises cette cause auprès de Donald Trump. Tous les présidents du G5 Sahel s’y sont essayés également, en vain. Ils ont fini par comprendre, quatre chefs d’Etats ont boudé la dernière Assemblée générale des Nations Unies. Seul, le Président malien, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, est monté à la tribune pour réitérer la demande de mise sous chapitre VII, unique solution pour que cette force obtienne un financement pérenne. Alors qu’en décembre 2017, Emmanuel Macron y croyait encore dur comme fer et exigeait des victoires au premier semestre 2018, faute de budget, le G5 Sahel n’est toujours pas opérationnel ! (6-7) Néanmoins, la Chine a promis de le soutenir financièrement. Magnanime, le secrétaire d’Etat à la défense, Jim Mattis a lui assuré à son homologue, Florence Parly, que les Etats-Unis apporteraient à la force conjointe une aide très significativement augmentée. Mais toujours pas de chapitre VII en vue... Ainsi, l’administration Trump joue coup double. Non seulement elle ne s’embarrasse pas avec le Conseil de Sécurité et le droit international mais sous couvert de lutte antiterroriste, elle incruste ses bottes dans ce qui est, (ce qui fut ?), la zone d’influence française.

      Far West

      Cerise sur le gâteau, en août dernier le patron de l’AFRICOM, le général Thomas D. Waldhauser, a annoncé une réduction drastique de ses troupes en Afrique (9). Les sociétés militaires privées, dont celle d’Erik Prince, anciennement Blackwater, ont bien compris le message et sont dans les starting-blocks prêtes à s’installer au Sahel (10).


      https://www.iveris.eu/list/notes_danalyse/371-le_sahel_estil_une_zone_de_nondroit__

  • Le berceau de la domestication du riz africain identifié au Mali - Institut de recherche pour le développement (IRD)
    https://www.ird.fr/ird.fr/toute-l-actualite/communiques-et-dossiers-de-presse/cp-2018/le-berceau-de-la-domestication-du-riz-africain-identifie-au-mali

    Une étude internationale, coordonnée par des chercheurs de l’IRD, et associant le CEA et le Centre du riz pour l’Afrique (AfricaRice), identifie l’origine géographique de la domestication du riz africain. Grâce au séquençage de plus de 246 génomes de riz africain – sauvages et cultivés – les chercheurs montrent que cette domestication est intervenue il y a 3 000 ans dans le delta intérieur du fleuve Niger, au nord du Mali. Ces résultats, publiés le 5 juillet 2018 dans la revue Current Biology , révèlent également comment les changements climatiques passés ont induit des transformations profondes des sociétés, notamment l’adoption de l’agriculture.

    Troisième #céréale la plus produite dans le monde après le blé et le maïs, le riz constitue la base de l’alimentation de près de la moitié de la population mondiale. De la famille des poacées, le riz se cultive pour sa graine, riche en amidon. On distingue deux espèces cultivées majeures : le #riz_africain (Oryza glaberrima ) et le #riz_asiatique (Oryza sativa ). Ces espèces ont divergé génétiquement il y a environ un million d’années, bien avant leur #domestication par l’Homme [et certainement LA Femme, tordu]. Ces domestications se sont produites indépendamment en Asie et en Afrique, dans les 10 000 dernières années. Jusqu’à présent, les hypothèses scientifiques localisaient l’origine géographique de la domestication du riz africain en #Afrique_de_l’Ouest1.


    #riz #cartographie #préhistoire

  • Three million euro for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

    The Farnesina has allocated a contribution of three million euro to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from the Africa Fund of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. It is to strengthen the reception and protection system for refugees in Niger.
    The project, called “Strengthening reception conditions for persons in need of international protection in Agadez and in Niamey”, provides support for temporary reception and protection of refugees hosted in Niger, also in the context of the evacuation of vulnerable persons from Libya operated by the UNHCR. About 2,750 refugees and asylum seekers in Niger will benefit from the intervention.
    The High Commissioner is committed to supporting refugees in many African countries along the main migratory routes headed for Europe, and particularly in Niger. There are over 344,000 refugees and displaced persons in Niger, plus about 1,500 particularly vulnerable individuals evacuated from Libya.
    The recent Italian contribution is part of a broader Italian strategy to support the international organisations responsible for migrants and refugees. In 2017 Italy provided over 51 million dollars to the UNHCR for its activities, thus taking twelfth place among the largest donors of the Agency.

    https://www.esteri.it/mae/en/sala_stampa/archivionotizie/comunicati/2018/09/finanziamento-di-tre-milioni-di-euro-a-favore-dell-alto-commissariato-delle-n
    #Italie #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Niger #HCR #UNHCR

    –-> Cette fragile ligne entre aide aux réfugiés et #externalisation des #contrôles_frontaliers... Aidons-les au Niger pour qu’ils ne viennent pas chez nous !

    cc @isskein

  • 15 personnes poursuivies pour avoir tenté d’empêcher le décollage d’un charter de 57 expulsés (Ghana et Nigeria) en se couchant sur le tarmac (voir End Deportation latest newsletter : https://us16.campaign-archive.com/?u=ae35278d38818677379a2546a&id=6be6b043c3)
    –-> reçu via la mailing-list Migreurop par Claire Rodier.

    #Stansted_15 : Amnesty to observe trial amid concerns for anti-deportation activists

    Amnesty considers the 15 to be human rights defenders

    ‘We’re concerned the authorities are using a sledgehammer to crack a nut with this case’ - Kate Allen

    Amnesty International will be observing the trial of 15 human rights defenders set to go on trial at Chelmsford Crown Court next week (Monday 1 October) relating to their attempt to prevent what they believed was the unlawful deportation of a group of people at Stansted airport.

    The protesters - known as the “#Stansted 15” - are facing lengthy jail sentences for their non-violent intervention in March last year.

    Amnesty is concerned that the serious charge of “endangering safety at aerodromes” may have been brought to discourage other activists from taking non-violent direct action in defence of human rights. The organisation has written to the Director of the Crown Prosecution Service and the Attorney General calling for this disproportionate charge to be dropped.

    The trial is currently expected to last for approximately six weeks.

    Kate Allen, Amnesty International UK’s Director, said:

    “We’re concerned the authorities are using a sledgehammer to crack a nut with this case.

    “Public protest and non-violent direct action can often be a key means of defending human rights, particularly when victims have no way to make their voices heard and have been denied access to justice.

    “Human rights defenders are currently coming under attack in many countries around the world, with those in power doing all they can to discourage people from taking injustice personally. The UK must not go down that path.”

    https://www.amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/stansted-15-amnesty-observe-trial-amid-concerns-anti-deportation-activis

    #avion #déportation #renvois #expulsions #UK #Angleterre #résistance #procès #migrations #asile #réfugiés #frontières

    –---

    voir aussi la métaliste sur la #résistance de #passagers (mais aussi de #pilotes) aux #renvois_forcés :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/725457

    • The Stansted protesters saved me from wrongful deportation. They are heroes

      The ‘Stansted 15’ face jail for stopping my flight from taking off. They helped me see justice – and the birth of my daughter

      I’ll never forget the moment I found out that a group of people had blocked a charter deportation flight leaving Stansted airport on 28 March 2017, because I was one of the people that had a seat on the plane and was about to be removed from Britain against my will. While most of those sitting with me were whooping with joy when they heard the news, I was angry. After months in detention, the thought of facing even just one more day in that purgatory filled me with terror. And, crucially, I had no idea then of what I know now: that the actions of those activists, who became known as the Stansted 15, would help me see justice, and save my life in Britain.
      Stansted 15 convictions a ‘crushing blow for human rights in UK’
      Read more

      I first arrived in Britain in 2004 and, like so many people who come here from abroad, built a life here. As I sat in that plane in Stansted last year I was set to be taken “back” to a country that I had no links to. Indeed there is no doubt in my mind that had I been deported I would have been destitute and homeless in Nigeria – I was terrified.

      Imagine it. You’ve lived somewhere for 13 years. Your mum, suffering with mobility issues, lives there. Your partner lives there. Two of your children already live there, and the memory of your first-born, who died at just seven years old, resides there too. Your next child is about to be born there. That was my situation as we waited on the asphalt – imagining my daughter being born in a country where I’d built a life, while I was exiled to Nigeria and destined to meeting my newborn for the first time through a screen on a phone.

      My story was harsh, but it’s no anomaly. Like many people facing deportation from the United Kingdom, my experience with the immigration authorities had lasted many years – and for the last seven years of living here I had been in a constant state of mental detention. A cycle of Home Office appeals and its refusal to accept my claims or make a fair decision based on the facts of my case saw me in and out of detention and permanently waiting for my status to be settled. Though the threat of deportation haunted me, it was the utter instability and racial discrimination that made me feel like I was going mad. That’s why the actions of the Stansted 15 first caused me to be angry. I simply didn’t believe that their actions would be anything more than a postponement of further pain.

      My view isn’t just shaped by my own experience. My life in Britain has seen me rub along with countless people who find themselves the victims of the government’s “hostile environment” for migrants and families who aren’t white. Migration and deportation targets suck humanity from a system whose currency is the lives of people who happen to be born outside the UK. Such is the determination to look “tough” on the issue that people are rounded up in the night and put on to brutal, secretive and barely legal charter flights. Most take off away from the public eye – 60 human beings shackled and violently restrained on each flight, with barely a thought about the life they are dragged away from, nor the one they face upon arrival.
      Stansted 15 activists vow to overcome ‘dark, dark day for the right to protest’
      Read more

      I was one of the lucky few. My removal from the plane gave me two life-changing gifts. The first was a chance to appeal to the authorities over my deportation – a case that I won on two separate occasions, following a Home Office counter-appeal. But more importantly the brave actions of the Stansted 15 gave me something even more special: the chance to be by my partner’s side as she gave birth to our daughter, and to be there for them as they both needed extensive treatment after a complicated and premature birth. Without the Stansted 15 I wouldn’t have been playing football with my three-year-old in the park this week. It’s that simple. We now have a chance to live together as a family in Britain – and that is thanks to the people who lay down in front of the plane.

      On Monday the Stansted 15 were found guilty of breaching a barely used terror law. Though the jury were convinced that their actions breached this legislation, there’s no doubt in my mind that these 15 brave people are heroes, not criminals. For me a crime is doing something that is evil, shameful or just wrong – and it’s clear that it is the actions of the Home Office that tick all of these boxes; the Stansted 15 were trying to stop the real crime being committed. As the Stansted 15 face their own purgatory – awaiting sentences in the following weeks – I will be praying that they are shown leniency. Without their actions I would have missed my daughter’s birth, and faced the utter injustice of being deported from this country without having my (now successful) appeal heard. My message to them today is to fight on. Your cause is just, and history will absolve you of the guilt that the system has marked you with.

      https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/dec/10/stansted-15-protesters-deportation

    • Regno Unito, quindici attivisti rischiano l’ergastolo per aver bloccato la deportazione di migranti

      La criminalizzazione della solidarietà non riguarda solo l’Italia, con la martellante campagna contro le Ong che salvano vite nel Mediterraneo. In Francia sette attivisti rischiano 10 anni di carcere e 750mila euro di multa per “associazione a delinquere finalizzata all’immigrazione clandestina”. Nel Regno Unito altri quindici rischiano addirittura l’ergastolo per aver bloccato nella notte del 28 marzo 2017 nell’aeroporto di Stansted la deportazione di un gruppo di migranti caricati in segreto su un aereo diretto in Nigeria.

