• Colère des #agriculteurs : « Ce qui était cohérent et cohésif est devenu explosif »
    https://theconversation.com/colere-des-agriculteurs-ce-qui-etait-coherent-et-cohesif-est-devenu

    Médiatiquement, il est souvent question des agriculteurs, comme si ces derniers représentaient un groupe social unifié. Est-ce le cas ? 

    D’un point de vue administratif, institutionnel, du point de vue de la description économique d’une tâche productive, « les agriculteurs », entendus comme les exploitants agricoles, ça existe. Mais d’un point de vue sociologique, non, ce n’est pas un groupe. Les viticulteurs de régions canoniques du vin, ou les grands céréaliers des régions les plus productives, n’ont pas grand-chose à voir avec les petits éleveurs, les maraîchers ou ceux qui pratiquent une agriculture alternative.

    Le sociologue aura dont plutôt tendance à rattacher certains d’entre eux aux catégories supérieures, proches des artisans, commerçants, chefs d’entreprises voire des cadres, et d’autres aux catégories supérieures des classes populaires. La plupart des agriculteurs sont proches des pôles économiques, mais une partie, sont aussi fortement dotés en capitaux culturels. Et, encore une fois, même dans les classes populaires, les agriculteurs y seront à part. C’est une classe populaire à patrimoine, ce qui les distingue de manière très décisive des ouvriers ou des petits employés.

    • Dans l’histoire de la sociologie, les agriculteurs ont d’ailleurs toujours été perçus comme inclassables. Ils sont autant du côté du #capital que du travail. Car ils sont propriétaires de leur propre moyen de production, mais en revanche ils n’exploitent souvent personne d’autre qu’eux-mêmes et leur famille, pour une grande partie. Autre dualité dans leur positionnement : ils sont à la fois du côté du travail en col blanc avec un ensemble de tâches administratives de planification, de gestion, de projection d’entreprise sur le futur, de captation de marchés, mais ils sont aussi du côté du col bleu, du travail manuel, de ses compétences techniciennes.

      Comment expliquer alors qu’en France, ce groupe soit encore si souvent présenté comme unifié ?

      Cette illusion d’unité est une construction à la fois de l’#État et de la Fédération nationale des syndicats d’exploitants agricoles (FNSEA) pour un bénéfice mutuel historique : celle d’une co-gestion. Globalement, l’État s’adresse aux agriculteurs via ce syndicat dominant, pour tâcher de bâtir une politique publique agricole cohérente. Même si la co-gestion a été dépassée pour être plus complexe, cette idée que l’agriculture était une histoire entre l’État et les agriculteurs perdure comme on le voit dans les syndicats invités à Matignon, uniquement la FNSEA au début de la crise. La FNSEA a tenté historiquement de rassembler les agriculteurs pour être l’interlocuteur légitime. Mais cet état des lieux est aussi le fruit de l’action historique de l’État, qui a forgé une batterie d’institutions agricoles depuis la IIIème République avec le Crédit Agricole, une mutuelle sociale agricole spécifique, des chambres d’agriculture… Jusque dans les statistiques, les agriculteurs sont toujours un groupe uni, à part, ce qui est une aberration pour les sociologues.

      [...]
      Ceux qui manifestent pour avoir du gazole moins cher et des pesticides savent qu’ils ont perdu la bataille, et qu’ils ne gagneront qu’un sursis de quelques années, car leur modèle n’est tout simplement plus viable. Ils sont aussi en colère contre les syndicats qui étaient censés penser pour eux la transformation nécessaire. La FNSEA ne maîtrise pas vraiment le mouvement.

      Gilles Laferté :
      https://www.cairn.info/publications-de-Gilles-Laferté--8803.htm
      #agriculteurs #patrimoine #dette #travail_immatériel #travail_manuel #travail #FNSEA #productivisme #agroécologie #suicide

    • Colère des agriculteurs : « Ces changements qui travaillent les campagnes à bas bruit »
      https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2024/01/29/colere-des-agriculteurs-ces-changements-qui-travaillent-les-campagnes-a-bas-

      Dans l’imaginaire des Français, et chez de nombreux exploitants agricoles eux-mêmes, il est difficile de penser l’avenir en dehors d’un modèle familial, qui ne concerne pourtant plus que 37 % des fermes, analyse dans sa chronique Jean-Michel Bezat, journaliste au « Monde ».

      A la faveur des lois d’orientation de 1960-1962, la figure immémoriale du paysan gardien de la nature a cédé la place à celle de l’agriculteur. (...) Quel métier a subi un tel « plan social » durant cette révolution ? On comptait 1,6 million d’exploitations en 1970, elles ne sont plus que 380 000. (...)
      [Ils] ont perdu le monopole de l’espace rural, de plus en plus disputé par les urbains et les néoruraux.

      https://justpaste.it/ac2ok

      #modèle_agricole (feu le) #écologie #green_new_deal

    • Car ils sont propriétaires de leur propre moyen de production, mais en revanche ils n’exploitent souvent personne d’autre qu’eux-mêmes et leur famille, pour une grande partie.

      « grande partie » c’est un peu vague : en 2021 43% de l’agriculture c’étaient PAS les agriculteurs « chef-exploitant ». Et ça ne fait qu’augmenter chaque année donc en 2023 après covid sûrement encore plus.

      https://agreste.agriculture.gouv.fr/agreste-web/download/publication/publie/Dos2303/Dossiers2023-3_EmploiAgricole2021.pdf

      Les chefs et coexploitants assurent en 2021 la plus grande part du travail agricole, avec 57 % des ETP

      Ça fait quand même un sacré paquet de vrais patrons, qui n’exploitent pas qu’eux-mêmes.

  • La mode : une affirmation de soi | Tracks East | ARTE - YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfLfwy0R-nw

    À travers nos vêtements, nous affirmons nos convictions et prenons part aux débats qui animent la société. La décision de porter tel modèle ou telle couleur, voire de renoncer à les porter, sont des choix qui deviennent politiques. Dans ce numéro, « Tracks East » examine sous toutes les coutures la dimension politique de la mode.

    La guerre en Ukraine a déclenché une vague de solidarité jusque sur les podiums, où des mannequins ont défilé vêtus de bleu et de jaune. Des stylistes ukrainiens ont réalisé des pièces grâce auxquelles les projecteurs de la filière se sont braqués sur leur pays - des créations autant célébrées que conspuées du fait de leur puissance symbolique. Certaines stars ont également affiché leur solidarité en portant des marques ukrainiennes ou des habits aux couleurs du pays.

    Et qu’en est-il de la signification religieuse de nos vêtements ? Mode d’expression de la foi pour les uns, symbole de l’oppression des femmes pour les autres, le hijab est un sujet hautement inflammable. Mais pourquoi ne pas laisser les musulmanes décider elles-mêmes de le porter - ou non ? Certaines ont fait leur choix. « Tracks East » leur donne la parole.

    #mode #palestine #ukraine #russie

  • Antoine Tabet et ses compagnons : portrait du Liban moderne - L’Orient-Le Jour
    https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1363031/antoine-tabet-et-ses-compagnons-portrait-du-liban-moderne.html

    Aussi, Voyages à travers la culture, l’architecture et la politique avec Antoine Tabet et ses compagnons est, comme son titre l’indique, un ouvrage où l’architecture occupe une place centrale. Jad Tabet y relate les transformations fondamentales qui ont accompagné l’expansion de Beyrouth, ont imprégné significativement son paysage urbain et ont marqué les débuts de l’architecture moderne. Parmi les « architectes de la première génération », Jad Tabet cite Youssef Bey Aftimos, Bahjat Abdelnour et Mardiros Altounian. Mais alors que la production des architectes de la première génération se distinguait par son mélange de styles « ottoman et moderne », de nouvelles tendances sont apparues au début des années 30. Elles présentent la nécessité d’un langage architectural compatible avec les transformations majeures de l’époque. Joseph Najjar, Farid Trad et Antoine Tabet forment cette nouvelle génération d’ingénieurs qui, ayant travaillé à l’établissement d’une pratique de l’ingénierie moderne, jouera un rôle fondamental au cours des années 50 et 60. Jad Tabet montre aussi comment, chacun de ces trois pionniers, a incarné un modèle idéal du rapport de l’ingénieur à sa profession et à la société dans laquelle il vit. Du caractère officiel de la pratique de Joseph Najjar qui a occupé plusieurs postes ministériels de 1964 à 1968 et du modèle de l’ingénieur « libéral » qui est représenté par Farid Trad, Tabet distingue celui incarné par Antoine Tabet, son père, celui de l’ingénieur « engagé ». Comme les pionniers du modernisme en Occident, Antoine Tabet croyait que le projet moderniste en architecture était lié à un projet plus large visant à établir un monde plus juste dans lequel chacun jouissait d’une vie meilleure.

    Une des plus belles pages, s’il en est, de ce qui se donne aussi à lire comme un récit de filiation. Proposée dans les années 90 par Dominique Viart (« Filiations littéraires », in Écritures contemporaines 2), la notion couvre un type de récit qui se configure sur le mode de l’enquête, l’enjeu étant, pour le narrateur, de se situer dans l’histoire à la fois collective et familiale dont il est le produit. Le récit de l’autre – en l’occurrence le père – est le détour nécessaire pour parvenir à soi. Le récit de filiation devient ainsi prétexte à revisiter l’Histoire et se présente comme un travail de restitution écrit à partir d’archives, de documents, de traces diverses devenues précieuses. Cette restitution se pense à plus d’un niveau puisque « restituer », c’est aussi le fait de « rendre quelque chose à quelqu’un », rendre une dette ou rendre leur existence à ceux qui ne sont plus en restituant, d’une certaine manière, leur légitimité.

    C’est donc un opus qui tient à la fois du traité d’architecture, du livre d’histoire et de l’objet littéraire que nous livre Jad Tabet pour brosser la fresque d’une époque, de l’émergence d’un monde à son extinction – le récit débutant avec la découverte de la maison de Bhamdoun dans laquelle Antoine Tabet est né s’achève avec la mort de ce dernier.

    A propos du livre LubnĀn al-bidayĀt fi sirat mouthakaf hadĀthi. RahalĀt fi al-thakĀfa wal-handasa wal-siyĀsa ma‘ Antoine Tabet wa rifĀkihi (Le Liban des commencements dans la biographie d’un intellectuel moderne : voyages à travers la culture, l’architecture et la politique avec Antoine Tabet et ses compagnons) de Jad Tabet (préface d’Elias Khoury), éditions Riad El-Rayyes, 2023, 335 p.
    #Liban #architecture #engagement #modernisme

  • #Inde : dans les champs du #Pendjab, la colère s’enracine

    Depuis leur soulèvement en 2021, les paysans du sous-continent sont revenus aux champs. Mais dans le grenier à #blé du pays, la révolte gronde toujours et la sortie de la #monoculture_intensive est devenue une priorité des #syndicats_agricoles.

    « Nous sommes rassemblés parce que la situation des agriculteurs est dans l’impasse. Dans le Pendjab, les paysans sont prisonniers de la monoculture du blé et du #riz, qui épuise les #nappes_phréatiques », explique Kanwar Daleep, président du grand syndicat agricole #Kisan_Marzoor. À ses côtés, ils sont une centaine à bloquer la ligne de train qui relie la grande ville d’Amritsar, dans le Pendjab, à New Delhi, la capitale du pays. Au milieu d’immenses champs de blé, beaucoup sont des paysans sikhs, reconnaissables à leur barbe et à leur turban.

    C’est d’ici qu’est parti le plus grand mouvement de contestation de l’Inde contemporaine. Pour s’opposer à la #libéralisation du secteur agricole, des paysans du Pendjab en colère puis des fermiers de toute l’Inde ont encerclé New Delhi pacifiquement mais implacablement en décembre 2020 et en 2021, bravant froids hivernaux, coronavirus et police. En novembre 2021, le premier ministre Narendra Modi a finalement suspendu sa #réforme, dont une des conséquences redoutées aurait été la liquidation des tarifs minimums d’achat garantis par l’État sur certaines récoltes.

    « Depuis cette #révolte historique, les agriculteurs ont compris que le peuple avait le pouvoir, juge #Sangeet_Toor, écrivaine et militante de la condition paysanne, basée à Chandigarh, la capitale du Pendjab. L’occupation est finie, mais les syndicats réclament un nouveau #modèle_agricole. Ils se sont emparés de sujets tels que la #liberté_d’expression et la #démocratie. »

    Pour Kanwar Daleep, le combat entamé en 2020 n’est pas terminé. « Nos demandes n’ont pas été satisfaites. Nous demandons à ce que les #prix_minimums soient pérennisés mais aussi étendus à d’autres cultures que le blé et le riz, pour nous aider à régénérer les sols. »

    C’est sur les terres du Pendjab, très plates et fertiles, arrosées par deux fleuves, que le gouvernement a lancé dans les années 1960 un vaste programme de #plantation de semences modifiées à grand renfort de #fertilisants et de #pesticides. Grâce à cette « #révolution_verte », la production de #céréales a rapidement explosé – l’Inde est aujourd’hui un pays exportateur. Mais ce modèle est à bout de souffle. Le père de la révolution verte en Inde, #Monkombu_Sambasivan_Swaminathan, mort en septembre, alertait lui-même sur les dérives de ce #productivisme_agricole forcené.

    « La saison du blé se finit, je vais planter du riz », raconte Purun Singh, qui cultive 15 hectares près de la frontière du Pakistan. « Pour chaque hectare, il me faut acheter 420 euros de fertilisants et pesticides. J’obtiens 3 000 kilos dont je tire environ 750 euros. Mais il y a beaucoup d’autres dépenses : l’entretien des machines, la location des terrains, l’école pour les enfants… On arrive à se nourrir mais notre compte est vide. » Des récoltes aléatoires vendues à des prix qui stagnent… face à un coût de la vie et des intrants de plus en plus élevé et à un climat imprévisible. Voilà l’équation dont beaucoup de paysans du Pendjab sont prisonniers.

    Cet équilibre financier précaire est rompu au moindre aléa, comme les terribles inondations dues au dérèglement des moussons cet été dans le sud du Pendjab. Pour financer les #graines hybrides et les #produits_chimiques de la saison suivante, les plus petits fermiers en viennent à emprunter, ce qui peut conduire au pire. « Il y a cinq ans, j’ai dû vendre un hectare pour rembourser mon prêt, raconte l’agriculteur Balour Singh. La situation et les récoltes ne se sont pas améliorées. On a dû hypothéquer nos terrains et je crains qu’ils ne soient bientôt saisis. Beaucoup de fermiers sont surendettés comme moi. » Conséquence avérée, le Pendjab détient aujourd’hui le record de #suicides de paysans du pays.

    Champs toxiques

    En roulant à travers les étendues vertes du grenier de l’Inde, on voit parfois d’épaisses fumées s’élever dans les airs. C’est le #brûlage_des_chaumes, pratiqué par les paysans lorsqu’ils passent de la culture du blé à celle du riz, comme en ce mois d’octobre. Cette technique, étroitement associée à la monoculture, est responsable d’une très importante #pollution_de_l’air, qui contamine jusqu’à la capitale, New Delhi. Depuis la route, on aperçoit aussi des fermiers arroser leurs champs de pesticides toxiques sans aucune protection. Là encore, une des conséquences de la révolution verte, qui place le Pendjab en tête des États indiens en nombre de #cancers.

    « Le paradigme que nous suivons depuis les années 1960 est placé sous le signe de la #sécurité_alimentaire de l’Inde. Où faire pousser ? Que faire pousser ? Quelles graines acheter ? Avec quels intrants les arroser ? Tout cela est décidé par le marché, qui en tire les bénéfices », juge Umendra Dutt. Depuis le village de Jaito, cet ancien journaliste a lancé en 2005 la #Kheti_Virasat_Mission, une des plus grandes ONG du Pendjab, qui a aujourd’hui formé des milliers de paysans à l’#agriculture_biologique. « Tout miser sur le blé a été une tragédie, poursuit-il. D’une agriculture centrée sur les semences, il faut passer à une agriculture centrée sur les sols et introduire de nouvelles espèces, comme le #millet. »

    « J’ai décidé de passer à l’agriculture biologique en 2015, parce qu’autour de moi de nombreux fermiers ont développé des maladies, notamment le cancer, à force de baigner dans les produits chimiques », témoigne Amar Singh, formé par la Kheti Virasat Mission. J’ai converti deux des quatre hectares de mon exploitation. Ici, auparavant, c’était du blé. Aujourd’hui j’y plante du curcuma, du sésame, du millet, de la canne à sucre, sans pesticides et avec beaucoup moins d’eau. Cela demande plus de travail car on ne peut pas utiliser les grosses machines. Je gagne un peu en vendant à des particuliers. Mais la #transition serait plus rapide avec l’aide du gouvernement. »

    La petite parcelle bio d’Amar Singh est installée au milieu d’hectares de blé nourris aux produits chimiques. On se demande si sa production sera vraiment « sans pesticides ». Si de plus en plus de paysans sont conscients de la nécessité de cultiver différemment, la plupart peinent à le faire. « On ne peut pas parler d’une tendance de fond, confirme Rajinder Singh, porte-parole du syndicat #Kirti_Kazan_Union, qui veut porter le combat sur le plan politique. Lorsqu’un agriculteur passe au bio, sa production baisse pour quelques années. Or ils sont déjà très endettés… Pour changer de modèle, il faut donc subventionner cette transition. »

    Kanwar Daleep, du Kisan Marzoor, l’affirme : les blocages continueront, jusqu’à obtenir des garanties pour l’avenir des fermiers. Selon lui, son syndicat discute activement avec ceux de l’État voisin du Haryana pour faire front commun dans la lutte. Mais à l’approche des élections générales en Inde en mai 2024, la reprise d’un mouvement de masse est plus une menace brandie qu’une réalité. Faute de vision des pouvoirs publics, les paysans du Pendjab choisissent pour l’instant l’expectative. « Les manifestations peuvent exploser à nouveau, si le gouvernement tente à nouveau d’imposer des réformes néfastes au monde paysan », juge Sangeet Toor.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/281223/inde-dans-les-champs-du-pendjab-la-colere-s-enracine
    #agriculture #monoculture #résistance

  • I grandi marchi della fast fashion non vogliono rinunciare al petrolio russo

    Nel 2023 le due principali società produttrici di poliestere, l’indiana #Reliance industries e la cinese #Hengli group, hanno continuato a utilizzare il greggio di Mosca. La maggior parte dei brand -da #Shein a #H&M, passando per #Benetton- chiude un occhio o promette impegni generici. Il dettagliato report di #Changing_markets.

    Quest’anno i principali produttori globali di poliestere, la fibra tessile di origine sintetica derivata dal petrolio, non solo non hanno interrotto i propri legami con la Russia ma al contrario hanno incrementato gli acquisti della materia prima fondamentale per il loro business. È quanto emerge da “#Crude_Couture”, l’inchiesta realizzata da Changing markets foundation pubblicata il 21 dicembre, a un anno di distanza dalla precedente “Dressed to kill” che aveva svelato i legami segreti tra i principali marchi della moda e il petrolio di Mosca.

    “Quest’indagine -si legge nell’introduzione- evidenzia il ruolo fondamentale svolto dall’industria della moda nel perpetuare la dipendenza dai combustibili fossili e segnala una preoccupante mancanza di azione per rompere i legami con il petrolio russo”. Un’inazione, sottolineano i ricercatori, che sta indirettamente finanziando la guerra in Ucraina. E non si tratta di un contributo di poco conto: le fibre sintetiche, infatti, pesano per il 69% sulla produzione di fibre e il poliestere è di gran lunga il più utilizzato, lo si può trovare infatti nel 55% dei prodotti tessili attualmente in circolazione. Se non ci sarà una netta inversione di tendenza, si stima che entro il 2030 quasi tre quarti di tutti i prodotti tessili verranno realizzati a partire da combustibili fossili.

    Il poliestere è fondamentale per l’esistenza dell’industria del fast fashion, e ancora di più per i marchi di moda ultraveloce come Shein: un’inchiesta pubblicata da Bloomberg ha mostrato che il 95% dei capi prodotti dal marchio di moda cinese conteneva materiali sintetici mentre per brand come #Pretty_Little_Thing, #Misguided e #Boohoo la percentuale era dell’83-89%.

    Al centro delle due inchieste realizzate da Changing markets ci sono due importanti produttori di questo materiale: l’indiana #Reliance_industries (con una capacità produttiva stimata in 2,5 milioni di tonnellate all’anno) e la cinese #Hengli_group. I filati e i tessuti che escono dai loro stabilimenti vengono venduti ai produttori di abbigliamento di tutto il mondo che, a loro volta, li utilizzano per confezionare magliette, pantaloni, cappotti, scarpe e altri accessori per importanti brand. Su 50 marchi presi in esame in “Dressed to kill” 39 erano direttamente o indirettamente collegati alle catene di fornitura di Hengli group or Reliance industries, tra questi figurano #H&M, #Inditex (multinazionale spagnola proprietaria, tra gli altri, di #Bershka e #Zara), #Adidas, #Uniqlo e #Benetton.

    Anche dopo la pubblicazione di “Dressed to kill”, Reliance e Hengli hanno continuato ad acquistare petrolio russo. A marzo 2023 l’India ha acquistato da Mosca la quantità record di 51,5 milioni di barili di greggio: “Insieme a Nayara Energya, la principale compagnia petrolifera indiana, Reliance industries ha rappresentato più della metà (52%) delle importazioni totali”, si legge nell’inchiesta. In crescita anche le importazioni cinesi (+11,7% rispetto all’anno precedente). “Nel maggio 2023, #Hengli_Petrochemical ha ricevuto 6,44 milioni di barili di greggio russo, come riportato dai dati di tracciamento delle navi dell’agenzia Reuters -scrivono gli autori del report-. Queste tendenze rivelano il persistente legame tra le aziende di moda che si riforniscono da questi produttori di poliestere e il petrolio russo”. Oltre alla violazione delle sanzioni imposte a Mosca da diversi governi, compresi quello degli Stati Uniti e dell’Unione europea.

    I ricercatori di Changing markets hanno quindi deciso di tracciare un bilancio e hanno inviato un questionario a 43 brand (compresi i 39 già presi in esame in “Dressed to kill”) per verificare se avessero interrotto i rapporti con Reliance ed Hengli. Appena 18 hanno risposto alle domande e solo due aziende (Esprit e G Star Raw) hanno dichiarato di aver tagliato i ponti con i due produttori. Una terza (Hugo Boss) si è impegnata a eliminare gradualmente il poliestere e il nylon: “Le altre rimangono in silenzio o minimizzano l’urgenza della crisi ucraina con vaghe promesse di cambiamento a diversi anni di distanza o con false soluzioni, come il passaggio al poliestere riciclato, per lo più da bottiglie di plastica”, si legge nel report.

    Tre società (H&M, C&A e Inditex) hanno risposto al questionario “distogliendo l’attenzione” dal legame con il petrolio russo per enfatizzare future strategie di transizione dal poliestere vergine a quello riciclato (da bottiglie di plastica) o verso materiali di nuova generazione. H&M ad esempio ha dichiarato la propria intenzione di non approvvigionarsi più di poliestere vergine entro il 2025 “tuttavia non ha chiarito le sue attuali pratiche per quanto riguarda i fornitori di poliestere legati al petrolio russo”. Analogamente, la catena olandese C&A afferma di volersi concentrare su materiali riciclati e di nuova generazione senza fornire informazioni sui legami con i fornitori oggetto dell’inchiesta. Nemmeno la spagnola Inditex ha risposto alle domande in merito a Reliance ed Hengli. Anche l’italiana Benetton avrebbe fornito risposte insufficienti o generiche: “Si è impegnata vagamente a una transizione verso materiali ‘preferiti’ -scrivono gli autori dell’inchiesta-, senza specificare però l’approccio ai materiali sintetici”.

    Tra quanti non hanno risposto al questionario c’è proprio Shein ma i suoi legami con il produttore indiano di poliestere sono evidenti: a maggio 2023 infatti le due società hanno sottoscritto un accordo in base al quale il colosso può utilizzare le capacità di approvvigionamento, l’infrastruttura logistica e l’ampia rete di negozi fisici e online di Reliance Retail, segnando così il ritorno di Shein in India dopo una pausa di tre anni. “Poiché il poliestere rappresenta il 64% del mix di materiali del brand e il 95,2% dell’abbigliamento di contiene plastica vergine, l’imminente collaborazione con Reliance suggerisce che una parte significativa delle circa 10mila novità giornaliere di Shein potrebbe in futuro essere derivata da prodotti di plastica vergine prodotti grazie a petrolio russo”, conclude il report.

    https://altreconomia.it/i-grandi-marchi-della-fast-fashion-non-vogliono-rinunciare-al-petrolio-

    #Russie #pétrole #fast-fashion #mode #polyester #rapport #textile #industrie_textile #industrie_de_la_mode

    • Fossil Fashion

      Today’s fashion industry has become synonymous with overconsumption, a snowballing waste crisis, widespread pollution and the exploitation of workers in global supply chains. What is less well known is that the insatiable fast fashion business model is enabled by cheap synthetic fibres, which are produced from fossil fuels, mostly oil and gas. Polyester, the darling of the fast fashion industry, is found in over half of all textiles and production is projected to skyrocket in the future. Our campaign exposes the clear correlation between the growth of synthetic fibres and the fast fashion industry – one cannot exist without the other. The campaign calls for prompt, radical legislative action to slow-down the fashion industry and decouple it from fossil fuels.

      Crude Couture: Fashion brands’ continued links to Russian oil

      December 2023

      Last year, our groundbreaking ‘Dressed to Kill’ investigation delved deep into polyester supply chains, unveiling hidden ties between major global fashion brands and Russian oil. We exposed Russia’s pivotal role as a primary oil supplier for key polyester producers India’s Reliance Industries and China’s Hengli Group, which were found to be supplying fibre for the apparel production of numerous fashion brands.

      Now, a year later, we returned to the fashion companies to evaluate if they have severed ties with these suppliers. Shockingly, our latest report reveals an alarming trend: the two leading polyester producers are increasingly reliant on war-tainted Russian oil in 2023. Despite prior warnings about these ties, major fashion brands continue to turn a blind eye, profiting from cheap synthetics, while Ukraine suffers. Only two companies – Esprit and G Star Raw – said they cut ties with the two polyester producers, while Hugo Boss committed to phase out polyester and nylon. The others remain silent or downplay the urgency of the Ukrainian crisis with vague promises of change several years ahead or with false solutions, such as switching to recycled polyester – mostly from plastic bottles. This investigation sheds light on the fashion industry’s persistent dependance on fossil fuel and their lack of action when it comes to climate change and fossil fuel phase out.

      https://changingmarkets.org/portfolio/fossil-fashion

  • Naftali Bennett נפתלי בנט sur X 
    https://twitter.com/naftalibennett/status/1738608818941034741

    The quickest way to end this war is to block fuel from entering Gaza.

    The pressure on Israel to allow fuel into Gaza/Hamas is morally and practically wrong.

    This fuel quite literally fuels Hamas’ main weapon - the terror tunnels.

    The terror tunnels can’t be used without ventilation.
    There’s no ventilation without electricity.
    There’s no electricity without fuel.

    No fuel=no tunnels=Hamas defeat.

    Hamas syphons a big share of all fuel that enters Gaza.

    Whoever wants to end the war must back Israel in preventing even one drop of fuel into Gaza.

    #modéré_sioniste

  • #Mimmo_Lucano lancia il suo movimento «modello Riace»

    Invitata tutta la sinistra. L’ex sindaco non si candiderà alle europee. Semmai ci riproverà alle comunali

    Il progetto è ambizioso. Provare a ricomporre i mille pezzi sparsi della sinistra dispersa. Ricucire le tante anime che in questi anni non si parlano e quando lo fanno litigano tra loro. Mimmo Lucano ha scelto cosa farà da grande. Ha in mente di costruire una sua area politica. Se si farà partito oppure movimento fluido ancora non è chiaro.

    Una cosa è certa. Ha convocato tutti coloro i quali in Italia sono stati sempre al suo fianco. Palazzo Pinnarò, nel centro del borgo jonico, è pronto ad ospitare i tanti pezzi del mosaico della sinistra. Il 20 dicembre è la data cerchiata. Lucano ci crede. Non si candiderà alle europee. Semmai dovesse farlo sarà per le comunali di Riace, da sindaco dopo lo stop del 2018 per il vincolo del terzo mandato. L’ex primo cittadino riacese ha invitato tutta la sinistra all’happening. Unione popolare e la lista pacifista di Santoro hanno detto che parteciperanno. Anche Sinistra Italiana manderà un esponente della segreteria nazionale malgrado ritenga velleitaria al momento una riunificazione della sinistra. L’appello «#Riace_per_l’Italia» sta girando in questi giorni nei tavoli delle segreterie. Dopo la quasi assoluzione dell’11 ottobre, Lucano ha riunito a metà novembre i suoi fedelissimi per interrogarsi sul suo futuro. La festa del 29 ottobre per ringraziare chi è stato sempre al suo fianco, anche durante l’odissea giudiziaria, si era rivelata un successo politico e di partecipazione. Duemila persone da tutta Italia stipate nelle piazze del “villaggio globale” di Riace. E anche una presenza significativa della sinistra politica, da Potere al Popolo e Unione popolare fino al Pd (Elly Schlein aveva inviato in terra di Calabria Marta Bonafoni).

