• Le foot comme outil de banalisation de la violences masculine

    De passage à Nancy j’ai appris que les supporter de foot en joie suite à une victoire de leur équipe, avaient causé pour 50.000€ de dégâts matériels. La presse qualifie ca de « débordements » ce qui renvoie plus à un phénomène naturel qu’à un comportement humain.
    https://france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr/grand-est/meurthe-et-moselle/nancy/nancy-apres-les-degradations-place-stanislas-arrestatio
    Là il ne s’agit que de dégâts matériels, ceux là sont pris légèrement au sérieux par les habitants et par la presse car ils sont visibles et on en parle dans le journal. Les destructions causées par les supporteurs en joie sont désignés comme une fatalité naturelle et il y a ici une question autour de la #virilité de sa naturalisation et de l’expression des privilèges qu’elle procure.

    Puis il y a cette étude de 2013 qui porte sur un petit échantillon de footeux de Lancaster que j’avais deja posté sur seenthis et qui rend compte d’une augmentation des violences sur conjointes les soirs de match, avec une net augmentation encore de ces violences en cas de défaites.
    cf https://www.huffingtonpost.fr/2018/07/04/coupe-du-monde-2018-une-campagne-de-prevention-contre-les-violences-c

    L’étude parle seulement des violences sur les conjoints mais les violences sur les enfants sont probablement corrélés.

    Et la France à perdu la coupe d’Europe du dopage et de la corruption ce qui implique que beaucoup de femmes et d’enfants ont été battus ces derniers jours sous prétexte de frustration d’hommes. Ca me saute aux yeux à cause d’une séquence vu dans le zapping d’aujourd’hui qui me semble être un exemple typique de la normalisation des violences masculines.

    Ca commence à 0:11 seconde - le journaliste dit que

    Certains français ont du mal à digéré la défaite. Alors certains imaginent se défoulés dans les vestiaires. D’autres préfèrent blablabla...

    A l’image on voit un vestiaire avec une équipe d’ados masculine assises et l’entraineur leur donner à chacun leur tour une grande gifle très violente.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUhjZ-ELZn4

    C’est sensé être une séquence humoristique, sois disant « certains imaginent » mention qui est sensé atténué la violence des images, mais on a le droit à une séquence qui ne laisse aucune place à l’imagination. Après tout l’entraineur aurais pu se mettre des gifles à lui même pour se calmé ou demandé à etre giflé car il a mal entrainé son équipe. Mais les hiérarchies sont bien respectés dans cette scène. Ces gifles violentes sont bel et bien infligées à des enfants qui servent de défouloir-substitut à l’équipe de France. Le point de vue adopté est celui de l’entraineur, c’est lui qui incarne ces « certains français qui ont mal digéré la défaite ». Et c’est cela qui est sensé être drôle, ou plutot jouissif du point de vue du narateur.

    Les gifles ont l’air vrai, mais même si c’etait un effet spécial de gifle et pas une véritable scène de violences le message reste identique, il n’y a pas de prise de distance ni de critique ni de renversement du pouvoir établie.
    La séquence valide le fait que les supporter de l’équipe masculine de France ont de bonnes raison d’être en colère.
    La séquence montre que la colère peu se déchargé sur autrui.
    La séquence indique que les supporter de l’équipe masculine de France peuvent se servir de personnes substitut parmi les dominés (ici des ados face à l’entraineur, mais on sais très bien que ca marche aussi avec les compagnes, voisines, les enfants ou les mecs pas assez viriles) pour déchargé leur frustration de ne pas avoir pu humilié et dominé l’équipe masculine du pays concurrent.
    La séquence ajoute en plus qu’il faut trouvé cela super marrant, normal et naturel que les dominants frappent les dominés pour se défoulés. La domination c’est cool et c’est fun.

    Je trouve cet extrait très interessante car on est face à un exemple d’éducation des hommes à la violence. Quand on parle d’éducation la plus part de gens pensent à la mère, car pour la plus part des gens ce sont les mères qui éduquent les enfants, mais les hommes et les garçons s’éduquent énormément entre eux, via ce genre de petits messages faussement humoristique. Ici c’est pas les mères qui font regarder à leurs fils ces biteries de vestiaires et de défouloir sur plus petit que soi. Ce sont les hommes qui s’apprennent entre eux comment dominer à travers leurs éléments de culture masculine.

    #éducation #foot #virilité #zapping #boysclub #domination #male_gaze #violence_masculine #nationalisme #fraternité #male_alphisme #gifle

  • Mathilde Cohen, blanchité alimentaire (#French_food_Whiteness)

    Une vidéo dans laquelle Mathilde Cohen, Université du Connecticut (https://www.law.uconn.edu/faculty/profiles/mathilde-cohen), explique le concept de blanchité alimentaire appliqué à la cuisine français fait polémique.
    Pour voir la vidéo (que je n’ai pas trouvé sur le site de Sciences Po - mais pas trop cherché non plus) :
    https://twitter.com/jeromegodefroy/status/1408443135643074560

    La vidéo est tirée d’un séminaire organisé à l’Université de Nanterre et dans lequel Mathilde Cohen a été invitée :

    Conseil de Laboratoire suivi d’un séminaire sur Law, Food, and Race : The Whiteness of French Food par Mathilde Cohen, professeure à l’Université du Connecticut.

    https://ctad.parisnanterre.fr/reunion-et-seminaire-du-ctad-999209.kjsp

    –---
    L’article de Mathilde Cohen, sur le même sujet :

    The Whiteness of French Food. Law, Race, and Eating Culture in France

    Food is fundamental to French identity. So too is the denial of structural racism and racial identity. Both tenets are central to the nation’s self-definition, making them all the more important to think about together. This article purports to identify and critique a form of #French_food-Whiteness (blanchité alimentaire), that is, the use of food and eating practices to reify and reinforce Whiteness as the dominant racial identity. To do so, it develops four case studies of how law elevates a fiction of homogeneous French/White food as superior and normative at the expense of alternative ways of eating and their eaters—the law of geographical indications, school lunches, citizenship, and cultural heritage.

    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3819684
    #identité_raciale #racisme_structurel #nationalisme #blanchité #homogénéité #mythe_de_l'homogénéité #cantines #citoyenneté #patrimoine #patrimoine_culinaire #patrimoine_culturel #AOP #IGP

    –—

    Réaction de Renaud Epstein sur twitter :

    Que CNews, Valeurs Actuelles et quelques autres déversent leur haine sur une chercheuse du CNRS sans avoir lu ses travaux, c’est assez attendu.
    Que le community manager du ministère @lesoutremer entre en connivence avec ceux qui l’attaquent, c’est assez effrayant.
    #WinterIsComing

    https://twitter.com/renaud_epstein/status/1409093048370438147

    –—

    Tweet de Jérôme Godefroy qui se dit journaliste :
    https://twitter.com/jeromegodefroy/status/1408443135643074560

    #Mathilde_Cohen #blanchité_alimentaire #colonialisme #décolonial #alimentation #recherche #université #science #sciences_sociales #cuisine_française

    ping @karine4 @cede

    • Hyper intéressant Cristina, merci ! Il y a un parallèle aux Pays-bas où les immigrés d’Indonésie étaient controlés s’il mangeaient bien des pommes de terre et pas du riz comme signe de leur intégration.

  • « Plus que jamais, les Chinois se méfient des étrangers »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2021/06/01/plus-que-jamais-les-chinois-se-mefient-des-etrangers_6082291_3232.html

    « Plus que jamais, les Chinois se méfient des étrangers » par Frédéric Lemaître
    Chronique. Le recensement de la population chinoise effectué en 2020, dont les résultats ont été publiés le 10 mai, le confirme : la Chine est un pays vieillissant. Les ménages ne cherchent pas à profiter de la nouvelle législation qui, depuis 2016, leur permet à nouveau d’avoir un deuxième enfant. Et rien ne dit que la possibilité qui leur a été accordée le 1er juin d’avoir trois enfants change radicalement la donne. Avec un taux de fécondité de 1,3, la Chine va connaître un rapide déclin démographique. Selon une étude publiée par la revue The Lancet en juillet 2020, la population passerait de 1,4 milliard actuellement à 732 millions (− 48 %) en 2100. Ce qui est plutôt une bonne nouvelle pour la planète ne l’est pas pour les dirigeants communistes, dont l’une des fiertés est d’être à la tête du pays le plus peuplé au monde. En 2100, la Chine serait dépassée par l’Inde, mais aussi par le Nigeria.
    Une des solutions pourrait être de favoriser l’immigration. Le pays ne compte, en effet, que 845 697 étrangers, soit deux fois moins qu’en Ile-de-France. Et encore ne s’agit-il que de personnes vivant dans le pays depuis plus de trois mois. L’immense majorité d’entre elles vont repartir. Il serait assez logique que Pékin cherche à attirer ses voisins, notamment les jeunes diplômés. L’Inde offre un réservoir de main-d’œuvre inépuisable. Actuellement, près de 18 millions d’Indiens vivent à l’étranger, essentiellement aux Emirats arabes unis, au Pakistan et aux Etats-Unis. En 2010, ils n’étaient que 15 000 en Chine, et rien ne laisse penser qu’ils sont nettement plus nombreux aujourd’hui. Pourtant, l’écart croissant de niveau de vie entre les deux géants asiatiques rend a priori la Chine attractive. Le PIB par habitant y est désormais cinq fois supérieur. A l’avenir, l’Inde pourrait donc être le réservoir de main-d’œuvre de la Chine, comme le Mexique a été celui des Etats-Unis.
    Le problème de la Chine est qu’elle n’est pas un pays d’immigration. Plus exactement, elle le devient, mais très lentement et en grande partie malgré elle. Il y avait, semble-t-il, environ 20 000 étrangers en Chine dans les années 1980. Ce n’est qu’en 2010 que le recensement les a comptabilisés. Ils étaient alors 593 832 dans le pays, sans compter les Taïwanais, les Hongkongais et les Macanais. En dix ans, l’augmentation est donc réelle (+ 42 %), mais, rapporté à la population, le total reste marginal. Le président, Xi Jinping, est conscient du problème. D’où l’adhésion de la Chine à l’Organisation internationale pour les migrations en 2016. D’où, surtout, la création par Pékin, en 2018, d’une administration nationale de l’immigration (ANI). Comme l’analyse la chercheuse Tabitha Speelman dans la revue Perspectives chinoises (n° 4, 2020), jusque-là, la Chine parlait d’« étrangers » et non de « migrants ». Le changement est donc significatif. Mais il est relatif. « Le gouvernement chinois reconnaît la Chine en tant que pays de destination pour les migrants étrangers. Cependant, cela ne signifie pas que le gouvernement considère la Chine comme un pays d’immigration », note la chercheuse. D’ailleurs la création de cette administration, qui dépend du ministère de la sécurité publique, correspond aussi à une reprise en main par Pékin au détriment des provinces. En 2019, la mise en place de mesures assurant « la sécurité politique et frontalière » a facilité l’expulsion des résidents étrangers illégaux.
    Dans une Chine très nationaliste, le sujet est extrêmement sensible. Mme Speelman rappelle qu’en février 2020 l’ANI a émis sa première proposition législative. Il s’agissait d’ouvrir le statut de résident permanent à un groupe plus large d’étrangers sur le long terme. Mais les réactions de l’opinion publique ont été si critiques que l’ANI a dû faire marche arrière. Apparemment, un débat oppose, au sein du pouvoir, les tenants d’une Chine davantage ouverte sur le monde et ceux qui y voient une source de problèmes à venir. Le Covid-19 ne va évidemment pas arranger la situation. Plus que jamais, les Chinois se méfient des étrangers, notamment des Indiens. L’Inde ne deviendra donc sans doute pas le Mexique de la Chine. Reste à Pékin une dernière solution : inciter la diaspora chinoise à rentrer au pays. Vouloir devenir la première puissance mondiale et se recroqueviller derrière sa Grande Muraille constituerait alors un paradoxe « aux caractéristiques chinoises » sans précédent.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#chine#sante#pandemie#immigration#politiquemigratoire#diaspora#demographie#etranger#securite#nationalisme

  • Le juge, la nièce et les historiens
    https://laviedesidees.fr/Le-juge-la-niece-et-les-historiens.html

    Quand la nièce d’un maire impliqué dans la déportation des juifs polonais porte plainte contre des historiens, ces derniers se voient menacés ou censurés par le pouvoir, fort des nouvelles lois mémorielles protégeant la #Pologne contre toute mise en cause dans l’histoire de la #Shoah.

    #Histoire #nationalisme #antisémitisme #révisionnisme
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/docx/20210601_pologne.docx
    https://laviedesidees.fr/IMG/pdf/20210601_pologne.pdf

  • Mystery plans to redraw Balkan borders alarm leaders

    “Changing borders would mean opening Pandora’s box,” says Valentin Inzko.

    As international High Representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina his job is to keep the peace, which has endured since the Dayton Peace Agreement brought conflict to an end in 1995, after almost four years of fighting that cost around 100,000 lives.

    The cause of his consternation was a pair of unofficial documents suggesting some of the borders in the Balkans should be redrawn. The so-called #non-papers made the rounds in diplomatic circles, before being picked up by media in the Western Balkans.

    As far as Bosnia is concerned, its high representative is not about to entertain suggestions that the answer to its ongoing dysfunctionality would be to redraw its national boundaries.

    “If somebody likes to think about changing borders, he should first visit all military graves from France to Stalingrad,” he warns.

    The documents did not carry an author’s name. That’s in keeping with the unofficial nature of a non-paper, but the contents caused outrage across the region.

    Among their suggestions were:

    - A “peaceful dissolution” of Bosnia-Herzegovina, with Serbia and Croatia annexing much of its territory
    - Unification of Kosovo and Albania
    - The creation of an autonomous, majority ethnic-Serb region in northern Kosovo.

    It reads very much like an ethno-nationalist wish-list from the 1990s. And everyone remembers how that unfolded at the time.

    “People are worried. One of my employees was crying, she was really worried about these maps”
    Valentin Inzko, High Representative in Bosnia and Herzegovina

    “We are making a mistake if we think that frozen conflicts remain frozen forever,” says Mr Inzko. “You have seen in Nagorno-Karabakh and Palestine - frozen conflicts can break out at any time. This could also be the case in Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

    The non-papers affair has turned into a diplomatic whodunnit.

    Few people have had anything to say in support of the ideas they contain - except Bosnia’s senior ethnic-Serb politician, Milorad Dodik, who never misses a chance to push the idea of secession for the country’s majority ethnic-Serb region. Under the Dayton accords, the country was divided into a Bosniak-Croat Federation and Bosnian Serb Republic (Republika Srpska).

    - The town where neighbours won’t share a coffee
    - Land swap could bridge divide for Serbia and Kosovo
    - Capturing the Balkans 25 years after peace deal
    - Bosnia-Herzegovina: Country profile

    But the non-papers may not be the work of self-serving ultranationalists. Slovenia had to fight off suggestions that it was circulating the first document. And media in Kosovo described the second non-paper as a “Franco-German” proposal.

    James Ker-Lindsay, a Balkans expert at the London School of Economics, says “blue-sky thinking” is one way for European leaders to tackle the region’s seemingly intractable issues.

    “We can’t deny there are problems in the Western Balkans. There are two significant issues which have got to be resolved: the dispute between Serbia and Kosovo over Kosovo’s independence - and the deep-seated political dysfunctionality that exists in Bosnia.”

    “This has vexed policymakers for the last 15 years in both cases. So the idea that we would be looking at trying to come up with new approaches to this isn’t particularly unusual”
    James Ker-Lindsay, Balkans expert, LSE

    Nonetheless, Slovenia attempted to consign the non-papers to the waste bin at a meeting of regional leaders it hosted earlier this month. It proposed a declaration affirming the inviolability of current borders.

    But Serbia refused. President Aleksandar Vucic said his country recognised “the borders determined by the UN charter”. In other words, he was not about to sign a document that could be construed as recognition of Kosovo’s independence.

    After meeting Mr Vucic in Slovenia, Kosovo’s president, Vjosa Osmani, told the BBC that she was convinced Belgrade was behind the non-papers.

    “I had no doubts from the very beginning - it’s enough to just read the contents and to see what these non-papers try to push forward. The idea of border redrawing as something that could achieve peace in the region, when in fact it’s the opposite.”

    “If there is one thing the entire political spectrum in #Kosovo agrees on, it’s that border redrawing is completely unacceptable”
    Vjosa Osmani, Kosovo president

    Naturally, Serbia denies all knowledge and James Ker-Lindsay notes that there are “all sorts of confusion and conspiracy theories kicking in”.

    But with the end of his 12-year stint as high representative approaching, Valentin Inzko simply wants everyone to accept the borders as they are and focus on eventually coming together in the European Union.

    “The better idea would be to follow the example of Tyrol - one part is in Italy, another in Austria. But it is one region, with four freedoms and one currency.”

    But EU membership for Western Balkans countries will remain out of reach for years. And that means many more non-papers, whether mischievous or constructive, are bound to be written.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-57251677
    #projet #frontières #Balkans #cartes #différents_frontaliers #Bosnie #Bosnie-Herzégovine #Croatie #Serbie #Albanie #conflits #Milorad_Dodik #Republika_Srpska #République_serbe_de_Bosnie #nationalisme #paix

    ping @reka

  • #Récit_national

    This installation aims to reflect on the space that is left in the current french society for the descendents of enslaved people.

    Mixing documentary and fiction, the artist, a french white female, started to work from18th century paintings depicting the families of ship owners and industrialists that grew wealthy through slave trade and slavery. These portraits are currently in numerous museums in France.

    Considering that the wealth appearing on them was stolen, #Elisa_Moris_Vai asked young enslaved people’s descendents thanks to a classified ad to pose in the style of the paintings. Creating in this way fictional pictures, the work questions the legitimacy of that wealth. That part blends with contemporary video pieces in which the same people stare at the spectator, giving a personal statement.

    Ruddy, Maëla, Lorenza, Lydie, Léa, Jérôme, Claude, Dimitri, Leïla and Christelle come from Guadeloupe, the Reunion island, French Guiana, Martinique, Haiti and Dominica. They are photographer, student, director, consultant, project manager, musician, management accountant, actresses. They are young, commited, talented. They are France.

    https://elisamorisvai.com/work/recit-national-national-narrative
    #contre-récit #nationalisme #art #art_et_politique #afro-descendants #photographie #portraits #peinture #fictionnalisation #esclavage #histoire #historicisation #identité #identité_nationale #Noirs #couleur_de_peau #tableau

    ping @isskein @karine4 @cede @albertocampiphoto
    via @reka

  • Opinion : The US needs a Marshall Plan for global vaccinations - CNN
    https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/29/opinions/marshall-plan-for-global-vaccinations-auchincloss/index.html

    Finally, controlling more vaccine production will give the United States greater leverage in vaccine diplomacy. Countries like Russia and China are already offering other countries access to vaccines in an attempt to further their interests. We should not let them set the norms or stakes for these negotiations. In Brazil, for example, China is using vaccine shipments to press for 5G access for the Chinese telecommunications company Huawei. The United States should be countering such strong-arming by providing its own vaccine supplies. Instead of extracting concessions, however, we can be building partnerships in public health, from the logistics of vaccine distribution to the training of medical workers.

