person:marco

  • The New York Times and its Uyghur “activist” - World Socialist Web Site
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/05/09/uygh-m09.html

    9 May 2019 - The New York Times has furnished a case study of the way in which it functions as the conduit for the utterly hypocritical “human rights” campaigns fashioned by the CIA and the State Department to prosecute the predatory interests of US imperialism.

    While turning a blind eye to the gross abuses of democratic rights by allies such as Saudi Arabia, the US has brazenly used “human rights” for decades as the pretext for wars, diplomatic intrigues and regime-change. The media is completely integrated into these operations.

    Another “human rights” campaign is now underway. The New York Times is part of the mounting chorus of condemnation of China over its treatment of the Turkic-speaking, Muslim Uyghur minority in the western Chinese province of Xinjiang.

    In an article on May 4 entitled “In push for trade deal, Trump administration shelves sanctions over China’s crackdown on Uyghurs,” the New York Times joined in criticism of the White House, particularly by the Democrats, for failing to impose punitive measures on Beijing.

    The strident denunciations of China involve unsubstantiated allegations that it is detaining millions of Uyghurs without charge or trial in what Beijing terms vocational training camps.

    The New York Times reported, without qualification, the lurid claims of US officials, such as Assistant Secretary of Defence Randall Schriver, who last Friday condemned “the mass imprisonment of Chinese Muslims in concentration camps” and boosted the commonly cited figure of up to a million to “up to three million” in detention. No evidence has been presented for either claim.

    The repression of the Uyghurs is completely bound up with the far broader oppression of the working class by the Chinese capitalist elites and the Chinese Communist Party regime that defends their interests. The US campaign on the Uyghurs, however, has nothing to do with securing the democratic rights of workers, but is aimed at stirring up reactionary separatist sentiment.

    The US has longstanding ties to right-wing separatist organisations based on Chinese minorities—Tibetans as well as the Uyghurs—that it helped create, fund and in some cases arm. As the US, first under President Obama and now Trump, has escalated its diplomatic, economic and military confrontation with China, the “human rights” of Uyghurs has been increasingly brought to the fore.

    Washington’s aim, at the very least, is to foment separatist opposition in Xinjiang, which is a crucial source of Chinese energy and raw materials as well as being pivotal to its key Belt and Road Initiative to integrate China more closely with Eurasia. Such unrest would not only weaken China but could lead to a bloody war and the fracturing of the country. Uyghur separatists, who trained in the US network of Islamist terrorist groups in Syria, openly told Radio Free Asia last year of their intention to return to China to wage an armed insurgency.

    The New York Times is completely in tune with the aims behind these intrigues—a fact that is confirmed by its promotion of Uyghur “activist” Rushan Abbas.

    Last weekend’s article highlighted Abbas as the organiser of a tiny demonstration in Washington to “pressure Treasury Department officials to take action against Chinese officials involved in the Xinjiang abuses.” She told the newspaper that the Uyghur issue should be included as part of the current US-China trade talks, and declared: “They are facing indoctrination, brainwashing and the elimination of their values as Muslims.”

    An article “Uyghur Americans speak against China’s internment camps” on October 18 last year cited her remarks at the right-wing think tank, the Hudson Institute, where she “spoke out” about the detention of her aunt and sister. As reported in the article: “I hope the Chinese ambassador here reads this,” she said, wiping away tears. “I will not stop. I will be everywhere and speak on this at every event from now on.”

    Presented with a tearful woman speaking about her family members, very few readers would have the slightest inkling of Abbas’s background, about which the New York Times quite deliberately says nothing. Abbas is a highly connected political operator with long standing ties to the Pentagon, the State Department and US intelligence agencies at the highest level as well as top Republican Party politicians. She is a key figure in the Uyghur organisations that the US has supported and funded.

    Currently, Abbas is Director of Business Development in ISI Consultants, which offers to assist “US companies to grow their businesses in Middle East and African markets.” Her credentials, according to the company website, include “over 15 years of experience in global business development, strategic business analysis, business consultancy and government affairs throughout the Middle East, Africa, CIS regions, Europe, Asia, Australia, North America and Latin America.”

    The website also notes: “She also has extensive experience working with US government agencies, including Homeland Security, Department of Defense, Department of State, Department of Justice, and various US intelligence agencies.” As “an active campaigner for human rights,” she “works closely with members of the US Senate, Congressional Committees, the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, the US Department of State and several other US government departments and agencies.”

    This brief summary makes clear that Abbas is well connected in the highest levels of the state apparatus and in political circles. It also underscores the very close ties between the Uyghur organisations, in which she and her family members are prominent, and the US intelligence and security agencies.

    A more extensive article and interview with Abbas appeared in the May 2019 edition of the magazine Bitter Winter, which is published by the Italian-based Center for Studies on New Religions. The magazine focuses on “religious liberty and human rights in China” and is part of a conservative, right-wing network in Europe and the United States. The journalist who interviewed Abbas, Marco Respinti, is a senior fellow at the Russell Kirk Centre for Cultural Renewal, and a board member of the Centre for European Renewal—both conservative think tanks.

    The article explains that Abbas was a student activist at Xinjiang University during the 1989 protests by students and workers against the oppressive Beijing regime, but left China prior to the brutal June 4 military crackdown that killed thousands in the capital and throughout the country. At the university, she collaborated with Dolkun Isa and “has worked closely with him ever since.”

    Dolkun Isa is currently president of the World Uyghur Congress, established in 2004 as an umbrella group for a plethora of Uyghur organisations. It receives funding from the National Endowment for Democracy—which is one of the fronts used by the CIA and the US State Department for fomenting opposition to Washington’s rivals, including so-called colour revolutions, around the world.

    Isa was the subject of an Interpol red notice after China accused him of having connections to the armed separatist group, the East Turkestan Liberation Organisation, a claim he denied. East Turkestan is the name given to Xinjiang by Uyghur separatists to denote its historic connections to Turkey. None of the Western countries in which he traveled moved to detain him and the red notice was subsequently removed, no doubt under pressure from Washington.

    Bitter Winter explained that after moving to the US, Abbas cofounded the first Uyghur organisation in the United States in 1993—the California-based Tengritagh Overseas Students and Scholars Association. She also played a key role in the formation of the Uyghur American Association in 1998, which receives funding from the National Endowment for Democracy (NED). Last year its Uyghur Human Rights Project was awarded two NED grants totaling $320,000. Her brother Rishat Abbas was the association’s first vice-chairman and is currently the honorary chairman of the Uyghur Academy based in Turkey.

    When the US Congress funded a Uyghur language service for the Washington-based Radio Free Asia, Abbas became its first reporter and news anchor, broadcasting daily to China. Radio Free Asia, like its counterpart Radio Free Europe, began its existence in the 1950s as a CIA conduit for anti-communist propaganda. It was later transferred to the US Information Agency, then the US State Department and before being incorporated as an “independent,” government-funded body. Its essential purpose as a vehicle for US disinformation and lies has not changed, however.

    In a particularly revealing passage, Bitter Winter explained: “From 2002–2003, Ms. Abbas supported Operation Enduring Freedom as a language specialist at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.” In the course of the interview with the magazine, Abbas attempted to explain away her involvement with the notorious prison camp by saying that she was simply acting on behalf of 22 Uyghurs who were wrongfully detained and ultimately released—after being imprisoned for between four to 11 years!

    Given the denunciations of Chinese detention camps, one might expect that Abbas would have something critical to say about Guantanamo Bay, where inmates are held indefinitely without charge or trial and in many cases tortured. However, she makes no criticism of the prison or its procedures, nor for that matter of Operation Enduring Freedom—the illegal US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq that resulted in the deaths of a million civilians.

    It is clear why. Abbas is plugged into to the very top levels of the US state apparatus and political establishment in Washington. Her stints with Radio Free Asia and at Guantanamo Bay are undoubtedly not the only times that she has been directly on the payroll.

    As Bitter Winter continued: “She has frequently briefed members of the US Congress and officials at the State Department on the human rights situation of the Uyghur people, and their history and culture, and arranged testimonies before Congressional committees and Human Rights Commissions.

    “She provided her expertise to other federal and military agencies as well, and in 2007 she assisted during a meeting between then-President George W. Bush and Rebiya Kadeer, the world-famous moral leader of the Uyghurs, in Prague. Later that year she also briefed then First Lady Laura Bush in the White House on the Human Rights situation in Xinjiang.”

    It should be noted, Rebiya Kadeer is the “the world-famous moral leader of the Uyghurs,” only in the eyes of the CIA and the US State Department who have assiduously promoted her, and of the US-funded Uyghur organisations. She was one of the wealthiest businesswomen in China who attended the National People’s Congress before her husband left for the US and began broadcasting for Radio Free Asia and Voice of America. She subsequently fled China to the US and has served as president both of the World Uyghur Congress and the American Uyghur Association.

    The fact that Russan Abbas is repeatedly being featured in the New York Times is an indication that she is also being groomed to play a leading role in the mounting US propaganda offensive against China over the persecution of the Uyghurs. It is also a telling indictment of the New York Times which opens its pages to her without informing its readers of her background. Like Abbas, the paper of record is also plugged into the state apparatus and its intelligence agencies.

