country:spain

  • Antonio Cubillo: Activist who fought for the independence of the Canary Islands | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/antonio-cubillo-activist-who-fought-for-the-independence-of-the-canar


    Je découvre un des derniers terroristes romantiques.

    Antonio Cubillo was the founder and leader of the movement for the independence from Spain of the Canary Islands, the Atlantic Ocean archipelago much loved by tourists, 70 miles from Africa but 10 times as far from mainland Spain. A lawyer, he died of an aneurysm but had spent 34 years on crutches or in a wheelchair after being stabbed in the spine in 1978, during exile in Algiers, by two hitmen sent by the Spanish secret services.

    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Cubillo

    Antonio Cubillo travaillait sur la publication d’un projet de constitution de la République Fédérale des Canaries dans le journal Tenerife Canaria. Entre autres choses, il a appelé à l’officialisation de la langue Tamazight comme le castillan, rappelons que Cubillo était un ami intime de Mouloud Mammeri.

  • AFN 360 Internet Radio
    http://www.afneurope.net/AFN-360

    Now you can receive your local AFN station plus eight additional music & information channels using your computer, Apple iOS or Android device. Now you can listen to AFN crystal clear without a radio.

    AFN 360 improves AFN quality where you get mobile data or internet. Using the best in audio encoding technology, we’re able to deliver near-CD quality programming while using minimal bandwidth. Once you’ve heard it, you’ll agree AFN radio never sounded better over any other medium!

    AFN 360 will work in countries where AFN radio is broadcast. You can listen to AFN 360 on computers or portable devices connected in Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands, Spain, Turkey, the Azores, or on OCONUS military workstations

    #USA #armée #radio #guerre

  • Warning: for Windows systems: important spread of #WannaCry (#Wcry) ransomware

    http://thehackernews.com/2017/05/wannacry-ransomware-unlock.html?m=1
    https://arstechnica.com/security/2017/05/an-nsa-derived-ransomware-worm-is-shutting-down-computers-worldwide

    The malware/worm is causing disruptions at banks, hospitals, telecommunications services, train stations, and other mission-critical organisations in multiple countries, including the UK, Spain, Germany, and Turkey. Telefonica, FedEx, and the UK government’s National Health Service (NHS) have been hit. Operations were cancelled, x-rays, test results and patient records became unavailable and phones did not work.

    The ransomware completely encrypts all your files and render them unusable. They ask you to pay some money to get the decryption key. ($300 to $600 worth in bitcoins). Paying does not guarantee you will get a decryption key though.

    The malware spreads through social engineering e-mails.
    Be careful with any attachments you receive from unknown sources (and even known sources). Make sure the files are sent intentionally.
    Watch out for .pdf or .hta files, or links received via e-mail that point to .pdf or .hta files.

    More than 45.000 computers worldwide have already been infected, but there appears to be a kill switch, i.e. a way to stop its spreading.
    As one of the first operations, the malware tries to connect to the website www.iuqerfsodp9ifjaposdfjhgosurijfaewrwergwea.com. It doesn’t actually download anything there, just tries to connect. If the connection succeeds, the program terminates.

    This can be seen as a kind of kill switch provision, or perhaps it had some particular reason. Whichever it is, the domain has now been sinkholed and the host in question now resolves to an IP address that hosts a website. Therefore, nothing will happen on any new systems that runs the malware. This will of course not help anyone already infected.

    Microsoft has released a patch to block the malware on Windows machines:

    MS17-010
    https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/security/ms17-010.aspx

    It is important to apply the patch because other variants of the malware can exploit the same vulnerability and/or use a different domain name check.

    Nice technical analysis of the worm:

    https://blog.malwarebytes.com/threat-analysis/2017/05/the-worm-that-spreads-wanacrypt0r

    And more technical info about the worm itself: (careful)

    https://gist.github.com/rain-1/989428fa5504f378b993ee6efbc0b168

    typedef struct _wc_file_t {
    char     sig[WC_SIG_LEN]     // 64 bit signature WANACRY!
    uint32_t keylen;             // length of encrypted key
    uint8_t  key[WC_ENCKEY_LEN]; // AES key encrypted with RSA
    uint32_t unknown;            // usually 3 or 4, unknown
    uint64_t datalen;            // length of file before encryption, obtained from GetFileSizeEx
    uint8_t *data;               // Ciphertext Encrypted data using AES-128 in CBC mode
    } wc_file_t;
    

    #malware #worm #ransomware #NSA #Shadow_Broker #EternalBlue

  • Northern Europe’s first floating rubbish bin installed in Helsinki – gCaptain
    http://gcaptain.com/northern-europes-first-floating-rubbish-bin-installed-helsinki

    The technology group Wärtsilä’s project to bring floating rubbish bins to Finland is making progress. The project is being executed in honour of Finland’s centenary. The first Seabin marine rubbish bin in all of Northern Europe was launched and placed in test use today in Uunisaari, off the coast of the Kaivopuisto district of Helsinki. Another floating rubbish bin will be installed in Helsinki at the turn of June.

    Wärtsilä will be operating as the Seabin Project’s global pilot partner for the next three years. The other six pilot partners are La Grande Motte in Southern France, Porto Montenegro in Montenegro, Port Adriano in Mallorca (Spain), Butterfield in Bermuda, and Safe Harbor Marinas in the United States. Seabin Project launched its new V5 Hybrid model at the end of April. It then began installing prototypes at its pilot partners’ sites. For a three-month trial period, the pilot partners will provide information about how the floating rubbish bins have functioned. Seabins are expected to go on commercial sale in August.
    […]
    The Seabin is a floating rubbish bin that is located in the water at marinas, docks, yacht clubs and commercial ports, where it collects all floating rubbish. Water is sucked in from the surface and passes through the catch bag inside the Seabin. The water is then pumped back into the marina leaving litter and debris trapped in the catch bag to be disposed of properly. The Seabin also has the potential to collect some of the oils and pollutants floating on the water surface. The Seabin Project’s team currently uses 12-volt submersible water pumps that can utilise alternative and clean energy sources. These may include solar, wave or wind power, depending on the location and available technology.