    #géopolitique de la production de #biomédicaments et notamment de #vaccins comme #bien_public_mondial. On peut critiquer le #nationalisme sous-jacent ("the world needs the US…") mais pas ignorer ces enjeux. (Et l’Europe encore une fois est à la ramasse.)

  • Irantzu Varela, #ElTornillo y las fronteras

    La España que quiere seguir siendo rica, blanca, paya y católica necesita fronteras para que no llegue gente buscando una vida mejor. Que no te engañen: esas barreras no están para protegerte, están para proteger a los que llevan siglos beneficiándose del sistema.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-ymDvM5DV8

    #frontières #déconstruction #invention #identité #nationalisme #conquête #Espagne #génocide #exploitation #esclavage #violence #colonisation #richesse #migrations #vidéo

  • Die #Europa-Politik gehört zu den Katastrophen der vergangenen GroK...
    https://diasp.eu/p/12840049

    Die #Europa-Politik gehört zu den Katastrophen der vergangenen GroKos und wenn LePen im nächsten Jahr gewinnen und der EU den Garaus machen sollte, hat Deutschland eindeutig Mitschuld. Immerhin gibt es jetzt ein gemeinsames Projekt europäischer Sendeanstalten: The European Collection (piqd) https://www.ardmediathek.de/video/the-european-collection/was-wurde-aus-unserem-europaeischen-traum/arte/Y3JpZDovL2FydGUudHYvMDk3ODg1LTAwMi1B

    • Qu’avons-nous fait du rêve européen ? - 54 min

      Disponible du 04/12/2020 au 30/06/2021

      https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/097885-002-A/qu-avons-nous-fait-du-reve-europeen

      Qu’avons-nous fait du #rêve_européen ? Peut-on encore croire en un avenir meilleur dans une période marquée par le #Brexit, la montée des #nationalismes, le regain des débats #identitaires et du #protectionnisme_économique ? Et comment en est-on arrivé là ? Enquête et analyse sur cet état de faits et tentative d’élaboration d’un manifeste d’avenir.

      Ce programme de France Télévisions fait partie de la Collection européenne, une initiative commune de médias publics européens (ARD, ARTE, France Télévisions, SSR SRG et ZDF), coordonnée par ARTE.

      Peut-on encore ré-enchanter le rêve européen, dans une période marquée par le Brexit, la montée des nationalismes, le regain des débats identitaires et du protectionnisme économique ? D’ailleurs, comment en est-on arrivé là ?
      Que s’est-il passé depuis 25 ans, alors que la chute du Mur de #Berlin et l’adoption du Traité de #Maastricht semblaient ouvrir la voie à la construction résolue d’une communauté de valeurs et de projets et d’une union sans cesse renforcée ? Avons-nous été trop confiants en considérant le processus d’intégration acquis ? Qu’est-il advenu de cet idéal de paix, de tolérance, de liberté, d’ouverture au monde et de prospérité économique ? Comment se fait-il qu’en l’espace d’un demi-siècle, l’Europe soit passée de l’utopie au contre-modèle ?
      Ce film est une enquête sur l’avenir de l’ #Europe. Il nous entraîne de #Bruxelles à #Varsovie et #Budapest, terres d’épanouissement des #populismes #eurosceptiques, pour comprendre ce qui s’y joue, les coups portés aux principes de l’Etat de droit, l’incurie des dirigeants qui dilapident les fonds européens dans des projets ubuesques, mais aussi entendre les arguments des adversaires de l’Union européenne.Il est aussi et surtout un manifeste pour nous, citoyens européens, afin que nous puissions à nouveau avancer ensemble vers un destin commun.

      #EU / #UE

  • La Coordination des collectifs de solidarité avec #Pınar_Selek 2000 - 2021

    2000 ........ 2020 ........
    Chère Pınar,
    Il y 20 ans, tu sortais enfin de prison, après deux ans d’enfermement et de tortures.
    20 ans plus tard, la géopolitique de la Turquie est bouleversée...
    Mais ton procès et les menaces contre toi continuent.
    Toi, tu continues tes luttes, comme tu l’avais promis en sortant de prison.
    Nous, nous continuons à tes cotés.
    Merci à toutes les personnalités qui ont accepté de joindre leur voix à la nôtre dans ce film pour te le dire.

    La Coordination des collectifs de solidarité avec Pınar Selek.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U24A7FiPxAc


    #Pinar_Selek #procès #droit_à_la_vie #torture #Turquie #prison #emprisonnement #lutte #témoignage #solidarité #solidarité_internationale #justice (!) #résistance #haine #arbitraire #arbitraire_du_pouvoir #répression_judiciaire #expliquer_c'est_excuser #terrorisme #Etat_de_droit #minorités #kurdes #islamisme #déradicalisation #évangélisation_de_l'islamisme #AKP #armée #processus_du_28_février #re-radicalisation #complotisme #conspirationnisme #nationalisme_turc #étatisation #Erdogan #stock_cognitif #amis_de_2071 #ennemis_de_2071 #2071 #pétitions #espoir
    #film #film_documentaire

    ping @isskein @cede @karine4

    • Pinar Selek et la faillite de l’état de droit en Turquie

      Plus de vingt ans ont passé depuis sa sortie de prison. Pinar Selek, toujours menacée d’une condamnation à perpétuité par le pouvoir turc, poursuit ses luttes en France et en Europe. Un film témoigne aujourd’hui des multiples combats de l’écrivaine et sociologue. L’histoire de Pinar Selek est devenue une part de l’Histoire de la Turquie. Et de la nôtre.

      La Coordination des collectifs de solidarité avec Pinar Selek (https://blogs.mediapart.fr/pascal-maillard/blog/160917/la-coordination-des-collectifs-de-solidarite-avec-pinar-selek-est-ne) diffuse un petit film sur l’écrivaine et sociologue. Ce film est important. Ute Müller en est la réalisatrice. Le film s’ouvre par les phrases fortes de l’écrivaine et journaliste Karin Karakasli : « Vous ne pouvez pas vous empêcher de répéter le nom de la personne que vous aimez comme un mantra », dit-elle. L’amie de Pinar la nomme ainsi : « la personne qui est mon honneur, ma fierté et mon bonheur ». Elle définit le procès de Pinar Selek de manière cinglante et précise : « Une violation du droit à la vie, un meurtre légal et une torture psychologique ». Tout est dit par la bouche de Karin Karakasli, qui prend soin de rappeler les faits de cette persécution invraisemblable.

      L’économiste et politologue Ahmet Insel souligne ensuite à quel point l’histoire de Pinar Selek est exemplaire de « l’arbitraire du pouvoir exercé par une répression judiciaire » et de « la faillite de d’état de droit en Turquie ». S’il rappelle que Pinar a été condamnée au moyen de preuves totalement inventées, c’est aussi pour observer une évolution de la répression politique en Turquie : le pouvoir accuse désormais ses opposants de terrorisme et les enferme sans avoir besoin de la moindre preuve. Suivent cinq autres témoignages et analyses, qu’il faut écouter attentivement, tous aussi importants les uns que les autres : celui de Umit Metin, Coordinateur général de l’ACORT (Assemblée Citoyenne des Originaires de Turquie), ceux de l’historien Hamit Bozarslan et du juriste Yériché Gorizian, celui de la journaliste Naz Oke et enfin les propos de Stéphanie, membre du Collectif de solidarité de la ville de Lyon.

      Parmi tous ces témoignages, il y a une phrase de Karin Karakasli qui résonne très fort et restera dans nos mémoires : « Vivre dans une Turquie où Pinar ne peut revenir, ne diffère pas d’une condamnation à vivre dans une prison en plein air ». Il faut en finir avec les prisons de pierre et les prisons en plein air. Pinar Selek, qui tient un blog sur Mediapart, invente des cerfs-volants qui traversent les frontières. Un jour les membres de ses collectifs de solidarité feront avec elle le voyage jusqu’à La Maison du Bosphore, où ils retrouveront Rafi, le joueur de Doudouk, cet instrument qui symbolise dans le roman de l’écrivaine la fraternité entre les kurdes, les arméniens et les turcs.

      Pascal Maillard,

      Membre de la Coordination des collectifs de solidarité

      https://blogs.mediapart.fr/pascal-maillard/blog/270421/pinar-selek-et-la-faillite-de-letat-de-droit-en-turquie

  • Décroissance ou barbarie
    http://blog.ecologie-politique.eu/post/Decroissance-ou-barbarie

    À quoi donc ressemble la une du mensuel pour produire un tel effet ? « Indigénistes, décolonialistes, racialistes… » « Basta ! », dit la pancarte d’un personnage représentant la Terre. Est-ce Minute, Valeurs actuelles, L’Express ou Marianne ? Non, c’est le « journal de la joie de vivre » qui tente un élargissement de sa cible à la fachosphère, rejoignant dans le concert national(iste) une extrême droite jadis isolée mais désormais rejointe par les plus grands esprits du pays, de la gauche républicaine à la droite la plus moisie

    #La_Décroissance #racisme #facho #nationalisme #extrême-droite #Aude_Vidal

  • #Mathieu_Bock-Côté : « Le #racialisme est un #totalitarisme »

    –-> attention : toxique !

    ENTRETIEN. #Privilège_blanc, #blanchité, #racisme_systémique… L’auteur de « La Révolution racialiste » (Les Presses de la Cité) décape les théories de la gauche identitaire.

    https://www.lepoint.fr/editos-du-point/sebastien-le-fol/mathieu-bock-cote-le-racialisme-est-un-totalitarisme-14-04-2021-2422277_1913

    #division #Blancs #racisés #couleur_de_peau #obsession_raciale #sciences_sociales #race #rapports_de_pouvoir #rapports_de_pouvoir #colonialisme_idéologique #révolution_racialiste #civilisation_occidentale #liberté_d'expression #démocratie #régression #imperméabilité_ethnique #enferment #groupe_racial #assignation #indigénisme #décolonial #mouvance_racialiste #américanisation #université #sciences_sociales #théorie_du_genre #genre #colonisation_idéologique #conscience_raciale #identification_raciale #Noirs_américains #clivages #intégration #assimilation #trahison_raciale #USA #Etats-Unis #Canada #multiculturalisme #niqab #Justin_Trudeau #noyau_identitaire #diversité #identité #utopie_diversitaire #France #résistance #Québec #idéologie #culture_française #universalisme #universel #moeurs #culture #imperméabilité #culture_nationale #nationalisme #déterminismes_biologiques #civilisation_occidentale #hygiène_intellectuelle #vérité #rigueur_intellectuelle #société_libérale

    ping @cede @karine4 (attention : indigeste)

  • The report of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities

    The Commission’s report sets out a new, positive agenda for change. It balances the needs of individuals, communities and society, maximising opportunities and ensuring fairness for all.

    The Commission has considered detailed quantitative data and qualitative evidence to understand why disparities exist, what works and what does not. It has commissioned new research and invited submissions from across the UK.

    Its work and recommendations will improve the quality of data and evidence about the types of barriers faced by people from different backgrounds. This will help to inform actions and drive effective and lasting change.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-report-of-the-commission-on-race-and-ethnic-disparities

    #rapport #UK #Angleterre #racisme #discriminations #inégalités
    #Commission_on_Race_and_Ethnic_Disparities (#CRED)

    pour télécharger le rapport :
    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/974507/20210331_-_CRED_Report_-_FINAL_-_Web_Accessible.pdf

    • Downing Street rewrote ‘independent’ report on race, experts claim

      Commissioners allege No 10 distorted their work on inequality, after conclusions played down institutional racism.

      Officials at Downing Street have been accused of rewriting much of its controversial report into racial and ethnic disparities, despite appointing an independent commission to conduct an honest investigation into inequality in the UK.

      The Observer has been told that significant sections of the report published on 31 March, which were criticised and debunked by health professionals, academics, business chiefs and crime experts, were not written by the 12 commissioners who were appointed last July.

      The 258-page document was not made available to be read in full or signed off by the group, which included scientist and BBC broadcaster Maggie Aderin-Pocock and Samir Shah, former chair of the Runnymede Trust, nor were they made aware of its 24 final recommendations. Instead, the finished report, it is alleged, was produced by No 10.

      Kunle Olulode, an anti-racism activist and director of the charity Voice4Change, is the first commissioner to condemn the government publicly for its lack of transparency. In a statement to the Observer, Olulode’s charity was scathing of the way evidence was cherrypicked, distorted and denied in the final document.

      “The report does not give enough to show its understanding of institutional or structural discrimination … evidence in sections, that assertive conclusions are based on, is selective,” it said. “The report gives no clear direction on what expectations of the role of public institutions and political leadership should be in tackling race and ethnic disparities. What is the role of the state in this?”

      One commissioner, who spoke out on condition of anonymity, accused the government of “bending” the work of its commission to fit “a more palatable” political narrative and denying the working group the autonomy it was promised.

      “We did not read Tony’s [Sewell] foreword,” they claimed. “We did not deny institutional racism or play that down as the final document did. The idea that this report was all our own work is full of holes. You can see that in the inconsistency of the ideas and data it presents and the conclusions it makes. That end product is the work of very different views.”

      The commissioner revealed that they had been privy only to the section of the report they were assigned, and that it had soon become apparent the exercise was not being taken sufficiently seriously by No 10.

      “Something of this magnitude takes proper time – we were only given five months to do this work, on a voluntary basis,” they said. In contrast to the landmark 1999 #Macpherson_report (https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/feb/22/macpherson-report-what-was-it-and-what-impact-did-it-have), an inquiry into the death of #Stephen_Lawrence, or the 2017 #Lammy_Review, both of which took 18 months to conclude, the report by the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities (Cred) was not peer reviewed and was published just seven months after the group first met on a videocall.

      The group, led by Sewell, was set up by #Samuel_Kasumu, No 10’s most senior black special adviser, who resigned from his post on the day the report was published, aghast at its final findings. Accusations that #Munira_Mirza, director of No 10’s policy unit, was heavily involved in steering the direction of the supposedly independent report were not directly addressed by a No 10 spokesperson, who said: “I would reiterate the report is independent and that the government is committed to tackling inequality.”

      A source involved in the commission told the Observer that “basic fundamentals in putting a document like this together were ignored. When you’re producing something so historic, you have to avoid unnecessary controversy, you don’t court it like this report did. And the comms was just shocking.”

      While the prime minister sought to distance himself from the criticism a day after its publication, unusually it was his office rather than the Cred secretariat which initially released the report to the press.

      A spokesperson for the race commission said: “We reject these allegations. They are deliberately seeking to divert attention from the recommendations made in the report.

      “The commission’s view is that, if implemented, these 24 recommendations can change for the better the lives of millions across the UK, whatever their ethnic or social background. That is the goal they continue to remain focused on.”

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/apr/11/downing-street-rewrote-independent-report-on-race-experts-claim

      #récriture #modification #indépendance #contreverse

    • voir aussi les critiques dans la page wiki dédiée au rapport :
      Reactions

      Political:

      Sir Keir Starmer, leader of the Labour Party, said that he was “disappointed” by the Commission’s report.[10][11]

      Isabelle Parasram, vice president of the Liberal Democrats, issued a statement that the Commission had “missed the opportunity to make a clear, bold statement on the state of race equality in this country”. Parasram said that the “evidence and impact of racism in the UK is overwhelming” and that “whilst some of recommendations made in the report are helpful, they fall far short of what could have been achieved”.[12]

      The Green Party of England and Wales issued a statement condemning the summary of the report as “a deliberate attempt to whitewash institutional racism” and that “Institutional racism in the UK does exist”.[13]

      Other:

      David Goodhart welcomed the report as “a game-changer for how Britain talks about race”.[14]

      Rose Hudson-Wilkin, the Bishop of Dover, described the report as “deeply disturbing”; she said the “lived experience” of the people “tells a different story to that being shared by this report”.[15]

      The historian David Olusoga accused the report’s authors of appearing to prefer “history to be swept under the carpet”.[16]

      A Guardian editorial quoted Boris Johnson’s intent to “change the narrative so we stop the sense of victimisation and discrimination”[17] when setting up the commission, and as evidence of the reality of racial inequality listed five recent government reports on different aspects:[18]

      - the criminal justice system (the David Lammy review of 2017[19][20]);
      - schools, courts, and the workplace (the Theresa May race audit of 2017[21]);
      - pay (the Ruby McGregor-Smith review of 2017[22][23]);
      - deaths in police custody (the Elish Angiolini report of 2017[24]);
      - the Windrush scandal (the Wendy Williams review of 2020[25][26]).

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commission_on_Race_and_Ethnic_Disparities

  • La Face cachée des #énergies_vertes

    Voitures électriques, éoliennes, panneaux solaires… La transition énergétique laisse entrevoir la promesse d’un monde plus prospère et pacifique, enfin libéré du pétrole, de la pollution et des pénuries. Mais cette thèse officielle s’avère être un mythe : en nous libérant des combustibles fossiles, nous nous préparons à une nouvelle dépendance à l’égard des métaux rares. De graves problèmes écologiques et économiques pour l’approvisionnement de ces ressources stratégiques ont déjà commencé. Et si le « monde vert » qui nous attend se révélait être un nouveau cauchemar ?

    http://www.film-documentaire.fr/4DACTION/w_fiche_film/61421_1

    #film #film_documentaire #documentaire

    #COP21 #COP_21 #transition_énergétique #technologie #technologies_vertes #voiture_électrique #énergies_propres #extractivisme #mines #green-washing #greenwashing #délocalisation_de_la_pollution #pétrole #métaux_rares #néodyme #cobalt #graphite #lithium #photovoltaïque #énergie_solaire #énergie_éolienne #éolienne #solaire #dépendance #RDC #République_démocratique_du_Congo #Australie #Chili #Bolivie #Indonésie #Chine #industrie_minière #Mongolie #Terres_rares #eaux_usées #radioactivité #réfugiés_des_technologies_vertes #eau #IDPs #déplacés_internes #cuivre #santé #Chuquicamata #cancer #Aliro_Boladas #centrales_à_charbon #modèle_économique_extractiviste #énergies_renouvelables #engie #Norvège #charbon #hypocrisie #green_tech #zéro_émissions #changement_climatique #Jean-Louis_Borloo #ADEME #Renault #bornes_électriques #Rapport_Syrota #Jean_Sirota #BYD #EDF #Photowatt #Péchiney_métallurgie #magnésium #nationalisme_des_ressources #Bolivie #recyclage #déchets #décharges_sauvages #Neocomp #fausse_transition #sobriété #progrès_technologique #décroissance #énergies_renouvelables

    –-

    déjà signalé par @odilon sur seenthis :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/888273

    • « La face positive des énergies vertes »

      Le documentaire « La face cachée des énergies vertes » est passé fin novembre sur Arte. Truffé d’erreurs et d’arguments partisans, allant jusqu’à comparer le problème des pales d’éoliennes, soit disant non recyclables, à celui posé par les déchets nucléaires !

