person:flavio

  • Au Brésil, l’affaire qui embarrasse Jair Bolsonaro et inquiète son entourage
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/02/20/au-bresil-l-affaire-qui-embarrasse-jair-bolsonaro-et-inquiete-son-entourage_


    Jair Bolsonaro et Gustavo Bebianno, alors nouveau secrétaire général de la présidence brésilienne, à Brasilia, le 2 janvier.
    ADRIANO MACHADO / REUTERS

    Le secrétaire général de la présidence, accusé d’avoir eu recours à des candidats fantômes quand il était à la tête du parti au pouvoir, a été destitué par le chef de l’Etat.

    Quelques heures après avoir été sèchement démis de ses fonctions de secrétaire général de la présidence de Jair Bolsonaro à la suite de soupçons de détournements de fonds, Gustavo Bebianno a pris soin, mardi 19 février, d’ôter de son profil Instagram la photo le montrant aux côtés du chef d’Etat brésilien, son « capitaine » auquel il promettait soutien et fidélité.

    A la place, l’éconduit a placé sur le réseau social un cliché un peu flou le montrant une mitraillette à la main. Ce message de l’ex-président du Parti social libéral (PSL), dénué de toute subtilité, semble confirmer le propos qu’il aurait, selon les médias brésiliens, lâché à ses proches avant sa démission fracassante : « Si je tombe, Bolsonaro tombe avec moi. »

    En vingt-quatre heures, Brasilia a pris des allures de telenovela où se mêlent haine, vengeance et trahison. Une affaire d’Etat qui vient déstabiliser le chef de l’extrême droite, ancien capitaine d’infanterie, moins de deux mois après sa prise de fonctions à la présidence.
    Au coeur de l’affaire, un scandale qui implique le PSL, la formation de Jair Bolsonaro, révélé par le quotidien Folha de Sao Paulo, le 4 février. Le recours à des candidats fantômes aurait permis au parti de toucher des subventions de plusieurs centaines de milliers de reais lors de la campagne de 2018. L’affaire, embarrassante, s’ajoute au discrédit lié à une enquête sur de possibles détournements de fonds et de blanchiment d’argent impliquant l’aîné des Bolsonaro, le sénateur Flavio.

    Après avoir nié toute malversation, Gustavo Bebianno avait assuré que de crise il n’y avait point. Et que Jair Bolsonaro lui maintenait sa confiance. « Nous nous sommes parlé trois fois aujourd’hui », avait-il assuré au quotidien O Globo. Jusqu’à ce que Carlos Bolsonaro, le deuxième fils du président, exaspéré par les propos de M. Bebianno, publie sur les réseaux sociaux l’extrait d’une conversation avec son père où celui-ci affirme qu’il ne s’est pas entretenu avec Bebianno. Le président donne raison à son fils.
    Quelques jours plus tard, M. Bebianno est démis sans ménagement.

    #paywall

  • #bresil
    VIDEO: The Dramatic Scandal Swallowing the #Bolsonaro Presidency and Which Just Drove an LGBT Congressman to Flee #Brazil
    https://theintercept.com/2019/01/24/video-the-dramatic-scandal-swallowing-the-bolsonaro-presidency-and-whi

    The scandal most centrally involves President Bolsonaro’s eldest son, Flavio, who has long been a State Deputy from Rio de Janeiro but was just elected to the Federal Senate with a massive vote total in the last election. The scandal began with the discovery of highly suspicious payments into and out of the account of Flavio’s driver, a former police officer and long-time friend of President Bolsonaro’s.

    Each new discovery has escalated the scandal’s seriousness: one unexplained deposit was found going into the account of President Bolsonaro’s wife, Michelle; both the driver and Flavio himself began using highly suspicious maneuvers to try to stymie the investigation; the amounts of the suspicious transfers began rapidly increasing to $US 2 million; and then deposits were found going into Flavio’s accounts in small increments of multiple deposits in rapid succession: at times up to 10 cash deposits made within 3 minutes, the hallmark of money laundering and evading banking regulations.