    Nell’incontro con il suo inner circle la scelta è dunque ricaduta sull’idea di costruire un’area politica che si ispiri al “modello Riace”. Perchè «l’esperienza riacese – si legge nel documento – non è solo un esperimento compiuto di società multietnica che ha creato benessere; è anche un ambulatorio che fornisce servizi sanitari pubblici e gratuiti a tutti, un turismo responsabile e non invasivo, un artigianato che crea lavoro, un rivoluzionario modello di gestione dei rifiuti, un innovativo sistema idrico che valorizza e privilegia esclusivamente l’acqua pubblica. Questa è stata Riace in questi anni». Partire dunque dalla Calabria per attraversare tutte le contraddizioni di un Paese ormai disumanizzato che erige muri, costruisce campi di internamento per migranti in Albania, tesse rapporti e mercimoni con le bande libiche e le autocrazie del Maghreb. Con la vana illusione di poter bloccare le migrazioni dando fiumi di denaro a paesi terzi per gestire i flussi di disperati, anche se questo si traduce in violenze, torture e, alla fine, in tragedie come quella, immane, di Steccato di Cutro.

    Il “popolo di Riace” prova cosi a cimentarsi nell’agone politico dando il suo contributo per la riorganizzazione del campo della sinistra. Partendo dalle esperienze sociali, associative, di movimento. Il progetto a cui guarda questo nuovo soggetto in fieri è quello spagnolo con l’esperienza di Sumar, il rassemblement che ha mescolato in un unico contenitore comunisti, altermondialisti, verdi, movimenti. E che ha dimostrato che unire le sinistre non solo è doveroso, ma anche possibile, persino vincente. Lucano sta girando l’Italia in questi giorni, dalla Sicilia a Torino passando per Roma, con due iniziative, nel quartiere Quadraro e al centro sociale Spin Time. L’idea è quella di creare dei nodi territoriali regionali facendo leva sulla rete di solidarietà creatasi nei mesi febbrili del processo. Appuntamento, dunque, a Riace alla vigilia di natale. Vedremo quale sarà il regalo per la sinistra sotto l’albero.

    https://ilmanifesto.it/mimmo-lucano-lancia-il-suo-movimento-modello-riace
    #Domenico_Lucano #Riace #accueil #Italie #Calabre #modèle_Riace #mouvement #gauche

  • Expulsion vers le #Rwanda. La #Suisse, pionnière d’une externalisation illégale ?

    Alors que la Cour suprême britannique a jugé illégal le plan du gouvernement britannique de délocaliser ses procédures d’asile au Rwanda, la Suisse doit examiner, lors de la prochaine session d’hiver, une #motion du Conseiller aux Etats #Damian_Müller (PLR) demandant d’y renvoyer les réfugié·es érythréen·nes débouté·es. Le contenu de la motion est truffée d’approximations et d’informations erronées quant à la légalité de la mesure qui devraient questionner les parlementaires sur le sérieux de la démarche. La réponse du Conseil fédéral apporte certains éléments factuels. Nous proposons ci-dessous des compléments utiles au débat public.

    La tentation de l’externalisation… et ses écueils

    La question de l’externalisation de tout ou partie des procédures d’asile est régulièrement thématisée par les gouvernements européens. Leur objectif vise généralement avant tout à donner un « signal » dissuasif à l’extérieur. Au Danemark, les tractations avec le Rwanda annoncées en grande pompe en 2021 ont été abandonnées en janvier 2023. L’annonce récente d’un accord par le gouvernement italien de Georgia Meloni avec l’Albanie suscite l’inquiétude du Haut Commissariat des Nations Unies pour les réfugié-es (HCR), qui rappelle sa position sur la question de l’externalisation. Le HCR a du reste salué l’arrêt de la Cour suprême britannique.
    Une motion suisse illégale, coûteuse et à la portée réduite

    C’est dans ce contexte que le Conseil national devra examiner la motion 23.3176 déposée en mars 2023 par le Conseiller aux Etats PLR Damian Müller. Sa visée électorale ne fait aucun doute, pas plus que les motivations des membres du Conseil des États. Ceux-ci l’ont acceptée lors de la session d’été en dépit de son caractère manifestement illégal, coûteux et à la portée pratique réduite, comme le soulignait le Conseil fédéral dans sa réponse. Le coût d’image, pour la Suisse, n’avait alors pas été considéré. Il devrait, néanmoins, aussi être mis dans la balance par les membres du Conseil national lorsqu’ils devront voter en décembre. Ceux-ci devraient notamment considérer les points suivants :

    - Le nombre très restreint de personnes concernées par cette motion (300 personnes en Suisse)
    - Le coût de la mesure, incertain. Londres a déboursé plus de 120 millions de livres sterling dans le cadre de son accord, qui vient d’être jugé illégal.
    - Ce qu’implique de se lier les mains avec un État tiers dans le cadre de ces accords d’externalisation. Les précédents dans l’histoire récente européenne sont la Libye et la Turquie, pays qui n’ont pas manqué d’instrumentaliser le dossier migratoire dans le cadre de crises politiques. La volonté active du Rwanda auprès des États européens de jouer ce rôle de gestion migratoire doit être comprise à travers le prisme de ces enjeux géostratégiques.
    - Le Rwanda n’est pas un pays sûr : les risques de refoulements vers le pays d’origine des requérant·es sont présents et ont été documentés dans le cadre d’accords avec d’autres pays par le passé. C’est ce qu’a conclu la Haute cour de justice britannique et c’est aussi ce qu’a reproché le HCR à cet accord.
    - L’illégalité de la mesure : pour procéder à un renvoi forcé vers un État tiers, la Suisse est tenue d’examiner le lien des personnes concernées avec le pays en question selon la loi. Elle devrait aussi garantir le respect des normes de droits humains par l’Etat tiers, ici le Rwanda, et devrait pour cela obtenir des garanties de Kigali. Or l’approche des élections rwandaises en 2024 a été marquée par des violations des droits humains.

    La « légalité » de la délocalisation. Une argumentation factuellement fausse
    Que dit la motion ?

    Le 15 mars 2023, le Conseiller aux États Damian Müller, a déposé une motion invitant le Conseil fédéral à lancer un projet pilote visant à renvoyer les personnes déboutées dans un État tiers. Le projet s’attaque aux ressortissant·es érythréen·nes débouté·es. Il rappelle que les concerné·es ne peuvent pas être renvoyés sous la contrainte en Érythrée, le gouvernement érythréen refusant de telles expulsions. Damian Müller demande d’identifier rapidement un pays prêt à accueillir les ressortissant·es érythréen·nes débouté·es et cite le Rwanda en exemple. Un mécanisme comprenant une compensation financière serait à mettre en place, ainsi qu’une évaluation.

    Concernant l’externalisation que prône la motion, à savoir le renvoi vers un État tiers de personnes déboutées, et en particulier le Rwanda, l’auteur de la motion estime que ces mesures sont légales, s’appuyant sur deux éléments factuellement faux. La formulation de Damian Müller montre qu’il n’a lui-même aucune idée de la légalité ou non de la mesure !

    Affirmation fausse #1 – L’exemple erroné du HCR au Rwanda

    L’auteur de la motion affirme qu’il serait légal de mener l’ensemble de la procédure d’asile à l’étranger, citant en exemple le HCR qui « externalise déjà au Niger et au Rwanda les procédures d’asile des requérants en provenance de Libye ».

    - Pourquoi c’est faux – Le HCR a utilisé ces deux pays pour évacuer les réfugié·es vulnérables de Libye en raison des conditions de violence et de détention dans lesquelles elles étaient plongées. Il s’agissait d’une solution transitoire de mise à l’abri. L’Emergency Transit Mechanism vise à pouvoir traiter leur cas et trouver ainsi une solution durable pour elles, notamment un lieu de réinstallation. Evacuees from Libya – Emergency Transit Mechanism – UNHCR Rwanda. Lire aussi la fiche d’information sur la situation dans les deux ETM (juin 2023) : Document – UNHCR Flash Update ETM Niger and Rwanda

    Affirmation fausse #2 – L’accord avec le Sénégal de 2003

    L’auteur de la motion s’appuie sur une tentative d’accord de transit avec le Sénégal de 2003 pour estimer pouvoir « part[ir] donc du principe que la légalité du renvoi des requérants d’asile vers des pays tiers a déjà été examinée ».

    - Pourquoi c’est faux – Le Conseil fédéral rappelle dans sa réponse que l’accord en question visait au « transit » des personnes déboutées qui ne pouvaient rentrer directement dans leur pays d’origine, et que l’accord en question stipulait un retour en Suisse en cas d’impossibilité pour ces personnes de poursuivre leur voyage. La motion en question « irait beaucoup plus loin » puisqu’il s’agirait d’une relocalisation dans un Etat tiers, « pratique qui n’est suivie par aucun Etat européen ».

    La délocalisation au Rwanda est illégale selon la Cour suprême britannique

    Le plan Rwanda du gouvernement britannique a été enterré par la Cour suprême du Royaume-Uni le 15 novembre 2023. Le projet phare de Rishi Sunak visant à délocaliser la procédure d’asile au Rwanda pour les personnes entrant par voie irrégulière dans le pays a été jugée illégale. Le Rwanda n’est pas un pays sûr confirment les juges et le risque de renvoi vers leur pays d’origine des personnes expulsées violerait le principe de non-refoulement consacré par le droit international. Les 120 millions de livres sterling déjà versés par Londres à Kigali dans le cadre de cet accord ne serviront pas les objectifs du gouvernement anglais. Si celui-ci a déjà annoncé vouloir passer outre la décision de la Haute cour (!), il collectionne pour l’heure les déboires judiciaires, avec la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme qui a ordonné la suspension du vol collectif organisé par Londres en juin 2022 puis l’annulation par la Haute cour des décisions de refoulement individuelles en décembre de la même année.

    https://asile.ch/2023/11/27/la-suisse-pionniere-dune-externalisation-illegale

    #externalisation #réfugiés #asile #migrations #réfugiés_érythréens #procédure_d'asile #externalisation_de_la_procédure #modèle_australien

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur les tentatives de différentes pays européens d’#externalisation non seulement des contrôles frontaliers (►https://seenthis.net/messages/731749), mais aussi de la #procédure_d'asile dans des #pays_tiers
    https://seenthis.net/messages/900122

  • When the Coast Guard Intercepts Unaccompanied Kids

    A Haitian boy arrived on Florida’s maritime border. His next five days detained at sea illuminate the crisis facing children traveling to the U.S. alone and the crews forced to send them back.

    Tcherry’s mother could see that her 10-year-old son was not being taken care of. When he appeared on their video calls, his clothes were dirty. She asked who in the house was washing his shirts, the white Nike T-shirt and the yellow one with a handprint that he wore in rotation. He said nobody was, but he had tried his best to wash them by hand in the tub. His hair, which was buzzed short when he lived with his grandmother in Haiti, had now grown long and matted. He had already been thin, but by January, after three months in the smuggler’s house, he was beginning to look gaunt. Tcherry told his mother that there was not enough food. He said he felt “empty inside.”

    More strangers, most of them Haitian like Tcherry, continued to arrive at the house in the Bahamas on their way to the United States. One day police officers came with guns, and Tcherry hid in a corner; they left when a man gave them money. The next time he and his mother talked, Tcherry lowered his bright, wide-set eyes and spoke to her in a quieter voice. “It was like he was hiding,” his mother, Stephania LaFortune, says. “He was scared.” Tcherry told her he didn’t want to spend another night on the thin mattress in the front room with scuffed pink walls. She assured him it would be over soon. A boat would take him to Florida, and then he would join her in Canada, where she was applying for asylum. LaFortune texted Tcherry photos of the city where she lived. The leaves had turned brown and fallen from the trees. Still, she was there, and that’s where Tcherry wanted to be. He waited another week, then two, then three.

    Tcherry didn’t laugh or play for months on end, until one day in February, when two sisters, both Haitian citizens, were delivered to the house. One was a 4-year-old named Beana. She wore a pink shirt and cried a lot. The other, Claire, was 8. She had a round face and a burn on her hand; she said that at the last house they’d stayed in, a girl threw hot oil on her. Claire did everything for her sister, helping her eat, bathe and use the bathroom. Like Tcherry, the girls were traveling to join their mother, who was working at a Michigan auto plant on a temporary legal status that did not allow her to bring her children from abroad. Their clothes were as dirty as his. Sometimes Tcherry and Claire watched videos on his phone. They talked about their mothers. “I am thinking about you,” Tcherry said in a message to his mother in early February. “It has been a long time.”

    Finally, nearly four months after Tcherry arrived at the house, one of the men in charge of the smuggling operation woke him and the two girls early in the morning. “He told us to get ready,” Tcherry recalls. With nothing but the clothes they wore, no breakfast or ID, they were loaded into a van and were dropped off at a trash-lined canal just outside Freeport, Bahamas. In the muck and garbage, more than 50 people stood waiting as a boat motored toward them. “Not a good boat,” Tcherry told me, “a raggedy boat.” But nobody complained. The 40-foot vessel tilted from the weight as people climbed aboard and pushed into the two dank cabins, sitting shoulder to shoulder or standing because there was no more space. Tcherry felt the boat speeding up, taking them out to sea.

    For almost 12 hours they traveled west, packed together in cabins that now smelled of vomit and urine. In the lower cabin, a baby was crying incessantly. A heavily pregnant woman offered up the last of her package of cookies to the child’s mother to help soothe the infant. Tcherry was thirsty and exhausted. Not far from him, he heard a woman say that the children’s parents must be wicked for sending them alone into the sea.

    The passengers had been promised they would reach U.S. shores hours earlier. People were starting to panic, sure that they were lost, when passengers sitting near the windows saw lights, at first flickering and then bright — the lights of cars and buildings. “That is Florida,” a young man said as the boat sped toward shore. Tcherry pulled on his sneakers. “If I make it,” he thought, “I will spend Christmas with my family.”

    But as quickly as the lights of Florida came into view, police lights burst upon them. A siren wailed. People screamed, a helicopter circled overhead and an officer on a sheriff’s boat pointed a long gun toward them. Uniformed men climbed on board, yelled orders and handed out life jackets. The group of 54 people was transferred to a small Coast Guard cutter. As the sun rose over Florida just beyond them, a man with a tattoo on his arm of a hand making the sign of the benediction began recording a video on his phone. “As you can see, we are in Miami,” he said. “As you can see, we are on a boat with a bunch of small children.” He intended to send the video to relatives waiting for him on land, and he urged them to contact lawyers. But his phone was confiscated, and the video was never sent.

    The Coast Guard frames its operations in the sea as lifesaving work: Crews rescue people from boats at risk of capsizing and pull them from the water. But the agency, which is an arm of the Department of Homeland Security, also operates as a maritime border patrol, its ships as floating holding facilities. Since the summer of 2021, the Coast Guard has detained more than 27,000 people, a number larger than in any similar period in nearly three decades. On a single day in January, the agency’s fleet of ships off the Florida coast collectively held more than 1,000 people. The public has no way of knowing what happens on board. Unlike at the U.S.-Mexico border, which is closely monitored by advocates, the courts and the press, immigration enforcement at sea takes place out of public view.

    The Coast Guard routinely denies journalists’ requests to witness immigration patrols, but in early March, I learned that several days earlier, a boat carrying dozens of Haitians had been stopped so close to land that they were first chased down by the Palm Beach County sheriff’s marine unit. Among them were three unaccompanied children: two young sisters and a 10-year-old boy. In the months afterward, I obtained a trove of internal Coast Guard documents, including emails and a database of the agency’s immigration interdictions, and I tracked down Tcherry, Claire and Beana and 18 people traveling with them. Many of them told me about the five days they spent detained on Coast Guard ships — an experience, one man said, “that will remain a scar in each person’s mind.”

    People intercepted at sea, even in U.S. waters, have fewer rights than those who come by land. “Asylum does not apply at sea,” a Coast Guard spokesperson told me. Even people who are fleeing violence, rape and death, who on land would be likely to pass an initial asylum screening, are routinely sent back to the countries they’ve fled. To try to get through, people held on Coast Guard ships have occasionally taken to harming themselves — swallowing sharp objects, stabbing themselves with smuggled knives — in the hope that they’ll be rushed to emergency rooms on land where they can try to claim asylum.

    The restrictions, combined with the nearly 30-year spike in maritime migration, created a crisis for the Coast Guard too, leading to what one senior Coast Guard official described in an internal email in February as “war-fighting levels of stress and fatigue.” Coast Guard crew members described to me their distress at having to reject desperate person after desperate person, but the worst part of the job, several said, was turning away the children who were traveling alone. From July 2021 to September 2023, the number of children without parents or guardians held by the Coast Guard spiked, a nearly tenfold increase over the prior two years. Most of them were Haitian. “The hardest ones for me are the unaccompanied minors,” one crew member told me. “They’re put on this boat to try to come to America, and they have no one.”

    The treatment of children is perhaps the starkest difference between immigration policy on land and at sea. At land borders, unaccompanied minors from countries other than Mexico and Canada cannot simply be turned back. They are assigned government caseworkers and are often placed in shelters, then with family members, on track to gain legal status. That system has its own serious failings, but the principle is that children must be protected. Not so at sea. U.S. courts have not determined what protections should extend to minors held on U.S. ships, even those detained well within U.S. waters. The Coast Guard says that its crew members screen children to identify “human-trafficking indicators and protection concerns including fear of return.” A spokesperson told me that “migrants who indicate a fear of return receive further screening” by Homeland Security officials.

    But of the almost 500 unaccompanied children held on the agency’s cutters in the Caribbean and the Straits of Florida between July 2021 and early September 2023, five were allowed into the U.S. because federal agencies believed they would face persecution at home, even amid escalating violence in Haiti, including the documented murder and rape of children. One other child was medically evacuated to a hospital in Florida, and six were brought to land for reasons that the internal Coast Guard records do not explain. The rest were delivered back to the countries they left, and it’s often unclear where they go once they return. Some have nowhere to stay and no one to take care of them. On occasion, they are so young that they don’t know the names of their parents or the country where they were born. One official from an agency involved in processing people delivered by the U.S. Coast Guard to Haiti told me “it is an open secret” that the process can be dangerously inconsistent. “Children leave the port,” the official said, “and what happens to them after they leave, no one knows.”

    Stephania LaFortune had not wanted to send her 10-year-old son on a boat by himself. She knew firsthand how perilous the journey could be. In May 2021, before the boat she had boarded made it to a Florida beach, some of the passengers jumped into the water to wade through the heavy waves. “They almost drowned,” she told me when I met her in Toronto. LaFortune waited on the beached vessel until U.S. Border Patrol officials came to detain her. In detention, she claimed asylum and was soon released. For months, she searched for other ways to bring Tcherry to her, but LaFortune ultimately determined she had no alternative.

    The first time LaFortune left Tcherry, he was 3 years old. Her husband, a police cadet, had been shot in his uniform and left to die in a ditch outside Port-au-Prince, and LaFortune, fearing for her life, departed for the Bahamas. Tcherry stayed behind with his grandmother. Four years later, as violence began to flare again, Tcherry’s mother finally made good on her promise to send for him. She arranged for him to fly to the Bahamas, where she had remarried and had a baby girl. But Tcherry was in the Bahamas not even a year when LaFortune told him that she would be leaving again — not because she wanted to, she assured her sobbing son, but because she had seen how Haitians were harassed and deported, and she simply didn’t believe there was real opportunity there. Tcherry’s stepfather and his younger half sister, who were Bahamian citizens, joined LaFortune months later. She arranged for Tcherry to live with relatives, promising to send for him as soon as she could.

    LaFortune’s asylum case in Florida dragged on, so she and her husband and daughter traveled over land to Canada, where they hoped they could get legal status more quickly. While they waited for a decision in their asylum case, the relative Tcherry was staying with said he could no longer take care of a growing boy by himself. After begging others to take her son, LaFortune found a woman she knew back in Haiti who said she was planning to make the trip to Florida herself with her own children. For $3,000, the woman said, she could take Tcherry with them. LaFortune sent the money. The woman took Tcherry to the smuggler’s house and did not return for him.

    That house, and the one where Tcherry was moved next, were filled with Haitians fleeing the crisis that began in July 2021, when President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated by a team of mostly Colombian mercenaries hired through a Miami-area security company. The U.S. Justice Department has accused nearly a dozen people, some based in the United States, of setting the assassination in motion. As the Haitian state crumbled, proliferating gangs, many with ties to the country’s political elite, burst from the neighborhoods they’d long controlled and began terrorizing Port-au-Prince and swaths of the rest of the country. Kidnapping, extortion, the rape of women and children, and the torching of homes and neighborhoods became routine weapons of fear. Thousands have been murdered, and in June the United Nations estimated that nearly 200,000 have been internally displaced. Haitians able to gather the resources have left however they can. Many have traveled over land to the Dominican Republic or by air to South and Central America. And thousands have boarded boats bound for the beaches of Florida.

    The people on the vessel with Tcherry had reasons, each as urgent as the next, for being there. There was a 31-year-old street vendor whose Port-au-Prince neighborhood had been taken over by gangs; she said that when she tried to flee north by bus, men with guns forced her and other women off the bus and raped them. A man from a district in the north said he’d been beaten more than once by thugs sent by a political boss he’d opposed; both times they threatened to kill him. A man who worked as a Vodou priest in Port-au-Prince said he left because he needed money for his sick daughter, and gangs were confiscating his wages. The pregnant woman who helped comfort the crying baby said she had been kidnapped and raped; she was released only after her family sold land and collected donations to pay for her ransom. Two women were traveling with their daughters, but Tcherry, Claire and Beana were the only young children traveling alone.

    Tcherry sat on the deck of a Coast Guard cutter called the Manowar along with the rest of the group, exhausted, scared and confused. Nobody had explained to him what would happen next. Crew members in blue uniforms finally gave them food, small plates of rice and beans, and began to search their belongings and run their photos and fingerprints through federal immigration and criminal databases. Tcherry and the sisters followed the orders of a crew member with blond hair, cut like the soldiers in movies Tcherry had seen, to sit in the shaded spot under the stairs to the bridge.

    On the stern of the cutter, a man in his early 30s named Peterson sat watching the children. He had crossed paths with them weeks earlier in one of the houses; seeing they were hungry, he had brought them extra slices of bread and even cut Tcherry’s hair. Claire reminded him of his own young daughter in Haiti. Peterson had not wanted to leave his child, but gangs had recently taken control of roadways not far from his home in the coastal city of Saint-Marc. He had not earned a decent wage for many months, not since he lost his job as a driver at a missionary organization. He had decided to leave for the United States so he could send money back to Haiti for his daughter, who remained behind with her mother.

    Now it occurred to Peterson that his connection to Tcherry and the girls could work to his advantage. Surely the Coast Guard wouldn’t return children to Haiti, he thought. Surely they wouldn’t separate a family. “I thought that there might be an opportunity for me to get to the U.S.,” he told me. He approached Tcherry, Claire and Beana and told them they should tell the crew he was their uncle.

    Peterson’s small kindness in the smuggler’s house had given Tcherry reason to trust him. When it came time for the blond-haired crew member, Petty Officer Timothy James, to interview the children, Peterson stood close behind. With the help of another Haitian man who spoke some English, Peterson told James that he was their uncle. James asked the children if it was true. Tcherry and Claire, both timid, their eyes lowered, said it was. Beana was too young to understand. James handed her a brown teddy bear, which the crew of the Manowar keeps on board because of the growing number of children they detain, and sent the children back to the stern.

    But no more than a couple of hours later, Peterson changed his mind. He’d noticed that the pregnant woman had been evaluated by Florida EMTs, and he moved over to offer her a deal: If she would tell the crew he was her husband and let him join her if they brought her to land, his brother in Florida, who already paid $6,000 for his place on this boat, would make sure she was compensated. “I helped her understand that that is something she could profit from,” he says. The woman agreed, and Peterson, who now needed to tell the truth about the children, divulged to a crew member that he was not their uncle. “I was just trying to help if I could,” he said.

    James crouched down beside the children again and told them not to lie. “Why did you leave your home to go to the United States,” he read off a questionnaire. “To go to my parents,” Tcherry replied. To Tcherry, the questions seemed like a good sign. He was unsure whether he could trust these crew members after the officer on the sheriff boat pointed a long gun at them the night before. “I thought they were going to shoot me,” Tcherry says. But James calmly directed the children to sit in the one shaded place on the boat, and gave them cookies and slices of apple. “He was nice,” Tcherry says — the nicest anyone had been since Peterson brought them bread in the house.

    James kept reading the form. “What will happen when you get there?” he asked. Tcherry looked up. He latched onto the words “when you get there” and took them as a promise. He asked James when they would be on land. James said the same thing he told everyone on the boat: that the decision was not up to him, that he was just doing his job. Tcherry was convinced James would send him and Claire and Beana to their mothers. He thought of the story his mother had told him about his father’s murder, his body in a ditch by the road, and of his last memory of Haiti, when he passed through a gang checkpoint on the way to the airport. “I saw bandits approaching toward us, and he had a gun pulled,” Tcherry told me. “My heart started beating fast, and I thought he was going to shoot.” He was overwhelmed with relief that he would never have to go back there.

    A boat came to bring someone to land. But it was not there to pick up Tcherry or the other children. A Coast Guard medical officer had reviewed the pregnant woman’s vitals and made a decision that because she “may go into labor at any moment,” she would be brought to a hospital in Palm Beach County accompanied by U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Before she was taken away, Peterson said the woman told him she would not claim to be married to him after all. She didn’t want a stranger on her baby’s birth certificate. She offered to say she was his cousin. “I knew that being the cousin would not be enough,” Peterson recalls, “and I have to say that I lost hope.”

    The pregnant woman disappeared on a small boat toward land. Those left on the stern began to talk among themselves, asking why the baby, who had barely stopped crying, and the other children had been left aboard the cutter. They said they could not keep going like this, eating only small portions of scarcely cooked and saltless rice and beans, unable to bathe and forced to urinate and defecate in a toilet seat attached to a metal box with a tube off the side of the open deck. They decided they would rise in unison and protest, and they passed the word from one to the next. At around 9 p.m., dozens of people began to yell toward the bridge demanding interpreters, lawyers or just to know what would become of them. From the bow where he stood, James heard faint yelling, and then the voice of the officer in charge over the loudspeaker. “They’re starting an uprising on the fantail,” he said. “I need you back there.”

    Timothy James came from a conservative family in a conservative little town in the mountains of North Carolina. He and his wife held handguns aloft in their wedding photos, and his first job after dropping out of college was as a sheriff’s deputy at the jail. James joined the Coast Guard in 2015. “My main goal,” he told me, “was to chase down drug runners and catch migrants” — two groups that were more or less the same, as far as he understood.

    He’d been on the job no more than a few weeks before his expectations were upended. “I had no idea what I was talking about,” he told me. There was much less “running and gunning, catching bad guys” than he’d anticipated. Instead, the people he detained would tell him their stories, sometimes with the help of Google Translate on his phone, about violence and deprivation like he had never contemplated. People described what it was like to live on $12 a month. There were children and grandmothers who could have been his own, and young men not so unlike him. They were not trying to infiltrate the country as he’d thought. They were running because “they didn’t have another option,” he says.

    James and his colleagues learned the lengths people would go to try to get to land. Since last fall, people detained on cutters have pulled jagged metal cotter pins, bolts and screws from the rigging and swallowed them, apparently trying to cause such severe injury that they’d be taken to a hospital. Last August, near the Florida Keys, three Cuban men were reported to the Coast Guard by a passing towboat operator; most likely fearing they would be brought back to Cuba, they stabbed and slashed their legs with blades and were found in puddles of blood. In January, a man plunged a five-inch buck-style knife that he’d carried onto a cutter into the side of his torso and slashed it down his rib cage. The crew taped the knife to the wound to stop him from bleeding out as he fell unconscious. Most of these people were delivered to Customs and Border Protection and rushed to hospitals on land, where they probably intended to claim asylum. By the time James began working as operations officer on the Manowar last summer, he and other crew members started every leg at sea by scouring the decks for anything that people might use to harm themselves. (According to a DHS spokesperson, “medical evacuations do not mean that migrants have a greater chance of remaining in the United States.”)

    People detained on cutters have in rare cases threatened to harm Coast Guard members or others they’re traveling with. In January, a group the Coast Guard detained pushed crew members and locked arms to stop their removal to another cutter, according to an internal record. That same month, a group of Haitians held children over the side of a boat, “threatening to throw them overboard and set them on fire” if the Coast Guard came closer. Weeks later, a group of Cubans brandished poles with nails hammered into them and tried to attack an approaching Coast Guard boat. Conflicts between crew and those they detain have escalated to the point that Coast Guard members have shot people with pepper balls and subdued others with stun maneuvers.

    James tensed as he heard the order over the loudspeaker. He thought of the crowd-control techniques he’d learned to immobilize someone, and stepped down the side walkway toward the stern. In front of him were dozens of angry men and a few women, yelling in Haitian Creole. James hesitated and then walked forcefully up to the group, his hands pulled into his sides as if he were ready to throw a punch. Instead, he took a knee. He gestured to the men around him to come join him. He spoke into a cellphone in English, and on the screen he showed them the Google Translate app: “You’ve got to tell everybody to calm down,” it read in Creole. “I can’t help you if I don’t know what’s going on.”