  • Spain: LGBT Asylum Seekers Abused in North African Enclave

    Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (#LGBT) asylum seekers in Spain’s North African enclave, #Ceuta, are exposed to harassment and abuse, Human Rights Watch said today. Spanish authorities should transfer them to mainland Spain without delay and halt its de facto policy of blocking most asylum seeker transfers to the mainland.

    https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/04/28/spain-lgbt-asylum-seekers-abused-north-african-enclave

    #abus #harcèlement #homophobie #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Espagne #Melilla

  • Show #336
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/l-etranger/show-336

    Ou•tré (uˈtreɪ) adj. Scrambling radio art/art of radio, social imaginary significations, collective fictional spaces, post-economic music, queer diasporas ...

    A relational outburst of ...

    Scrambled live:

    1. Lenin Lads - Beach Boys from ’PSST! Wanna Buy A Record?’ LP (No Label, Belgium) 2015 2. Mental Anguish - Yes, That’s The Way You Do It from ’Defaecatio 1’ cassette (Biotope Art Organization, Italy) 1989 3. Uniform - Lost Causes (feat. Drew McDowall) from ’Perfect World’ LP (12XU, USA) 2015 4. Hamburger All-Stars - Swinging London Pt. 1 from ’Love Not Devotion’ LP (Fuck Off Records, UK) 1982 5. Richard Franecki - ’Excerpt from “1636”’ from ’Codex’ cassette (IEP, Spain) 1985 6. Azar Swan - In My Mouth (Drew McDowall remix) from (...)

    #liminal #experimental #convivial
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/l-etranger/show-336_03517__1.mp3

  • Reuters Gives Us He Said/She Said Reporting on German Trade Surplus, with a Little Ad Hominem for Good Measure | Beat the Press | Blogs | Publications | The Center for Economic and Policy Research
    http://cepr.net/blogs/beat-the-press/reuters-gives-us-he-said-she-said-reporting-on-german-trade-surplus-with-a-lit

    Germany is running an annual trade surplus of more than 8.0 percent of its GDP (equivalent to $1.6 trillion in the U.S. economy). This huge trade surplus translates into large deficits for the rest of the world. This is the largest single cause of the problems facing Greece, Italy, Spain, and even France. All are seeing their growth and employment seriously constrained as a result of the large German trade surpluses.

    In the good old days before the euro, Germany’s trade surplus would have led to a run-up in the value of its currency making its goods and services less competitive in the world economy, which would have diminished its surplus. However now that Germany is in the euro, this mechanism for adjustment does not exist.

    In the absence of an exchange rate adjustment, the mechanism for addressing the trade imbalance would be more rapid inflation and growth in Germany. The inflation would adjust relative prices and the growth would pull in more imports from Germany’s trading partners. For reasons that seem largely grounded in superstition, Germany refuses to embark on a more rapid growth path (it is running a budget surplus) and continues to maintain a very low inflation rate. (The two are directly linked, since more rapid growth would be the mechanism for increasing the inflation rate.

    Instead of giving these basic facts to readers, the NYT ran a Reuters article that reported the dispute as a silly he said/she said. It told readers:

    “The Trump administration has criticized Germany for its large trade surpluses with the United States, while Germany has said its companies make quality products that customers want to buy.”

    The German response is of course meaningless. The fact that it has a trade surplus means that people want to buy its products at their current prices. If there was an adjustment process that made the German products, say 20 percent more expensive, many fewer people would want to buy them.

    #Allemagne #budget #médias #enfumage

  • Pharmaceutical giant ’plotted to destroy cancer drugs to drive prices up 4,000%’ | The Independent
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/drug-giant-aspen-plot-destroy-cancer-medicine-big-pharma-times-invest

    After purchasing five different cancer drugs from British firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), the company tried to sell the medicines in Europe for up to 40 times their previous price, reported The Times.

    (…) The other four drugs, including Leukeran, also used by leukaemia patients, and melphalan (trade name Alkeran), for skin and ovarian cancers, also became up to four times more expensive.

    (...) In a confidential email published by The Times, an Aspen employee appeared to write: “We’ve signed new reimbursement and price agreement successfully: price increases are basically on line with European target prices (Leukeran, a bit higher!)... Let’s celebrate!”

    When bargaining over drug prices in Spain, the pharmaceutical giant is said to have threatened to stop selling the cancer treatments unless the health minister agreed to price rises of up to 4,000 per cent, reported Spanish online newspaper El Confidencial Digital at the time.

    Now another leaked email appears to reveal that staff at Aspen discussed destroying their supplies of the drug in the row.

    #cancer #pharma #prix #assassins

    • The EU has built #1000_km of border walls since fall of Berlin Wall

      European Union states have built over 1,000km of border walls since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, a new study into Fortress Europe has found.

      Migration researchers have quantified the continent’s anti-immigrant infrastructure and found that the EU has gone from just two walls in the 1990s to 15 by 2017.

      Ten out of 28 member states stretching from Spain to Latvia have now built such border walls, with a sharp increase during the 2015 migration panic, when seven new barriers were erected.

      Despite celebrations this year that the Berlin Wall had now been down for longer than it was ever up, Europe has now completed the equivalent length of six Berlin walls during the same period. The barriers are mostly focused on keeping out undocumented migrants and would-be refugees.

      The erection of the barriers has also coincided with the rise of xenophobic parties across the continent, with 10 out of 28 seeing such parties win more than half a million votes in elections since 2010.

      “Europe’s own history shows that building walls to resolve political or social issues comes at an unacceptable cost for liberty and human rights,” Nick Buxton, researcher at the Transnational Institute and editor of the report said.

      “Ultimately it will also harm those who build them as it creates a fortress that no one wants to live in. Rather than building walls, Europe should be investing in stopping the wars and poverty that fuels migration.”

      Tens of thousands of people have died trying to migrate into Europe, with one estimate from June this year putting the figure at over 34,000 since the EU’s foundation in 1993. A total of 3,915 fatalities were recorded in 2017.

