organization:socialist party

  • Former #Venezuela Supreme Court judge flees to U.S., denounces Maduro | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-idUSKCN1P00OU


    FILE PHOTO : Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro pauses as he speaks during a news conference at Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela December 12, 2018.
    REUTERS/Marco Bello

    Former Venezuelan Supreme Court Justice Christian Zerpa has fled to the United States to protest President Nicolas Maduro’s second term that will begin with his inauguration this week, the onetime Maduro backer told a Miami broadcaster on Sunday.

    The latest defection from the crisis-stricken OPEC nation’s government comes amid growing international pressure on Maduro over his new term, which resulted from a broadly boycotted 2018 vote dismissed by countries around the world as a sham.

    I’ve decided to leave Venezuela to disavow the government of Nicolas Maduro,” Zerpa said in an interview with EVTV, which is broadcast over cable and the internet.

    I believe (Maduro) does not deserve a second chance because the election he supposedly won was not free and competitive.

    The Supreme Court confirmed in a statement that he had fled, referring to him as a former magistrate and adding it opened an investigation of him in November over accusations of sexual harassment by women in his office. The court’s leadership recommended that he be dismissed over the allegations, it said, without providing details.

    Zerpa was for years a crucial ally of Maduro on the Supreme Court, which has backed the ruling Socialist Party in every major legal dispute since Maduro’s 2013 election.

    He wrote a 2016 ruling that provided the legal justification for Maduro’s government to strip congress of most of its powers after the Socialist Party lost control of the body to the opposition in a landslide election.

    Zerpa in the interview described the Supreme Court as “an appendage of the executive branch,” and said that justices were at times summoned to the presidential palace to receive instructions on how to rule on certain sensitive cases.

    The Information Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Zerpa said he did not criticize Maduro’s May 2018 election to make sure he could pave the way for a safe exit from the country in the company of his family.

  • Fires in the Void : The Need for Migrant Solidarity

    For most, Barcelona’s immigrant detention center is a difficult place to find. Tucked away in the Zona Franca logistics and industrial area, just beyond the Montjuïc Cemetery, it is shrouded in an alien stillness. It may be the quietest place in the city on a Saturday afternoon, but it is not a contemplative quiet. It is a no-one-can-hear-you-scream quiet.

    The area is often described as a perfect example of what anthropologist Marc Augé calls a non-place: neither relational nor historical, nor concerned with identity. Yet this opaque institution is situated in the economic motor of the city, next to the port, the airport, the public transportation company, the wholesale market that provides most of the city’s produce and the printing plant for Spain’s most widely read newspaper. The detention center is a void in the heart of a sovereign body.

    Alik Manukyan died in this void. On the morning of December 3, 2013, officers found the 32-year-old Armenian dead in his isolation cell, hanged using his own shoelaces. Police claimed that Manukyan was a “violent” and “conflictive” person who caused trouble with his cellmates. This account of his alleged suicide was contradicted, however, by three detainees. They claimed Alik had had a confrontation with some officers, who then entered the cell, assaulted him and forced him into isolation. They heard Alik scream and wail all through the night. Two of these witnesses were deported before the case made it to court. An “undetectable technical error” prevented the judge from viewing any surveillance footage.

    The void extends beyond the detention center. In 2013, nearly a decade after moving to Spain, a young Senegalese man named #Alpha_Pam died of tuberculosis. When he went to a hospital for treatment, Pam was denied medical attention because his papers were not in order. His case was a clear example of the apartheid logic underlying a 2012 decree by Mariano Rajoy’s right-wing government, which excluded undocumented people from Spain’s once-universal public health care system. As a result, the country’s hospitals went from being places of universal care to spaces of systematic neglect. The science of healing, warped by nationalist politics.

    Not that science had not played a role in perpetuating the void before. In 2007, during the Socialist government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, #Osamuyi_Aikpitanyi died during a deportation flight after being gagged and restrained by police escorts. The medical experts who investigated Aikpitanyi’s death concluded that the Nigerian man had died due to a series of factors they called “a vicious spiral”. There was an increase in catecholamine, a neurotransmitter related to stress, fear, panic and flight instincts. This was compounded by a lack of oxygen due to the flight altitude and, possibly, the gag. Ultimately, these experts could not determine what percentage of the death had been directly caused by the gag, and the police were fined 600 euros for the non-criminal offense of “light negligence”.

    The Romans had a term for lives like these, lives that vanish in the void. That term was #homo_sacer, the “sacred man”, who one could kill without being found guilty of murder. An obscure figure from archaic law revived by the philosopher #Giorgio_Agamben, it was used to incorporate human life, stripped of personhood, into the juridical order. Around this figure, a state of exception was produced, in which power could be exercised in its crudest form, opaque and unaccountable. For Agamben, this is the unspoken ground upon which modern sovereignty stands. Perhaps the best example of it is the mass grave that the Mediterranean has become.

    Organized Hypocrisy

    Its name suggests that the Mediterranean was once the world’s center. Today it is its deadliest divide. According to the International Organization for Migration, over 9,000 people died trying to cross the sea between January 1, 2014 and July 5, 2018. A conservative estimate, perhaps. The UN Refugee Agency estimates that the number of people found dead or missing during this period is closer to 17,000.

    Concern for the situation peaks when spectacular images make the horror unavoidable. A crisis mentality takes over, and politicians make sweeping gestures with a solemn sense of urgency. One such gesture was made after nearly 400 people died en route to Lampedusa in October 2013. The Italian government responded by launching Operation #Mare_Nostrum, a search-and-rescue program led by the country’s navy and coast guard. It cost €11 million per month, deploying 34 warships and about 900 sailors per working day. Over 150,000 people were rescued by the operation in one year.

    Despite its cost, Mare Nostrum was initially supported by much of the Italian public. It was less popular, however, with other European member states, who accused the mission of encouraging “illegal” migration by making it less deadly. Within a year, Europe’s refusal to share the responsibility had produced a substantial degree of discontent in Italy. In October 2014, Mare Nostrum was scrapped and replaced by #Triton, an operation led by the European border agency #Frontex.

    With a third of Mare Nostrum’s budget, Triton was oriented not towards protecting lives but towards surveillance and border control. As a result, the deadliest incidents in the region’s history occurred less than half a year into the operation. Between April 13 and April 19, 2015, over one thousand people drowned in the waters abandoned by European search and rescue efforts. Once again, the images produced a public outcry. Once again, European leaders shed crocodile tears for the dead.

    Instead of strengthening search and rescue efforts, the EU increased Frontex’s budget and complemented Triton with #Operation_Sophia, a military effort to disrupt the networks of so-called “smugglers”. #Eugenio_Cusumano, an assistant professor of international relations at the University of Leiden, has written extensively on the consequences of this approach, which he describes as “organized hypocrisy”. In an article for the Cambridge Review of International Affairs (https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0010836718780175), Cusumano shows how the shortage of search and rescue assets caused by the termination of Mare Nostrum led non-governmental organizations to become the main source of these activities off the Libyan shore. Between 2014 and 2017, NGOs aided over 100,000 people.

    Their efforts have been admirable. Yet the precariousness of their resources and their dependence on private donors mean that NGOs have neither the power nor the capacity to provide aid on the scale required to prevent thousands of deaths at the border. To make matters worse, for the last several months governments have been targeting NGOs and individual activists as smugglers or human traffickers, criminalizing their solidarity. It is hardly surprising, then, that the border has become even deadlier in recent years. According to the UN Refugee Agency, although the number of attempted crossings has fallen over 80 percent from its peak in 2015, the percentage of people who have died or vanished has quadrupled.

    It is not my intention, with the litany of deaths described here, to simply name some of the people killed by Europe’s border regime. What I hope to have done instead is show the scale of the void at its heart and give a sense of its ruthlessness and verticality. There is a tendency to refer to this void as a gap, as a space beyond the reach of European institutions, the European gaze or European epistemologies. If this were true, the void could be filled by simply extending Europe’s reach, by producing new concepts, mapping new terrains, building new institutions.