      Attivisti appartenenti ai gruppi End Deportations, Plane Stupid e Lesbian and Gays Support the Migrants hanno circondato l’aereo, impedendone il decollo. Come risultato della loro azione undici persone sono rimaste nel Regno Unito mentre la loro domanda di asilo veniva esaminata e due hanno potuto restare nel paese. Nonostante il carattere nonviolento dell’azione, il gruppo che ha bloccato l’aereo è finito sotto processo con accuse basate sulla legge anti-terrorismo e se giudicato colpevole rischia addirittura l’ergastolo. Il verdetto è atteso la settimana prossima.

      Membri dei movimenti pacifisti, antirazzisti e ambientalisti si sono uniti per protestare contro l’iniquità delle accuse. Amnesty International ha espresso la preoccupazione che siano state formulate per scoraggiare altri attivisti dall’intraprendere azioni dirette nonviolente in difesa dei diritti umani. Il vescovo di Chelmsford, la cittadina dove si tiene il processo, si è presentato in tribunale per esprimere il suo appoggio agli imputati. La primavera scorsa oltre 50 personalità, tra cui la leader dei Verdi Caroline Lucas, la scrittrice e giornalista Naomi Klein, il regista Ken Loach e l’attrice Emma Thompson hanno firmato una lettera in cui chiedono il ritiro delle accuse contro i “Quindici di Stansted” e la fine dei voli segreti di deportazione.

      Nel Regno Unito questa pratica è iniziata nel 2001. Molte delle persone deportate hanno vissuto per anni nel paese; vengono portate via dai posti di lavoro, in strada o dalle loro case, rinchiuse in centri di detenzione, caricate in segreto su voli charter notturni e inviate in paesi che spesso non conoscono e dove rischiano persecuzioni e morte. Alcuni non vengono preavvisati in tempo per ricorrere in appello contro la deportazione. “Il nostro è stato un atto di solidarietà umana, di difesa e resistenza contro un regime sempre più brutale” ha dichiarato un’attivista.


      https://www.pressenza.com/it/2018/12/regno-unito-quindici-attivisti-rischiano-lergastolo-per-aver-bloccato-la-
      #UK #Angleterre #solidarité #délit_de_solidarité #criminalisation #asile #migrations #réfugiés #expulsions

    • Activists convicted of terrorism offence for blocking Stansted deportation flight

      Fifteen activists who blocked the takeoff of an immigration removal charter flight have been convicted of endangering the safety of Stansted airport, a terrorism offence for which they could be jailed for life.

      After nearly three days of deliberations, following a nine-week trial, a jury at Chelmsford crown court found the defendants guilty of intentional disruption of services at an aerodrome under the 1990 Aviation and Maritime Security Act, a law passed in response to the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.

      The court had heard how members of the campaign group End Deportations used lock-on devices to secure themselves around a Titan Airways Boeing 767 chartered by the Home Office, as the aircraft waited on the asphalt at the airport in Essex to remove undocumented immigrants to Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone.

      The prosecution argued that their actions, which led to a temporary shutdown of Stansted, had posed a grave risk to the safety of the airport and its passengers.

      The verdict came after the judge Christopher Morgan told the jury to disregard all evidence put forward by the defendants to support the defence that they acted to stop human rights abuses, instructing jurors to only consider whether there was a “real and material” risk to the airport.

      In legal arguments made without the jury present, which can now be reported, defence barristers had called for the jury to be discharged after Morgan gave a summing up which they said amounted to a direction to convict. The judge had suggested the defendants’ entry to a restricted area could be considered inherently risky.

      Human rights organisations and observers had already expressed concerns over the choice of charge, which Kate Allen, the UK director of Amnesty International, likened to “using a sledgehammer to crack a nut”. Responding to the verdict on Monday, Gracie Bradley, policy and campaigns manager at Liberty, called the verdict a “grave injustice” and a “malicious attack” on the right to peaceful protest.

      Dr Graeme Hayes, reader in political sociology at Aston University, was one of a team of academics who observed the trial throughout. The only previous use of the 1990 law he and colleagues were able to find was in 2002 when a pilot was jailed for three years after flying his helicopter straight at a control tower.

      “This is a law that’s been brought in concerning international terrorism,” he said. “But for the last 10 weeks [of the trial], we’ve heard what amounts to an extended discussion of health and safety, in which the prosecution has not said at any point what the consequences of their actions might have been.”

      In a statement released by End Deportations after the verdict, the defendants said: “We are guilty of nothing more than intervening to prevent harm. The real crime is the government’s cowardly, inhumane and barely legal deportation flights and the unprecedented use of terror law to crack down on peaceful protest.

      The protest took place on the night of 28 March 2017. The activists cut a hole in the airport’s perimeter fence, the court heard. Jurors were shown footage from CCTV cameras and a police helicopter of four protesters arranging themselves around the front landing gear of the aircraft and locking their arms together inside double-layered pipes filled with expanding foam.

      Further back, a second group of protesters erected a two-metre tripod from scaffolding poles behind the engine on the left wing on which one of them perched while others locked themselves to the base to prevent it from being moved, the videos showed. In the moments before police arrived, they were able to display their banners, one of which said: “No one is illegal.”

      Helen Brewer, Lyndsay Burtonshaw, Nathan Clack, Laura Clayson, Mel Evans, Joseph McGahan, Benjamin Smoke, Jyotsna Ram, Nicholas Sigsworth, Alistair Temlit, Edward Thacker, Emma Hughes, May McKeith, Ruth Potts and Melanie Stickland, aged 27 to 44, had all pleaded not guilty.

      They will be sentenced at a later date.


      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/dec/10/activists-convicted-of-terror-offence-for-blocking-stansted-deportation

    • Stansted 15: no jail for activists convicted of terror-related offences

      Judge says group ‘didn’t have a grievous intent as some may who commit this type of crime’.

      Fifteen activists convicted of a terrorism-related offence for chaining themselves around an immigration removal flight at Stansted airport have received suspended sentences or community orders.

      The judge decided not to imprison them after he accepted they were motivated by “genuine reasons”.

      Amid an outcry over what human rights defenders branded a heavy-handed prosecution, the group, who have become known as the Stansted 15, were convicted last December of endangering the safety of an aerodrome.

      They had broken into Stansted airport’s “airside” area in March 2017 and chained themselves together around a Boeing 767 chartered by the Home Office to deport 60 people to Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone. After a 10-week trial a jury found them guilty of the charge – an offence that carries a potential life sentence.
      We in the Stansted 15 have been treated like terrorists
      Emma Hughes
      Read more

      At Chelmsford crown court on Wednesday, Judge Christopher Morgan QC, dismissed submissions in mitigation that the group should receive conditional discharges for the direct action protest, which briefly paralysed the airport, saying they did not reflect the danger that had been presented by their actions.

      He said such action would “ordinarily result in custodial sentences”, but that they “didn’t have a grievous intent as some may do who commit this type of crime”. The mood in the court had lightened considerably at the start of the hearing when Morgan said that he did not consider the culpability of any of the defendants passed the threshold of an immediate custodial sentence.

      The heaviest sentences were reserved for three of the group who had been previously convicted of aggravated trespass at Heathrow airport in 2016.

      Alistair Tamlit and Edward Thacker were sentenced on Wednesday to nine months in jail suspended for 18 months, along with 250 hours of unpaid work. Melanie Strickland was sentenced to nine months suspended for 18 months, with 100 hours of unpaid work.

      Benjamin Smoke, Helen Brewer, Lyndsay Burtonshaw, Nathan Clack, Laura Clayson, Mel Evans, Joseph McGahan, Jyotsna Ram, Nicholas Sigsworth, Emma Hughes and Ruth Potts were each given 12-month community orders with 100 hours of unpaid work, while May McKeith received a 12-month community order with 20 days of rehabilitation.

      In mitigation, Dexter Dias QC said it should be taken into account that all acted to try to help individuals they perceived to be in danger. “The reason they wanted to prevent [the flight’s] departure is that they believed the welfare and safety of some of the people on that flight was at risk,” he said.
      Guardian Today: the headlines, the analysis, the debate - sent direct to you
      Read more

      “In those circumstances the court historically in this country have considered that conscientious motivations offer quite significant mitigation.”

      Dias pointed out that 11 of those who had been due to be deported to west Africa that night remain in the country, including two of whom there were reasons to believe were victims of human trafficking, and two who were subsequently found to have been victims of human trafficking. “One of them had been raped and forced into sex work in several European cities,” he said.

      Kirsty Brimelow QC, who appeared to have been specially recruited for the mitigation after not acting for any defendant during the trial, told Morgan he must balance the defendants’ rights to protest and free association against the harm their actions caused the airport.

      Brimelow last year acted for three fracking protesters whose sentences were overturned by the court of appeal as “manifestly excessive”. She continually referred to that case as she told Morgan that he must consider the “proportionality” of the sentences.

      The defendants emerged from the court to a rousing reception from hundreds of supporters who had spent the day protesting outside. Tamlit said he was “relieved that’s over”.

      “It’s been a gruelling process,” he said. “The flight that went this morning [to Jamaica] put things in perspective. We might have been in jail tonight but people could have visited us and we would have eventually been released.

      “Not going to jail is a partial victory but we are going to keep campaigning to end charter flights, immigration detention and the hostile environment.”

      McKeith’s mother, Ag, said she was pleased at the relatively lenient sentence. But, she said she felt they ought not to have been convicted at all. “Despite the judge’s stern account, it’s simply not true that they endangered anybody at the airport,” she said. “The only people who were in danger were the people on the plane. I watched the trial all the way through and watched the prosecution trying to spin straw into gold, and they didn’t convince me.”

      Graeme Hayes, reader in political sociology at Aston University, who observed the entire trial, said: “Although the defendants have not got the custodial sentence, the bringing of a terrorism-related charge against non-violent protesters is a very worrying phenomenon. It’s so far the only case [of its type] in the UK, and points to a chilling of legitimate public dissent.”

      The defendants have already filed an appeal against their convictions. Raj Chada, of Hodge, Jones & Allen, represented most of them. “We will be studying the judgment carefully to review whether there are any issues that need to be brought up in the appeal,” he said.

      “It’s striking that nowhere was there any endangerment of individuals identified.”

      https://www.theguardian.com/global/2019/feb/06/stansted-15-rights-campaigners-urge-judge-to-show-leniency?CMP=Share_An

    • Stansted deportation flight protesters have convictions quashed

      Group of 15 activists were prosecuted under anti-terror laws for blocking immigration removal flight in 2017

      Fifteen anti-deportation activists who were prosecuted under counter-terror legislation for blocking the takeoff of an immigration removal flight from Stansted airport have had their convictions quashed.

      In a judgment handed down by the court of appeal on Friday afternoon, the lord chief justice, Lord Burnett of Maldon, said: “The appellants should not have been prosecuted for the extremely serious offence under section 1(2)(b) of the 1990 Act because their conduct did not satisfy the various elements of the offence.

      “There was, in truth, no case to answer.”

      The ruling came more than two years after the 15 protesters were convicted following a nine-week trial of endangering the safety of an aerodrome, an offence under the 1990 Aviation and Maritime Security Act that carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.

      It was the first time the terror-related offence, passed in 1990 in response to the Lockerbie bombing, had been used against peaceful protesters.

      The defendants said they were relieved by the decision. May MacKeith, 35, said that the time from their arrest in 2017 to Friday’s ruling put into perspective the experiences of people caught in the UK’s hostile environment immigration system.

      “It was frightening,” she said. “But all along, despite the draconian charge, we knew that our actions were justified. We’ve never doubted that the people on that plane should never have been treated that way by our government.” Of those due to be deported on the flight, 11 were still in the UK, with three granted leave to remain.

      In their appeal, lawyers for the defence argued the legislation used to convict the group was not only rarely used but also was not intended for the kinds of peaceful actions undertaken by their clients. They said the prosecution stretched the meaning of the law by characterising the lock-on equipment they used to blockade the runway as devices used to endanger life.