  • Famille Bolsonaro : petits arrangements entre amis au Brésil ?
    https://www.latribune.fr/economie/international/famille-bolsonaro-petits-arrangements-entre-amis-au-bresil-804425.html


    Flavio Bolsonaro, l’un des fils du président brésilien aurait reçu sur son compte bancaire, en juin et juillet 2017, 48 dépôts d’une valeur totale de 96.000 réais (environ 30.000 dollars au taux de change actuel)
    Crédits : Adriano Machado

    C’est une affaire qui tombe mal pour le président brésilien Jair Bolsonaro, champion de la lutte anticorruption. Son fils aîné Flavio et son chauffeur auraient bénéficié de virements suspects.
    L’agence gouvernementale chargée de surveiller les transactions financières (COAF) a découvert des dépôts de sommes d’argent « suspects » sur un compte bancaire de Flavio Bolsonaro, l’un des fils du président Jair Bolsonaro, a affirmé vendredi la chaîne Globo. Flavio Bolsonaro, fils aîné du chef de l’Etat, aurait reçu sur son compte bancaire, en juin et juillet 2017, 48 dépôts d’une valeur totale de 96.000 réais (environ 30.000 dollars au taux de change actuel), selon Globo dévoilant un rapport de la COAF. Selon ce rapport, l’institution n’a pas été en mesure d’établir l’origine de ces dépôts.

    Il s’agit de 48 dépôts d’un montant de 2.000 réais chacun auprès d’une agence bancaire de l’Etat de Rio, et les dépôts jugés suspects ont été effectués sur une période de cinq jours, toujours selon Globo. Après avoir été député de l’Etat de Rio, Flavio Bolsonaro a été élu sénateur fédéral lors des élections générales d’octobre et doit débuter son mandat en février.

    Les informations de Globo sont publiées au lendemain d’une décision de la Cour suprême du Brésil de suspendre l’enquête sur des mouvements financiers suspects de Fabricio José de Queiroz, chauffeur de Flavio Bolsonaro, portant sur un montant de 1,2 million de réais en 2016 et 2017. Ces mouvements financiers étaient apparemment incompatibles avec les revenus de José de Queiroz. Aucune précision officielle n’ayant été fournie sur les motivations de la suspension décidée mercredi par le juge Luiz Fux, la presse a évoqué la possibilité qu’elle corresponde à une demande de Flavio Bolsonaro. Celui-ci a nié toute irrégularité lors d’une interview vendredi à la chaîne de télévision Record TV.

    Convoqué plusieurs fois par la justice à Rio de Janeiro, José de Queiroz ne s’est pas présenté, invoquant des problèmes de santé. Il a assuré que les mouvements sur son compte provenaient de ses affaires. « Je suis un homme d’affaires. Je fais de l’argent, j’achète des voitures, je les revends », a-t-il assuré à la télévision SBT. L’un des mouvements suspects est un versement de 24.000 réais (environ 5.500 euros) sur le compte de Michelle Bolsonaro, aujourd’hui Première dame. Jair Bolsonaro, alors président élu, a expliqué qu’il s’agissait du remboursement d’un prêt non déclaré.

    Cette affaire tombe mal pour Jair Bolsonaro, dont la lutte anticorruption a été l’un des grands thèmes de campagne et qui est l’un des rares hommes politiques brésiliens à ne pas avoir été éclaboussé à ce jour par un scandale. « Si une erreur a été commise, que ce soit par moi, mon fils ou (son assistant) Queiroz, nous paierons pour cette erreur, parce que nous ne pouvons pas montrer la moindre connivence avec quelque erreur que ce soit », avait-il déclaré.

  • Brasil no se pierde ni un capítulo de los Bolsonaro, los Kardashian de la política | Internacional | EL PAÍS
    https://elpais.com/internacional/2019/01/08/actualidad/1546972766_015508.html

    Los brasileños adictos a las telenovelas siguen ahora, capítulo por capítulo, una trama omnipresente: los Bolsonaro. El padre, Jair, de 63 años, fue investido presidente el 1 de enero. Y con él suben al poder sus tres hijos adultos, que también llevan media vida en política: Flávio, 37, el primogénito, senador; Eduardo, de 34 años, diputado nacional; y Carlos, de 36 años, concejal de Rio de Janeiro. El cuarteto conforma una poderosa dinastía, inédita incluso en un país de oligarquías políticas arraigadas, que ha ido conquistando fans hasta crear un imperio de 15 millones de seguidores en Facebook, Twitter e Instagram.

    Guardando las distancias, son una especie de Kardashian de la política. Todo lo que dicen y tocan se convierte en noticia como ocurre con el famoso clan estadounidense. En ambos casos, el público tiene sus personajes preferidos, especula sobre sus actos y sobre sus papeles futuros. Sus mensajes se modulan para cada plataforma digital, que ahora inicia una prueba de fuego: ser influencer y Gobierno a la vez. El primer fin de semana todos mantuvieron una actividad tuitera.