    #Chine #Xinjiang_Weiwuer_zizhiqu #USA #impérialisme #services_secretes

    新疆維吾爾自治區 / 新疆维吾尔自治区, Xīnjiāng Wéiwú’ěr zìzhìqū, englisch Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

  • Panique astronomique face à la constellation de satellites d’Elon Musk
    https://www.latribune.fr/entreprises-finance/industrie/aeronautique-defense/panique-astronomique-face-a-la-constellation-de-satellites-d-elon-musk-818

    Ils craignent que tous ces points brillants dans la nuit ne gâchent les observations de leurs télescopes, même si les points Starlink semblent devenir moins intenses au fur et à mesure que les satellites gagnent en altitude.

    « S’il y en a 12.000 là-haut, cela veut dire que des centaines se trouveront au-dessus de l’horizon à tout instant », explique Jonathan McDowell, du centre d’astrophysique d’Harvard et Smithsonian.

    Or les télescopes ont souvent besoin d’une exposition longue, par exemple 15 minutes, dit-il à l’AFP. Si des dizaines ou des centaines de satellites passent dans le champ pendant cet intervalle, « l’image sera rayée de traits lumineux (...) au point qu’il sera difficile de voir les galaxies très faiblement visibles que vous cherchiez à observer ».

    Les satellites Starlink font environ 227 kilogrammes et étaient particulièrement brillants peu après leur lancement jeudi dernier, à environ 440 km d’altitude, car ils sont plats, et ont un grand panneau solaire reflétant la lumière. La brillance dépend de l’angle des panneaux, et de celle de l’orbite.

    Un astronome néerlandais, Marco Langbroek, avait anticipé la trajectoire et a réussi à filmer vendredi le « train » bien droit des satellites, comme une armée extraterrestre. Depuis, chaque soir, des astronomes tentent d’observer la longue traîne, qui s’allonge et met plus de dix minutes à traverser le ciel.

    À Paris, le prochain passage du train de satellites est prévu pour mercredi à 23h39, très bas dans le ciel, selon le site heavens-above.com.

    Mais si les futures méga-constellations étaient aussi brillantes que dans les premiers jours de Starlink, « dans moins de 20 ans, les gens verront plus de satellites que d’étoiles à l’oeil nu pendant une bonne partie de la nuit », s’alarme Bill Keel, astronome à l’université de l’Alabama.

    Elon Musk a répondu sur Twitter avec un mélange de hauteur et de légèreté aux critiques.

    « Starlink ne sera vu par personne sauf ceux qui regardent très précisément, et aura à peu près 0% d’impact sur les progrès de l’astronomie », a-t-il assuré. Il a argué que fournir internet à des « milliards de gens économiquement désavantagés » était un « bien supérieur ».

    Mais il a tout de même dit avoir demandé à ses équipes de réduire l’albédo (la part de lumière renvoyée par la surface des satellites) des prochains appareils.

    « C’est bien, mais personne n’y avait réfléchi 60 secondes auparavant ? », ironise Bill Keel.

    #Espace #Communs

  • Panique astronomique face à la constellation de satellites d’Elon Musk
    https://www.latribune.fr/entreprises-finance/industrie/aeronautique-defense/panique-astronomique-face-a-la-constellation-de-satellites-d-elon-musk-818

    TRAIN DE SATELLITES | Constellation Startlink de SpaceX d’Elon Musk | (Source Marco Langbroek)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FL8OsJ2oa4

    Envahissante la constellation Starlink de satellites de SpaceX, s’inquiète la communauté des astronomes.

    Si le ciel est dégagé mercredi soir, vous verrez peut-être défiler dans le ciel une chaîne de 60 points brillants, les premiers satellites de la constellation Starlink mise en orbite jeudi dernier par SpaceX, la société d’Elon Musk. C’est justement le fait qu’ils soient aussi visibles, et que le patron ait l’intention d’en envoyer 12.000 en tout afin de fournir le globe en internet à haut débit, qui fait souffler un vent de panique dans la communauté des astronomes depuis quelques jours.
    […]
    Les satellites Starlink font environ 227 kilogrammes et étaient particulièrement brillants peu après leur lancement jeudi dernier, à environ 440 km d’altitude, car ils sont plats, et ont un grand panneau solaire reflétant la lumière. La brillance dépend de l’angle des panneaux, et de celle de l’orbite.

    Un astronome néerlandais, Marco Langbroek, avait anticipé la trajectoire et a réussi à filmer vendredi le « train » bien droit des satellites, comme une armée extraterrestre. Depuis, chaque soir, des astronomes tentent d’observer la longue traîne, qui s’allonge et met plus de dix minutes à traverser le ciel.

    • http://www.rfi.fr/science/20190601-space-x-pointe-doigt-cause-satellites-trop-lumineux

      Pollution radio et débris orbitaux

      Cela soulève encore un autre problème, non pas la pollution lumineuse, mais la pollution radio : ces constellations ont pour but de garantir un accès internet sur tout le globe, et les ondes qu’elles utilisent pour y parvenir risquent de gêner les radio-télescopes installés par les observatoires. Tout cela sans parler de la question des débris orbitaux. On estime aujourd’hui à 21 000 le nombre d’objets d’une taille supérieure à 10 centimètres en orbite autour de la Terre. La multiplication d’objets en orbite basse de la Terre augmente donc le risque de la collision entre un débris et l’un de ces satellites. Cela entraînerait la création de nouveaux débris, dans une réaction en chaîne. Au-delà d’un certain seuil, un tel scénario rendrait tout simplement impossibles l’exploration spatiale et l’envoi de nouveaux satellites ; il y aurait trop de risques qu’ils soient détruits par des fragments d’engins en orbite, dans ce qu’on appelle lesyndrome de Kessler.

      #astronautique #satellites

  • Dans la lignée de son rôle très actifs dans les accords de paix en Colombie, la Norvège, qui n’a pas reconnu Juan Guaidó comme président, entretient de longue date des contacts avec gouvernement et opposants du Venezuela. Des rencontres ont eu lieu mardi 14 et mercredi 15à Oslo.

    Qué tienen los noruegos para abonar una solución a la crisis en Venezuela
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/politica/que-tienen-los-noruegos-para-abonar-una-solucion-crisis-venezuela_28253

    Noruega ha hecho del apoyo a la paz en el mundo una verdadera política de Estado”. Son palabras del ex presidente colombiano Juan Manuel Santos en la obra La batalla por la paz, en la que desgrana desde las vivencias personales en el arduo camino hasta la firma de los acuerdos de paz en Colombia. En esta complicada tarea participó una delegación noruega encabezada por el diplomático Dag Nylander.

    Noruega, junto con Cuba, fueron los países garantes presentes en la mesa de negociaciones. Con esa labor, Noruega se ganó el crédito de todos, incluidos cubanos y venezolanos, subraya al diario ALnavío Leiv Marsteintredet, profesor asociado de Política Comparada de la Universidad de Bergen. Este experto noruego es investigador de fenómenos políticos y especialista en estudios de resolución de conflictos, con un marcado interés por América Latina, especialmente Venezuela.

    Ahora el foco negociador vuelve de nuevo a Noruega. Esta vez por la crisis venezolana. Según adelantó el diario ALnavío -y se hacen eco medios noruegos y españoles- el martes y el miércoles delegados de la oposición y del régimen de Nicolás Maduro mantuvieron dos encuentros en Oslo. Ya están de regreso a Caracas. En ambos encuentros estuvo presente un grupo de intermediarios, un equipo noruego. Marsteintredet subraya que parte de ese equipo es el mismo que participó en la mesa de negociación de los acuerdos de paz en Colombia, incluido Nylander.

    Noruega lleva ya probablemente un año o más hablando con las dos partes, con gobierno y oposición de Venezuela. Por lo menos por separado. Lo confirmó la ministra de Exteriores noruega, Ine Eriksen Søreide”, recalca este experto.

    El rumor de que Noruega podría tener un papel en la mediación entre ambas partes despertó cuando Yván Gil, viceministro para Europa de Nicolás Maduro, visitó Oslo a mediados de febrero. Gil se reunió con el diplomático noruego Nylander, el mismo de las negociaciones de paz en Colombia años atrás.

    Intercambiamos opiniones sobre la situación de Venezuela, pero en el marco de la posición oficial de Noruega”, dijo Gil a Aftenposten.

     Hasta ahora Noruega no ha reconocido a Juan Guaidó como presidente encargado de Venezuela.

    ¿Por qué los noruegos están mediando en la crisis venezolana? “Es natural ver esto como una continuación del buen contacto que Noruega obtuvo en la negociación de los acuerdos de paz en Colombia tanto con los cubanos como con el gobierno de Venezuela, primero de Hugo Chávez y ahora de Nicolás Maduro, ya que Venezuela también formó parte de las conversaciones para el tratado de paz en Colombia”, explica Marsteintredet.

    Este experto subraya que Noruega ha mantenido una presencia en Colombia para seguir la implementación del acuerdo de paz, que “se ha ganado el respeto del gobierno de Venezuela” y que “ha aprovechado esos contactos para seguir trabajando”, esta vez por la resolución del conflicto venezolano.