      The report also looked at eight EU maritime rescue operations launched by the bloc, seven of which were carried out specifically by the EU’s border agency Frontex.

      The researchers found that none of the operations, all conducted in the Mediterranean, had the rescue of people as their principal goal – with all of them focused on “eliminating criminality in border areas and slowing down the arrival of displaced peoples”.

      Just one, Operation Mare Nostrum, which was carried out by the Italian government, included humanitarian organisations in its fleets. It has since been scrapped and replaced by Frontex’s Operation Triton, which has a smaller budget.

      “These measures lead to refugees and displaced peoples being treated like criminals,” Ainhoa Ruiz Benedicto, researcher for Delàs Center and co-author of the report said.

      At the June European Council, EU leaders were accused by NGOs of “deliberately condemning vulnerable people to be trapped in Libya, or die at sea”, after they backed the stance of Italy’s populist government and condemned rescue boats operating in the sea.

      https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/eu-border-wall-berlin-migration-human-rights-immigration-borders-a862

    • Building walls. Fear and securitization in the European Union

      This report reveals that member states of the European Union and Schengen Area have constructed almost 1000 km of walls, the equivalent of more than six times the total length of the Berlin Walls, since the nineties to prevent displaced people migrating into Europe. These physical walls are accompanied by even longer ‘maritime walls’, naval operations patrolling the Mediterranean, as well as ‘virtual walls’, border control systems that seek to stop people entering or even traveling within Europe, and control movement of population.
      Authors
      Ainhoa Ruiz Benedicto, Pere Brunet
      In collaboration with
      Stop Wapenhandel, Centre Delàs d’Estudis per la Pau
      Programmes
      War & Pacification

      On November 9th 1989, the Berlin Wall fell, marking what many hoped would be a new era of cooperation and openness across borders. German President Horst Koehler celebrating its demise some years later spoke of an ‘edifice of fear’ replaced by a ‘place of joy’, opening up the possibility of a ‘cooperative global governance which benefits everyone’. 30 years later, the opposite seems to have happened. Edifices of fear, both real and imaginary, are being constructed everywhere fuelling a rise in xenophobia and creating a far more dangerous walled world for refugees fleeing for safety.

      This report reveals that member states of the European Union and Schengen Area have constructed almost 1000 km of walls, the equivalent of more than six times the total length of the Berlin Walls, since the nineties to prevent displaced people migrating into Europe. These physical walls are accompanied by even longer ‘maritime walls’, naval operations patrolling the Mediterranean, as well as ‘virtual walls’, border control systems that seek to stop people entering or even traveling within Europe, and control movement of population. Europe has turned itself in the process into a fortress excluding those outside– and in the process also increased its use of surveillance and militarised technologies that has implications for its citizens within the walls.

      This report seeks to study and analyse the scope of the fortification of Europe as well as the ideas and narratives upon which it is built. This report examines the walls of fear stoked by xenophobic parties that have grown in popularity and exercise an undue influence on European policy. It also examines how the European response has been shaped in the context of post-9/11 by an expanded security paradigm, based on the securitization of social issues. This has transformed Europe’s policies from a more social agenda to one centred on security, in which migrations and the movements of people are considered as threats to state security. As a consequence, they are approached with the traditional security tools: militarism, control, and surveillance.

      Europe’s response is unfortunately not an isolated one. States around the world are answering the biggest global security problems through walls, militarisation, and isolation from other states and the rest of the world. This has created an increasingly hostile world for people fleeing from war and political prosecution.

      The foundations of “Fortress Europe” go back to the Schengen Agreement in 1985, that while establishing freedom of movement within EU borders, demanded more control of its external borders. This model established the idea of a safe interior and an unsafe exterior.

      Successive European security strategies after 2003, based on America’s “Homeland Security” model, turned the border into an element that connects local and global security. As a result, the European Union Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP) became increasingly militarised, and migration was increasingly viewed as a threat.

      Fortress Europe was further expanded with policy of externalization of the border management to third countries in which agreements have been signed with neighbouring countries to boost border control and accept deported migrants. The border has thus been transformed into a bigger and wider geographical concept.
      The walls and barriers to movement

      The investigation estimates that the member states of the European Union and the Schengen area have constructed almost 1000 km of walls on their borders since nineties, to prevent the entrance of displaced people and migration into their territory.


      The practice of building walls has grown immensely, from 2 walls in the decade of the 1990s to 15 in 2017. 2015 saw the largest increase, the number of walls grew from 5 to 12.

      Ten out of 28 member states (Spain, Greece, Hungary, Bulgaria, Austria, Slovenia, United Kingdom, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania) have built walls on their borders to prevent immigration, all of them belonging to the Schengen area except for Bulgaria and the United Kingdom.

      One country that is not a member of the European Union but belongs to the Schengen area has built a wall to prevent migration (Norway). Another (Slovakia) has built internal walls for racial segregation. A total of 13 walls have been built on EU borders or inside the Schengen area.

      Two countries, both members of the European Union and the Schengen area, (Spain and Hungary) have built two walls on their borders for controlling migration. Another two (Austria and the United Kingdom) have built walls on their shared borders with Schengen countries (Slovenia and France respectively). A country outside of the European Union, but part of of the so-called Balkan route (Macedonia), has built a wall to prevent migration.


      Internal controls of the Schengen area, regulated and normalized by the Schengen Borders Code of 2006, have been gone from being an exception to be the political norm, justified on the grounds of migration control and political events (such as political summit, large demonstrations or high profile visitors to a country). From only 3 internal controls in 2006, there were 20 in 2017, which indicates the expansion in restrictions and monitoring of peoples’ movements.


      The maritime environment, particularly the Mediterranean, provides more barriers. The analysis shows that of the 8 main EU maritime operations (Mare Nostrum, Poseidon, Hera, Andale, Minerva, Hermes, Triton and Sophia) none have an exclusive mandate of rescuing people. All of them have had, or have, the general objective of fighting crime in border areas. Only one of them (Mare Nostrum) included humanitarian organisations in its fleet, but was replaced by Frontex’s “Triton” Operation (2013-2015) which had an increased focus on prosecuting border-related crimes. Another operation (Sophia) included direct collaboration with a military organisation (NATO) with a mandate focused on the persecution of persons that transport people on migratory routes. Analysis of these operations show that their treatment of crimes is sometimes similar to their treatment of refugees, framed as issues of security and treating refugees as threats.