    Bolsonaro padre lideró su triunfante campaña recurriendo a WhatsApp y a retransmisiones en directo en Facebook, donde no faltaron exposiciones de su intimidad —como enseñar la bolsa de colostomía que lleva tras el atentado por apuñalamiento que sufrió en septiembre— ataques virulentos a sus adversarios o la imagen de que es un hombre sencillo, en una estrategia claramente coreografiada. Sus hijos, con mayor o menor habilidad, siguen esa senda. Hablan sobre el Gobierno y actúan como si formasen parte del Gabinete, pese a no tener ningún cargo formal en él. De sus tres matrimonios, el presidente tiene dos hijos más, un adolescente y una niña.

    (...)

    Mientras esperan que empiece la nueva temporada, los simpatizantes hacen circular una broma en los grupos de WhatsApp que dice que Brasil no se va a librar tan pronto del nuevo programa de telerrealidad: en 2026 Eduardo Bolsonaro será presidente, sucediendo a su padre, que será reelegido dentro de cuatro años.

    #brésil #bolsonaro

  • Migrants : avec les Pilotes volontaires, au-dessus de la Méditerranée
    https://www.lemonde.fr/a-bord-de-l-aquarius/article/2018/10/06/migrants-avec-les-pilotes-volontaires-au-dessus-de-la-mediterranee_5365581_4
    L’ONG française survole les eaux internationales à bord du Colibri, au large de la Libye, pour repérer des embarcations en détresse.

    Les membres de Pilotes volontaires ont réalisé trente-cinq missions de survol depuis mai 2018. « Nous avons repéré quarante-deux bateaux, ce qui représente près de 4 000 personnes qui ont pu être secourues », assure José Benavente, cofondateur de l’ONG. Vendredi, l’avion a encore croisé une embarcation de caoutchouc en détresse. A 80 milles marins au large de la ville de Khoms, à l’est de Tripoli, un rubber boat – une « embarcarion pneumatique » –, avec à son bord 28 personnes, a été retrouvé. Sa présence avait été signalée au Colibri par l’association Alarm Phone, qui propose une assistance téléphonique aux bateaux en détresse. « On a cherché des bateaux dans la zone et on a fini par prévenir un tanker [navire-citerne], explique Benoît Micolon. Il est allé leur porter secours, deux heures avant que la nuit tombe. »

    C’est ce drame qui avait donné lieu à « Mare Nostrum », l’opération humanitaire et militaire de la marine italienne en Méditerranée centrale. Et c’est la fin de Mare Nostrum, en 2014, qui avait poussé des associations à s’engager dans le secours en mer. Aux commémorations officielles, pour la première fois en cinq ans, aucun représentant du gouvernement italien n’a fait le déplacement. « En 2013, l’opinion publique était attachée au principe de sauver des vies. Aujourd’hui, c’est vécu comme un crime », regrette Flavio Di Giacomo. Outre le gouvernement italien, d’autres personnes ont boudé cet anniversaire. Giacomo Sferlazzo est membre du collectif Askavusa et, après avoir recueilli la parole de rescapés et de témoins du drame, il est convaincu que tout n’a pas été fait par les autorités italiennes, ce jour-là, pour venir en aide aux naufragés. « Cette tragédie aurait pu être évitée », assure-t-il. Cinq ans ont passé. Et elles se poursuivent.

    • Migranti:da inizio anno sbarcati 16.566,-79% rispetto a 2017

      Dall’inizio dell’anno ad oggi sono sbarcati in Italia 16.566 migranti, il 79,07% in meno rispetto allo stesso periodo dell’anno scorso, quando ne arrivarono 79.154. Dai dati del Viminale, aggiornati al 28 giugno, emerge dunque che per il dodicesimo mese consecutivo gli sbarchi nel nostro paese sono in calo: l’ultimo picco fu registrato proprio a giugno dell’anno scorso, quando sbarcarono 23.526 migranti (nel 2016 ne arrivarono 22.339 mentre quest’anno il numero è fermo a 3.136). Dal mese di luglio 2017, che ha coinciso con gli accordi siglati con la Libia dall’ex ministro dell’Interno Marco Minniti, si è sempre registrata una diminuzione. Dei 16.566 arrivati nei primi sei mesi del 2018 (la quasi totalità, 15.741, nei porti siciliani), 11.401 sono partiti dalla Libia: un calo nelle partenze dell’84,94% rispetto al 2017 e dell’83,18% rispetto al 2016. Quanto alle nazionalità di quelli che sono arrivati, la prima è la Tunisia, con 3.002 migranti, seguita da Eritrea (2.555), Sudan (1.488) e Nigeria (1.229).

      http://www.ansa.it/sito/notizie/cronaca/2018/06/30/migrantida-inizio-anno-sbarcati-16.566-79-rispetto-a-2017-_30327137-364e-44bf-8

    • En Méditerranée, les flux de migrants s’estompent et s’orientent vers l’ouest

      Pour la première fois depuis le début de la crise migratoire en 2014, l’Espagne est, avant l’Italie et la Grèce, le pays européen qui enregistre le plus d’arrivées de migrants par la mer et le plus de naufrages meurtriers au large de ses côtes.