      Weighing the argument, Burnett said in his judgment: “The closure of the runway was undoubtedly disruptive and expensive, but there was no evidence that it resulted in likely endangerment to the safety of the aerodrome or of persons there.

      “The [deployment] of an unspecified number of police officers when the terrorist threat was severe may have increased the risks within the terminal, but there was no evidence to enable an inference to be drawn that endangerment was likely.

      “There may have been a slightly enhanced risk of a police officer slipping en route to the aircraft, but it would stretch both language and common sense to say that there was likely endangerment, both in terms of the probability of this happening and the seriousness of the consequences if it did happen.”

      Burnett added: “Both the crown’s case and the summing-up collapsed the distinction between risk and likely danger and treated the offence as if it were akin to a health and safety provision.”

      The defendants, all members of the group Stop Deportations, had taken part in a peaceful action that stopped a chartered deportation flight to Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone from taking off on 28 March 2017. Members of the group cut a hole in the airport’s perimeter fence before rushing on to the apron at Stansted.

      Four protesters arranged themselves around the front landing gear of the aircraft, locking their arms together inside double-layered pipes filled with expanding foam. Further back, a second group of protesters erected a 2-metre tripod from scaffolding poles behind the engine on the left wing. One of them perched on top of the makeshift structure, while others locked themselves to the base to prevent it from being moved.

      In the moments before police arrived they were able to display banners, including one that said: “No one is illegal.”

      Although members of the group received suspended sentences or community orders, UN human rights experts wrote to the UK government expressing concern over the application of “security and terrorism-related legislation to prosecute peaceful political protesters and critics of state policy”.

      On Friday, rights groups including Amnesty International and Liberty welcomed the ruling. But Raj Chada of Hodge Jones & Allen, who represented the defendants, said questions remained as to why the then attorney general, Jeremy Wright, had authorised the use of the charge in the first place.

      He said: “It does make me uncomfortable that a British cabinet minister has authorised a terror charge against political opponents, that the lord chief justice has decided is completely inappropriate. The appellants should be told, why was this charge used in this way? What information did the attorney general have?”

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/jan/29/stansted-deportation-flight-protesters-have-convictions-quashed

    • Stansted 15: Activists who stopped migrant deportation flight have convictions overturned

      Lord Chief Justice says demonstrators have ‘no case to answer’ for offences they were charged with

      A group of activists who stopped a deportation flight leaving Stansted airport have had their convictions overturned by the Court of Appeal.

      They had been prosecuted following a protest in March 2017, where they ultimately prevented a charter flight that was due to deport 60 individuals to Africa.

      The group, known as the Stansted 15, were initially charged with aggravated trespass but the charge was changed to endangering safety at a public airport.

      All defendants denied the offence at trial, and said they were “guilty of nothing more than intervening to prevent harm” to migrants on board the plane.

      On Friday, the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Burnett, sitting with Mr Justice Jay and Ms Justice Whipple, overturned all 15 demonstrators’ convictions.

      Lord Burnett said the protesters “should not have been prosecuted for the extremely serious offence ... because their conduct did not satisfy the various elements of the offence. There was, in truth, no case to answer.”

      The judgment said the offence they were charged with was intended for “conduct of a different nature” after the campaigners’ lawyers told the Court of Appeal the offence used was related to terrorism and had been created in the wake of the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.

      May MacKeith, a member of the Stansted 15, said almost four years of legal proceedings “should never have happened”.

      “But for many people caught up in the UK immigration system the ordeal lasts much, much longer,” she added.

      “The nightmare of this bogus charge, a 10 week trial and the threat of prison has dominated our lives for four years. Despite the draconian response we know our actions were justified.”

      Raj Chada of Hodge Jones and Allen Solicitors, who represented the Stansted 15, said the case should be a matter of “great shame” to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and attorney general.

      “Both have questions to answer as to why they authorised such an unprecedented charge,” he added.

      “Amnesty International adopted the 15 as human rights defenders, Liberty intervened in the case and even the UN, through their special rapporteurs, expressed concern, yet the case went forward.”

      In March 2017, the defendants cut through the perimeter fence of Stansted airport in Essex and used pipes to lock themselves together around a plane.

      The Boeing 767 had been chartered by the Home Office to remove 60 people to Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone, and was stationary on the airport’s apron.

      The trial heard the defendants believed the deportees were at risk of death, persecution and torture if they were removed from Britain, and many were asylum seekers.

      Campaigners said that 11 of the 60 passengers remain in the UK, and included victims of human trafficking.

      The protesters, who all pleaded not guilty, were convicted in December 2018 of the intentional disruption of services at an aerodrome under the Aviation and Maritime Security Act 1990.

      A judge at Chelmsford Crown Court handed three defendants, who had previous convictions for aggravated trespass at airports, suspended prison terms and gave 12 defendants community sentences.

      Judge Christopher Morgan said alleged human rights abuses, immigration policy and proportionality did not have “any relevance” to whether a criminal offence had been committed.

      “In normal circumstances only a custodial sentence would have been justified in this case, but I accept that your intentions were to demonstrate.”

      United Nations human rights experts raised concern over the case and warned the British government against using security-related laws against protesters and critics.

      “We are concerned about the application of disproportional charges for what appears to be the exercise of the rights to peaceful and non-violent protest and freedom of expression,” a statement said in February 2019.

      “It appears that such charges were brought to deter others from taking similar peaceful direct action to defend human rights, and in particular the protection of asylum seekers.”

      The group received high-profile support from MPs and public figures, including the Bishop of Chelmsford.

      An open letter signed by dozens of politicians and academics in September condemned the practice of “secret deportation flights”, which came into renewed focus following the Windrush scandal.

      Amnesty International said the case was part of a Europe-wide trend of volunteers and activists being criminalised for helping migrants.

      Kate Allen, Amnesty International UK’s director, said the Court of Appeal ruling was a “good day for justice”.

      “The Stansted 15 will take their place in the history books as human rights defenders who bravely brought injustices perpetrated by the state into the light,” she added.

      “This case should never have been brought and there must be lessons learnt for how we treat human rights defenders in this country.”

      Lana Adamou, a lawyer for the Liberty human rights group, called the charges “an attack on our right to express dissent”.

      “All too often it is the most marginalised in society, and those acting in solidarity with them, who bear the brunt of over-zealous policing and crackdowns on protest, making it even more important for the government to take steps to facilitate protest and ensure these voices are heard, rather than find ways to suppress them,” she added.

      At November’s Court of Appeal hearing, lawyers for the activists told the court the legislation used to convict the 15 is rarely used and not intended for a protest case.

      In documents before the court, the Stansted 15’s barristers argued it was intended to deal with violence of the “utmost seriousness”, such as terrorism, rather than risks of “a health and safety-type nature” posed by those who have trespassed at an airport.

      Lawyers for the group also argued that the attorney general – who is required to sign off on the use of the legislation – should not have granted consent for the law to be used in this case, that the crown court judge made errors in summing up the case and in directions given to the jury.

      Barristers representing the CPS had said the convictions are safe and that the trial judge was correct.

      Tony Badenoch QC told the court: “We don’t accept that the act is constrained to terrorism and nothing else.”

      A CPS spokesperson said: “We will consider the judgment carefully in the next 28 days.”

      The 15 are: #Helen_Brewer, 31; #Lyndsay_Burtonshaw, 30; #Nathan_Clack, 32; #Laura_Clayson, 30; #Melanie_Evans, 37; #Joseph_McGahan, 37; #Benjamin_Smoke, 21; #Jyotsna_Ram, 35; #Nicholas_Sigsworth, 31; #Melanie_Strickland, 37; #Alistair_Tamlit, 32; #Edward_Thacker, 31; #Emma_Hughes, 40; #May_McKeith, 35; and #Ruth_Potts, 46.

      https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/stansted-15-deportation-flight-convictions-appeal-b1794757.html

  • UN Human Rights Council passes a resolution adopting the peasant rights declaration in Geneva - Via Campesina
    https://viacampesina.org/en/un-human-rights-council-passes-a-resolution-adopting-the-peasant-right

    Seventeen years of long and arduous negotiations later, peasants and other people working in rural areas are only a step away from having a UN Declaration that could defend and protect their rights to land, seeds, biodiversity, local markets and a lot more.

    On Friday, 28 September, in a commendable show of solidarity and political will, member nations of United Nations Human Rights Council passed a resolution concluding the UN Declaration for the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas. The resolution was passed with 33 votes in favour, 11 abstentions and 3 against. [1]

    Contre : Australie, Hongrie et Royaume-Uni

    In favour: Afghanistan, Angola, Burundi, Chile, China, Cote d’Ivoire, Cuba, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iraq, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa, Switzerland, Togo, Tunisia, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela

    Abstention: Belgium, Brazil, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Iceland, Japan, Republic of Korea, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain

    https://viacampesina.org/en/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2011/03/Declaration-of-rights-of-peasants-2009.pdf

    #droit_des_paysan·nes

  • As the World Abandons Refugees, UNHCR’s Constraints Are Exposed

    The U.N. refugee agency lacks the funding, political clout and independence to protect refugees in the way that it is supposed to, says former UNHCR official and refugee policy expert #Jeff_Crisp.

    Over the past three years, the world has been confronted with a number of major new refugee emergencies – in Myanmar, Nigeria, South Sudan, Yemen and Venezuela, as well as the Central American region. In addition, existing crises in Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia and Syria have gone unresolved, making it impossible for large exiled populations to return to their own country. As a result, the global refugee population has soared to more than 25 million, the highest figure ever recorded.

    This means that the role of the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, which is supposed to protect and find solutions for this growing population, is more important than ever. But is it up to the task? The proliferating crises have stretched it to the limit. Funding, most of which comes from a dozen key donor states, has not kept up with the rising numbers the agency is expected to support. In April, UNHCR said it had received just $2.3 billion of the $8.2 billion it needed for its annual program.

    Things look unlikely to improve. UNHCR is losing the support of the United States, traditionally the organization’s most important government partner, whether under Republican or Democrat administrations. Since Donald Trump’s election, the country has slashed the number of refugees it admits through its resettlement program. In his final years in office, Barack Obama had raised the annual quota to 110,000 refugees. That is now down to 45,000 and may yet be reduced to 25,000.

    There is also the prospect that the Trump administration will demonstrate its disdain for the U.N. and limited interest in the refugee issue by reducing its funding to the agency, as it has already done with UNRWA, a separate agency that supports Palestinian refugees. Given that the U.S. currently contributes almost 40 percent of the UNHCR budget, even a modest reduction in its support will mean serious cuts in expenditure.

    The agency therefore has little choice but to look for alternative sources of funding and diplomatic support, especially from the European Union and its member states. But that may come at a price. One of the E.U.’s top priorities is to halt the arrival of refugees and asylum seekers who have transited through nearby countries such as Libya, Morocco and Turkey. Populist political parties throughout much of the E.U. are reaping the electoral benefits of taking a hard line on the issue of refugees and migration. Several European governments have shown little hesitation in violating the international refugee laws they have signed in their desperation to seal Europe’s borders.

    The E.U. thus looks to UNHCR for two things: first, the expertise and operational capacity of an organization that has years of experience in responding to mass movements of people; and second, the legitimacy that E.U. policies can acquire by means of close association with an agency deemed by its founding statute to be “entirely non-political and humanitarian.” In this context, it should come as no surprise that E.U. foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini has been at pains to point out that the E.U. and UNHCR “work together” and have a “close partnership” – and that the E.U. remains “the strongest supporter of UNHCR.”