      Autre exemple : ce documentaire assène que les énergies vertes et que les batteries nécessitent obligatoirement l’utilisation de terres rares. Ce n’est pourtant pas du tout l’avis de l’Ademe. D’autre part, le photovoltaïque n’utilise jamais de terres rares. Et pour l’éolien et les voitures électriques, leur utilisation dans les moteurs à aimants permanents permet de gagner en performances, mais cet usage n’est ni systématique, ni indispensable.

      Cet article présente :

      – La quinzaine d’erreurs grossières parmi les très nombreuses qui émaillent ce documentaire.
      – Le cercle vertueux du photovoltaïque et de l’éolien : plus on en installe, plus on réduit les émissions de gaz carbonique.
      – Que nos voitures contiennent davantage de terres rares que les voitures électriques sans moteurs à aimants permanents.
      – Pour qui roule le journaliste Guillaume Pitron, à l’origine de ce documentaire.

      En se fondant sur les avis qui se colportent, principalement sur la production des terres rares utilisées dans les énergies vertes, Guillaume Pitron, qui a enquêté dans une douzaine de pays, nous fait visiter quelques sites d’exploitation qui portent atteinte à l’environnement et à la santé des travailleurs.

      Hélas ce documentaire est gâché autant par sa partialité, que par de très nombreuses erreurs grossières.

      https://www.passerelleco.info/article.php?id_article=2390
      https://seenthis.net/messages/894307

    • Geologic and anthropogenic sources of contamination in settled dust of a historic mining port city in northern Chile: health risk implications

      Chile is the leading producer of copper worldwide and its richest mineral deposits are found in the Antofagasta Region of northern Chile. Mining activities have significantly increased income and employment in the region; however, there has been little assessment of the resulting environmental impacts to residents. The port of Antofagasta, located 1,430 km north of Santiago, the capital of Chile, functioned as mineral stockpile until 1998 and has served as a copper concentrate stockpile since 2014. Samples were collected in 2014 and 2016 that show elevated concentrations of As, Cu, Pb, and Zn in street dust and in residents’ blood (Pb) and urine (As) samples. To interpret and analyze the spatial variability and likely sources of contamination, existent data of basement rocks and soil geochemistry in the city as well as public-domain airborne dust were studied. Additionally, a bioaccessibility assay of airborne dust was conducted and the chemical daily intake and hazard index were calculated to provide a preliminary health risk assessment in the vicinity of the port. The main conclusions indicate that the concentrations of Ba, Co, Cr, Mn, Ni, and V recorded from Antofagasta dust likely originate from intrusive, volcanic, metamorphic rocks, dikes, or soil within the city. However, the elevated concentrations of As, Cd, Cu, Mo, Pb, and Zn do not originate from these geologic outcrops, and are thus considered anthropogenic contaminants. The average concentrations of As, Cu, and Zn are possibly the highest in recorded street dust worldwide at 239, 10,821, and 11,869 mg kg−1, respectively. Furthermore, the contaminants As, Pb, and Cu exhibit the highest bioaccessibilities and preliminary health risk indices show that As and Cu contribute to elevated health risks in exposed children and adults chronically exposed to dust in Antofagasta, whereas Pb is considered harmful at any concentration. Therefore, an increased environmental awareness and greater protective measures are necessary in Antofagasta and possibly other similar mining port cities in developing countries.

      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5922233

      #santé #mines

    • L’association #Vernunftkraft

      Aufgeklärte und deshalb zu Recht besorgte Bürger dieses Landes (https://www.vernunftkraft.de/bundesinitiative) erkennen hinsichtlich der Rationalität energiepolitischer Entscheidungen nicht hinnehmbare Defizite.

      Die Zerstörung von Wäldern zwecks Ansiedlung von volkswirtschaftlich sinnlosen Windindustrieanlagen ist dabei die Spitze des Eisbergs.

      Zentrale Elemente der gegenwärtigen Energiepolitik sind extrem unvernünftig.

      Daher möchten wir der Vernunft Kraft geben.
      https://www.vernunftkraft.de

    • La guerre des métaux rares. La face cachée de la transition énergétique et numérique

      En nous émancipant des énergies fossiles, nous sombrons en réalité dans une nouvelle dépendance : celle aux métaux rares. Graphite, cobalt, indium, platinoïdes, tungstène, terres rares… ces ressources sont devenues indispensables à notre nouvelle société écologique (voitures électriques, éoliennes, panneaux solaires) et numérique (elles se nichent dans nos smartphones, nos ordinateurs, tablettes et autre objets connectés de notre quotidien). Or les coûts environnementaux, économiques et géopolitiques de cette dépendance pourraient se révéler encore plus dramatiques que ceux qui nous lient au pétrole.

      Dès lors, c’est une contre-histoire de la transition énergétique que ce livre raconte – le récit clandestin d’une odyssée technologique qui a tant promis, et les coulisses d’une quête généreuse, ambitieuse, qui a jusqu’à maintenant charrié des périls aussi colossaux que ceux qu’elle s’était donné pour mission de résoudre.

      http://www.editionslesliensquiliberent.fr/livre-La_guerre_des_m%C3%A9taux_rares-9791020905741-1-1-

      #livre #Guillaume_Pitron

    • Rapport ADEME 2012 :

      Énergie et patrimoine communal : enquête 2012

      L’enquête « Énergie et patrimoine communal » est menée tous les cinq ans depuis 1990. Elle porte sur les consommations d’énergie et les dépenses payées directement par les communes sur trois cibles principales : le patrimoine bâti, l’éclairage public et les carburants des véhicules.

      https://www.ademe.fr/energie-patrimoine-communal-enquete-2012

      –—

      Rapport ADEME 2015 :


      Scénarios 2030-2050 : une vision énergétique volontariste

      Quel mix énergétique pour les années 2030-2050 ? L’ADEME actualise son scénario Énergie Climat et propose des mesures pour contribuer à la déclinaison du plan CLIMAT.

      Les objectifs ambitieux du Plan Climat lancé par Nicolas Hulot, ministre de la Transition écologique et solidaire, confirment la stratégie volontariste de la France pour la transition énergétique. Dans le contexte actuel de mise à jour de la Stratégie nationale bas carbone (SNBC) et de la Programmation pluriannuelle de l’énergie (PPE), l’actualisation du scénario énergie-climat de l’ADEME vient contribuer aux réflexions pour mettre en oeuvre ces objectifs.

      Cette contribution est double : d’une part, l’actualisation des « Visions énergétiques » de l’ADEME, qui souligne l’enjeu que représente l’atteinte des objectifs ambitieux inscrits dans la loi, et d’autre part, l’étude « Propositions de mesures de politiques publiques pour un scénario bas carbone », qui propose une liste de mesures concrètes à mettre en oeuvre.

      https://www.ademe.fr/recherche-innovation/construire-visions-prospectives/scenarios-2030-2050-vision-energetique-volontariste

    • En #Géorgie, la révolte de la “capitale du #manganèse” contre une exploitation hors de contrôle

      Le développement de technologies comme les voitures électriques a fait grimper la demande de manganèse. À #Tchiatoura, où cette ressource est abondante, on en paie les conséquences : excavations à tout-va, paysage saccagé, maisons qui s’effondrent, et main-d’œuvre mal payée.

      La grogne sociale monte depuis 2019 dans le district de Tchiatoura, ancienne “capitale” soviétique de la production de manganèse. Depuis trois mois, 3 500 mineurs sont en #grève pour réclamer la hausse de leurs salaires (qui ne dépassent pas 250 euros) et une meilleure assurance maladie. À la mi-mai, quelques mineurs du village de #Choukrouti, près de Tchiatoura, se sont cousus la bouche et ont entamé une #grève_de_la_faim, rapporte le site géorgien Ambebi.

      Face au silence des autorités locales et nationales, depuis le 31 mai, dix familles font un sit-in devant l’ambassade des États-Unis (la puissance occidentale la plus influente en Géorgie), à Tbilissi, la capitale. “Les gens réclament des compensations pour leur maison et demandent l’aide des diplomates étrangers”, pour rappeler à l’ordre la compagnie privée #Georgian_Manganese, filiale géorgienne de la société britannique #Stemcor, explique le site Ekho Kavkaza.

      Les habitants protestent contre les dégâts écologiques, économiques et culturels causés par une extraction intensive à ciel ouvert du manganèse. Utilisé dans la fabrication de l’acier, la demande pour ce métal est en forte croissance, notamment pour les besoins de l’industrie des véhicules électriques, des piles, des batteries et circuits électroniques.

      #paywall

      https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/degats-en-georgie-la-revolte-de-la-capitale-du-manganese-cont

    • En #Géorgie, la révolte de la “capitale du #manganèse” contre une exploitation hors de contrôle

      Le développement de technologies comme les voitures électriques a fait grimper la demande de manganèse. À #Tchiatoura, où cette ressource est abondante, on en paie les conséquences : excavations à tout-va, paysage saccagé, maisons qui s’effondrent, et main-d’œuvre mal payée.

      La grogne sociale monte depuis 2019 dans le district de Tchiatoura, ancienne “capitale” soviétique de la production de manganèse. Depuis trois mois, 3 500 mineurs sont en #grève pour réclamer la hausse de leurs salaires (qui ne dépassent pas 250 euros) et une meilleure assurance maladie. À la mi-mai, quelques mineurs du village de #Choukrouti, près de Tchiatoura, se sont cousus la bouche et ont entamé une #grève_de_la_faim, rapporte le site géorgien Ambebi.

      Face au silence des autorités locales et nationales, depuis le 31 mai, dix familles font un sit-in devant l’ambassade des États-Unis (la puissance occidentale la plus influente en Géorgie), à Tbilissi, la capitale. “Les gens réclament des compensations pour leur maison et demandent l’aide des diplomates étrangers”, pour rappeler à l’ordre la compagnie privée #Georgian_Manganese, filiale géorgienne de la société britannique #Stemcor, explique le site Ekho Kavkaza.

      Les habitants protestent contre les dégâts écologiques, économiques et culturels causés par une extraction intensive à ciel ouvert du manganèse. Utilisé dans la fabrication de l’acier, la demande pour ce métal est en forte croissance, notamment pour les besoins de l’industrie des véhicules électriques, des piles, des batteries et circuits électroniques.

      #paywall

      https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/degats-en-georgie-la-revolte-de-la-capitale-du-manganese-cont

  • Chroniques de l’occupation de la Rhénanie

    Au lendemain de la Première Guerre mondiale, quelque 100 000 soldats français sont envoyés en #Allemagne pour occuper la Rhénanie. Environ 20 000 d’entre eux sont issus des colonies françaises, notamment de #Tunisie et du #Maroc. Rapidement, ces hommes sont la cible d’une campagne de #diffamation qui fait la une des journaux du monde entier sous le slogan « La honte noire »…

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LmnuSwdlGg


    #film #documentaire #film_documentaire
    #occupation #histoire #propagande #honte_noire #WWI #première_guerre_mondiale #accord_de_Versailles #troupes_coloniales_françaises #corps #racisme #schwarze_schmach #soldats_africains #Rhénanie #Ray_Beveridge #femmes_allemandes #Luise_Zietz #haine_raciale #stérilisation #Mulatiesierung #nationalisme #enfants_afro-allemands #bâtards_de_Rhénanie #Eugen_Fischer #nazisme #stérilisations_forcées_de_masse #Wolfgang_Abel #commission_spéciale_3 #colonisation #colonialisme #soldats_coloniaux #armée

    ping @nepthys

  • #Biélorussie, une #dictature ordinaire

    Le temps semble figé en Biélorussie, pays oublié où règne sans partage #Alexandre_Loukachenko, ancien chef de kolkhoze à la tête de l’État depuis 1994. Là-bas, le #KGB s’appelle toujours KGB, les rues portent les noms de Marx et Engels, et la statue de Lénine domine la place centrale de Minsk, comme si l’homme imprimait toujours sa marque au destin du pays. Parades patriotiques et militaires rythment les saisons biélorusses, orchestrées par le président omnipotent, intarissable défenseur de la fibre nationale et dénonçant sans fin l’idée d’un complot occidental pour conserver son pouvoir. Disparitions, assassinats politiques et vagues de répression s’abattent sur ceux qui osent douter, résister, contredire la voix du maître. Car le pays est déchiré entre deux visions : l’une, attachée à Moscou et effrayée par la porosité de la crise ukrainienne frontalière, qui accepte la domination d’un pouvoir autoritaire, et l’autre résistante, qui s’emploie à aider les victimes de la répression et lutte pour la mémoire de ceux que le régime a fait disparaître. Y aura-t-il un « printemps biélorusse » ? La documentariste Manon Loizeau promène sa caméra dans un pays clivé, encombrant voisin de l’Europe qui sait tirer son parti des guerres d’influences entre Bruxelles et Moscou.

    http://www.film-documentaire.fr/4DACTION/w_fiche_film/53901_1
    #film #film_documentaire
    #Loukachenko #frontières #Europe #cimetière #laissez-passer #nationalisme #peur #répression #Alès_Bialiatski #liberté #ordre #contrôle #armée #populisme #résistance #prisonniers_politiques #Vesna #mémoire #totalitarisme #disparus_de_Biélorussie #Dmitry_Zavadsky #accords_de_Minsk #Mikalaï_Statkiévitch #parasites #parasitisme #décret_3 #Maksim_Filipovich #Gomel

    –—

    Citation d’une habitante d’un village coupé en 2 par la frontière entre la Biélorussie et la #Lithuanie (2004) :

    « On était une grande famille. Puis, l’#Union_soviétique s’est effondrée. Les Républiques ont voulu leur #indépendance. Elles ont pensé qu’elles deviendraient riches en ne vivant que pour elles-mêmes. Alors ils ont construit cette frontière. Et on s’est mis à se détester. La #haine, c’est qu’il y a de plus terrible »

  • The Struggle at Turkey’s Boğaziçi University. Attacks on higher education tighten the grip of the AKP’s hegemonic project

    Late at night on January 1, 2021, by presidential decree, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan appointed new rectors to five universities in Turkey. One was Professor Melih Bulu, who became rector of the prestigious Boğaziçi University. This liberal and pluralist institution hosts dissident students and faculty, including many connected to Academics for Peace, an association that demands a peaceful resolution to Turkey’s war on the Kurds. Constituents of Boğaziçi immediately rejected this fait accompli as illegitimate, and began to protest. On January 4, police attacked hundreds of students: an image of Boğaziçi’s gates locked with handcuffs went viral.

    To this day, the campus remains under heavy police surveillance as the AKP and associated dominant social groups use both consent and coercion to impose their ways on social and political life. This process, called hegemony, plays out in the education sector today.

    Melih Bulu was unwelcome at Boğaziçi University for many reasons. A dean and a rector at two other universities, in 2015, he ran in the general elections as a candidate from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP.) In the first few days of his appointment at Boğaziçi, Bulu was credibly accused of plagiarizing his doctoral dissertation. Dismissing the charges as forgetfulness in using quotation marks, he tried to win students over by claiming that he supports LGBT rights – only to close down the LGBTI+ Studies student club as one of his first executive decisions.

    Since the day of Bulu’s appointment, students and faculty members at Boğaziçi have been protesting him, as well as the anti-democratic intervention in the university’s internal operations by President Erdoğan. The Boğaziçi resistance, however, is more than a struggle over the future of one university: it is a much larger struggle for academic freedom, institutional autonomy, and democracy in an increasingly authoritarian Turkey.

    Students and faculty have mobilized creative protests despite the likelihood of a further crackdown. On March 1, over 70 Boğaziçi faculty members applied to the Council of State, demanding the reversal of Bulu’s appointment as it violates the Constitution and the law. By the end of March, more than 800 protesters around Turkey had been taken into custody. Twenty-nine are now under extended house arrest, while six remain in pretrial detention. Faculty members continue to turn their backs on the rectorship every day, and students are boycotting the first six days of the new semester to honor six friends in detention.

    This is clearly an assault on academic and political freedom. But the Boğaziçi resistance also sheds light on why the Erdoğan government may be courting controversy with the nation’s public universities – and why this particular university has taken center stage in the struggle for democracy in Turkey.

    The AKP is a culturally conservative and economically center-right party that has been in power since 2002. The first few years of the Erdoğan government saw democratic advances: lifting of the ban on headscarves in public institutions and an end to military interference in politics. Over the course of two decades in power, however, the AKP has ruled through authoritarian and neoliberal governance.

    These events are neither new nor confined to the education sector. It is only one leg of the AKP’s ongoing political project to transform both state and society. This involves reconstituting higher education to mirror the AKP’s control of state institutions, governance structures, civil society, and the media. The AKP has seized control of the judiciary, parliament, the military, and the police. It has criminalized all opposition. It has imprisoned, purged, or silenced journalists, teachers, academics, lawyers, and others. It has bought off the media. It has removed democratically-elected mayors in the Kurdish southeast and appointed new ones.

    This has all taken place legally, through the constitutional amendments of 2010 and 2017, and the laws by decree that were issued during the two-year state of emergency between 2016 and 2018.

    But the infringement on institutional autonomy and academic freedom is older than the current regime. The Council of Higher Education (YÖK), established after the 1980 military coup, was established to curb the autonomy of universities by controlling university structures, their governance, staff, and intellectual output. Between 1992 and 2016, candidates for a rectorship were voted on first by university departments and faculty before being nominated for appointment by the YÖK. But after a law by decree was issued under emergency rule in 2016, the YÖK was put in charge of appointing rectors. Since 2018, President Erdoğan appoints them.

    The government, its media, and the President used their usual combination of divide-and-conquer techniques on the protesters in a bid to cordon them off from support by the population at large. Boğaziçi students and faculty members, as well as other students and supporters of the protests were characterized first as “elitist,” then as “LGBT deviants,” then “disrespectful of national sensibilities,” and then as “terrorists.”

    The inclusive politics that the Boğaziçi resistance showcased prompted Erdoğan to resort to even more populist tactics, to remind the nation that “lesbians and the like” (“lezbiyen mezbiyen”) should not be listened to, and that “the pillar of the family is the mother,” falling back on the age old conservative “our customs and values!” rhetoric. More broadly, these instances lay bare the differences between the kind of politics that the AKP and the student movement adhere to, suggesting the type of politics – inclusive, diverse, intersectional – that is well-positioned to burst through the cracks of the current system.