      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/280618/en-mediterranee-les-flux-de-migrants-s-estompent-et-s-orientent-vers-l-oue
      #routes_migratoires

    • Migratory flows in April: Overall drop, but more detections in Greece and Spain

      Central Mediterranean
      The number of migrants arriving in Italy via the Central Mediterranean route in April fell to about 2 800, down 78% from April 2017. The total number of migrants detected on this route in the first four months of 2018 fell to roughly 9 400, down three-quarters from a year ago.
      So far this year, Tunisians and Eritreans were the two most represented nationalities on this route, together accounting for almost 40% of all the detected migrants.

      Eastern Mediterranean
      In April, the number of irregular migrants taking the Eastern Mediterranean route stood at some 6 700, two-thirds more than in the previous month. In the first four months of this year, more than 14 900 migrants entered the EU through the Eastern Mediterranean route, 92% more than in the same period of last year. The increase was mainly caused by the rise of irregular crossings on the land borders with Turkey. In April the number of migrants detected at the land borders on this route has exceeded the detections on the Greek islands in the Aegean Sea.
      The largest number of migrants on this route in the first four months of the year were nationals of Syria and Iraq.

      Western Mediterranean
      Last month, the number of irregular migrants reaching Spain stood at nearly 1100, a quarter more than in April 2017. In the first four months of 2018, there were some 4600 irregular border crossings on the Western Mediterranean route, 95 more than a year ago.
      Nationals of Morocco accounted for the highest number of arrivals in Spain this year, followed by those from Guinea and Mali.

      https://frontex.europa.eu/media-centre/news-release/migratory-flows-in-april-overall-drop-but-more-detections-in-greece-a
      #2018 #Espagne #Grèce

    • EU’s Frontex warns of new migrant route to Spain

      Frontex chief Fabrice Leggeri has warned that Spain could see a significant increase in migrant arrivals. The news comes ahead of the European Commission’s new proposal to strengthen EU external borders with more guards.

      Frontex chief Fabrice Leggeri said Friday that some 6,000 migrants had entered the European Union in June by crossing into Spain from Morocco, the so-called western Mediterranean route.

      https://m.dw.com/en/eus-frontex-warns-of-new-migrant-route-to-spain/a-44563058?xtref=http%253A%252F%252Fm.facebook.com

    • L’Espagne devient la principale voie d’accès des migrants à l’Europe

      La Commission a annoncé trois millions d’euros d’aide d’urgence pour les garde-frontières espagnols, confrontés à un triplement des arrivées de migrants, suite au verrouillage de la route italienne.

      –-> v. ici :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/683358

      L’aide supplémentaire que l’exécutif a décidé d’allouer à l’Espagne après l’augmentation des arrivées sur les côtes provient du Fonds pour la sécurité intérieure et a pour but de financer le déploiement de personnel supplémentaire le long des frontières méridionales espagnoles.

      Le mois dernier, la Commission a déjà attribué 24,8 millions d’euros au ministère de l’Emploi et de la Sécurité sociale et à la Croix-Rouge espagnole, afin de renforcer les capacités d’accueil, de prise en charge sanitaire, de nourriture et de logement des migrants arrivants par la route de l’ouest méditerranéen.

      Une enveloppe supplémentaire de 720 000 euros a été allouée à l’organisation des rapatriements et des transferts depuis l’enclave de Ceuta et Melilla.

      Cette aide financière s’ajoute aux 691,7 millions que reçoit Madrid dans le cadre du Fonds pour l’asile, l’immigration et l’intégration et du fonds pour la sécurité intérieure pour la période budgétaire 2014-2020.

      https://www.euractiv.fr/section/migrations/news/avramopoulos-in-spain-to-announce-further-eu-support-to-tackle-migration

    • En #Méditerranée, les flux de migrants s’orientent vers l’ouest

      Entre janvier et juillet, 62 177 migrants ont rejoint l’Europe par la Méditerranée, selon les données de l’Agence des Nations unies pour les réfugiés. Un chiffre en baisse par rapport à 2017 (172 301 sur l’ensemble des douze mois) et sans commune mesure avec le « pic » de 2015, où 1 015 078 arrivées avaient été enregistrées.