      There are also growing numbers of ‘virtual walls’ which seek to control, monitor and surveil people’s movements. This has resulted in the expansion, especially since 2013, of various programs to restrict people’s movement (VIS, SIS II, RTP, ETIAS, SLTD and I-Checkit) and collect biometric data. The collected data of these systems are stored in the EURODAC database, which allows analysis to establish guidelines and patterns on our movements. EUROSUR is deployed as the surveillance system for border areas.

      Frontex: the walls’ borderguards

      The European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) plays an important role in this whole process of fortress expansion and also acts and establishes coordination with third countries by its joint operation Coordination Points. Its budgets have soared in this period, growing from 6.2 million in 2005 to 302 million in 2017.


      An analysis of Frontex budget data shows a growing involvement in deportation operations, whose budgets have grown from 80,000 euros in 2005 to 53 million euros in 2017.

      The European Agency for the Border and Coast Guard (Frontex) deportations often violate the rights of asylum-seeking persons. Through Frontex’s agreements with third countries, asylum-seekers end up in states that violate human rights, have weak democracies, or score badly in terms of human development (HDI).


      Walls of fear and the influence of the far-right

      The far-right have manipulated public opinion to create irrational fears of refugees. This xenophobia sets up mental walls in people, who then demand physical walls. The analysed data shows a worrying rise in racist opinions in recent years, which has increased the percentage of votes to European parties with a xenophobic ideology, and facilitated their growing political influence.

      In 28 EU member states, there are 39 political parties classified as extreme right populists that at some point of their history have had at least one parliamentary seat (in the national Parliament or in the European Parliament). At the completion of this report (July 2018), 10 member states (Germany, Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Netherlands, Hungary, Italy, Poland and Sweden) have xenophobic parties with a strong presence, which have obtained more than half a million votes in elections since 2010. With the exception of Finland, these parties have increased their representation. In some cases, like those in Germany, Italy, Poland and Sweden, there has been an alarming increase, such as Alternative for Germany (AfD) winning 94 seats in the 2017 elections (a party that did not have parliamentary representation in the 2013 elections), the Law and Justice party (PiS) in Poland winning 235 seats after the 2015 elections (an increase of 49%), and Lega Nord’s (LN) strong growth in Italy, which went from 18 seats in 2013 to 124 seats in 2018.

      Our study concludes that, in 9 of these 10 states, extreme right-wing parties have a high degree of influence on the government’s migration policies, even when they are a minority party. In 4 of them (Austria, Finland, Italy and Poland) these parties have ministers in the government. In 5 of the remaining 6 countries (Germany, Denmark, Holland, Hungary, and Sweden), there has been an increase of xenophobic discourse and influence. Even centrist parties seem happy to deploy the discourse of xenophobic parties to capture a sector of their voters rather than confront their ideology and advance an alternative discourse based on people’s rights. In this way, the positions of the most radical and racist parties are amplified with hardly any effort. In short, our study confirms the rise and influence of the extreme-right in European migration policy which has resulted in the securitization and criminalization of migration and the movements of people.

      The mental walls of fear are inextricably connected to the physical walls. Racism and xenophobia legitimise violence in the border area Europe. These ideas reinforce the collective imagination of a safe “interior” and an insecure “outside”, going back to the medieval concept of the fortress. They also strengthen territorial power dynamics, where the origin of a person, among other factors, determines her freedom of movement.

      In this way, in Europe, structures and discourses of violence have been built up, diverting us from policies that defend human rights, coexistence and equality, or more equal relationships between territories.

      https://www.tni.org/en/publication/building-walls
      #rapport

      Pour télécharger le rapport:
      https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/building_walls_-_full_report_-_english.pdf

      #murs_virtuelles #surveillance #murs_maritimes #murs_terrestres #EUROSUR #militarisation_des_frontières #frontières #racisme #xénophobie #VIS #SIS #ETIAS #SLTD

  • Achingly Memorable : Magdalena Montezuma | Slant Magazine
    http://www.slantmagazine.com/house/article/achingly-memorable-magdalena-montezuma

    Magdalena Montezuma (nee Erika Kluge) was a German experimental film actress. A muse to New German Cinema filmmaker, Werner Schroeter, Montezuma drifted through the films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Ulrike Ottinger, Rosa Von Praunhiem and Frank Ripploh. She played nurses, transsexuals, kings, party guests, mothers and baroque divas. With a striking face to match her flamboyant name, Montezuma achieved a certain, cultish notoriety until her untimely death from cancer at age 41. Schroeter hastily began production on his film The Rose King for the actress, shooting in her final months, as Montezuma longed to capture this energy, “to die on the set.”

    She pops up in the first Fassbinder film I ever saw: Beware of a Holy Whore. The film assembles a slew of Fassbinder regulars (Hanna Schygulla, Kurt Raab, Ingrid Caven, Ulli Lommel) and some very fine German auteurs (Margarethe Von Trotta, Schroeter) as they act, drink, and collapse on a film shoot in Spain. There’s a lot of displacement going on—Fassbinder is in the autobiographical film about filming, though he plays the production manager, Sascha. And Montezuma, playing actress Irm (Hermann, one presumes), shoulders the blow of Fassbinder’s vehement misogynies. Heavily painted (as was her custom) Montezuma springs from Schroeter’s arms, throwing herself upon the Fassbinder surrogate: Jeff (Lou Castel). He strikes her repeatedly and she collapses into an abject bundle, howling as she falls to the tiled floor.

    As this character, Montezuma manages to embody Fassbinder’s crew of “happily victimized” women. A more quintessential Montezuma can be glimpsed in her final scene in the film, as she rides away from some Spanish isle in shame, cast away from the production. Swaying in the boat and giving the picturesque landscape a run for its money, Montezuma’s architectural face becomes pliable, bursting with tremulous emotions. Opera music blares—it’s the only kind that really suits her. She slowly rocks back and forth. Her performance in that film made a lasting impact on me, though I mistook her for a minor actor, since she appeared in few other Fassbinder films.