    The regime, unable to legitimize its appointed rector at Boğaziçi, seems poised to empty out the university and appoint loyalist deans and staff by using forms of clientelism that are common to AKP rule. Two new faculties were established on February 6. On March 1, Bulu appointed his vice-rector Professor Naci Inci, a physicist, as the director of the Institute for Graduate Studies in Social Sciences. Re-staffing Boğaziçi will ease the process of governing the university, leaving the structure of the institution (if not its procedures) intact, and maintaining the appearance of legitimacy.

    Why is establishing ironclad control of universities necessary to the AKP? Because institutions of higher education mold individuals into citizens, workers, social and political beings. By exerting control over education, the AKP is not only demolishing public space but also ensuring the reproduction of “acceptable” citizens and publics who consent to these practices. At the same time, through establishing its control over education, the AKP is attempting to overturn the decline in support from the youth, as well as the educated and professional classes and re-establish what it calls the “national and religious” youth.

    Universities are also an economic and political project for the AKP: they are money-making, personnel-providing, vote-generating machines. Universities, many of poor quality, have popped up all over Turkey since the party came to power. Erecting a faculty building in a small town or city employs a lot of people. It also provides hope for social mobility, and attaches that hope to voting for the AKP.

    This process cannot be separated from the transformation of universities into institutions that provide a workforce, and where only profitable, depoliticized professions have value. This is the essence of what we mean by a neoliberal transformation of education. The decline and defunding of social sciences and humanities departments is discernible both in and outside of Turkey. Subjects that create space for studying economic, social, and political systems, promise to create politically engaged, critical individuals. It should, then, not come as a surprise that Melih Bulu, once appointed, declared that his mission and vision for Boğaziçi was, instead, to boost the university’s “sectoral cooperation, entrepreneurship, innovation ecosystem,” and put it in in the Times Higher Education (THE) and the QS first 100 rankings.

    Students of Boğaziçi have since made it clear, as one banner read, that they do not want a corporation but a university.

    Nevertheless, political encroachment into higher education continues. In its 19th year of rule, as it loses legitimacy and struggles to generate consent, the AKP increases coercion by repressing dissent everywhere. Higher education is no exception: trade unions, professional associations, political parties, publishing houses, and media outlets have been targeted too.

    These attacks on the university and academic freedom are yet another step by the AKP towards establishing authority over what little space remains for public debate and free expression. Indeed, the boundaries of the state, the government, and the public are already blurred in Turkey. When Bulu stated, in reaction to mounting pressure for his resignation, “touching me would mean touching the state” Erdoğan agreed: if the protesters “had the guts,” he said, they would ask him to resign.

    This conflation of Bulu’s authority with that of Erdoğan and the Turkish state reveals the stakes of the Boğaziçi resistance. Protesters denying the appointed “trustee” (“kayyum”) rector’s legitimacy at Boğaziçi also deny legitimacy to all kayyums in the Kurdish southeast. Refusing to accept Bulu’s appointment at Boğaziçi is also a refusal to accept the AKP’s anti-democratic politics. Reclaiming LGBTI+ identity also reclaims Muslim women’s rights. Freedom to establish or join a student club is a matter of freedom of assembly and expression.

    The students’ bold and incisive open letter to President Erdoğan eloquently expresses these entanglements and the intersectionality of their politics. Placing their struggle at Boğaziçi University within workers’ and minorities’ struggles, and within struggles against injustice, sexism and gender inequality, and the targeting of their fellow friends and professors, university students sum up what this resistance stands for. Their example should illuminate a way forward for an international left politics that commits to democracy and justice for all.

    For recent developments, follow bogazicidireniyor on Instagram and use the hashtags #bogazicidireniyor, #KabulEtmiyoruzVazgeçmiyoruz, #WeDoNotAcceptWeDoNotGiveUp, #WeWillNotLookDown and @unibogazici_en on Twitter.

    #Turquie #université #Bogazici #Boğaziçi #ESR #université_du_Bosphore #attaques #recteurs #Erdogan #Melih_Bulu #AKP #hégémonie #résistance #liberté_académique #contrôle #YÖK #autonomie #homophobie #Naci_Inci #répression #nationalisme #kayyum #légitimité #démocratie #justice

    ping @isskein

    • Open letter to President from Boğaziçi University students

      Amid ongoing protests against the appointed rector of Boğaziçi University, Erdoğan has issued a Presidential decree to open two new faculties at the university. The Boğaziçi Solidarity has addressed an open letter to the President.

      –—

      Amid the ongoing protests against the appointment of Prof. Melih Bulu as a new rector to Boğaziçi University by President and ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) Chair Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, a new Presidential decree has been published in the Official Gazette, foreseeing the establishment of Law and Communication faculties at the university.

      While the appointed rector has welcomed the news on his social media account, the Boğaziçi Solidarity platform, on behalf of the Boğaziçi University students protesting the appointment of Melih Bulu, has addressed an open letter to the 12th President of Turkey on social media.

      Under the hashtags #YüreğimizYetiyor (We have the guts), referring to a statement by Erdoğan, and #FakülteyiSarayaKur (Establish the faculty at the palace), students have addressed the following letter:
      Reasons underlying the protests

      "Previously, we responded to Melih Bulu with the poem ’Satirical Attempts on a Provocateur.’ It is pleasing to see that you have acknowledged yourself to be the person responsible, and responded accordingly.

      "Up until today, you have demanded secret meetings with us via the Turkey Youth and Education Service Foundation (TÜRGEV).

      "Now, you are trying to start an argument against us through the media. We do not like go-betweens, we prefer speaking outright and explicitly to all. We hope that you will proceed accordingly.

      "First, let us remind you of our demands and of the reasons underlying our protests:

      "You appointed a trustee rector to our university with utter disregard for the students and faculty. Is what you did legal? Yes, as you like to mention every chance you get, but it is not legitimate. This appointment makes anyone who has even the tiniest sense of justice revolt with indignation.

      "To top it off, you open faculties and appoint deans with an overnight presidential order on a Friday night, in order to intimidate the whole institution with all its students, teachers and laborers.

      "Your attempts to pack our university with your own political militants is the symptom of the political crisis that you have fallen into.

      "Victims of your crisis grow in number with every passing day!
      Constitutional rights

      "We use our constitutional rights to make people from all segments of society aware of the injustices we are subjected to.

      "These are our demands:

      All our friends who have been arrested or detained in this period must be released immediately!
      All campaigns to defame and disenfranchise LGBTI+s and all other targeted groups must end!
      All government-appointed trustees, starting with Melih Bulu, who instigated all these arrests, detentions, scapegoating campaigns, and threats, must resign!
      In universities, democratic rectorate elections must be held with the participation of all constituents of the university!

      ’Don’t mistake us for those who obey you’

      "You uttered a sentence starting with ’If they have the guts...’ in your statement. Is it a constitutional right to call for the resignation of the president? YES! Since when is the use of a constitutional right a matter of courage?

      "Do not mistake us for those who obey you unconditionally. You are not a sultan, and we are not your subjects.

      "But since you mentioned courage, we shall also respond to that briefly.

      "We have no immunities! You, however, are the one who has been storming around, hiding behind your legal and political immunity for the last 19 years.

      "The Interior Minister is spreading lies to play on religious sensitivities. We say that we will not practice self-censorship.

      "You call LGBTI+s deviants, we state that LGBTI+ rights are human rights.

      "Members of your party kicked miners in Soma. We actively stood in solidarity with the mine workers, and we will continue to do so.

      "You unlawfully keep the Co-Chairs of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) imprisoned, alongside journalists and union members.

      "We declare that we stand united with those who fearlessly speak the truth, and we are against all government-appointed trustees.

      "You make crowds boo Berkin Elvan’s mother in rallies. We declare that we stand with Berkin Elvan.

      "You target and attack Ayşe Buğra, without even mentioning her name, saying ’Osman Kavala ’s wife is among these provocateurs’.

      “In a vulgar manner, you restate the sexist fallacy that the only significant feature of a woman is her husband. We state that ’Ayşe Buğra is a dignified professor and an esteemed academic’. We say that ’We will take any charge against her as a charge against us’.
      ”(We know very well that you will file dozens of lawsuits against this letter on the grounds that it praises crime and criminals or insulting the president, but we also know that we will never give up on speaking the truth!)
      ’Why would we call on you to resign?’

      "Since you lack the power necessary to keep the trustee-rector you have appointed in the office, you resort to petty tricks like opening new faculties and appointing sham personnel, which does not appear to be an act of courage. That is why we disregard your words about courage.

      "We are aware that Bogaziçi University is not Turkey’s most significant institution, nor is the appointment of Melih Bulu Turkey’s most significant problem.

      "Regarding the demand for your resignation, we would not consider calling for your resignation based on this issue. YOU ASK WHY?

      "If you were ever going to resign,

      "You would have resigned when Brant Dink was slaughtered!

      "You would have resigned when 34 Kurds were killed in the Roboski massacre. You would have resigned when 301 miners were murdered in Soma! You would have resigned after the Çorlu train derailment!

      "You would have resigned in the face of the livelihood problems of thousands of citizens, who were left unemployed or could not find a job, and especially in face of the decree-law (KHK) purgees!

      "You would have assumed responsibility for the economic policies which condemned the people to poverty, instead of sacrificing your son-in-law.

      "The examples are plenty, but you have never resigned.

      "You preferred to present yourself as naively deceived, instead of, in your own words, ’having the guts’. So now why would we call on you to resign?

      "As long as Melih Bulu sits on that seat, we will continue our protest by strengthening our struggle, with all those who join the resistance. Whether or not you do what must be done is your own business. We stand with those who are robbed of their democratic rights and freedoms.

      “With hopes that you realize that you cannot silence the oppressed of these lands by shouting and threatening from arenas and podiums.”

      What happened?

      Prof. Melih Bulu has been appointed as the President of Boğaziçi University in a Presidential Decree issued on January 1. The appointment of Bulu has sparked harsh criticisms among both the students and academics of the university as well as in the academic community.

      Appointed to Boğaziçi, one of the most prestigious universities in Turkey, from outside its community, Bulu was a candidate for nomination to run in the Parliamentary elections in 2015 for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which is chaired by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

      The students and several students’ clubs of the university have been campaigning on social media under the hashtag #kayyımrektöristemiyoruz (We don’t want a trustee university president).

      The call of the students was also supported by the faculty members of the university, who released a joint statement on January 3.

      “An academic outside Bogazici University community was appointed as rector (university president), which is a practice introduced for the first time after the 1980s military tutelage,” read their statement.

      Amid harsh criticisms of students and faculty members, Prof. Bulu has shared a message on his Twitter account, welcoming his appointment to the position, saying, “We are all in the same boat.”

      The students protested the appointment of Bulu in front of the South Campus of the university in İstanbul on January 4. However, the police intervened into the protest with pepper gas and plastic bullets.

      Next day, it was reported that there were detention warrants against 28 people for “violating the law on meetings and demonstrations” and “resisting the officer on duty.” Later in the day, 22 of them were detained.

      40 people in total were detained over the protests. All of the detained were released on January 7 and 8, 2021.

      The protests of students and faculty members at the South Campus of Boğaziçi University have been going on since January 4.

      On February 1, police stormed the South Campus and intervened into the students’ protests. Earlier in the day, the students gathered in front of the campus for the protest. Police hindered the protest while also preventing the students inside the South Campus from joining their friends outside.

      With the 51 students taken into custody inside the campus in the evening, the number of detained increased to 159. In a statement released by the İstanbul Governor’s Office in the early morning hours on February 2, it was announced that 98 students were released from detention.

      On February 2, Boğaziçi University students gathered in Kadıköy Rıhtım for another protest, which was attacked by the police with plastic bullets and tear gas. 134 people were taken into custody by the police. Two of the protesters were arrested by the court afterwards.
      About Melih Bulu

      Prof. Melih Bulu was appointed as the President of Haliç University on January 17, 2020. In office in this foundation university for less than a year, he has been appointed as the President of Boğaziçi University.

      He was a Dean and University President at the İstinye University from 2016 to 2019. Between the years of 2010 and 2016, he was the Head of the Business Management Department of İstanbul Şehir University’s Business Management and Management Science Faculty.

      He was the General Coordinator of International Competitiveness Research Institute (URAK), an NGO working on economic competitiveness of cities and countries, from the year 2017 to 2019. Since 2011, he has been the Executive Board member of the İstanbul Electric-Electronic Machinery and Informatics Exporters R&D Market.

      In 2002, he founded the Sarıyer District Organization of the ruling AKP in İstanbul. In 2015, he was a candidate for nomination to run in the Parliamentary elections from the AKP in the first election district in İstanbul.

      He studied Industrial Engineering at the Middle East Technical University (METU) in Ankara in 1992. He did his MBA and PhD at Boğaziçi University’s Department of Management.

      https://bianet.org/english/education/238843-open-letter-to-president-from-bogazici-university-students
      #lettre_ouverte

  • Needle to know - How useful are vaccine passports? | Leaders | The Economist
    https://www.economist.com/leaders/2021/03/13/how-useful-are-vaccine-passports

    How useful are vaccine passports?Identity schemes have a part to play in the return to life as normal, but only a modest one THE WORLD has stumbled through the pandemic by nationalising risk. In heavily infected countries the state has shut citizens in their homes for weeks at a time, letting them out only for exercise and to buy food. As vaccination spreads, and hospitals are less likely to be overrun, governments must gradually move choice back to the individual, where it belongs. How?
    Information is part of the answer. This week the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention issued the first guidance on what vaccinated people can do. More is needed. True, covid-19 is still poorly understood and the risk for individuals will depend on their own circumstances. Yet, as our covid-19 risk estimator in this issue explains, the data already cast some light on what puts you at risk if you are diagnosed with the disease. Age is closely tied to death, so do not visit your unvaccinated grandparents, however healthy they may be. Comorbidities can lead to a spell in hospital even for the young, so don’t imagine you are safe just because you’re under 35

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#sante#passeportvaccinal#comorbidite#nationalisme#pandemie#rsiquesanitaire

  • Il curricolo «razziale». La costruzione dell’alterità di «razza» e coloniale nella scuola italiana (1860-1950)

    Il volume ripercorre la storia del concetto di «razza umana» nell’ambito scolastico italiano tra Otto e Novecento, dal periodo precedente la conquista delle colonie africane agli anni della decolonizzazione. Il termine infatti ha svolto un ruolo cruciale nei processi di costruzione e descrizione svalorizzante dell’«altro», nella giustificazione dell’espansione coloniale nonché nell’opera di «invenzione» dell’identità nazionale. L’indagine tocca tutti gli ambiti disciplinari ma si incentra soprattutto sulla Geografia, tributaria - durante tutto il periodo - del compito di presentare-insegnare la diversità umana agli studenti, trasmettendo loro gerarchie esplicite ed implicite.
    Questa immagine «razziale» dell’italiano e dell’«altro» (africano, «negro») ha avuto una sua articolata declinazione iconografica che viene ricostruita e analizzata con il supporto di un ampio apparato di immagini.

    http://eum.unimc.it/it/catalogo-completo/442-il-curricolo-razziale
    #école #éducation #race #racisme #alterité #école_italienne
    #livre #colonialisme #Italie #Italie_coloniale #colonialisme_italien #histoire #histoire_coloniale #identité #identité_nationale #nationalisme #impérialisme #géographie #iconographie #imaginaire #imaginaire_colonial

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur le colonialisme italien:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/871953

    • Une (brève) recension:
      Gianluca Gabrielli, Il curricolo «razziale». La costruzione dell’alterità di «razza» e coloniale nella scuola italiana (1860-1950)

      Dans le sillage des postcolonial studies sur l’histoire culturelle de l’impérialisme et des études françaises sur l’imaginaire colonial, cet ouvrage a comme ambition de reconstruire l’histoire des représentations des races humaines pendant les cent années correspondant à l’expansion coloniale italienne, entre l’Unité et les années 1950. En s’appuyant sur l’opinion de Nicola Labanca  d’après lequel « durante la fase coloniale la scuola italiana assolse la funzione di potente strumento di fucina e diffusione di stereotipi e di pregiudizi colonialisti » (p. 39) , Gianluca Gabrielli a choisi comme pistes d’exploration l’école et les livres pour la jeunesse, en ajoutant à l’étude des programmes et des manuels scolaires l’analyse de la littérature enfantine, fortement influencée par la même idéologie.

      Le volume est articulé en quatre chapitres. Dans le premier trouve place une présentation générale de l’histoire coloniale de la péninsule, ainsi qu’une synthèse des résultats de la recherche italienne sur la « culture impérialiste » et l’imaginaire colonial. Pour mettre en évidence l’image de l’Afrique et des Africains d’une part, de l’autre celle des colonisateurs, la critique historique s’est surtout intéressée à la période fasciste, lorsque l’effort expansionniste atteignit son sommet, et que l’idéologie raciale qui servait de socle à la politique du régime trouva son expression la plus achevée. Mais l’ouvrage de Gabrielli couvre une période bien plus large, en examinant les sources et les documents dans lesquels ont été expliqués aux élèves le colonialisme et les théories raciales. De 1860 aux années 1950, l’auteur passe d’abord en revue les programmes de tous les cursus d’études primaires et secondaires, en portant une attention particulière à la géographie, car c’est surtout à cette dernière discipline, notamment à la géographie humaine, qu’a été confié l’enseignement des différences entre les races et les civilisations. En étroite correspondance avec les étapes de l’expansionnisme italien, les colonies acquièrent une place de plus en plus importante, qui deviendra même prépondérante sous Mussolini, lors de la guerre d’Éthiopie et de la proclamation de l’empire. Après la chute du fascisme, les programmes de la République, tout en laissant subsister le classement des races et les jugements en faveur de la civilisation des Blancs, feront le silence total sur l’histoire coloniale, et il faudra attendre la fin des années 1960 pour voir apparaître les premières manifestations critiques envers le passé colonial italien, et la fin des années 1970 pour que soit abordée la question de la décolonisation.