      Les flux déclinent et se déplacent géographiquement : entre 2014 et 2017, près de 98 % des migrants étaient entrés via la Grèce et l’Italie, empruntant les voies dites « orientales » et « centrales » de la Méditerranée ; en 2018, c’est pour l’instant l’Espagne qui enregistre le plus d’arrivées (23 785), devant l’Italie (18 348), la Grèce (16 142) et, de manière anecdotique, Chypre (73).


      https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/030818/en-mediterranee-les-flux-de-migrants-s-orientent-vers-l-ouest
      #statistiques #chiffres #Méditerranée_centrale #itinéraires_migratoires #parcours_migratoires #routes_migratoires #asile #migrations #réfugiés #2018 #Espagne #Italie #Grèce #2017 #2016 #2015 #2014 #arrivées

      Et des statistiques sur les #morts et #disparus :


      #mourir_en_mer #décès #naufrages

    • The most common Mediterranean migration paths into Europe have changed since 2009

      Until 2018, the Morocco-to-Spain route – also known as the western route – had been the least-traveled Mediterranean migration path, with a total of 89,000 migrants arriving along Spain’s coastline since 2009. But between January and August 2018, this route has seen over 28,000 arrivals, more than the central Africa-to-Italy central route (20,000 arrivals) and the Turkey-to-Greece eastern route (20,000 arrivals). One reason for this is that Spain recently allowed rescue ships carrying migrants to dock after other European Union countries had denied them entry.

      Toute la Méditerranée:

      #Méditerranée_occidentale:

      #Méditerranée_centrale:

      #Méditerranée_orientale:

      http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/09/18/the-most-common-mediterranean-migration-paths-into-europe-have-changed-

    • The “Shift” to the Western Mediterranean Migration Route: Myth or Reality?

      How Spain Became the Top Arrival Country of Irregular Migration to the EU

      This article looks at the increase in arrivals[1] of refugees and migrants in Spain, analysing the nationalities of those arriving to better understand whether there has been a shift from the Central Mediterranean migration route (Italy) towards the Western Mediterranean route (Spain). The article explores how the political dynamics between North African countries and the European Union (EU) have impacted the number of arrivals in Spain.

      The Western Mediterranean route has recently become the most active route of irregular migration to Europe. As of mid-August 2018, a total of 26,350 refugees and migrants arrived in Spain by sea, three times the number of arrivals in the first seven months of 2017. In July alone 8,800 refugees and migrants reached Spain, four times the number of arrivals in July of last year.

      But this migration trend did not begin this year. The number of refugees and migrants arriving by sea in Spain grew by 55 per cent between 2015 and 2016, and by 172 per cent between 2016 and 2017.

      At the same time, there has been a decrease in the number of refugees and migrants entering the EU via the Central Mediterranean route. Between January and July 2018, a total of 18,510 persons arrived in Italy by sea compared to 95,213 arrivals in the same period in 2017, an 81 per cent decrease.

      This decrease is a result of new measures to restrict irregular migration adopted by EU Member States, including increased cooperation with Libya, which has been the main embarkation country for the Central Mediterranean migration route. So far this year, the Libyan Coast Guards have intercepted 12,152 refugees and migrants who were on smuggling boats (more than double the total number of interceptions in 2017). In the last two weeks of July, 99.5 per cent of the refugees and migrants who departed on smuggling boats were caught and returned to Libya, according to a data analysis conducted at the Italian Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI). The number of people being detained by the Libyan Directorate for Combatting Illegal Migration (DCIM) has continued growing (from 5,000 to 9,300 between May and July 2018), with thousands more held in unofficial detention facilities.

      So, was there a shift from the Central to the Western Mediterranean Migration route? In other words, has the decline of arrivals in Italy led to the increase of arrivals in Spain?

      First of all, while this article only analyses the changes in the use of these two sea routes and among those trying to go to Europe, for most West Africans, the intended destination is actually North Africa, including Libya and Algeria, where they hope to find jobs. A minority intends to move onwards to Europe and this is confirmed by MMC’s 4Mi data referred to below.

      The answer to the question on whether or not there has been a shift between the two routes can be found in the analysis of the origin countries of the refugees and migrants that were most commonly using the Central Mediterranean route before it became increasingly difficult to reach Europe. Only if a decrease of the main nationalities using the Central Mediterranean Route corresponds to an increase of the same group along the Western Mediterranean route we can speak of “a shift”.

      The two nationalities who were – by far – the most common origin countries of refugees and migrants arriving in Italy in 2015 and in 2016 were Nigeria and Eritrea. The total number of Nigerians and Eritreans arriving in Italy in 2015 was 50,018 and slightly lower (47,096) in the following year. Then, between 2016 and last year, the total number of Nigerian and Eritrean arrivals in Italy decreased by 66 per cent. The decrease has been even more significant in 2018; in the first half of this year only 2,812 Nigerians and Eritreans arrived in Italy.