    Before they could respond, five other crew members came down the stairs, plastic zip ties and batons hanging from their belts. Tcherry was sitting under the stairs, beside Claire and Beana, who had not let go of the teddy bear. “Shut up, shut up,” one of the crew told the protesters as he stepped in front of Tcherry. “One of them said he was going to pepper-spray their eyes and handcuff them,” Tcherry says. James told his colleagues to wait. The yelling in English and Creole grew louder. A man to Tcherry’s left began to scream and roll on the ground, and then he rolled partway under the handrail. A crew member grabbed the man by the back of the pants and hauled him up. James secured his wrist to a post on the deck. “Nobody’s dying on my boat today,” James said.

    Above Tcherry, another crew member stepped onto the landing at the top of the stairs. He held a shotgun and cocked it. James claims that the gun was not loaded, but the threat of violence had its intended effect. The protesters stepped back and went quiet.

    James kept speaking into the phone. “What do you want?” he asked the men.

    “If we go back, we’re dead,” one man replied. They said they could not endure being on the boat much longer.

    “If it were up to me, we’d be taking you to land,” James said. “But it is not up to us.” There was a process to seek protection, he told them. “But what you’re doing now is not that process.”

    Coast Guard crews do not decide who will be offered protection and who will be sent back. Their responsibility is only to document what the agency calls “manifestation of fear” (MOF) claims. The Coast Guard instructs them to make note of such claims only when people proactively assert them or when they observe people exhibiting signs of fear, such as shaking or crying. They are not supposed to ask. That may help explain why the agency has logged only 1,900 claims from more than 27,000 people detained in this region between July 2021 and September 2023. Fewer than 300 of those came from Haitians, even though they make up about a third of people held on cutters. Officials in the Coast Guard and in U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services told me that Haitians face a systemic disadvantage in making a successful claim for protection: Almost no one working on Coast Guard boats can speak or understand Creole. (The Coast Guard told me it has access to contracted Creole interpreters aboard cutters.)

    Regardless of the person’s nationality, the process is nearly always a dead end. Each person who makes a claim for protection is supposed to be referred to a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officer, who conducts a “credible fear” screening by phone or in person on a cutter. Between July 2021 and early September 2023, USCIS approved about 60 of the approximately 1,900 claims — around 3%. By contrast, about 60% of asylum applicants on land passed a credible-fear screening over roughly the same period. Unlike on land, people who are denied on ships have no access to courts or lawyers to appeal the decision. And the few who are approved are not sent to the United States at all. Should they choose to proceed with their claims, they are delivered to an immigration holding facility at the U.S. naval base at Guantánamo Bay, where they are evaluated again. They’re told they should be prepared to wait for two years or more, until another country agrees to take them as refugees. Only 36 of the people with approved claims agreed to be sent to Guantánamo. The State Department says there are currently no unaccompanied minors held at the Migrant Operations Center at Guantánamo, but a recent federal contract document says that the facility is prepared to accept them.

    The Manowar crew had been tasked by the local Coast Guard office with logging any requests for protection. But the night after the protest had been too chaotic and exhausting for them to do so. In the morning, a larger cutter with more supplies arrived. The people detained on the Manowar would be transferred to that boat. Before they departed, James told them that anyone who intended to seek protection should seek help from the crew on the next boat. “Tell them, ‘I’m in fear for my life,’ just like you told me,” he said. “You tell whoever is processing you that specific thing.”

    But subsequent crews logged no such claims, according to records I obtained. One man told me that, in response to his plea for protection, an officer on the next boat wrote a note on a piece of paper, but nobody ever followed up. Another said that an officer told him their claims would be heard later. But there were no more interviews. “We had no opportunity,” a woman in the group says. When I asked the Coast Guard about this, a spokesperson told me the agency meticulously documents all claims. “Since we do not have a record of any of those migrants communicating that they feared for their lives if returned to Haiti, I cannot say that they made MOF claims while aboard,” he said.

    Tcherry fell asleep on the larger cutter and woke at around dawn to commotion. He saw an EMT pressing on the chest of a middle-aged woman who lay several yards away from him. She had been moaning in pain the night before. The crew member keeping watch had found her dead, her nose and mouth covered in blood. Another Haitian woman began to sing a hymn as the EMT performing CPR cried. A small boat took the woman’s body away and then returned for another man who had been complaining of pain and could not urinate. “I thought they would take us to land after the woman had died,” Tcherry says. “I thought they would let us go.” But that afternoon, he was transferred to yet another cutter that pulled away from Florida and into the high seas. Tcherry finally understood he was being sent back.

    The Coast Guard was first deployed as a maritime border-patrol agency to stop an earlier surge of migration from Haiti. In 1981, President Ronald Reagan made a deal with Jean-Claude Duvalier, the Haitian dictator, that allowed the Coast Guard to stop and board Haitian boats and deliver those detained directly back to Haiti. They would be processed on Coast Guard cutters, far from lawyers who could review their cases. The order, advocates argued at the time, undermined U.N. refugee protections and a U.S. refugee-and-asylum law that Congress passed just the year before. “This effort to push borders into the world’s oceans was new, and it marked a perverse paradigm shift,” Jeffrey Kahn, a legal scholar at the University of California, Davis, wrote recently.

    A decade after the Reagan agreement, as Haitians again departed en masse following a military coup, the George H.W. Bush administration further buttressed the sea wall. Bush signed an order that said federal agencies had no obligation to consider asylum claims from Haitians caught in international waters, no matter the evidence of danger or persecution. Lawyers and activists protested, calling the maritime regime a wholesale abdication of human rights doctrine. But the Bush order still stands. By the mid-1990s, its reach expanded to nearly anyone of any nationality caught in the sea, whether out in international waters or a couple of hundred feet from the beach.

    Pushing migrants and refugees away from the land borders to avoid obligations under law has now become common practice. In the United States, consecutive policies under Presidents Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Joe Biden have attempted to cast whole swaths of the land south of the border as a legal no-man’s land like the ocean. They have outsourced deterrence, detention and deportation to Mexico and Central America. Trump and Biden have sought to bar people from seeking asylum if they don’t first try to apply for protection in countries they pass through on their way to the United States. Europe, for its part, has pushed people coming by boat through the Mediterranean back to North African shores, where countries have imposed brutal regimes of deterrence.

    None of those measures have prevented the latest wave of migration from the Caribbean. In January, amid a generational spike in Haitians and Cubans held on their cutters, the Coast Guard acknowledged that crew members were reaching a breaking point. “We are in extremis,” a senior official wrote to colleagues in a widely circulated internal email in January. “I know you and your teams are pushed beyond limits.” The head of the Coast Guard for the eastern half of the United States, Vice Adm. Kevin Lunday, wrote in February to colleagues that two outside experts had told him their crews were under extreme stress similar to the levels experienced in “sustained combat operations.”

    Coast Guard members told me they had become accustomed to retrieving corpses from capsized boats, worn down by water or gnawed on by sharks. It was not uncommon to walk down a stairway or into a bunk room and come upon a crew member sobbing. Crew members waited months for mental health appointments, and the agency was talking openly about suicide prevention. “I don’t see how the current level of operations is sustainable,” Capt. Chris Cederholm, the commander of U.S. Coast Guard Sector Miami, wrote to colleagues, “without the breaking of several of our people.” Some were struggling with what one former crew member called a “moral dilemma,” because they had begun to understand that the job required them to inflict suffering on others. “We hear their stories, people who say they’d rather we shoot them right here than send them back to what they’re running from,” one Coast Guard member says. “And then we send them all back.”

    Tim James told me he tried to take his mind off the job by lifting weights and frequenting a cigar bar where service members and cops go to talk about “the suck,” but he soon realized he needed more than weights or whiskey to reckon with the mounting stress, even despair. “I go home, and I feel guilty,” he told me, “because I don’t have to worry about somebody kicking in my front door, you know, I don’t have to worry about the military roaming the streets.” He sought mental health support from a new “resiliency support team” the agency created. But James had not been able to shake the memories of the children he detained, particularly one 7-year-old Haitian girl with small braids. She’d been wearing shorts and a tank top, her feet were bare and she smiled at James whenever their eyes caught. “My mom is dead,” she told James with the help of an older child who spoke a little English. “I want to go to my auntie in Miami.”

    In the girl’s belongings the crew found a piece of paper with a phone number she said was her aunt’s. After James interviewed her, they sent her unaccompanied-minor questionnaire to the district office in Florida, and they waited for instructions on what to do with her. Out on the deck, James couldn’t help hoping she’d be taken to shore, to her aunt. But late in the morning the next day, the crew received a list from an office in Washington, D.C., of the people to be sent back. The girl was on the list. James cried on the return trip to port. One of his own daughters was about the girl’s age. “I can’t imagine sending my 7-year-old little kid across an ocean that is unforgiving,” James told me, nearly in tears. “I can’t imagine what my life would be like to have to do that.”

    That was just weeks before he encountered Tcherry, Claire and Beana. So when Peterson admitted the children were alone, the news came as a blow. “It’s a pretty hard hit when you think the kids have somebody and then it turns out that they really don’t,” James told me. He could see that Tcherry thought he would be making it to shore. “To see the hope on his face and then have to kind of turn around and destroy that is tough,” James told me. He never learns what becomes of the people he transfers off his cutter: that the pregnant woman gave birth in a hospital to a healthy boy and has an asylum case pending; that the body of Guerline Tulus, the woman who died on the cutter of what the medical examiner concluded was an embolism, remains in a Miami morgue, and that authorities have not identified any next of kin. He does not know what happened to the three children after they were sent back, but many months later, he says, he still wonders about them.

    Tcherry followed Claire and Beana up a rickety ramp in the port of Cap-Haïtien, Haiti, past a seized blue and yellow cargo ship into the Haitian Coast Guard station. The ground was littered with plastic U.S. Coast Guard bracelets that previous groups of people had pulled off and thrown to the ground. Officials from the Haitian child-protection authority and the U.N.’s International Organization for Migration watched as Tcherry and the rest of the group disembarked. “They looked scared and they said they were hungry,” a veteran official at IBESR, the Haitian child-protection agency, who was working at the port that day told me. “As a Haitian, I feel humiliated,” he says, “but we can’t really do anything about it. We’ve resigned ourselves.” To him, the people the Americans offloaded in Haiti always looked half dead. “It seems to me that when those children fall in their hands, they should know how to treat them. But that’s not the case.”

    Tcherry’s throat hurt and his legs were weak. He had never felt such tiredness. He ate as much as he could from the warm plate of food the UN provided. Slumped over on a bench, he waited for his turn to use the shower in a white and blue wash shed on the edge of a fenced lot behind the Haitian Coast Guard station. The officials brought several people to a hospital and got to work figuring out what to do with the unaccompanied children.

    The U.S. Coast Guard and State Department say that the children they send back are transferred into the hands of local authorities responsible for the care of children. “When we have custodial protection of those children, we want to make sure that the necessary steps are taken,” Lt. Cmdr. John Beal, a Coast Guard spokesperson, told me, “to ensure that when we repatriate those migrants, they don’t end up in some nefarious actor’s custody or something.” But no U.S. agency would explain the actual precautions the U.S. government takes to keep children from ending up in the wrong hands, beyond initial screenings aboard cutters. Last year, the Coast Guard stopped tracking the “reception agency” in each country, because according to the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. government has set up rules establishing which agencies take these children and no longer needs to track them on a case-by-case basis.

    Haitian child-protection officials in Cap-Haïtien say their agency always finds relatives to take children, though sometimes after weeks or months. But the official with one of the other agencies involved in the processing of returned and deported Haitians at the Cap-Haïtien port said this claim is simply not true. The official said that children have departed the port with adults and with older children without any agency confirming they have an actual relationship or connection. “This is a serious concern in terms of trafficking,” the official told me. IBESR said those claims were unfounded. “According to the procedure, every child who leaves the port is accompanied by someone,” the IBESR official said, adding that when possible, the agency follows up with families to make sure children arrive safely. But the agency acknowledged there are limits to the support it can provide because of a lack of resources.
    Before they left the cutter, Peterson told Tcherry and the sisters that he would take care of them until they could contact their parents, who would figure out where they needed to go. Tcherry agreed. Peterson later told me he’d thought carefully about whether he wanted to get involved in the kids’ affairs once they were off the boat. He’d talked to other adults onboard, and they all agreed that someone needed to step up, that the Haitian government was surely not to be trusted. “If I didn’t do it,” Peterson says, “they would remain with the Haitian state, with all the risks that they could’ve faced, including kidnapping.”

    Peterson told the child-protection agency that he was the children’s guardian. The officials said they would need to contact the parents to confirm, so Peterson did the only thing he could think to do: He called the man who had been his conduit to the boat out of the Bahamas. The man sent him photos of the children’s IDs and put Peterson in touch with Claire and Beana’s mother, Inose Jean, in Michigan. She screamed and cried with relief upon learning her daughters were alive. Peterson explained that he’d taken care of the girls at sea and he asked her what to do with them. She said she would call back. Two hours later, she instructed Peterson to take the girls to her friend’s house in Cap-Haïtien.

    But Peterson still had no number for Tcherry’s mother. So he told the officials that Tcherry was Claire and Beana’s cousin, and that he’d gotten the image of Tcherry’s ID from Inose Jean. At dusk, Peterson walked with the three children through the metal gate of the Haitian Coast Guard station, at once incensed and relieved that he’d been allowed to take them. “The Haitian authorities didn’t talk to the children’s mothers,” Peterson says. “There was not enough evidence to actually prove I was who I was, or to prove a relationship.” They took a taxi to Jean’s friend’s house, and Claire, who recognized the woman from years earlier, rushed into her arms.

    The woman agreed to let Tcherry spend a night there. Peterson went to a cheap hotel with spotty electricity and a dirty pool. The man in the Bahamas finally sent Peterson Tcherry’s mother’s number. “I am the person who stood up to care for Tcherry on the boat,” Peterson told LaFortune. She collapsed onto the bed in her room, the only piece of furniture in the Toronto apartment she shared with her husband and her daughter. She had spent the last six days in a terrified daze, calling the people in the Bahamas she’d paid, begging for any news and fighting images in her mind of her son sinking into the sea. The next morning, after Tcherry woke, Peterson called LaFortune again. Tcherry looked weak and his voice was frail and hoarse. “When will I be with you, Mommy?” he asked.

    LaFortune did not for a moment consider trying to put Tcherry on another boat. She told him she would wait until she got asylum in Canada and send for him legally. But Haiti was even more dangerous for Tcherry than when he’d left. One man who was detained with Tcherry, whom I interviewed in Haiti two weeks after he returned there, said he feared he would be killed if he left Cap-Haïtien for his home in Port-au-Prince. After he ran through the roughly $50 the U.N. agency gave each of the returnees, which he used for a hotel, he did go back and was attacked on the street as he traveled to a hospital, he said, to get medicine for his daughter. He sent me photographs of gashes on his body. A second man sent me photos of a deep head wound that he suffered during an attack by the very armed men he had said he was running from. Another woman from the boat who told me she fled because she was raped says she is now “in hiding” in Port-au-Prince, living with relatives and her daughter, whom she does not allow to leave the house.

    Others on the boat have been luckier. In late 2022, the Department of Homeland Security started an unusually broad new legal-immigration program that now allows Haitians and Cubans, along with Venezuelans and Nicaraguans, to apply for two-year entry permits on humanitarian grounds from their countries, rather than traveling by land or sea first. The Department of Homeland Security says that since the program began, it has processed 30,000 people a month. More than 107,000 Haitians and 57,000 Cubans have been approved for entry, including a man who was detained with Tcherry. On Oct. 18, he stepped off a plane in Fort Lauderdale with a legal entry permit. He made it just under the wire, given the timing of his interdiction in February. In late April, DHS added a caveat to the new program: Anyone stopped at sea from then on would be ineligible to apply to the parole program. The Coast Guard says the new program and the accompanying restriction have caused the numbers of Cubans and Haitians departing on boats to fall back down to their pre-2021 level. “People have a safe and lawful alternative,” Beal, the Coast Guard’s spokesperson in Florida, told me, “so they don’t feel their only option is to take to the sea.”

    Tcherry rode a bus with Peterson over the mountains to Saint-Marc. In the stucco house on a quiet street where Peterson lived with his fiancée and her parents, Tcherry struggled to stop thinking about his experience at sea. “When I sleep, when I sit down, I want to cry,” Tcherry told me days after his arrival there. “They had us for five days. We couldn’t eat well, couldn’t sleep well. Couldn’t brush our teeth.” He thought of his body soaked from the sea spray, of the woman who died. Although Peterson assured him it was not true, Tcherry kept wondering if the officers had just thrown her body into the sea. “He is having nightmares about the boats,” Peterson told me a week after their arrival, “reliving the same moment again and again, and he starts crying.”

    LaFortune told Tcherry that she was arranging for him to travel to his grandmother in another part of the country. But it soon became clear to her that the roads were too dangerous, spotted with gang and vigilante checkpoints guarded often by men carrying AK-47s. Peterson told LaFortune that Tcherry could stay with him as long as she needed him to. But as the weeks turned to months, Tcherry felt that Peterson began to change. He said Peterson needed money, and he was asking Tcherry’s mother to send more and more. Peterson was frequently out of the house, working odd jobs, and often could not answer LaFortune’s calls. She grew worried. When she did talk to Tcherry, he was as quiet as he was in the smuggler’s house in the Bahamas.

    Two months passed. LaFortune’s asylum case was denied, and she and her husband appealed. Four more months passed. LaFortune’s husband heard news that gangs were closing in on Saint-Marc. LaFortune decided that they must move Tcherry, that it was time to risk the journey on the roads. In September, she sent an old family friend to collect him. They rode on a bus through a checkpoint where the driver paid a fee to a masked man. “I saw a man holding his gun,” Tcherry says. The man made a sign that they could pass.

    Tcherry arrived at a busy bus station in Port-au-Prince and looked for his grandmother. He saw her in a crowd and remembered her face, her high forehead and wide smile. “That is my grandma,” he said, again and again. His mutters turned to song. “That is my grandmother, tololo, tololo, that is my grandmother.” He sank into her arms. He held her hand as they boarded another bus and passed through another checkpoint, back to where he began.

    https://www.propublica.org/article/when-the-coast-guard-intercepts-unaccompanied-kids

    –—

    Reprise du #modèle_australien et son concept de l’#excision_territoriale :

    “People intercepted at sea, even in U.S. waters, have fewer rights than those who come by land. “Asylum does not apply at sea,” a Coast Guard spokesperson told me. Even people who are fleeing violence, rape and death, who on land would be likely to pass an initial asylum screening, are routinely sent back to the countries they’ve fled.”

    Excision territoriale :

    https://seenthis.net/messages/416996
    #Australie

    #droits #mer #terre #USA #Etats-Unis #asile #migrations #réfugiés #MNA #mineurs_non_accompagnés #enfants #enfance #Haïti #réfugiés_haïtiens

    via @freakonometrics

  • Marine pollution, a Tunisian scourge: Jeans industries destroy the marine ecosystem in the #Ksibet_El-Mediouni Bay

    The Made in Tunisia clothes industry for the European market consumes large amounts of water and pollutes Tunisia’s coastline. In Ksibet El Mediouni, the population is paying the price of the environmental cost of #fast_fashion.

    Behind the downtown promontory, blue-and-white tourist villas and monuments celebrating former Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba, born in Monastir, give way to gray warehouses. Made in Tunisia clothes for export are cut, sewn, and packed inside these hangars and garages, many undeclared, by a labor force mostly of women, who are paid an average of 600 dinars, as confirmed by the latest social agreement signed with the main trade union, the Tunisian General Labour Union (UGTT), obtained by inkyfada.

    The triangle of death”

    The clothes are then shipped to the European Union, the primary export market. While most Tunisians can afford to buy second-hand clothes on the so-called “fripes” markets, 82% of Tunisian textile production leaves the country, according to the latest figures published in a report by the NGO Avocats Sans Frontières. Tunisia, like Morocco and Egypt, are attractive destinations for textile manufacturing multinationals due to their geographical proximity to the European market.

    Here, the tourist beaches quickly become a long, muddy marine expanse. The road that leads to the working-class neighborhoods south of Monastir, known as a hub of the textile industry - Khniss, Ksibet, Lamta, Ksar Hellal, Moknine - is paradoxically called Boulevard de l’Environnement (Environment Boulevard).

    This street name can be found in every major city in the country as a symbol of the ’authoritarian environmentalism of Ben Ali’s 1990s Tunisia’ - as researcher Jamie Furniss called it - redeeming the image of dictatorship ’by appealing to strategic hot-button issues in the eyes of the “West.”’

    After rolling up his pants, he dips his feet into the dirty water and climbs into a small wooden boat. ’Nowadays, to find even a tiny fish, we must move away from the coast.’

    ’Sadok is one of the last small fishermen who still dares to enter these waters,’ confirms Yassine, a history professor in the city’s public school, watching him from the main road to cope with the strong smell.

    Passers-by of Boulevard de l’Environnement agree: the Ksibet El-Mediouni Bay died ‘because of an abnormal concentration of textile companies in a few kilometers’, they say, polluting the seawater where the population used to bathe in summer.

    The region is home to five factory clusters. ’Officially, there are 45 in all, but there are illegal ones that we cannot count or even notice. They are often garages or warehouses without signs,’ confirms Mounir Hassine, head of Monastir’s Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.

    This is how the relocation of textile industries works: the big brands found in French, Italian, Spanish, and German shops relocate to Tunisia to cut costs. ’Then some local companies outsource production to other smaller, often undeclared companies to reduce costs and be more competitive,’ explains Habib Hazemi, President of the General Federation of Textiles, Clothing, Footwear, and Leather in the offices of the trade union UGTT.

    According to Hassine from the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights (FTDES), ‘undeclared factories often dig wells to access groundwater and end up polluting the Bay by discharging wastewater directly into the sea’.

    The public office responsible for water treatment (Office National de l’Assainissement, ONAS) ’fails to treat all this wastewater,’ he adds, so State and private parties bounce responsibilities off each other’. ’The result is that nothing natural is left here,’ Yassine keeps repeating.

    The unheard call of civil society

    Fatma Ben Amor, 28, has learned the meaning of pollution by looking at it through her window and listening to the stories of her grandparents, born and raised in the small town of Ksibet El Mediouni. ’ They often tell me that people used to bathe and go fishing here. I never knew the ’living’ beach,’ says this local activist.

    After the revolution, her city became the center of a wave of protests in 2013 by the population against ’an ecological and health disaster,’ it was written on the protesters’ placards. Nevertheless, the protests yielded no results, and marine pollution has continued.

    Founded in 2014, the Association for the Protection of the Environment in Ksibet el Mediouni (APEK) monitors the level of marine pollution in the so-called ’triangle of death.’ Fatma tries to raise awareness in the local community: ’We began with a common reflection on resource management in the region and the idea of reclaiming our bay. Here, youth are used to the smells, the waste, the dirty sea.’

    Under one of the bridges on Boulevard de l’Environnement runs one of the few rivers where there is still water. That water, however, ‘gathers effluent from the area’s industries’, the activists complain. ’The water coming from Oued el-Melah, where all the factories unload, pollutes the sea,’ she explains by pointing to the oued.

    According to the latest report by Avocats Sans Frontières (ASF) and FTDES in August 2023, one of the leading causes of marine pollution in Monastir governorate would be the denim washing process, a practice used in the dyeing of jeans.

    The ASF research explains that the jeans sector is characterized by technical processes involving chemicals - such as acetic acid used for washing, several chemical detergents and bleaching products, or hydrogen peroxide - and massive water consumption in a country suffering from water stress.

    During the period of 2011-2022, Tunisia has ratified important international texts that will strengthen and enrich Tunisian national law in terms of pollution control, environmental security, and sustainable development. ’ Although the regulations governing environmental protection and the use of water resources are strict, the authorities in charge of controls and prosecutions are outdated and unable to deal with the infringements,’ the ASF report confirms.

    According to both civil society organizations, there are mainly two sources of pollution in Ksibet Bay: polluting industries discharging chemicals directly into the seawater and the Office de l’Assainissement (ONAS) , ’which should be responsible for treating household wastewater, but mainly manages wastewater from factories discharging, and then throw them into the sea,’ Fatma Ben Amor explains.

    ’Take, for example, the ONAS plant at Ouad Souk, in Ksibet Bay. Created in 1992, it has a treatment capacity of 1,680 cubic meters per day, with a population more or less adapted to this capacity. It receives more than 9,000 cubic meters daily on average,’ Mounir Hassine confirms.

    ONAS did not respond to our interview requests. The Tunisian Textile and Clothing Federation (FTTH), representing part of the sector’s employers, assures that ‘the large companies in the region have all the necessary certifications and now use a closed cycle that allows water to be reused.’ The FTTH adds that the sector is taking steps towards the energy transition and respect for the environment.

    UTICA Monastir, the other branch of the employers’ association, has also confirmed this information. While a system of certifications and environmental audits has been put in place to monitor the work of large companies, ‘the underground part of the production chain escapes the rules,’ admits one entrepreneur anonymously.

    This pair of jeans is water’

    ONAS finds itself treating more water than the treatment stations’ capacities because, within a few decades, the Monastir region has radically changed its economic and resource management model. A few kilometers from the towns on the coast, roads run through olive groves that recall the region’s agricultural past.

    But today, agriculture and fishing are also industrialized: the governorate of Monastir produced almost 20,000 tonnes of olive oil by 2020. With 14 aquaculture projects far from the coast, the region ranks first in fish production, with an estimated output of between 17,000 and 18,000 tonnes by 2022.

    A wave of drought in the 1990s intensified the rural exodus from inland Tunisia to the coast. ’This coastal explosion has been accompanied by a development model that looked to globalization rather than domestic needs,’ Mounir Hassine from FTDES explains. ’Our region has been at the heart of so-called vulnerable investments, which bring in cheap labor without considering environmental needs and rights.’

    This sudden increase in residents has put greater pressure on the region’s natural water resources, ‘which supply only 50% of our water needs,’ he adds. The remaining 50 percent comes from the increasingly empty northern Oued Nebhana and Oued Medjerda dams. However, much of the water resources are not used for household needs but for industrial purposes.

    According to the ASF report, export companies draw their water partly from the public drinking water network (SONEDE). But the primary source is wells that draw water directly from the water table: ’Although the water code regulates the use of wells, 70% of the water used by the textile industry comes from the region’s unauthorized groundwater’. ’Most wells are dug inside the factories,’ Mounir Hassine from FTDES confirms.

    Due to the current drought wave and mismanagement of resources, Tunisia is now in water poverty, with an average use of 450 cubic meters of water per citizen (the poverty line is 500), according to 2021 data. Moreover, the Regional Agricultural Commission figures show that the water level in Monastir’s aquifers falls between three and four meters yearly.

    Water mismanagement is not just a problem in the textile industry. This type of production, however, is highly water-hungry, especially when it comes to the denim washing process.

    Even if the big brands are at the top of the production chain that ends on the coast of Ksibet El Medeiouni, ‘ they will rarely be held accountable for the social and environmental damage they leave behind,’ admits an entrepreneur in the sector working in subcontracting. Tunisian companies all work for several brands at the same time, and they don’t carry the same name as the big brands, which outsource production.

    ‘Tracing the chain of responsibility is complicated, if not impossible,’ confirms Adel Tekaya, President of UTICA #Monastir.

    The EU wants to produce more green but continues to relocate South

    Once taken directly from the aquifer or from the public drinking water company, SONEDE, a part of the waters polluted by chemical processes, thus ends up in the sea without being filtered. According to scholars, textile dyeing is responsible for the presence of 72 toxic chemicals in water, 30 of which cannot be eliminated.

    According to the World Bank, between 17% and 20% of industrial water pollution worldwide is due to the dyeing and finishing processes used in the textile industry. A figure confirmed by the European Parliament states:

    “Textile production is estimated to be responsible for around 20% of global clean water pollution from dyeing and finishing products".

    The EU has set itself the target of achieving good environmental status in the marine environment by 2025 by applying the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Still, several polluting sectors continue to relocate their production to the Southern countries, where ‘there are fewer controls and costs,’ explains the entrepreneur requesting anonymity for fear of consequences for criticizing a ’central sector’ in the country.

    But pollution knows no borders in the Mediterranean. 87% of the Mediterranean Sea remains contaminated by chemical pollutants, according to the first map published by the European Environment Agency (EEA), based on samples taken from 1,541 sites.

    The environmental damage of the textile industry - considered one of ‘the most polluting sectors on the planet’ - was also addressed at Cop27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, where a series of social and climate objectives concerning greater collaboration between the EU and the MENA region were listed.

    One of the main topics was the urgent harmonization of environmental standards in the framework of the installation of digital product passports’, a tool that will track the origin of all materials and components used in the manufacturing process.

    FTTH ensures that large companies on the Monastir coast have invested in a closed water re-use cycle to avoid pollution. ‘All companies must invest in a closed loop that allows water reuse,’ Mounir Hassine reiterates.

    But to invest in expensive and reconversion work requires a long-term vision, which not all companies have. After a period of ten years, companies can no longer benefit from the tax advantages guaranteed by Tunisian investment law. ‘Then they relocate elsewhere or reopen under another name,’ Mounir Hassine adds.
    Environmental and health damages of marine pollution

    Despite the damage, only female workers walking around in white or colored uniforms at the end of the working day prove that the working-class towns south of Monastir constitute the most important manufacturing hub of Made In Tunisia clothes production. The sector employs 170,000 workers in the country.