    But, in fact, Europe has been treating the void as a site of production all along. As political theorist #Sandro_Mezzadra writes, the border is the method through which the sovereign machine of governmentality was built. Its construction must be sabotaged, subverted and disrupted at every level.

    A Crisis of Solidarity

    When the ultranationalist Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini refused to allow the MV #Aquarius to dock in June 2018, he was applauded by an alarmingly large number of Italians. Many blamed his racism and that of the Italians for putting over 600 lives at risk, including those of 123 unaccompanied minors, eleven young children and seven pregnant women.

    Certainly, the willingness to make a political point by sacrificing hundreds of migrant lives confirms that racism. But another part of what made Salvini’s gesture so horrifying was that, presumably, many of those who had once celebrated increasing search and rescue efforts now supported the opposite. Meanwhile, many of the same European politicians who had refused to share Italy’s responsibilities five years earlier were now expressing moral outrage over Salvini’s lack of solidarity.

    Once again, the crisis mode of European border politics was activated. Once again, European politicians and media talked about a “migrant crisis”, about “flows” of people causing unprecedented “pressure” on the southern border. But attempted crossings were at their lowest level in years, a fact that led many migration scholars to claim this was not a “migrant crisis”, but a crisis of solidarity. In this sense, Italy’s shift reflects the nature of the problem. By leaving it up to individual member states, the EU has made responding to the deaths at the border a matter of national conviction. When international solidarity is absent, national self-interest takes over.

    Fortunately, Spain’s freshly sworn-in Socialist Party government granted the Aquarius permission to dock in the Port of #Valencia. This happened only after Mayor Ada Colau of Barcelona, a self-declared “City of Refuge”, pressured Spanish President Pedro Sánchez by publicly offering to receive the ship at the Port of Barcelona. Party politics being as they are, Sánchez authorized a port where his party’s relationship with the governing left-wing platform was less conflictive than in Barcelona.

    The media celebrated Sánchez’s authorization as an example of moral virtue. Yet it would not have happened if solidarity with refugees had not been considered politically profitable by institutional actors. In Spain’s highly fractured political arena, younger left-wing parties and the Catalan independence movement are constantly pressuring a weakened Socialist Party to prove their progressive credentials. Meanwhile, tireless mobilization by social movements has made welcoming refugees a matter of common sense and basic human decency.

    The best known example of this mobilization was the massive protest that took place in February 2017, when 150,000 people took to the streets of Barcelona to demand that Mariano Rajoy’s government take in more refugees and migrants. It is likely because of actions like these that, according to the June 2018 Eurobarometer, over 80 percent of people in Spain believe the country should help those fleeing disaster.

    Yet even where the situation might be more favorable to bottom-up pressure, those in power will not only limit the degree to which demands are met, but actively distort those demands. The February 2017 protest is a good example. Though it also called for the abolition of detention centers, racial profiling and Spain’s racist immigration law, the march is best remembered for the single demand of welcoming refugees.

    The adoption of this demand by the Socialist Party was predictably cynical. After authorizing the Aquarius, President Sánchez used his momentarily boosted credibility to present, alongside Emmanuel Macron, a “progressive” European alternative to Salvini’s closed border. It involved creating detention centers all over the continent, with the excuse of determining people’s documentation status. Gears turn in the sovereign machine of governmentality. The void expands.

    Today the border is a sprawling, parasitic entity linking governments, private companies and supranational institutions. It is not enough for NGOs to rescue refugees, when their efforts can be turned into spot-mopping for the state. It is not enough for social movements to pressure national governments to change their policies, when individual demands can be distorted to mean anything. It is not enough for cities to declare themselves places of refuge, when they can be compelled to enforce racist laws. It is not enough for political parties to take power, when they can be conditioned by private interests, the media and public opinion polls.

    To overcome these limitations, we must understand borders as highly vertical transnational constructions. Dismantling those constructions will require organization, confrontation, direct action, sabotage and, above all, that borderless praxis of mutual aid and solidarity known as internationalism. If we truly hope to abolish the border, we must start fires in the void.

    https://roarmag.org/magazine/migrant-solidarity-fires-in-the-void
    #solidarité #frontières #migrations #réfugiés #asile #détention_administrative #rétention #Barcelone #non-lieu #Espagne #mourir_en_détention_administrative #mort #décès #mourir_en_rétention #Alik_Manukyan #renvois #expulsions #vie_nue #Méditerranée #hypocrisie #hypocrisie_organisée #ONG #sauvetage #sabotage #nationalisme #crise #villes-refuge #Valence #internationalisme #ouverture_des_frontières #action_directe

    signalé par @isskein

  • Venezuela : 72,6% d’abstention aux élections municipales (41,6% en 2018)
    96,1% des mandats nominatifs et 91,0% des mandats par liste pour le PSUV (au pouvoir)

    CNE anunció que participación fue de 27,4% en elecciones municipales
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/politica/cne-anuncio-que-participacion-fue-274-elecciones-municipales_262777

    Tibisay Lucena, presidente del Consejo Nacional Electoral (CNE), anunció este domingo en horas de la noche que la participación de las elecciones de Concejos Municipales fue 27,4%.

    La rectora del CNE acotó que los resultados emitidos corresponden a 92,30% de la transmisión de votos.

    De acuerdo con cifras del organismo, para este proceso de votación el Registro Electoral fue de 20.704.612 electores, por lo que aproximadamente 5.673.063 millones de ciudadanos ejercieron su derecho al sufragio durante los comicios de este 9 de diciembre.

    El porcentaje de participación de este año 2018 disminuyó en relación con las elecciones municipales del año 2013, cuando se situó en 58,36% del Registro Electoral.

    Lucena informó que los cargos quedaron adjudicados de la siguiente manera: De 467 cargos nominales, 449 son adjudicables para el Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (PSUV). De 156 cargos lista adjudicables, 142 son para el PSUV.

    También indicó que de 69 circunscripciones indigenas 45 son adjudcables.

    Al terminar de leer los resultdos, Lucena autorizó a las juntas municipales para adjudicar a los ganadores del proceso,

    • Maduro’s grip on Venezuela tightens, warns of Trump threat - The Washington Post
      https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/maduros-grip-on-venezuela-tightens-warns-of-trump-threat/2018/12/09/4a148f70-fc29-11e8-a17e-162b712e8fc2_story.html

      Socialist President Nicolas Maduro further consolidated power in Venezuelan local elections Sunday, while accusing President Donald Trump of plotting to overthrow him.

      The majority of nearly 2,500 council seats spread across the crisis-stricken country went to members of Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela, election officials loyal to Maduro said.

      After casting his ballot, Maduro spoke on state TV scoffing at Trump and other foreign leaders who have labeled him a dictator.

      An attempt is under way today coming straight from the White House to destroy our way of life in Venezuela and to overthrow our constitutional democracy,” Maduro said.
      […]
      Little more than 27 percent of some 20 million eligible voters cast ballots in Sunday’s council races, said Tibisay Lucena, president of the National Electoral Council, praising the election as strengthening Venezuela’s democracy.

  • 30 years on since first migrant death, still no end to tragedies at sea

    When the body of a Moroccan man washed up on a beach in #Tarifa in 1988, no one knew that it would be the first of more than 6,700 fatalities.

    The body lay face up in the sand with its arms in a cross. It was swollen but clothed. The small boat had run aground and swept up on the shores of a beach in Tarifa, a town in Spain’s southern province of Cádiz. Four survivors recounted in French the story of the shipwreck that “froze the heart.”

    It was November 1, 1988, a date that continues to haunt journalist Ildefonso Sena. He took 10 photos of the scene with his Nikon compact camera but only one was needed for the incident to send shock waves through Europe. Without intending to, he had immortalized the first migrant death in the Strait of Gibraltar.