    When I began to recognize her in other experimental German films of the period, I started to connect the dots. Ottinger made her her Freak Orlando, in the film of the same name, where Montezuma dithers between genders and lovers, rallying armies and snuggling up with Siamese twins whilst covered in scales. Nefarious bad boy Rosa Von Praunhiem gave Montezuma a role respective of her histrionic caliber—the Lady Macbeth in his 1971 opera staging. I can think of no less of a nurturing figure, so it’s with an ironic arch of those painted-on eyebrows that Montezuma nurses Frank Ripploh, as he straddles gynecological stirrups in Taxi Zum Klo. Inspecting his recent outbreak of anal warts, the doctor inserts a metal probe inside the actor/director and Montezuma assures/glares, “You see, nothing to it.”

    But Montezuma’s true platform was Schroeter’s non-linear, elegiac films where her sculptural face conveyed a kind of semiotic narrative. Each curled lip and trembling eyebrow imbued meaning into these lush tableau vivants. She is the eponymous diva in his breakthrough The Death of Maria Malibran, singing to an out-of-sync tune, disembodied from speech, even time itself. With her unique features and severe acting style, she steals the scene from her fabulous co-stars—Fassbinder regular Ingrid Caven and Candy Darling. Hers is a strange kind of stardom—made all the more esoteric now that these films suffer from a lack of distribution, but her Germanic countenance is achingly memorable in every inch of vintage celluloid.

    Bradford Nordeen

    #film #Allemagne

  • Ça fait plaisir d’entendre de nouveau du bon #son chez Paris DJs Soundsystem :)

    http://www.parisdjs.com/index.php/post/Paris-DJs-Soundsystem-presents-Friends-Family-Vol-2

    Following up where we left off with the first volume, here’s the second part of our “extravaganza” mix digging into the vast selection of current artists, bands and producers from the unique “Paris DJs universe”. We’ve left you last week with a 25-tracks selection of American friends, let’s now check out the rest of the world, with 25 more productions and reissues originating this time from Spain, France, Germany, UK, Australia, Ethiopia, Netherlands, Israel, South Africa, Nigeria, Togo, Ghana and Cape Verde !

    http://traffic.libsyn.com/parisdjs/Paris_DJs_Soundsystem-Friends_and_Family_Vol_2.mp3

  • Protecting EU Borders Costs Morocco €250 mln Annually

    An official source told the Moroccan news portal le360.ma that monitoring the borders with Spain to avert illegal immigration attempts cost Morocco an estimated annual amount of €250 million.

    http://northafricapost.com/16603-protecting-eu-borders-costs-morocco-e250-mln-annually.html
    #coût #business #contrôles_frontaliers #asile #migrations #frontières #Maroc #réfugiés
    cc @daphne @albertocampiphoto @marty

  • State’s Discretion and the Challenge of Irregular Migration – the Example of Permanent Regularization Practices in Spain and Switzerland

    In the heated debate around irregular migration, the so-called regularization measures represent one of the main bones of contention – presented by some as the only possible solution to irregular presences and contested by others as rewards for illicit behaviour. Despite their many differences, such measures have a common core – discretion. They are, in fact, gracious concessions of the State to those who, by entering and staying within its borders in breach of its laws, have challenged its sovereignty. The present paper will use an operational definition of discretion to analyse two European regularization mechanisms that, because of their manifest similarities as well as their different empirical outcomes, lend themselves particularly well to comparison: the Swiss “cas de rigueur” procedure and the Spanish “#arraigo”. The juxtaposition between the two schemes will be used to investigate how the powers of the State decline, through discretion, different answers to the challenge posed to national immigration models by irregular entries and stays.

    http://nccr-onthemove.ch/publications/states-discretion-and-the-challenge-of-irregular-migration-the-exampl
    #régularisation #cas_de_rigueur #sans-papiers #Suisse #Espagne

  • Protesters in Barcelona urge Spain to take in more refugees | World news | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/feb/18/protesters-in-barcelona-urge-spain-to-take-in-more-refugees

    Tens of thousands of people marched through Barcelona on Saturday urging the Spanish government to immediately meet its pledge to take in thousands of refugees.

    #Ada_Colau, the mayor of Spain’s second city, had called on Barcelona residents to “fill the streets” and march under the slogan volem acollir (“We want to welcome them” in Catalan). Local police said approximately 160,000 people had heeded her call.

    Many of those flooding the major Via Laietana thoroughfare carried signs reading “Enough excuses, welcome them now”.

  • Internet Backbone Provider Cogent Blocks Pirate Bay and other “Pirate” Sites

    Si c’est la vrai, ça n’est pas rien.

    https://torrentfreak.com/internet-backbone-provider-cogent-blocks-pirate-bay-and-other-pirate-s

    Several Pirate Bay users from ISPs all over the world have been unable to access their favorite torrent site for more than a week. Their requests are being stopped in the Internet backbone network of Cogent Communications, which has blackholed the CloudFlare IP-address of The Pirate Bay and many other torrent and streaming sites.

    [...]

    The sites in question all use CloudFlare, which assigned them the public IP-addresses 104.31.18.30 and 104.31.19.30. While this can be reached just fine by most people, users attempting to pass requests through Cogent’s network are unable to access them.

    The issue is not limited to a single ISP and affects a small portion of users all over the world, the United States and Europe included. According to Cogent’s own backbone routing check, it applies to the company’s entire global network.

    [...]

    For now, however, we can only speculate what the reason or target is. Since so many of the sites involved are accused of facilitating copyright infringement, it seems reasonable to view that as a possible cause. However, this remains unconfirmed for now.