    Tunisia is the ninth-largest exporter of clothing from the EU, after Cambodia, according to a study by the Textile Technical Centre in 2022. More than 1,530 companies are officially located there, representing 31% of the national fabric. 82% of this production is exported mainly to France, Italy, Belgium, Germany, and Spain.

    Some women sit eating lunch not far from warehouses on which signs ending in -tex. Few dare to speak; one of them mentions health problems from exposure to chemicals. ’We have received complaints about health problems caused by the treatment and coloring of jeans,’ confirms FGTHCC-UGTT (Textile, Clothing, Footwear and Leather Federation) general secretary Habib Hzemi. Studies have also shown that textile workers – particularly in the denim industry – have a greater risk of skin and eye irritation, respiratory diseases, and cancer.

    Pollution, however, affects not only the textile workers but the entire community of Ksibet. ’We do not know what is in the seawater, and many of us prefer not to know. We have tried to get laboratory tests, but they are very expensive,’ explains Fatma Ben Amor of the APEK Association.

    According to an opinion poll by the Association for the Protection of the Environment of Ksibet Mediouni (APEK) in July 2016, the cancer rate is 4.3%. Among the highest rates worldwide,’ explains a study on cancer in Ksibet for the German Heinrich Böll Stiftung. Different carcinogenic diseases have been reported in the local community, but a cancer register has never been set up.

    Pollutants from the textile industry have impacted marine life too. Like all towns on the coast, Monastir is known for fishing bluefish, sea bream, cod, and other Mediterranean species. But artisanal fishing is increasingly complicated in front of the bay of Ksibet El Mediouni, and the sector has become entirely industrialized. Thus, the town’s small port is deserted.

    ’The port of Ksibet is emptying out, while the ports of Sayeda and Teboulba, beyond the bay, are still working. There are only a few small-scale fishermen left. We used to walk into the water to catch octopuses with our hands,’ one of the port laborers explains anonymously, walking on the Bay.

    ’Thirty years ago, this was a nursery for many Mediterranean species due to the shallow waters. Now, nothing is left,’ he adds. As confirmed by several fishermen in the area, the population has witnessed several fish deaths, most recently in 2020.

    ’We sucked up the algae, waste, and chemical waste a few years ago for maintenance work,’ explains the port laborer. ’Once we cleaned it up, the sea breathed again. For a few days, we saw fish again that we had not seen for years. Then the quicksand swallowed them up again.’

    https://inkyfada.com/en/2023/11/03/marine-pollution-jean-industry-tunisia

    #pollution #jeans #mode #Tunisie #mer #textile #industrie_textile #environnement #eau #pollution_marine

  • #Niger : Europe’s Migration Laboratory
    (publié en 2018, pour archivage ici)

    Mahamane Ousmane is an unrepentant people smuggler. He makes no effort to deny transporting migrants “countless times” across the Sahara into Libya. When he is released from prison in Niger’s desert city of Agadez, he intends to return to the same work.

    The 32-year-old is even more adamant he has done nothing wrong. “I don’t like criminals. I am no thief. I have killed no one,” he says.

    As Ousmane speaks, a small circle of fellow inmates in filthy football shirts and flip-flops murmur in agreement. The prison at Agadez, where the French once stabled their horses in colonial times, now houses an increasing number of people smugglers. These “passeurs,” as they are known in French, have found themselves on the wrong side of a recent law criminalizing the movement of migrants north of Agadez.

    Aji Dan Chef Halidou, the prison director who has gathered the group in his office, does his best to explain. “Driving migrants out into the Sahara is very dangerous, that’s why it is now illegal,” he interjects.

    Ousmane, a member of the Tubu tribe, an ethnic group that straddles the border between Niger and Libya, is having none of it. “Nobody ever got hurt driving with me,” he insists. “You just have to drive at night because in the day the sun can kill people.”

    A powerfully built man who speaks in emphatic bursts of English and Hausa, Ousmane worked in the informal gold mines of Djado in northern Niger until they were closed by the military. Then he borrowed money to buy a pickup truck and run the route from Agadez to Sebha in Libya. His confiscated truck is now sinking into the sand at the nearby military base, along with more than 100 others taken from people smugglers. Ousmane still owes nearly $9,000 on the Toyota Hilux and has a family to support. “There is no alternative so I will go back to work,” he says.

    “We need to implement this law gently as many people were living off migration and they were promised compensation by Europe for leaving it behind, but this hasn’t happened yet.”

    While the temperature outside in the direct sun nears 120F (50C), the air conditioner in the warden’s office declares its intention to get to 60F (16C). It will not succeed. As mosquitoes circle overhead, Halidou’s earlier enthusiasm for the law evaporates. “Agadez has always been a crossroads where people live from migration,” he says. “We need to implement this law gently as many people were living off migration and they were promised compensation by Europe for leaving it behind, but this hasn’t happened yet.”

    Ali Diallo, the veteran among the inmates, blames Europe for his predicament. Originally from Senegal, he made his way across West Africa to Libya working in construction. His life there fell apart after the Western-backed ouster of the Gadhafi regime. The steady supply of work became more dangerous and his last Libyan employer shot him in the leg instead of paying him at the end of a job.

    “In Senegal there are no jobs, in Mali there are no jobs, but there were jobs in Libya and that was all right,” he says. “Then the West killed Gadhafi and now they want to stop migration.” Diallo retreated two years ago to Agadez and found a job as a tout or “coxeur” matching migrants with drivers. This was what he was arrested for. He has a question: “Didn’t the Europeans think about what would happen after Gadhafi?”

    The Little Red Town

    Niger is prevented from being the poorest country in the world only by the depth of misery in Central African Republic. It was second from bottom in last year’s U.N. Human Development Index. Niamey, the country’s humid capital on the banks of the River Niger, has a laid-back feeling and its population only recently passed the 1 million mark.

    But the city’s days as a forgotten backwater are coming to an end.

    Along the Boulevard de la Republique, past the machine-gun nests that block approaches to the presidential palace, concrete harbingers of change are rising from the reddish Saharan dust. Saudi Arabia and the U.S. have vast new embassy complexes under construction that will soon overshadow those of Libya and France, the two traditional rivals for influence in Niger.

    Further north in the Plateau neighborhood, the development aid complex is spreading out, much of it funded by the European Union.

    “What do all these foreigners want from our little red town?” a senior Niger government adviser asked.

    In the case of the E.U. the answer is clear. Three-quarters of all African migrants arriving by boat in Italy in recent years transited Niger. As one European ambassador said, “Niger is now the southern border of Europe.”

    Federica Mogherini, the closest the 28-member E.U. has to a foreign minister, chose Niger for her first trip to Africa in 2015. The visit was seen as a reward for the Niger government’s passage of Law 36 in May that year that effectively made it illegal for foreign nationals to travel north of Agadez.

    “We share an interest in managing migration in the best possible way, for both Europe and Africa,” Mogherini said at the time.

    Since then, she has referred to Niger as the “model” for how other transit countries should manage migration and the best performer of the five African nations who signed up to the E.U. Partnership Framework on Migration – the plan that made development aid conditional on cooperation in migration control. Niger is “an initial success story that we now want to replicate at regional level,” she said in a recent speech.

    Angela Merkel became the first German chancellor to visit the country in October 2016. Her trip followed a wave of arrests under Law 36 in the Agadez region. Merkel promised money and “opportunities” for those who had previously made their living out of migration.

    One of the main recipients of E.U. funding is the International Organization for Migration (IOM), which now occupies most of one street in Plateau. In a little over two years the IOM headcount has gone from 22 to more than 300 staff.

    Giuseppe Loprete, the head of mission, says the crackdown in northern Niger is about more than Europe closing the door on African migrants. The new law was needed as networks connecting drug smuggling and militant groups were threatening the country, and the conditions in which migrants were forced to travel were criminal.

    Loprete echoes Mogherini in saying that stopping “irregular migration” is about saving lives in the desert. The IOM has hired community officers to warn migrants of the dangers they face farther north.

    “Libya is hell and people who go there healthy lose their minds,” Loprete says.

    A side effect of the crackdown has been a sharp increase in business for IOM, whose main activity is a voluntary returns program. Some 7,000 African migrants were sent home from Niger last year, up from 1,400 in 2014. More than 2,000 returns in the first three months of 2018 suggest another record year.

    Loprete says European politicians must see that more legal routes are the only answer to containing irregular migration, but he concludes, “Europe is not asking for the moon, just for managed migration.”

    The person who does most of the asking is Raul Mateus Paula, the E.U.’s top diplomat in Niamey. This relatively unheralded country that connects West and North Africa is now the biggest per capita recipient of E.U. aid in the world. The European Development Fund awarded $731 million to Niger for the period 2014–20. A subsequent review boosted this by a further $108 million. Among the experiments this money bankrolls are the connection of remote border posts – where there was previously no electricity – to the internet under the German aid corporation, GIZ; a massive expansion of judges to hear smuggling and trafficking cases; and hundreds of flatbed trucks, off-road vehicles, motorcycles and satellite phones for Nigerien security forces.

    This relatively unheralded country that connects West and North Africa is now the biggest per capita recipient of E.U. aid in the world.

    Normally, when foreign aid is directed to countries with endemic corruption – Transparency International ranks Niger 112th out of 180 countries worldwide – it is channeled through nongovernmental organizations. Until 2014 the E.U. gave only one-third of its aid to Niger in direct budget support; in this cycle, 75 percent of its aid goes straight into government coffers. Paula calls the E.U. Niger’s “number one partner” and sees no divergence in their interests on security, development or migration.

    But not everyone agrees that European and Nigerien interests align. Julien Brachet, an expert on the Sahel and Sahara, argues that the desire to stop Europe-bound migration as far upstream as possible has made Niger, and particularly Agadez, the “perfect target” for E.U. migration policies. These policies, he argues, have taken decades-old informal migration routes and made them clandestine and more dangerous. A fellow at the French National Research Institute for Development, Brachet accuses the E.U. of “manufacturing smugglers” with the policies it has drafted to control them.

    Niger, which has the fastest-growing population in the world, is a fragile setting for grand policy experiments. Since independence from France in 1960 it has witnessed four coups, the last of which was in 2010. The regular overthrow of governments has seen political parties proliferate, while the same cast of politicians remains. The current president, Mahamadou Issoufou, has run in every presidential election since 1993. His latest vehicle, the Party for Democracy and Socialism, is one of more than 50 active parties. The group’s headquarters stands out from the landscape in Niamey thanks to giant streamers, in the party’s signature pink, draped over the building.

    The biggest office in the pink house belongs to Mohamed Bazoum, Niger’s interior minister and its rising political star. When European diplomats mention who they deal with in the Nigerien government, his name is invariably heard.

    “We are in a moment with a lot of international attention,” Bazoum says. “We took measures to control migration and this has been appreciated especially by our European partners.”

    Since the crackdown, the number of migrants passing checkpoints between Niamey and Agadez has dropped from 350 per day, he claims, to 160 a week.

    “We took away many people’s livelihoods,” he says, “but we have to say that the economy was linked to banditry and connected to other criminal activities.”

    “Since independence, we never had a government that served so many foreign interests,”

    E.U. officials say privately that Bazoum has taken to issuing shopping lists, running to helicopters and vehicles, of goods he expects in return for continued cooperation.
    By contrast, the World Food Programme, which supports the roughly one in ten of Niger’s population who face borderline malnutrition, has received only 34 percent of the funding it needs for 2018.

    At least three E.U. states – France, Italy and Germany – have troops on the ground in Niger. Their roles range from military advisers to medics and trainers. French forces and drone bases are present as part of the overlapping Barkhane and G5 Sahel counterinsurgency operations which includes forces from Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania. The U.S., meanwhile, has both troops and drone bases for its own regional fight against Islamic militants, the latest of which is being built outside Agadez at a cost of more than $100 million.

    “Since independence, we never had a government that served so many foreign interests,” says Hamadou Tcherno Boulama, a civil society activist. His organization, Alternative Espaces Citoyens, often has an armed police presence outside its gates these days to prevent people gathering. Four of Niger’s main civil society leaders were jailed in late March after 35,000 people took to the streets in Niamey in the biggest demonstrations Niger has seen in a decade. Much of the public anger is directed against this year’s budget, which hiked taxes on staples such as rice and sugar.

    Foreign aid accounts for 45 percent of Niger’s budget, so the austerity budget at a time of peak foreign interest has stoked local anger.

    Boulama calls Bazoum “the minister of repression” and says Issoufou has grown fond of foreign travel and spends so little time in Niger that his nickname is “Rimbo” – Niger’s best-known international bus company.

    “Issoufou uses international support related to migration and security issues to fortify his power,” Boulama says.

    The E.U. and the International Monetary Fund have praised the government for this year’s budget, saying it will ease dependence on donors. The most that European diplomats will concede is that the Nigerien government is “bloated” with 43 ministers, each with an expensive retinue.

    European leaders’ “focus on migration is 100 percent,” says Kirsi Henriksson, the outgoing head of EUCAP Sahel, one of those E.U. agencies that few Europeans have ever heard of. When it was conceived, its brief was to deliver a coordinated strategy to meet the jihadi threat in Mali, but its mandate changed recently to prioritize migration. Since then its international staff has trebled.

    Henriksson, whose term ended in April, compares the security and development push to a train where everything must move at the same speed: “If the carriages become too far apart the train will crash,” she says.

    As one of the few Europeans to have visited the border area between Libya and Niger, she is concerned that some European politicians have unrealistic expectations of what is achievable. The border post at Tummo is loosely controlled by ethnic Tubu militia from southern Libya and no Nigerien forces are present.

    “Ungoverned spaces” confuse some E.U. leaders, she says, who want to know how much it will cost to bring the border under control. These kinds of questions ignore both the conditions and scale of the Sahara. On the wall of Henriksson’s office is a large map of the region. It shows the emerald green of West Africa, veined with the blue of its great rivers, fading slowly to pale yellow as you look north. If you drew a line along the map where the Saharan yellow displaces all other colors, it would run right through Agadez. North of that line is a sea of sand nearly four times the size of the Mediterranean.

    The Development Delusion

    Bashir Amma’s retirement from the smuggling business made him an Agadez celebrity after he plowed his past earnings into a local soccer team, where he makes a show of recruiting migrant players. Bashir once ran a ghetto, the connection houses where migrants would wait until a suitable ride north could be found. These days a handful of relatives are the only occupants of a warren of rooms leading off a courtyard amid the adobe walls of the old town.

    He is the president of the only officially recognized association of ex-passeurs and has become the poster boy for the E.U.-funded effort to convert smugglers into legitimate business people. The scheme centers on giving away goods such as cheap motorcycles, refrigerators or livestock up to a value of $2,700 to an approved list of people who are judged to have quit the migration business.

    Bashir is accustomed to European questioners and holds court on a red, black and gold sofa in a parlor decorated with framed verses from the Quran, plastic flowers and a clutch of E.U. lanyards hanging from a fuse box. Flanked by the crutches he has used to get around since a botched injection as a child left him with atrophied legs, he says his conscience led him to give up smuggling. But the more he talks, the more his disenchantment with his conversion seeps out.

    Some of his colleagues have kept up their trade but are now plying different, more dangerous routes to avoid detection. “The law has turned the desert into a cemetery, for African passengers and for drivers as well,” Bashir says.

    You either have to be foolhardy or rich to keep working, Bashir says, because the cost of bribing the police has increased since Law 36 was implemented. As he talks, the two phones on the table in front of him vibrate constantly. His public profile means everyone is looking to him to help them get European money.

    “I’m the president but I don’t know what to tell them. Some are even accusing me of stealing the money for myself,” he says.

    His anxious monologue is interrupted by the appearance of man in a brilliant white suit and sandals at the doorway. Bashir introduces him as “one of the most important passeurs in Agadez.”

    The visitor dismisses the E.U. compensation scheme as “foolish” and “pocket money,” saying he earns more money in a weekend. The police are trying to stop the smugglers, he says, but they do not patrol more than 10 miles (15km) outside the city limits. When asked about army patrols north of Agadez, he replies, “the desert is a big place.”

    After he leaves, Bashir hints darkly at continuing corruption in the security forces, saying some smugglers are freer to operate than others. The old way was effectively taxed through an open system of payments at checkpoints; it is unrealistic to expect this to disappear because of a change in the law.

    “We know that the E.U. has given big money to the government of Niger, we’re seeing plenty of projects opening here,” he says. “But still, one year after the conversion program launched, we’re waiting to receive the money promised.”

    But his biggest frustration is reserved for the slow pace of compensation efforts. “We know that the E.U. has given big money to the government of Niger, we’re seeing plenty of projects opening here,” he says. “But still, one year after the conversion program launched, we’re waiting to receive the money promised.”

    Even the lucky few who make it onto the list for the Action Plan for Rapid Economic Impact in Agadez (PAIERA) are not getting what they really need, which is jobs, he says. The kits are goods to support a small business idea, not a promise of longer-term employment.

    “National authorities don’t give a damn about us,” he says. “We asked them to free our jailed colleagues, to give us back the seized vehicles, but nothing came.”

    There is a growing anti-E.U. sentiment in Agadez, Bashir warns, and the people are getting tired. “Almost every week planes land with leaders from Niamey or Europe. They come and they bring nothing,” he says.

    Agadez is not a stranger to rebellions. The scheme to convert smugglers is run by the same government department tasked with patching up the wreckage left by the Tuareg rebellion, the latest surge of northern resentment at perceived southern neglect that ended in 2009. The scheme sought to compensate ex-combatants and to reduce tensions amid the mass return of pro-Gadhafi fighters and migrant workers that followed from Libya, in 2011 and 2012. Many of them were ethnic Tubu and Tuareg who brought vehicles and desert know-how with them.

    The offices of the High Authority for the Consolidation of Peace in the capital have the air of a place where there has not been much to do lately. Two men doze on couches in the entrance hall. Inside, Jacques Herve is at his desk, the picture of a well-ironed French bureaucrat. He bristles at the accusation that the PAIERA program has failed.

    “The media has often been negative about the conversion program, but they have not always had the right information,” he says. Herve is one of the legion of French functionaries rumored to be seconded to every nook of Niger’s government, and is well-versed in the complaints common in Agadez.

    “During the preparatory phase, people did not see anything, so they were frustrated, but now they are starting to see concrete progress,” he says.

    Herve says 108 small business kits have been given out while another 186 were due to be handed over. When a small number of four-person projects are added in, the total number of people who have been helped is 371. The pilot for the conversion scheme that Bashir and others are waiting on is worth just $800,000.

    If the program was rolled out to all 5,118 ex-smugglers on the long list, it would cost $13 million in funding over the next three years, according to a letter sent to the E.U. Delegation in Niamey. There are other E.U.-funded cash-for-jobs schemes worth another $7 million in Agadez, but these are not related to the former passeur.

    This leaves an apparent mismatch in funding between security, in effect enforcement, and development spending, or compensation. The E.U. Trust Fund for Africa, which European leaders have earmarked to address the “root causes” of migration, has allocated $272 million in Niger.

    Money, Herve acknowledges, is not the problem. He says the principle has been to “do no harm” and avoid channeling funds to organized smuggling kingpins. He also says the task of compiling a roll call of all the workers in an informal economy in a region larger than France had been enormous. “The final list may not be perfect but at least it exists,” he says.

    Herve’s struggles are part of the E.U.’s wider problem. The bloc has pushed for the mainstay of northern Niger’s economy to be criminalized but it remains wary of compensating the individuals and groups it has helped to brand as criminals. There is no precedent for demolishing an informal economy in one of the world’s poorest countries and replacing it with a formal model. Some 60 percent of Niger’s GDP comes from the informal sector, according to the World Bank.

    As a senior government adviser put it, “When you slap a child you cannot ask it not to cry.”

    According to an E.U. official who followed the program, “the law was imposed in a brutal way, without any prior consultation, in a process where the government of Niger was heavily pressured by the E.U., France and Germany, with a minimal consideration of the fact Nigerien security forces are involved in this traffic.”

    “exodants” – a French word used locally to denote economic migrants who fled poverty and conflict in northern Niger to work in Libya or Algeria.

    The group listens as Awal presents the latest draft of an eight-page plan featuring carpentry, restoration, tailoring and sheep-farming ideas. Making it a reality would cost $160,000, they estimate.

    “Some of us have been jailed, some vehicles are lying uselessly under the sun in the military base, but the reality is that we don’t know any other job than this.”

    All those present listen and pledge to respect the new law but they are not happy. The oldest man in the group, a Tuareg with a calm and deep voice, speaks up, “Some of us have been jailed, some vehicles are lying uselessly under the sun in the military base, but the reality is that we don’t know any other job than this,” he says.

    Then his tone turns bitter, “I feel like we have been rejected and the option to move to Libya, like we did in the past, is not there anymore.” Before he can finish, one of the frequent Agadez power cuts strikes, leaving everyone sitting in darkness.

    Unintended Consequences

    Alessandra Morelli uses the fingers of her right hand to list the emergencies engulfing Niger. The country representative of the U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) starts with her little finger to represent the 240,000 people displaced by the Boko Haram crisis in Niger’s southeast. Next is the Malian refugee crisis in the regions of Tillabery and Tahoua, a strip of land that stretches northeast of the capital, along the border with Mali, where 65,000 people have fled conflict into Niger. Her middle finger is the situation along the border with Algeria where migrants from all over West Africa are being pushed back or deported, often violently, into Niger. Her index finger stands for the thousands of refugees and migrants who have retreated back into Niger across the border from Libya. And her thumb represents the refugees the U.N. has evacuated from Libya’s capital Tripoli under a tenuous plan to process them in Niger ahead of resettlement to Europe.

    “I can no more tell you which is more important than I can choose a finger I don’t need,” says Morelli, the survivor of a roadside bombing in Somalia.

    Her depiction of a country beset by emergencies is at odds with the E.U. officials who talk of security and development benefits for Niger from its burgeoning international partnerships. UNHCR opened its office in Niger in 2012 and had been attempting to identify refugees and asylum cases among the much larger northward flow of economic migrants. The agency already has tens of thousands of refugees scattered across camps in the region, where many have already been in the queue for resettlement to the rich world for more than 15 years.

    Her depiction of a country beset by emergencies is at odds with the E.U. officials who talk of security and development benefits for Niger from its burgeoning international partnerships.

    A delicate negotiation with the government of Niger – which is aware that European money and plaudits flow from stopping migrants, not identifying more refugees – led to a fledgling project in Agadez, which in partnership with IOM was meant to identify a small number of test cases.

    But the concentration of international resources in Agadez can also have unintended side effects and the UNHCR guest houses were overwhelmed soon after they opened their doors.
    In December a trickle of young Sudanese men started to appear at the IOM transit center. When they made it clear they did not want passage home to Darfur, they were moved into the guest houses as soon as these opened in January. Hundreds more Sudanese quickly followed, the majority of them from Darfur but some from as far away as South Sudan. Most of them had spent half a lifetime in camps in Sudan or Chad and brought with them stories of hardship, abuse and torture in Libya, where they said they had either worked or been seeking passage to Europe.

    By February the first of the men’s families started to arrive, some from Libya and others from camps in neighboring Chad or from Darfur itself. By the time the number of Sudanese passed 500, UNHCR and its partner – an Italian NGO, COOPI – saw their funds exhausted. The influx continued.

    By early March more than 1,500 Sudanese had gathered in Agadez, many camped in front of the government’s office for refugees. The government of Niger wanted to expel them, said an E.U. security adviser. They were suspicious of possible links with Darfuri rebel groups who have been active in southern Libya. “They gave them a 10-day deadline to leave then revoked it only after a delicate negotiation,” the security adviser said.

    Rumors that the Sudanese were demobilized fighters from the Justice and Equality Movement and Sudan Liberation Army-Minni Minawi spread in Agadez. In the comment section of local media outlet Air Info, anger has been rising. “Agadez is not a dumping ground,” wrote one person, while another said, “we’re tired of being Europe’s dustbin.”

    Still only 21 years old, Yacob Ali is also tired. He has been on the run since he was 8 years old, first escaping the bombs of Sudanese government forces in al-Fasher, northern Darfur. He remembers battling for a tent in Zam Zam, one of the world’s biggest camps for displaced people. The eldest of six children, he left for Libya at 20, hoping to find a job. After being abused and exploited on a farm outside Murzuq, an oasis town in southern Libya, he decided “to cross the sea.”

    Agadez is not a dumping ground,” wrote one person, while another said, “we’re tired of being Europe’s dustbin.

    Once again there was no escape and “after hours on a dinghy,” Ali says, “a Libyan vessel with plainclothes armed men forced us back.”

    For the next five months he was trapped in a warehouse in Tripoli, where he and hundreds of others were sold into forced labor. Eventually he managed to free himself and was told that Agadez “was a safe place.”

    Any hopes Ali or other Sudanese may have harbored that Agadez with its presence of international agencies might offer a swifter and safer route to resettlement are vanishing.
    “For refugees who are stuck in Libya, coming to Niger is the only way to safety and protection,” Morelli says, “but it’s difficult to offer them a real solution.”

    Fears that the Sudanese may be deported en masse intensified in early May, when 132 of them were arrested and removed from the city by Nigerien authorities. They were transported to Madama, a remote military outpost in the northern desert, before being forcibly pushed over the border into Libya.

    The accusation that Niger has become a dumping ground for unwanted Africans has become harder for the government to dismiss over the past six months as its neighbor Algeria has stepped up a campaign of pushbacks and deportations along the desert border. Arbitrary arrests and deportations of West Africans working without documents have long been a feature of Algeria’s economy, but the scale of current operations has surprised observers.

    Omar Sanou’s time in Algeria ended abruptly. The Gambian, who worked in construction as a day laborer, was stopped on the street one evening by police. When he asked for the chance to go to his digs and collect his things he was told by officers he was just going to a registration center and would be released later. Another policeman told him he was African, so had “no right to make money out of Algeria.”

    That is when he knew for sure he would be deported.

    Without ever seeing a court or a lawyer, Sanou found himself with dozens of other migrants on a police bus driving east from the Algerian city of Tamanrasset. The men had been stripped of their belongings, food and water.

    The bus stopped in a place in the desert with no signs and they were told the nearest shelter was 15 miles (25km) away. Although several of the men in his group died on the ensuing march, Sanou was lucky. Other groups have been left more than 30 miles from the border. Some men talk of drinking their own urine to survive, and reports of beatings and gunshot wounds are common. As many as 600 migrants have arrived in a single day at Assamaka border post, the only outpost of the Nigerien state in the vast Tamesna desert, where IOM recently opened an office. Survivors such as Sanou have found themselves at the IOM transit center in Agadez where there is food, shelter, healthcare and psychological support for those willing to abandon the road north and go home.

    After nearly five years, Sanou now faces returning home to Gambia empty-handed. The money he earned during the early years of his odyssey was given to his little brother more than a year ago to pay his way north from Agadez. Now 35 and looking older than his age, he admits to feeling humiliated but refuses to despair. “A man’s downfall is not his end,” he says.

    After nearly five years, Sanou faces returning home to Gambia empty-handed. Now 35 and looking older than his age, he admits to feeling humiliated but refuses to despair. “A man’s downfall is not his end.”

    Algeria’s brutal campaign has hardly drawn comment from the E.U., and a Nigerien diplomat said U.S. and European anti-migrant rhetoric is being parroted by Algerian officials. At a recent gathering of Algerian military commanders, discussions centered on the need to “build a wall.”

    The perception among senior figures in the Niger government that they have allowed themselves to become a soft touch for unwanted refugees and migrants has created acute tension elsewhere.

    In March a small-scale effort to evacuate the most vulnerable refugees from Tripoli to Niamey before processing them for resettlement in Europe was suspended. The deal with UNHCR hinged on departures for Europe matching arrivals from Libya. When only 25 refugees were taken in by France, the government of Niger pulled the plug. It has been partially reactivated but refugee arrivals at 913 far outweigh departures for the E.U. at 107. Some reluctant E.U. governments have sent asylum teams to Niamey that are larger in number than the refugees they are prepared to resettle. Meanwhile, people who have suffered horrifically in Libya are left in limbo. They include a Somali mother now in Niamey whose legs are covered in the cigarette burns she withstood daily in Libya at the hands of torturers who said they would start on her two-year-old daughter if she could not take the pain.

    The knock-on effects of the experiments in closing Niger as a migration corridor are not felt only by foreigners. Next to the rubbish dump in Agadez, a few hundred yards from the airstrip, is a no-man’s land where the city’s landless poor are allowed to pitch lean-to shelters. This is where Fatima al-Husseini, a gaunt 60-year-old, lives with her toddler granddaughter Malika. Her son Soumana Abdullahi was a fledgling passeur who took the job after failing to find any other work.

    What had always been a risky job has become potentially more deadly as police and army patrols have forced smugglers off the old roads where there are wells and into the deep desert. Abdullahi’s friends and fellow drivers cannot be sure what happened to him but his car got separated from a three-vehicle convoy on a night drive and appears to have broken down. It took them hours to find the vehicle and its human cargo but Abdullahi had struck out for help into the desert and disappeared.

    His newly widowed wife had to return to her family and could support only two of their three children, so Malika came to live with al-Husseini. Tears look incongruous on her tough and weatherworn face but she cries as she remembers that the family had been close to buying a small house before her son died.