      Ensuite dans le troisième chapitre (qui occupe la moitié du volume), la plus grande attention est portée au contenu d’un grand nombre de manuels de géographie de la même période, qui sont ici examinés avec une précision minutieuse. L’angle d’attaque est celui du « curricolo razziale » dans les livres scolaires, à commencer par le Giannetto de Luigi Alessandro Parravicini : la définition des races se conforme aux théories successivement en vigueur au XIXe siècle, des « variétés humaines » de la Bible jusqu’à un classement hiérarchique de plus en plus rigide, lorsque le positivisme donne aux théories raciales son empreinte « scientifique », fondée tant sur la forme du crane et le profil facial que sur la psychologie ethnique, pour établir les niveaux de supériorité ou infériorité des races, qui passent de trois à cinq. Le corollaire de cette doctrine, souvent donnée à voir dans des tableaux et des compositions photographiques, est bien entendu la naturalisation du colonialisme de l’homme blanc sur les races inférieures, la suprématie étant toujours attribuée à la « race caucasienne », ou race européenne, sur les Africains. Une infériorité culturelle qui, d’après Gabrielli, se lit déjà en toutes lettres dans un apologue intitulé I negri e il libro, colporté sur une longue durée dans les livres de lecture courante, d’après lequel les causes de l’assujettissement des Noirs aux Blancs seraient leur avidité et leur ignorance.

      Au terme de ce long parcours à travers la didactique de la géographie, Gabrielli ne peut que constater la force et la durée de l’enracinement du paradigme racial dans l’enseignement italien, où le classement et la représentation des races a constitué un véritable « genre scolaire ». Une démonstration qui apparaît d’autant plus convaincante que cette étude s’appuie sur un apparat critique solide et sur une documentation très riche, notamment pour ce qui est des sources (le nombre de manuels de géographie et d’ouvrages scolaires repérés et consultés est considérable).

      https://journals.openedition.org/laboratoireitalien/1008?lang=it
      #manuels_scolaires

  • Immigration Enforcement and the Afterlife of the Slave Ship

    Coast Guard techniques for blocking Haitian asylum seekers have their roots in the slave trade. Understanding these connections can help us disentangle immigration policy from white nationalism.

    Around midnight in May 2004, somewhere in the Windward Passage, one of the Haitian asylum seekers trapped on the flight deck of the U.S. Coast Guard’s USCGC Gallatin had had enough.

    He arose and pointed to the moon, whispering in hushed tones. The rest of the Haitians, asleep or pretending to be asleep, initially took little notice. That changed when he began to scream. The cadence of his words became erratic, furious—insurgent. After ripping his shirt into tatters, he gestured wildly at the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) watchstanders on duty.

    I was one of them.

    His eyes fixed upon mine. And he slowly advanced toward my position.

    I stood fast, enraptured by his lone defiance, his desperate rage. Who could blame him? Confinement on this sunbaked, congested, malodorous flight deck would drive anyone crazy—there were nearly 300 people packed together in a living space approximately 65 feet long and 35 feet wide. We had snatched him and his compatriots from their overloaded sailing vessel back in April. They had endured week after week without news about the status of their asylum claims, about what lay in store for them.

    Then I got scared. I considered the distinct possibility that, to this guy, I was no longer me, but a nameless uniform, an avatar of U.S. sovereignty: a body to annihilate, a barrier to freedom. I had rehearsed in my mind how such a contingency might play out. We were armed only with nonlethal weapons—batons and pepper spray. The Haitians outnumbered us 40 to 1. Was I ready? I had never been in a real fight before. Now a few of the Haitian men were standing alert. Were they simply curious? Was this their plan all along? What if the women and children joined them?

    Lucky for me, one of the meanest devils on the watch intervened on my behalf. He charged toward us, stepping upon any Haitians who failed to clear a path. After a brief hand-to-hand struggle, he subdued the would-be rebel, hauled him down to the fantail, and slammed his head against the deck. Blood ran from his face. Some of the Haitians congregated on the edge of the flight deck to spectate. We fastened the guy’s wrists with zip ties and ordered the witnesses to disperse. The tension in his body gradually dissipated.

    After fifteen minutes, the devil leaned down to him. “Are you done? Done making trouble?” His silence signified compliance.

    Soon after, the Haitians were transferred to the custody of the Haitian Coast Guard. When we arrived in the harbor of Port-au-Prince, thick plumes of black smoke rose from the landscape. We were witnessing the aftermath of the CIA-orchestrated February coup against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the subsequent invasion of the country by U.S. Marines under the auspices of international “peacekeeping.” Haiti was at war.

    None of that mattered. Every request for asylum lodged from our boat had been rejected. Every person returned to Haiti. No exceptions.

    The Gallatin left the harbor. I said goodbye to Port-au-Prince. My first patrol was over.

    Out at sea, I smoked for hours on the fantail, lingering upon my memories of the past months. I tried to imagine how the Haitians would remember their doomed voyage, their detention aboard the Gallatin, their encounters with us—with me. A disquieting intuition repeated in my head: the USCG cutter, the Haitians’ sailing vessel, and European slave ships represented a triad of homologous instances in which people of African descent have suffered involuntary concentration in small spaces upon the Atlantic. I dreaded that I was in closer proximity to the enslavers of the past, and to the cops and jailors of the present, than I ever would be to those Haitians.

    So, that night, with the butt of my last cigarette, I committed to cast my memories of the Haitians overboard. In the depths of some unmarked swath of the Windward Passage, I prayed, no one, including me, would ever find them again.

    In basic training, every recruit is disciplined to imagine how the USCG is like every other branch of the military, save one principle: we exist to save lives, and it is harder to save lives than to take them. I was never a very good sailor, but I took this principle seriously. At least in the USCG, I thought, I could evade the worst cruelties of the new War on Terror.

    Perhaps I should have done more research on the USCG’s undeclared long war against Haitian asylum seekers, in order to appreciate precisely what the oath to “defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic” would demand of me. This war had long preceded my term of enlistment. It arguably began in 1804, when the United States refused to acknowledge the newly liberated Haiti as a sovereign nation and did everything it could to insulate its slaving society from the shock waves of Haiti’s radical interpretation of universal freedom. But in our present day, it began in earnest with President Ronald Reagan’s Executive Order 12324 of 1981, also called the Haitian Migrant Interdiction Operation (HMIO), which exclusively tasked the USCG to “interdict” Haitian asylum seekers attempting to enter the United States by sea routes on unauthorized sailing vessels. Such people were already beginning to be derogatorily referred to as “boat people,” a term then borrowed (less derogatorily) into Haitian Kreyòl as botpippel.

    The enforcement of the HMIO and its subsequent incarnations lies almost entirely within the jurisdiction of federal police power acting under the authority of the executive branch’s immigration and border enforcement powers. It does not take place between nations at enmity with one another, but between vastly unequal yet allied powers. Its strategic end is to create a kind of naval blockade, a fluid maritime border around Haiti, which remains under ever-present threat of invasion by a coalition of U.S. and foreign military forces.

    Adding to its asymmetry, the “enemies” to be vanquished on the battlefield are also unconventional: they are not agents of a state, but rather noncombatant individuals who are, in one sense or another, simply acting to save their own lives. During their incarceration aboard USCG cutters, they automatically bear the legal status of “economic migrant,” a person whom authorities deem to be fleeing poverty alone and therefore by definition ineligible for asylum. The meaning of this category is defined solely by reference to its dialectical negation, the “political refugee,” a person whom authorities may (or may not) deem to have a legible asylum claim because they are fleeing state persecution on the basis of race, creed, political affiliation, or sexual orientation. These abstractions are historical artifacts of a half-baked, all-encompassing theory of preemptive deterrence: unless USCG patrols are used to place Haiti under a naval blockade, and unless botpippel are invariably denied asylum, the United States will become flooded with criminals and people who have no means of supporting themselves. By 2003 John Ashcroft and the Bush administration upped the ante, decrying botpippel to be vectors of terrorism. On January 11, 2018, President Donald Trump, during efforts to justify ending nearly all immigration and asylum, described Haiti (which he grouped with African nations) as a “shithole country” where, as he asserted several months prior, “all have AIDS.”

    Haiti is now facing another such crisis. Its president, Jovenel Moïse, having already suspended nearly all elected government save himself, refused to step down at the end of his term on February 7, 2021, despite widespread protests that have shuttered the country. Moïse’s administration is currently being propped up by criminal syndicates, but they are slipping his grasp, and kidnapping for money is now so prevalent that people are terrified to leave their homes. So far, the Biden administration’s response has not been encouraging: though it has instructed ICE to temporarily halt deportations to Haiti, naval blockades remain in force, and the U.S. State Department has expressed the opinion that Moïse should remain in office for at least another year, enforcing the sense that Haiti is once again a U.S. client state.

    With regard to the Coast Guard’s longstanding orders to block Haitians seeking asylum, the modality of killing is not straightforward, but it is intentional. It consists of snatching the Haitian enemy from their vessel, forcing them to subsist in a state of bare life, and finally abandoning them in their home country at gunpoint. Of course, many may survive the ordeal and may even attempt another journey. But especially during acute phases of armed conflict and catastrophe, it is just as likely that—whether at the behest of starvation, disease, or violence—a return to Haiti is a death sentence.

    This banal form of murder is analogous to what Ruth Wilson Gilmore offers as her definition of racism in Golden Gulag (2007): “the state sanctioned or extralegal production and exploitation of group-differentiated vulnerability to premature death.” Based on the extant documentary record, I estimate that the USCG has interdicted at least 120,000 botpippel since the HMIO of 1981 took effect. Those who fell prey to an untimely demise following deportation died because the United States, though repeatedly responsible for undermining Haitian democracy and economic stability, nonetheless refuses to acknowledge that these actions have made Haiti, for many, mortally unsafe. The true death toll will never be known. Countless botpippel have simply disappeared at sea, plunged into a gigantic watery necropolis.

    Since 2004 U.S. officials have brought their forms of border policing strategies and tactics against Haitians to bear on land-based immigration and refugee policies against non-white asylum seekers. One of the most significant technical innovations of enforcement against Haitians was the realization that by detaining them exclusively within a maritime environment, the United States could summarily classify all of them as economic migrants—whose claims for asylum de facto have no standing—and prevent them from lodging claims as political refugees, which are the only claims with any hope of success. They were thus proactively disabled from advancing a request for asylum in a U.S. federal court, with all claims instead evaluated by an INS-designated official aboard the USCG vessel. The New York Times recently reported that, since late 2009, similar techniques have been adopted by Customs and Border Control agents patrolling sea routes along the California coast, which has resulted in a notable escalation of CBP naval patrols and aerial surveillance of the region. And in fact, the USCG has cooperatively supported these efforts by sharing its infrastructure—ports, cutters, and aircraft—and its personnel with CBP. All of this has been with the aim of making sure that asylum seekers never make it to the United States, whether by land or by sea.

    The Trump administration made the most significant use of this set of innovations to date, insisting that asylum claims must be made from camps on the Mexican side of the U.S. border—and therefore automatically invalid by virtue of being limited to the status of economic migrant. Thus, hundreds of thousands of non-white asylum seekers fleeing material precariousness, yes, but also the threat of violence in the Global South are, and will continue to be, caught in carceral webs composed of ICE/CBP goon squads, ruthless INS officials, and perilous tent cities, not to mention the prison guards employed at one of the numerous semi-secret migrant detention centers operating upon U.S. soil for those few who make it across.

    From the perspective of Haitian immigrants and botpippel, this is nothing new. Thousands of their compatriots have already served time at infamous extrajudicial sites such as the Krome detention center in Miami (1980–present), Guantanamo Bay (1991–93), and, most often, the flight decks of USCG cutters. They know that the USCG has long scoured the Windward Passage for Haitians in particular, just as ICE/CBP goon squads now patrol U.S. deserts, highways, and city streets for the undocumented. And they know that Trump’s fantasy of building a “Great Wall” on the U.S.–Mexico border is not so farfetched, because the USCG continues to enforce a maritime one around Haiti.

    The Biden administration has inherited this war and its prisoners, with thousands remaining stuck in legal limbo while hoping—in most cases, without hope—that their asylum claims will advance. Opening alternative paths to citizenship and declaring an indefinite moratorium on deportations would serve as foundations for more sweeping reforms in the future. But the core challenge in this political moment is to envision nothing less than the total decriminalization and demilitarization of immigration law enforcement.

    Botpippel are not the first undocumented people of African descent to have been policed by U.S. naval forces. The legal architecture through which the USCG legitimates the indefinite detention and expulsion of Haitian asylum seekers reaches back to U.S. efforts to suppress the African slave trade, outlawed by Congress in 1807, though domestic slaveholding would continue, and indeed its trade would be not only safeguarded but bolstered by this act.

    This marked a decisive turning point in the history of maritime policing vis-à-vis immigration. Per the Slave Trade Acts of 1794 and 1800, the United States already claimed jurisdiction over U.S. citizens and U.S. vessels engaged in the slave trade within U.S. territorial borders (contemporaneously understood as extending three nautical miles into the ocean). By 1808, however, the United States sought to extend its jurisdiction over the sea itself. Slaver vessels operating around “any river, port, bay, or harbor . . . within the jurisdictional limits of the United States” as well as “on the high seas” were deemed illegal and subject to seizure without compensation. The actual physical distance from U.S. soil that these terms referred to was left purposefully vague. To board a given vessel, a Revenue Cutter captain only had to suspect, rather than conclusively determine, that that vessel eventually intended to offload “international” (i.e., non-native) enslaved people into the United States. The 1819 iteration of the law further stipulated that U.S. jurisdiction included “Africa, or elsewhere.” Hence, in theory, after 1819, the scope of U.S. maritime police operations was simply every maritime space on the globe.

    Revenue Cutter Service captains turned the lack of any description in the 1808 law or its successive iterations about what should be done with temporarily masterless slaves into an advantage. They did what they would have done to any fugitive Black person at the time: indefinitely detain them until higher authorities determined their status, and thereby foreclose the possibility of local Black people conspiring to shuttle them to freedom. During confinement, captured Africans were compelled to perform labor as if they were slaves. For instance, those captured from the Spanish-flagged Antelope (1820) spent seven years toiling at a military fort in Savannah, Georgia, as well as on the local U.S. marshal’s plantation. As wards of the state, they were human only insofar as U.S. officials had a duty to force them to remain alive. Of those “rescued” from the Antelope, 120 ultimately died in captivity and 2 went missing. Following litigation, 39 survivors were sold to U.S. slaveowners to compensate Spanish and Portuguese claimants who had stakes in the Antelope and her enslaved cargo. Per the designs of the American Colonization Society, the remaining 120 Africans were freed upon condition that they be immediately deported to New Georgia, Liberia.

    This anti-Black martial abolitionism was therefore a project framed around the unification of two countervailing tendencies. While white planters consistently pushed to extend racial slavery into the southern and western frontiers, white northern financiers and abolitionists were in favor of creating the most propitious conditions for the expansion of free white settlements throughout America’s urban and rural milieus. Black people were deemed unfit for freedom not only because of their supposed inborn asocial traits, but because their presence imperiled the possibility for white freedom. To actualize Thomas Jefferson’s “Empire of Liberty,” the United States required immigration policies that foreshortened Black peoples’ capacities for social reproduction and thereby re-whitened America.

    This political aim was later extended in legislation passed on February 19, 1862, which authorized President Abraham Lincoln—who intended to solve the contradictions that led to the Civil War by sending every Black person in America back to Africa—to use U.S. naval forces to capture, detain, and deport undocumented people of East Asian/Chinese descent (“coolies”) while at sea. Henceforth, “the free and voluntary emigration of any Chinese subject” to the U.S. was proscribed unless a ship captain possessed documents certified by a consular agent residing at the foreign port of departure. At the time, the principal means for Chinese emigrants to obtain authorization would have been at behest of some corporation seeking expendable, non-white laborers contractually bound to work to death in mines and on railroads on the western frontiers—Native American lands stolen through imperialist warfare. White settlers presupposed that these Asians’ residency was provisional and temporary—and then Congress codified that principle into law in 1870, decreeing that every person of East Asian/Chinese descent, anywhere in the world, was ineligible for U.S. citizenship.

    Twelve years later, An Act to Regulate Immigration (1882) played upon the notion that non-white immigration caused public disorder. Through the use of color-blind legal language, Section 2 of this law specified that the United States must only accept immigrants who were conclusively not “convict[s], lunatic[s], idiot[s], or any person unable to take care of himself or herself without becoming a public charge.” The burden of proof lay on non-white immigrants to prove how their racial backgrounds were not already prima facie evidence for these conditions. Section 4 also stipulated that “all foreign convicts except those convicted of political offenses, upon arrival, shall be sent back to the nations to which they belong and from whence they came.” By which means a non-white person could demonstrate the “political” character of a given conviction were cleverly left undefined.

    It was not a giant leap of imagination for the United States to apply these precedents to the maritime policing of Haitian asylum seekers in the 1980s. Nor should we be surprised that the logic of anti-Black martial abolitionism shapes present-day U.S. immigration policy.

    Political philosopher Peter Hallward estimates that paramilitary death squads executed at least a thousand supporters of Lavalas, President Aristide’s party, in the weeks following Aristide’s exile from Haiti on February 29, 2004. The first kanntè (Haitian sailing vessel) the Gallatin sighted one morning in early April had likely departed shortly thereafter.

    The first people from our ship that the Haitians met were members of the boarding team, armed with pistols, M-16s, shotguns, and zip ties. Their goal was to compel the hundred or so aboard the kanntè to surrender their vessel and allow us to deposit them on the flight deck of our ship. Negotiations can take hours. It is not uncommon for some to jump overboard, rather than allow boarding to occur uninhibited. If immediate acquiescence is not obtained, we will maneuver ourselves such that any further movement would cause the small boat to “ram” the Gallatin—an attack on a U.S. military vessel.

    On the Gallatin, we waited for uptake, outfitted with facemasks and rubber gloves. One at a time, we aided the Haitian adults to make the final step from the small boat to the deck of the cutter. We frisked them for weapons and then marched them to the fantail to undergo initial processing. Most of them appeared exhausted and confused—but compliant. Some may have already been in fear for their lives. One night aboard the USCGC Dallas, which hovered in Port-au-Prince Bay as a deportation coordination outpost and as a temporary detention site for Haitians awaiting immediate transfer to Haitian Coast Guard authorities, my friend and his shipmates asked their Kreyòl interpreter how he managed to obtain compliance from the botpippel. “I tell them you will hurt or kill them if they do not obey,” he joked, “so, of course, they listen.”

    Boarding all the Haitians took from midday until midnight. One of the last ones I helped aboard, a man dressed in a suit two sizes too large, looked into my eyes and smiled. He gently wept, clasped my hand tightly, and embraced me. I quickly pushed him off and pointed to the processing station at the fantail, leading him by the wrist to join the others. He stopped crying.

    Three things happened at the processing station. First, Haitians deposited the last of their belongings with the interpreter, ostensibly for safekeeping. Who knows if anyone got their things back. Second, a Kreyòl translator and one of the officers gave them a cursory interview about their asylum claims, all the while surrounded by armed sentries, as well as other Haitians who might pass that intelligence onto narcotics smugglers, paramilitary gangs, or state officials back in Haiti. Lastly, they received a rapid, half-assed medical examination—conducted in English. So long as they nodded, or remained silent, they passed each test and were shuffled up to the flight deck.