    • Le point de vue du «  boss  » : négocier, c’est bien, faut essayer, mais faut pas que ça serve à gagner du temps ; négocier, c’est pour virer Maduro.
      Intéressante base de «  négociations  ». Un peu comme pour Bachar,…

      Rubio : Guaidó y su equipo no caerán en negociaciones falsas
      http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/mundo/rubio-guaido-equipo-caeran-negociaciones-falsas_282689

      Marco Rubio, senador estadounidense por el estado de Florida, dijo este viernes que el presidente interino Juan Guaidó merece crédito por «explorar nuevas posibilidades para encontrar una transición pacífica a la democracia en Venezuela». 

      Señaló que tanto Estados Unidos como el Grupo de Lima son conscientes de que Nicolás Maduro utilizó las oportunidades de diálogo pasadas para ganar tiempo. «El presidente Guaidó y su equipo no van a caer en una negociación falsa», aseguró en Twitter. 

      El martes Noruega recibió a representantes de Nicolás Maduro y de la oposición para explorar eventuales conversaciones a fin de buscar solución a la crisis política. Por parte del oficialismo participaron Jorge Rodríguez y Héctor Rodríguez y por la oposición asistieron Gerardo Blyde, Fernando Martínez y Stalin González, segundo vicepresidente del Parlamento.

      Guaidó informó el jueves en rueda de prensa que se trataba de «un esfuerzo de Noruega por una mediación, que tiene meses. Esta fue la segunda invitación a Oslo (...) Es la intención de un país, así como la tienen el Grupo de Contacto, el Grupo de Lima, Canadá y otras naciones, de mediar en la crisis. Es una iniciativa más de un país que quiere colaborar».

      @marcorubio - Twitter
      17:36 - 17 may. 2019
      https://twitter.com/marcorubio/status/1129410338603044865

      .@jguaido deserves credit for exploring new every possibility at finding a peaceful transition to democracy in #Venezuela#LimaGroup & #EU well aware #Maduro used past negotiations to buy time & President Guaido & his team aren’t going to fall for a fake negotiation

  • Documentaire sur les religieuses abusées, la justice contraint Arte à cesser toute diffusion
    https://www.la-croix.com/Religion/Catholicisme/Monde/Documentaire-religieuses-abusees-justice-contraint-Arte-cesser-toute-diffu

    À la suite d’une plainte en référé, le tribunal d’instance de Hambourg (Allemagne) a rendu sa décision le 20 mars dans laquelle il interdit à ARTE de diffuser à nouveau le documentaire Religieuses abusées, l’autre scandale de l’Église dans sa version actuelle. Source : La Croix

    • Voisi le texte àl’origine du sujet mentinonné dans une interview avec l’auteure

      LES BORDELS DU VATICAN
      http://humanoides.free.fr/press-30.html

      lien mort vers le texte original
      http://www.motus.ch/bulletins/no4/bordelsvatican

      LES BORDELS DU VATICAN
      Enrôlées comme religieuses à destination des couvents du monde entier, les jeunes filles du Tiers-monde sont utilisées comme esclaves sexuelles par le corps ecclésiastique.

      Des religieuses-prostituées comme ces filles chrétiennes de l’état du Kerala - "la réserve « christianisée » des jésuites en Inde" sont envoyées au loin pour en faire des nonnes d’un genre spécial. Quelque part en Afrique, en guise de promesse du ciel, c’est l’enfer qu’elles découvrent à l’abri de la sainte Église qui les utilise comme bétail sexuel au service de son corps ecclésiastique. On a bien fait voeu de célibat mais pas de chasteté. Cette hypocrisie empoisonne l’Occident depuis dix-huit siècles, et serait même à l’origine de la prostitution moderne. Durant des siècles, ce commerce fut pris en mains par l’Église qui était à la fois cliente et maquereau. La moitié de la population féminine de Rome "la ville de pèlerinage obligée pour tout sémina-riste" fut réduite à la prostitution à certaines époques de l’histoire.

      Pour que ce scandale puisse être connu, il aura fallu que des religieuses-médecins, débordées par l’ampleur de ce crime organisé, se décident courageusement à publier des rapports. Mais, immanquablement, ces rapports destinés au Saint-Siège finissent aux oubliettes avec celles qui les ont rédigés.

      Selon l’agence Reuters, « accusé d’entretenir une conspiration du silence autour des cas d’abus sexuels dans les couvents, notamment en Afrique, le Vatican a reconnu l’existence d’une série de scandales, tout en assurant qu’ils étaient limités. » Selon un rapport, des prêtres et des missionnaires ont contraint des religieuses à avoir des relations sexuelles avec eux, en les violant. Certaines victimes ont été obligées de prendre la pilule, d’autres d’avorter. L’ampleur du scandale a amené Joaquin Navarro-Valls, porte-parole du Vatican, à déclarer que le Saint-Siège était « au courant du problème », mais que celui-ci était « limité à certaines zones géographiques » non précisées.

      Conspiration du silence.

      Le rapport, qui a été soumis il y a six ans au cardinal Martinez Solamo, préfet de la Congrégation pour les instituts de vie consacrée et pour les sociétés de vie apostolique, a été rédigé par une religieuse et médecin, Maura O’Donohue. Celle-ci a recensé des cas d’abus dans 23 pays, y compris les Etats-Unis, l’Italie et l’Irlande. Mais elle écrit que la plupart des violences sexuelles commises par des prêtres et missionnaires se sont produites en Afrique, où les religieuses présentent, aux yeux de leurs partenaires potentiels, l’avantage de passer pour être exemptes du virus du sida qui ravage le continent noir.

      L’auteur du rapport, qui mentionne des noms, cite le cas d’un prêtre qui avait mis enceinte une religieuse. Après l’avoir forcée à avorter, ce dont elle est morte, c’est lui qui a célébré la messe d’enterrement.

      Maura O’Donohue rapporte des cas de nombreuses religieuses tombées enceintes en même temps dans des communautés religieuses africaines, notamment celui d’une supérieure relevée de ses fonctions par son évêque après avoir signalé "la grossesse simultanée de 29 de ses soeurs" sans qu’aucune mesure ne soit prise par ailleurs. Selon Marco Politi, correspondant de la Republica au Vatican, ces scandales, qui n’ont commencé à transpirer hors des murs du Vatican qu’il y a peu de temps, ont été portés à l’attention du Saint-Siège à plusieurs reprises au cours de la décennie passée. Sans résultat.

      Une autre religieuse, Marie McDonald, supérieure des Missions de Notre-Dame d’Afrique, avait à son tour soumis en 1998 un rapport sur les « abus sexuels et viols commis par des prêtres et évêques ». « Que je sache, aucune inspection n’a eu lieu. La conspiration du silence aggrave le problème », a t-elle déclaré. Le Vatican observe la situation mais n’a pris aucune mesure concrète.

      Cherchez la secte.

      L’Église est beaucoup plus loquace en ce qui concerne les dérives des prétendues « sectes » qui lui font de la concurrence. Il y a environ 25 ans, un prêtre français au sourire immuable, manipulateur et ambitieux, le père Jean Vernette, fut chargé de répandre l’idéologie antisecte par une propagande extrêmement habile et efficace. Selon l’adage « hors de l’Église, point de salut », Jean Vernette et ses amis inquisiteurs ont fourni à l’association antisecte ADFI toute une panoplie d’armes intellectuelles et logistiques pour traquer les « sectes ». Après avoir quitté l’ADFI, trop virulente, il peaufine son image de saint homme qui prêche la « tolérance » et « l’évangélisation des sectes ».

      En réalité, derrière cette langue de bois onctueuse, « évangélisation » signifie guerre totale. Pour l’ADFI, Vernette rédigea la liste des « symptômes de sectarisme » qui est à l’origine de la persécution de milliers de non-conformistes (long temps de lecture et de méditation, changement de régime alimentaire...).

      Par cette manipulation, l’épiscopat de France nous a fait croire que la secte c’est l’autre, que la pédophilie c’est chez les autres, et que les pratiques mafieuses c’est chez ceux d’en face. Pourtant, dans le seul registre des moeurs, chaque semaine apporte un nouveau cas de pédophilie ecclésiastique en France.

      En bon jésuite, le porte-parole du Vatican a trouvé la parade : « Certaines affaires négatives ne doivent pas nous faire oublier la foi souvent héroïque manifestée par une grande majorité de ces hommes et femmes des ordres religieux et du clergé », a- t-il plaidé.

      Certes, mais lorsqu’un enfant attrape un mauvais rhume dans une « secte » pas très catholique, le journal La Croix et les bons cathos de l’ADFI n’hésitent pas à crier au « crime contre l’humanité ».

      Quant à « la foi souvent héroïque », si c’est de l’évangélisation planétaire dont on parle, il aurait mieux fallu pour l’humanité souffrante que les hordes de missionnaires incultes et arrogants qui ont la prétention de sauver l’âme des païens, restent tranquillement à la maison en s’exerçant à un métier honnête.

