person:justin gengler

  • Quand il s’agit de discréditer toutes les manifestations contre la #barbarie israélienne les #Etasuniens recouvrent soudainement la vue, le « ... plain black flag » http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-09-12/american-killed-flag-torn-down-in-attacks-on-us-diplomats/4256040 devient « flag of the Islamic State » http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/fighters-abandoning-al-qaeda-affiliates-to-join-islamic-state-us-officials-say/2014/08/09/c5321d10-1f08-11e4-ae54-0cfe1f974f8a_story.html ce qui n’est d’ailleurs que partiellement exact, puisqu’il s’agit du drapeau de tous les sympathisants de #al-Qaïda, y compris des alliés circonstanciels du « #monde_libre »...

    • Article de Justin Gengler en 2012,
      http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/09/17/the_united_states_dangerous_double_standard_on_islamic_extrem

      La bannière, que la porte-parole du département d’Etat américain Victoria Nuland a hypocritement minimisé comme un « drapeau entièrement noir, » devrait maintenant être assez familière aux fonctionnaires de l’administration. Elle est la même que celle adoptée par les extrémistes salafistes, y compris ceux appartenant à Al-Qaïda et ses affiliés régionaux, du Mali au Yémen.

      Comme par hasard, elle est apparue dans chacune des manifestations de masse dont nous avons été témoins à ce jour - à Benghazi, à Tunis, à Khartoum, et même à Doha.

      Que l’administration Obama puisse ne pas reconnaître le symbolisme manifeste du drapeau est indicatif d’une vérité inconfortable encore persistante quant à la politique américaine au Moyen-Orient : que les ennemis des États-Unis dans un pays sont ses alliés de convenance dans un autre.

  • Une nouvelle étude destinée à contrer l’allégation de l’opposition bahreinienne selon laquelle les chiites sont discriminés dans leur accès à l’emploi (texte 1) et sa critique scientifique par Justin Gengler sur son blog (texte 2).

    1)
    Gulf Daily News » Local News » Opposition’s ’lies’ bared
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=352829

    ALLEGATIONS that Bahrain’s Shi’ite community suffers from economic discrimination have been disputed in a report compiled by an independent expert, who accuses opposition groups of lying about the extent of hardships being faced.

    The study was carried out over 18 months by Prague-based Metropolitan University Department of International Relations and European Studies founder and head Dr Mitchell Belfer, who is putting together a book on Bahrain.

    He embarked on the project following opposition claims that the country’s Shi’ite community was underrepresented, excluded from economic life, experienced inequality in pay and was more likely to be unemployed.

    However, his results led him to accuse anti-government activists of engaging in “demographic slander” by twisting facts to suit their agenda, undermine the government and incite sectarianism.

    The “Demographic Warfare” report was compiled based on staff data at six government ministries, five government agencies, 17 high-income sectors, five banks, 10 major employers and 10 top Shi’ite-owned firms.

    Dr Belfer’s research indicated there was equal representation of Shia and Sunni in the economy, with Shi’ite staff massively outnumbering the Sunni workforce in several ministries and agencies, as well as in some of the country’s largest private organisations.

    He also alleged discrimination against Sunni Muslims by 10 major Shi’ite-owned companies, which he said employed 2,648 people in total.

    The study found that an average of 98.1pc of staff at those firms were Shi’ite, although the research did not document levels of Shi’ite employment in Sunni-owned companies.

    “Such statistics only seek to show that the theory of economic desperation and disempowerment is false,” says the report by Dr Belfer, who is also the editor-in-chief of the Central European Journal of International and Security Studies (CEJISS).

    The report also disputes allegations by opposition groups such as Al Wefaq National Islamic Society that Bahrain was trying to reduce the footprint of the Shi’ite population by granting Bahraini citizenship to expats - arguing that immigrants were being unfairly politicised by such claims.