    We retired for the night after the boarding team set fire to the kanntè as a hazard to navigation. The Haitians probably didn’t know that this was the reason we unceremoniously torched their last hope for escape before their very eyes.

    About a week later, we found another kanntè packed with around seventy Haitians and repeated the process. Another USCG cutter transferred a hundred more over to the Gallatin. Our flight deck was reaching full capacity.

    We arrived at one kanntè too late. It had capsized. Pieces of the shattered mast and little bits of clothing and rubbish were floating around the hull. No survivors. How long had it been? Sharks were spotted circling at a short depth below the vessel.

    The Gallatin’s commanders emphasized that our mission was, at its core, humanitarian in nature. We were duty-bound to provide freshwater, food, and critical medical care. During their time aboard, Haitians would be treated as detainees and were not to be treated, or referred to, as prisoners. The use of force was circumscribed within clear rules of engagement. The Haitians were not in any way to be harmed or killed unless they directly threatened the ship or its sailors. Unnecessary violence against them could precipitate an internal review, solicit undue international criticism, and imperil the deportationist efficiency of INS officials. We were told that our batons and pepper spray were precautionary, primarily symbolic.

    It sounded like all I had to do was stand there and not screw anything up.

    Over the course of several watches, I concluded that, in fact, our job was also to relocate several crucial features of the abysmal living conditions that obtained on the kanntè onto the Gallatin’s flight deck. Though the flight deck was 80 feet by 43 feet, we blocked the edges to facilitate the crew’s movement and to create a buffer between us and the Haitians. Taking this into account, their living space was closer to 65 feet by 35 feet. For a prison population of 300 Haitians, each individual would have had only 7 feet 7 inches square to lie down and stand up. On the diagram of the eighteenth-century British slaver Brooks, the enslaved were each allocated approximately 6 feet 10 inches square, scarcely less than on the Gallatin. (Historian Marcus Rediker thinks that the Brooks diagram probably overstates the amount of space the enslaved were given.)

    Although some cutters will drape tarps over the flight deck to shield the Haitians from the unmediated effects of the sun, the Gallatin provided no such shelter. We permitted them to shower, once, in saltwater, without soap. The stench on the flight deck took on a sweet, fetid tinge.

    The only place they could go to achieve a modicum of solitude and to escape the stench was the makeshift metal toilet on the fantail. (On slave ships, solitude was found by secreting away to a hidden compartment or small boat to die alone; the “necessary tubs” that held human excrement were contained in the slave holds below deck.) They were permitted to use the toilet one at a time in the case of adults, and two at a time in the case of children and the elderly. For what was supposed to be no longer than five minutes, they had an opportunity to stretch, relax, and breathe fresh sea air. Nevertheless, these moments of respite took place under observation by the watchstander stationed at the toilet, not to mention the numerous Haitian onlookers at the rear of the flight deck.

    Despite our commanders’ reticence on the matter, the ever-present fear of revolt hovered underneath the surface of our standing orders. We were to ensure order and discipline through counterinsurgency protocols and techniques of incarceration that one might find in any U.S. prison. The military imperative aboard the Gallatin was to produce a sense of radical uncertainty and temporal disorientation in the Haitians, such that they maintain hope for an asylum claim that had already been rejected.

    In this context, there were four overlapping components to the security watch.

    The first component of the ship’s securitization was constant surveillance. We were not supposed to take our eyes off the Haitians for one moment. During the watch, we would regularly survey the flight deck for any signs of general unrest, conspiracy, or organized protest. Any minor infraction could later contribute to the eruption of a larger riot, and thus needed to be quickly identified and neutralized. We also had to observe their behavior for indications that one of them intended to jump overboard or harm another Haitian. All that said, we found a used condom one day. Surveillance is never total.

    The second was the limitation we placed on communication. We shrouded all USCG practices in a fog of secrecy. Conversing with the Haitians through anything other than hand signals and basic verbal commands was forbidden; physical contact was kept at bare minimum. Nonofficial speech among the watch was proscribed. Watchstanders were stripped of their identity, save their uniform, from which our nametags were removed. It was critical that botpippel forever be unable to identify us.

    Secrecy preemptively disabled the Haitians from collectively piecing together fragments of information about where our vessel had been, where it was now, and where it was going. Officially, the concern was that they might exploit the situation to gather intelligence about our patrol routes and pass this information to human or narcotics smugglers. We militated against their mapping out how the ship operated, its layout and complement, where living spaces and the armory were located, and so on. These were standard tactics aboard slaver vessels. As freed slave and abolitionist Olaudah Equiano observed, “When the ship we were in had got in all her cargo . . . we were all put under deck, so that we could not see how they managed the vessel.”

    On the Gallatin, the command also strove to maintain strict control over the narrative. They blocked sailors’ access to the open Internet and censored letters from home that contained news of global or domestic politics (and even just bad personal news). Knowledge of whether a particular asylum claim had failed or succeeded was hidden from all. A watchstander harboring political solidarity with—as opposed to mere empathy and pity for—the Haitians might compromise operational capacities, good judgment, and core loyalty to the USCG.

    Our third securitization strategy was to produce false knowledge of the future. The Haitians were led to believe that they were merely waiting aboard the ship because their asylum claims were still being vigorously debated by diplomatic entities in Washington. Their continued compliance was predicated on this differential of knowledge. They could not realize that they were moving in circles, being returned slowly to Haiti. If they lost all hope, we presumed they would eventually resist their intolerable conditions through violent means.

    Hence, our fourth securitization measure: USCG personnel were permitted to inflict several limited forms of physical and symbolic violence against the Haitians, not only in response to perceived noncompliance, but also as a means of averting the need to inflict even greater violence in the future.

    If it were not classified as a matter of national security, we might have a better grasp of how many times such instances occur aboard USCG vessels. I open this essay with a story of how we subdued and punished one person for resisting the rules. But it is known that punishment is sometimes inflicted on entire groups. A telling example took place on January 30, 1989, when the USCG captured the Dieu Devant with 147 Haitians aboard. One of them, Fitzroy Joseph, later reported in congressional hearings that, after they expressed a fear of being killed if returned to Haiti, USCG personnel “began wrestling with the Haitians and hitting their hands with their flashlights.” This was followed by threats to release pepper spray. Marie Julie Pierre, Joseph’s wife, corroborated his testimony, adding:

    [We were] asked at once if we feared returning to Haiti and everyone said yes we did. We said ‘down with Avril, up with Bush.’ We were threatened with tear gas but they didn’t use it. Many people were crying because they were so afraid. [Ti Jak] was hit by the officers because he didn’t want to go back. They handcuffed him. The Coast Guard grabbed others by the neck and forced them to go to the biggest boat. My older brother was also hit and treated like a chicken as they pulled him by the neck.

    Counterintuitively, our nonlethal weapons functioned as more efficient instruments of counterinsurgency than lethal weapons. Brandishing firearms might exacerbate an already tense situation in which the Haitians outnumbered the entire ship’s complement. It could also provide an opportunity for the Haitians to seize and turn our own guns against us (or one another). In contrast, losing a baton and a can of pepper spray represented a relatively minor threat to the ship’s overall security. In the event of an actual riot, the command could always mobilize armed reinforcements. From the perspective of the command, then, the first responders on watch were, to some extent, expendable. Nevertheless, sentries bearing firearms were on deck when we approached Haiti and prepared for final deportation. That is, the precise moment the Haitians realized their fate.

    Like the enslaved Africans captured by the Revenue Cutter Service, botpippel were human to us only insofar as we had to compel them, through the threat or actuality of violence, to remain alive. The Haitians ate our tasteless food and drank our freshwater—otherwise they would starve, or we might beat them for going on a hunger strike. They tended to remain silent and immobile day and night—otherwise they would invite acts of exemplary punishment upon themselves. The practices of confinement on the Gallatin represent a variant of what historian Stephanie Smallwood describes as a kind of “scientific empiricism” that developed aboard slave ships, which “prob[ed] the limits to which it is possible to discipline the body without extinguishing the life within.” Just as contemporary slavers used force to conserve human commodities for sale, so does the USCG use force to produce nominally healthy economic migrants to exchange with Haitian authorities.

    The rational utilization of limited forms of exemplary violence was an integral aspect of this carceral science. Rediker shows how slaver captains understood violence along a continuum that ranged from acceptably severe to unacceptably cruel. Whereas severity was the grounds of proper discipline as such, an act was cruel only if it led “to catastrophic results [and] sparked reactions such as mutiny by sailors or insurrection by slaves.” In turn, minor acts of kindness, such as dispensing better food or allowing slightly more free time to move above deck, were conditioned by these security imperatives. Furthermore, they exerted no appreciable change to the eventuality that the person would be sold to a slaveowner, for kindness was a self-aggrandizing ritual performance of authority that intended to lay bare the crucial imbalance of power relations at hand. This was, Rediker maintains, “as close as the owners ever came to admitting that terror was essential to running a slave ship.”

    The USCG’s undeclared long war against Haitian asylum seekers is but one front of a much longer war against people of African descent in the Americas. The entangled histories of the African slave trade and anti-Black martial abolitionism reveal how this war intimately shaped the foundations and racist intentions that underlay modern U.S. immigration and refugee policy writ large. And the Gallatin, her sailors, and the Haitians who were trapped on the flight deck, are, in some small way, now a part of this history, too.

    The Biden administration has the power to decisively end this war—indeed, every war against non-white asylum seekers. Until then, botpippel will continue to suffer the slave ships that survive into the present.

    https://bostonreview.net/race/ryan-fontanilla-immigration-enforcement-and-afterlife-slave-ship

    #esclavage #héritage #migrations #contrôles_migratoires #Haïti #gardes-côtes #nationalisme_blanc #USA #Etats-Unis #migrations #frontières #asile #réfugiés #USCG #Haitian_Migrant_Interdiction_Operation (#HMIO) #botpippel #boat_people

    #modèle_australien #pacific_solution

    ping @karine4 @isskein @reka

    • Ce décret de #Reagan mentionné dans l’article rappelle farouchement la loi d’#excision_territoriale australienne :

      But in our present day, it began in earnest with President Ronald Reagan’s Executive Order 12324 of 1981, also called the Haitian Migrant Interdiction Operation (HMIO), which exclusively tasked the USCG to “interdict” Haitian asylum seekers attempting to enter the United States by sea routes on unauthorized sailing vessels. Such people were already beginning to be derogatorily referred to as “boat people,” a term then borrowed (less derogatorily) into Haitian Kreyòl as botpippel.

      Excision territoriale australienne :


      https://seenthis.net/messages/416996

      –—

      Citation tirée du livre de McAdam et Chong : « Refugees : why seeking asylum is legal and Australia’s policies are not » (p.3)

      “Successive governments (aided by much of the media) have exploited public anxieties about border security to create a rhetorical - and, ultimately, legislative - divide between the rights of so-called ’genuine’ refugees, resettled in Australia from camps and settlements abroad, and those arriving spontaneously in Australia by boat.”

  • Le «#navi_bianche», quando i profughi dall’Africa erano italiani

    «Donne smunte, lacerate accaldate, affrante dalle fatiche, scosse dalle emozioni… Bimbi sparuti che le lunghe privazioni e l’ardore del clima hanno immiserito e stremato fino al limite». Si presentavano così i coloni dell’ormai “ex Impero” agli occhi di #Zeno_Garroni, regio commissario della missione speciale che avrebbe rimpatriato 28mila tra donne, anziani, bambini e ragazzi sotto 15 anni dall’Etiopia, dall’Eritrea e dalla Somalia, paesi di quell’Africa orientale italiana facilmente conquistata all’inizio del 1941 dalle truppe britanniche. Un’ondata di profughi “bianchi” che ricevette un’accoglienza diversa da quella destinata oggi ai naufraghi ma che, come loro, si lasciavano alle spalle la esperienza drammatica della prigionia nei campi alleati.

    Alla missione umanitaria si arrivò dopo una lunga trattativa tra il governo britannico e quello italiano. Furono allestite quattro navi (“Saturnia”, “Vulcania”, “Caio Duilio” e “Giulio Cesare”), dipinte di bianco con grandi croci rosse, alle quali fu imposto il periplo dell’Africa, dal momento che non fu permesso loro di passare attraverso il canale di Suez. Il viaggio, così, diventava molto lungo: circa cinquanta giorni. E pericoloso: la prima spedizione salpò nell’aprile del 1942 da Genova e Trieste, la terza e ultima attraccò a Taranto nell’agosto del 1943. Tutto in piena guerra, quella che si combatteva anche lungo le rotte e i porti del Mediterraneo.

    «Costretti ad abbandonare case e averi, concentrati dai britannici in campi provvisori e da lì inviati a Berbera direttamente per l’imbarco - scrive lo storico Emanuele Ertola che alla vicenda delle “navi bianche” ha dedicato un saggio - affaticati e storditi dopo un lungo viaggio attraverso l’Etiopia in treno e camionetta, i rimpatrianti dovevano quindi sopportare la lunga attesa per salire a bordo». Qui venivano subito assistiti dal personale sanitario (c’erano medici e infermieri) ma affrontavano da subito il problema del sovraffollamento. Durante l’imbarco e il viaggio - soprattutto della prima spedizione - molti bambini, già provati e sofferenti per vita nei campi di concentramento britannici e sfiancati dalle condizioni climatiche, morirono. «Ricordo benissimo, giorno per giorno, la vita a bordo, che è durata circa un mese e mezzo - racconta una testimone, Maria Gabriella Ripa di Meana, citata nel libro di Massimo Zamorani Dalle navi bianche alla linea gotica (Mursia), inviato del Giornale di Indro Montanelli che era uno dei tanti bambini italiani d’Africa -. Ricordo i bambini più piccoli che morivano per infezione diarroica; ricordo l’epidemia di tosse convulsa che imperversava tra i bambini più grandi. Ricordo la madre disperata che aveva assistito alla fine del suo piccolo; ricordo che le donne in stato di gravidanza erano terrorizzate e ricordo che non c’erano più letti disponibili nell’infermeria strapiena».

    Ma oltre che umanitaria, nelle intenzioni del governo fascista, quella delle “navi bianche” doveva essere anche una missione politica. Aveva lo scopo di preparare i profughi che avevano vissuto nelle colonie al reinserimento nella vita della madrepatria e a “rieducarli” ai principi «della gerarchia e dei valori sociali » soprattutto dopo il periodo di prigionia nei campi britannici. Tra i “ragazzi d’Africa” c’era anche il futuro fumettista Hugo Pratt, all’epoca del rientro appena quindicenne. Come altri suoi coetanei si arruolò volontario appena compiuti diciotto anni, convinto che quella della fedeltà al regime fosse l’unica scelta possibile. Tra i bambini sopravvissuti c’era anche Luciano Violante (è nato a Dire Daua nel 1941) che, magistrato e politico ex comunista, molti anni dopo nel suo discorso di insediamento da presidente della Camera invitò a riflettere sui «vinti di ieri» per capire «senza revisionismi falsificanti» anche chi si schierò «dalla parte di Salò».

    https://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/le-navi-bianche-quando-profughi-dall-africa-erano-italiani-AE3GxU5E
    #réfugiés #réfugiés_italiens #décolonisation #Afrique #Corne_d'Afrique #Ethiopie #Erythrée #Somalie #navires #Saturnia #Vulcania #Caio_Duilio #Giulio_Cesare #Berbera #colonialisme #camps_de_concentration #réinsertion #rééducation #Hugo_Pratt

    • The World Refugees Made. Decolonization and the Foundation of Postwar Italy

      In The World Refugees Made, #Pamela_Ballinger explores Italy’s remaking in light of the loss of a wide range of territorial possessions—colonies, protectorates, and provinces—in Africa and the Balkans, the repatriation of Italian nationals from those territories, and the integration of these “national refugees” into a country devastated by war and overwhelmed by foreign displaced persons from Eastern Europe. Post-World War II Italy served as an important laboratory, in which categories differentiating foreign refugees (who had crossed national boundaries) from national refugees (those who presumably did not) were debated, refined, and consolidated. Such distinctions resonated far beyond that particular historical moment, informing legal frameworks that remain in place today. Offering an alternative genealogy of the postwar international refugee regime, Ballinger focuses on the consequences of one of its key omissions: the ineligibility from international refugee status of those migrants who became classified as national refugees.

      The presence of displaced persons also posed the complex question of who belonged, culturally and legally, in an Italy that was territorially and politically reconfigured by decolonization. The process of demarcating types of refugees thus represented a critical moment for Italy, one that endorsed an ethnic conception of identity that citizenship laws made explicit. Such an understanding of identity remains salient, as Italians still invoke language and race as bases of belonging in the face of mass immigration and ongoing refugee emergencies. Ballinger’s analysis of the postwar international refugee regime and Italian decolonization illuminates the study of human rights history, humanitarianism, postwar reconstruction, fascism and its aftermaths, and modern Italian history.

      https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501747588/the-world-refugees-made/#bookTabs=1
      #livre #rapatriement #nationalisme #identité #citoyenneté

      –---

      Et un autre mot...

      Post-World War II Italy served as an important laboratory, in which categories differentiating #foreign_refugees (who had crossed national boundaries) from #national_refugees (those who presumably did not) were debated, refined, and consolidated.

      #terminologie #vocabulaire #mots
      –-> ajouté à la métaliste: https://seenthis.net/messages/414225
      ping @sinehebdo

    • Dalle navi bianche alla Linea Gotica

      Tra il 1941 e il 1943 quattro transatlantici della Marina mercantile italiana – Saturnia, Vulcania, Giulio Cesare e Caio Duilio – furono appositamente trasformati nelle cosiddette Navi Bianche per riportare in patria dall’Africa Orientale Italiana 30.000 civili prelevati dalle loro case dopo l’occupazione del 1941 e rinchiusi nei campi di concentramento britannici: donne, anziani, invalidi e tantissimi bambini.

      Tra questi c’era anche #Massimo_Zamorani, che racconta il viaggio epico vissuto in prima persona, a quindici anni, attraverso mari invasi dai sommergibili in guerra. Dopo mesi nei campi di prigionia trascorsi in proibitive condizioni climatiche, igieniche, alimentari e sanitarie, i rimpatriandi si trovarono ad affrontare un percorso lunghissimo e difficile di circumnavigazione dell’Africa, poiché il governo britannico non aveva concesso il passaggio dal Canale di Suez.

      Come altri giovani rimpatriati – fra questi anche l’allora sconosciuto Hugo Pratt, futuro creatore di Corto Maltese – appena compiuti gli anni minimi Zamorani si arruolò volontario nell’esercito della Repubblica Sociale e combatté sulla Linea Gotica dove, dato disperso in combattimento, finì ancora una volta prigioniero in Algeria e poi a Taranto.