      #religion #catholicisme #abus_sexuel #église

    • « Religieuses abusées, l’autre scandale de l’Église » : une enquête choc qui rompt l’omerta
      https://information.tv5monde.com/terriennes/religieuses-abusees-l-autre-scandale-de-l-eglise-une-enquete-c

      Pendant deux ans, les documentaristes Marie-Pierre Raimbault et Éric Quintin, épaulé.e.s par la journaliste Élizabeth Drévillon, ont enquêté à travers le monde sur des faits d’abus sexuels commis par des prêtres sur les religieuses. Abusées pendant des années pour certaines, violées et avortées de force ... Ce documentaire permet aux victimes de sortir d’un trop long silence.

      Pourquoi ce phénomème est resté secret

      Ces rapports avaient été envoyés au Vatican par Maura O’Donohue et Mary Mac Donald, deux religieuses gynécologues, dans les années 1990. Elles étaient dignes de confiance puisqu’elles se sont retrouvées plusieurs fois confrontées à des religieuses violées, et parfois même, enceintes à la suite de ces viols. Au-delà de la thèse culturelle et des stéréotypes, puisqu’il était coutumier de renvoyer l’existence de ces abus sexuels à l’Afrique, les rapports faisaient mention du nombre de religieuses violées par des prêtres, dans 23 pays à travers le monde. C’était donc un mode de fonctionnement systémique dans l’Eglise catholique et le Vatican en avait connaissance. D’ailleurs, Rome n’a jamais répondu à ces religieuses. Elle demandaient une intervention de la part des autorités du clergé et réclamaient justice. Elles n’ont été entendues sur aucun de ces deux points.

      A ceci s’ajoute souvent une dualité de la part de ces lanceuses d’alertes. Elles ont certes dénoncé les abus des prêtres sur leurs consœurs religieuses, mais voulaient aussi protéger l’institution, en laquelle elles ont placé leurs croyances et à laquelle elles se sont dévouées. Pour ces raisons, elles n’ont pas osé en parler publiquement. Et si quelqu’un n’avait pas fait fuiter le contenu de ces rapports, l’opinion publique n’en aurait jamais rien su.

    • Religieuses abusées : une censure inexplicable
      Par Bernadette Sauvaget, Journaliste au service Société
      https://www.liberation.fr/planete/2019/04/29/religieuses-abusees-une-censure-inexplicable_1724080

      Personne ne s’attendait à cette censure. Et pour l’heure, rien n’indique qu’elle sera levée, ni, si c’est le cas, à quelle échéance. Le 20 mars, le tribunal de Hambourg, en Allemagne, a estimé - mais sans que cela ne soit rendu public à ce moment-là - qu’Arte devait suspendre illico la diffusion du documentaire Religieuses abusées, l’autre scandale de l’Eglise. Une enquête approfondie qui a provoqué un immense choc, particulièrement dans les milieux catholiques.

      Aucune voix ne s’était pourtant élevée pour remettre en cause la véracité des accusations, ni la réalité des abus sexuels subis par les religieuses catholiques, un tabou qui commence à se lever. Personne, sauf un prêtre qui estime pouvoir être reconnu comme l’un des abuseurs ! Pensant être en mesure d’arrêter la marche de l’histoire, il s’est adressé à la justice qui lui a donné, pour l’heure, gain de cause. Seul contre tous. Même contre le pape, qui a pris acte de ces abus. « C’est une procédure inique, dénonce à Libération le producteur Eric Colomer. L’objectif du film est de donner la parole aux victimes, pas de jeter en pâture tel ou tel. » A Hambourg, la défense, conformément aux règles de la procédure, n’a pas pu faire valoir ses droits mais prépare sa contre-attaque. La bataille ne fait que commencer. Doris, l’une des ex-religieuses qui témoignent, a déjà publié un livre et s’est largement exprimée dans la presse. Sans jamais subir les foudres de la justice. A l’aune du succès du documentaire (plus de 2 millions de personnes l’ont visionné), la peur pourrait bien avoir changé de camp.

  • #Italie, anatomie d’une crise (4/5) – Marco d’Eramo : « Salvini et Di Maio ne disent jamais que le problème majeur de l’Italie est la dette publique »
    https://lemediapresse.fr/international/italie-anatomie-dune-crise-4-5-marco-deramo-salvini-et-di-maio-ne-dise

    À Rome, Filippo Ortona rencontre Marco d’Eramo, intellectuel italien, ancien élève de Pierre Bourdieu, penseur du #Capitalisme, du #populisme et de ses usages, pour le quatrième épisode de notre série « Italie, anatomie d’une crise ». Entretien. 

    #Idées #International #classe_ouvrière #communisme #Europe #extrême_droite #fascisme #Gauche #globalisation #italieanatomiedunecrise #Italieombresetlumieres #Lega #M5S #Mondialisation #ouvriers #sociologie #sociologue #syndicalisme #Syndicats #UE #Union_Européenne

  • Bolivia’s new Mother Earth Law to sideline indigenous rights – Carwil without Borders
    https://woborders.blog/2012/08/24/new-mother-earth-law-sidelines-indigenous

    Bolivia, the country that became synonymous with indigenous and environmental rights on the global diplomatic stage, is about to approve a Mother Earth Law that lacks the blessing of the country’s leading indigenous organizations and undermines indigenous communities’ rights to prior consultation. Thursday (August 23), the National Council of Ayllus and Markas of Qollasuyu (CONAMAQ) publicly walked out of the Chamber of Deputies’ drafting session on the “Framework Law on Mother Earth and Integral Development for Living Well” (Ley Marco de la Madre Tierra y Desarrollo Integral para Vivir Bien). CONAMAQ Spokesman David Crispin explained the walk out: “We in CONAMAQ dave decided to withdraw from the drafting because we do not want to be complicit, alongside the Plurinational Assembly, in building a Law of Integral Development that will damage the Pachamama/Mother Earth. nosotros del CONAMAQ hemos decidido retirarnos del tratamiento porque no queremos ser cómplices, juntamente con la Asamblea Plurinacional, en construir una Ley de Desarrollo Integral que va dañar a la Pachamama” The government had already broken off contact with the Confederation of Indigenous Peoples of Bolivia (CIDOB) and the government-backed alternate leadership of the organization does not appear to be involved in the drafting process.

    #écologie #bolivie #droits_de_la_nature #peuple_autochtone #contradiction #extractivisme #2012

  • #Minniti: ‘Affidare il salvataggio dei naufraghi ai libici è stato un drammatico errore’

    Marco Minniti (PD): ‘Il problema è chi risponde al telefono. Prima rispondeva la guardia costiera italiana, ma ora nel Mediterraneo centrale non operiamo più… e la guardia costiera libica non è in grado di salvare i naufraghi’

    http://www.la7.it/piazzapulita/video/giannini-%E2%80%98l%E2%80%99italia-in-libia-ha-scommesso-sul-cavallo-sbagliato%E
    #ONG #sauvetage #asile #migrations #Méditerranée #réfugiés #erreur #erreur_dramatique #gardes-côtes_libyens #Libye
    via @isskein

    J’ai ajouté à cette métaliste:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/731749#message765324

    • «La guardiacostiera libica non è preparata a svolgere attività di coordinamento e salvataggio in mare. È stato un tragico errore». L’ex ministro Minniti dice la verità. Finalmente. Dopo centinaia di morti.

      https://twitter.com/openarms_it/status/1116448798472134656

      Traduction de @isskein :

      « Les garde-côtes libyens ne sont pas prêts à mener des activités de coordination et de sauvetage en mer. C’était une erreur tragique » L’ancien ministre Minniti (qui a lancé es négociations avec les Libyens) dit la vérité. Enfin. Après des centaines de morts.

      https://twitter.com/isskein/status/1116452323050565641?s=12

    • Warning of ’Libyan death zone’ as Tripoli stops migrant rescues

      The Libyan Coast Guard has not been operating in its maritime rescue zone for three weeks. A German search and rescue NGO, Sea-Eye, has called for Malta to take over and has warned of a ’Libyan death zone.’

      Sea-Eye says the United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, has confirmed that there has been no search and rescue activity by the Libyan Coast Guard in the maritime rescue zone since April 10. The claim is supported by a UN official in Tripoli with access to “official information,” according to the Italian newspaper Avvenire.

      Avvenire alleges that Libyan patrol boats normally used for search and rescue, which include some supplied by Italy and France, are being deployed for combat.operations in the civil war. Since the beginning of April, hundreds of people have been killed in fighting between the Haftar Libyan National Army and the internationally-recognized Government of National Accord. “Obviously, the government of Tripoli has its own problems instead of dealing with EU border protection,” says Gorden Isler, a spokesperson for Sea-Eye.

      Blackout

      The Sea-Eye search and rescue vessel, the Alan Kurdi, will spend the next month in a Spanish shipyard for routine maintenance, leaving one other NGO ship, the Mare Jonio, in action in the Central Mediterranean.

      With very few NGOs active in the area and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) unable to work in Tripoli, Isler says there is no information about emergencies or drownings at sea. Sea-Eye has not heard of any rescues since April 10.

      However, this tweet from Alarm Phone, the hotline for people in distress at sea, says a group of 23 people was picked up by a fishing boat and returned to Libya yesterday.

      Leaving rescue to Libyans ’irresponsible’

      With Libya “paralyzed” by civil war, Europe must step in now and take over rescue work in the Mediterranean, says Isler. Sea-Eye wants immediate action from the International Maritime Organization to remove responsibility for the sea area from Libya, or “Libya’s so-called search and rescue zone will become a Libyan death zone.”