      However, there has not been an increase in Nigerians and Eritreans arriving in Spain. Looking at the data, it is clear that refugees and migrants originating in these two countries have not shifted from the Central Mediterranean route to the Western route.

      The same is true for refugees and migrants from Bangladesh, Sudan and Somalia – who were also on the list of most common countries of origin amongst arrivals in Italy during 2015 and 2016. While the numbers of Bangladeshis, Sudanese and Somalis arriving in Italy have been declining since 2017, there has not been an increase in arrivals of these nationals in Spain. Amongst refugees and migrants from these three countries, as with Nigerians and Eritreans, there has clearly not been a shift to the Western route. In fact, data shows that zero refugees and migrants from Eritrea, Bangladesh and Somalia arrived in Spain by sea since 2013.

      However, the data tells a different story when it comes to West African refugees and migrants. Between 2015 and 2017, the West African countries of Guinea, Mali, Cote d’Ivoire, Gambia and Senegal were also on the list of most common origin countries amongst arrivals in Italy. During those years, about 91 per cent of all arrivals in the EU from these five countries used the Central Mediterranean route to Italy, while 9 per cent used the Western Mediterranean route to Spain.

      But in 2018 the data flipped: only 23 per cent of EU arrivals from these five West African countries used the Central Mediterranean route, while 76 per cent entered used the Western route. It appears that as the Central Mediterranean route is being restricted, a growing number of refugees and migrants from these countries are trying to reach the EU on the Western Mediterranean route.

      These finding are reinforced by 3,224 interviews conducted in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso between July 2017 and June 2018 by the Mixed Migration Monitoring Mechanism initiative (4Mi), which found a rise in the share of West African refugees and migrants stating their final destination is Spain and a fall in the share of West African refugees and migrants who say they are heading to Italy.[2]

      A second group who according to the data shifted from the Central Mediterranean route to the Western route are the Moroccans. Between 2015 and 2017, at least 4,000 Moroccans per year entered the EU on the Central Mediterranean route. Then, in the first half of this year, only 319 Moroccan refugees and migrants arrived by sea to Italy. Meanwhile, an opposite process has happened in Spain, where the number of Moroccans arriving by sea spiked, increasing by 346 per cent between 2016 and last year. This increase has continued in the first six months of this year, in which 2,600 Moroccans reached Spain through the Western Mediterranean route.

      On-going Political Bargaining

      The fact that so many Moroccans are amongst the arrivals in Spain could be an indication that Morocco, the embarkation country for the Western Mediterranean route, has perhaps been relaxing its control on migration outflows, as recently suggested by several media outlets. A Euronews article questioned whether the Moroccan government is allowing refugees and migrants to make the dangerous sea journey towards Spain as part of its negotiations with the EU on the size of the support it will receive. Der Spiegel reported that Morocco is “trying to extort concessions from the EU by placing Spain under pressure” of increased migration.

      The dynamic in which a neighbouring country uses the threat of increased migration as a political bargaining tool is one the EU is quite familiar with, following its 2016 deal with Turkey and 2017 deal with Libya. In both occasions, whilst on a different scale, the response of the EU has been fundamentally the same: to offer its southern neighbours support and financial incentives to control migration.

      The EU had a similar response this time. On August 3, the European Commission committed 55 million euro for Morocco and Tunisia to help them improve their border management. Ten days later, the Moroccan Association for Human Rights reported that Moroccan authorities started removing would-be migrants away from departure points to Europe.

      Aside from Morocco and Libya, there is another North African country whose policies may be contributing to the increase of arrivals in Spain. Algeria, which has been a destination country for many African migrants during the past decade (and still is according to 4Mi interviews), is in the midst of a nationwide campaign to detain and deport migrants, asylum seekers and refugees.

      The Associated Press reported “Algeria’s mass expulsions have picked up since October 2017, as the European Union renewed pressure on North African countries to discourage migrants going north to Europe…” More than 28,000 Africans have been expelled since the campaign started in August of last year, according to News Deeply. While Algeria prides itself on not taking EU money – “We are handling the situation with our own means,” an Algerian interior ministry official told Reuters – its current crackdown appears to be yet another element of the EU’s wider approach to migration in the region.
      Bargaining Games

      This article has demonstrated that – contrary to popular reporting – there is no blanket shift from the Central Mediterranean route to the Western Mediterranean route. A detailed analysis on the nationalities of arrivals in Italy and Spain and changes over time, shows that only for certain nationalities from West Africa a shift may be happening, while for other nationalities there is no correlation between the decrease of arrivals in Italy and the increase of arrivals in Spain. The article has also shown that the recent policies implemented by North African governments – from Libya to Morocco to Algeria – can only be understood in the context of these countries’ dialogue with the EU on irregular migration.