    “I wasn’t aware of the number of deaths that would follow,” Sena told the local newspaper Diario de Cádiz. Two bodies were found the following day, another two on November 3 and one more in Ceuta, the Spanish exclave city in North Africa. A total of 11 people died and seven disappeared. It was the first time a migrant boat had shipwrecked off Spain’s southern border. Thirty years on, there is no sign of an end to the deaths. “There has not been one single year where there have not been deadly tragedies,” says Gabriel Delgado, who has been director of the Migration Office of the Cádiz and Ceuta Diocese since 1993.

    Since November 1, 1988, 6,714 migrants have died or gone missing in the Strait of Gibraltar, according to a report by the migrant support group Andalucía Acoge. As the sun sets one afternoon in late October, Antonio Ruiz and his son Francisco Ruiz visit the graves at Tarifa cemetery. Antonio was mayor for the Socialist Party (PSOE) when Tarifa was shocked by the first migrant death. Now his son is the mayor and the people of the town, home to 118,116 residents, jump into action to lend a hand and provide resources to hundreds of migrants when the system is unable to cope.

    In Tarifa, they now know that when the wind is calm or gently blowing from the west, boats will arrive to the shore. And, if there is a sudden easterly gust, that there will be more deaths at sea. “We have 30 years of experience. We have been living with this situation for many years and are used to it. You have to normalize providing shelter, but you must never normalize death,” says Francisco Ruiz.

    This is the unwritten wisdom of a town committed to solidarity at all costs – a hundred or so locals spent their summer helping migrants sheltered in the municipal pavilion – and one that is becoming increasingly more familiar with the arrival of bodies of North African and Sub-Saharan migrants to their shores.

    It was not like this in the 1980s, when the town had no idea about the scope of the problem. “We could not imagine that this was going to lead to what it has led to,” explains Antonio Ruiz. Sena agrees: “The migration phenomena was gradually revealed. Between 1982 and 1983, boats began to arrive and the Civil Guard thought at first they were bringing in drugs. Later it happened more frequently but nobody gave it any importance until November 1, 1988.” That was the day the journalist was told by a Civil Guard officer: “Go to Los Lances beach, a body has appeared.”

    Sena remembers the scene when he arrived: “There was an infernal wind. The dead young man was two meters from the bow of the boat. He was around 25 years old and covered with grime from the sea.”

    He squatted down to take the photos. An officer then approached him and asked if he could interpret from French for the four Moroccan survivors. “They told me that 23 of them had set sail at 12 from a beach in Tangier. Halfway into the trip, they were surprised by a very strong easterly wind. They got close to the coast but the ship capsized,” recalls the 67-year-old, who has now retired.

    The 11 migrants who were found dead in the following days had no name, affiliation or known family – a pattern that would become all too familiar. Their bodies were moved from the morgue to a common grave in Tarifa cemetery, which is marked by a simple tombstone: “In memory of the migrants who died in the Strait of Gibraltar.” Delgado placed the tombstone when he took office. Since then, he and his team have discovered that, unlike other dioceses, the brunt of their work is in assisting migrants, not emigrants.

    Delgado has 25 years of bittersweet experiences, of migrants who were able to move forward and others who became just another anonymous legal process of a tomb in the cemeteries of Tarifa, Barbate and Conil de la Frontera in Cádiz, and in Ceuta. In these years, Delgado has seen blood trails on beaches and dead children, like Samuel, who was found at the beginning of 2017 in Barbate. “Fatal tragedies hit me very hard. I cannot get used to it,” explains the priest, who has officiated dozens of migrant burials.

    Every second Wednesday of the month, Delgado organizes Circles of Silence meetings in cities in Ceuta and Cádiz. “We don’t want anyone to get used to tragedy. Now I fear that, what’s more, we have gone from the globalization of indifference to the globalization of rejection,” he says in a serious tone.

    Every date marks the death of a migrant at sea. But back on November 1, 1988, it was difficult to imagine the Strait of Gibraltar would become the mass grave it is today. That windy morning was just a day when Sena pressed the shutter on his camera, “without calibrating the importance the photo would have.”


    https://elpais.com/elpais/2018/11/01/inenglish/1541074865_689521.html?id_externo_rsoc=TW_CC
    #Etroit_de_Gibraltar #mourir_en_mer #30_ans triste (#anniversaire) #histoire #photographie #migrations #frontières #fermeture_des_frontières #Espagne #Méditerranée #Forteresse_Europe #1988

    ping @reka

  • Les mensonges sur France Télécom éclairent ceux sur la #SNCF
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/economie/160318/les-mensonges-sur-france-telecom-eclairent-ceux-sur-la-sncf

    Pour justifier les ordonnances sur la SNCF, le gouvernement assure que son seul objectif est d’améliorer le fonctionnement de l’entreprise dans le cadre de l’ouverture à la concurrence. Les mêmes arguments, avancés pour France Télécom voilà 20 ans, ont débouché… sur une cascade de mensonges !

    #Economie #France_Telecom #Lionel_Jospin #Michel_Delebarre #Orange #Service_public

  • EU blacklists top Venezuelan officials over torture, rights abuses | AFP.com
    https://www.afp.com/en/news/824/eu-blacklists-top-venezuelan-officials-over-torture-rights-abuses-doc-xg7931

    The European Union on Monday blacklisted seven senior Venezuelan officials over human rights violations, including the regime’s intelligence chief, who the bloc accused of torture.

    Interior Minister Nestor Reverol and the head of the Venezuelan Supreme Court are among those hit by asset freezes and travel bans in the EU’s first targeted sanctions against members of President Nicolas Maduro’s administration.

    The EU has voiced serious concerns about rights abuses in #Venezuela, where protests against Maduro last year turned violent and economic collapse has led to dire shortages of food and medicine.

    In view of the continuing deterioration of the situation in Venezuela, the Council (of EU foreign ministers) decided to put seven individuals holding official positions under restrictive measures, with immediate effect,” the EU said in a statement.

    These individuals are involved in the non-respect of democratic principles or the rule of law as well as in the violation of human rights.

    The official notification of the #sanctions said intelligence chief Gustavo Gonzalez Lopez was responsible for “serious human rights violations including arbitrary detention, inhuman and degrading treatment, and torture”.

    Supreme Court president Maikel Moreno and the number two of Maduro’s ruling socialist party Diosdado Cabello have also been added to the EU’s sanctions list.

    The EU warned the situation in was deteriorating in Venezuela, from where hundreds of thousands of people have fled to seek refuge from the economic crisis crippling their homeland, which has seen severe shortages of food and medicine.

  • World Bank Unfairly Influenced Its Own Competitiveness Rankings - WSJ
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/world-bank-unfairly-influenced-its-own-competitiveness-rankings-1515797620

    The World Bank repeatedly changed the methodology of one of its flagship economic reports over several years in ways it now says were unfair and misleading.

    The World Bank’s chief economist, Paul Romer, told The Wall Street Journal on Friday he would correct and recalculate national rankings of business competitiveness in the report called “#Doing_Business” going back at least four years.

    The revisions could be particularly relevant to Chile, whose standings have been volatile in recent years—and potentially tainted by political motivations of World Bank staff, Mr. Romer said.

    The report is one of the most visible World Bank initiatives, ranking countries around the world by the competitiveness of their business environment. Countries compete against each other to improve their standings, and the report draws extensive international media coverage.
    […]
    I want to make a personal apology to Chile, and to any other country where we conveyed the wrong impression,” Mr. Romer said. The problems with the report, he said, were “my fault because we did not make things clear enough.” Mr. Romer said the World Bank is beginning the process of correcting the past reports and republishing what the rankings would have been without the methodology changes. He said he couldn’t defend “the integrity” of the process that led to the methodology changes.

    Chile’s overall ranking has fluctuated between 25th and 57th since 2006. During that period, the presidency of Chile has alternated between Ms. Bachelet, of Chile’s socialist party, and Sebastián Piñera, a conservative. Under Ms. Bachelet, Chile’s ranking consistently deteriorated, while it consistently climbed under Mr. Piñera.

    Recalculating the numbers could show significant changes to other countries as well.