      Sea-Eye says Libya had conducted few missions in its search and rescue zone before the escalation of civil conflict, with only 12 operations this year. During the period in which the Sea-Eye’s vessel was in the area, between March 25 and April 3, the Libyan Coast Guard (LCG) failed to engage in three separate emergencies, according to Isler. “Rubber boats with people disappear without any LCG activities. It is irresponsible to leave this search and rescue area to the Libyans.”

      Malta urged to take over

      Italy handed over responsibility for rescuing migrants in the search and rescue zone to Libya last June. In February, the German left-wing party, Die Linke, called for administration of the zone to be given back to the Maritime Rescue Coordination Center in Rome. But the prospect of Italy agreeing to take back responsibility, Isler says, is “probably an illusion”.

      The best option now, according to Sea-Eye, is Malta, a small archipelago with a population of about half a million. The NGO argues that the country is capable of taking responsibility for the search and rescue zone “in principle”.

      But Malta has so far given no public sign that it would be willing to take over from Libya. Earlier this month, the Maltese government forced the Alan Kurdi, with 62 rescued migrants on board, to remain at sea for days while European countries argued over who would take them in. “Once again, the European Union’s smallest state has been put under pointless pressure in being tasked with resolving an issue which was not its responsibility,” the government complained.

      Sea-Eye says a resolution involving Malta must include support from other EU member states, particularly Germany. “We hope that our own government will lead by example and play an important role in supporting Malta,” Isler says.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/16615/warning-of-libyan-death-zone-as-tripoli-stops-migrant-rescues

  • Mahan Air inaugure une liaison directe Téhéran-Caracas (16 heures).
    Les États-Unis, la France (depuis avril 2019) et l’Allemagne (depuis janvier 2019) interdisent Mahan Air pour cause d’intervention en Syrie. La compagnie dessert un réseau national et des vols internationaux vers Moscou, Pékin et Barcelone, entre autres.

    Aerolínea iraní inaugura el primer vuelo directo entre Teherán y Caracas
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/mundo/aerolinea-irani-inaugura-primer-vuelo-directo-entre-teheran-caracas_278

    La aerolínea iraní Mahan Air, la segunda más grande del país, inauguró este lunes oficialmente un vuelo directo entre Teherán y Caracas, en una muestra de las estrechas relaciones entre Irán y Venezuela, ambos países bajo sanciones de Estados Unidos.

  • Les #gilets_jaunes vus de New York...

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    Driving was already expensive in France when in January 2018 the government of President Emmanuel Macron imposed a tax that raised the price of diesel fuel by 7.6 centimes per liter and of gasoline by 3.8 centimes (about 9 and 4 cents, respectively); further increases were planned for January 2019. The taxes were an attempt to cut carbon emissions and honor the president’s lofty promise to “Make Our Planet Great Again.”

    Priscillia Ludosky, then a thirty-two-year-old bank employee from the Seine-et-Marne department outside Paris, had no choice but to drive into the city for work every day, and the cost of her commute was mounting. “When you pay regularly for something, it really adds up fast, and the increase was enormous,” she told me recently. “There are lots of things I don’t like. But on that I pushed.” In late May 2018, she created a petition on Change.org entitled Pour une Baisse des Prix du Carburant à la Pompe! (For a reduction of fuel prices at the pump!)

    Over the summer Ludosky’s petition—which acknowledged the “entirely honorable” aim of reducing pollution while offering six alternative policy suggestions, including subsidizing electric cars and encouraging employers to allow remote work—got little attention. In the fall she tried again, convincing a radio host in Seine-et-Marne to interview her if the petition garnered 1,500 signatures. She posted that challenge on her Facebook page, and the signatures arrived in less than twenty-four hours. A local news site then shared the petition on its own Facebook page, and it went viral, eventually being signed by over 1.2 million people.

    Éric Drouet, a thirty-three-year-old truck driver and anti-Macron militant also from Seine-et-Marne, created a Facebook event for a nationwide blockade of roads on November 17 to protest the high fuel prices. Around the same time, a fifty-one-year-old self-employed hypnotherapist named Jacline Mouraud recorded herself addressing Macron for four minutes and thirty-eight seconds and posted the video on Facebook. “You have persecuted drivers since the day you took office,” she said. “This will continue for how long?” Mouraud’s invective was viewed over six million times, and the gilets jaunes—the yellow vests, named for the high-visibility vests that French drivers are required to keep in their cars and to wear in case of emergency—were born.

    Even in a country where protest is a cherished ritual of public life, the violence and vitriol of the gilets jaunes movement have stunned the government. Almost immediately it outgrew the issue of the carbon taxes and the financial burden on car-reliant French people outside major cities. In a series of Saturday demonstrations that began in mid-November and have continued for three months, a previously dormant anger has erupted. Demonstrators have beaten police officers, thrown acid in the faces of journalists, and threatened the lives of government officials. There has been violence on both sides, and the European Parliament has condemned French authorities for using “flash-ball guns” against protesters, maiming and even blinding more than a few in the crowds. But the gilets jaunes have a flair for cinematic destruction. In late November they damaged parts of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris; in early January they commandeered a forklift and rammed through the heavy doors of the ministry of state—the only time in the history of the Fifth Republic that a sitting minister had to be evacuated from a government building.

    The gilets jaunes are more than a protest. This is a modern-day jacquerie, an emotional wildfire stoked in the provinces and directed against Paris and, most of all, the elite. French history since 1789 can be seen as a sequence of anti-elite movements, yet the gilets jaunes have no real precedent. Unlike the Paris Commune of 1871, this is a proletarian struggle devoid of utopian aspirations. Unlike the Poujadist movement of the mid-1950s—a confederation of shopkeepers likewise opposed to the “Americanization” of a “thieving and inhuman” state and similarly attracted to anti-Semitic conspiracy theories—the gilets jaunes include shopkeepers seemingly content to destroy shop windows. There is an aspect of carnival here: a delight in the subversion of norms, a deliberate embrace of the grotesque.

    Many have said that the gilets jaunes are merely another “populist movement,” although the term is now so broad that it is nearly meaningless. Comparisons have been made to the Britain of Brexit, the United States of Donald Trump, and especially the Italy of Cinque Stelle. But the crucial difference is that the gilets jaunes are apolitical, and militantly so. They have no official platform, no leadership hierarchy, and no reliable communications. Everyone can speak for the movement, and yet no one can. When a small faction within it fielded a list of candidates for the upcoming European parliamentary elections in May, their sharpest opposition came from within: to many gilets jaunes, the ten who had put their names forward—among them a nurse, a truck driver, and an accountant—were traitors to the cause, having dared to replicate the elite that the rest of the movement disdains.

    Concessions from the government have had little effect. Under mounting pressure, Macron was forced to abandon the carbon tax planned for 2019 in a solemn televised address in mid-December. He also launched the so-called grand débat, a three-month tour of rural France designed to give him a better grasp of the concerns of ordinary people. In some of these sessions, Macron has endured more than six hours of bitter criticisms from angry provincial mayors. But these gestures have quelled neither the protests nor the anger of those who remain in the movement. Performance is the point. During the early “acts,” as the weekly demonstrations are known, members refused to meet with French prime minister Édouard Philippe, on the grounds that he would not allow the encounter to be televised, and that sentiment has persisted. Perhaps the most telling thing about the gilets jaunes is the vest they wear: a symbol of car ownership, but more fundamentally a material demand to be seen.

    Inequality in France is less extreme than in the United States and Britain, but it is increasing. Among wealthy Western countries, the postwar French state—l’État-providence—is something of a marvel. France’s health and education systems remain almost entirely free while ranking among the best in the world. In 2017 the country’s ratio of tax revenue to gross domestic product was 46.2 percent, according to statistics from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)—the highest redistribution level of any OECD country and a ratio that allows the state to fight poverty through a generous social protection system. Of that 46.2 percent, the French government allocated approximately 28 percent for social services.

    “The French social model is so integrated that it almost seems a natural, preexisting condition,” Alexis Spire, a sociologist of inequality at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, told me recently. A number of the gilets jaunes I met said that despite the taxes they pay, they do not feel they benefit from any social services, since they live far from urban centers. But anyone who has ever received housing assistance, a free prescription, or sixteen weeks of paid maternity leave has benefited from the social protection system. The effect of redistribution is often invisible.

    And yet the rich in France have gotten much richer. Between 1983 and 2015, the vast majority of incomes in France rose by less than one percent per year, while the richest one percent of the population saw their incomes rise by 100 percent after taxes. According to World Bank statistics, the richest 20 percent now earns nearly five times as much as the bottom 20 percent. This represents a stark shift from the Trente Glorieuses, France’s thirty-year economic boom after World War II. As the economist Thomas Piketty has pointed out, between 1950 and 1983, most French incomes rose steadily by approximately 4 percent per year; the nation’s top incomes rose by only one percent.