      So, while the idea of a shift from the Central Mediterranean route to the Western route up until now is more myth than reality, it is clear that the changes of activity levels on these migration routes are both rooted in the same source: the on-going political bargaining on migration between the EU and North African governments. And these bargaining games are likely to continue as the EU intensifies its efforts to prevent refugees and migrants from arriving at its shores.

      http://www.mixedmigration.org/articles/shift-to-the-western-mediterranean-migration-route
      #Méditerranée_centrale #Méditerranée_occidentale

    • IOM, the UN Migration Agency, reports that 80,602 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea in 2018 through 23 September, with 35,653 to Spain, the leading destination this year. In fact, with this week’s arrivals Spain in 2018 has now received via the Mediterranean more irregular migrants than it did throughout all the years 2015, 2016 and 2017 combined.

      The region’s total arrivals through the recent weekend compare with 133,465 arrivals across the region through the same period last year, and 302,175 at this point in 2016.

      Spain, with 44 per cent of all arrivals through the year, continues to receive seaborne migrants in September at a volume nearly twice that of Greece and more than six times that of Italy. Italy’s arrivals through late September are the lowest recorded at this point – the end of a normally busy summer sailing season – in almost five years. IOM Rome’s Flavio Di Giacomo on Monday reported that Italy’s 21,024 arrivals of irregular migrants by sea this year represent a decline of nearly 80 per cent from last year’s totals at this time. (see chart below).

      IOM’s Missing Migrants Project has documented the deaths of 1,730 people on the Mediterranean in 2018. Most recently, a woman drowned off the coast of Bodrum, Turkey on Sunday while attempting to reach Kos, Greece via the Eastern Mediterranean route. The Turkish Coast Guard reports that 16 migrants were rescued from this incident. On Saturday, a 5-year-old Syrian boy drowned off the coast of Lebanon’s Akkar province after a boat carrying 39 migrants to attempt to reach Cyprus capsized.

      IOM Spain’s Ana Dodevska reported Monday that total arrivals at sea in 2018 have reached 35,594 men, women and children who have been rescued in Western Mediterranean waters through 23 September (see chart below).

      IOM notes that over this year’s first five months, a total of 8,150 men, women and children were rescued in Spanish waters after leaving Africa – an average of 54 per day. In the 115 days since May 31, a total of 27,444 have arrived – or just under 240 migrants per day. The months of May-September this year have seen a total of 30,967 irregular migrants arriving by sea, the busiest four-month period for Spain since IOM began tallying arrival statistics, with just over one week left in September.

      With this week’s arrivals Spain in 2018 has now received via the Mediterranean more irregular migrants than it did throughout all the years 2015, 2016 and 2017 combined (see charts below).

      On Monday, IOM Athens’ Christine Nikolaidou reported that over four days (20-23 September) this week the Hellenic Coast Guard (HCG) units managed at least nine incidents requiring search and rescue operations off the islands of Lesvos, Chios, Samos and Farmakonisi.

      The HCG rescued a total 312 migrants and transferred them to the respective islands. Additional arrivals of some 248 individuals to Kos and some of the aforementioned islands over these past four days brings to 22,821 the total number of arrivals by sea to Greece through 23 September (see chart below).

      Sea arrivals to Greece this year by irregular migrants appeared to have peaked in daily volume in April, when they averaged at around 100 per day. That volume dipped through the following three months then picked up again in August and again in September, already this year’s busiest month – 3,536 through 23 days, over 150 per day – with about a quarter of the month remaining. Land border crossing also surged in April (to nearly 4,000 arrivals) but have since fallen back, with fewer than 2,000 crossings in each of the past four months (see charts below).

      IOM’s Missing Migrants Project has recorded 2,735 deaths and disappearances during migration so far in 2018 (see chart below).

      In the Americas, several migrant deaths were recorded since last week’s update. In Mexico, a 30-year-old Salvadoran man was killed in a hit-and-run on a highway in Tapachula, Mexico on Friday. Another death on Mexico’s freight rail network (nicknamed “La Bestia”) was added after reports of an unidentified man found dead on tracks near San Francisco Ixhuatan on 15 September.

      In the United States, on 16 September, an unidentified person drowned in the All-American Canal east of Calexico, California – the 55th drowning recorded on the US-Mexico border this year. A few days later a car crash south of Florence, Arizona resulted in the deaths of eight people, including four Guatemalan migrants, on Wednesday. Two others killed included one of the vehicles’ driver and his partner, who authorities say had been involved with migrant smuggling in the past.

      https://reliefweb.int/report/spain/mediterranean-migrant-arrivals-reach-80602-2018-deaths-reach-1730

    • Analyse de Matteo Villa sur twitter :

      Irregular sea arrivals to Italy have not been this low since 2012. But how do the two “deterrence policies” (#Minniti's and #Salvini's) compare over time?