    • Info arrivée via Sergio Coronado, député des Français d’Amérique latine dans la législature précédente qui possède également la nationalité chilienne…

      Je n’ai plus accès au WSJ (paywall) mais toujours au journal chilien qui reprenait l’info (et qui m’y avait conduit). Mais on a déjà trouvé le lampiste à qui imputer ces magouilles. Parce que les changements de méthodologie, hein, ça reste quand même super-sérieux.

      El Banco Mundial perjudicó los números de Chile durante el Gobierno de Bachelet - Cooperativa.cl
      http://www.cooperativa.cl/noticias/economia/competitividad/imagen-pais/el-banco-mundial-perjudico-los-numeros-de-chile-en-los-gobiernos-de-bachelet/2018-01-13/110242.html

      El Wall Street Journal apuntó a la figura del economista boliviano Augusto López-Claros.

      Augusto López-Claros, de nacionalidad boliviana (La Paz, 1955), es director de Indicadores Globales y Análisis del Banco Mundial, el departamento responsable del informe «Doing Business» y otros estudios internacionales de evaluación comparativa.

      De acuerdo a la biografía de su página web, anteriormente fue economista jefe y director del Programa de Competitividad Global en el Foro Económico Mundial (FMI) en Ginebra (desde el año 2003), donde también fue editor del Global Competitiveness Report (Reporte de Competitivad Global), la publicación principal del fórum, así como otros estudios económicos regionales.

      Como precisa la plataforma Thinking Heads, antes de unirse al Foro, López-Claro trabajó durante varios años en el sector financiero, ejerciendo durante cinco años como director ejecutivo y economista internacional superior en Londres en la firma Lehman Brothers International, cuya quiebra en 2008 incendió los mercados y aceleró la crisis mundial.

      De acuerdo a su página web, López-Claros se desempeñó como profesor de Economía en la Universidad de Chile y recibió un diploma en Estadística Matemática de la Universidad de Cambridge, Reino Unido, y un Doctorado en Economía de la Universidad de Duke, Estados Unidos

  • Dodon : Transnistria comprehends it has no future without Moldova — Politics, Europe — EADaily
    https://eadaily.com/en/news/2017/12/13/dodon-transnistria-comprehends-it-has-no-future-without-moldova

    Moldovan President Igor Dodon has announced that he never changed his mind about the status of Transnistria. The president said that even while being the leader of the Socialist Party, he always spoke for federalization of the republic.

    We have never changed this position. We did say it was not important how they would call it, federation or a special status. It is important for us what is inside this political part of the solution. And we came forward with a proposal on the solution. If our colleagues, partners from the left bank agree this will be good,” Dodon said.
    According to Moldova’s leader, “Transnistrian residents do comprehend that they have no other future than a common one with Moldova.” According to the president, Tiraspol are coming to the same idea.

    Vers un rapprochement entre la Transnistrie et la Moldavie ?

    La reprise des négociations était annoncée par Le Courrier des Balkans mais derrière #paywall (bis @cdb_77 ?)

    La Moldavie va reprendre les négociations avec les sécessionnistes de Transnistrie - Le Courrier des Balkans
    https://www.courrierdesbalkans.fr/La-Moldavie-va-reprendre-les-negociations-avec-les-secessionniste

    C’est un conflit gelé qui dure depuis l’effondrement de l’URSS. La petite république de Transnistrie refuse toujours de reconnaître l’autorité de Chișinău, clamant qu’elle est un État indépendant. Les deux parties vont à nouveau négocier fin novembre à Vienne sous un format « 5+2 ».

    5+2 ie Transnistrie, Russie, Moldavie, Ukraine, OSCE + Union européenne, États-Unis

  • How the Tariq Ramadan Scandal Derailed the #Balancetonporc Movement in France | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/how-the-tariq-ramadan-scandal-derailed-the-balancetonporc-movement-in-fra

    C’est toujours intéressant de voir comment des étrangers regardent les événements qui agitent la France. Un article du New Yorker sur l’affaire Ramadan qui permet un regard distancié, et qui pour une fois se place du côté des féministes, contre l’instrumentalisation du débat pour d’autres sujets.

    Soon after the #MeToo movement formed in the United States, in response to the Harvey Weinstein scandal, #balancetonporc (“expose your pig”) erupted in France. The effect has been an unprecedented blow to what Sabrina Kassa has described, in Mediapart, as the “patriarchal belly” of a country where harassment and other sexual crimes have often been concealed, or explained away, by a Gallic rhetoric of flirtation and libertinism. In 2008, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who was the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, was subjected to an internal I.M.F. inquiry over allegedly coercing a subordinate to have sex with him. Although he apologized for his “error of judgment,” he was celebrated in the French press as “the Great Seducer.” Had he not been arrested in New York, in 2011, on charges (which were eventually dropped) of assaulting Nafissatou Diallo, a maid, in the presidential suite of the Sofitel Hotel, Strauss-Kahn, a powerful figure in the Socialist Party, might have been elected President of France in 2012.

    The #balancetonporc movement has exposed prominent men in business, entertainment, and media, but the most high-profile scandal has been that surrounding Tariq Ramadan, an Islamic scholar and activist whom several women have accused of rape and sexual abuse. (Ramadan has denied all allegations.) Ramadan has been a controversial figure in France for more than two decades—a kind of projection screen, or Rorschach test, for national anxieties about the “Muslim question.” Like Strauss-Kahn, he has often been depicted as a seducer, but the description has not been meant as a compliment: he has long been accused of casting a dangerous spell on younger members of France’s Muslim population, thereby undermining their acceptance of French norms, particularly those pertaining to secularism, gender, and sexuality.

  • How the Tariq Ramadan Scandal Derailed the #Balancetonporc Movement in France
    https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/how-the-tariq-ramadan-scandal-derailed-the-balancetonporc-movement-in-fra

    oon after the #MeToo movement formed in the United States, in response to the Harvey Weinstein scandal, #balancetonporc (“expose your pig”) erupted in France. The effect has been an unprecedented blow to what Sabrina Kassa has described, in Mediapart, as the “patriarchal belly” of a country where harassment and other sexual crimes have often been concealed, or explained away, by a Gallic rhetoric of flirtation and libertinism. In 2008, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who was the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, was subjected to an internal I.M.F. inquiry over allegedly coercing a subordinate to have sex with him. Although he apologized for his “error of judgment,” he was celebrated in the French press as “the Great Seducer.” Had he not been arrested in New York, in 2011, on charges (which were eventually dropped) of assaulting Nafissatou Diallo, a maid, in the presidential suite of the Sofitel Hotel, Strauss-Kahn, a powerful figure in the Socialist Party, might have been elected President of France in 2012.
    The #balancetonporc movement has exposed prominent men in business, entertainment, and media, but the most high-profile scandal has been that surrounding Tariq Ramadan, an Islamic scholar and activist whom several women have accused of rape and sexual abuse. (Ramadan has denied all allegations.) Ramadan has been a controversial figure in France for more than two decades—a kind of projection screen, or Rorschach test, for national anxieties about the “Muslim question.” Like Strauss-Kahn, he has often been depicted as a seducer, but the description has not been meant as a compliment: he has long been accused of casting a dangerous spell on younger members of France’s Muslim population, thereby undermining their acceptance of French norms, particularly those pertaining to secularism, gender, and sexuality.
    Born in 1962, in Switzerland, Ramadan is the son of Said Ramadan, an exiled Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood leader who was the son-in-law of Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood. Tariq Ramadan, who is not a member of the Brotherhood, is nonetheless a religious conservative—a “Salafi reformist,” in his words—who has long preached the virtues of female “modesty” in dress and sexual comportment. (His brother Hani Ramadan, the head of the Islamic Center in Geneva, is notorious for his support for stoning female adulterers, his hatred of homosexuals, and his belief that the attacks of 9/11 were a Western conspiracy.)