    But this partnership (which involved $436 million in funding from Brussels alone in 2017) also involves an important element of compromise on the part of UNHCR. In the Mediterranean, for example, the E.U. is funding the Libyan coast guard to intercept and return any refugees who try to leave the country by boat. Those people are subsequently confined to detention centers where, according to Amnesty International, they are at risk of torture, forced labor, extortion and murder at the hand of smugglers, bandits or the Libyan authorities.

    The U.N. high commissioner for human rights has publicly chastised the E.U. for its failure to improve the situation of migrants in Libya. By contrast, UNHCR has kept very quiet about the E.U.’s role in the process of interception, return and detention, despite the fact that these actions violate a fundamental principle of refugee protection: that no one should be returned to a country where their life or freedom would be threatened.

    This reveals a fundamental tension in the organization’s character. Ostensibly, UNHCR enjoys a high degree of independence and moral authority. As part of the U.N. system, it is treated with more respect by states and other actors than NGOs doing similar work. It has regular access to heads of state, government leaders, regional organizations, the U.N. security council and the secretary-general himself (who was previously UNHCR chief).

    But in practice, the autonomy enjoyed by UNHCR is at best a relative one. Almost 90 percent of the agency’s funding is provided by states, much of it earmarked for specific programs, projects and countries. UNHCR’s governing board consists entirely of states.

    The organization can operate in a country only if it has the agreement of the government, which also has the ability to shape the scope of UNHCR’s operational activities, as well as the partners it works with. In countries such as Ethiopia, Pakistan, Sudan and Syria, for example, the organization is obliged to work with government departments whose priorities may well be different from those of UNHCR.

    Almost 90 percent of the agency’s funding is provided by states, much of it earmarked for specific programs, projects and countries. UNHCR’s governing board consists entirely of states.

    The tensions at the heart of UNHCR seem unlikely to diminish. Throughout the world, governments are closing their borders to refugees and depriving them of basic rights. Exiled populations are being induced to repatriate against their will and to countries that are not safe. As epitomized by the E.U.’s deal with Turkey, asylum seekers have become bargaining chips in interstate relations, used by political leaders to extract financial, political and even military concessions from each other.

    Given the constitutional constraints imposed on the organization, UNHCR’s options are now limited. It can try (as it has done for many years) to diversify its funding base. It could assume a more assertive stance with states that violate refugee protection principles – and in doing so risk the loss of its already diminished degree of diplomatic support. And it can hope that the recently completed Global Compact on Refugees, a nonbinding declaration of principles that most U.N. member states are expected to sign, will have some effect on the way that governments actually treat refugees.

    A final option available to UNHCR is to be more transparent about its limitations, to moderate the relentless self-promotion of its branding and marketing campaign and give greater recognition to the efforts that refugees are making to improve their own lives. In that respect, UNHCR’s favourite hashtag, “We Stand #WithRefugees,” could usefully be changed to “Refugees Are #StandingUpForThemselves.”

    #UN #ONU #HCR #UNHCR #crise #indépendance #fonds #financement #it_has_begun

  • Pirates kidnap 12 crew members from Swiss vessel in Nigerian waters - ship operator | Reuters
    https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-nigeria-piracy/pirates-kidnap-12-crew-members-from-swiss-vessel-in-nigerian-waters-ship


    © N. Nikolov
    MarineTraffic.com

    Pirates kidnapped 12 crew members from a Swiss merchant vessel on Saturday in Nigerian waters, the ship’s operator said in a statement.

    Kidnapping for ransom is a common problem in parts of Nigeria. A number of foreigners have been kidnapped in the last few years in the southern Niger Delta region, source of most of the crude oil which is the mainstay of west Africa’s biggest economy.

    Massoel Shipping, operator of MV Glarus, said the vessel carrying wheat was travelling between the southwestern commercial capital Lagos and southern Niger Delta oil hub Port Harcourt when it was boarded by pirates, who took 12 away of the 19 crew members.

    It said the attack happened around 45 nautical miles south west of Bonny Island.

    The company is working with the authorities and specialists to secure the speedy and safe release of those being held,” Massoel Shipping said in its statement. The statement did not give the nationalities of the crew members.

    Switzerland’s foreign ministry said it had learned from the company that none of the crew members were from Switzerland itself.

    Nigeria’s navy and maritime police said they were unaware of the kidnapping and would investigate.

  • Anatomy of a Killing - BBC News

    Voici une recherche (Forensic research) très impressionnante sur cette histoire horrible : La démarche devrait beaucoup intéresser @simplicissimus et peut-être pourrions nous reparler et débattre de ce que le BBC a réussi à faire ici. Je reste sans voix.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4G9S-eoLgX4

    In July 2018 a horrifying video began to circulate on social media. It shows two women and two young children being led away at gunpoint by a group of Cameroonian soldiers. The captives are blindfolded, forced to the ground, and shot 22 times.

    #cameroun #nigéria #meurtres #boko_haram

    • These women and children while being led to their deaths the soldiers accused them of belonging to the jihadist group Boko Haram graphic tissue here they’re blindfolded posted the ground and shot a close-range 22 * one of the women still has the baby strapped to her back the video began to circulate on my 10th 2018 some claimed that this atrocity took place in Molly where government soldiers have been fighting Boko Haram since 2014 the government of Cameroon initially dismissed the video as fake news a month later they announce the seven members of the military wear under investigation but there has still been no official admission that these killings were carried out in cameroonian song by government soldiers and there is still no guarantee that anyone will be held to account so how can we tell what really happened here over the next few minutes we’re going to follow these women and children on the short walk to the end of their lives and to glean from this video the clues that tell us where this happened when it happened and who was responsible for this atrocity this looks like the kind of Dusty anonymously track that could be anywhere in the Sahel what the first 40 seconds of the film capture a mountain range with the distinctive profile we spent hours trying to match this rage to the Topography of Northern Cameroon and then in Late July we received a tip-off from a cameroonian sourced have you looked at the area near Santa Fe close to the town of side of it we found a match for the Ridgeline it this is the scene on a dirt road just outside of Village called crime Alpha a few hundred meters away is the border with Nigeria the video also reveals other details that can be matched precisely to what we see on the satellite imagery this track these buildings and these trees putting all this evidence together we can say with certainty but the killings took place here less than a kilometer away instead of it we found this compound and identify this the combat Outpost used by the cameroonian military and their fight against Boko Haram will come back to this base later exactly when the killings took place at First Sight harder to say but again the video contains Clues this building is visible and satellite imagery but only until February 2016 the murders must have happened before that date satellite images also captured this structure the Wolves surrounding it I’ll present an imagery dated March 2015 but it not yet been built in November 2014 giving earliest possible date for the atrocity the video also reveals this footpath a part that only appears in the hot dry season between January and April less obvious clues in the video as they leave these women away the soldiers like moving sundials cost Shadows on the track a simple mathematical formula tells us the end the sun in comparison to the Horizon we can also see what direction the light is coming from when we add this data to our location we can get a precise time frame for this event The Killing between March 20th and April 5th 2015 we now know where this happened and we know when it happened but who are the men who murdered these women and children in July is Serta Roma Bakery cameroon’s minister of communication insisted that the killers are not cameroonian soldiers and presented what he claimed was irrefutable evidence from the video itself the weapons he said I’m not those used by the cameroonian Army in this area of operation but your analysis shows that one of these is a Serbian made the stopper M21 it’s rare in sub-Saharan Africa but it is used by some divisions of the cameroonian military also claimed that a close examination of the shoes the soldiers wearing colorful Forrestal camouflage in the phone knows he said cameroonian soldiers wear pale desert style fatigues a closer look at the evidence reveals this cancel just seen here in a 2015 report by Channel 4 News filmed inside of it wearing darker forestal fatigues similar to those seen in the video on Facebook we also found these pictures cameroonian soldiers wearing the same type of camouflage the images attack to CertiFit but carry also question why the soldiers are not wearing the standard combat gear of troops stationed in that area be helmets bulletproof vest and ranges boots Beyonce is that the soldiers when those house on patrol they would just a few hundred metres away from the combat Outpost we saw earlier we know that this is a military base because we match the features visible in satellite imagery to the details in the channel 4 news report that was short hair in 2015 new movies this year and I Misty International investigators spoke with residents who have been displaced by the fighting to a nearby Town among them was the man who said that sold these women and children being brought into the base by cameroonian soldiers a short while after they will either way he said he heard gunfire in August there was a sudden change in the government Fishing Off 2 weeks of denying that these killings took place in Cameroon vicari announced that seven members of the cameroonian military had been arrested and we’re under investigation or analysis has and avoid three men who actually pulled the trigger one of them is this man introduced at the start of the film as chocho that links the nickname chocho to a soldier called Syriac patiala is among the detainees named by the government the BBC has also spoken with a former cameroonian Soldier to confirm but this is chocho cyriak patiala at the end of the film we see him again blindfolding the little girl he’s about to kill a few seconds later he draw his weapon and opens fire analysis Identify two other guns that were used in The Killing one of them was in the hands of this man we see him here blindfolding the woman with the baby seconds before the shooting starts resource identified him as Barnabas go no so we would not able to confirm this identification a very similar name Barnabas Donna Sue appeared 11 days later on the government’s List of soldiers under investigation the 3rd weapon used in The Killing is the Zastava M21 we saw earlier it is in the hands of a man introduced in the video as second-class cobra so who is Cobra of the women and children are killed Cobra is the lost man still firing into the body’s one of his colleagues calls out tangle leave it there dead when he still does not stop shooting the cold out again that’s enough tanker that’s enough the name Sanger also appears list of men under investigation suggesting but Cobra is a nickname for Lance corporal Tanga another man named among those arrested is Etienne Sebastian he’s the platoon commander who was interviewed by channel 4 news in 2015 as far as week until he does not appear in the video we put these findings to the government of Cameroon who responded Honda investigation right now until the investigation has been concluded and that hold of them will be given a fair trial new due process was extended to the two women killed outside set of it and no presumption of innocence was a foot to the children who died with them
      In July 2018 a horrifying video began to circulate on social media. It shows two women and two young children being led away at gunpoint by a group of Cameroonian soldiers. The captives are blindfolded, forced to the ground, and shot 22 times.

      The government of Cameroon initially dismissed the video as “fake news.” But BBC Africa Eye, through forensic analysis of the footage, can prove exactly where this happened, when it happened, and who is responsible for the killings.

      Warning: this video contains disturbing content

      Investigation by Aliaume Leroy and Ben Strick.
      Produced by Daniel Adamson and Aliaume Leroy.
      Motion Graphics: Tom Flannery

      Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog

    • (je commente ici…)

      Intéressant (et horrible !) La localisation par la ligne de crête me laisse très dubitatif. Elle me semble habiller une localisation obtenue par des moyens plus … classiques ; peut-être pour protéger une source.

      En particulier, la suite de la vidéo montre que les enquêteurs ont eu accès directement sur place, par exemple lors du reportage sur le poste militaire, à diverses informations, notamment l’identité des participants.

      Le recoupement entre images et vues par satellite interviennent plus comme confirmation ou pour préciser la localisation des séquences : les constructions sont vraiment sommaires et elles manquent totalement d’éléments remarquables. Sans localisation globale, rien de tout cela n’est utilisable.

    • Un bon article de #Matteo_Villa qui résume ces questions, paru en septembre 2018 :

      Outsourcing European Border Control : Recent Trends in Departures, Deaths and Search and Rescue Activities in the Central Mediterranean

      In our previous blog post ‘Border Deaths in the Mediterranean: what we can learn from the latest data?’ on Border Criminologies (March 2017) we discussed the existing data sources on Mediterranean Sea migration and provided an analysis of key patterns and trends. We found that Search and Rescue (SAR) has little or no effect on the number of arrivals, and it is rather the absence of SAR that leads to more deaths. These results, which are in line with other research, were covered by various European media outlets and also resulted in a peer reviewed publication in Sociology (also available as a free preprint).