    What has become painfully visible, however, is the extent of the country’s geographical fractures. Paris has always been the undisputed center of politics, culture, and commerce, but France was once also a country that cherished and protected its vibrant provincial life. This was la France profonde, a clichéd but genuinely existing France of tranquil stone villages and local boulangeries with lines around the block on Sundays. “Douce France, cher pays de mon enfance,” goes the beloved song by the crooner Charles Trenet. “Mon village, au clocher aux maisons sages.” These days, the maisons sages are vacant, and the country boulangeries are closed.

    The story is familiar: the arrival of large multinational megastores on the outskirts of provincial French towns and cities has threatened, and in many cases asphyxiated, local businesses.1 In the once-bustling centers of towns like Avignon, Agen, Calais, and Périgueux, there is now an eerie quiet: windows are often boarded up, and fewer and fewer people are to be found. This is the world evoked with a melancholy beauty in Nicolas Mathieu’s novel Leurs enfants après eux, which won the Prix Goncourt, France’s most prestigious literary prize, in 2018.

    The expansion since the 1980s of France’s high-speed rail network has meant that the country’s major cities are all well connected to Paris. But there are many small towns where the future never arrived, where abandoned nineteenth-century train stations are now merely places for teenagers to make out, monuments of the way things used to be. In these towns, cars are the only way people can get to work. I met a fifty-five-year-old truck and taxi driver named Marco Pavan in the Franche-Comté in late November. What he told me then—about how carbon taxes can seem like sneers from the Parisian elite—has stayed with me. “Ask a Parisian—for him none of this is an issue, because he doesn’t need a car,” Pavan said. “There’s no bus or train to take us anywhere. We have to have a car.” I cited that remark in a Washington Post story I filed from Besançon; in the online comments section, many attacked the movement for what they saw as a backward anti-environmentalism—missing his point.

    Few have written as extensively as the French geographer Christophe Guilluy on la France périphérique, a term he popularized that refers both to the people and the regions left behind by an increasingly globalized economy. Since 2010, when he published Fractures françaises, Guilluy has been investigating the myths and realities of what he calls “the trompe l’oeil of a peaceful, moderate, and consensual society.” He is one of a number of left-wing French intellectuals—among them the novelist Michel Houellebecq, the historian Georges Bensoussan, and the essayist Michel Onfray—who in recent years have argued that their beloved patrie has drifted into inexorable decline, a classic critique of the French right since 1789. But Guilluy’s decline narrative is different: he is not as concerned as the others with Islamist extremism or “decadence” broadly conceived. For him, France’s decline is structural, the result of having become a place where “the social question disappears.”

    Guilluy, born in Montreuil in 1964, is something of a rarity among well-known French intellectuals: he is a product of the Paris suburbs, not of France’s storied grandes écoles. And it is clear that much of his critique is personal. As a child, Guilluy, whose family then lived in the working-class Paris neighborhood of Belleville, was forcibly relocated for a brief period to the heavily immigrant suburb of La Courneuve when their building was slated to be demolished in the midst of Paris’s urban transformation. “I saw gentrification firsthand,” he told Le Figaro in 2017. “For the natives—the natives being just as much the white worker as the young immigrant—what provoked the most problems was not the arrival of Magrebis, but that of the bobos.”

    This has long been Guilluy’s battle cry, and he has focused his intellectual energy on attacking what he sees as the hypocrisy of the bobos, or bourgeois bohemians. His public debut was a short 2001 column in Libération applying that term, coined by the columnist David Brooks, to French social life. What was happening in major urban centers across the country, he wrote then, was a “ghettoization by the top of society” that excluded people like his own family.

    Guilluy crystallized that argument in a 2014 book that won him the ear of the Élysée Palace and regular appearances on French radio. This was La France périphérique: comment on a sacrifié les classes populaires, in which he contended that since the mid-1980s, France’s working classes have been pushed out of the major cities to rural communities—a situation that was a ticking time bomb—partly as a result of rising prices. He advanced that view further in 2016 with La Crépuscule de la France d’en haut—now translated into English as Twilight of the Elites: Prosperity, the Periphery, and the Future of France—a pithy screed against France’s bobo elite and what he sees as its shameless embrace of a “neoliberal,” “Americanized society” and a hollow, feel-good creed of multicultural tolerance. In 2018, one month before the rise of the gilets jaunes, he published No Society, whose title comes from Margaret Thatcher’s 1987 comment that “there is no such thing as society.”

    In Guilluy’s view, an immigrant working class has taken the place of the “native” working class in the banlieues on the outskirts of major cities. This native class, he argues, has been scattered throughout the country and become an “unnoticed presence” that France’s elite has “made to disappear from public consciousness” in order to consolidate its grip on power. Cities are now the exclusive preserve of the elites and their servants, and what Guilluy means by “no society” is that the visible signs of class conflict in urban daily life have vanished. This is his trompe l’oeil: rich, insulated Parisians have convinced themselves that everything is fine, while those who might say otherwise are nowhere near. “The simmering discontent of rural France has never really been taken seriously,” he writes in Twilight of the Elites.

    Since November, much of the French press has declared that Guilluy essentially predicted the rise of the gilets jaunes. They seem, after all, a fulfillment of his prophecy about “the betrayal of the people” by the elites, even if he is always elusive about who exactly “the people” are. While critiques from the movement have remained a confused cloud of social media invective, Guilluy has served as its de facto interpreter.

    No Society puts into words what many in the gilets jaunes have either struggled or refused to articulate. This is the hazy middle ground between warning and threat: “The populist wave coursing through the western world is only the visible part of a soft power emanating from the working classes that will force the elites to rejoin the real movement of society or else to disappear.”

    For now, however, there is just one member of the elite whom the gilets jaunes wish would disappear, and calls for his violent overthrow continue even as the movement’s momentum subsides.

    An intense and deeply personal hatred of Macron is the only unifying cry among the gilets jaunes. Eighteen months before the uprising began, this was the man who captured the world’s imagination and who, after populist victories in Britain and the United States, had promised a French “Third Way.” Yet the Macronian romance is already over, both at home and abroad.

    To some extent, the French always turn against their presidents, but the anger Macron elicits is unique. This is less because of any particular policy than because of his demeanor and, most of all, his language. “Mr. Macron always refused to respond to us,” Muriel Gautherin, fifty-three, a podiatrist who lives in the Paris suburbs, told me at a December march on the Champs-Élysées. “It’s he who insults us, and he who should respond.” When I asked her what she found most distasteful about the French president, her answer was simple: “His words.”

    She has a point. Among Macron’s earliest actions as president was to shave five euros off the monthly stipends of France’s Aide personalisée au logement (APL), the country’s housing assistance program. Around the same time, he slashed France’s wealth tax on those with a net worth of at least €1.3 million—a holdover from the Mitterand era.

    Macron came to office with a record of unrelentingly insulting the poor. In 2014, when he was France’s economic minister, he responded to the firing of nine hundred employees (most of them women) from a Breton slaughterhouse by noting that some were “mostly illiterate.” In 2016 he was caught on camera in a heated dispute with a labor activist in the Hérault. When the activist gestured to Macron’s €1,600 suit as a symbol of his privilege, the minister said, “The best way to afford a suit is to work.” In 2018 he told a young, unemployed gardener that he could find a new job if he merely “crossed the street.”

    Yet nothing quite compares to the statement Macron made in inaugurating Station F, a startup incubator in the thirteenth arrondissement of Paris, housed in a converted rail depot. It is a cavernous consulate for Silicon Valley, a soaring glass campus open to all those with “big ideas” who can also pay €195 a month for a desk and can fill out an application in fluent English. (“We won’t consider any other language,” the organization’s website says.) Google, Amazon, and Microsoft all have offices in it, and in a city of terrible coffee, the espresso is predictably fabulous. In June 2017 Macron delivered a speech there. “A train station,” he said, referring to the structure’s origins, “it’s a place where we encounter those who are succeeding and those who are nothing.”

    This was the moment when a large percentage of the French public learned that in the eyes of their president, they had no value. “Ceux qui ne sont rien” is a phrase that has lingered and festered. To don the yellow vest is thus to declare not only that one has value but also that one exists.

    On the whole, the gilets jaunes are not the poorest members of French society, which is not surprising. As Tocqueville remarked, revolutions are fueled not by those who suffer the most, but by those whose economic status has been improving and who then experience a sudden and unexpected fall. So it seems with the gilets jaunes: most live above the poverty line but come from the precarious ranks of the lower middle class, a group that aspires to middle-class stability and seeks to secure it through palliative consumption: certain clothing brands, the latest iPhone, the newest television.

    In mid-December Le Monde profiled a young couple in the movement from Sens in north-central France, identified only as Arnaud and Jessica. Both twenty-six, they and their four children live in a housing project on the €2,700 per month that Arnaud earns as a truck driver, including more than €1,000 in government assistance. According to statistics from France’s Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques (Insée), this income places them right at the poverty line for a family of this size, and possibly even slightly below it. But the expenses Arnaud and Jessica told Le Monde they struggled to pay included karate lessons for their oldest son and pet supplies for their dog. Jessica, who does not work, told Le Monde, “Children are so mean to each other if they wear lesser brands. I don’t want their friends to make fun of them.” She said she had traveled to Paris for gilet jaune protests on three separate weekends—journeys that presumably cost her money.