    Epilogue

    All that remains of Mamadou Makka is his phone. The only traces on the scratched handset of the optimistic and determined young Guinean are a few songs he liked and some contacts. It is Ousman Ba’s most treasured possession. “I have been hungry and refused to sell it,” he says, sitting on the mud floor of a smuggler’s ghetto outside Agadez.

    Makka and Ba became friends on the road north to the Sahara; they had never met in Conakry, the capital of their native Guinea. The younger man told Ba about his repeated attempts to get a visa to study in France. Makka raised and lost thousands of dollars through intermediaries in various scams before being forced to accept that getting to Europe legally was a dead end. Only then did he set out overland.

    “It was not his fate to study at a university in France, it was his fate to die in the desert,” says Ba, who was with him when, on the last day of 2017, he died, aged 22.

    “It was not his fate to study at a university in France, it was his fate to die in the desert”

    The pair were among some 80 migrants on the back of a trio of vehicles roughly two days’ drive north of Agadez. The drivers became convinced they had been spotted by an army patrol and everything began to go wrong. Since the 2016 crackdown the routes have changed and distances doubled, according to active smugglers. Drivers have also begun to take amounts of up to $5,000 to pay off security patrols, but whether this works depends on who intercepts them. Some drivers have lost their vehicles and cash and been arrested. News that drivers are carrying cash has drawn bandits, some from as far afield as Chad. Faced with this gauntlet, some drivers unload their passengers and try to outrun the military.

    In Makka and Ba’s case, they were told to climb down. With very little food or water, the group did not even know in which direction to walk. “In that desert, there are no trees. No houses, no water … just mountains of sand,” Ba says.

    It took four days before an army patrol found them. In that time, six of the group died. There was no way to bury Makka, so he was covered with sand. Ba speaks with shame about the selfishness that comes with entering survival mode. “Not even your mother would give you her food and water,” he says.

    When they were finally picked up by the Nigerien army, one of the officers demanded to know of Ba why he had put himself in such an appalling situation and said he could not understand why he hadn’t gotten a visa.

    Half dead from heat stroke and dehydration, Ba answered him, “It is your fault that this happened. Because if you weren’t here, the driver would never abandon us.”

    Four months on and Ba has refused the offer from IOM of an E.U.-funded plane ticket home. He is back in the ghetto playing checkers on a homemade board and waiting to try again. He used Makka’s phone to speak to the young man’s father in Conakry, who begged him to turn back. Ba told him, “Your son had a goal and I am still following that goal. Either I will reach it or I will die. God will decide.”

    https://deeply.thenewhumanitarian.org/refugees/articles/2018/05/22/niger-europes-migration-laboratory

    #laboratoire #migrations #asile #réfugiés #externalisation #frontières #Agadez #modèle #modèle_nigérien #loi_36 #loi #IOM #OIM #Giuseppe_Loprete #risques #retours_volontaires #Raul_Mateus_Paula #European_development_fund #fond_européen_pour_le_développement #Allemagne #GTZ #Mohamed_Bazoum #France #Italie #G5_Sahel #Action_Plan_for_Rapid_Economic_Impact_in_Agadez (#PAIERA)

  • Aaron 💎 sur X :
    https://twitter.com/aaron_a_t/status/1734202267895492939

    Israel: we decided to put Palestinians in gas chambers.

    Congress: here is Zyklon B gas.

    Blinken: Israel assured us they will use gas for cooking only.

    Biden: We expect gas chambers not to be overcrowded. We will provide humanitarian last meal.

    CNN: Israel is defending itself.

    Arab leaders :

    EU leaders: whatever US says.

    NYT: a million Palestinians allegedly die from fume inhalation.

    @AuschwitzMuseum
    : blocked you.

    Ivy League Jewish students: we are the real victims. Nothing compares to the horrors we endured when students chanted “free Palestine”.

  • L’augmentation du #chiffre_d’affaires issu des ventes d’#armes du Top 100 du #SIPRI impactée par des défis de production et des carnets de commandes remplis

    Le chiffre d’affaires issu des #ventes_d’armes et de services à caractère militaire par les 100 plus grandes entreprises d’#armement s’élève à 597 milliards de dollars en 2022, soit 3,5 % de moins qu’en 2021 en termes réels, alors même que la demande a fortement augmenté. C’est ce que révèlent les nouvelles données publiées aujourd’hui par le Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

    Cette diminution s’explique principalement par la baisse du chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes des plus grandes entreprises américaines. Le chiffre d’affaires a augmenté de manière significative en Asie, Océanie et au Moyen-Orient. Les commandes en cours et la multiplication de nouveaux contrats laissent présager que le chiffre d’affaires mondial issu des ventes d’armes pourrait augmenter de manière significative au cours des prochaines années.

    La demande en armement augmente mais la #production reste à la traîne

    L’invasion à grande échelle de l’Ukraine par la Russie et les tensions géopolitiques dans le monde ont provoqué une forte augmentation de la demande d’armes et d’équipements militaires en 2022. Cependant, malgré de nouvelles commandes, de nombreuses entreprises d’armement américaines et européennes n’ont pas pu augmenter de manière significative leur capacité de production en raison de difficultés de recrutement, de flambée des coûts et de perturbations dans les chaînes d’approvisionnement exacerbées par la #guerre_en_Ukraine. En outre, les pays ont passé de nouvelles commandes en fin d’année et en raison du décalage entre les commandes et la production, l’augmentation de la demande ne s’est pas reflétée dans le chiffre d’affaires de ces entreprises en 2022.

    « De nombreuses entreprises d’armement ont été confrontées à des obstacles pour adapter leur production en vue d’une guerre de haute intensité », souligne Dr Lucie Béraud-Sudreau, directrice du programme Dépenses militaires et Production d’armes du SIPRI. « Toutefois, de nouveaux contrats ont été signés notamment pour des #munitions, ce qui devrait se traduire par une hausse du chiffre d’affaires en 2023 et au-delà. » Contrairement aux plus grands fournisseurs américains et européens, les entreprises d’Asie, d’Océanie et du Moyen-Orient ont vu leur chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes augmenter de manière significative en 2022, démontrant ainsi leur capacité à répondre à une demande accrue dans des délais plus courts. Cela est particulièrement vrai dans les pays où les entreprises disposent de capacités de fabrication réactives et compétitives, comme #Israël et la #Corée_du_Sud, et dans ceux où les entreprises ont tendance à s’appuyer sur des chaînes d’approvisionnement courtes.

    Aux États-Unis, le chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes chute en raison de problèmes de production

    Le chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes des 42 entreprises américaines du Top 100 a chuté de 7,9 % pour atteindre 302 milliards de dollars en 2022. Il représente 51 % du chiffre d’affaires total issu des ventes d’armes du Top 100. Sur les 42 entreprises américaines, 32 ont enregistré une baisse de leur chiffre d’affaires sur un an, citant le plus souvent des problèmes persistants dans la chaîne d’approvisionnement et des pénuries de main-d’œuvre résultant de la pandémie de Covid-19.

    « On constate un afflux de nouvelles commandes liées à la guerre en Ukraine et certaines grandes entreprises américaines, dont #Lockheed_Martin et #Raytheon_Technologies, ont reçu de nouvelles commandes en conséquence », précise Dr Nan Tian, chercheur principal au SIPRI. « Cependant, en raison des carnets de commandes déjà existants de ces entreprises et des difficultés à augmenter leur capacité de production, les revenus générés par ces nouvelles commandes ne se refléteront dans les comptes de l’entreprise probablement que d’ici deux à trois ans. »

    L’#Asie surpasse l’#Europe tirée par un phénomène de #modernisation_militaire

    Le chiffre d’affaire issu des ventes d’armes des 22 entreprises d’Asie et d’Océanie répertoriées dans le classement a augmenté de 3,1 % pour atteindre 134 milliards de dollars en 2022. Il s’agit de la deuxième année consécutive où le chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes des entreprises du Top 100 situées en Asie et en Océanie est supérieur à celui des entreprises situées en Europe.

    « La demande intérieure et l’appui sur des fournisseurs locaux ont protégé les entreprises d’armement asiatiques des perturbations dans la chaîne d’approvisionnement en 2022 », explique Xiao Liang, chercheur au programme Dépenses militaires et Production d’armes du SIPRI. « Les entreprises en #Chine, en #Inde, au #Japon et à Taïwan ont toutes bénéficié d’investissements gouvernementaux soutenus dans le cadre des programmes de modernisation militaire. »

    Le #chiffre_d’affaires combiné des quatre entreprises sud-coréennes du Top 100 a chuté de 0,9 %, principalement en raison d’une baisse de 8,5 % enregistrée par le plus grand producteur d’armes du pays, #Hanwha_Aerospace. Deux entreprises sud-coréennes ont enregistré une augmentation de leur chiffre d’affaires, notamment #LIG_Nex1. Les entreprises sud-coréennes devraient connaître un accroissement de leur chiffre d’affaires dans les années à venir en raison d’une augmentation des commandes enregistrées après la signature d’importants contrats d’armement avec la Pologne et les Émirats arabes unis.

    Augmentation modeste du chiffre d’affaires en Europe alors que la demande liée à l’Ukraine commence à affluer

    Le chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes des 26 entreprises du Top 100 basées en Europe a augmenté de 0,9 % pour atteindre 121 milliards de dollars en 2022.

    « La guerre en Ukraine a entraîné une demande de matériel adapté à une guerre d’usure, comme les munitions et les véhicules blindés. De nombreux producteurs européens ont vu leur chiffre d’affaires augmenter », souligne Lorenzo Scarazzato, chercheur au programme Dépenses militaires et Production d’armes du SIPRI. « Il s’agit notamment d’entreprises basées en #Allemagne, en #Norvège et en #Pologne. Par exemple, la société polonaise #PGZ a augmenté son chiffre d’affaires de 14 %, bénéficiant du programme accéléré de modernisation militaire que le pays poursuit. »

    Les sociétés transeuropéennes #Airbus et #KNDS comptent parmi les principales sources d’augmentation du chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes en Europe, en grande partie grâce aux livraisons effectuées sur des commandes de longue date.

    Les entreprises turques mènent une augmentation significative du chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes au Moyen-Orient

    Le Moyen-Orient a connu la plus forte augmentation en pourcentage du chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes de toutes les régions en 2022. Les sept entreprises basées au Moyen-Orient figurant dans le Top 100 ont enregistré une augmentation substantielle. Leur chiffre d’affaires combiné de 17,9 milliards de dollars représente une augmentation de 11 % sur un an. Le chiffre d’affaires combiné des quatre entreprises turques a atteint 5,5 milliards de dollars, soit 22 % de plus qu’en 2021. Le chiffre d’affaires combiné des trois entreprises israéliennes du Top 100 a atteint 12,4 milliards de dollars en 2022, soit une augmentation de 6,5 % par rapport à 2021.

    « Les entreprises du Moyen-Orient spécialisées dans des produits moins sophistiqués sur le plan technologique ont pu augmenter leur production plus rapidement afin de répondre à l’augmentation de la demande », précise Dr Diego Lopes da Silva, chercheur principal au SIPRI. « L’exemple le plus frappant est celui de #Baykar, en Turquie, producteur du #drone #Bayraktar_TB-2. Baykar est entré dans le Top 100 pour la première fois en raison de l’augmentation de son chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes de 94 %, soit le taux d’augmentation le plus rapide de toutes les entreprises du classement. »

    Autres développements notables

    - En 2022, la Chine représente la deuxième plus grande part du chiffre d’affaires par pays du Top 100, soit 18 %. Le chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes combiné des huit entreprises d’armement chinoises du Top 100 a augmenté de 2,7 % pour atteindre 108 milliards de dollars.
    - Le chiffre d’affaires issus des ventes d’armes des sept entreprises britanniques dans le Top 100 ont augmenté de 2,6 % pour atteindre 41,8 milliards de dollars, soit 7,0 % du total.
    - En raison du manque de données, seules deux entreprises russes ont été incluses dans le Top 100 pour 2022. Leur chiffre d’affaires combiné a chuté de 12 %, à 20,8 milliards de dollars. La transparence des entreprises russes continue de régresser. Bien qu’il s’agisse d’une holding, sans capacité de production directe, #Rostec est incluse dans le Top 100 de 2022 en tant que mandataire des entreprises qu’elle contrôle.
    - La seule entreprise ukrainienne figurant dans le Top 100, #UkrOboronProm, a vu son chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes chuter de 10 % en termes réels, à 1,3 milliard de dollars. Bien que son chiffre d’affaires ait augmenté en termes nominaux, cela a été compensé par la forte inflation du pays.

    À l’attention des rédacteurs

    À propos de la base de données du SIPRI sur l’industrie de l’armement

    La base de données du SIPRI sur l’industrie de l’armement a été créée en 1989. À cette époque, elle excluait les données des entreprises installées en Chine, en Union soviétique et en Europe de l’Est. La version actuelle contient des données pour 2002-2022, y compris des données sur les entreprises russes. Les entreprises chinoises sont incluses à partir de 2015.
    Le « chiffre d’affaires issu des ventes d’armes » fait référence au chiffre d’affaires généré par la vente de biens et de services à caractère militaire à des clients militaires nationaux et étrangers. Sauf indication contraire, tous les changements sont exprimés en termes réels et tous les chiffres sont donnés en dollars américains constants de 2022. Les comparaisons entre 2021 et 2022 sont basées sur la liste des entreprises du classement 2022 (c’est-à-dire que la comparaison annuelle s’effectue entre le même ensemble d’entreprises). Les comparaisons à plus long terme sont basées sur des ensembles d’entreprises listées au cours de l’année respective (c’est-à-dire que la comparaison porte sur des listes différentes d’entreprises).

    La base de données du SIPRI sur l’industrie de l’armement, qui présente un ensemble de données plus détaillées pour les années 2002 à 2022, est disponible sur le site Web du SIPRI : https://www.sipri.org/databases/armsindustry

    https://www.obsarm.info/spip.php?article631

    #industrie_de_l'armement #rapport #chiffres #statistiques #USA #Etats-Unis #business #Turquie

    voir aussi :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1029978

  • EN COMMUN ! La propriété collective à l’épreuve de la modernité

    Ce film documentaire est issu d’une recherche pluridisciplinaire menée pendant quatre années, sur différents sites en France, par le Centre de recherche en droit Antoine Favre de l’Université Savoie Mont Blanc. A partir d’une pluralité de points de vue, recueillis lors d’entretiens et témoignages, il rend compte de l’évolution et du fonctionnement de propriétés collectives foncières ancestrales, également connues sous le nom de « #communaux » ou « #biens_communaux ». Il s’intéresse en particulier à deux de ces systèmes singuliers et méconnus présents en zone rurale, notamment en région de #montagne : les #sections_de_commune et les #bourgeoisies. Quels rôles ces #communs_fonciers en mutation jouent-ils aujourd’hui à l’échelle des territoires en matière de gestion des ressources naturelles, de cohésion sociale ou de dynamiques patrimoniales ? En quoi ces systèmes peuvent-ils participer à une revivification originale et pertinente de la démocratie locale ? A rebours de l’idée reçue selon laquelle ils seraient condamnés dans la société moderne, le changement de perception dont ils font l’objet à présent les place-t-ils à l’avant-garde de la résolution de certains problèmes territoriaux ou climatiques du XXIème siècle ? Plus largement, à l’intersection de nombreux enjeux de société, ce film alimente une réflexion sur la redéfinition d’un cadre de vie conciliant progrès, #justice_sociale et préservation de l’environnement.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BclZKvhpww4

    #propriété_collective #terres #foncier #modernité #communs #commons #communs #documentaire #film_documentaire #film #forêt #bois #droits_d'usage #France #Alpes #montagne #élevage #sol #usage_du_sol #biens_communs #biens_de_section #Etat #Etat_moderne #municipalisation #droit_public #agriculture #tradition #terres #patrimoine #communalisation #spoliation #pâturage #loi_2013 #loi #commissions_syndicales #accaparement_de_terres #privatisation #corvées #éoliennes #2013 #préfecture #avant-garde #anachronisme #ignorance #chasse #legs #responsabilité #devoirs #bourgeoisie #droit_collectif #mécénat #communs_fonciers #valeurs

  • L’Inexploré - Pierre Legendre
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zkdFbCeRLU

    Pierre Legendre, à l’écart du brouhaha médiatique et des idéologies à la mode, a tracé patiemment, sur plus de soixante ans, le chemin de l’anthropologie dogmatique. Il est revenu, en la maison qui l’a accueilli dans ses premières années d’étude des manuscrits médiévaux, l’École des chartes, pour livrer « à la jeunesse désireuse des lois » le suc de son labeur.

    Dans le droit fil de « De la Société comme texte » (2001) et en résonance avec ses conférences données au Japon en 2004 « Ce que l’Occident ne voit pas de l’Occident », dans un style dépouillé, Pierre Legendre découvre ce qui fait tenir debout, enlacés, l’humain et la société. Quel meilleur guide que Piero della Francesca pour ouvrir nos yeux à l’invisible ?

    https://arsdogmatica.com

    #chrétienté #anthropologie_dogmatique #langue #institution #civilisation #montage #scène #individu #personne #fiction #Piero_della_Francesca #principe_de_réalité #religion #ritualité #pacte_dogmatique #faille_institutionnelle #modernité #droit_naturel #droit_romain #occident #papauté #activisme_juridique #contrat #protestantisme #universalisme_politique #impératif_libéral #révolution_protestante #révolutions #Europe #narration_totémique #chorégraphie #logiques_contraires #tiers-terme

  • #José_Vieira : « La #mémoire des résistances face à l’accaparement des terres a été peu transmise »

    Dans « #Territórios_ocupados », José Vieira revient sur l’#expropriation en #1941 des paysans portugais de leurs #terres_communales pour y planter des #forêts. Cet épisode explique les #mégafeux qui ravagent le pays et résonne avec les #luttes pour la défense des #biens_communs.

    Né au Portugal en 1957 et arrivé enfant en France à l’âge de 7 ans, José Vieira réalise depuis plus de trente ans des documentaires qui racontent une histoire populaire de l’immigration portugaise.

    Bien loin du mythe des Portugais·es qui se seraient « intégré·es » sans le moindre problème en France a contrario d’autres populations, José Vieira s’est attaché à démontrer comment l’#immigration_portugaise a été un #exode violent – voir notamment La Photo déchirée (2001) ou Souvenirs d’un futur radieux (2014) –, synonyme d’un impossible retour.

    Dans son nouveau documentaire, Territórios ocupados, diffusé sur Mediapart, José Vieira a posé sa caméra dans les #montagnes du #Caramulo, au centre du #Portugal, afin de déterrer une histoire oubliée de la #mémoire_collective rurale du pays. Celle de l’expropriation en 1941, par l’État salazariste, de milliers de paysans et de paysannes de leurs terres communales – #baldios en portugais.

    Cette #violence étatique a été opérée au nom d’un vaste #projet_industriel : planter des forêts pour développer économiquement ces #territoires_ruraux et, par le même geste, « civiliser » les villageois et villageoises des #montagnes, encore rétifs au #salariat et à l’ordre social réactionnaire de #Salazar. Un épisode qui résonne aujourd’hui avec les politiques libérales des États qui aident les intérêts privés à accaparer les biens communs.

    Mediapart : Comment avez-vous découvert cette histoire oubliée de l’expropriation des terres communales ou « baldios » au Portugal ?

    José Vieira : Complètement par hasard. J’étais en train de filmer Le pain que le diable a pétri (2012, Zeugma Films) sur les habitants des montagnes au Portugal qui sont partis après-guerre travailler dans les usines à Lisbonne.

    Je demandais à un vieux qui est resté au village, António, quelle était la définition d’un baldio – on voit cet extrait dans le documentaire, où il parle d’un lieu où tout le monde peut aller pour récolter du bois, faire pâturer ses bêtes, etc. Puis il me sort soudain : « Sauf que l’État a occupé tous les baldios, c’était juste avant que je parte au service militaire. »

    J’étais estomaqué, je voulais en savoir plus mais impossible, car dans la foulée, il m’a envoyé baladé en râlant : « De toute façon, je ne te supporte pas aujourd’hui. »

    Qu’avez-vous fait alors ?

    J’ai commencé à fouiller sur Internet et j’ai eu la chance de tomber sur une étude parue dans la revue de sociologie portugaise Análise Social, qui raconte comment dans les années 1940 l’État salazariste avait pour projet initial de boiser 500 000 hectares de biens communaux en expropriant les usagers de ces terres.

    Je devais ensuite trouver des éléments d’histoire locale, dans la Serra do Caramulo, dont je suis originaire. J’ai passé un temps fou le nez dans les archives du journal local, qui était bien sûr à l’époque entièrement dévoué au régime.

    Après la publication de l’avis à la population que les baldios seront expropriés au profit de la plantation de forêts, plus aucune mention des communaux n’apparaît dans la presse. Mais rapidement, des correspondants locaux et des éditorialistes vont s’apercevoir qu’il existe dans ce territoire un malaise, qu’Untel abandonne sa ferme faute de pâturage ou que d’autres partent en ville. En somme, que sans les baldios, les gens ne s’en sortent plus.

    Comment sont perçus les communaux par les tenants du salazarisme ?

    Les ingénieurs forestiers décrivent les paysans de ces territoires comme des « primitifs » qu’il faut « civiliser ». Ils se voient comme des missionnaires du progrès et dénoncent l’oisiveté de ces montagnards peu enclins au salariat.

    À Lisbonne, j’ai trouvé aussi une archive qui parle des baldios comme étant une source de perversion, de mœurs légères qui conduisent à des enfants illégitimes dans des coins où « les familles vivent presque sans travailler ». Un crime dans un régime où le travail est élevé au rang de valeur suprême.

    On retrouve tous ces différents motifs dans le fameux Portrait du colonisé d’Albert Memmi (1957). Car il y a de la part du régime un vrai discours de colonisateur vis-à-vis de ces régions montagneuses où l’État et la religion ont encore peu de prise sur les habitants.

    En somme, l’État salazariste veut faire entrer ces Portugais reculés dans la modernité.

    Il y a eu des résistances face à ces expropriations ?

    Les villageois vont être embauchés pour boiser les baldios. Sauf qu’après avoir semé les pins, il faut attendre vingt ans pour que la forêt pousse.

    Il y a eu alors quelques histoires d’arrachage clandestin d’arbres. Et je raconte dans le film comment une incartade avec un garde forestier a failli virer au drame à cause d’une balle perdue – je rappelle qu’on est alors sous la chape de plomb du salazarisme. D’autres habitants ont aussi tabassé deux gardes forestiers à la sortie d’un bar et leur ont piqué leurs flingues.

    Mais la mémoire de ces résistances a peu été transmise. Aujourd’hui, avec l’émigration, il ne reste plus rien de cette mémoire collective, la plupart des vieux et vieilles que j’ai filmés dans ce documentaire sont déjà morts.

    Comment justement avez-vous travaillé pour ce documentaire ?

    Quand António me raconte cette histoire d’expropriation des baldios par l’État, c’était en 2010 et je tournais un documentaire, Souvenirs d’un futur radieux. Puis lorsqu’en 2014 un premier incendie a calciné le paysage forestier, je me suis dit qu’il fallait que je m’y mette.

    J’ai travaillé doucement, pendant trois ans, sans savoir où j’allais réellement. J’ai filmé un village situé à 15 kilomètres de là où je suis né. J’ai fait le choix d’y suivre des gens qui subsistent encore en pratiquant une agriculture traditionnelle, avec des outils de travail séculaires, comme la roue celte. Ils ont les mêmes pratiques que dans les années 1940, et qui sont respectueuses de l’écosystème, de la ressource en eau, de la terre.

    Vous vous êtes aussi attaché à retracer tel un historien cet épisode de boisement à marche forcée...

    Cette utopie industrialiste date du XIXe siècle, des ingénieurs forestiers parlant déjà de vouloir récupérer ces « terres de personne ». Puis sous Salazar, dans les années 1930, il y a eu un débat intense au sein du régime entre agrairistes et industrialistes. Pour les premiers, boiser ne va pas être rentable et les baldios sont vitaux aux paysans. Pour les seconds, le pays a besoin de l’industrie du bois pour décoller économiquement, et il manque de bras dans les villes pour travailler dans les usines.

    Le pouvoir central a alors même créé un organisme étatique, la Junte de colonisation interne, qui va recenser les baldios et proposer d’installer des personnes en leur donnant à cultiver des terres communales – des colonies de repeuplement pour résumer.

    Finalement, l’industrie du bois et de la cellulose l’a emporté. La loi de boisement des baldios est votée en 1938 et c’est en novembre 1941 que ça va commencer à se mettre en place sur le terrain.

    Une enquête publique a été réalisée, où tout le monde localement s’est prononcé contre. Et comme pour les enquêtes aujourd’hui en France, ils se sont arrangés pour dire que les habitants étaient d’accord.

    Qu’en est-il aujourd’hui de ces forêts ? Subsiste-t-il encore des « baldios » ?

    Les pinèdes sont exploitées par des boîtes privées qui font travailler des prolos qui galèrent en bossant dur. Mais beaucoup de ces forêts ont brûlé ces dernière décennies, notamment lors de la grande vague d’incendies au Portugal de 2017, où des gens du village où je filmais ont failli périr.

    Les feux ont dévoilé les paysages de pierre qu’on voyait auparavant sur les photos d’archives du territoire, avant que des pins de 30 mètres de haut ne bouchent le paysage.

    Quant aux baldios restants, ils sont loués à des entreprises de cellulose qui y plantent de l’eucalyptus. D’autres servent à faire des parcs d’éoliennes. Toutes les lois promues par les différents gouvernements à travers l’histoire du Portugal vont dans le même sens : privatiser les baldios alors que ces gens ont géré pendant des siècles ces espaces de façon collective et très intelligente.

    J’ai fait ce film avec en tête les forêts au Brésil gérées par les peuples autochtones depuis des siècles, TotalEnergies en Ouganda qui déplace 100 000 personnes de leurs terres pour du pétrole ou encore Sainte-Soline, où l’État aide les intérêts privés à accaparer un autre bien commun : l’eau.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/culture-et-idees/021223/jose-vieira-la-memoire-des-resistances-face-l-accaparement-des-terres-ete-

    #accaparement_de_terres #terre #terres #dictature #histoire #paysannerie #Serra_do_Caramulo #communaux #salazarisme #progrès #colonisation #colonialisme #rural #modernité #résistance #incendie #boisement #utopie_industrialiste #ingénieurs #ingénieurs_forestiers #propriété #industrie_du_bois #Junte_de_colonisation_interne #colonies_de_repeuplement #cellulose #pinèdes #feux #paysage #privatisation #eucalyptus #éoliennes #loi #foncier

  • Cette #hospitalité_radicale que prône la philosophe #Marie-José_Mondzain

    Dans « Accueillir. Venu(e)s d’un ventre ou d’un pays », Marie-José Mondzain, 81 ans, se livre à un plaidoyer partageur. Elle oppose à la #haine d’autrui, dont nous éprouvons les ravages, l’#amour_sensible et politique de l’Autre, qu’il faudrait savoir adopter.

    En ces temps de crispations identitaires et même de haines communautaires, Marie-José Mondzain nous en conjure : choisissons, contre l’#hostilité, l’hospitalité. Une #hospitalité_créatrice, qui permette de se libérer à la fois de la loi du sang et du #patriarcat.

    Pour ce faire, il faut passer de la filiation biologique à la « #philiation » − du grec philia, « #amitié ». Mais une #amitié_politique et proactive : #abriter, #nourrir, #loger, #soigner l’Autre qui nous arrive ; ce si proche venu de si loin.

    L’hospitalité fut un objet d’étude et de réflexion de Jacques Derrida (1930-2004). Née douze ans après lui, à Alger comme lui, Marie-José Mondzain poursuit la réflexion en rompant avec « toute légitimité fondée sur la réalité ou le fantasme des origines ». Et en prônant l’#adoption comme voie de réception, de prise en charge, de #bienvenue.

    Son essai Accueillir. Venu(e)s d’un ventre ou d’un pays se voudrait programmatique en invitant à « repenser les #liens qui se constituent politiquement et poétiquement dans la #rencontre de tout sujet qu’il nous incombe d’adopter ».

    D’Abraham au film de Tarkovski Andreï Roublev, d’Ulysse à A. I. Intelligence artificielle de Spielberg en passant par Antigone, Shakespeare ou Melville, se déploie un plaidoyer radical et généreux, « phraternel », pour faire advenir l’humanité « en libérant les hommes et les femmes des chaînes qui les ont assignés à des #rapports_de_force et d’#inégalité ».

    En cette fin novembre 2023, alors que s’ajoute, à la phobie des migrants qui laboure le monde industriel, la guerre menée par Israël contre le Hamas, nous avons d’emblée voulu interroger Marie-José Mondzain sur cette violence-là.

    Signataire de la tribune « Vous n’aurez pas le silence des juifs de France » condamnant le pilonnage de Gaza, la philosophe est l’autrice d’un livre pionnier, adapté de sa thèse d’État qui forait dans la doctrine des Pères de l’Église concernant la représentation figurée : Image, icône, économie. Les sources byzantines de l’imaginaire contemporain (Seuil, 1996).

    Mediapart : Comment voyez-vous les images qui nous travaillent depuis le 7 octobre ?

    Marie-José Mondzain : Il y a eu d’emblée un régime d’images relevant de l’événement dans sa violence : le massacre commis par le Hamas tel qu’il fut en partie montré par Israël. À cela s’est ensuite substitué le tableau des visages et des noms des otages, devenu toile de fond iconique.