    • Franchement vu l’extrait ci dessus, je me disais que ça allait encore être un article de merde. Mais en fait c’est beaucoup plus critique que le début de l’article peut le laisser paraître.
      Quelques extraits dont une petite mise au point sur Valls :

      Valls had never before expressed much concern for the victims of sex crimes by powerful men. In fact, he had deplored the “unbearable cruelty” of Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in New York. (A few members of the Socialist Party, including Strauss-Kahn himself, claimed that he was a victim of a plot engineered by President Sarkozy, who saw Strauss-Kahn as a threat to his reëlection. Sarkozy denied the allegations.)

      ou :

      In recent years, Muslims in France have discovered that it is not enough to respect France’s laws: to truly belong to France, they must denounce bad Muslims, praise Charlie, and make other shows of loyalty, just as their ancestors in colonial North and West Africa learned to honor “our ancestors, the Gauls.” The more French they have become, the more their French-ness, their ability to “assimilate,” seems to be in question, which has deepened their sense of estrangement. Muslim organizations and institutions have largely refrained from commenting on the Ramadan scandal—a silence that, for some, has been an expression of solidarity with a fellow-Muslim who has long been vilified in France. Others who have been asked to comment publicly on the Ramadan affair have chosen to remain quiet as a result of their discomfort, or perhaps irritation, at being summoned to pass yet another litmus test to prove their worth as citizens, or at the “Islamization” of the affair, in which Ramadan is either viewed as a victim of an anti-Muslim conspiracy or as a symbol of Muslim sexual violence.

      et la meilleure pour la fin que je ne peux m’empêcher de traduire grossièrement :

      While most of the commentators on the Ramadan Affair have been—as tends to be the case with conversations about Islam, laïcité, and terrorism in France—white and male, some of the most important insights on the scandal have come from those Muslim feminists…

      « Alors que la plupart des commentateurs sur l’affaire Ramadan sont — comme cela a tendance à être le cas des conversations au sujet de l’islam, la laïcité et le terrorisme en France — des hommes blancs, les analyses les plus pertinentes sur le scandale ont été émises par les féministes musulmanes… »
      Difficile de rendre l’effet de surenchérissement « white and male » et l’ironie : blancs et masculins.

    • Oui mais on s’en fout que lui soit blanc, il commente surtout en tant qu’étranger avec un regard extérieur, c’est son statut. À LMSI parfois il y a de bons articles, je vois pas ce qu’il y a de choquant et Houria Bouteldja elle est citée comme à chaque fois qu’il y a un article sur un sujet qui traite d’1 affaire médiatique où il y a un arabe dedans. C’est vrai que sur ce coup là il aurait pu s’en passer mais on va pas trop lui en demander.
      Quant aux féministes musulmanes ce ne sont pas de ces personnes dont il parle et d’ailleurs Houria Bouteldja ne se revendique absolument pas comme féministe ou alors faut me citer une phrase précise. Et je ne pense pas que qui que ce soit la considère comme féministe ou faut m’expliquer pourquoi.
      Le circuit fermé des universitaires est quoi qu’il en soit une réalité indéniable !

    • @ninachani oui, sauf que se présenter comme « un regards extérieur » alors qui est plus impliqué* dans le débats que la plupart des français voir des militants c’est faire preuve malhonnêteté.

      D’autant que l’article prend clairement parti contre Valls en ridiculisant les « laïcistes » qui serait tous démago et raciste car refusant le concept d’islamophobie.

      Cela dit en relisant je serais plus nuancé en effet il ne met pas Boutelja dans les « féminismes musulmanes » (d’ailleurs on ne sait pas trop si il fait il référence à quelque choses d’existants ; des femmes comme Lallab mettant en avant leurs religions ou des féministes issues de l’immigration).

      [Désolé c’est du google trad]
      "Comme l’explique Joan Wallach Scott dans son nouveau livre, "Sex and Secularism", l’idée du patriarche musulman répressif et pourtant ludique a longtemps servi à détourner l’attention de la discrimination de la société française contre les femmes [...] Ces dernières années, les musulmans en France ont découvert qu’il ne suffit pas de respecter les lois de la France : pour appartenir véritablement à la France, ils doivent dénoncer les mauvais musulmans, féliciter Charlie. [...] tout comme leurs ancêtres dans l’Afrique coloniale du Nord et de l’Ouest ont appris à honorer « nos ancêtres, les Gaulois ». Plus ils sont français, plus leur françaisité, leur capacité à « assimiler » semble être en question, ce qui a approfondi leur sens de l’aliénation."

      "Mais les groupes d’activistes anti-racisme dans lequel ces femmes travaillaient avaient choisi d’ignorer les violences sexuelles perpétrées par des hommes « indigènes » par crainte d’attiser l’islamophobie française. Il n’est pas surprenant que des femmes musulmanes comme Henda Ayari se tournent vers des écrivains comme Caroline Fourest".

      J’ai comme même l’impression que les « féministes universalistes » n’existe pas dans son analyse, quand à la critique de la religion on en parle même pas.

      * Voir ses interventions une de ses intervention dans le débats :
      http://213-info.com/lettre-dun-journaliste-americain-adam-shatz-a-kamel-daoud

    • "Laïcisme est un terme péjoratif, utilisé pour fustiger des mesures extrêmes, prises par certains fervents partisans de la laïcité, contre la présence de certaines visibilités ou exigences religieuses dans la sphère publique"
      On peut raisonnablement dire que les « laïcistes » sont tous démagos et racistes.
      Merci pour votre intervention le reste étant de la meme eau.

    • @aktivulo1 les féministes universalistes WTF !!!!! tu veux dire les féministes qui pensent comme universel le fait d’être blanche, athée, occidentale et pour qui en dehors de Badinter et Fourest il n’y a point de salut ? L’universel qui a servi d’argument à la conquête coloniale ?
      « Prendre parti contre Valls » : je ne vois pas comment on peut faire autrement sans se décrédibiliser immédiatement. En tout prendre parti pour Valls a pour effet de se positionner très clairement du côté de la parole raciste.
      Sinon pour ta gouverne, les féministes musulmanes ce sont des femmes qui se reconnaissent dans le féminisme et qui sont de religion musulmane. C’est pas plus compliqué que ça, même si tu en parles comme du yéti : on en parle mais on ne l’a jamais vu… mystère peut-être n’existe t-il pas lol
      Enfin la critique de la religion, je ne vois ABSOLUMENT pas ce qu’elle aurait à faire ici. L’article parle de Ramadan pas de l’islam.

    • @ninachani

      Je pensais plus avoir utilisé un pléonasme qu’un gros mot. Par « féministes universalistes », je parlais d’un mouvement vaste et international avec des tendances différentes et parfois contradictoires ça ne peut pas se résumé à C. Fourest et I. Bandinter. Je pense que la tendance LMSI, Marche de la dignité est encore minoritaire chez les féministes.

      « L’article parle de Ramadan pas de l’islam. »

      Heu, sérieusement ? Mais l’article parle d’un prédicateur et Islamologue, de l’islamophobie, des féministes musulmanes, du mythe de l’homme musulman.

      C’est toute le délire actuel.

      On fait entrer insidieusement la religion dans le débat sans pouvoir en parler. Imaginons un article de fond sur les curées pédophiles, qui ne parlerais pas de pudibonderie propre à l’église catholique.

    • Les curés pédophiles sont couverts par la hiérarchie ecclésiastique, entité qui n’existe pas en Islam. L’islam n’a pas de clergé, en tout cas c’est très clair pour l’islam sunnite auquel appartient Ramadan donc il ne représente que lui même.
      L’article parle de musulmans justement pour contrer le type de discours que tu développes, c’est très bien présenté à la fin de l’article en ramenant Ramadan a sa dimension foncièrement masculine. Les viols sont des outils de domination utilisés par les hommes globalement, pas par les musulmans spécifiquement. Donc chaque homme qu’il soit musulman, athée, juif, bouddhiste etc a sa propre réflexion à mener sur la façon dont il relaie le patriarcat ou pas. Mais c’est sûr que du coup ça a des conséquences plus gênantes que si on réduit tout ça à un problème de musulmans, surtout quand on ne l’est pas n’est ce pas @aktivulo1 ?
      Lallab a fortement déploré que les médias leur aient demandé leur avis au sujet de Ramadan mais jamais auparavant au sujet du mouvement #balance ton porc comme si elles n’étaient concernées que par le fait qu’elles soient musulmanes et non pas par le problème global des violences faites aux femmes.