    #net_neutrality
    #the_pirate_bay
    #Cogent #AS174

  • Spain Immigration Detention

    Immigration detention in Spain has declined considerably during the last five years, decreasing by some 50 percent. At the same time, the numbers of “pushbacks” at the borders of Spain’s enclaves in Africa have reportedly increased. The poor treatment of detainees in some detention facilities and the perceived inadequacy of detention as a response to migration and refugee challenges have spurred calls by activists and local officials to close the country’s network of centros de internamiento de extranjeros, or CIEs.

    https://www.globaldetentionproject.org/countries/europe/spain?platform=hootsuite
    #détention_administrative #rétention #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Espagne #CIE

  • Feeling ‘Pressure All the Time’ on Europe’s Treadmill of Temporary Work
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/09/business/europe-jobs-economy-youth-unemployment-millenials.html

    The temporary-work trend is accelerating around Europe, as employers seek more flexibility to fire and hire workers, and shun permanent contracts with expensive costs and labor protections. In Spain alone, the government reported that 18 million temporary contracts were handed out last year, compared with 1.7 million long-term jobs.

    #précarité #travail_temporaire #Europe #UE

    • French village opens its chateau as home from home for refugees

      Pessat-Villeneuve is a typical village in the Puy de Dôme region in central France. It has rows of detached houses with gardens, an elegant Romanesque church, a schoolyard where children play and shout, a French flag flying from the town hall, and a park with a chateau which was once a summer camp and is now owned by the town council.

      http://www.unhcr.org/news/stories/2017/4/58e61a3d4/french-village-opens-its-chateau-home-home-refugees.html

    • Gérard Dubois, maire de Pessat-Villeneuve

      Après avoir accueilli des migrants, trois années de suite, dans le cadre d’un Centre d’Accueil et d’Orientation, la petite commune puydômoise de Pessat-Villeneuve candidate pour une structure pérenne. Elle a répondu à un appel à projet pour accueillir un Centre Provisoire d’Hébergement pour des personnes ayant le statut de réfugiés. Les explications du maire de la commune, Gérard Dubois.

      https://www.francebleu.fr/emissions/l-invite-de-la-redaction/pays-d-auvergne/gerard-dubois-maire-de-pessat-villeneuve

    • Puy-de-Dôme : Pessat-Villeneuve pérennise l’accueil de réfugiés

      Depuis trois ans, la commune de Pessat-Villeneuve accueille des migrants. Une solidarité clairement affichée par son maire, menacé de mort pour s’être engagé pour cette cause. Aujourd’hui il vient d’obtenir l’ouverture d’une centre provisoire d’hébergement pour pérenniser cet accueil.


      https://www.francebleu.fr/infos/societe/un-cph-a-pesqat-1524494780
      #CPH

    • French village sets an example of how to welcome refugees

      For four months, residents and volunteers in Pessat-Villeneuve in central France have been helping 60 evacuees from Africa build new lives.

      It is nearly 5 pm on a cold January evening in Pessat-Villeneuve and the first snow of the year is falling. The atmosphere is quiet as a group of African refugees take a break from French classes.

      It is an important day. In keeping with tradition, the mayor, Gérard Dubois will present his New Year wishes to villagers and their refugee guests at a reception in the evening.

      Besides its 653 inhabitants, the village, in the Puy de Dôme region in central France, hosts 60 refugees resettled from Niger and Chad. They arrived four months ago and are accommodated in the village’s château.

      Sudanese refugee Alfatih, 25, is one. He jokes outside the school, where he has been learning French for nearly four months.

      “The first thing I noticed in Pessat-Villeneuve is that there are many good people here,” Alfatih says. “They help us a lot. Pessat-Villeneuve is nice.”

      “When I arrived there, I was very, very tired of running.”

      Just four months earlier, Alfatih was in Goz Beïda, in eastern Chad. He has never seen snow before and wonders how it feels.

      In 2018, France undertook to resettle 3,000 refugees from Chad and Niger by the end of 2019, including some of those evacuated from Libya.

      The refugees are accommodated in the château under the care of a local non-governmental organization, CeCler.

      The NGO’s social workers and educators help them navigate administrative procedures, and find housing and work, while volunteers guide them through daily life, such as shopping and sports activities.

      Alfatih fled Sudan when he was a child. He was 10 when the Janjawid militia attacked his village and killed his father in front of him.

      “My father was at the mosque on a Friday,” he recalls. “My mother told me to run and to tell my father that the village was being attacked. In the panic, everyone ran in another direction and I couldn’t find anyone. When I returned home, I saw my father killed in front of me.”

      During the attack, Alfatih was separated from his mother, brothers and sisters.

      The group took him to the forest, where the beat him then abandoned him. “I cried a lot. I didn’t know what I could do.”

      For months, he searched for his family from village to village without success. He found an uncle who took him under his wing and together they fled to Chad. There, they were taken to Goz Amer refugee camp by UNHCR, the UN refugee agency.

      “When I arrived there, I was very, very tired of running,” he says. “I was very sad until I found my mother, my sisters and my brothers.”

      Alfatih resumed his education and passed the Sudanese baccalaureate in Chad. He also took a course in agriculture.

      More than once he thought of taking the dangerous road to Libya and discussed it with his friends, but stayed behind in Chad.

      “My mother had an operation in Goz Beïda,” he says. “Her health is not good. Her heart is bad. Sometimes, she could be happy, sometimes, she could be ill. We don’t have a dad who can support us, who could help us, and we need to study.”

      Alfatih was the only member of the family who had any vocational training but his prospects were poor and life was difficult.

      “We could not return to Sudan. We said to each other that our only choice was to go to Libya and after that to try anything. We needed to study. We were in the camp for a long time.

      “A lot of my friends went to Libya. I don’t know where they are now.”

      The French government resettled Alfatih’s mother, his two younger brothers and sister in Dijon. Alfatih, another brother and sister were taken to Pessat-Villeneuve.

      Resettlement is a way to protect the most vulnerable refugees and shield them from dangerous journeys.

      In its latest report, (to be published on Jan 30), on the routes refugees are taking to find safety, UNHCR notes that numbers may be falling in some places but that the perils of such journeys remain undimmed.