    Du côté de Gaza apparaît un champ de ruines, des maisons effondrées, des rues impraticables. Le tout depuis un aplomb qui n’est plus un regard humain mais d’oiseau ou d’aviateur, du fait de l’usage des drones. La mort est alors sans visages et sans noms.

    Face au phénomène d’identification du côté israélien s’est donc développée une rhétorique de l’invisibilité palestinienne, avec ces guerriers du Hamas se terrant dans des souterrains et que traque l’armée israélienne sans jamais donner à voir la moindre réalité humaine de cet ennemi.

    Entre le visible et l’invisible ainsi organisés, cette question de l’image apparaît donc extrêmement dissymétrique. Dissymétrie accentuée par la mise en scène des chaînes d’information en continu, qui séparent sur les écrans, avec des bandes lumineuses et colorées, les vues de Gaza en ruine et l’iconostase des otages.

    C’est avec de telles illustrations dans leur dos que les prétendus experts rassemblés en studio s’interrogent : « Comment retrouver la paix ? » Comme si la paix était suspendue à ces images et à la seule question des otages. Or, le contraire de la guerre, ce n’est pas la paix − et encore moins la trêve −, mais la justice.

    Nous assistons plutôt au triomphe de la loi du talion, dont les images deviennent un levier. Au point que visionner les vidéos des massacres horrifiques du Hamas dégénère en obligation…

    Les images deviennent en effet une mise à l’épreuve et une punition. On laisse alors supposer qu’elles font suffisamment souffrir pour que l’on fasse souffrir ceux qui ne prennent pas la souffrance suffisamment au sérieux.

    Si nous continuons à être uniquement dans une réponse émotionnelle à la souffrance, nous n’irons pas au-delà d’une gestion de la trêve. Or la question, qui est celle de la justice, s’avère résolument politique.

    Mais jamais les choses ne sont posées politiquement. On va les poser en termes d’identité, de communauté, de religion − le climat très trouble que nous vivons, avec une indéniable remontée de l’antisémitisme, pousse en ce sens.

    Les chaînes d’information en continu ne nous montrent jamais une carte de la Cisjordanie, devenue trouée de toutes parts telle une tranche d’emmental, au point d’exclure encore et toujours la présence palestinienne. Les drones ne servent jamais à filmer les colonies israéliennes dans les Territoires occupés. Ce serait pourtant une image explicite et politique…

    Vous mettez en garde contre toute « réponse émotionnelle » à propos des images, mais vous en appelez dans votre livre aux affects, dans la mesure où, écrivez-vous, « accueillir, c’est métamorphoser son regard »…

    J’avais écrit, après le 11 septembre 2001, L’#image peut-elle tuer ?, ou comment l’#instrumentalisation du #régime_émotionnel fait appel à des énergies pulsionnelles, qui mettent le sujet en situation de terreur, de crainte, ou de pitié. Il s’agit d’un usage balistique des images, qui deviennent alors des armes parmi d’autres.

    Un tel bombardement d’images qui sème l’effroi, qui nous réduit au silence ou au cri, prive de « logos » : de parole, de pensée, d’adresse aux autres. On s’en remet à la spontanéité d’une émotivité immédiate qui supprime le temps et les moyens de l’analyse, de la mise en rapport, de la mise en relation.

    Or, comme le pensait Édouard Glissant, il n’y a qu’une poétique de la relation qui peut mener à une politique de la relation, donc à une construction mentale et affective de l’accueil.

    Vous prônez un « #tout-accueil » qui semble faire écho au « Tout-monde » de Glissant…

    Oui, le lien est évident, jusqu’en ce #modèle_archipélique pensé par Glissant, c’est-à-dire le rapport entre l’insularité et la circulation en des espaces qui sont à la fois autonomes et séparables, qui forment une unité dans le respect des écarts.

    Ces écarts assument la #conflictualité et organisent le champ des rapports, des mises en relation, naviguant ainsi entre deux écueils : l’#exclusion et la #fusion.

    Comment ressentir comme un apport la vague migratoire, présentée, voire appréhendée tel un trop-plein ?

    Ce qui anime mon livre, c’est de reconnaître que celui qui arrive dans sa nudité, sa fragilité, sa misère et sa demande est l’occasion d’un accroissement de nos #ressources. Oui, le pauvre peut être porteur de quelque chose qui nous manque. Il nous faut dire merci à ceux qui arrivent. Ils deviennent une #richesse qui mérite #abri et #protection, sous le signe d’une #gratitude_partagée.

    Ils arrivent par milliers. Ils vont arriver par millions − je ne serai alors plus là, vu mon âge −, compte tenu des conditions économiques et climatiques à venir. Il nous faut donc nous y préparer culturellement, puisque l’hospitalité est pour moi un autre nom de la #culture.

    Il nous faut préméditer un monde à partager, à construire ensemble ; sur des bases qui ne soient pas la reproduction ou le prolongement de l’état de fait actuel, que déserte la prospérité et où semble s’universaliser la guerre. Cette préparation relève pour moi, plus que jamais, d’une #poétique_des_relations.

    Je travaille avec et auprès d’artistes − plasticiens, poètes, cinéastes, musiciens −, qui s’emparent de toutes les matières traditionnelles ou nouvelles pour créer la scène des rapports possibles. Il faut rompre avec ce qui n’a servi qu’à uniformiser le monde, en faisant appel à toutes les turbulences et à toutes les insoumissions, en inventant et en créant.

    En établissant des #zones_à_créer (#ZAC) ?

    Oui, des zones où seraient rappelées la force des faibles, la richesse des pauvres et toutes les ressources de l’indigence qu’il y a dans des formes de précarité.

    La ZAD (zone à défendre) ne m’intéresse effectivement que dans la mesure où elle se donne pour but d’occuper autrement les lieux, c’est-à-dire en y créant la scène d’une redistribution des places et d’un partage des pouvoirs face aux tyrannies économiques.

    Pas uniquement économiques...

    Il faut bien sûr compter avec ce qui vient les soutenir, anthropologiquement, puisque ces tyrannies s’équipent de tout un appareil symbolique et d’affects touchant à l’imaginaire.

    Aujourd’hui, ce qui me frappe, c’est la place de la haine dans les formes de #despotisme à l’œuvre. Après – ou avant – Trump, nous venons d’avoir droit, en Argentine, à Javier Milei, l’homme qui se pose en meurtrier prenant le pouvoir avec une tronçonneuse.

    Vous y opposez une forme d’amitié, de #fraternité, la « #filia », que vous écrivez « #philia ».

    Le [ph] désigne des #liens_choisis et construits, qui engagent politiquement tous nos affects, la totalité de notre expérience sensible, pour faire échec aux formes d’exclusion inspirées par la #phobie.

    Est-ce une façon d’échapper au piège de l’origine ?

    Oui, ainsi que de la #naturalisation : le #capitalisme se considère comme un système naturel, de même que la rivalité, le désir de #propriété ou de #richesse sont envisagés comme des #lois_de_la_nature.

    D’où l’appellation de « #jungle_de_Calais », qui fait référence à un état de nature et d’ensauvagement, alors que le film de Nicolas Klotz et Élisabeth Perceval, L’Héroïque lande. La frontière brûle (2018), montre magnifiquement que ce refuge n’était pas une #jungle mais une cité et une sociabilité créées par des gens venus de contrées, de langues et de religions différentes.

    Vous est-il arrivé personnellement d’accueillir, donc d’adopter ?

    J’ai en en effet tissé avec des gens indépendants de mes liens familiaux des relations d’adoption. Des gens dont je me sentais responsable et dont la fragilité que j’accueillais m’apportait bien plus que ce que je pouvais, par mes ressources, leur offrir.

    Il arrive, du reste, à mes enfants de m’en faire le reproche, tant les font parfois douter de leur situation les relations que je constitue et qui tiennent une place si considérable dans ma vie. Sans ces relations d’adoption, aux liens si constituants, je ne me serais pas sentie aussi vivante que je le suis.

    D’où mon refus du seul #héritage_biologique. Ce qui se transmet se construit. C’est toujours dans un geste de fiction turbulente et joyeuse que l’on produit les liens que l’on veut faire advenir, la #vie_commune que l’on désire partager, la cohérence politique d’une #égalité entre parties inégales – voire conflictuelles.

    La lecture de #Castoriadis a pu alimenter ma défense de la #radicalité. Et m’a fait reconnaître que la question du #désordre et du #chaos, il faut l’assumer et en tirer l’énergie qui saura donner une forme. Le compositeur Pascal Dusapin, interrogé sur la création, a eu cette réponse admirable : « C’est donner des bords au chaos. »

    Toutefois, ces bords ne sont pas des blocs mais des frontières toujours poreuses et fluantes, dans une mobilité et un déplacement ininterrompus.

    Accueillir, est-ce « donner des bords » à l’exil ?

    C’est donner son #territoire au corps qui arrive, un territoire où se créent non pas des murs aux allures de fin de non-recevoir, mais des cloisons – entre l’intime et le public, entre toi et moi : ni exclusion ni fusion…

    Mon livre est un plaidoyer en faveur de ce qui circule et contre ce qui est pétrifié. C’est le #mouvement qui aura raison du monde. Et si nous voulons que ce mouvement ne soit pas une déclaration de guerre généralisée, il nous faut créer une #culture_de_l’hospitalité, c’est-à-dire apprendre à recevoir les nouvelles conditions du #partage.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/culture-et-idees/271123/cette-hospitalite-radicale-que-prone-la-philosophe-marie-jose-mondzain
    #hospitalité #amour_politique

    via @karine4

    • Accueillir - venu(e)s d’un ventre ou d’un pays

      Naître ne suffit pas, encore faut-il être adopté. La filiation biologique, et donc l’arrivée d’un nouveau-né dans une famille, n’est pas le modèle de tout accueil mais un de ses cas particuliers. Il ne faut pas penser la filiation dans son lien plus ou moins fort avec le modèle normatif de la transmission biologique, mais du point de vue d’une attention à ce qui la fonde : l’hospitalité. Elle est un art, celui de l’exercice de la philia, de l’affect et du lien qui dans la rencontre et l’accueil de tout autre exige de substituer au terme de filiation celui de philiation. Il nous faut rompre avec toute légitimité fondée sur la réalité ou le fantasme des origines. Cette rupture est impérative dans un temps de migrations planétaires, de déplacements subjectifs et de mutations identitaires. Ce qu’on appelait jadis « les lois de l’hospitalité » sont bafouées par tous les replis haineux et phobiques qui nous privent des joies et des richesses procurées par l’accueil. Faute d’adopter et d’être adopté, une masse d’orphelins ne peut plus devenir un peuple. La défense des philiations opère un geste théorique qui permet de repenser les liens qui se constituent politiquement et poétiquement dans la rencontre de tout sujet qu’il nous incombe d’adopter, qu’il provienne d’un ventre ou d’un pays. Le nouveau venu comme le premier venu ne serait-il pas celle ou celui qui me manquait ? D’où qu’il vienne ou provienne, sa nouveauté nous offre la possibilité de faire œuvre.

      https://www.quaidesmots.fr/accueillir-venu-e-s-d-un-ventre-ou-d-un-pays.html
      #livre #filiation_biologique #accueil

  • Islande : revirement surprenant dans la menace d’éruption du volcan sous la ville de Grindavik
    https://www.futura-sciences.com/planete/actualites/volcanologie-islande-revirement-surprenant-menace-eruption-volcan-s

    Les volcans sont imprévisibles. Alors que tout le monde s’attendait à une nouvelle éruption de grande ampleur sur la péninsule de Reykjanes, en Islande, la diminution significative de l’activité sismique depuis quelques jours semble indiquer une stabilisation de la situation. L’office météorologique islandais indique également que le taux de déformation du sol diminue. L’ensemble de ces observations suggère que la probabilité d’une éruption est désormais bien plus faible qu’au début de la crise, débutée le 10 novembre.
    Levée de l’état d’urgence

    Une bouffée d’espoir pour les 3 700 habitants de la ville de Grindavik, forcés d’évacuer leurs logements. Bien qu’ils ne soient toujours pas autorisés à rentrer chez eux, le risque de voir leurs maisons et leurs biens disparaître sous la lave s’amenuise considérablement. Si l’état d’urgence vient d’être levé, la prudence reste cependant de mise.

  • Fin de grève amère dans les usines textiles du Bangladesh
    https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2023/11/17/fin-de-greve-amere-dans-les-usines-textiles-du-bangladesh_6200798_3234.html


    Des #ouvriers textiles bangladais retournent travailler dans leur usine à Ashulia, au nord de Dhaka (?), le 15 novembre 2023. MUNIR UZ ZAMAN / AFP

    Le mouvement de revendication pour de meilleurs salaires, qui a mis l’industrie textile à l’arrêt pendant trois semaines, n’a pas eu gain de cause. Presque aucun donneur d’ordre occidental n’a incité ses fournisseurs à payer décemment les ouvriers.

    Les ouvriers des usines textiles du Bangladesh n’ont pas eu gain de cause. Après trois semaines de #grève, de manifestations et de heurts avec la police, ceux qui fabriquent les vêtements #Levi’s, #Zara et autres H&M ont repris le travail, mercredi 15 novembre, sans obtenir le quasi-triplement de leurs salaires demandé.
    Le comité du #salaire minimum du secteur textile a décidé d’augmenter la rémunération de base de 56 %, la portant à 12 500 takas, soit 104 euros, mardi 8 novembre. Un montant que les syndicats jugent « ridicule » au regard des 23 000 takas, soit environ 190 euros, revendiqués.
    Sheikh Hasina, la première ministre du pays qui briguera un cinquième mandat lors des élections générales, le 7 janvier 2024, a refusé toute nouvelle hausse du salaire minimum et intimé les ouvriers de reprendre le travail sous peine de perdre leur emploi et d’avoir « à retourner dans leurs villages ».

    Troisième plus gros fournisseur mondial

    De fait, « c’est par obligation financière et sous la pression du gouvernement et la menace des autorités policières, y compris physiques, que les ouvriers grévistes ont repris le travail », observe Christie Miedema, coordinatrice de Clean Clothes Campaign, une fédération d’organisations non gouvernementales qui militent pour le respect des droits humains.
    « La situation ressemble à celle d’il y a cinq ans », déplore Mme Miedema. En 2018, le salaire minimum dans ce secteur, qui emploie quatre millions de personnes, avait été révisé à 8 000 takas, soit 65 euros, pour cinq ans. Depuis, le secteur a traversé la crise du Covid-19 et essuyé l’inflation galopante, de l’ordre de 35 % depuis 2019.

    A l’été 2023, pour la première fois, le gouvernement a monté un comité pour déterminer un #salaire_minimum applicable dans le secteur du #prêt-à-porter au 1er décembre, sans attendre l’échéance de 2024. Toutefois, aucun des syndicats représentatifs du personnel de cette puissante industrie n’y siège. A l’évidence, le patronat local rechigne à augmenter les salaires de peur de dégrader la compétitivité d’un secteur qui représente 85 % des 55 milliards d’euros d’exportations annuelles du pays. Grâce à un réseau de 3 500 usines, le secteur est connu pour être l’un des moins chers au monde : le pays est le troisième fournisseur de vêtements, derrière la Chine et le Vietnam.

    Quatre morts à Dacca

    Dix ans après l’effondrement de l’immeuble du Rana Plaza à Dacca, tuant plus de 1 100 ouvriers textiles, les conditions de travail n’ont guère évolué. En outre, le #Bangladesh est toujours dans la ligne de mire des ONG qui y dénoncent les atteintes au droit syndical. En juin dernier, Luc Triangle, secrétaire général de la Confédération syndicale internationale, a condamné le meurtre de Shahidul Islam Shahid, responsable syndical de la Fédération des travailleurs de l’industrie et des usines textiles du Bangladesh, « battu à mort » par un gang après avoir assisté à une réunion syndicale. « Cet assassinat s’inscrit dans un contexte d’attaques ciblées contre les leaders syndicaux au Bangladesh et aura un effet dissuasif sur le mouvement ouvrier déjà très restreint », avait alors réagi l’ONG américaine Human Rights Watch.

    Les manifestations de l’automne ont aussi été très violentes pour les grévistes, notamment à Dacca. Au moins quatre ouvriers ont été tués lors des manifestations, dont trois ont été abattus par les forces de l’ordre, d’après l’AFP. Quelque 140 ouvriers et plusieurs dirigeants syndicaux ont été arrêtés, et environ 10 000 travailleurs font l’objet de poursuites pour violences, selon la police, précise aussi l’agence d’informations.

    Mercredi 15 novembre, le principal dirigeant syndical, Babul Akhter, a demandé au gouvernement de « libérer tous les ouvriers arrêtés », avant d’appeler à reprendre le travail, tout en maintenant ses revendications. « Nous n’avons pas dévié de notre revendication d’un salaire minimum de 23 000 takas », a-t-il déclaré à l’AFP. « La colère des ouvriers a été alimentée par la hausse du coût de la vie, avec des denrées de base qui sont devenues inabordables, affirme Taslima Akhter, membre du mouvement d’ouvriers Bangladesh Garment Workers Solidarity, mais la violence s’exprime d’autant plus facilement que les syndicats ne sont autorisés que sur le papier et sont contrôlés par les propriétaires d’usines. »

    Les marques occidentales « responsables »

    De son côté, le patronat bangladais pointe le rôle ambivalent des #donneurs_d’ordre. L’Association des fabricants et des exportateurs de vêtements du Bangladesh a notamment estimé que le niveau de salaire pratiqué dans leurs usines découlait des prix imposés par leurs clients, dont surtout des #marques occidentales. « Elles sont autant responsables de la hausse des salaires que les fabricants bangladais », déclare au Monde Miran Ali, son vice-président. Selon lui, il n’est pas acceptable que ces donneurs d’ordre « prennent publiquement position en faveur d’une hausse des salaires et, en privé, refusent d’absorber cette hausse de coûts » en relevant leurs prix d’achat.
    De fait, rares sont les marques à avoir répondu aux appels de soutien des revendications salariales. L’association Clean Clothes Campaign avait notamment interpellé une douzaine d’entre elles, dont #H&M et #C&A, qui fabriquent leurs collections à moindre prix au Bangladesh. Mais seule Patagonia a répondu, observe Mme Miedema. La marque de sport américaine a rejoint l’association Fair Labor pour appeler Dacca à porter le salaire minimum à 23 000 takas. « Les autres fabricants sont moins explicites, voire totalement muets », pointe Mme Miedema. En septembre, Human Rights Watch constatait que la question de la liberté d’expression était « à peine abordée » dans la plupart des rapports d’audit sociaux commandés par les grandes marques d’habillement.
    En France, #Carrefour se contente de rappeler avoir « pris position le 13 septembre en faveur d’une revalorisation du salaire minimum des travailleurs des usines textiles ». En Espagne, #Inditex est aussi fort prudent. Le numéro un mondial de l’habillement refuse de commenter les événements récents et renvoie à ses déclarations de septembre. Il exprimait alors toute sa confiance envers le comité du salaire minimum du secteur textile afin « d’établir un salaire minimum au Bangladesh qui couvre le coût de la vie des ouvriers et de leurs familles ».

    Il n’en a rien été, estiment nombre d’ONG, dont la Fair Wear Foundation. L’association, qui travaille avec des marques, des usines et des syndicats pour améliorer les conditions de travail des employés dans l’industrie textile, fait partie des 2 500 signataires d’une lettre envoyée le 16 novembre à la première ministre pour exprimer « leur inquiétude » et l’inviter « à revoir sa décision » puisque, prévient-elle, le nouveau salaire minimum « ne couvre pas les besoins fondamentaux » des ouvriers textiles du Bangladesh.

    #textile #mode

  • En Andalousie, le joyau naturel de Doñana menacé par la sécheresse et la culture intensive de la fraise

    REPORTAGE Zone naturelle classée, le parc national de Doñana voit disparaître ses lagunes et ses marais. Les centaines de milliers d’oiseaux migrateurs qui ont l’habitude d’y faire halte entre l’Europe du Nord et l’Afrique sont contraints de l’abandonner. En cause, la culture intensive de fruits rouges, gourmande en irrigation, sur fond de changement climatique.

    Juan Pedro Castellano avance à vive allure sur une immense plage vierge, où courent quelques bécasseaux. A bord de son véhicule tout-terrain, le directeur du parc national de Doñana, zone humide exceptionnelle à la pointe sud de l’Espagne, inscrite au Patrimoine mondiale de l’Unesco, sillonne des dunes mobiles et des pinèdes et longe les vastes marais argileux qui forment les 60 000 hectares protégés du parc. Il croise des vaches mostrenca aux longues cornes, des daims et des chevaux sauvages, avant de s’arrêter devant la lagune de Santa Olalla. Ou plutôt ce qu’il en reste. Jaillissant de l’aquifère, elle s’est complètement asséchée cet été. Et une terre grise, craquelée, a remplacé cet écrin de biodiversité d’une valeur incalculable. Cette lagune censée être « permanente » – la plus grande du parc – abrite d’ordinaire des milliers d’oiseaux migrateurs, dont l’arrivée devrait déjà avoir commencé. En cette mi-octobre, sous un soleil éclatant et une température inhabituelle de 33 °C, elle n’est fréquentée que par les cerfs.

    ... « C’est bien simple : ici, à Lucena del Puerto, presque toutes les exploitations situées au milieu des pins devraient être démantelées… »

    Depuis que la Cour de justice de l’Union européenne a condamné l’Espagne, en juin 2021, pour ne pas avoir protégé suffisamment #Doñana, les inspecteurs de la Confédération hydrographique du Guadalquivir, rattachée au ministère de la transition écologique, ont multiplié les contrôles et scellé près d’un millier de #puits_illégaux autour de l’espace naturel protégé. La justice aussi semble prendre le #vol_d’eau plus au sérieux. En septembre, cinq frères ont été condamnés à trois ans et demi de prison et 1,9 million d’euros de remboursement pour avoir puisé illégalement 19 millions de mètres cubes d’eau dans l’aquifère de Doñana entre 2008 et 2013. Et fin octobre, un tribunal de Séville a cité à comparaître la Maison d’Albe, riche famille de la noblesse espagnole, après une plainte du parquet environnemental pour un vol d’eau au travers de huit puits illégaux destinés à la culture d’orangers.

    A rebours de cette prise de conscience, le Parti populaire (PP ; droite), au pouvoir dans la communauté autonome d’Andalousie depuis 2019, a présenté au printemps un projet de loi régional pour régulariser plus de 700 hectares de terrains irrigués illégalement dans la « couronne nord » de Doñana. « Une amnistie pour les fraudeurs », ont critiqué les écologistes.

    ... L’association d’agriculteurs Puerto de Doñana, qui regroupe de nombreuses exploitations écologiques, s’y oppose, en rappelant que cet été, beaucoup de petits producteurs n’ont déjà pas pu arroser leurs plantations, car leurs puits étaient à sec. « Nous avons renoncé à plus de 70 % de nos exploitations irriguées ces trente dernières années afin de conserver Doñana, misé sur la production bio et donné des garanties à nos acheteurs. Nous ne voulons pas que les efforts de tant d’années tombent à l’eau à cause de l’obsession de croître de quelques-uns », explique son porte-parole, Manuel Delgado.


    Les installations et serres de culture de fruits rouges, aux alentours du parc national de Donaña (Espagne), le 10 octobre 2023. CESAR DEZFULI POUR « LE MONDE »

    https://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2023/10/30/en-andalousie-le-joyau-naturel-de-donana-menace-par-la-secheresse-et-par-la-
    https://archive.ph/1oTdH

    #eau #sécheresse #biodiversité #lagunes #marais #zones_humides #agriculture #tourisme #agriculture_écologique #modèle_agricole #irrigation #écologie

  • Comment Israël a payé plusieurs millions de dollars pour inonder les internautes français de publicités anti-Hamas
    par Elsa de La Roche Saint-André | le 25 octobre 2023 – Libération
    https://www.liberation.fr/checknews/comment-israel-a-paye-plusieurs-millions-de-dollars-pour-inonder-les-inte
    https://www.liberation.fr/resizer/K2tcdaO1fDAF0r_88WJ4K7ZsiVI=/1200x630/filters:format(jpg):quality(70)/cloudfront-eu-central-1.images.arcpublishing.com/liberation/XG6QJZW2K5GZXO3GZNTKLLRWUQ.JPG

    Depuis le 7 octobre, en plus des combats qui opposent sur le terrain l’armée israélienne aux forces du Hamas, une autre bataille se joue entre l’Etat hébreu et le mouvement islamiste au pouvoir à Gaza, celle de la communication. Parmi les outils privilégiés par Israël pour rallier l’opinion mondiale à sa cause, l’un s’est particulièrement fait remarquer en France : des vidéos abondamment diffusées sous forme de spots publicitaires sur YouTube. Sur les réseaux sociaux, des internautes s’étonnent ainsi d’avoir vu apparaître, alors qu’ils visionnaient des vidéos sur la plateforme appartenant à Google, des publicités dénonçant les crimes perpétrés par le Hamas, parfois estampillées d’un logo « State of Israel ».

    Et à en croire les calculs d’un outil de marketing digital, de nombreux internautes français ont été exposés à ces contenus : plus de 4,6 millions de dollars (environ 4,3 millions d’euros) auraient été investis par le ministère des Affaires étrangères israélien en vue de distribuer ces campagnes publicitaires en France. Faisant de l’Hexagone le pays le plus ciblé par la diffusion de ces contenus. (...)

    #abonnés #7oct23

    • Dès le 8 octobre, au lendemain de l’attaque terroriste du Hamas en Israël, le journaliste Vincent Manilève rapportait sur X (anciennement Twitter) l’existence d’une vidéo diffusée avant les contenus de youtubeurs français connus, comme [l’antisémite, ndc] Squeezie ou Amixem. Pendant les vingt-neuf secondes de la vidéo, s’affiche en lettres rouges capitales un message, par ailleurs lu par une voix automatique sur fond de musique angoissante : « Le Hamas a déclaré la guerre à Israël. Les terroristes armés du Hamas se sont infiltrés en Israël par le biais d’une invasion terrestre et ont commencé à massacrer des Israéliens innocents. Des centaines de #civils israéliens, y compris des enfants et des femmes, ont été tués ou blessés. Des Israéliens ont été pris en otage. C’est une guerre et Israël prendra toutes les mesures nécessaires pour protéger ses citoyens contre ces terroristes barbares. »

      D’après les éléments disponibles dans le Centre de transparence publicitaire de Google, cette #vidéo importée sur le compte du ministère des Affaires étrangères d’#Israël, n’a été diffusée en France que sur la journée du 8 octobre. Pour cause : elle a rapidement été signalée par plusieurs internautes. La réponse adressée le 9 octobre par #You_Tube à l’un d’eux a été consultée par Arrêt sur images : la plateforme explique avoir « décidé de prendre des mesures à l’encontre de cette annonce », après avoir « déterminé que l’annonce ne respectait pas les règles de Google ». Après cette décision, il n’a plus été possible pour cette vidéo d’être distribuée comme publicité, sans pour autant être définitivement retirée de la chaîne YouTube de la diplomatie israélienne. Chaque jour, de nouvelles vidéos y sont importées. Et pour faire simple, celles qui comptabilisent le plus de vues sont celles qui ont, au moins un temps, été monétisées.

      Une quinzaine de campagnes publicitaires

      Car après sa vidéo du 8 octobre, cette chaîne a lancé de nouvelles #campagnes_publicitaires. Une semaine plus tard, l’humoriste Matthieu Longatte, plus connu sur les réseaux sociaux sous le pseudo Bonjour Tristesse, a par exemple été confronté à une autre annonce vidéo. « WTF les pubs de #propagande israélienne avant les vidéos YouTube », s’étonnait-il le 14 octobre. Cette vidéo, en effet, a été diffusée auprès des utilisateurs français de YouTube du 13 au 19 octobre. A l’écran, on lit : « Le Hamas, une organisation terroriste vicieuse, a assassiné plus de 1 300 Israéliens innocents […] des familles entières ont été massacrées dans leurs maisons. » Là aussi, des signalements ont été envoyés, mais différentes versions de la vidéo ayant été importées et monétisées par la chaîne, cette annonce a pu continuer à circuler.

      Dans la quinzaine de campagnes publicitaires du ministère israélien des Affaires étrangères qu’affiche le centre de transparence publicitaire de #Google, on trouve aussi une vidéo intitulée Ramenez nos enfants à la maison diffusée depuis le 19 octobre. Comptabilisant plus de 4,4 millions de vues sur YouTube, ce qui fait d’elle la plus visionnée sur la chaîne du ministère, elle se veut un avertissement adressé au reste du monde : « Plus de 200 bébés, enfants, personnes âgées, hommes et femmes innocents ont été enlevés par les terroristes du Hamas de Daech. Le Hamas a enlevé nos êtres chers. Demain, ce peut être les vôtres ! »

      Les mêmes publicités ont aussi été diffusées en dehors de YouTube, bien que toujours hébergées par la plateforme. Les vidéos sont ainsi apparues dans des #applications_de_jeu mobile – Candy Crush ou Angry Birds ont entre autres été citées par les internautes. « Je jouais tranquillement à un jeu mobile quand cette pub est tombée devant mes yeux », a tweeté la streameuse Twitch Artillerie lourde, qui ajoute plus tard : « deuxième vidéo sur le même jeu et les deux pubs redirigent sur le compte YouTube du ministère des Affaires étrangères israélien ».