    • Après j’arrête.

      Mais c’est sûr que du coup ça a des conséquences plus gênantes que si on réduit tout ça à un problème de musulmans, surtout quand on ne l’est pas n’est ce pas @aktivulo1 ?

      Honnêtement je n’ai pas compris. Je ne suis athée, si c’est la question : donc ? Qui réduit le problème à un problème de musulmans, quelle sont les conséquences pour qui ?

      « L’islam n’a pas de clergé [...] Ramadan donc il ne représente que lui même. »

      Je parlais de la soumission qu’induit l’idéologie de la religion sur le respect de la femme. Et aussi de l’emprise sectaire, et de la culture du secret des religions en général. L’islam n’a pas de clergé mais à des organisations et des réseaux de pouvoir. Et puis c’est relativement pratique avant quand on attaquais T. Ramadan on était « islamophobe » quand il n’est plus fréquentable : il ne représente que lui. Face tu perds, pile je gagne.

    • C’est bien ce que je disais, tu insinues qu’un croyant aura moins de respect pour les femmes. Je ne vois pas ce qui peut te permettre de dire cela. Les violences envers les femmes traversent toutes les strates de la société que ce soit en terme de différences culturelles, cultuelles, sociales, les études le montrent. Par contre, forcément quelqu’un qui est dans une situation de pouvoir a forcément plus de moyens de soumettre les autres et donc à plus forte raison les femmes, et ça n’a rien à voir avec la religion. Le pouvoir de Weinstein il le tirait de sa position d’hégémonie dans le cinéma, le pouvoir de Marchal-Beck de sa position de pouvoir au sein des MJS, le pouvoir de Ramadan de son statut de théologien fortement médiatisé.
      Quand on attaque Ramadan avec des arguments islamophobe on est islamophobe. Pour moi Ramadan c’est un bourgeois réactionnaire qui est dans une déférence vis à vis du pouvoir institutionnel et ça par exemple ce n’est pas islamophobe. Bon maintenant on sait qu’en plus c’est un violeur et ça non plus ce n’est pas islamophobe de le dire.
      Quant aux athées, ils ne sont pas moins susceptibles de violer, frapper ou harceler les femmes que les musulmans ou autres croyants.

    • @ninachani

      C’est bien ce que je disais, tu insinues qu’un croyant aura moins de respect pour les femmes. Je ne vois pas ce qui peut te permettre de dire cela.

      Moi je ne voie pas comment tu peux le nier. Ce n’est même pas une question de respect c’est une question de reconnaissance à l’égalité.

      Les principales religions monothéiste Judaïsme, Christianisme et Islam considère la femme comme inférieur. Aie-je besoin de citer les textes à charge ?

      Si tu penses que la culture influe sur les comportements. Pourquoi la religion qui est un programme de conduite moral serait en dehors de ça. Je ne dit que c’est le seul problème, mais c’est un des problèmes.

    • @aktivulo1 Tu ne vois pas comment je peux nier qu’un croyant a moins de respect qu’un athée pour les femmes ? Je trouve ta remarque assez incroyable. Je pense que notre échange va s’arrêter là parce que nous sommes sur des positions trop éloignées, ça n’a aucun intérêt.
      Malgré cela, pour terminer, si on prend les violences faites aux femmes (le sujet ici) les croyants n’en sont pas plus auteurs que les non croyants. J’ai utilisé le mot respect parce que c’est toi qui avait parlé de « respect pour les femmes », moi je n’ai pas pour habitude d’utiliser ce terme, il ne veut pas dire grand chose.
      En réponse à mon affirmation, que j’avais déjà énoncée au-dessus, toi tu me parles théologie et analyse des textes religieux ce qui n’est pas le propos ici. On parle de violences faites aux femmes et, je le répète, le fait d’être croyant n’est pas un critère qui accentue la violence des hommes dans les enquêtes.
      Et juste pour info, pour un croyant la religion n’est pas un programme de conduite morale comme tu dis, c’est beaucoup plus que cela. Tu abordes la religion comme l’athée que tu es, ce qui est normal puisque tu n’as pas vécu l’expérience de la transcendance.

    • @ninachani

      « nous sommes sur des positions trop éloignées, ça n’a aucun intérêt » Oui, on est d’accord sur ça. Quoi que pour moi c’est plus sur la volonté de discuter et de se comprendre (ça tourne en rond).

      le fait d’être croyant n’est pas un critère qui accentue la violence des hommes dans les enquêtes.

      A quelles enquêtes fait tu références ?

    • Pour illustrer le point de vue d’@aktivulo1 :
      L’ahurissante apologie catholique de la virilité masculine
      https://blogs.mediapart.fr/yvon-quiniou/blog/291216/lahurissante-apologie-catholique-de-la-virilite-masculine

      Ce qui suit part d’un longue page du Monde qui nous apprend que des catholiques « veulent rendre à l’Eglise sa virilité » (23 décembre, p. 9) Je dis que cela est ahurissant, mais je pourrais dire scandaleux vu l’argumentaire qui soutient cette prise de position. Elle s’illustre par des faits avérés : des pratiquants, prêtres ou laïcs, tous militants de la foi telle qu’ils la conçoivent, se réunissent et organisent avec succès des stages entre hommes destinés à rendre leur fierté à ceux-ci dans une Eglise qui se serait trop féminisée, dans ses paroles et ses actes. Or que nous disent-ils ? Que l’homme n’est pas la femme (bien qu’ils soient égaux : ouf !), qu’il contient en lui un potentiel de violence guerrière qui doit être valorisé, cultivé et doit s’exprimer. Je cite « Il a besoin de se battre (…) d’un lieu où le guerrier qui est en lui peut reprendre vie ». Ou encore : les hommes doivent assumer les « désirs profonds, spécifiquement masculins, que sont l’aventure à vivre, le combat à mener et la belle à conquérir ». On croirait lire du Nietzsche avec son apologie éthique de la force et son mépris de la femme… sauf qu’il était rigoureusement athée, ayant annoncé « la mort de Dieu » et qu’il combattait vigoureusement les religions ! On y trouve même, chez certains, l’affirmation sans retenue qu’« il y a une animalité en l’homme qui le pousse à aller vers l’extérieur », autre idée nietzschéenne qui refusait toute idée d’« esprit » comme mystificatrice et mettait l’accent sur l’origine animale de l’homme et la persistance de cette origine en lui .

    • @marielle c’est complètement hors sujet ce truc, c’est fatiguant de manquer de rigueur comme ça dans une discussion. Le sujet concerne les violences faites aux femmes, je répète 100 fois que le fait d’être croyant n’est pas un critère qui accentue les probabilités de violences faites aux femmes, ou dit autrement, un homme croyant n’a pas plus de propension à être violent vis à vis des femmes qu’un non croyant et vous vous entêtez à parler soit des textes religieux soit ici des illuminations virilistes d’un groupe de catholiques. Vous essayez de prouver quoi en fait ? Moi je vais vous sortir les règlements des cercles bourgeois privés interdits aux femmes ou un florilège des pensées de comptoir dans les bars prolos et ça prouvera quoi ? Le sexisme est transversal à toute la société dépassant les clivages de culture et de classe, c’est d’ailleurs en ça que la société est patriarcale.
      Quant aux études ce sont tout bonnement les enquêtes sociologiques qui étudient la question depuis de nombreuses années et grâce auxquelles on peut aussi ne pas parler dans le vide sur ce sujet ou pas uniquement en citant un amoncellement de faits ou d’exemples sans analyse.
      Je vous laisse entre grands penseurs et penseuses. Ciao !