      Un episodio poco noto della Seconda guerra mondiale nella straordinaria testimonianza di un piccolo sopravvissuto che tornerà da grande in Africa orientale, come inviato speciale.

      https://www.mursia.com/products/14128?_pos=1&_sid=96d96b040&_ss=r

    • Navi bianche. Missione di pace in tempo di guerra

      Erano le unità ospedaliere della nostra flotta. Navigavano protette dalle convenzioni internazionali, ma alcune ugualmente colarono a picco per siluramento, mine, mitragliatrici. Il racconto di questa grandiosa impresa poco conosciuta nei suoi moventi e nella sua esecuzione ma pervasa da un alto senso di umanità, densa di drammaticità e contessuta di episodi molto interessanti, anche dal punto di vista storico, si presenta molto complesso. Le missioni furono tre: dal marzo al giugno 1942; dal settembre 1942 al gennaio 1943; dal maggio all’agosto del 1943; compiute con 4 grandi piroscafi: Vulcania, Saturnia, Duilio e Giulio Cesare.

      https://www.anobii.com/books/Navi_bianche/01966660c104330368

  • Israel’s Vaccine Apartheid | Left Voice
    http://www.leftvoice.org/israels-vaccine-apartheid

    he vaccine rollout in the United States and other imperialist countries has been a disaster. Amid all the bad news, one country has stood out: Israel. Under the extreme right-wing and notoriously corrupt government of Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel has been vaccinating about 1 percent of its population per day. As of two days ago, more than 1 million people in Israel, 12 percent of the country’s 9 million citizens, had gotten a first dose of the vaccine. The U.S., in contrast, had jabbed only 4.2 million people by the same day — just over 1 percent of the population.

    Yet these statistics ignore an inconvenient fact: 5 million Palestinians live under Israeli occupation in the West Bank and Gaza. They have their own administration, yet their borders are controlled by Israel, making Gaza an open-air prison. The Israeli army maintains a permanent occupation regime that is also responsible for collecting — and withholding — taxes.

    Almost 500,000 Israeli settlers live in Palestinian territories, not including East Jerusalem. These settlers might live just a few meters away from Palestinians, but they enjoy completely different rights — which the old regime in South Africa used to call apartheid. This applies to the pandemic as well, as the Guardian reports:

    #Israël #ethno-nationalisme #vaccin #covid_19 #nationalisme_sanitaire

  • The strange case of Portugal’s returnees

    White settler returnees to Portugal in #1975, and the history of decolonization, can help us understand the complicated category of refugee.

    The year is 1975, and the footage comes from the Portuguese Red Cross. The ambivalence is there from the start. Who, or maybe what, are these people? The clip title calls them “returnees from Angola.” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wzd9_gh646U

    ) At Lisbon airport, they descend the gangway of a US-operated civil airplane called “Freedom.” Clothes, sunglasses, hairstyles, and sideburns: no doubt, these are the 1970s. The plane carries the inscription “holiday liner,” but these people are not on vacation. A man clings tight to his transistor radio, a prized possession brought from far away Luanda. Inside the terminal, hundreds of returnees stand in groups, sit on their luggage, or camp on the floor. White people, black people, brown people. Men, women, children, all ages. We see them filing paperwork, we see volunteers handing them sandwiches and donated clothes, we see a message board through which those who have lost track of their loved ones try to reunite. These people look like refugees (http://tracosdememoria.letras.ulisboa.pt/pt/arquivo/documentos-escritos/retornados-no-aeroporto-de-lisboa-1975). Or maybe they don’t?

    Returnees or retornados is the term commonly assigned to more than half-a-million people, the vast majority of them white settlers from Angola and Mozambique, most of whom arrived in Lisbon during the course of 1975, the year that these colonies acquired their independence from Portugal. The returnees often hastily fled the colonies they had called home because they disapproved of the one party, black majority state after independence, and resented the threat to their racial and social privilege; because they dreaded the generalized violence of civil war and the breakdown of basic infrastructures and services in the newly independent states; because they feared specific threats to their property, livelihood, and personal safety; or because their lifeworld was waning before their eyes as everyone else from their communities left in what often resembled a fit of collective panic.

    Challenged by this influx from the colonies at a time of extreme political instability and economic turmoil in Portugal, the authorities created the legal category of returnees for those migrants who held Portuguese citizenship and seemed unable to “integrate” by their own means into Portuguese society. Whoever qualified as a returnee before the law was entitled to the help of the newly created state agency, Institute for the Support of the Return of the Nationals (IARN). As the main character of an excellent 2011 novel by Dulce Maria Cardoso on the returnees states:

    In almost every answer there was one word we had never heard before, the I.A.R.N., the I.A.R.N., the I.A.R.N. The I.A.R.N. had paid our air fares, the I.A.R.N. would put us up in hotels, the I.A.R.N. would pay for the transport to the hotels, the I.A.R.N. would give us food, the I.A.R.N. would give us money, the I.A.R.N. would help us, the I.A.R.N. would advise us, the I.A.R.N. would give us further information. I had never heard a single word repeated so many times, the I.A.R.N. seemed to be more important and generous than God.

    The legal category “returnee” policed the access to this manna-from-welfare heaven, but the label also had a more symbolic dimension: calling those arriving from Angola and Mozambique “returnees” implied an orderly movement, and possibly a voluntary migration; it also suggested that they came back to a place where they naturally fit, to the core of a Portuguese nation that they had always been a part of. In this sense, the term was also meant to appeal to the solidarity of the resident population with the newcomers: in times of dire public finances, the government hoped to legitimize its considerable spending on behalf of these “brothers” from the nation’s (former) overseas territories.

    Many migrants, however, rebutted the label attached to them. While they were happy to receive the aid offered by state bureaucracies and NGOs like the Portuguese Red Cross, they insisted that they were refugees (refugiados), not returnees. One in three of them, as they pointed out, had been born in Africa. Far from returning to Portugal, they were coming for the first time, and often did not feel welcome there. Most felt that they had not freely decided to leave, that their departure had been chaotic, that they had had no choice but to give up their prosperous and happy lives in the tropics. (At the time, they never publicly reflected on the fact that theirs was the happiness of a settler minority, and that prosperity was premised on the exploitation of the colonized.) Many were convinced they would return to their homelands one day, and many of them proudly identified as “Angolans” or “Africans” rather than as Portuguese. All in all, they claimed that they had been forcibly uprooted, and that now they were discriminated against and living precariously in the receiving society—in short, that they shared the predicaments we typically associate with the condition of the refugee.

    Some of them wrote to the UNHCR, demanding the agency should help them as refugees. The UNHCR, however, declined. In 1976, High Commissioner Prince Aga Khan referred to the 1951 Refugee Convention, explaining that his mandate applied “only to persons outside the country of their nationality,” and that since “the repatriated individuals, in their majority, hold Portuguese nationality, [they] do not fall under my mandate.” The UNHCR thus supported the returnee label the Portuguese authorities had created, although high-ranking officials within the organization were in fact critical of this decision—in the transitory moment of decolonization, when the old imperial borders gave way to the new borders of African nation-states, it was not always easy to see who would count as a refugee even by the terms of the 1951 Convention.

    In short, the strange case of Portugal’s returnees—much like that of the pieds-noirs, French settlers “repatriated” from Algeria—points to the ambiguities of the “refugee.” In refugee studies and migration history, the term defines certain groups of people we study. In international law, the category bestows certain rights on specific individuals. As a claim-making concept, finally, “the refugee” is a tool that various actors—migrants, governments, international organizations, NGOs—use to voice demands and to mobilize, to justify their politics, or to interpret their experiences. What are we to make of this overlap? While practitioners of the refugee regime will have different priorities, I think that migration scholars should treat the “refugee” historically. We need to critically analyze who is using the term in which ways in any given situation. As an actor’s category, “refugee” is not an abstract concept detached from time and place, context, and motivations. Rather, it is historically specific, as its meanings change over time; it is relational, because it is defined against the backdrop of other terms and phenomena; and it is strategic, because it is supposed to do something for the people who use the term. The refugee concept is thus intrinsically political.

    Does analyzing “the refugee” as an actor’s category mean that we must abandon it as an analytical tool altogether? Certainly not. We should continue to research “refugees” as a historically contested category of people. While there will always be a tension between the normative and analytical dimensions, historicizing claims to being a “refugee” can actually strengthen the concept’s analytical purchase: it can complicate our understanding of forced migrations and open our eyes to the wide range of degrees of voluntariness or force involved in any migration decision. It can help us to think the state of being a refugee not as an absolute, but as a gradual, relational, and contextualized category. In the case of the returnees, and independently from what either the migrants or the Portuguese government or the UNHCR argued, such an approach will allow us to analyze the migrants as “privileged refugees.”

    Let me explain: For all the pressures that pushed some of them to leave their homes, for all the losses they endured, and for all the hardships that marked their integration into Portuguese society, the returnees, a privileged minority in a settler colony, also had a relatively privileged experience of (forced) migration and reintegration when colonialism ended. This becomes clear when comparing their experience to the roughly 20,000 Africans that, at the same time as the returnees, made it to Portugal but who, unlike them, were neither accepted as citizens nor entitled to comprehensive welfare—regardless of the fact that they had grown up being told that they were an integral part of a multi-continental Portuguese nation, and despite the fact that they were fleeing the same collapsing empire as the returnees were. Furthermore, we must bear in mind that in Angola and Mozambique, hundreds of thousands of Africans were forcibly displaced first by Portugal’s brutal colonial wars (1961-1974), then during the civil wars after independence (1975-2002 in Angola, 1977-1992 in Mozambique). Unlike the returnees, most of these forced migrants never had the opportunity to seek refuge in the safe haven of Portugal. Ultimately, the returnees’ experience can therefore only be fully understood when it is put into the broader context of these African refugee flows, induced as they were by the violent demise of settler colonialism in the process of decolonization.

    So, what were these people in the YouTube clip, then? Returnees? Or African refugees? I hope that by now you will agree that … well … it’s complicated.

    https://africasacountry.com/2020/12/the-strange-case-of-portugals-returnees

    #Portugal #colonialisme #catégorisation #réfugiés #asile #décolonisation #Angola #réfugiés_portugais #histoire #rapatriés #rapatriés_portugais #Mozambique #indépendance #nationalisme #retour_volontaire #discriminations #retour_forcé #retour #nationalité

    Et un nouveau mot pour la liste de @sinehebdo :
    #retornados
    #terminologie #vocabulaire #mots

    ping @isskein @karine4

  • En Europe, la convergence des néolibéraux et des #identitaires

    Entretien croisé avec #Michel_Feher, philosophe, et #Chloé_Ridel, du Groupe d’études géopolitiques de l’ENS. Le premier revient sur son analyse de l’Europe « bleue-brune » qui se dessine, et la seconde sur l’idée d’« #Europe-civilisation » qui se substitue au « #nationalisme_à_la_papa ».

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vAMFAcgHqg&feature=emb_logo


    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/251118/en-europe-la-convergence-des-neoliberaux-et-des-identitaires

    #néolibéralisme #extrême_droite #entretien

    • « Faire de l’Europe une maison de retraite fortifiée pour des épargnants de souche. »

      (Macron) « Quand on se met à virer à droite, demandez au PS, c’est jamais suffisant, et c’est toujours l’extrême droite qui emporte le morceau. »

      « Je ne pense pas que le populisme xénophobe est une réaction aux politiques néolibérales et à la financiarisation, je pense au contraire qu’il en est une extension. Il ya une grave erreur à gauche en particulier à penser que cette montée de l’extrême droite, c’est une réaction, que ce serait une révolte (...) quand on voit les programmes, ces gens là ne sont pas du tout des antilibéraux (...) les gens qui dirigent l’AFD en Allemagne sont des membres de la Société du Mont Pellerin, c’est-à-dire le cénacle même des économistes néolibéraux. »

      Michel Feher (actionnaire) reste stimulant.

      #phobie_migratoire #capital_humain #capital_d'autochtonie #identitaires

  • Sur la frontière gréco-turque, à l’épicentre des tensions

    L’Union européenne entend sanctionner la politique de plus en plus expansionniste de la Turquie, qui ravive en Grèce les souvenirs des conflits du passé. Ligne de rupture, mais aussi d’échanges entre Orient et Occident, la frontière gréco-turque ne respire plus depuis la crise sanitaire. De #Kastellorizo à la #Thrace en passant par #Lesbos, les deux pays ont pourtant tant de choses en commun, autour de cette démarcation qui fut mouvante et rarement étanche.

    Petite île aux confins orientaux de la Grèce, Kastellorizo touche presque la #Turquie. Le temps s’écoule lentement dans l’unique village, logé dans une baie profonde. En cette fin septembre, de vieux pêcheurs jouent aux cartes près des enfants qui appâtent des tortues dans les eaux cristallines. Devant son café froid, M. Konstantinos Papoutsis observe, placide, l’immense côte turque, à guère plus de deux kilomètres, et la ville de Kaş, son seul horizon. « Nous sommes une île touristique tranquille, assure cet homme affable qui gère une agence de voyages. Je l’ai répété aux touristes tout l’été. » Attablée autour de lui, la poignée d’élus de cette commune de cinq cents âmes reprend ses propos d’un air débonnaire : « Il n’y a aucun danger à Kastellorizo ! »

    Un imposant ferry, qui paraît gigantesque dans ce petit port méditerranéen, vient animer le paysage. Parti d’Athènes vingt-quatre heures plus tôt, il manœuvre difficilement pour débarquer ses passagers, parmi lesquels une cinquantaine d’hommes en treillis et chapeaux de brousse. Les soldats traversent la baie d’un pas vif avant de rejoindre les falaises inhabitées qui la dominent. « C’est une simple relève, comme il y en a tous les mois », commente M. Papoutsis, habitué à cette présence.

    Selon le #traité_de_Paris de février 1947 (article 14), et du fait de la cession par l’Italie à la Grèce du Dodécanèse, les îles dont fait partie Kastellorizo sont censées être démilitarisées. Dans les faits, les troupes helléniques y guettent le rivage turc depuis l’occupation par Ankara de la partie nord de Chypre, en 1974, précisent plusieurs historiens (1). Cette défense a été renforcée après la crise gréco-turque autour des îlots disputés d’Imia, en 1996. La municipalité de Kastellorizo refuse de révéler le nombre d’hommes postés sur ses hauteurs. Et si les villageois affichent un air de décontraction pour ne pas effrayer les visiteurs — rares en cette période de Covid-19 —, ils n’ignorent pas l’ombre qui plane sur leur petit paradis.

    Un poste avancé d’Athènes en Méditerranée

    Kastellorizo se trouve en première ligne face aux menaces du président turc Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, qui veut redessiner les cartes et imposer son propre #partage_des_eaux. Depuis les années 1970, les #îles du #Dodécanèse font l’objet d’un #conflit larvé entre ces deux pays membres de l’Organisation du traité de l’Atlantique nord (OTAN). La Turquie conteste la souveraineté grecque sur plusieurs îles, îlots et rochers le long de sa côte. Surtout, elle est l’un des rares pays, avec notamment les États-Unis, à ne pas avoir signé la convention des Nations unies sur le droit de la mer (dite #convention_de_Montego_Bay, et entrée en vigueur en 1994), et ne reconnaît pas la revendication par la Grèce d’un plateau continental autour de ses îles. Athènes justifie dès lors leur #militarisation au nom de la #légitime_défense (2), en particulier depuis l’occupation turque de Chypre et en raison d’une importante présence militaire à proximité : la marine et l’armée de l’air turques de l’Égée sont basées à İzmir, sur la côte occidentale de l’Asie Mineure.

    Si proche de la Turquie, Kastellorizo se trouve à 120 kilomètres de la première autre île grecque — Rhodes — et à plus de 520 kilomètres du continent grec. Alors que l’essentiel de la #mer_Egée pourrait être revendiqué par Athènes comme #zone_économique_exclusive (#ZEE) (3) au titre de la convention de Montego Bay (voir la carte ci-contre), ce lointain îlot de neuf kilomètres carrés lui permet de facto de jouir d’une large extension de plusieurs centaines de kilomètres carrés en Méditerranée orientale. Or, faute d’accord bilatéral, cette ZEE n’est pas formellement établie pour Ankara, qui revendique d’y avoir librement accès, surtout depuis la découverte en Méditerranée orientale de gisements d’#hydrocarbures potentiellement exploitables. À plusieurs reprises ces derniers mois, la Turquie a envoyé dans le secteur un bateau de recherche sismique baptisé #Oruç_Reis, du nom d’un corsaire ottoman du XVIe siècle — surnommé « #Barberousse » — né à Lesbos et devenu sultan d’Alger.

    Ces manœuvres navales font écho à l’idéologie de la « #patrie_bleue » (#Mavi_Vatan). Soutenue par les nationalistes et les islamistes, cette doctrine, conçue par l’ancien amiral #Cem_Gürdeniz, encourage la Turquie à imposer sa #souveraineté sur des #zones_disputées en #mer_Noire, en mer Égée et en #Méditerranée. Ces derniers mois, M. Erdoğan a multiplié les discours martiaux. Le 26 août, à l’occasion de l’anniversaire de la bataille de Manzikert, en 1071, dans l’est de la Turquie, où les Turcs Seldjoukides mirent en déroute l’armée byzantine, il avertissait la Grèce que toute « erreur » mènerait à sa « ruine ». Quelques semaines plus tard, le 21 octobre, lors d’une rencontre avec les présidents chypriote et égyptien à Nicosie, M. Kyriakos Mitsotakis, le premier ministre grec conservateur, accusait la Turquie de « fantasmes impérialistes assortis d’actions agressives ».

    Sous pression en août dernier, Athènes a pu compter sur le soutien de la République de Chypre, de l’Italie et de la France, avec lesquelles elle a organisé des manœuvres communes. Ou encore de l’Égypte, avec laquelle elle vient de signer un accord de partage des #zones_maritimes. Déjà en conflit ouvert avec son homologue turc sur la Syrie, la Libye et le Caucase, le président français Emmanuel Macron s’est résolument rangé aux côtés d’Athènes. « C’est un allié précieux que l’on voudrait inviter à venir sur notre île », déclare l’adjoint à la municipalité de Kastellorizo, M. Stratos Amygdalos, partisan de Nouvelle Démocratie, le parti au pouvoir. À la mi-septembre 2020, la Grèce annonçait l’acquisition de dix-huit Rafale, l’avion de combat de Dassault Aviation.