      These findings covered the period until December 2016. Since then, however, the context of European border policy has changed considerably:

      Through a mix of political pressure, financial incentives and military assistance, the EU has tried to induce transit countries in the Sahel to close their borders to Europe-bound migrants. According to European parliament president Tajani, this resulted in a 95% drop in crossings through Niger, a key transition point for migrants on the way to Libya, although it cannot be excluded that migrants are taking different, more dangerous routes in order to reach Northern African countries (either via Niger or through Algeria).
      From the beginning of 2017 onwards, the Italian government backed by the EU has increasingly cooperated with Libyan authorities to block depatures in exchange for financial and logistical support. The UN-backed government in Libya in turn, has allegedly forged deals with a number of militias.
      Increased European support for the Libyan Coast Guard (LCG), resulting in an increase in interceptions and the declaration of a Libyan SAR zone.
      Increasing legal and political attacks on NGOs engaged in SAR have culminated in Italy’s decision to declare its ports to be “closed” to NGO vessels and (temporarily) to EU rescue ships in June 2018.

      Each of these developments can be seen as part of a broader strategy to close the European borders by externalizing border control to third countries, a practice that was tried earlier with Turkey, and to relax commitments enshrined in international law, such as search and rescue at sea and non refoulement.

      In view of these recent developments, we document estimated trends in arrivals, deaths, mortality rates and rescue activities covering the most recent period, between January 2016 and July 2018. In doing so, we strongly rely on detailed statistical analyses conducted by the Italian research institute ISPI. Our analyses are based on publicly available data from the IOM and the UNHCR for arrivals and interceptions, and IOM’s Missing Migrants Project for deaths. It is important to note that recorded deaths are a lower bound estimate of the actual death toll, because some deaths are likely to remain unreported. We provide an extensive discussion of data sources, data quality and challenges for their interpretation in our academic article on the issue. Since most of the above developments relate to the situation in Libya, we focus on migrants departing from that country. Libya is also the only Northern African country where interceptions at sea by the Coast Guard are independently monitored by both IOM and UNHCR personnel at disembarkation points.

      Although each of these individual developments have been reported elsewhere, together they paint a picture of Europe’s resolve to close its external borders and deter irregular migration, regardless of the (human) cost.

      Trend #1: A sharp drop in departures

      Figure 1 plots trends in the number of migrants departing irregularly from Libya by sea since January 2016. Until mid-2017, migrant departures show a remarkably regular seasonal pattern, with around 20,000 departures during the summer months. As of July 2017, however, the number of arrivals dropped dramatically, and it has stayed at comparatively low levels up to the present. The decrease in arrivals occurred after alleged ’deals’ between Libyan authorities and the militias in Western Libya that control the smuggling networks, and a few months after the signing of a memorandum of understanding between Italy and Libya. Convergent diplomatic action induced some militias to switch from smuggling to preventing departures. Other factors, such as the activity of the LCG, private and public SAR providers, or dynamics in the rate of dead and missing along the route, are relevant per se but appear to play no significant role in the decrease in arrivals to Europe. Europe’s efforts to block migrants passing though transit countries may have played a role as well, but evidence is still too sparse to be reliably assessed.

      Trend #2: An increased risk of interception by the Libyan Coast Guard

      The Libyan Coast Guard plays a pivotal role in Europe’s strategy of externalizing migration control to third countries. A report by Human Rights Watch suggests that in recent months “the Italian Maritime Rescue Coordination Center (IMRCC) has routinized a practice, tested since at least May 2017, of transferring responsibility to Libyan coast guard forces in international waters even when there are other, better-equipped vessels, including its own patrol boats or Italian navy vessels, closer to the scene.” This practice has been termed ’refoulement by proxy’ because the LCG is financed, equipped and instructed by the Italian and European authorities, as described in this recent investigative report. Migrants who are forcibly returned to Libya are imprisoned in detention centres for indefinite periods, and they face systematic violence—including torture and rape—as has been documented in numerous reports.

      The new Italian government intensified and formalized the policy of transferring responsibility to the LCG. Since June, it has instructed ships undertaking rescues in the Libyan SAR zone to refer all emergency calls to the Libyan authorities, who will then arrange their interception and pull-back to Libya. The declarations that Italian ports are “closed” to NGO ships are also part of this strategy, as their operations are considered to interfere with LCG interceptions. In late July, this practice resulted in the first instance of a non-Libyan vessel, the Asso Ventotto, being instructed to coordinate with the Tripoli Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre (JRCC). The ship ultimately disembarked the rescued persons on Libyan territory and thus effectively engaged in refoulement and collective expulsion of migrants.

      The practice of outsourcing European border control to the Libyan Coast Guard has brought about a sharp increase in its activity: by the end of July 2018, the LCG had intercepted 12,490 migrants at sea compared to 8,851 during the same period in the previous year, which amounts to a 41% increase. In combination with the drop in departures, this policy has resulted in a rapid increase in the risk of interception. To illustrate this fact, in July 2017 just 6% of migrants leaving Libya by sea ended up being caught and brought back, while almost 94% made it to Europe. In July 2018, instead, 71% of migrants leaving Libya’s shores were intercepted and brought back, while just 24% arrived safely in a European country (see Figure 2).

      Trend #3: An increase in the absolute and relative mortality rate between mid-June and July 2018

      In this section, we look at trends in absolute mortality (the number of dead and missing people at sea) and relative mortality (the risk of crossing) of migrants departing from Libya. In particular, we analyse the widely reported spike in deaths that occurred in late June 2018, after virtually all SAR NGOs had been prevented from operating as a result of policies introduced by the new Italian Minister of Interior Salvini from the far-right Lega and the continued denial by the Maltese authorities to offer Valetta as a port of entry. On June 10, Italy unilaterally decided to declare its ports to be “closed” to NGO rescue ships, as well as (temporarily) to commercial and EU vessels carrying rescued migrants. Also Malta tightened its position on rescue activities and cracked down on two SAR NGOs in early July. Since then, rescue operations close to the Libyan coast have been almost entirely delegated to the LCG.

      First, we look at trends in the absolute mortality rate. Figure 3 shows a reduction in the monthly number of deaths since July 2017, commensurate with the reduction in the number of departures described above. For example, 20 deaths were recorded in April 2018, and 11 in May (Figure 3). In June, however, an estimated 451 migrants died on their way from Libya to Europe—of which 370 between 16 and 30 June. It is important to note that these deaths occurred during a time when departures were comparatively low. As a result, the risk of crossing has increased from 2.8% in the previous months to a staggering 7% since mid-June 2018 (Figure 4). These findings are also robust to using different time frames for the pre-NGO absence period, including the entire period since the drop of arrivals in July 2017 until the NGO ban. Whereas relative mortality has fluctuated in recent years, 7% constitute an extraordinary spike.

      Figure 5 maps shipwreck events occurring between 16 June and 31 July 2018 with at least estimated 15 dead or missing persons, using geocoded data provided by IOM’s Missing Migrants Project. While the precise location of each shipwreck is only an estimate, as “precise locations are not often known” (as explained in the “Methodology” section of the Missing Migrants Project), such estimates do provide an indication of where such shipwrecks have taken place. In particular, IOM data shows that shipwrecks between 16 June and 31 July took place well within 50 nautical miles from Libya’s shores, an area which used to be patrolled by either the LCG or NGO vessels. Yet, during the time when deaths spiked, only two NGO vessels had been operating, and only discontinuously.

      These observations are reminiscent of what happened in 2015, when the withdrawal of competent SAR providers (the Italian mission Mare Nostrum) similarly created the conditions for avoidable loss of life. Although these findings are based on a relatively short time period, they are suggestive of the risk of leaving the Libyan SAR zone to the operations of the LCG alone. Continuous monitoring of the situation remains of utmost importance.

      Conclusion

      In combination, the three trends described above highlight the harsh realities of recent European migration policies, which seek to limit irregular migration regardless of the moral, legal and humanitarian consequences. The current European obsession with reducing migration at all costs is even less comprehensible when considering that arrivals decreased drastically prior to the most recent escalation of rhetoric and externalization of migration control. Arrivals to Italy in the first half of 2018 were down by 79% compared to the same time frame in 2017. Although increasingly inhumane policies are often cloaked in a rhetoric about reducing deaths at sea, it is important to remember that those who are prevented from crossing or forcibly returned are generally not safe but remain subject to precarious and often lethal conditions in countries of transit. Rather than providing a sustainable response to the complex challenges involved in irregular migration, Europe has outsourced the management of its migration ’problem’ to countries like Libya and Niger, where violence and death often remains hidden from the public view.

      https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2018/09/outsourcing

    • Arrivées en Europe via la Méditerranée :
      2018 :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/705781
      Arrivées en Europe toute frontière confondue :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/739902
      –-> attention, c’est les « crossings »... rappelez-vous de la question des doubles/triples contages des passages :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/705957

      Pour #2016 #2017 et #2018, chiffres de Matteo Villa :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/768142
      database : https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ncHxOHIx4ptt4YFXgGi9TIbwd53HaR3oFbrfBm67ak4/edit#gid=0
      #base_de_données #database

    • Arrivées par la #Méditerranée en #2019 :
      Europe : plus de 21.000 migrants et réfugiés arrivés par la Méditerranée depuis janvier

      Selon l’Agence des Nations Unies pour les migrations (OIM ), les arrivées de migrants en Méditerranée ont dépassé le seuil des 21.000, ce qui constitue une baisse d’environ un tiers par rapport aux 32.070 arrivés au cours de la même période l’an dernier.

      Ce sont exactement 21.301 migrants et réfugiés qui sont entrés en Europe par voie maritime à la date du 29 mai. Les arrivées en Espagne et en Grèce représentent 85% du total des arrivées, le reste des migrants et réfugiés de cette année ont pris la direction de l’Italie, de Malte et de Chypre.

      La Grèce a désormais surpassé l’Espagne au titre de première destination des migrants et des réfugiés rejoignant l’Europe via la Méditerranée. Selon l’Organisation internationale pour les migrations (OIM), le nombre total d’arrivées par mer cette année est de 10.200 dont 2.483 arrivées signalées entre le 1er et le 29 mai dernier.

      Le Bureau de l’OIM en Grèce a indiqué mercredi dernier que les garde-côtes helléniques ont confirmé que pendant plus de 48 heures entre le 28 et le 29 mai, il y eu sept incidents nécessitant des opérations de recherche et sauvetage au large des îles de Lesbos, Leros, Samos, Symi Kos et le port d’Alexandroupolis. Ils ont ainsi sauvé 191 migrants qui ont été transférés par la suite dans les ports respectifs grecs.

      De plus, à la date du 30 avril, ce sont 3.497 migrants qui ont réussi à atteindre la Grèce via sa frontière terrestre avec la Turquie.
      519 décès de migrants, dont plus de la moitié sur la route de la Méditerranée centrale

      L’Espagne reste la deuxième porte d’entrée des réfugiés en Méditerranée, avec 7.876 arrivées dont 1.160 hommes, femmes et enfants pour le seul mois de mai. Sur la même période l’an dernier, Madrid a comptabilisé 8.150 migrants et réfugiés ayant réussi à franchir la route de la Méditerranée occidentale. En outre, plus de 2.100 ont atteint l’Espagne via sa frontière terrestre avec le Maroc.

      Par ailleurs, l’OIM rappelle que les arrivées ont considérablement baissé en Italie où seuls 1.561 migrants ont réussi à franchir les côtes siciliennes.