      In particular, the report, entitled Desperate Journeys, details how the death rate has increased for people crossing the Mediterranean and stresses how people like Alfatih have had to face increased dangers of kidnapping and torture for ransom, and the threat from traffickers even before facing the deadliest sea crossing in the world.

      “A lot of my friends went to Libya. I don’t know where they are now.”

      However, the report found that patterns of movement changed in 2018. More people crossed the sea to Spain from May onwards, making it the main entry point to Europe for the first time since 2008.

      Smugglers made the journey more accessible at a time when it had become harder to cross via Libya,

      Spain, France, and Germany undertook to relocate the largest numbers of people after their arrival in Europe, it said.

      Among its recommendations, the report called for a coordinated response to rescue at sea, greater support for the countries where most refugees and migrants arrive and further steps to hold perpetrators of crimes against refugees and migrants, including traffickers, accountable.

      Ibrahim, a 30-year-old refugee from Eritrea, also lives in the Pessat-Villeneuve reception centre. He was resettled from Niger to France after being evacuated from Libya by UNHCR.

      Previously, he made five unsuccessful attempts to undertake the dangerous sea voyage from Libya to Europe. During one of the attempts, he was among the few who survived when their boat capsized.

      “Out of 148 people, only 20 people survived,” he says. He and six others clung to a wooden section of the boat and managed to stay afloat.

      Now that they are safe, Alfatih and Ibrahim want to resume their studies.

      Alfatih has ambitions to be become a doctor or a social worker so he can help others. Ibrahim wants to work in the food industry.

      “I believe you can do anything if you really want to”, Alfatih says.

      “In what I learn from life in France, what strikes me too, is that here, I live in a democracy.”

      In his speech at the reception, Mayor Dubois reviews the highlights of the year. With pride he mentions the opening of the refugee reception in the château.

      “I will always be here to defend our village, its interests, its residents, its employees, its officials, its values,” he says. “I will be the shield against hared, xenophobia, populism and mediocrity.

      “Friends, we are on Gallic soil. Before you enjoy the dishes made for you, I will pass on a secret recipe, the one for Pessat-Villeneuve’s magic potion. Although it’s a secret, I give you permission to share it with the whole world.

      “You take one quarter liberty, one quarter equality and one quarter brotherhood. And you need a pinch of secularism. Mix in a good dose of optimism. Don’t forget to water it generously with mutual support.

      “And there, before your eyes, is a commune like Pessat-Villeneuve, a place full of humanity and the qualities that together define us: free, fraternal, supportive and, quite simply, human.”


      https://www.unhcr.org/news/stories/2019/1/5c49c0c24/french-village-sets-example-welcome-refugees.html

    • 24 réfugiés sont arrivés au centre d’accueil de Pessat-Villeneuve (Puy-de-Dôme)

      Trois petits minibus ont déposé hier matin 24 réfugiés, hommes et femmes, venus principalement d’Érythrée, au centre d’accueil de Pessat-Villeneuve (Puy-de-Dôme). Tout un symbole en ce jour de journée mondiale des migrants.

      Même s’il a pris le pli, Gérard Dubois, maire de Pessat-Villeneuve, ressent toujours cette même « petite pointe au cœur » à chaque arrivée de réfugiés. « C’est toujours une émotion. Je sais à quel point c’est exceptionnel pour eux, et j’imagine le choc qu’ils ressentent. »
      « C’est une goutte d’eau dans la mer… Mais c’est essentiel »

      Pas de routine donc, malgré les 453 migrants et réfugiés que le centre, depuis son ouverture, aura vu passer, en comptant l’arrivée de 48 nouvelles familles prévue le 3 juillet. Bénévole depuis le début de l’aventure, le 3 novembre 2015, Sylvie reste fidèle au poste. « C’est toujours une émotion particulière quand ils arrivent… Et quand ils partent aussi d’ailleurs. On tisse tellement de belles histoires », évoque la professeur de Français multicasquettes. « Je donne des cours, mais je fais aussi du covoiturage et des courses. » Et une motivation intacte, malgré les deux années et demi écoulées.

      « C’est de l’humanité, c’est mon histoire personnelle. Mes parents étaient réfugiés et la République m’a tout offert, ça doit être pareil pour eux. C’est une goutte d’eau dans la mer… Mais c’est essentiel. »

      Encadrés par l’association Cecler, les réfugiés vont pouvoir entamer les procédures de régularisation et d’intégration. À compter d’octobre, le Centre d’accueil des réfugiés réinstallés (CARR) de Pessat deviendra un Centre provisoire d’hébergement (CPH), un statut qui permettra aux réfugiés de résider neuf mois au lieu de quatre actuellement.

      https://www.lamontagne.fr/pessat-villeneuve-63200/actualites/24-refugies-sont-arrives-au-centre-d-accueil-de-pessat-villeneuve-puy-de-

    • "Je suis condamné à mort sur un site d’extrême droite" : un maire bataille depuis cinq ans pour faire accepter des réfugiés installés dans sa commune

      Pessat-Villeneuve, en Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, a été l’une des premières communes à accueillir des migrants de Calais en 2015. Une décision qui a valu au maire une série de menaces et d’appels malveillants. Gérard Dubois reste pourtant seul candidat à sa succession.

      « J’en tremble encore presque d’émotion ». Gérard Dubois, le maire DVG de Pessat-Villeneuve, une petite commune du Puy-de-Dôme de 670 habitants, se souvient comme si c’était hier de ce soir de novembre 2015 où il s’apprête à recevoir ses premiers réfugiés après le démantèlement de la jungle de Calais. « Et donc ils sont 48 jeunes hommes, fatigués, dénutris, qui arrivent directement de Calais en bus et qui déboulent ici en Auvergne, dans un tout petit village. Moi, je me suis positionné dans une posture d’urgence humanitaire », explique le maire.
      « Ça commence à déraper sérieux ! »

      Dans cette urgence, il n’a pas eu le temps de prévenir ses administrés, ce qui lui vaut dès le lendemain des menaces et des coups de fils anonymes. « On a eu jusqu’à 200 coups de fil, des horreurs, des courriers anonymes… Le premier que je vois arriver je l’ouvre, et le lendemain je me rappelle qu’il y en a un autre qui arrive. Celui-là, je mets des gants pour l’ouvrir. Je suis condamné à mort sur un site d’extrême droite. Et du coup, c’est un peu la trouille de se dire : ’Mais bon sang, ça commence à déraper sérieux !’ », raconte Gérard Dubois. Il organise une réunion publique et s’y rend sous protection policière. La salle est comble.