    Readers of Le Monde—many of them educated, affluent, and pro-Macron—were quick to attack Arnaud and Jessica. But the sniping missed their point, which was that they felt a seemingly inescapable sense of humiliation, fearing ridicule everywhere from the Élysée Palace to their children’s school. They were explaining something profound about the gilets jaunes: the degree to which the movement is fueled by unfulfilled expectations. For many demonstrators, life is simply not as they believed it would be, or as they feel they deserve. There is an aspect of entitlement to the gilets jaunes, who are also protesting what the French call déclassement, the increasing elusiveness of the middle-class dream in a society in which economic growth has not kept pace with population increase. This entitlement appears to have alienated the gilets jaunes from immigrants and people of color, who are largely absent from their ranks and whose condition is often materially worse.2 “It’s not people who don’t have hope anymore, who don’t have a place to live, or who don’t have a job,” Rokhaya Diallo, a French activist for racial equality, told me recently, describing the movement. “It’s just that status they’re trying to preserve.”

    The gilets jaunes have no substantive ideas: resentment does not an ideology make. They remain a combustible vacuum, and extremist agitators on the far right and the far left have sought to capitalize on their anger. Both Marine Le Pen of the recently renamed Rassemblement National and Jean-Luc Mélenchon of the left-wing La France Insoumise have tried hard to channel the movement’s grassroots energy into their own political parties, but the gilets jaunes have so far resisted these entreaties. The gilets jaunes also found themselves at the center of a diplomatic spat: in early February Italy’s deputy prime minister, Luigi Di Maio, met with two of their members on the outskirts of Paris in a jab at Macron. Two days later, France withdrew its ambassador to Rome for the first time since 1940, but the gilets jaunes have not attempted to exploit this attention for their own political gain. Instead there was infighting—a Twitter war over who had the right to represent the cause abroad and who did not.

    The intellectual void at the heart of an amorphous movement can easily fill with the hatred of an “other.” That may already be happening to the gilets jaunes. Although a careful analysis by Le Monde concluded that race and immigration were not major concerns in the two hundred most frequently shared messages on gilet jaune Facebook pages between the beginning of the movement and January 22, a number of gilets jaunes have been recorded on camera making anti-Semitic gestures, insulting a Holocaust survivor on the Paris metro, and saying that journalists “work for the Jews.” Importantly, the gilets jaunes have never collectively denounced any of these anti-Semitic incidents—a silence perhaps inevitable for a movement that eschews organization of any kind. Likewise, a thorough study conducted by the Paris-based Fondation Jean Jaurès has shown the extent to which conspiracy theories are popular in the movement: 59 percent of those surveyed who had participated in a gilet jaune demonstration said they believed that France’s political elites were encouraging immigration in order to replace them, and 50 percent said they believed in a global “Zionist” conspiracy.

    Members of the movement are often quick to point out that the gilets jaunes are not motivated by identity politics, and yet anyone who has visited one of their demonstrations is confronted with an undeniable reality. Far too much attention has been paid to the symbolism of the yellow vests and far too little to the fact that the vast majority of those who wear them are lower-middle-class whites. In what is perhaps the most ethnically diverse society in Western Europe, can the gilets jaunes truly be said to represent “the people,” as the members of the movement often claim? Priscillia Ludosky, arguably the first gilet jaune, is a black woman. “It’s complicated, that question,” she told me. “I have no response.”

    The gilets jaunes are also distinctly a minority of the French population: in a country of 67 million, as many as 282,000 have demonstrated on a single day, and that figure has consistently fallen with each passing week, down to 41,500 during “Act 14” of the protest on February 16. On two different weekends in November and December, other marches in Paris—one for women’s rights, the other against climate change—drew far bigger crowds than the gilets jaunes did. But the concerns of this minority are treated as universal by politicians, the press, and even the movement’s sharpest critics. Especially after Trump and Brexit, lower-middle-class and working-class whites command public attention even when they have no clear message.

    French citizens of color have been protesting social inequality for years without receiving any such respect. In 2005 the killing of two minority youths by French police in the Paris suburb of Clichy-sous-Bois ignited a string of violent uprisings against police brutality, but the government declared an official state of emergency instead of launching a grand débat. In 2009, the overseas departments of Guadeloupe and Martinique saw a huge strike against the high cost of living—a forty-four-day uprising that also targeted fuel prices and demanded an increase to the minimum wage. In 2017 an almost identical protest occurred in French Guiana, another French overseas department, where residents demonstrated against household goods that were as much as 12 percent more expensive than they were in mainland France, despite a lower minimum wage. The French government was slow to respond in both of these instances, while the concerns of the gilets jaunes have resulted in a personal apology from the president and a slew of concessions.

    Guilluy, whose analysis of la France périphérique ultimately fails to grapple significantly with France’s decidedly peripheral overseas territories, does not shy away from the question of identity. He sees a racial element to the frustrations of la France périphérique, but he does not see this as a problem. Some of the most frustrating moments in his work come when he acknowledges but refuses to interrogate white working-class behavior that seems to be racially motivated. “Public housing in outlying communities is now a last resort for workers hoping to be able to go on living near the major cities,” he writes in Twilight of the Elites, describing the recent astronomic rise in France’s urban real estate prices. “These projects, mostly occupied by immigrant renters, are avoided by white French-born workers. Barring some utterly unforeseeable turn of events, their expulsion from the largest urban centers will be irreversible.” It would not diminish Guilluy’s broader point about la France périphérique if he acknowledged that victims of structural changes can also be intolerant.

    Guilluy also regularly recycles anxieties over immigration, often from controversial theorists such as Michèle Tribalat, who is associated with the idea of le grand remplacement, the alleged “great replacement” of France’s white population by immigrants from North and Sub-Saharan Africa. In making his case about “the demographic revolution in process,” Guilluy has been accused of inflating his statistics. France, he wrote in Fractures françaises, “welcomes a little less than 200,000 legal foreigners every year.” But these claims were attacked by Patrick Weil, a leading French historian of immigration, who noted in his book Le sens de la République (2015) that Guilluy failed to consider that a large number of those 200,000 are temporary workers, students who come and go, and others of “irregular” status. Guilluy has not responded to these criticisms, and in any case his rhetoric has since grown more radical. In No Society he writes, “Multiculturalism is, intrinsically, a feeble ideology that divides and weakens.”

    Whether the gilets jaunes will eventually come to agree with him is a crucial question. Like Guilluy, they are responding to real social conditions. But if, following Guilluy’s lead, they ultimately resort to the language of race and ethnicity to explain their suffering, they will have chosen to become a different movement altogether, one in which addressing inequality was never quite the point. In some ways, they have already crossed that line.

    On the afternoon of Saturday, February 16, the prominent French intellectual Alain Finkielkraut got out of a taxi on the Boulevard Montparnasse. A crowd of gilets jaunes noticed him and began hurling anti-Semitic insults. The scene, recorded on video, was chilling: in the center of Paris, under a cloudless sky, a mob of visibly angry men surrounded a man they knew to be Jewish, called him a “dirty Zionist,” and told him, “go back to Tel Aviv.”

    Finkielkraut’s parents were Polish refugees from the Holocaust. He was born in Paris in 1949 and has become a fixture in French cultural life, a prolific author, a host of a popular weekly broadcast on France Culture, and a member of the Académie Française, the country’s most elite literary institution. In the words of Macron, who immediately responded to the attack, he “is not only an eminent man of letters but the symbol of what the Republic affords us all.” The irony is that Finkielkraut—another former leftist who believes that France has plunged into inexorable decline and ignored the dangers of multiculturalism—was one of the only Parisian intellectuals who had supported the gilets jaunes from the beginning.

    I spoke to Finkielkraut after the attack, and he explained that the gilets jaunes had seemed to him the evidence of something authentic. “I saw an invisible France, neglected and forgotten,” he said. “Wearing fluorescent yellow vests in order to be visible—of being a ‘somewhere’ as opposed to an ‘anywhere,’ as Goodhart has said—seemed to me an absolutely legitimate critique.” The British journalist David Goodhart, popular these days in French right-wing circles, is the author of The Road to Somewhere (2017), which sees populist anger as the inevitable response to the widening gulf between those “rooted” in a particular place and cosmopolitans at home anywhere. “France is not a ‘start-up nation,’” Finkielkraut told me. “It can’t be reduced to that.”

    Finkielkraut said that the attack was a sign that the reasonable critiques orginally made by the gilets jaunes had vanished, and that they had no real future. “I think the movement is in the process of degradation. It’s no longer a social movement but a sect that has closed in on itself, whose discourse is no longer rational.”

    Although the Paris prosecutor has opened an investigation into his attackers, Finkielkraut has not pressed charges. He told me that the episode, as violent as it was, did not necessarily suggest that all those who had worn yellow vests in recent months were anti-Semites or extremists. “Those who insulted me were not the nurses, the shopkeepers, or the small business owners,” he said, noting that he doubted he would have experienced the same prejudice at the roundabouts, the traffic circles across the country where gilets jaunes protesters gathered every Saturday. In a sense, these were the essence of the movement, which was an inchoate mobilization against many things, but perhaps none so much as loneliness. The roundabouts quickly became impromptu piazzas and a means, however small, of reclaiming a spirit of community that disappeared long ago in so many French towns and villages.