      Mais la route de la Méditerranée centrale (Italie et Malte) reste tout de même la plus meurtrière avec 321 décès, soit plus de la moitié du total de migrants et réfugiés ayant péri en tentant d’atteindre l’Europe. Les décès enregistrés sur les trois principales routes de la mer Méditerranée pendant près de cinq mois en 2019 s’élèvent à 519 personnes, soit un quart de moins que les 662 décès confirmés au cours de la même période en 2018.

      A cet égard, l’OIM rappelle que dans l’ouest de la Méditerranée, l’organisation non gouvernementale Alarme Phone a signalé qu’un jeune Camerounais avait disparu le 21 mai dernier. Selon les témoignages des huit survivants qui l’accompagnaient, il serait tombé en mer avant que leur navire ne soit intercepté par la marine marocaine. Son corps n’a pas été retrouvé.

      En Méditerranée centrale, des migrants interceptés et renvoyés en Libye le 23 mai ont également indiqué aux équipes de l’OIM que cinq hommes s’étaient noyés au cours de leur voyage. « Aucun autre détail concernant l’identité, le pays d’origine ou d’autres informations personnelles concernant les disparus n’est disponible », a souligné l’OIM dans une note à la presse.

      https://news.un.org/fr/story/2019/05/1044671

  • L’EPFZ accusée de mener des recherches risquées au Nigeria Jean-Marc Heuberger/jgal - 31 Aout 2018 - RTS
    http://www.rts.ch/info/suisse/9812239-l-epfz-accusee-de-mener-des-recherches-risquees-au-nigeria.html

    L’Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Zurich (EPFZ) profiterait d’une législation plus laxiste en Afrique pour mener une expérience de dissémination d’OGM jugée dangereuse par plusieurs ONG suisses et nigérianes, révèle vendredi SRF.
    Cible des critiques, le projet de la biologiste Livia Stavolone qui étudie en conditions réelles du manioc génétiquement modifié à Ibadan, au Nigeria.


    « Cet essai est purement scientifique. Nous voulons savoir si les résultats obtenus en laboratoire à Zurich se confirment dans les conditions réelles », explique-t-elle à l’émission alémanique 10 vor 10. L’objectif est de rallonger la durée de conservation du manioc, l’un des aliments de base en Afrique, via génie génétique.

    Normes internationales « respectées »
    Malgré les mesures prises pour surveiller le terrain jour et nuit, le projet est vivement critiqué par Swissaid. L’ONG suisse juge le projet risqué et accuse l’EPFZ de profiter de la législation moins stricte au Nigeria pour s’épargner des contrôles de sécurité qui seraient exigés en Suisse.

    « Il faut s’assurer que les mêmes normes soient appliquées en Suisse comme à l’étranger », estime Céline Kohlprath, responsable de la politique de développement et médias pour Swissaid.

    Du côté de la haute école, on assure que « les risques sont très limités ». « Nous respectons les normes internationales. Toutes les plantes ont un code et à la fin nous brûlerons tout ce que nous avons amené », indique Livia Stavolone.

    #EPFZ #Suisse #OGM #livia_stavolone #manioc #Nigeria #Plantes #agriculture #environnement #nature_/_ecologie #Afrique #cobayes #génie_génétique

  • Organized crime in Nigeria - Wikipedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organized_crime_in_Nigeria

    An example of this are the highly organized confraternities/campus gangs that operate worldwide, for example the Neo Black Movement of Africa. In its own words, the Neo Black Movement of Africa is a “registered non-partisan, non-religious and non-tribal organisation that sincerely seek to revive, retain and modify where necessary those aspects of African culture that would provide vehicles of progress for Africa and her peoples”.

    The current worldwide head of the Neo Black Movement is Augustus Bemigho-Oyeoyibo. A representative of the Neo Black Movement of Africa has claimed to be separate from the Black Axe groups and has engaged in charitable giving.

    Behind the welfare facade of the Neo Black Movement hides indeed the most dreaded Nigerian campus cult, the Black Axe confraternity. NBM usually state that they are not identical with Black Axe for propaganda purposes. While the atrocities committed by campus cult members are well-known, very little is known about other activities of the Neo Black Movement. Offiong claims that the group’s initial goal of promoting black consciousness and fighting for the dignity of Africans and their freedom from neo-colonialism has deteriorated into self-serving behaviour that is “notoriously and brutally violent”. He maintains that violence has in fact become the cult’s official policy.

    Apart from the atrocities in the orbit of NBM, most members of the confraternity are involved in fraud and cyber crime. The main reason to join the confraternity is (besides the pressure and intimidation that is applied to students to join) the fact that the confraternity has infiltrated all spheres of Nigerian society and serves the main purpose of helping its members climb the career ladder and going unpunished for their crimes by means of their nepotistic structure.

    Investigations and a number of arrests of members of NBM by the Italian police brought to light various crimes committed by members of NBM. NBM and other cults were found guilty of smuggling of drugs, extortion, 419 fraud, prostitution, passport falsification, and cloning of credit cards.

    In 2011, eight more members of NBM were arrested in Italy for the same offenses mentioned above. They are referred to as an international criminal organisation and Nigerian Mafia. According to internal documents, the confraternity helps members to immigrate illegally to Europe. Nigerian fraud rings have been exported to Europe, America, and Asia (see external links section). In 2015 a sophisticated car theft ring run by the Black Axe organized crime ring was busted in Toronto, Canada. The ring had stolen more than 500 luxury cars in one year, valued at 30 million US dollars.

    #Nigeria #Black_Axe #crime

  • Italy: After Cosa Nostra, Nigerian Black Axe New Foe for Police
    https://www.occrp.org/en/27-ccwatch/cc-watch-briefs/8095-aly-after-cosa-nostra-nigerian-black-axe-new-foe-for-police

    Published: Thursday, 17 May 2018 13:37
    WRITTEN BY JELTER MEERS

    Sicilian authorities that have been fighting the Cosa Nostra for decades are facing a new type of organized crime: a Nigerian sex and drug trafficking gang called Black Axe, NPR reported Wednesday.

    Black Axe members are arrested (Polizia di Stato)
    After the Cosa Nostra in Palermo had been weakened by police, the Black Axe swooped in. A bloody war between authorities and mafia in the 1990s followed by a crackdown on its leading figures created an opening for new criminal groups to take over.

    “The Nigerian organizations have settled in places where mafia groups don’t have complete control,” said Cesare Sirignano, a magistrate at the National Anti-Mafia Directorate.

    As long as they give the original gangsters a cut or “pizzo” of their drug and prostitution profits and don’t encroach on the mafia’s businesses, “the presence of the Nigerian gangs isn’t a problem for the Italian mafia groups," Sirignano said.

    In Palermo, Black Axe operate from the Ballaro neighborhood, home to the city’s oldest market where the air is filled with vendors screaming in thick Sicilian accents and the smells of fresh produce, meat, fish, olives and cheese.

    But that is not the only place where you can get a taste, or “un assaggio.”

    The Nigerian gang uses the neighborhood’s historic but rundown houses to hold the women, and sometimes underage girls, whom they force to prostitute themselves on the city streets.

    “We have shut down several houses ... most of them rundown, some of them entire old buildings in bad shape in Ballaro ... where these girls would be forced into prostitution,” said former Palermo police officer Carmine Mosca.

    On promises of good jobs, Nigerian women have been trafficked to Italy since the 1980s but there has been a spike in recent years.

    The International Organization for Migration said that in 2016 and 2017, the main nationality of people arriving by sea was Nigeria.

    They estimate that 80 percent of Nigerian women arriving in Italy are potential trafficking victims and said the number of minors is increasing.

    While authorities have the tools, such as anti-mafia laws, to combat new crime groups from their fights against local mafia, the same long struggle has made some cities more susceptible to organized crime newcomers, Sirignano said.

    #Nigeria #Black_Axe #Italie #Mafia #Prostitution

  • NBM disowns Black Axe over arrest of 120 suspected cultists NBM disowns Black Axe over arrest of 120 suspected cultists % - The Sun News– The Sun News
    http://sunnewsonline.com/nbm-disowns-black-axe-over-arrest-of-120-suspected-cultists

    12th July 2018 Adewale Sanyaolu

    The Neo Black Movement of Africa (NBM) has denied having any relationship with a group named Black Axe, saying the use of its logo by the group was an infringement on its copyright.

    Recall that the Police had, last week, arrested 120 persons alleged to be members of Black Axe group during the celebration of 777 in preparation for initiation into the group in the Ikorodu area of Lagos.

    The NBM, in a statement by its National President, Engr. Felix Kupa, said its attention had been drawn to the picture accompanying the arrest of 120 suspected cultists in Lagos, which is currently circulating in various online website and blogs, adding that NBM has no approval of any ceremony on the said date.

    ‘‘While we commend the Police Force for the prompt enforcement of law and order, we are however constrained to make this public announcement in view of our noticing a possible infringement on our organizations copyrighted names and logo in the accompanying picture.

    “For the non-discerning, the banner in the accompanying picture may seem as ours and therefore may have a damaging effect on our brand name in the eyes of those who are not able to tell the difference between the one in the picture and ours.

    “We hereby restate, as we always have when our attention is drawn to possible abuse of our names and logo by imposters.”

    The NBM said as a law-abiding organisation registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and which facts have severally been reaffirmed by various courts of the Federal Republic of Nigeria have no relationship with Black Axe.

    “The banner is not ours and we state without any equivocation that none of our member is among the arrested persons.

    “We have instructed our solicitors to liaise with the police to ascertain who or those we will be pressing a case of copyright violation against.

    “We as an organisation remain resolute in the aims and objectives guiding our organisation regardless of the attempts by imposters to distract us from our chosen path.

    “We urge the Police Force to, within the context of due process; charge any infractions of the laws to the court for proper adjudication,’’ Kupa said.

    NBM disowns Black Axe over arrest of 120 suspected cultists NBM disowns Black Axe over arrest of 120 suspected cultists % - The Sun News– The Sun News
    http://sunnewsonline.com/nbm-disowns-black-axe-over-arrest-of-120-suspected-cultists

    12th July 2018 Adewale Sanyaolu

    The Neo Black Movement of Africa (NBM) has denied having any relationship with a group named Black Axe, saying the use of its logo by the group was an infringement on its copyright.

    Recall that the Police had, last week, arrested 120 persons alleged to be members of Black Axe group during the celebration of 777 in preparation for initiation into the group in the Ikorodu area of Lagos.

    The NBM, in a statement by its National President, Engr. Felix Kupa, said its attention had been drawn to the picture accompanying the arrest of 120 suspected cultists in Lagos, which is currently circulating in various online website and blogs, adding that NBM has no approval of any ceremony on the said date.

    ‘‘While we commend the Police Force for the prompt enforcement of law and order, we are however constrained to make this public announcement in view of our noticing a possible infringement on our organizations copyrighted names and logo in the accompanying picture.

    “For the non-discerning, the banner in the accompanying picture may seem as ours and therefore may have a damaging effect on our brand name in the eyes of those who are not able to tell the difference between the one in the picture and ours.

    “We hereby restate, as we always have when our attention is drawn to possible abuse of our names and logo by imposters.”

    The NBM said as a law-abiding organisation registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and which facts have severally been reaffirmed by various courts of the Federal Republic of Nigeria have no relationship with Black Axe.

    “The banner is not ours and we state without any equivocation that none of our member is among the arrested persons.

    “We have instructed our solicitors to liaise with the police to ascertain who or those we will be pressing a case of copyright violation against.

    “We as an organisation remain resolute in the aims and objectives guiding our organisation regardless of the attempts by imposters to distract us from our chosen path.