      On peut également citer l’exemple d’une vidéo, déjà mentionnée par CheckNews, qui mettait en avant le chiffre de « 40 nourrissons » assassinés par le Hamas (qui n’a jamais été confirmé) dans une animation aux tons pastel. Selon le Centre de transparence publicitaire, cette vidéo a été diffusée comme annonce en France du 13 au 15 octobre. Malgré son apparence enfantine, elle n’a pas, comme toutes les annonces « à caractère politique » ou comportant des « références à la mort », pu « être diffusée auprès des enfants ou sur des contenus conçus pour les enfants, ou encore apparaître sur YouTube Kids », a expliqué un représentant de Google à CheckNews. Elle a en revanche continué à l’être auprès des adultes, les équipes du géant de la tech ayant considéré qu’elle était « en règle avec [ses] règlements publicitaires ».

      La Commission européenne a pris les devants

      De nouveau contacté, ce représentant de Google ne commente pas les autres vidéos sponsorisées par la diplomatie israélienne. Mais se contente de rappeler que les règles de YouTube interdisent aux annonceurs de monétiser « des vidéos contenant de la violence ou un contenu choquant ». Par ailleurs, Google a instauré une réglementation spécifique pour les « événements sensibles », « souvent mis en place à la suite de catastrophes naturelles ou d’autres événements tragiques », nous indique-t-on, sans accepter de préciser si le conflit entre Israël et le Hamas est concerné. Lorsque des événements ont été déclarés comme sensibles, « les annonces qui exploitent ou capitalisent sur ces tragédies ne sont pas autorisées, tout comme la monétisation des vidéos YouTube qui exploiteraient ou capitaliseraient sur ces tragédies, à moins qu’elles n’incluent un contexte crucial, tel qu’un rapport d’actualité faisant autorité ».

      Un mois après le début de la guerre en Ukraine, le 23 mars 2022, YouTube avait pour cette raison suspendu la « monétisation de tout contenu qui exploite, ignore ou cautionne la guerre ». Et c’est en appliquant ces règles qu’en 2021, YouTube avait déjà retiré une vidéo sponsorisée comme publicité par Israël. La plateforme avait alors estimé que cette séquence de quinze secondes alternant images de roquettes, d’explosions et de civils blessés ne respectait pas ses règles. « Nous avons une politique ferme à l’égard des publicités qui contiennent un contenu choquant », avait expliqué un porte-parole de Google à Vice.

      Dans le contexte du conflit actuel, la Commission européenne a pris les devants pour rappeler à #Alphabet, la maison mère de Google, ses obligations en matière de #modération sur YouTube. Dans un courrier adressé vendredi 13 octobre au patron d’Alphabet, le commissaire européen chargé du Numérique, #Thierry_Breton, soulignait que Google a une « obligation particulière de protéger les millions d’enfants et d’adolescents » utilisant sa plateforme « contre les contenus violents représentant des prises d’otages et autres vidéos choquantes ». Un appel qui semble avoir été entendu s’agissant de l’une des vidéos du ministère des Affaires étrangères israéliens. Après avoir été monétisée du 14 au 16 octobre, la séquence, qui montrait des murs et sols couverts de sang, des housses mortuaires ou encore des otages dénudés, a été définitivement supprimée de YouTube.

      France, Allemagne et Royaume-Uni

      Au total, les montants engagés par le ministère des Affaires étrangères pour diffuser ces publicités sont de l’ordre de 8,5 millions de dollars (8 millions d’euros), selon l’outil Semrush, un logiciel notamment utilisé pour estimer les performances des campagnes en ligne. La quasi-totalité de cette somme a été consacrée à trois pays européens : la France, l’Allemagne et le Royaume-Uni.

      Ces investissements ont permis au ministère israélien des Affaires étrangères de réaliser en tout plus d’1,1 milliard d’impressions sur ses vidéos, dont 535 millions auprès du public français, toujours selon Semrush. Le pic de ces impressions se situe sur le week-end des 14 et 15 octobre, soit une semaine après l’attaque terroriste menée par le Hamas en Israël.

      Interrogé par CheckNews sur les raisons pour lesquelles le public français a été particulièrement exposé à ces vidéos de propagande, le porte-parole de l’ambassade d’Israël en France, Hen Feder, indique qu’il n’a « pas connaissance d’un ciblage spécifique de la population française ». Et l’ambassade d’ajouter qu’Israël est « maintenant en guerre contre une organisation vicieuse semblable à Daech », qui conduit une « guerre de propagande ». L’Etat hébreu explique donc publier « sur des plateformes, dont YouTube, pour [diffuser] la vérité sur l’horrible attaque terroriste du Hamas. »

      en Europe, la France est le pays qui compte le plus de musulmans et de juifs

      #propagande_de_guerre #légitimation #internet

  • 11 octobre 2023, verdict en cour d’appel pour le #procès contre #Mimmo_Lucano, ancien maire de #Riace

    –—

    Ce fil de discussion est la suite de celui-ci :
    Le 20.09.2023 la défense de #Mimmo_Lucano a prononcé le plaidoyer final dans le cadre de l’#appel à la condamnation de l’ancien maire de #Riace...
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1018103

    #accueil #migrations #solidarité #asile #réfugiés #Italie #criminalisation_de_la_solidarité #acquittement #justice #Xenia

    • La corte d’appello condanna Mimmo Lucano a 1 anno e 6 mesi

      La sentenza di primo grado aveva fissato la condanna a 13 anni e due mesi, la procura aveva chiesto 10 anni e 5 mesi. I suoi avvocati volevano l’assoluzione. Lucano non ha mai smesso di lavorare nei progetti per l’accoglienza e in una lettera aveva invitato i giudici ad andare a vedere il Villaggio Globale di Riace

      La Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria ha condannato l’ex sindaco di Riace Mimmo Lucano a 1 anno e 6 mesi: un decimo di quanto chiesto dalla procura. Le accuse sono state fortemente ridimensionate, e l’esito drasticamente ridotto rispetto alla condanna in primo grado a oltre 13 anni.

      La procura generale aveva chiesto per questo secondo grado di giudizio la condanna a 10 anni e 5 mesi di carcere per l’ex sindaco di Riace e principale imputato del processo “Xenia”, nato da un’inchiesta della guardia di Finanza sulla gestione dei progetti di accoglienza dei migranti nel piccolo paese della Locride. Un processo che lo vede alla sbarra insieme ad altre 17 persone. Le accuse erano pesanti: associazione a delinquere e peculato, frode, falso in atto pubblico, abuso d’ufficio e truffa.

      La prima condanna

      Il Tribunale di Locri a settembre del 2021 lo aveva condannato a 13 anni e 2 mesi di reclusione, e 700mila euro di danni per la gestione dei progetti di accoglienza per i migranti (ma c’è anche la gestione dei rifiuti, il mancato pagamento della Siae e altri illeciti amministrativi), nonostante Riace sia stata lodata in tutto il mondo, e gli stessi giudici abbiano descritto i progetti come figli di un’utopia.

      Dal processo è stato dimostrato che Lucano non ha tratto benefici per il suo conto corrente. Nelle motivazioni della sentenza di primo grado i giudici trovavano la colpa nel «comportamento omissivo, che era stato tenuto per bieco calcolo politico».

      E ancora: «Nulla importa che l’ex sindaco di Riace sia stato trovato senza un euro in tasca», perché, si leggeva, «ove ci si fermasse a valutare questa condizione di mera apparenza, si rischierebbe di premiare la sua furbizia, travestita da falsa innocenza».

      Per i difensori, Andrea Daqua e Giuliano Pisapia, si tratta di un processo politico, in cui sono stati fatti anche errori. Durante il processo d’appello sono state aggiunte nuove intercettazioni e contestate trascrizioni della guardia di finanza da quelle precedenti. Nelle motivazioni d’appello i due legali avevano parlato di «lettura forzata se non surreale dei fatti».

      Dopo la sentenza di primo grado era scaturito in ambito internazionale un appello firmato dal linguista Noam Chomsky, dall’ex capitana Sea Watch Carola Rackete, fino al leader della sinistra francese Jean-Luc Mélenchon perché venissero ritirate le accuse a suo carico.
      La lettera

      Alle ultime elezioni regionali si era candidato in appoggio a Luigi de Magistris, ma non è stato eletto. Non ha smesso di lavorare. Il 20 settembre l’ex sindaco di Riace ha consegnato una lettera alla Corte: «Come tutti gli esseri umani posso aver commesso degli errori, ma ho sempre agito con l’obiettivo e la volontà di aiutare i più deboli e di contribuire all’accoglienza e all’integrazione di bambini, donne e uomini che fuggivano dalla fame, dalla guerra, dalle torture».

      Lucano ha poi ricordato: «Sono passati cinque anni da quando sono stato arrestato con l’accusa infamante di svolgere la mia attività di accoglienza e integrazione dei migranti per finalità di carriera politica e di lucro. Sono passati due anni da quando mi è stata inflitta la condanna in primo grado a una smisurata pena detentiva quale non tocca spesso ai peggiori criminali».

      Ma non ha desistito, e ha invitato i giudici ad andare a vedere i risultati del suo lavoro: «Ho continuato a dedicarmi a tempo pieno, da privato cittadino, alla riapertura e alla gestione del Villaggio globale di Riace che ha ospitato e continua ad ospitare bambini e persone con fragilità. Non si è interrotta, dunque, quella che considero la missione della mia vita, a prescindere da incarichi pubblici e finanziamenti statali. Altro che associazione a delinquere. Al termine di questo processo vi invito a visitare il Villaggio Globale di Riace, sarete i benvenuti».

      https://www.editorialedomani.it/politica/italia/mimmo-lucano-sentenza-corte-appello-oooeao9j

    • Non reggono in Appello le accuse monstre a Lucano. L’ex sindaco condannato a un anno e 6 mesi
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBE1GEzNnow&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.corrieredellaca

      –—

      La decisione della Corte nel processo al “modello Riace”: assolti 15 imputati su 17. L’accusa aveva chiesto 10 anni 5 mesi per l’ex sindaco. In primo grado la pena comminata era stata di oltre 13 anni

      L’ex sindaco di Riace Domenico Lucano è stato condannato a un anno e sei mesi (con pena sospesa) dalla Corte d’Appello di Reggio Calabria, pena sensibilmente inferiore rispetto ai 13 anni e due mesi rimediati in primo grado e rispetto alla richiesta della Procura generale (10 anni e 5 mesi). Oggi assente a Reggio Calabria, l’ex primo cittadino ha atteso l’esito della camera di consiglio durata circa sei ore, nel piccolo borgo del “modello” per molti anni simbolo dell’accoglienza e alla sbarra dopo l’inchiesta “Xenia” della procura di Locri. Dentro e fuori dall’aula applausi e festeggiamenti per la decisione.

      L’accusa, rappresentata dai sostituti procuratori generali Adriana Fimiani e Antonio Giuttari, aveva chiesto per l’ex primo cittadino una condanna di 10 anni e 5 mesi di reclusione. Imputati davanti ai giudici della Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria, (presidente Elisabetta Palumbo, giudici relatori Davide Lauro e Massimo Minniti) Lucano e altre 17 persone.
      Si conclude così il secondo capitolo giudiziario scaturito dall’inchiesta condotta dalla Guardia di Finanza che si basa sull’accusa di aver utilizzato i fondi destinati all’accoglienza dei migranti per “trarre vantaggi personali”. Associazione a delinquere, abuso d’ufficio, truffa, concussione, peculato, turbativa d’asta, falsità ideologica e favoreggiamento dell’immigrazione clandestina. Queste, a vario titolo, le accuse della Procura di Locri che ha attaccato in toto il sistema di accoglienza messo in piedi nel borgo della Locride. In primo grado il Tribunale di Locri aveva condannato Lucano a 13 anni e 2 mesi di reclusione, a fronte della richiesta della Procura a 7 anni e 11 mesi.

      Il dibattimento

      Nel corso del dibattimento i legali di Lucano, gli avvocati Andrea Daqua e Giuliano Pisapia, avevano sottolineato come quella di Lucano fosse una «innocenza documentalmente provata» poiché l’obiettivo dell’ex sindaco di Riace «era uno solo ed in linea con quanto riportato nei manuali Sprar: l’accoglienza e l’integrazione. Non c’è una sola emergenza dibattimentale (intercettazioni incluse) dalla quale si possa desumere che il fine che ha mosso l’agire del Lucano sia stato diverso».
      Nelle motivazioni d’appello i legali avevano sottolineato che in sentenza c’era stato un «uso smodato delle intercettazioni telefoniche, conferite in motivazione nella loro integralità attraverso la tecnica del copia/incolla». Intercettazioni che, in molti casi, secondo gli avvocati, sarebbero inutilizzabili. Nel corso delle arringhe finali i legali di Lucano avevano chiesto alla corte di ribaltare la sentenza di primo grado del Tribunale di Locri che aveva motivato la sentenza in 900 pagine definendo Lucano “dominus indiscusso” del sistema messo in piedi a Riace per l’accoglienza e l’integrazione dei migranti. Tanti i sostenitori di Lucano che hanno atteso la decisione dei giudici dentro e fuori la Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria, tra loro anche Giuseppe Lavorato.
      In tanti di sono recati anche a Riace e hanno aspettato insieme all’ex sindaco l’esito del processo.

      https://www.corrieredellacalabria.it/2023/10/11/non-reggono-in-appello-le-accuse-monstre-a-lucano-lex-sindaco-

    • Lucano: “Finalmente respiro e ora torno in politica. Sogno un’altra Italia”

      Dopo la sentenza che ha cancellato la condanna a 13 anni e due mesi, parla l’ex sindaco del paese dell’accoglienza. “Riace era avanguardia dei diritti e della speranza, torniamo a esserlo”

      Ora respiro, ora respiro di nuovo». Non è facile parlare con l’ex sindaco dell’accoglienza Mimmo Lucano dopo la sentenza che lo ha assolto dall’accusa di aver trasformato la “sua” Riace in un “sistema clientelare” costruito al solo scopo di “ricavarne benefici politici”, sostenevano i giudici del primo grado. “Che assurdità. Proprio io, che non mi sono mai voluto candidare. Ma adesso la verità è stata ristabilita”, dice l’ex sindaco dell’accoglienza mentre dietro di lui si sente il paese in festa e di tanto in tanto la comunicazione salta perché qualcuno l’abbraccia forte.

      Quando ha sentito il giudice leggere la sentenza che ribaltava quella durissima di primo grado che effetto le ha fatto?

      “In pochi secondi tutti i dispiaceri, l’amarezza, i momenti più duri, quelli in cui non credevo di farcela, tutto è stato cancellato. Mi sono sentito rinascere”.

      È stata dura?

      “È stata dura, è stata lunga, ci sono stati i domiciliari, le misure cautelari che mi hanno tenuto lontano da Riace, poi la sentenza di primo grado, il fango. Ma adesso è come se tutto fosse sparito, in questo momento non pesa più”.

      In questi anni c’è stato qualcosa che è stato più difficile di altre da sopportare?

      «Il sospetto. Quelle ombre che sono state evocate su di me, l’idea che è stata instillata che avessi fatto tutto per un tornaconto personale. Riace era ed è un’idea di umanità, di rinascita per gli ultimi, per tutti. Adesso la verità è venuta a galla».

      I giudici di primo grado dietro quel modello avevano letto un sistema criminale.

      “Assurdo. La contestazione di associazione a delinquere è quanto di più lontano da quello che il villaggio globale, la comunità che qui avevamo costruito, rappresenta.Noi abbiamo sempre lottato per la fratellanza, perché tutti avessero un’opportunità, questa è l’antitesi alle associazioni criminali, che qui significano mafia. E noi l’abbiamo sempre combattuta. I miei primi passi in politica sono stati proprio contro la mafia”.

      A proposito di politica, cade anche l’interdizione ai pubblici uffici. Pensa di candidarsi nuovamente?

      “È presto, la sentenza è appena arrivata, solo adesso inizio a realizzare, ma ci sto pensando. Sicuramente adesso si apre una fase nuova, di rinascita e di speranza”.

      In che misura?

      “Fin dall’inizio della sua storia Riace è stata un’avanguardia in termini di difesa dei diritti umani, anzi dell’umanità. Abbiamo mostrato concretamente che accoglienza non è un problema di ordine pubblico o motivo di allarme sociale, ma occasione per il territorio che la sperimenta, crescita, rinascita per tutti, per chi c’era e per chi viene accolto”.

      E adesso che l’Italia sembra andare in tutt’altra direzione?

      «In questo momento storico così buio, con i decreti Cutro e Piantedosi che criminalizzano i migranti e chi prova a essere solidale, che i giudici cancellino una sentenza che provava a smentirlo trasforma Riace nuovamente in un’avanguardia».

      Di cosa?

      «Della speranza di un’altra Riace possibile, di un’altra Italia possibile, di un altro mondo possibile. Noi abbiamo sempre lottato per questo».

      Nel frattempo però il “paese dell’accoglienza” è stato distrutto

      «In realtà non del tutto. Paradossalmente la sentenza di primo grado ha scatenato un’ondata incredibile di solidarietà. Associazioni come “A buon diritto” hanno promosso persino una raccolta fondi per aiutarmi a pagare la sanzione pecuniaria che mi era stata inflitta. Ma quando il presidente Luigi Manconi mi ha chiamato, gli ho chiesto di usare quei fondi per altro».

      A cosa sono stati destinati?

      «Qui a Riace vivono ancora tante famiglie di rifugiati, quei fondi sono stati utilizzati per dei progetti di lavoro che adesso impiegano tantissime persone anche in strutture come il frantoio, che inizialmente era stato letto come parte di un progetto criminale ed è speranza per chi è arrivato senza più avere nulla».

      Insomma, l’accoglienza a Riace non è morta.

      «Assolutamente no e questo si deve anche a tutte le persone che in questi anni non hanno mai fatto mancare il proprio sostegno né a me, né a Riace. Il mio primo pensiero oggi è stato per loro, per i miei legali, l’avvocato Mazzone soprattutto, il primo a credere in me e che adesso non c’è più».

      Al ministro Salvini che in passato l’ha definita uno zero ha pensato?

      «No, ma so che è uno che guarda il calcio. E a lui che ha usato la mia condanna per criminalizzare l’accoglienza direi che i risultati si commentano a fine partita».

      https://www.repubblica.it/cronaca/2023/10/12/news/lucano_finalmente_respiro_e_ora_torno_in_politica_sogno_unaltra_italia-41

    • Freispruch in Riace

      Dem für gute Flüchtlingsarbeit bekannten italienischen Bürgermeister drohten 13 Jahre Haft. Jetzt hat ihn ein Gericht in zweiter Instanz freigesprochen.

      Mimmo Lucano ist kein Schwerverbrecher. Zu diesem Schluss kam am Mittwochnachmittag das Gericht im süditalienischen Reggio Calabria, das in zweiter Instanz den früheren Bürgermeister der kleinen kalabrischen Gemeinde Riace in fast allen Anklagepunkten freisprach.

      Lucano war mit seiner Politik der ausgestreckten Hand gegenüber Mi­gran­t*in­nen weit über Italien hinaus berühmt geworden, und wurde für sein „Modell Riace“ in den Medien gefeiert und mit Preisen ausgezeichnet, unter anderem mit dem Friedenspreis der Stadt Dresden – bis er im Jahr 2021 in erster Instanz als angeblicher Chef einer kriminellen Vereinigung zu exorbitanten 13 Jahren und 2 Monaten Haft verurteilt wurde.

      Angeblich hatte er, der in den Jahren 2004 bis 2018 Bürgermeister des 1.800-Seelen-Ortes Riace war, sich der Förderung illegaler Einwanderung schuldig gemacht, zahlreiche Delikte wie Betrug, Urkundenfälschung, Unterschlagung begangen, mehr als 700.000 Euro an staatlichen Geldern beiseite geschafft.
      Alles nur Show in Riace?

      Und das Modell Riace? Alles nur Fassade, wenn man Staatsanwaltschaft und Gericht glauben darf, das 2021 in erster Ins­tanz urteilte. Diese „Fassade“ bestand darin, dass Lucano dem Verfall des Dorfkerns von Riace, dem Wegzug jüngerer Menschen etwas entgegensetzen wollte: die Ansiedlung von Migrant*innen, für die Häuser instand gesetzt wurden, und die Schaffung von Arbeit in neu eröffneten Läden und Werkstätten, in denen alteingesessene Bür­ge­r*in­nen gemeinsam mit Neuankömmlingen aus Syrien oder Äthiopien tätig waren. Ende 2017 lebten 470 Mi­gran­t*in­nen in Riace, mehr als ein Viertel der Ortsbevölkerung.

      Doch in den Augen des Innenministeriums in Rom und der Justiz war das alles nur Show. Im Jahr 2017 behauptete der damalige Präfekt von Reggio Calabria, in Riace würden systematisch die staatlichen Zuwendungen für Mi­gran­t*in­nen unterschlagen. 2018 dann erließ das Gericht von Locri Haftbefehl gegen Lucano, der in Hausarrest genommen und seines Amtes enthoben wurde.

      Der damalige Innenminister und Chef der fremdenfeindliche Lega, Matteo Salvini, nutzte diese Steilvorlage, um das Modell Riace von einem Tag auf den anderen zu liquidieren und die dort lebenden Geflüchteten wegzuschaffen.
      Weder persönliche Bereicherung noch politischer Ehrgeiz

      Lucano stand mit 23 Mitangeklagten vor Gericht, und wurde dann zu einer Haftstrafe verurteilt, die eines Mafiabosses würdig gewesen wäre. Dabei mussten auch die Staatsanwaltschaft und das damals urteilende Gericht zugeben, dass auf keinem seiner Konten auch nur ein roter Heller war und ihm keine private Bereicherung nachgewiesen werden konnte. Aber egal: Seine Gegner argumentierten, es sei ihm um „politischen Nutzen“ und den eigenen Ruhm gegangen. Lucano allerdings hatte mehrfach Angebote für Kandidaturen zum Europaparlament und zum nationalen Parlament ausgeschlagen. Viel politischer Ehrgeiz war da nicht zu sehen.

      Zu einer ganz anderen Würdigung kamen denn jetzt auch die Rich­te­r*in­nen in zweiter Instanz. Fast alle Mitangeklagten Lucanos wurden freigesprochen. Er selbst allerdings wurde wegen Urkundenfälschung in einem Verwaltungsakt von 2017 zu 18 Monaten Haft auf Bewährung verurteilt. Dennoch feierten er und seine An­hän­ge­r*in­nen das Verdikt wie einen Freispruch. Die zahlreichen Anwesenden im Gerichtssaal stimmten „Mimmo, Mimmo!“-Sprechchöre an und sangen „Bella Ciao“. Lucano selbst, der das Urteil in Riace abgewartet hatte, brach nach dem Richterspruch in Freudentränen aus. Er sieht seinen guten Ruf wiederhergestellt und erwägt eine Rückkehr in die Politik.

      https://taz.de/Ex-Buergermeister-Mimmo-Lucano/!5962687

    • Mimmo Lucano, ridotta drasticamente la condanna in appello: un urlo liberatorio!

      «La solidarietà non può essere reato»

      La sentenza di appello del processo a carico dell’ex sindaco di Riace, Domenico “Mimmo” Lucano, e dei membri della sua giunta, per un totale di 18 imputati, rovescia completamente il verdetto di primo grado.

      I giudici della Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria, infatti, lo hanno condannato a un anno e sei mesi di reclusione, con pena sospesa, contro la richiesta della Procura generale di 10 anni e 5 mesi, stravolgendo la sentenza di primo grado del Tribunale di Locri che gli aveva inflitto 13 anni e 2 mesi di carcere per associazione per delinquere, truffa, peculato, falso e abuso d’ufficio per le iniziative di accoglienza, cooperazione, convivenza pacifica e solidarietà costruite nei tre mandati (tra il 2004 e il 2018) da Sindaco di Riace.

      La Corte ha così assolto Lucano da tutti i reati più gravi e poi tutti gli altri 17 imputati e ha ristabilito una verità dei fatti totalmente diversa da quella, abnorme, disegnata dal primo grado.

      «Ci sarà ora qualcuno che chiederà scusa a Mimmo Lucano per la sistematica attività di diffamazione indirizzata nei suoi confronti» si chiede A Buon Diritto.

      Per il presidente, Luigi Manconi, e per tutta l’associaizone «la soddisfazione per la sentenza di appello è grande».

      «Abbiamo sostenuto fin dal primo momento l’idea di politica dell’accoglienza e dell’ospitalità promossa dalla giunta di Riace e abbiamo sostenuto gli imputati con una sottoscrizione nazionale che ha dato eccezionali risultati. Questa sentenza conferma che eravamo nel giusto quando affermavamo che la solidarietà non può essere criminalizzata», conclude l’associazione alla quale si sono aggiunti in queste ore diversi commenti di personalità e organizzazioni solidali che sono sempre state vicine all’ex Sindaco.

      Intervistato da Repubblica, Mimmo Lucano ha detto: «In pochi secondi tutti i dispiaceri, l’amarezza, i momenti più duri, quelli in cui non credevo di farcela, tutto è stato cancellato. Mi sono sentito rinascere».

      E poi: «È stata dura e lunga, ci sono stati i domiciliari, le misure cautelari che mi hanno tenuto lontano da Riace, poi la sentenza di primo grado, il fango. Adesso è come se tutto fosse sparito, in questo momento non pesa più».

      https://twitter.com/RaffaellaRoma/status/1712154008217854430

      https://www.meltingpot.org/2023/10/mimmo-lucano-ridotta-drasticamente-la-condanna-in-appello-un-urlo-libera

    • C’è un giudice a Reggio Calabria

      Mimmo Lucano, a lungo agli arresti domiciliari e condannato a tredici anni e due mesi dal tribunale di Locri, con una sentenza nella cui motivazione si leggono anche pesanti giudizi etici (un “falso innocente» che avrebbe agito con una «logica predatoria delle risorse pubbliche» per soddisfare «appetiti di natura personale, spesso declinati in chiave politica»), ha visto oggi la Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria assolvere i suoi coimputati (salvo uno) e ridurre drasticamente la condanna a un anno e sei mesi di reclusione.

      Da quel che si può capire dal dispositivo letto oggi in udienza, la condanna dovrebbe riguardare un episodio di abuso d’ufficio per l’affidamento del servizio di raccolta di rifiuti. Un reato che a detta del Ministro della giustizia andrebbe abolito perché inutile e fonte di ritardi e costi processuali (9 condanne su 5.000 processi penali).

      Ovviamente, come si suol dire in queste occasioni, aspettiamo di leggere la motivazione, che probabilmente ci riserverà ulteriori piacevoli sorprese. Ma già il dispositivo giustifica alcune valutazioni.

      L’indagine, nata da ispezioni al Comune di Riace disposte dal Prefetto di Reggio Calabria dell’epoca (successivamente nominato da Salvini capo del dipartimento libertà civili e immigrazione del Viminale) e da indagini della Guardia di Finanza, non ha retto al vaglio del giudizio della Corte d’appello. La difesa di Lucano, sostenuta dagli avvocati Andrea Daqua e Giuliano Pisapia, aveva sostenuto, oltre ad alcuni plateali errori delle indagini (un’intercettazione erroneamente trascritta dalla polizia giudiziaria), l’inconsistenza del quadro probatorio dell’accusa e questa linea è stata evidentemente condivisa dalla Corte. Ma insieme all’accusa giuridica necessariamente dovrebbero essere caduti anche i giudizi morali negativi e le feroci critiche al modello di accoglienza realizzato da Lucano. Il “modello Riace” conosciuto e apprezzato nel mondo, sia nelle aule universitarie che nelle più diverse tribune mediatiche.

      E’ difficile però che quel modello, nell’attuale temperie culturale e politica, possa facilmente essere rimesso completamente in piedi. Non ostante la propria personale sofferenza per le accuse ricevute, Lucano, con l’aiuto concreto di alcune associazioni, ha continuato a praticare nel Villaggio Globale di Riace la sua idea di accoglienza. Non è certo il “modello Riace” che vedeva coinvolto l’intero paese, ma è importante che sia rimasto e rimanga in piedi il suo nucleo etico e culturale.

      https://www.articolo21.org/2023/10/ce-un-giudice-a-reggio-calabria

    • La condanna di Mimmo Lucano è stata ridotta in appello a 1 anno e 6 mesi

      In primo grado l’ex sindaco di Riace era stato condannato a oltre 13 anni per la gestione dei migranti, con una sentenza molto contestata

      Mercoledì la Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria ha condannato Mimmo Lucano, ex sindaco di Riace, a un anno e sei mesi di reclusione per reati commessi nella gestione dei progetti di accoglienza dei migranti di Riace, in Calabria. Lucano era stato condannato in primo grado a 13 anni e 6 mesi di carcere, quasi il doppio della pena chiesta dall’accusa, con una sentenza assai contestata dato che la sua gestione dei migranti a Riace era stata raccontata in tutta Europa e nel resto del mondo come un modello di integrazione e solidarietà: il cosiddetto “modello Riace”.