    « Erdoğan se prend pour Soliman le Magnifique. Mais il perd du crédit dans son pays, la livre turque s’effondre. Alors il essaie de redorer son image avec des idées de conquêtes, de rêve national… », maugrée de son côté M. Konstantinos Raftis, guide touristique à Kastellorizo. La comparaison entre le sultan de la Sublime Porte et l’actuel président turc revient fréquemment dans ce pays qui fit partie de l’Empire ottoman durant quatre siècles (de 1430, date de la chute de Salonique, à l’indépendance de 1830). La résistance hellénique a forgé l’identité de l’État grec moderne, où l’on conserve une profonde suspicion à l’égard d’un voisin encombrant, quatre fois plus riche, six fois plus grand et huit fois plus peuplé. Cette méfiance transcende les clivages politiques, tant le #nationalisme irrigue tous les partis grecs. Athènes voit aujourd’hui dans la doctrine de la « patrie bleue » une politique expansionniste néo-ottomane, qui fait écho à l’impérialisme passé.

    À l’embouchure du port de Kastellorizo, la silhouette d’une mosquée transformée en musée — rare vestige de la présence ottomane — fait de l’ombre à un bar à cocktails. L’édifice trône seul face aux vingt-six églises orthodoxes. La Constitution précise que l’orthodoxie est la « religion dominante » dans le pays, et, jusqu’en 2000, la confession était inscrite sur les cartes d’identité nationales. La suppression de cette mention, à la demande du gouvernement socialiste, a provoqué l’ire de la puissante Église orthodoxe, plus de 95 % des Grecs se revendiquant alors de cette religion. « Pendant toute la période du joug ottoman, nous restions des Grecs. Nos ancêtres ont défendu Kastellorizo pour qu’elle garde son identité. Nous nous battrons aussi pour qu’elle la conserve », s’emballe soudainement M. Raftis.

    Son île a dû résister plus longtemps que le reste du pays, insiste le sexagénaire. Après le départ des Ottomans, Kastellorizo, convoitée par les nations étrangères pour sa position géographique aux portes de l’Orient, a été occupée ou annexée par les Français (1915-1921), les Italiens (1921-1944), les Britanniques (1944-1945)… L’îlot n’est devenu complètement grec qu’en 1948, comme l’ensemble des îles du Dodécanèse. Depuis, il arbore fièrement ses couleurs. Dans la baie, plusieurs étendards bleu et blanc flottent sur les balcons en encorbellement orientés vers la ville turque de Kaş (huit mille habitants). Le nombre de ces drapeaux augmente quand la tension s’accroît.

    Trois autres grands étendards nationaux ont été peints sur les falaises par des militaires. En serrant les poings, M. Raftis raconte un épisode qui a « mis les nerfs de tout le monde à vif ». À la fin septembre 2020, un drone d’origine inconnue a diffusé des chants militaires turcs avant d’asperger ces bannières d’une peinture rouge vif, évoquant la couleur du drapeau turc. « C’est une attaque impardonnable, qui sera punie », peste l’enfant de l’île, tout en scrutant les quelques visages inconnus sur la promenade. Il redoute que des espions viennent de Turquie.

    « Les #tensions durent depuis quarante ans ; tout a toujours fini par se régler. Il faut laisser la Turquie et la Grèce dialoguer entre elles », relativise pour sa part M. Tsikos Magiafis, patron avenant d’une taverne bâtie sur un rocher inhabité, avec une vue imprenable sur Kaş. « Les querelles sont affaire de diplomates. Les habitants de cette ville sont nos frères, nous avons grandi ensemble », jure ce trentenaire marié à une Turque originaire de cette cité balnéaire. Adolescent, déjà, il délaissait les troquets de Kastellorizo pour profiter du bazar de Kaş, du dentiste ou des médecins spécialisés qui manquent au village. Les Turcs, eux, ont compté parmi les premiers touristes de l’île, avant que la frontière ne ferme totalement en mars 2020, en raison du Covid-19.

    À Lesbos, les réfugiés comme « #arme_diplomatique »

    À 450 kilomètres plus au nord-ouest, au large de l’île de Lesbos, ce ne sont pas les navires de recherche d’hydrocarbures envoyés par Ankara que guettent les Grecs, mais les fragiles bateaux pneumatiques en provenance de la côte turque, à une dizaine de kilomètres seulement. Cette île montagneuse de la taille de la Guadeloupe, qui compte 85’000 habitants, constitue un autre point de friction, dont les migrants sont l’instrument.

    Depuis une décennie, Lesbos est l’une des principales portes d’entrée dans l’Union européenne pour des centaines de milliers d’exilés. Afghans, Syriens, Irakiens ou encore Congolais transitent par la Turquie, qui accueille de son côté environ quatre millions de réfugiés. En face, le rivage turc se compose de plages peu touristiques et désertes, prisées des passeurs car permettant des départs discrets. Les migrants restent toutefois bloqués à Lesbos, le temps du traitement de leur demande d’asile en Grèce et dans l’espoir de rejoindre d’autres pays de l’espace Schengen par des voies légales. Le principal camp de réfugiés, Moria, a brûlé dans des conditions obscures le 8 septembre, sans faire de victime grave parmi ses treize mille occupants.

    Pour M. Konstantinos Moutzouris, le gouverneur des îles égéennes du Nord, ces arrivées résultent d’un calcul stratégique d’Ankara. « Erdoğan utilise les réfugiés comme arme diplomatique, il les envoie lorsqu’il veut négocier. Il a une attitude très agressive, comme aucun autre dirigeant turc avant lui », accuse cette figure conservatrice locale, connue pour ses positions tranchées sur les migrants, qu’il souhaite « dissuader de venir ».

    Il en veut pour preuve l’épisode de tension de mars 2020. Mécontent des critiques de l’Union européenne lors de son offensive contre les Kurdes dans le nord de la Syrie, le président turc a annoncé l’ouverture de ses frontières aux migrants voulant rejoindre l’Europe, malgré l’accord sur le contrôle de l’immigration qu’il a passé avec Bruxelles en mars 2016. Plusieurs milliers de personnes se sont alors massées aux portes de la Grèce, à la frontière terrestre du Nord-Est, suscitant un renforcement des troupes militaires grecques dans ce secteur. Dans le même temps, à Lesbos, une dizaine de bateaux chargés de réfugiés atteignaient les côtes en quelques jours, déclenchant la fureur d’extrémistes locaux. « Nous ne communiquons plus du tout avec les autorités turques depuis », affirme M. Moutzouris.

    Athènes assume désormais une ligne dure, quitte à fermer une partie de sa frontière commune avec la Turquie aux demandeurs d’asile, en dépit des conventions internationales que la Grèce a signées. Le gouvernement a ainsi annoncé mi-octobre la construction d’un nouveau #mur de 27 kilomètres sur la frontière terrestre. Au début de l’année 2020, il avait déjà déclaré vouloir ériger un #barrage_flottant de 2,7 kilomètres au large de Lesbos. Un ouvrage très critiqué et jugé illégal par les organisations non gouvernementales (ONG) de défense des droits humains. Un projet « absurde », juge M. Georgios Pallis, pharmacien de l’île et ancien député Syriza (gauche). Plusieurs sources locales évoquent une suspension de la construction de ce barrage. Le gouvernement, lui, ne communique pas à ce sujet.

    « Les réfugiés payent la rupture du dialogue gréco-turc », déplore M. Pallis entre deux mezze arrosés de l’ouzo local, près du port bruyant de Mytilène, dans le sud de l’île. « Des retours forcés de migrants sont organisés par les gardes-côtes grecs. » En septembre, le ministre de la marine se targuait, au cours d’une conférence de presse, d’avoir « empêché » quelque dix mille migrants d’entrer en 2020. Un mois plus tard, le ministre de l’immigration tentait, lui, de rectifier le tir en niant tout retour forcé. À Lesbos, ces images de réfugiés rejetés ravivent un douloureux souvenir, analyse M. Pallis : « Celui de l’exil des réfugiés d’Asie Mineure. » Appelé aussi en Grèce la « #grande_catastrophe », cet événement a fondé l’actuelle relation gréco-turque.

    Au terme du déclin de l’Empire ottoman, lors de la première guerre mondiale, puis de la guerre gréco-turque (1919-1922), les Grecs d’Asie Mineure firent l’objet de #persécutions et de #massacres qui, selon de nombreux historiens, relèvent d’un #génocide (4). En 1923, les deux pays signèrent le #traité_de_Lausanne, qui fixait les frontières quasi définitives de la Turquie moderne et mettait fin à l’administration par la Grèce de la région d’İzmir-Smyrne telle que l’avait décidée le #traité_de_Sèvres de 1920 (5). Cet accord a aussi imposé un brutal #échange_de_populations, fondé sur des critères religieux, au nom de l’« #homogénéité_nationale ». Plus de 500 000 musulmans de Grèce prirent ainsi le chemin de l’Asie Mineure — soit 6,5 % des résidents de Lesbos, selon un recensement de 1920 (6). En parallèle, le traité a déraciné plus de 1,2 million de chrétiens orthodoxes, envoyés en Grèce. Au total, plus de 30 000 sont arrivés dans l’île. Ils ont alors été péjorativement baptisés les « #graines_de_Turcs ».

    « Ils étaient chrétiens orthodoxes, ils parlaient le grec, mais ils étaient très mal perçus des insulaires. Les femmes exilées de la grande ville d’İzmir étaient surnommées “les prostituées”. Il a fallu attendre deux générations pour que les relations s’apaisent », raconte M. Pallis, lui-même descendant de réfugiés d’Asie Mineure. « Ma grand-mère est arrivée ici à l’âge de 8 ans. Pour s’intégrer, elle a dû apprendre à détester les Turcs. Il ne fallait pas être amie avec “l’autre côté”. Elle n’a pas remis les pieds en Turquie avant ses 80 ans. »

    Enfourchant sa Vespa sous une chaleur accablante, M. Pallis s’arrête devant quelques ruines qui se dressent dans les artères de #Mytilène : d’anciennes mosquées abandonnées. L’une n’est plus qu’un bâtiment éventré où errent des chatons faméliques ; une autre a été reconvertie en boutique de fleuriste. « Les autorités n’assument pas ce passé ottoman, regrette l’ancien député. L’État devrait financer la reconstruction de ces monuments et le développement du tourisme avec la Turquie. Ce genre d’investissements rendrait la région plus sûre que l’acquisition de Rafale. »

    En #Thrace_occidentale, une population musulmane ballottée

    Dans le nord-est du pays, près de la frontière avec la Turquie et la Bulgarie, ce passé ottoman reste tangible. En Thrace occidentale, les #mosquées en activité dominent les villages qui s’élèvent au milieu des champs de coton, de tournesols et de tabac. La #minorité_musulmane de Grèce vit non loin du massif montagneux des #Rhodopes, dont les sommets culminent en Bulgarie. Forte d’entre 100 000 et 150 000 personnes selon les autorités, elle se compose de #Roms, de #Pomaks — une population d’origine slave et de langue bulgare convertie à l’#islam sous la #domination_ottomane — et, majoritairement, d’habitants aux racines turques.

    « Nous sommes des citoyens grecs, mais nous sommes aussi turcs. Nous l’étions avant même que la Turquie moderne existe. Nous parlons le turc et nous avons la même #religion », explique M. Moustafa Moustafa, biologiste et ancien député Syriza. En quelques mots, il illustre toute la complexité d’une #identité façonnée, une fois de plus, par le passé impérial régional. Et qui se trouve elle aussi au cœur d’une bataille d’influence entre Athènes et Ankara.

    Rescapée de l’#Empire_ottoman, la minorité musulmane a vu les frontières de la Grèce moderne se dessiner autour d’elle au XXe siècle. Elle fut épargnée par l’échange forcé de populations du traité de Lausanne, en contrepartie du maintien d’un patriarcat œcuménique à Istanbul ainsi que d’une diaspora grecque orthodoxe en Turquie. Principalement turcophone, elle évolue dans un État-nation dont les fondamentaux sont la langue grecque et la religion orthodoxe.

    Elle a le droit de pratiquer sa religion et d’utiliser le turc dans l’enseignement primaire. La région compte une centaine d’écoles minoritaires bilingues. « Nous vivons ensemble, chrétiens et musulmans, sans heurts. Mais les mariages mixtes ne sont pas encore tolérés », ajoute M. Moustafa, dans son laboratoire de la ville de #Komotini — aussi appelée #Gümülcine en turc. Les quelque 55 000 habitants vivent ici dans des quartiers chrétiens et musulmans érigés autour d’une rivière méandreuse, aujourd’hui enfouie sous le béton. M. Moustafa n’a presque jamais quitté la Thrace occidentale. « Notre minorité n’est pas cosmopolite, nous sommes des villageois attachés à cette région. Nous voulons juste que nos descendants vivent ici en paix », explique-t-il. Comme de nombreux musulmans de la région, il a seulement fait ses études supérieures en Turquie, avant de revenir, comme aimanté par la terre de ses ancêtres.

    À cent kilomètres de Komotini, la Turquie demeure l’« État parrain » de ces musulmans, selon le traité de Lausanne. Mais l’influence de celle que certains nomment la « mère patrie » n’est pas toujours du goût de la Grèce. Les plus nationalistes craignent que la minorité musulmane ne se rapproche trop du voisin turc et ne manifeste des velléités d’indépendance. Son statut est au cœur de la discorde. La Turquie plaide pour la reconnaissance d’une « #minorité_turque ». La Grèce refuse, elle, toute référence ethnique reliée à une appartenance religieuse.

    La bataille se joue sur deux terrains : l’#éducation et la religion. À la fin des années 1990, Athènes a voulu intégrer la minorité dans le système d’éducation publique grec, appliquant notamment une politique de #discrimination_positive et offrant un accès facilité à l’université. Les musulmans proturcs plaident, eux, pour la création de davantage d’établissements minoritaires bilingues. Sur le plan religieux, chaque partie nomme des muftis, qui ne se reconnaissent pas mutuellement. Trois représentants officiels sont désignés par la Grèce pour la région. Deux autres, officieux, le sont par les musulmans de Thrace occidentale soutenus par Ankara, qui refuse qu’un État chrétien désigne des religieux.

    « Nous subissons toujours les conséquences des #crises_diplomatiques. Nous sommes les pions de leur jeu d’échecs », regrette d’une voix lasse M. Moustafa. Le sexagénaire évoque la période qui a suivi le #pogrom dirigé principalement contre les Grecs d’Istanbul, qui avait fait une quinzaine de morts en 1955. Puis les années qui ont suivi l’occupation du nord de #Chypre par la Turquie, en 1974. « Notre minorité a alors subi une violation de ses droits par l’État grec, dénonce-t-il. Nous ne pouvions plus passer le permis de conduire. On nous empêchait d’acheter des terres. » En parallèle, de l’autre côté de la frontière, la #peur a progressivement poussé la communauté grecque de Turquie à l’exil. Aujourd’hui, les Grecs ne sont plus que quelques milliers à Istanbul.

    Ces conflits pèsent encore sur l’évolution de la Thrace occidentale. « La situation s’est améliorée dans les années 1990. Mais, maltraités par le passé en Grèce, certains membres de la minorité musulmane se sont rapprochés de la Turquie, alimentant une méfiance dans l’imaginaire national grec. Beaucoup de chrétiens les considèrent comme des agents du pays voisin », constate M. Georgios Mavrommatis, spécialiste des minorités et professeur associé à l’université Démocrite de Thrace, à Komotini.
    « Ankara compte des milliers d’#espions dans la région »

    Une atmosphère de #suspicion plane sur cette ville, sous l’emprise de deux discours nationalistes concurrents. « Les gens de l’extrême droite grecque nous perçoivent comme des janissaires [soldats de l’Empire ottoman]. Erdoğan, lui, nous qualifie de soydas [« parents », en turc] », détaille d’une voix forte Mme Pervin Hayrullah, attablée dans un café animé. Directrice de la Fondation pour la culture et l’éducation en Thrace occidentale, elle se souvient aussi du passage du président turc dans la région, fin 2017. M. Erdoğan avait dénoncé les « discriminations » pratiquées par l’État grec à l’égard de cette communauté d’origine turque.

    Une chrétienne qui souhaite rester anonyme murmure, elle, que « les autorités grecques sont dépassées. La Turquie, qui est bien plus présente sur le terrain, a davantage de pouvoir. Ankara compte des milliers d’espions dans la région et donne des millions d’euros de budget chaque année au consulat turc de Komotini ». Pour Mme Hayrullah, qui est proche de cette institution, « le consulat ne fait que remplir une mission diplomatique, au même titre que le consulat grec d’Edirne [ville turque à quelque deux cents kilomètres, à la frontière] ». L’allure du consulat turc tranche avec les façades abîmées de Komotini. Surveillé par des caméras et par des gardes en noir, l’édifice est cerné de hautes barrières vertes.

    « La Grèce nous traite bien. Elle s’intéresse au développement de notre communauté et nous laisse exercer notre religion », vante de son côté M. Selim Isa, dans son bureau calme. Le président du comité de gestion des biens musulmans — désigné par l’État grec — est fier de montrer les beaux lustres et les salles lumineuses et rénovées d’une des vingt mosquées de Komotini. « Mais plus les relations avec la Turquie se détériorent et plus le consulat étend son influence, plus il revendique la reconnaissance d’une minorité turque », ajoute M. Isa, regard alerte, alors que l’appel du muezzin résonne dans la ville.

    À l’issue du sommet européen des 10 et 11 décembre, l’Union européenne a annoncé un premier volet de #sanctions contre la Turquie en raison de ses opérations d’exploration. Des mesures individuelles devraient cibler des responsables liés à ces activités. Athènes plaidait pour des mesures plus fortes, comme un embargo sur les armes, pour l’heure écarté. « C’était une proposition-clé. Nous craignons que la Turquie s’arme davantage. Sur le plan naval, elle est par exemple en train de se doter de six #sous-marins de type #214T fournis par l’#Allemagne, explique le diplomate grec Georgios Kaklikis, consul à Istanbul de 1986 à 1989. M. Erdoğan se réjouit de ces sanctions, qui sont en réalité minimes. » Le président turc a réagi par des #rodomontades, se félicitant que des pays « dotés de bon sens » aient adopté une « approche positive ». Bruxelles assure que d’autres mesures pourraient tomber en mars 2021 si Ankara ne cesse pas ces actions « illégales et agressives ».

    https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2021/01/PERRIGUEUR/62666
    #Grèce #Turquie #frontière #asile #migrations #réfugiés
    #Oruc_Reis #murs #Evros #barrières_frontalières #histoire

    ping @reka

    –—

    #terminologie #mots #vocabulaire :
    – "Le traité (de Lausanne) a déraciné plus de 1,2 million de chrétiens orthodoxes, envoyés en Grèce. Au total, plus de 30 000 sont arrivés dans l’île. Ils ont alors été péjorativement baptisés les « #graines_de_Turcs »."
    – "Les femmes exilées de la grande ville d’İzmir étaient surnommées “les prostituées”."

    –-> ajoutés à la métaliste sur la terminologie de la migration :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/414225

    ping @sinehebdo