      Quelques mois plus tard, un autre bus arrive. De nouveau les réseaux sociaux se déchainent mais le maire tient bon. « On m’avait tellement promis des choses terribles, que ça allait cramer, qu’il y aurait des déchets partout, les viols, tout ça… Le moindre incident, je sais que je vais trinquer », se souvient-il.

      Mais tout se passe bien. Et les bénévoles sont de plus en plus nombreux pour aider les réfugiés. Ils sont 70 à être hébergés aujourd’hui sur la commune et pour son hospitalité et sa solidarité, Gérard Dubois a reçu la légion d’honneur. Brigitte est l’une des bénévoles et elle affiche un soutien ému à son maire.

      Brigitte reconnaît cependant que la question de l’accueil de ces réfugiés est « encore compliquée pour certains ». Ce que confirme Gérard Dubois : « J’ai eu encore un courrier d’un habitant de Pessat qui a soi-disant un problème d’eau qui entre chez lui. Et il écrit : ’Arrête de ne t’occuper que des migrants ! Occupe-toi de nous !’ Tant que je serai maire, il y aura toujours des réfugiés à Pessat-Villeneuve. Si le maire n’est pas porteur d’un petit village comme ça, ça ne marche pas. »

      Mais la rancune est tenace chez certains."Je ne suis pas d’accord d’accueillir des gens comme ça", explique un habitant qui n’a jamais accepté les réfugiés. Je suis pour les aider. Il faudrait les aider chez eux", poursuit-il. Et de préciser qu’il ne votera pas pour Gérard Dubois aux municipales, même si ce dernier, seul candidat à sa succession, est assuré d’être réélu.❞

      https://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/europe/migrants/je-suis-condamne-a-mort-sur-un-site-d-extreme-droite-un-maire-bataille-

    • LETTRE ANONYME. Hier soir, 9 mars 2020, en relevant le courrier de la mairie j’ai eu la désagréable surprise de recevoir une lettre anonyme. Cette lettre vient compléter une « abjecte collection » qui a commencé en novembre 2015. Ma récente médiatisation dans les médias nationaux, RMC, France Info et le journal La Croix, sans oublier la Montagne bien entendu, cette médiatisation a provoqué de nombreuses réactions sur les sites de ces médias, du négatif, beaucoup, mais aussi du positif, beaucoup aussi... L’extrême-droite est à l’affût prête à répandre sa propagande nauséabonde. Ne leur déplaise je suis là et bien là pour protéger et continuer à accueillir. Comme je l’ai dit sur France Info, je ne lâcherai pas, je ne lâcherai jamais.
      Au fond, les agressions, qu’elles que soient leurs formes, me rendent plus fort plus combatif et me confortent dans mon engagement dans l’accueil digne, solidaire de ces enfants, de ces femmes et de ces hommes qui ont souffert. C’est le plus beau combat que je n’aurais jamais pensé mener.

      https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2721716481260287&set=a.1313915988707017&type=3&theater

  • Languages Are Still a Major Barrier to Global Science - Tatsuya Amano , Juan P. González-Varo, William J. Sutherland (PLoS)
    http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.2000933

    While it is recognized that language can pose a barrier to the transfer of scientific knowledge, the convergence on English as the global language of science may suggest that this problem has been resolved. However, our survey searching Google Scholar in 16 languages revealed that 35.6% of 75,513 scientific documents on biodiversity conservation published in 2014 were not in English. Ignoring such non-English knowledge can cause biases in our understanding of study systems. Furthermore, as publication in English has become prevalent, scientific knowledge is often unavailable in local languages. This hinders its use by field practitioners and policy makers for local environmental issues; 54% of protected area directors in Spain identified languages as a barrier.

    #recherche #langue #anglais #biodiversité

  • $2,000,000,000,000 in Proceeds of #Corruption Removed from China and Taken to US, Australia, Canada and Netherlands
    http://www.antimoneylaunderinglaw.com/2017/01/qa-on-the-2-trillion-in-proceeds-of-corruption-removed-from-

    If you want a sense of how come China said in 2011 that the illegal removal of $2 Trillion from corruption payments threatens its economy, note that, according to Wikipedia, there are only a few countries in the world that have an economy of $2 Trillion or more and they are: US, Japan, Germany, UK, France, China, Italy, Brazil and Russia.

    Another way of looking at it is that the proceeds of corruption that flew out of China and landed in the US, Canada, Australia and the Netherlands is more than the entire economies of each of over 100 countries including the economy of Spain, Mexico, South Korea, Australia, Turkey or Switzerland.

    #Chine

  • Turkey condemns state of press freedom in Europe and the U.S.
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/12/06/turkey-condemns-state-of-press-freedom-in-europe-and-the-u-s/?postshare=6941481045214276&tid=ss_tw

    “Countries that frequently criticize Turkey include Western democracies such as, France, Germany, England, Sweden, Spain, Netherlands and the USA,” read the statement emailed to foreign journalists over the weekend by Turkey’s Directorate General of Press and Information. “So, is freedom of press unlimited in these countries? Do not the journalists, media workers, and reporters face problems in these countries?”

    #c'est_même_à_ça_qu'on_les_reconnaît

  • The Depopulation of Europe

    Spain is home to the area most affected by depopulation in the European Union, the so-called ‘Universal Mountains’ (Montes Universales) along the Celtiberian Range. This region gathers a multitude of abandoned and deteriorated towns, some of which have only a single inhabitant left. The European Commission has recently discussed this growing problem for the first time.


    http://lacuna.org.uk/environment/the-depopulation-of-europe

    #dépopulation #démographie #Europe #Espagne #photographie
    cc @albertocampiphoto