    “We urge the Police Force to, within the context of due process; charge any infractions of the laws to the court for proper adjudication,’’ Kupa said.

    #Nigeria #Black_Axe

  • Shadowy Black Axe group leaves trail of tattered lives - The Globe and Mail
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/shadowy-black-axe-group-leaves-trail-of-tattered-lives/article27244946

    Canadian police say they are fighting a new kind of criminal organization.

    The signs began to appear two years ago: photos on Facebook of men wearing odd, matching outfits.

    Then there were stories, even old police files, attached to the people in the photos: a kidnapping, a man run over by a car, brutal beatings over what seemed to be a small slight.

    Mapping a secret criminal hierarchy for the first time is a rare kind of detective work. So when two Toronto police officers and an RCMP analyst in British Columbia started documenting the existence of something called the “Black Axe, Canada Zone,” they could not have predicted it would take them to funerals, suburban barbecue joints and deep into African history before they understood what they were seeing.

    The Black Axe is feared in Nigeria, where it originated. It is a “death cult,” one expert said. Once an idealistic university fraternity, the group has been linked to decades of murders and rapes, and its members are said to swear a blood oath.

    Most often, the group is likened to the Mob or to biker gangs, especially as it spreads outside Nigeria.

    An investigation by The Globe and Mail that included interviews with about 20 people found that “Axemen,” as they call themselves, are setting up chapters around the world, including in Canada.

    Like any criminal organization, it focuses on profit, police say. But instead of drug or sex trafficking, it specializes in a crime many consider minor and non-violent: scamming.

    What police have also learned is that, when done on an “industrial” level as part of a professional global network, scams ruin lives on a scale they have rarely seen.

    Two weeks ago, at a news conference attended by FBI officers, Toronto police announced they had taken part in an international crackdown on a money-laundering network through which more than $5-billion flowed in just over a year. Two local men charged with defrauding a Toronto widow of her life’s savings will eventually face extradition to the United States on money-laundering charges, they said.

    Online fraud is fluid, global and hard-to-track, but it often requires local operatives. Several Toronto-area residents have been defrauded of at least $1-million each in the past two years, and police allege the money was wired with the help of Canadian residents linked to the Black Axe, and sometimes it was handed to the group’s associates in person. The recipients then sent the money ricocheting through bank accounts around the globe, with trusted members in countries on every continent helping with the transfers before it disappeared.

    The sophistication of the money-laundering scheme reflects the efficiency of the scams, in which several people assume false identities and mix reality – bank accounts, real names and real websites – with fake documents.

    The police added an extra charge for one of the men they arrested, Akohomen Ighedoise, 41: “participating in a criminal organization.”

    Officers said in an interview they seized documents that will prove in court that Mr. Ighedoise separately helped a network of fraudsters launder money, that the fraudsters are members of the Black Axe and that he is their bookkeeper. The charge is the first time a Canadian has been publicly linked to the group.

    Interviews with police, gang experts and Nigerian academics paint a picture of an organization both public and enigmatic, with an ostensible charitable purpose as well as secret codes and a strict hierarchy. Police say it has grown to 200 people across Canada.

    Officers in Canada first heard the name “Black Axe” less than two years ago, said Tim Trotter, a detective constable with the Toronto Police Service. They are working quickly, trying to stop the group from becoming entrenched.

    “I mean, 100 years ago, law enforcement dealt with the same thing, the Sicilian black hand, right? It meant nothing to anybody except the Sicilian community,” Det. Constable Trotter said. “And that’s what we have here – that’s what we believe we have here.”

    **

    Many scam victims lose a few thousand dollars. Soraya Emami, one of Toronto’s most recent victims, lost everything, including many friends.

    In 1988, Ms. Emami fled her native Iran with her four sons. Her husband was jailed by the regime and his passport was held for years. Ms. Emami flew to Canada and became a real estate agent in North York.

    It took 30 years to save for a nice house in quiet Stouffville, Ont. The rest of her earnings went to her boys, who grew up to be a doctor, an engineer, a computer engineer and a bank manager. Last year, the youngest – a fifth son, born in Canada – began university. She and her husband had never reunited, and for the first time in decades, Ms. Emami thought about dating.

    “My kids grow up, and I feel lonely,” said the 63-year-old, who has long, wavy black hair. “I didn’t know how, and because I’m not [used to] any relationship, I feel shy.”

    Ms. Emami saw a TV commercial for Match.com and joined, hesitantly. A few days later, she told a friend she had heard from a tanned, white-haired, very nice geologist. Fredrick Franklin said he lived just 45 minutes away, in Toronto’s wealthy Bridle Path neighbourhood.

    He had spent years in Australia, and when they talked on the phone, she could not always understand his thick accent at first. He called her several times a day from Vancouver, where he was on a business trip, then from Turkey, where he travelled on a short contract. He was to fly home via Delta airlines on May 5. She would pick him up from the airport, and they would finally meet.

    “I am a simple man in nature, very easy going,” he wrote in an e-mail, telling her about his son and granddaughters. “I have done the Heart and Stroke ride in Toronto for the past 2 years, have also done the MS ride from London to Grand Bend.”

    A few days before his return date, Mr. Franklin called Ms. Emami in a panic. His bank had told him someone had tried to gain access to his account, he said. He could not clear it up from rural Turkey, so would she mind calling the bank and reporting back with his balance? He e-mailed the phone number for SunTrust bank, a 10-digit account number and a nine-digit tax ID number.

    She spoke to a bank teller. The balance, she was told, was $18-million.

    A few days later, Mr. Franklin asked for a small favour – could she send him a new phone and laptop – saying he would repay her upon his return. She acquiesced, believing he could pay her back.

    Within a few weeks, she lost half a million dollars, and the scam would cost her the home in Stouffville.

    What perplexes police about some of the Toronto romance frauds is not how the victims could be so naive, but how the fraudsters could be so convincing.

    The SunTrust account appears to be real, The Globe determined after retracing the steps Ms. Emami took to access it. The bank said it could not verify the account’s existence, as that was client-related information.

    In the course of the scam, Ms. Emami spoke to at least five people other than the Aussie geologist, including two in person.

    In June, in what they called Project Unromantic, York Regional Police charged nine local people in several cases, including that of Ms. Emami, that added up to $1.5-million. They considered the criminals to be internationally connected. “We don’t know who’s at the top, but there seems to be a hierarchy,” Detective Courtney Chang said.

    The Toronto police believe the crimes that led to their charges against Mr. Ighedoise are linked to the ones in York Region.

    *

    Canadian police came across the Black Axe by happenstance. In 2013, an RCMP analyst in Vancouver was investigating a West Coast fraud suspect and found a photo of him on Facebook with another man, said Det. Constable Trotter (the analyst would not speak to The Globe). Both were wearing unusual clothes and seemed to be at a meeting in Toronto.

    The analyst discovered the second man was under investigation by Toronto financial crimes detective Mike Kelly, an old partner of Det. Constable Trotter. The analyst e-mailed Det. Constable Kelly to ask if he knew the significance of what the two men in the photo were wearing.

    The uniform of the Black Axe is a black beret, a yellow soccer scarf and high yellow socks. These items often have a patch or insignia showing two manacled hands with an axe separating the chain between them, which sometimes also says “Black Axe” or “NBM,” standing for “Neo-Black Movement,” another name for the group. They often incorporate the numbers seven or 147.

    The group tries to maintain a public image of volunteerism. It has been registered as a corporation in Ontario since 2012 under the name “Neo-Black Movement of Africa North America,” with Mr. Ighedoise among several people listed as administrators. In the United Kingdom, said Det. Constable Trotter, it has been known to make small donations – to a local hospital, for example – and then claim to be in a “partnership” with the legitimate organization.

    In the GTA, the group got itself listed publicly in 2013 as a member of Volunteer MBC, a volunteer centre serving Mississauga, Brampton and Caledon. But after expressing an interest in recruiting volunteers, the group involved never posted an ad, and staff at the centre said when they tried to follow up, they found the three yahoo.com addresses on file were no longer working.

    Police found plenty of photos on social media of men in Axemen uniforms at what were said to be conferences or events.

    Det. Constable Kelly and Det. Constable Trotter compiled a list of people in Canada photographed wearing Axemen outfits. From a car, they watched some of them attend a funeral. One mourner had yellow socks and a yellow cummerbund with NBM on it, Det. Constable Trotter said. The rest were dressed normally. Near the end of the ceremony, “all of a sudden the berets and everything came out, and then they put the coffin into the earth,” he said.

    As they added names to their list, the investigators checked each one for connections to previous cases.

    What they found were 10 to 20 episodes of serious violence over the past few years clearly linked to members of the group, many of them at a Nigerian restaurant in northwest Toronto, Det. Constable Trotter said. One man had been run over by a car; another was allegedly kidnapped and beaten with a liquor bottle for a day in an abandoned building; a man was knocked to the ground for refusing to fetch another man a beer. Witnesses generally refused to talk.

    In one incident, a group of men had insulted another man’s girlfriend, and when he objected, they “beat the living hell” out of him, leaving him with cranial fractures, Det. Constable Trotter said.

    “Without the understanding of the context, it’s just a bar fight,” he said. “But when we understand who those people were, and we realize, oh, they’re all affiliated to the group … that’s why no one called [911]. And that’s why, when the police came, suddenly, oh no, those cameras don’t work. And that’s why, out of a bar full of people, the only witness was his girlfriend.”

    That case and the kidnapping case are before the courts, Det. Constable Trotter said. The Globe tried to search for all court records linked to the bar’s address over the past few years, but was told such a search is impossible.

    Police have six criteria to identify members of the group, Det. Constable Trotter said. If a person meets three of the six, he is considered a likely member.

    Police have documents that show when certain people were “blended” or initiated into the group, including some in Toronto, he said. Members live mostly in Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver.

    “There’s evidence that they’ve been active since 2005, so that’s a decade’s worth of ability to lay under the radar and become ensconced in the criminal community,” he said.

    To set up scams, they work from cafés or home and are “fastidious” about deleting their online history, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    “They have names, titles, they show respect,” Det. Constable Trotter said. “They pay dues to each other. Individuals are detailed by higher-ranking individuals to do things.”

    As they learned of the group’s fearsome reputation in Nigeria, the officers began to equate it more with established Canadian organized crime. At Afrofest in Woodbine Park one summer, a group of Axemen walked through in full uniform – not something anyone from the Nigerian community would do lightly, Det. Constable Trotter said. “I wouldn’t wear a Hells Angels vest if I wasn’t a Hells Angel.”

    He began to worry the group’s brazenness would signify to the community that “Axemen are here. And they’re open about it, and the police are doing nothing.”

    *

    Fraternities such as the Black Axe were born during an optimistic time in Nigeria’s recent history, and at first they reflected it. In the postcolonial 1970s, they were modelled after U.S. fraternities. They attracted top students and were meant to foster pan-African unity and Nigeria’s future leaders.

    When the country descended into widespread corruption after its oil boom, the fraternities split into factions and violently sought power on campuses, trying to control grades and student politics and gain the loyalty of the richest, best-connected students.

    Through the 1990s and 2000s, the groups inspired terror: Students were hacked to death or shot in their sleep, and professors were murdered in their offices in what seemed to be random attacks. Researchers say such crimes were often assigned to new members in their late teens to prove their allegiance after a painful hazing in an isolated cemetery or forest.

    “Sometimes, they are given some tough assignments like raping a very popular female student or a female member of the university staff,” Adewale Rotimi wrote in a 2005 scholarly article.

    Raping the daughters of rich and powerful families, or the girlfriends of enemies, was another tactic of the groups to prove their dominance, Ifeanyi Ezeonu wrote in 2013.