    • Je suis parfaitement d’accord avec vous.
      Vous êtes entièrement libre de croire. J’ai perdu la foi depuis longtemps !
      Pardonnez moi pour le « hors sujet » et permettez moi d’adhérer à cette pensée :

      Pour avoir baigné dans le puritanisme catholique pendant toute mon enfance et avoir eu un mal fou à me libérer de ce carcan moralisateur entraînant un sentiment de culpabilité énorme quand je n’étais pas une bonne mère ou une bonne épouse, je voudrais faire mienne la parole d’Emma Goldman qui écrivait en 1906 : « Il est de toute nécessité que la femme retienne cette leçon : que sa liberté s’étendra jusqu’où s’étend son pouvoir de se libérer elle-même. Il est donc mille fois plus important pour elle de commencer par sa régénération intérieure ; de laisser tomber le fait des préjugés, des traditions, des coutumes. » (cf. « La tragédie de l’émancipation féminine », Emma Goldman 1906, traduit par E. Armand (1914), p. 185, « Lutte des sexes, lutte des classes », éditions Agone).

      Autrement écrit : « Ni dieu, ni maître, ni ordre moral ! »

  • When Dissent Became Treason
    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/09/28/world-war-i-when-dissent-became-treason

    As our newspapers and TV screens overflow with choleric attacks by President Trump on the media, immigrants, and anyone who criticizes him, it makes us wonder: What would it be like if nothing restrained him from his obvious wish to silence, deport, or jail such enemies? For a chilling answer, we need only roll back the clock one hundred years, to the moment when the United States entered not just a world war, but a three-year period of unparalleled censorship, mass imprisonment, and anti-immigrant terror.

    When Woodrow Wilson went before Congress on April 2, 1917, and asked it to declare war against Germany, the country, as it is today, was riven by discord. Even though millions of people from the perennially bellicose Theodore Roosevelt on down were eager for war, President Wilson was not sure he could count on the loyalty of some nine million German-Americans, or of the 4.5 million Irish-Americans who might be reluctant to fight as allies of Britain. Also, hundreds of officials elected to state and local office belonged to the Socialist Party, which strongly opposed American participation in this or any other war. And tens of thousands of Americans were “Wobblies,” members of the militant Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), and the only battle they wanted to fight was that of labor against capital.

    The moment the United States entered the war in Europe, a second, less noticed war began at home. Staffed by federal agents, local police, and civilian vigilantes, it had three main targets: anyone who might be a German sympathizer, left-wing newspapers and magazines, and labor activists. The war against the last two groups would continue for a year and a half after World War I ended.

  • French government prepared coup if Le Pen won presidential election
    By Alex Lantier

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/05/19/fran-m19.html

    Vous y croyez, vous ?

    19 May 2017

    According to an extraordinary report published yesterday in L’Obs magazine, top members of France’s Socialist Party (PS) government prepared to launch a coup d’état if Marine Le Pen of the neo-fascist National Front (FN) won the May 7 presidential run-off.

    The purpose of the coup was not to keep Le Pen from taking office. Rather, it was designed to crush left-wing protests against Le Pen’s victory, impose martial law, and install Le Pen in power in an enforced alliance with a PS-led government.

  • French President Elect: Unveiling The Golden Boy Emmanuel Macron
    http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=19045

    Sharmini Peries: And also, given that this new party has no real political base in the National Assembly and there is National Assembly election scheduled for June 11th, how will the political landscape in France respond to this, particularly given the fragmentation that we were just talking about.

    Serge Halimi: Well, it’s really difficult to tell at this time. It’s quite clear that elements of the right are going to split from the right and rejoin with Macron. Elements of the socialist party are going to split from the socialist party and rejoin Macron. But I think that one thing that is more important than this is the social element that was disclosed by the vote. Because Macron’s golden boy image and actions account for the fact that despite of his landslide victory, 56 percent of the workers voted for Marine Le Pen. Of course, Paris, which is the most bourgeois of major French cities gave a landslide to Macron; received 90 percent of the vote there.

    In other words, you saw in this vote a prosperous and educated France that voted for Macron and won. And the richer city is in terms of how much income it taxes its residents, the more likely the city is to vote for Macron, who incidentally promised to eliminate much of the wealth tax. So this is, I think, one thing we must emphasize, the fact that Macron is really the elected president of the prosperous France and of the middle class, and that Marine Le Pen got a lot of support from the working class, and this is something that will stay during Macron’s term, and I think the policies he has in mind, especially the deregulation of the labor market will insist on the features of his program, which is a program meant for the wealthy.

    Sharmini Peries: And so then let’s talk about where the French left is. Its main candidate, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, won nearly 20 percent of the vote during the first round of the elections. The highest they’ve ever had in terms of a left socialist party perspective. What are his chances of winning the National Assembly and more seats there so he can actually challenge Macron as he seeks to implement more neoliberal measures in France?

    Serge Halimi: Well, the result Mélenchon got was not the highest the left had in France, you had, of course, several decades ago, the communist party that got more than 20 percent of the vote. But it’s still a very good result he got in the first round. Now the question is the extent to which this result will translate in parliamentary seats, and the parliamentary system is such that its very unlikely that Mélenchon will get that many seats. We have 577 seats in the National Assembly and most of the projections say that Mélenchon will be able to get 40 or 50 seats at most. So maybe we will be surprised by what happens in the next few weeks, but the most likely outcome will be Macron getting almost a majority of the seats in the National Assembly. The right, getting 200 seats more or less. And then Mélenchon and the extreme right getting very few seats because the system is rigged against parties such as the National Front and the left international assembly.

    #France

  • Emmanuel Clinton vs Marine LeTrump | Asia Times
    http://www.atimes.com/article/emmanuel-clinton-vs-marine-letrump

    Here’s the body count in the latest geopolitical earthquake afflicting the West: The Socialist Party in France is dead. The traditional Right is comatose. What used to be the Extreme Left is alive, and still kicking.

    Yet what’s supposed to be the shock of the new is not exactly a shock. The more things veer towards change (we can believe in), the more they stay the same. Enter the new normal: the recycled “system” – as in Emmanuel Macron — versus “the people” — as in the National Front’s Marine Le Pen, battling for the French presidency on May 7.

    Although that was the expected outcome, it’s still significant. Le Pen, re-christened “Marine”, reached the second round of voting despite a mediocre campaign.

  • French election special: live reports as Macron and Le Pen are through to final round
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/230417/french-election-special-live-reports-macron-and-le-pen-are-through-final-r

    Campaign posters of the 11 candidates in southern #France. © Reuters Maverick centrist Emmanuel Macron has come first and far-right leader Marine Le Pen second in Sunday’s first-round voting in France’s presidential elections, setting up a knockout second round contest between the two on May 7th. While the final results are yet to arrive, conservative candidate François Fillon and radical-left Jean-Luc Mélenchon were given neck and neck positions in third and fourth place respectively, separated by a fractional percentage. Socialist Party candidate Benoît Hamon is given fifth place with just more than 6% of the vote, a historically low figure for his party. Follow the results, reactions and analyses here live throughout the evening. Reporting by Graham Tearse and Michael (...)

    #2017_French_presidential_elections #first_round

  • The Ships That Helped Silence the Early USSR’s Intellectuals | Atlas Obscura
    http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/philosophers-ships-soviet-intellectual-ussr-russia

    The USSR was first established in December of 1922, but months earlier, the new nation’s future leaders ordered the deportation of a large number of Russian intellectuals. 