    “Few have truly sought to learn about the people who are being politicised for nothing more than gaining Bahraini nationality through the many channels open to immigrants; asylum seekers, economic migrants, regular immigrants, etc,” says the report.

    "Despite the near deafening depiction that immigrants are mercenaries working to suppress the ’majority Shia’, most immigrants to Bahrain - over the past century - are hardly Sunni zealots seeking to eliminate the country’s Shia; they tend to be either the politically vanquished or the economically downtrodden.

    "They come from around the world; the Philippines, Kurdistan, Eritrea, Sudan, Turkey, Western Europe and the US and, for the past century, they have steadily come from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Baluchistan and from throughout the Middle East.

    “It is on this last destination that pause for reflection is most needed since the cases of Palestinian and Syrian immigrants to Bahrain clearly demonstrate that Bahrain’s immigration policy is not intended to alter the demographic situation on the ground - it has already been widely acknowledged by the Bahraini government that Bahrainis, Shia and Sunni, are the minority in the country - but is designed in a way to provide political safety and economic opportunity for those that require it most.”

    Although Dr Belfer’s report does not cover staffing at the Defence Ministry and Interior Ministry, it describes allegations that the Shi’ite community is disenfranchised as false and states such allegations only serve to polarise society.

    “There is clear evidence that Shia Bahrainis enjoy the distribution of economic benefits from many of the country’s key sectors and industries,” it says.

    The report warns of the dangers of trying to misrepresent employment opportunities for the Shi’ite community in Bahrain and advises members of the public to challenge such claims by opposition groups.

    “It is not prudent to simply allow demographic slander to go unchecked, these lines of argumentation need to be openly challenged not for Bahrain as a state, but for the very people who live within it, those who found shelter, safety and security in the Kingdom, who call it home while Al Wefaq calls them strangers and mercenaries,” it says.

    It also highlights the dangers of assuming that all members of the Shi’ite community are opponents of the government, particularly since many Bahraini Shia of Persian descent (known as the Ajam) are loyal to the ruling family after their ancestors were welcomed in Bahrain.

    In addition, the report refutes the notion that Bahrain is a country divided between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims.

    “The country is not a simple case of Sunnis and Shia Muslims competing for dominance of the political and economic resources of the state,” it says.

    "Sunnis and Shia are joined by many other identities, not least of Bahrainis.

    “Despite the manipulation of demographics to attempt to delegitimise Bahrain’s immigration policy, and the government by extension, Bahrain continues to be a vibrant society where the majority of all citizens and residents from the full spectrum of ethnic, religious, linguistic, social and political groups enjoy freedom of speech, of assembly, of worship, of association.”

    2) Bahrain Re-Opens to (Pseudo-) Academics

    the purpose of the Belfer paper is clear: to counter perceptions—local but probably mainly Western perceptions—of employment discrimination against Shi’a citizens. Of course, insofar as the main grievance of Shi’a is not simply employment discrimination per se but disproportionate exclusion from politically-important positions—indeed, from precisely those ministries (and security services) not included in Belfer’s report—it does not directly address this issue.

    Yet the bigger problem with the paper would seem to be one for the government itself. That is, what exactly is the lesson here? And to whom is it directed? Though the article’s main audience is obviously Western, still if I were the Bahraini government I don’t know if I would want to be advertising the fact that, in reality, Shi’a citizens seem to be doing better than Sunnis in many industries and agencies. For, as my own survey results showed, the political views and behavior of ordinary Shi’a Bahrainis are not systematically related to their economic status; those of Sunnis, by contrast, are, and one would think the state would be cognizant of this.

    Thanks may be in order, therefore, to Mitchell A. Belfer, who seems to have substantiated the primary complaint of many of the government’s fiercest critics: that Bahraini Sunnis are poorly rewarded for their staunch support of the government, which continues to patronize exactly those who oppose it.

    http://bahrainipolitics.blogspot.fr/2013/05/bahrain-re-opens-to-pseudo-academics.html