    In addition to innocent victims, one West African organization fighting cult violence says more than 1,700 fraternity members died in inter-group wars in a 10-year span. The groups were outlawed, and much of their ritualistic element – night-time ceremonies, code words – seemed to evolve to avoid detection, said Ogaga Ifowodo, who was a student in Nigeria during the 1980s and later taught at Cornell and Texas State universities.

    “Early on … you could distinguish them by their costume,” he said. “The Black Axe, they tended to wear black berets, black shirt and jeans.”

    The transformation was not a coincidence, Mr. Ifowodo said.

    “At that time, we were under military dictatorships, and they had actually propped up the now-secret cults as a way of weakening the students’ movements,” he said. “It violates something that I think is sacred to an academic community, which is bringing into campus a kind of Mafia ethos.”

    But this does not explain whether, or how, the fraternities could morph into a sophisticated global crime syndicate.

    In Nigeria, the groups are not associated with fraud, said Etannibi Alemika, who teaches at Nigeria’s University of Jos. Mr. Ifowodo agreed. However, he also backed Toronto Police’s conclusion that Black Axe is one and the same as the Neo-Black Movement. In a briefing document posted online, Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board says the two are closely linked, but speculates that the Black Axe is a “splinter group” of the NBM.

    The NBM is known to carry out fraud, said Jonathan Matusitz, a professor at the University of Central Florida who has studied Nigerian fraternities. He said the group’s members have also been linked, mostly in Nigeria, to drug trafficking, pimping, extortion, and the falsification or copying of passports and credit cards.

    “I think that the NBM movement is more about scamming people, and it has some associations with the Black Axe, which kills people,” he said. “Have they joined forces to have like a super-group? I hope not.”

    Despite police fears, several people interviewed by The Globe, mostly business owners, said they had never heard of the Black Axe before the police news conference last week.

    Kingsley Jesuorobo, a Toronto lawyer who has many Nigerian-Canadian clients, said he has never heard of anyone being intimidated by the group.

    Mr. Jesuorobo said he is familiar with the Black Axe in the Nigerian context, but cannot imagine it posing a real threat in Canada. It is more likely that former members gravitate to each other for social reasons, he said.

    “It would be a case of comparing apples and oranges to look at how these guys operate – the impunity that characterizes their actions – in Nigeria, and then sort of come to the conclusion that they can do the same thing here,” he said.

    For Nigerian-Canadians, a cultural minority working hard to establish themselves, the idea is very troubling, he said.

    “If these things are true, it would be a bad omen for our community,” he said.

    *

    After confirming her love interest’s $18-million bank balance, Ms. Emami did not hear from him for a few days. When they spoke again, she told him she had worried. He responded that it was a sign of how close they had become; she had sensed something had happened.

    The geologist said that during his contract in Turkey, he had been in a mining accident. He was injured and could not get to Istanbul to replace his phone and laptop, which had been destroyed, so would she buy new ones and send them by courier? Ms. Emami went to the Apple Store at Fairview Mall and called him, asking if he could pay with his credit card over the phone. He said the store would not allow it, and the employee agreed. So she bought the $4,000 laptop and phone and shipped them.

    A few days later, he called again: He needed $80,000 to pay the salary of an employee, promising to repay with interest. She told him she would have to borrow from her son, but he reassured her, and she wired the money in several instalments.

    The day of his flight, a man called and said he was Mr. Franklin’s lawyer and was with him at the Istanbul airport. Someone injured in the mining accident had died, he said, and Mr. Franklin owed $130,000 to his family or he would go to jail.

    “He’s calling me, he’s crying to me,” she said. “I didn’t have any choice. I go to friends and everybody I know. Because you know, when you’re trying to be a good person, everybody trusts you. …Whatever I asked, they give me.”

    Even a friend of a friend, a cab driver, lent her thousands. “He told me, you know, dollar by dollar I collected this money,” she recalled.

    Mr. Franklin sent her details of his rebooked flight, and she promised to pick him up and cook a meal. He would love that, he said; he liked chicken.

    “You don’t believe how much food I make for him,” she said.

    She was waiting with the packed-up meal the morning of his flight when the phone rang again. It was another lawyer, this time at the Frankfurt airport, he said. Mr. Franklin owed $250,000 in tax before he could leave the country with a valuable stone.

    “My heart is just – crash,” she said. “I was crying on the phone. I said, ’Please don’t do this to me. … Why are you doing this to me? I told you from the first day, I’m borrowing this money from people.’”

    A man saying he was Mr. Franklin’s son, who also had an Australian accent, called and told her he had remortgaged his house to save his father and might lose custody of his children because of it. Ms. Emami pulled together $158,000. When her bank would not let her transfer the money, she was instructed to meet a man and a woman in person who deposited it into their accounts.

    Ms. Emami’s son and her manager at work persuaded her to go to police. When officers told her Mr. Franklin was not real and the money was likely gone for good, they called a psychiatrist to help her grasp the news.

    She cannot pay her bills or afford groceries, her credit rating is destroyed and she is hunting for work despite crippling headaches. On Oct. 27, she was served with notice that she will lose her house in Stouffville in 20 days.

    “I can’t sleep,” she said recently, crying.

    She had always considered it her “duty” to help people in need, she said. Now her friends, even her sons, are angry that the scam impoverished them as well.

    “It’s my life, it’s my relationships,” she said. “And after 30 years living here with five kids, you know, I can’t live in the street. I can’t go to the shelter.”

    *

    Other local women describe the lengths fraudsters went to to blend truth and fiction. One received a forged Ontario provincial contract. Two victims in York said the scammers impersonated an Edmonton mining executive. The fraudsters build Facebook and LinkedIn accounts that seem to be populated by friends and family.

    “When we Google them, they do seem real,” one woman said.

    Daniel Williams of the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, a federal intelligence-gathering agency on fraud, said the scammers profit from economies of scale. “What they did to you, they were doing to 8,000 people that day,” he said.

    The agency gets more calls from fraud victims a day than it can answer, sometimes exceeding 2,000. Staff look for waves of calls complaining of the same methods.

    Authorities estimate they are only ever aware of about 1 per cent to 5 per cent of fraud committed globally, Mr. Williams said. Many victims do not believe they have been scammed or will not report it out of embarrassment.

    Fraudsters, sometimes using credit checks, also home in on well-off victims for special treatment, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    “It’s just like, oh, we’ve got somebody on $100,000 level, let’s steer this to this person,” he said.

    The amount taken from Toronto victims alone is “absolutely astonishing,” he said.

    “If you were going to distribute cocaine, for example, you have to buy that cocaine from another smuggler somewhere, and you have to put up money for that,” he said.

    “In fraud, what is your put-up? What is your overhead? Your commodity that you’re trading in, that you’re selling, is BS. BS is cheap, it’s abundant, it’s infinite. You know, it can be replicated again and again and again and again. … And that’s why it’s a better business.”

    Fraudsters based in Canada work with people in Kuala Lumpur, in Tokyo, in Lagos, Det. Constable Kelly said.

    At the turn of the 20th century in New York, Italian-owned banks started suffering bombings, and homes were mysteriously burned down. Police heard the incidents happened after warnings from something called the “black hand.” But no officers spoke Italian, and investigations were stymied.

    It was not until the 1950s that widespread police crackdowns began. By that time, the group now known as the Mafia had spread around the world and made new alliances. The FBI estimates the organization has about 25,000 members and a quarter-million affiliates worldwide, including about 3,000 in the United States.

    Police hope the charge against Mr. Ighedoise will send an early message to Canada’s Axemen. York and Toronto officers are working to confirm connections between the fraud ring that impoverished Ms. Emami and the ring that Mr. Ighedoise is alleged to help lead.

    At their recent press conference, they appealed to the Nigerian community to report instances where the Black Axe has “intimidated” others.

    They want to know how ambitious the group really is, Det. Constable Trotter said, and how much it is feared.

    If Axemen rely on selling stories, he said, the most important one is for their own community: “That [they] have all the power and authority and the propensity for violence that [they] have back home, here in Canada.”

    #Canada #scam #Nigeria #Black_Axe

  • An Assessment of Black Axe Confraternity Cult in Nigeria: Its Impact on the University Educational System - January 2017
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/318773709_An_Assessment_of_Black_Axe_Confraternity_Cult_in_Nigeria_Its

    PDF: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Aminu_Surajo2/publication/318773709_An_Assessment_of_Black_Axe_Confraternity_Cult_in_Nigeria_Its_Impact_on_the_University_Educational_System/links/597d8971458515687b485967/An-Assessment-of-Black-Axe-Confraternity-Cult-in-Nigeria-Its-Impact-on

    The thesis focuses attention on the activities of Black Axe Confraternity cult in major Nigerian university campuses. The cult group brings about lack of peace and stability in the campus as a result of incessant violence with the rival cult groups. The activities of Black Axe Confraternity cult started at the University of Benin and spread to various universities. The Black Axe cult members also involved in armed robbery, drug trafficking, kidnapping, election rigging and other political malpractice. Every year newly recruited members were initiated into the cult group and they swear with the oath of secrecy. From that day, they give their allegiance to their leaders. The impacts of Black Axe Confraternity cult includes interruption of the academic calendar, lack of peace of minds, insecurity and uncertainty among students, death and injury of many members including the innocent students, destruction of the university properties, the involvement of election violence and civil disobedience. The solutions to the problems of Black Axe Confraternity cult group in Nigerian university campuses comprises of public enlightenment campaign on the negative effect of cultism, moral reorientation, discouraging politicians from assisting the cult member financially, admission based on merit and expulsion of students involved in campus cult violence. The parents, society, government and the religious organisations have the greater role to play in bringing an end to the problem which affects the university educational system in Nigerian.

    #université #Nigeria #Black_Axe

  • Cocorico Monsieur Poulet
    http://www.nova-cinema.org/prog/2018/167-pleinopenair/weekend-2/article/cocorico-monsieur-poulet

    Jean Rouch, 1977, NE, 16mm, 93’

    Dans sa 2 CV bringuebalante nommée « Patience », Lam, alias Mr Poulet, part dans la brousse chercher des poulets pour aller ensuite les revendre à la ville de Niamey. Tallou, son apprenti, et Damouré, un opportuniste, se joignent à lui pour ce voyage censé durer un jour. Les trois comparses espèrent faire des affaires juteuses. Mais les poulets sont introuvables. La traversée du fleuve Niger s’avère plus difficile et mouvementée que prévu. Les autorités surveillent le trio. Et une diablesse ne cesse de lui jeter des sorts. La voiture, quant à elle, s’avère être une épave. Elle accumule les incidents et d’innombrables bricolages n’y changent rien. Et il ne s’agit pas de fiction : pendant le tournage, la 2 CV de Lam n’avait ni freins, ni phares, ni papiers. Ses (...)

  • Ubang: The Nigerian village where men and women ’speak different languages’ - BBC News
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-45262081

    In Ubang, a farming community in southern Nigeria, men and women say they speak different languages. They view this unique difference as “a blessing from God”, but as more young people leave for greener pastures and the English language becomes more popular, there are concerns it won’t survive, reports the BBC’s Yemisi Adegoke.

    Dressed in a brightly coloured traditional outfit, a red chief’s cap and holding a staff, Chief Oliver Ibang calls over his two young children, eager to demonstrate the different languages.

    He holds up a yam and asks his daughter what it is called.

    “It’s ’irui’,” she says, without hesitating.

    But in Ubang’s “male language” the word for yam, one of Nigeria’s staple foods, is “itong”.

    And there are many other examples, such as the word for clothing, which is “nki” for women and “ariga” for men.

    #nigéria #langues #langage #genre