    The idea to exile the ideological opponents of the new Soviet state had come from Vladimir Lenin himself. In May of 1922, Lenin sent a letter to the head of the GPU, the state security organization in charge of, among other things, dealing with dissidents and enemies of the Soviet state. The letter ordered the director, Felix Dzerzhinsky, to organize teams to research the backgrounds and political leanings of academics and writers. Dzerzhinsky, a loyal Bolshevik, set to work and established a pair of committees, one to create a list of troublesome professors, and another to focus on students.
    […]
    On September 28, 1922, loaded with its cargo of exiled thinkers and their families, the ship Oberbürgermeister Haken disembarked for Germany. And in November of that year, a second German vessel, the Preussen, carried yet more deported thinkers to Germany as well. All told, some 220 prominent intellectuals were forcibly removed from Russia before the official establishment of the Soviet Union.

    via Maritime Monday, l’excellente revue de presse hebdomadaire de gCaptain, http://gcaptain.com/maritime-monday-feb-20-2017

  • How France’s Alleged Police Rape Case Could Swing a High-Stakes Election
    https://psmag.com/how-frances-alleged-police-rape-case-could-swing-a-high-stakes-election-5fcb4

    The case of a young black French man alleged to have been savagely raped and mutilated by police — one that recalls the Black Lives Matter movement’s calls for police accountability in the United States — may sway the outcome of the hotly contested French presidential election in April, analysts and activists tell Pacific Standard.

    Whatever happens, the incident “will definitely be present” as a campaign talking point, Bitar predicts. It will provoke the ire of the populists and also serve as a reminder of the outgoing president and his Socialist Party’s failures to address issues of development, discriminatory and violent policing, and sweeping unemployment.

  • French unions join far-right movement against refugees in Calais - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/09/12/cala-s12.html

    Je n’ai pas vu passer ça dans la revue de presse sur #calais et si cest vrai c’est assez grave. Notez au passage comment l’ICFI présente la CGT ;)

    Cynically claiming it was defending jobs, the Stalinist General Confederation of Labor (CGT) union joined far right protests against the “Jungle” refugee camp last Monday in Calais. The union bureaucracy thus brought its support to neo-fascist anti-immigrant propaganda and to the Socialist Party (PS) government, which aims to dismantle the “Jungle” to divide the workers with nationalist hatreds and disorient their opposition to PS wars and austerity measures.

    After several protests in northern France and in Paris, the “Great rally of the Calais region,” a self-proclaimed “apolitical citizens movement,” carried out an action on September 5, cutting off the A16 highway with trucks and tractors.

  • The Weaponized Architecture of Paris Northern Banlieue Police Stations
    http://thefunambulist.net/2015/10/26/the-weaponized-architecture-of-paris-nothern-banlieue-police-station

    “For an important amount of the banlieues inhabitants, in particular the Black and Arab youth, the police incarnate a daily reminder of the structural antagonism at work against their neighborhood and their bodies. As explained in a past article entitled “The Banlieue Battleground: Designing the French Suburbs for Police/Military Interventions,” this antagonism reached its peak during the nine years of Nicolas Sarkozy’s executive mandates (four years as Minister of Interior and five as President) between 2003-2004, and 2005- (see the Karsher declaration, only a few days before the death of Bouna and Zyed) 2012, but it never really dissolved since then — the current Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, also formerly Minister of Interior shares a certain amount of similarities with Sarkozy’s politics, despite being part of the Socialist Party. The strategy of the State vis-a-vis the cités (high density public housing in a low density urban fabric) consists in a gradual withdrawal of its service and an increase of police control. The latter’s violence is characterized by disrespectful discourse, systematic identity control, random chase and/or arrests, and sometimes, the use of a potentially lethal arsenal coming from a prolific security market. The following photographs attempt to show that architecture as well constitutes a weapon both symbolic and effective reinforcing the strong antagonism developed by the police against the banlieue youth. The police stations’ architectures, through their spatiality, their aesthetics and the care in the materials used (brick for the Aubervilliers one, and even some marble imitation for the Pierrefitte one, see below) attempt to present them as authored works, designed by architecture offices that also conceive libraries, schools, housing, etc. However, the agenda of this architecture is fairly explicit to anyone who knows their antagonizing context: these police station are built to respond to the potentiality of a “siege” undertaken against them — a rather odd hypothesis when one knows the police arsenal — by what they imagine to be hordes of barbarian youth (paranoia is necessary to maintain the antagonism). The walls of these stations are thus opaque with various degrees of inclination (a well-known technique by 17th-century fortress architects!), the more transparent parts are elevated, out-of-reach, and the sidewalks in front of their entrances are made inaccessible for vehicles through the presence of metallic cones (ubiquitous on the Paris sidewalks). Architecture is weaponized here again, and architects should be held accountable for the responsibility of their contribution to the antagonism developed by the State and its police towards the banlieue inhabitants.”

    #Architecture #Design #Cartography #History #Loi

  • Et sinon, de manière pas du tout prévisible (comment ça, si ?) :
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Lebanon-News/2015/Mar-26/292239-lebanon-supports-legitimacy-in-yemen-bassil.ashx

    Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Progressive Socialist Party leader had offered their support to military action against the Houthi rebels, while Hezbollah strongly condemned the intervention as an aggression.

  • Jumblat : Hizbullah’s Fighting in Syria Did Not Bring Terrorism to Lebanon (à nouveau, l’opinion de Joumblatt n’a à mon avis aucun intérêt pour elle-même, en dehors des calculs politiciens que les autres politiciens libanais en tireront – dans six mois, Gugusse vous racontera exactement le contraire)
    http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/141682-jumblat-hizbullah-s-fighting-in-syria-did-not-bring-terrorism-to-le

    Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat stressed on Sunday that Lebanon is facing the danger of terrorism given the clashes between the army and the al-Nusra Front gunmen in the eastern region of Arsal near the border with Syria.

    He said during a tour of the Deir Qoubel and Choueifat regions: “Hizbullah’s fighting in Syria did not bring about the threat of terrorism to Lebanon.”

    “We should rise above all internal disputes and pointless debates and support the army and security forces and agencies in their battle against the armed groups and takfiri movements," he added before the crowds.

  • French neo-fascist victory in European elections exposes bankruptcy of ruling elite - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/05/27/fran-m27.html

    French neo-fascist victory in European elections exposes bankruptcy of ruling elite
    By Alex Lantier
    27 May 2014

    Sunday’s first-place finish by the neo-fascist National Front (FN) in the European elections in France is a devastating exposure of the bankruptcy of the French political establishment. There is rising anger over the wars and austerity policies of the Socialist Party (PS) government and the European Union (EU). Due to the complicity of the entire “left” in these measures, however, it is the extreme-right that has benefited.

    #extrême-droite

  • Une bonne nouvelle et une mauvaise nouvelle (je commence par laquelle ?) : Jumblat to Quit Political Activity as Taymour Begins Preparations for Parliamentary Life
    http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/130640-jumblat-to-quit-political-activity-as-taymour-begins-preparations-f

    Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat said that he will end his political activity at the end of the current parliamentary term as he “is seriously considering not to run for the elections.”

    “I will be folding my political page and my voting for a new head of state would be my last,” Jumblat said in an interview with the pan-Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat.

    He pointed out that his son Taymour is preparing himself to run for the parliamentary elections and running the affairs of al-Mukhtara.

    Mais d’ici à l’élection, ça lui laisse encore le temps de changer plusieurs fois d’avis.

  • Évidemment : contre toute vérité historique, le 14 Mars commence par établir l’équivalence entre les armes du Hezbollah et les tarés d’Assir. (Et évidemment, c’est l’axe obligé des forums et échanges des 14 Mars sur le Web.)
    http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/88004-saniora-calls-on-army-to-end-armed-presence-in-sidon-impose-curfew-i

    “The army must end any armed presence in Sidon, including the Hizbullah-affiliated Resistance Brigades,” Saniora said.

    • Position nettement différente de Joumblatt (avant son prochain retournement de veste) :
      http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/87958-jumblat-sidon-must-be-returned-to-its-people-away-from-al-asir-pheno

      Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat on Sunday called for supporting the army in order to “foil strife,” saying the clashes-hit southern city of Sidon “must be returned to its people away from the ’Asirist phenomenon’,” in reference to Islamist cleric Sheikh Ahmed al-Asir.

      “The army and the state are our only option and I contacted everyone to tell them that Sidon must remain the capital of the resistance and must be spared the Syrian conflict,” Jumblat said in an interview on al-Jadeed television, in the wake of clashes in Sidon’s Abra between the army and Asir’s supporters that left 10 army troops dead, among them two officers.