      Why start from July 15th each year? That’s when the drop in sea arrivals in 2017 kicked in, and this allows us to do away with the need to control for seasonality. Findings do not change much if we started on July 1st this year.
      Zooming in, in relative terms the drop in sea arrivals during Salvini’s term is almost as stark as last year’s drop.

      In the period 15 July - 8 October:

      Drop during #Salvini: -73%.
      Drop during #Minniti: -79%.

      But looking at actual numbers, the difference is clear. In less than 3 months’ time, the drop in #migrants and #refugees disembarking in #Italy under #Minniti had already reached 51,000. Under #Salvini in 2018, the further drop is less than 10,000.


      To put it another way: deterrence policies under #Salvini can at best aim for a drop of about 42,000 irregular arrivals in 12 months. Most likely, the drop will amount to about 30.000. Under #Minniti, sea arrivals the drop amounted to 150.000. Five times larger.

      BOTTOM LINE: the opportunity-cost of deterrence policies is shrinking fast. Meanwhile, the number of dead and missing along the Central Mediterranean route has not declined in tandem (in fact, in June-September it shot up). Is more deterrence worth it?

      https://twitter.com/emmevilla/status/1049978070734659584

      Le papier qui explique tout cela :
      Sea Arrivals to Italy : The Cost of Deterrence Policies


      https://www.ispionline.it/en/publication/sea-arrivals-italy-cost-deterrence-policies-21367

    • Méditerranée : forte baisse des traversées en 2018 et l’#Espagne en tête des arrivées (HCR)

      Pas moins de 113.482 personnes ont traversé la #Méditerranée en 2018 pour rejoindre l’Europe, une baisse par rapport aux 172.301 qui sont arrivés en 2017, selon les derniers chiffres publiés par le Haut-Commissariat de l’ONU pour les réfugiés (HCR).
      L’Agence des Nations Unies pour les réfugiés rappelle d’ailleurs que le niveau des arrivées a également chuté par rapport au pic de 1,015 million enregistré en 2015 et à un moindre degré des 362.753 arrivées répertoriées en 2016.

      Toutefois pour l’année 2018, si l’on ajoute près de 7.000 migrants enregistrés dans les enclaves espagnoles de #Ceuta et #Melilla (arrivées par voie terrestre), on obtient un total de 120.205 arrivées en Europe.

      L’an dernier l’Espagne est redevenue la première porte d’entrée en Europe, avec 62.479 arrivées (dont 55.756 par la mer soit deux fois plus qu’en 2017, avec 22.103 arrivées).

      La péninsule ibérique est suivie par la #Grèce (32.497), l’Italie (23.371), #Malte (1.182) et #Chypre (676).

      https://news.un.org/fr/story/2019/01/1032962

  • Un grand prix de Formule 1 à Bakou dès l’année prochaine ?

    Holding Formula 1, great success for Baku : Briatore - AzerNews
    http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/67455.html

    It was previously assumed that these races would be held in Baku in 2016, but Azerbaijan’s Youth and Sports Ministry reported that Formula One race will be held in Azerbaijan in autumn 2015.
    Azerbaijan will become the second country in the former Soviet Union -after Russia- that will host the Formula One Grand Prix.

    Et Flavio Briatore donne une description de Bakou (peut-être un poil rewritée…) qui donne envie :

    It’s very close to Europe, the city is amazing - it’s like a little Dubai. And more importantly, everything is new,” added Briatore. “The heart of the town is renovated completely so you have the flavor of the old days and of the oil money. The hotels are amazing, the facilities for your guys is super. It’s very nice.

  • Jour de colère au Brésil | Gol do Brasil
    http://bresil2014.blog.lemonde.fr/2014/05/15/jour-de-colere-au-bresil

    Moins « tranquille » visiblement, la menace de grève de la police fédérale pour laquelle Celso Amorim prévoit déjà un renfort éventuel de l’armée. Mercredi, un premier jugement du STJ (Superior tribunal da justicia), de la magistrat Assusete Magalhaes interdit d’ailleurs la police fédérale d’entrer en grève dans tous le pays, moyennant une amende de 200 000 reais par jour… Selon le patron des syndicats de la police fédérale, Flavio Werneck, cette décision ne fera qu’empirer les relations déjà tendues avec le gouvernement. Une marche de protestation de policiers civils et militaires est annoncée pour le 21 mai.

    #Brésil #Mondial2014 #colèresociale