      La sentenza d’appello è arrivata dopo diverse ore di camera di consiglio e non si sanno ancora le motivazioni della decisione dei giudici. In primo grado, a settembre del 2021, Lucano era stato condannato per 21 reati che includevano associazione a delinquere e una serie di reati tra cui falso in atto pubblico, peculato, abuso d’ufficio e truffa. Nella sentenza di appello i giudici hanno assolto Lucano da quasi tutti i reati, dichiarato il non luogo a procedere per difetto di querela per altri e concesso la sospensione condizionale della pena.

      Lucano è stato invece condannato per falsità materiale e ideologica commessa dal pubblico ufficiale in atti pubblici, e comunque limitatamente a un solo atto, delle decine indicate nella sentenza di primo grado, relativo a un contributo ricevuto per l’accoglienza di alcuni migranti. La procura aveva chiesto una condanna a 10 anni e 5 mesi: insieme a Lucano erano imputate altre 17 persone, tutte assolte a parte una.

      La vicenda giudiziaria di Mimmo Lucano era iniziata nel 2016, a seguito di alcune rilevazioni di varie irregolarità amministrative da parte di ispettori della prefettura locale. Due anni dopo era stata avviata un’inchiesta, l’operazione Xenia, che nel 2021 aveva portato alla condanna in primo grado da parte del tribunale di Locri. Lucano era stato invece assolto dalle accuse di concussione e immigrazione clandestina.

      In sostanza, secondo i giudici, il sistema organizzato da Lucano, descritto come un modello per i principi di solidarietà a cui si ispirava, nascondeva invece un’associazione a delinquere responsabile di una serie di reati. A dicembre del 2021 erano state pubblicate le motivazioni della sentenza. Secondo i giudici Lucano li aveva compiuti per arricchirsi e garantirsi una tranquillità economica una volta andato in pensione. Gli avvocati di Lucano avevano ritenuto queste accuse insensate, e avevano sostenuto che Lucano avesse gestito Riace col solo scopo di realizzare un sistema ispirato a valori di accoglienza e solidarietà.

      Le critiche alla sentenza avevano riguardato anche il calcolo della pena: i giudici avevano individuato due separati disegni criminosi, ripartendo quindi in due filoni i reati di cui Lucano era accusato e quindi duplicando la pena, con più di 10 anni di reclusione per il primo e più di 2 per il secondo, raddoppiando, come detto, la pena chiesta dall’accusa.

      Lucano e i suoi avvocati avevano fatto ricorso, e a luglio del 2022 c’era stato un ulteriore sviluppo nella vicenda: la Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria aveva deciso di riaprire l’istruttoria dibattimentale: significa che la corte aveva ammesso un’integrazione alle prove raccolte durante il processo di primo grado. L’integrazione consisteva in 50 pagine di una perizia cosiddetta “pro veritate”, realizzata da un consulente della difesa di Lucano, Antonio Milicia, perito trascrittore. Il perito aveva trascritto cinque intercettazioni. In quattro di queste c’erano differenze, che la difesa aveva definito «fondamentali», tra il testo che presentava Milicia e quello che venne presentato dal perito del processo di primo grado.

      Prossimamente verranno depositate le motivazioni della sentenza d’appello.

      https://www.ilpost.it/2023/10/11/lucano-appello-ridotta-pena

    • Italie : peine allégée pour le maire qui aidait des migrants

      Condamné en première instance à treize ans de prison pour « association de malfaiteurs aux fins d’immigration irrégulière », il a vu l’essentiel des charges portées contre lui être abandonnées.

      Par un cri de victoire et des embrassades avec ses proches, #Domenico_Lucano, dit « #Mimmo », a célébré l’arrêt de la cour d’appel de Reggio de Calabre, mercredi 11 octobre. Les juges lui ont en effet notifié qu’il n’était plus « que » condamné à dix-huit mois de prison avec sursis, en dépit des réquisitions du procureur. Ancien maire de Riace de 2004 à 2018, petite ville d’à peine 2 000 âmes perchée sur les collines calabraises, Mimmo Lucano avait été condamné en première instance, en 2021, à une lourde peine : plus de treize ans de réclusion pour « association de malfaiteurs aux fins d’immigration irrégulière », « pratiques frauduleuses » et « détournements de biens publics ». « Justice a été rendue à un homme qui a toujours travaillé dans le seul et unique intérêt du bien commun et de la défense des plus faibles », ont réagi les deux avocats de l’ancien élu, à la sortie de la cour d’appel.

      « Il s’agissait d’un #procès_politique, les charges pesant sur lui étaient excessives, souligne Gianfranco Schiavone, président du Consortium italien de solidarité (ICS), une plate-forme qui dispense de l’aide juridique aux demandeurs d’asile. Cet épisode restera comme une page sombre de la justice italienne, celle où l’on a cherché à démolir un homme et un #modèle d’accueil. » Car derrière le maire de Riace, c’est bien l’intégration des migrants qui était mise en cause.

      En 1998, Mimmo Lucano accueille pour la première fois des Kurdes échoués sur une plage voisine, et ne s’arrêtera plus de porter secours aux migrants. En vingt ans, il va faire de Riace une commune connue dans le monde entier pour son #accueil_inconditionnel. Des dizaines d’exilés, venus de Somalie, de Tunisie, d’Afghanistan, trouvent refuge dans la bourgade. Une coopérative sociale est créée, tout comme des boutiques. L’école du village rouvre et fait cohabiter petits Calabrais et migrants.

      Cible de Matteo Salvini

      Le « modèle Riace », perçu comme un modèle d’intégration vertueux par le travail permettant, aussi, d’enrayer le déclin d’une Calabre qui se vide, est vanté dans de nombreux pays. En 2016, le magazine américain Fortune classe l’édile au 40e rang des personnes les plus influentes de la planète. La même année, le pape François lui envoie une lettre dans laquelle il exprime son soutien à ses initiatives en faveur des migrants.

      https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2023/10/13/italie-la-cour-d-appel-allege-la-peine-du-maire-calabrais-condamne-pour-avoi

    • Le maire calabrais Mimmo Lucano voit sa peine pour « délit de solidarité » réduite

      En 2021, il avait été condamné, en première instance, à 13 ans de prison et 500 000 euros d’amende, pour délit de solidarité. Le crime de Domenico Lucano, dit Mimmo : avoir mis en place un ambitieux système d’accueil des réfugiés dans le village de Riace, en Calabre, dont il était maire.

      Sa peine a été réduite à un an de prison et 1 400 euros d’amende par la cour d’appel de Locri, en Calabre, qui a rendu son verdict ce mercredi en fin d’après midi. Les 17 autres solidaires assis à ses côtés sur le banc des accusés ont tous été acquittés, alors qu’ils avaient écopé, en première instance, de 1 à 10 ans de prison.

      « C’est une #victoire ! Je viens de l’avoir au téléphone. Il pleurait en remerciant tous ceux qui l’ont soutenu », explique Martine Mandrea, animatrice de son comité de soutien à Marseille.

      https://www.humanite.fr/monde/domenico-lucano/le-maire-calabrais-mimmo-lucano-voit-sa-peine-pour-delit-de-solidarite-redu

    • Cosa insegna la (quasi) assoluzione di Mimmo Lucano

      La quasi-assoluzione in appello di Mimmo Lucano e della sua giunta rappresenta una svolta nella battaglia culturale e politica relativa alla criminalizzazione della solidarietà. La pesante condanna ricevuta in primo grado, oltre tredici anni di carcere, superiore alle richieste della pubblica accusa, appare ora abnorme e immotivata, probabilmente viziata da teoremi pregiudiziali.

      All’ex sindaco di Riace era stata addebitata addirittura l’associazione per delinquere. Già il fatto che magistratura e forze dell’ordine in quel contesto avessero dedicato una quantità ingente di tempo e risorse a indagare sull’accoglienza dei rifugiati, distogliendole necessariamente dalla lotta alla ndrangheta, aveva qualcosa di surreale. Entrando nel merito, nel 2019 la Cassazione aveva criticato la conduzione delle indagini, affermando che poggiavano “sulle incerte basi di un quadro di riferimento fattuale sfornito di significativi e precisi elementi”.

      La vicenda Lucano si aggiunge quindi a una serie di casi giudiziari in cui i protagonisti di iniziative di accoglienza verso profughi e migranti sono stati colpiti non solo da veementi campagne politiche e mediatiche, ma anche da accuse che li hanno costretti a difendersi e non di rado a sospendere la loro attività: basti ricordare Carola Rackete e le molte ong finite sotto processo, con le navi ispezionate e sequestrate, ma mai condannate; padre Mussie Zerai, processato perché impegnato ad aiutare i profughi eritrei suoi connazionali; gli attivisti di Baobab a Roma, che rifocillavano i profughi e li aiutavano a ripartire verso la Francia; i coniugi triestini Gian Andrea Franchi e Lorena Fornasir, che con la loro associazione Linea d’Ombra assistevano i migranti della rotta balcanica.

      Il fenomeno non è solo italiano, giacché, per restare in Europa, in Francia aveva fatto rumore il processo a Cédric Herrou, contadino-attivista che accoglieva in val Roja i profughi provenienti dall’Italia.

      Non è il caso di parlare di un complotto, e tanto meno di rivolgere agli inquirenti accuse di politicizzazione speculari a quelle provenienti, anche in questi giorni, dal fronte della chiusura dei confini. Occorre però vedere in queste ripetute inchieste giudiziarie, quasi sempre destinate al fallimento o a magri risultati, uno dei frutti più tossici di un clima culturale avvelenato: un clima in cui l’accoglienza è esposta al rischio costante di essere scambiata per un atto sovversivo, di attacco alla sovranità statuale e al controllo (selettivo) dei confini. E in cui di fatto si finisce per intimidire e scoraggiare chi si mobilita per soccorrere e aiutare.

      Se vi è un auspicio da trarre da questa vicenda, è che magistratura e forze dell’ordine siano sollecitate a indirizzare le loro energie, non infinite e quindi necessariamente guidate da scelte di priorità, a indagare ben altri luoghi di malaffare, ben altre forme di lesione della legalità, ben altre violazioni della sovranità statuale. E per quanto riguarda noi cittadini, sia lecito sognare un mondo in cui l’accoglienza non sia né di destra, né di sinistra, ma la conseguenza di un’opzione per i diritti umani affrancata da logiche di schieramento.

      https://www.avvenire.it/opinioni/pagine/mimmo-lucano-assoluzione-criminalizzazione-solidarieta

    • Per Mimmo Lucano ribaltata la sentenza: crollano quasi tutte le accuse

      La Procura generale di Reggio Calabria aveva chiesto 10 anni e 5 mesi di reclusione, mentre per i giudici è rimasto in piedi solo un falso in atto pubblico per un’assegnazione di fondi a cooperative

      Crollano in appello quasi tutte le accuse contestate all’ex sindaco di Riace, Mimmo Lucano. I giudici della Corte d’appello di Reggio Calabria, infatti, dopo una camera di consiglio di 7 ore, lo hanno condannato ad un anno e sei mesi di reclusione, con pena sospesa, contro la richiesta della Procura generale di 10 anni e 5 mesi, ribaltando la sentenza di primo grado del Tribunale di Locri che gli aveva inflitto 13 anni e 2 mesi di carcere per associazione per delinquere, truffa, peculato, falso e abuso d’ufficio. Assolti altri 16 imputati, collaboratori di Lucano, mentre l’unica altra condanna, a un anno, è per Maria Taverniti.

      Dalla lettura del dispositivo emerge che la Corte, presieduta da Elisabetta Palumbo, ha condannato Lucano solo per il reato di falso in atto pubblico in relazione ad una determina del 2017 relativa all’assegnazione di fondi pubblici alle cooperative, mentre sono state prescritte altre due accuse tra le quali l’abuso d’ufficio per l’affidamento del servizio di raccolta e trasporto dei rifiuti nel Comune di Riace a due cooperative sociali prive dei requisiti richiesti dalla legge.

      Tutti gli atti del processo sono stati trasmessi comunque alla Corte dei Conti. Il resto cade, soprattutto l’accusa di essere il promotore di un’associazione a delinquere finalizzata alla gestione illecita dei fondi destinati ai progetti Sprar e Cas. Lucano non era presenta alla lettura della sentenza e ha atteso l’esito nel suo paese.

      Dentro e fuori dall’aula applausi e festeggiamenti per la decisione che smonta le accuse contenute prima nei durissimi rapporti della Prefettura di Reggio Calabria e poi nell’inchiesta “Xenia” della procura di Locri che nel 2018 aveva portato Lucano agli arresti domiciliari. L’inchiesta della procura di Locri e poi la sentenza di primo grado avevano accusato un modello di accoglienza diventato famoso nel mondo e iniziato nel 1998 quando con un gruppo di amici accolse alcuni curdi sbarcati a Riace, da cui il soprannome “Mimmo u’ curdu”.

      Eletto tre volte sindaco, tra il 2004 e il 2018, quando venne sospeso dopo gli arresti domiciliari. «È la fine di un incubo che in questi anni mi ha abbattuto, umiliato, offeso - ha commentato Lucano -. E che mi ha reso agli occhi della gente come un delinquente. Avrò fatto anche degli errori, ma sono stato attaccato, denigrato, anche a livello politico, per distruggere il “modello Riace”, la straordinaria opportunità creata per accogliere centinaia di persone che avevano bisogno e per ridare vita e ripopolare i centri della Calabria». Ma cosa rimane del “modello Riace”? Nulla o poco più. Non esistono più né Cas, né Sprar.

      Il Comune, a guida leghista dopo la caduta di Lucano, non ha più confermato quel sistema. Il nome di Riace però continua ad attrarre. Arrivano ancora immigrati, lo stesso Lucano aiuta a trovare case, ma è accoglienza improvvisata e non ci sono né lavoro né fondi per attività. E proprio per questo hanno chiuso quasi tutte le botteghe e i laboratori di artigianato. Molti i debiti ancora da pagare e comunque nel paese non si vede più quel turismo solidale di allora. Invece purtroppo a Riace marina è comparsa la prostituzione di donne nigeriane. Non è però finito il modello calabrese di accoglienza.

      Proprio nella Locride non sono pochi i comuni che continuano ad ospitare gli immigrati, ormai realtà consolidate, come a Camini, paese confinante con Riace. O come a Roccella Jonica, anche questo confinante, Comune record per sbarchi dalla rotta turca, e dove si accoglie senza tensione. O ancora a Gioiosa Jonica, Benestare, Caulonia, Ardore, Siderno. Tutte località che ancora ospitano Cas e Sai, pur tra non poche difficoltà. Ma senza problemi di irregolarità o bilanci in disordine. Buona accoglienza silenziosa e poco conosciuta. Senza riflettori politici, positivi o negativi. Solo accoglienza e integrazione. Tutta un’altra storia.

      https://www.avvenire.it/attualita/pagine/per-lucano-ribaltata-la-sentenza

    • Mimmo Lucano: «Il modello Riace ha spaventato chi non guarda ai migranti con umanità»

      L’ex sindaco a Telesuonano: «Futuro? Tre possibilità, ma ne preferisco una». L’avvocato Daqua: «Grave errore giudiziario che nessuno ripagherà»

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sw2suusH4H8

      «Il mio sogno? È nato un po’ per caso e ho cercato di realizzarlo in maniera inconsapevole. Mi sono interessato di accoglienza, di solidarietà dopo uno sbarco. Ma è vero, man mano che passavano gli anni, ho immaginato in maniera concreta di riscattare la mia terra, la Calabria. Nonostante i luoghi della precarietà, spesso anche dell’abbandono, del silenzio, dell’omertà, abbiamo trasmesso un messaggio al mondo: che almeno siamo grandi per essere vicini a chi subisce le decisioni di guerra, chi subisce scelte di politiche che hanno depredato i territori del cosiddetto terzo e quarto mondo, abbiamo fatto capire che è possibile costruire alternative umane utilizzando i nostri spazi, i nostri luoghi che sono dei luoghi abbandonati. E non c’è voluto nulla, il modello Riace non è altro che l’utilizzo di case in cui prima abitavano i nostri emigranti che per ragione di lavoro hanno cercato altrove possibilità di un sogno per la loro vita». Ha esordito così, con queste parole semplici ma potenti, Mimmo Lucano, ospite nell’ultima puntata di Telesuonano, il format condotto da Danilo Monteleone in onda su L’altro Corriere tv (canale 75). L’ex sindaco di Riace, da poco reduce dalla sentenza di appello “Xenia” che ha fatto cadere quasi tutte le accuse a suo carico (dai 13 e due mesi inflitti a Lucano in primo grado, si è passati a un anno e sei mesi – con pena sospesa – per una «residua ipotesi di falso su una determina»), ha ripercorso il suo viaggio giudiziario, partendo dall’inizio dell’operazione che lo ha coinvolto.
      Dopo la sentenza

      «Quella mattina è stato l’epilogo di qualcosa di strano. Negli ultimi anni della terza legislatura, che corrispondono al 2015-2016, avevo percepito un atteggiamento ostile soprattutto dalla prefettura di Reggio Calabria, e anche a livello centrale con tentativi così ingiustificati di contrastare quello che invece nel piccolo era stata una soluzione per un problema globale come quello della migrazione. Devo dire che il primo ad avere raccontato al mondo che in Calabria esiste un luogo in cui addirittura l’immigrazione, l’arrivo delle persone, non è solo un problema, ma risolve i problemi delle comunità locali, è stato il regista Wim Wenders. Ha detto “questo è un messaggio per il mondo, è un messaggio globale, è stato fatto a livello locale però va molto al di là di questa prospettiva”. E poi quella mattina, quell’epilogo è stata la fine di una favola, è stato di nuovo scendere nella realtà ed è cambiato tutto. Ricordo le persone che mi sono state vicine in maniera molto lucida. Ancora vivo quei momenti, quelle sensazioni, quel bussare alla porta nelle prime ore del mattino, e poi ho visto l’avvocato Antonio Mazzone, Andrea Daqua che per me non sono stati solo avvocati. Hanno lottato insieme a me per un ideale di giustizia, di rispetto, della dignità, della democrazia della nostra terra. Aspettavo questo riscatto, la mia realtà stava vivendo un paradosso. Monsignor Bregantini è venuto a fare il testimone, partendo con il treno da Campobasso e ha detto: “Attenzione, questa non è una storia criminale, è una storia profetica che indica al mondo un’altra soluzione”». Dopo la sentenza di primo grado c’è stato però qualcosa che è riuscito a dare speranza a Lucano. «È durata solo un giorno quella sensazione di sconforto, perché il giorno dopo, eravamo all’inizio di ottobre, perché la sentenza è arrivata il 30 settembre 2021, ho ricevuto una telefonata che mi ha cambiato completamente lo stato d’animo. Non lo so perché, ho avvertito che c’era quasi un raggio di luce in una storia con tante ombre. Luigi Manconi (sociologo ed ex senatore, ndr), mi chiama e mi dice che c’è un’indignazione generale per quella condanna che è una condanna che non è solo verso una persona, ma verso gli ideali che appartengono alla collettività e soprattutto appartengono anche alla dimensione dei nostri luoghi, della nostra terra. Io l’ho sempre vista sotto questo aspetto, io sono stato il tramite, però quello che volevamo contrastare è quel messaggio che dice attenzione, la soluzione umana prevale su quella disumana. La soluzione disumana non porta a nulla, porta solo a guerre, a odi, a razzismi, a commercio di armi. Manconi in quella circostanza si è fatto promotore di una raccolta fondi che era finalizzata al pagamento della mia multa, perché oltre agli anni di reclusione dovevo pagare anche una sanzione pecuniaria. Io mi sono rifiutato, perché non riconoscevo quella giustizia. Ho detto “questi fondi utilizziamoli per riavviare l’accoglienza” e così è stato. Il villaggio globale ha riaperto l’asilo, ha riaperto la mensa sociale, ha riaperto la scuola, il dopo scuola, la scuola per gli adulti, abbiamo riaperto la fattoria sociale che prima addirittura era stata considerata il luogo del reato penale per quanto riguarda il peculato».

      A chi ha dato fastidio Riace?

      «A chi ha dato fastidio Riace? Qualcuno – ha affermato Lucano – ha voluto sintetizzare dicendo così: “noi siamo Riace, loro sono Cutro”. Ecco, ancora oggi si scelgono i percorsi di deportazione per la soluzione dei migranti, di persone che, non dobbiamo mai dimenticarlo, sono vittime delle politiche dei Paesi occidentali e siamo noi che abbiamo imposto regimi, guerre, vendita di armi, abbiamo depredato quei territori, le persone che arrivano non è vero che arrivano per fare un viaggio perché sono migranti economici». Sul primo percorso ispettivo su Riace del governo, che in quella fase era di centrosinistra, Lucano evidenzia come in quel periodo si diceva che appoggiare Riace significava perdere consensi. «Perché, paradossalmente, i consensi li ha chi propone misure di ordine, di disciplina, di chiusura delle frontiere, di chiusura dei porti. Riace non è stato tutto questo, semplicemente ha proposto una soluzione partendo dai luoghi. Ancora oggi io dico, che rispetto alle deportazioni in Albania (Lucano si riferisce all’accordo Italia-Albania, ndr) la soluzione ideale sarebbe quella di riaccendere i paesi abbandonati della Calabria». «Ci sono tanti disoccupati nei nostri paesi – ha proseguito l’ex sindaco –. Addirittura quando io facevo il sindaco non c’era nemmeno il reddito di cittadinanza. C’è una realtà locale di autoctoni che vive condizioni di difficoltà e qual è la soluzione? Quella di andare via, andando via si desertificano i territori che rimangono dei luoghi dove c’è solo il silenzio. L’arrivo delle persone è stato vissuto con la consapevolezza che invece poteva esserci una rigenerazione dei luoghi, qualcuno l’ha definita un’accoglienza dolce che occupa gli spazi che non sono di nessuno. Se tutte le realtà disabitate, soprattutto le aree interne, le aree fragili calabresi, dessero la disponibilità di numeri piccoli, allora non si parlerebbe più di invasione, ma di una straordinaria opportunità. Una cosa che si sarebbe potuta fare in Calabria? Penso alla legge 18 del 2009 che prendeva spunto da questa economia sociale e solidale che in atto a Riace, poteva essere l’occasione per attuare delle politiche in cui l’Europa sarebbe dovuta stare attenta ad avviare dei processi legati al recupero delle aree abbandonate nelle campagne, per una nuova riforma agraria, per attività sulla zootecnica, su quelle che sono le risorse e le vocazioni dei territori».

      Cosa resta oggi del modello Riace?


      «Oggi a Riace non c’è la scuola – ha ricordato Lucano – non c’è l’asilo, c’è di nuovo quell’atmosfera di oblio sociale che prelude poi all’abbandono. Quando le comunità diventano questo, di fronte agli occhi ti appare solo un deserto, paesi fantasmi. Ecco, il mio impegno di questi anni è andato in questa direzione. Poi è arrivata la storia giudiziaria, il voler dire che non c’è altra soluzione se non quella di chiudere le frontiere, chiudere gli spazi, di considerare l’immigrazione solo come un problema, solo come un’invasione, solo come qualcosa che produce la paura, che giustifica misure di sicurezza. Riace è stato il paese pioniere di una nuova visione che ribalta totalmente il paradigma dell’invasione. E secondo me è qui che bisogna cercare il movente giudiziario che mi ha portato ad essere indagato. Credo che il neoliberismo a livello mondiale non gradisca il senso dell’umanità».
      Il futuro di Mimmo Lucano

      Ma c’è davanti a Mimmo Lucano un ritorno all’impegno politico diretto? «Quello che ho davanti – ha detto ancora l’ex sindaco di Riace – è qualcosa che non riguarda solo me, in tanti hanno sostenuto Riace come un’idea in cui si è ritrovata tutta l’Europa. Io sono stato tante volte in Germania, in Francia, in Spagna. Riace non è qualcosa che riguarda solo me, quello che dovrò fare, ma certamente è un messaggio politico. Io non so quello che farò, ma credo dipenderà dal contributo che potrò dare alla collettività ed è una decisione che prenderò insieme alle tante persone che hanno condiviso il mio percorso di sofferenza. Esistono tre possibilità per dedicarsi all’impegno politico e sociale: la prima è fare il sindaco, l’altra è impegnarsi per la Regione, per la nazione e per l’Europa, e poi c’è la militanza, che non prevede ruoli. È quella che mi affascina di più».

      Dopo Mimmo Lucano, nella seconda parte di Telesuonano, è toccato all’avvocato Andrea Daqua ripercorrere in maniera più approfondita la vicenda processionale dell’ex primo cittadino di Riace. «Cosa ho pensato quando ho sentito pronunciare la condanna a 13 anni e due mesi? Con il collega Giuliano Pisapia (ex sindaco di Milano che nel frattempo era diventato difensore di Lucano dopo la morte del professore Antonio Mazzone che aveva seguito dall’inizio la vicenda, ndr), abbiamo immediatamente qualificato quel dispositivo come aberrante, ma non in riferimento soltanto alla quantità smisurata, sproporzionata della pena, ma perché noi che avevamo seguito il processo, avevamo subito intuito che c’era un contrasto evidente tra quel dispositivo e il dato che era invece emerso dall’istruttoria. Poi questa nostra convinzione si è rafforzata quando abbiamo letto la motivazione che era più aberrante del dispositivo e, soprattutto, quando abbiamo ascoltato fonti autorevolissime del diritto italiano, giuristi di primo livello che erano completamente sganciati dal processo e non conoscevano nemmeno Lucano, che hanno spiegato perché quella sentenza era aberrante». Così Andrea Daqua che ha sottolineato come anche nel caso di Lucano, «le cause scatenanti o determinanti di un determinato processo possono essere molteplici, ma noi abbiamo il dovere di attenerci al dato documentale, al dato processuale e sulla base di questo abbiamo dimostrato che Lucano è stato vittima di un gravissimo errore giudiziario. Poi su come sia nato questo errore giudiziario o sulle motivazioni qua potremmo parlare interi giorni». Un errore giudiziario che, come spesso capita, travolge una persona, i suoi familiari e, nel caso di Lucano, una esperienza. Chi ripagherà questo danno? «Nessuno – ha dichiarato Daqua –, l’unico modo secondo il mio modesto parere per dare un senso a questo danno irreparabile che ha subito una persona perbene come Lucano, è quello di leggere le carte, di leggere il processo, di capire il perché di tante anomalie e studiare i rimedi possibili affinché ciò non accada più, perché quello che è successo a Lucano domani potrebbe succedere a chiunque. Allora qui è necessario che gli addetti ai lavori riflettano su questo procedimento e capiscano come anche alcuni strumenti processuali andrebbero rivisti».

      Il ricordo dell’avvocato Antonio Mazzone

      «La fortuna di Mimmo (Lucano, ndr) – ha detto ancora l’avvocato Daqua – è che è stato seguito all’inizio dal professore Mazzone, scomparso da tre anni. Io appena mi sono laureato sono entrato nello studio del professore Mazzone e non ne sono mai uscito, anche se poi ho aperto il mio studio. Però continuare a collaborare con lui, è stata veramente una fortuna perché dove arrivava lui nessuno di noi era in grado di arrivare. Appena Lucano mi ha fatto vedere la prima relazione prefettizia, che era uno dei supporti investigativi su cui si è appoggiato poi il costrutto accusatorio, io, convinto della bontà del suo modello, della sua onestà, gli ho detto: “sindaco io la aiuto, ma qui c’è qualcosa che va oltre. Noi dobbiamo parlare con il prof. Mazzone”. Cosa che da lì a qualche giorno abbiamo fatto e da quel momento in poi tutta la prima parte l’abbiamo seguita insieme. Mazzone è stato convinto dal primo minuto dell’onestà di Lucano e aveva ragione». Ma cosa avrebbe detto Mazzone dopo aver ascoltato le due sentenze? «Nel primo grado – ha risposto sorridendo Daqua – è meglio che io non lo dica. Nel secondo grado, avrebbe detto che giustizia è stata fatta. E’ chiaro che in questo processo il merito è del professore, perché quando lui è venuto a mancare noi eravamo già in una fase istruttoriale avanzata. Poi è intervenuto il collega Pisapia, che ringrazio per il modo con cui lui si è messo a disposizione».

      La precisazione sulla sentenza in Appello

      Sull’ultima sentenza in Appello, Daqua ci ha tenuto a fare una precisazione. «Sento spesso dire che è stata ridotta la condanna – ha affermato il legale – non è proprio così, Lucano è stato assolto per tutti i reati. Per un reato, che è una ipotesi di falso relativa a una determina, c’è stata la condanna. E anche su questa noi siamo assolutamente rispettosi della decisione della Corte, aspetteremo l’esito della motivazione, perché secondo noi anche quella determina è lecita, però chiaramente aspetteremo la valutazione della corte e poi valuteremo. Comunque, nel complesso, possiamo dire che il castello accusatorio si è sbriciolato, sono caduti tutti i reati che erano gravi come il peculato, l’associazione a delinquere e la truffa. Abbiamo dimostrato che diverse intercettazioni erano assolutamente non rispondenti al contenuto della effettiva dichiarazione». «Le intercettazioni – ha continuato Daqua – costituiscono sicuramente uno strumento processuale, ma va assolutamente rivisto in una prospettiva di rispetto verso il principio costituzionale di presunzione di innocenza».

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzLgnpZvtTk&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.corrieredellaca

      https://www.corrieredellacalabria.it/2023/11/16/mimmo-lucano-il-modello-riace-ha-spaventato-chi-non-guarda-ai-