    In Paris, where the remaining gilets jaunes have now focused most of their energy, the weekly protests have become little more than a despicable theater filled with scenes like the attack on Finkielkraut. There is no convincing evidence that those still wearing yellow vests are troubled by the presence of bigotry in their ranks. What is more, many gilets jaunes now seem to believe that pointing out such prejudice is somehow to become part of a government-backed conspiracy to turn public opinion against them.

    Consider, for instance, a February 19 communiqué released in response to the attack on Finkielkraut from La France en Colère, one of the movement’s main online bulletins. “For many days, the government and its friends in the national media seem to have found a new technique for destabilizing public opinion and discrediting the Gilets Jaunes movement,” it begins. “We denounce the accusations and the manipulations put in place by this government adept at fake news.” But this is all the communiqué denounces; it does not address the anti-Semitic violence to which Finkielkraut was subjected, nor does it apologize to a national figure who had defended the movement when few others of his prominence dared to do the same.

    A month after our last conversation, I called Priscillia Ludosky back, to see if she had any reaction to the recent turn of events in the movement her petition had launched. She was only interested in discussing what she called the French government’s “systematic abuse to manipulate public opinion.” She also believes that a government-media conspiracy will stop at nothing to smear the cause. “If there was one person who ever said something homophobic, it was on the front page of every newspaper,” she told me.

    In the days after the attack, Finkielkraut lamented not so much the grim details of what had happened but the squandered potential of a moment that has increasingly descended into paranoid feverishness. As he told me: “This was a beautiful opportunity to reflect on who we are that’s been completely ruined.”

    https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2019/03/21/low-visibility-france-gilet-jaunes

  • Le retour de Marco Polo ou les complications d’un monde post-impérial
    http://www.chroniquesdugrandjeu.com/2019/03/le-retour-de-marco-polo-ou-les-complications-d-un-monde-post-i

    Lorsque le 22 mars, le président chinois Xi Jinping débarquera à Rome pour une très importante visite, l’esprit de Marco Polo flottera dans l’air. S’il ne fut pas le premier Occidental à emprunter la route de la Soie, le célèbre Vénitien laissa à la postérité...

  • Dubwise
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/reservoir-dub/dubwise-7

    We are back this thursday 28th of february for a new radio show!

    We hope you’re ready for some reggae and dub vibes. We’ll play some old and new tunes with some brand new releases from :

    Midnight Resistance : new 12inch with Anthony B

    Lion’s choice & Black redemtpion : new 12inch with Calim Steppa &Ras Amlack, And many more!

    We’ll give you a preview of our upcoming first release with Unlisted Fanatic & Disciples as well!

    And little surprise, we’ll give a part of the interview that we have recorded with Marco Lion Warriah from 4Weed records!

    The show will be hosted by WooDub and I-Sayah.

    Tune in Radio Panik at 9.30 PM—> www.radiopanik.org for the (...)

    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/reservoir-dub/dubwise-7_06342__1.mp3

  • ‘Eva Doesn’t Sleep’ Review : Eva Peron’s Journey After Death – Variety
    https://variety.com/2016/film/reviews/eva-doesnt-sleep-review-1201631075
    https://pmcvariety.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/evadoesntsleep.jpg?w=700&h=393&crop=1

    Les corps des héroïnes sont l’objet de spéculations et de phantasmes encore longtemps après leur mort. Deuxième exemple : Eva Peron

    The presiding character in “Eva Doesn’t Sleep” is dead before most of the action takes place: Writer-director Pablo Aguero (“Salamandra”) speculates on the eerie journey of Eva Peron’s body, which disappeared in the aftermath of the 1955 military coup that overthrew her husband, Argentine president Juan Peron, and wasn’t returned to the country until the 1970s. This morbid subject matter is served at a chilly temperature about as far removed from Andrew Lloyd Webber as could possibly be imagined. The elliptical narrative and political intrigue will appeal to those well versed in Argentine history, as well as to arthouse audiences of the sort that flock to Alexander Sokurov’s films, to which “Eva” bears a resemblance in its cerebral approach to history.

    The movie unfolds in flashback from 1976, narrated by a military leader from a coup that year credited simply as “Admiral,” but likely representing Jorge Rafael Videla (Gael Garcia Bernal, seen only in the bookends, despite lead billing). A staunch enemy of the woman he repeatedly refers to as “that bitch,” he rues the populism she represented and her championing of the working class. Incorporating black-and-white newsreel footage, the rhythmic, immersive prologue captures the adulation that Eva Peron received in life and the national outpouring of grief that followed her death from cancer in 1952.

    The first proper segment centers on Peron’s embalmer, Dr. Pedro Ara (Imanol Arias), who treats her body (stood in for by the actress Sabrina Macchi) with unnerving reverence and intimacy. He sculpts her face to preserve what he sees as her best qualities and cracks her foot and fingers, in just one component of the movie’s sensationally moody sound design. These minimally lit scenes have an ambience that alternately evokes a mad-scientist picture and a religious ceremony, with imagery of the Madonna and child.

    The second and most compelling section takes place in 1956, when an army colonel (Denis Lavant, supplying a measure of his spastic physical intensity) is tasked by the military ruling powers with a covert mission to transport Evita’s body. The soldier (Nicolas Goldschmidt) traveling with him steals a peek at the top-secret cargo and seems hypnotized by what he sees (“It isn’t a corpse. It’s her”). As night turns into dawn, the two men argue and eventually brawl, giving the impression that Evita’s presence, even in death, exerts a mystical power. As the voiceover says, “Her body turned us into animals. It drove us crazy. It made us delirious.”

    Set in 1969, the third movement extrapolates from the real-life kidnapping of Pedro Aramburu (Daniel Fanego), a general in the 1955 coup who subsequently presided as Argentina’s president over a period of repressive crackdown on all images and mention of the Perons. Here, his kidnappers, self-proclaimed Peronist revolutionaries, put him on trial and demand to know the location of their heroine’s body. One of them, Esther (Sofia Brito), is first seen from behind at an angle that gives her hair bun a ghostly resemblance to Evita’s own. (She is perhaps also the child Esther who catches a glimpse of Evita’s body in the embalming segment.) These tense and spare scenes call to mind Marco Bellocchio’s similar “Good Morning, Night.”

    Aguero favors a desaturated, at times almost sepia palette and long takes, some apparently broken up in editing, that help to draw out suspense even while little is happening. The movie’s visceral qualities are substantially enhanced by a theatrical viewing.

    #Argentine #histoire #femmes

  • Infiltration - Une taupe à la solde de #Philipp_Morris

    En mars 2001, Pascal Diethelm, ancien cadre de l’OMS, tombe sur de surprenants documents. Un professeur de la Faculté de médecine de Genève, Ragnar Rylander, collabore secrètement depuis 30 ans avec Philip Morris. Son credo : organiser des symposiums pseudo-scientifiques et publier des études conformes aux attentes de l’industrie du tabac. L’objectif : faire croire à l’innocuité de la fumée passive. #Pascal_Diethelm et #Jean-Charles_Rielle, médecin actif dans la prévention du #tabagisme, flairent la fraude. Ils alertent la presse. Mais c’est devant les tribunaux qu’ils devront s’expliquer. #Ragnar_Rylander revendique son honnêteté scientifique. De coups de théâtre en révélations, l’affaire Rylander durera près de trois ans. Elle plongera les protagonistes au cœur de la stratégie de dénégation de l’industrie du tabac et les confrontera à une justice pas toujours bien disposée à leur égard. Les journalistes Sophie Malka et Marco Gregori ont rencontré les principaux acteurs de cette inrigue aux multiples facettes. Ils ont exhumé les nombreuses pièces du dossier, correspondance, études, témoignages et jugements. Sur le mode du récit, ils emmènent le lecteur dans un imbroglio juridico-scientifique dont ils dénouent les fils les uns après les autres.


    https://www.decitre.fr/livres/infiltration-9782825709146.html
    #livre #tabac #lutte_anti-tabac #université #lobby #science #Université_de_Genève #Suisse #cigarettiers #influence #infiltration #procès #justice #industrie_du_tabac

  • For six months, these Palestinian villages had running water. Israel put a stop to it
    For six months, Palestinian villagers living on West Bank land that Israel deems a closed firing range saw their dream of running water come true. Then the Civil Administration put an end to it

    Amira Hass Feb 22, 2019 3:25 PM

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-why-doesn-t-israel-want-palestinians-to-have-running-water-1.69595

    The dream that came true, in the form of a two-inch water line, was too good to be true. For about six months, 12 Palestinian West Bank villages in the South Hebron Hills enjoyed clean running water. That was until February 13, when staff from the Israeli Civil Administration, accompanied by soldiers and Border Police and a couple of bulldozers, arrived.

    The troops dug up the pipes, cut and sawed them apart and watched the jets of water that spurted out. About 350 cubic meters of water were wasted. Of a 20 kilometer long (12 mile) network, the Civil Administration confiscated remnants and sections of a total of about 6 kilometers of piping. They loaded them on four garbage trucks emblazoned with the name of the Tel Aviv suburb of Ramat Gan on them.

    The demolition work lasted six and a half hours. Construction of the water line network had taken about four months. It had been a clear act of civil rebellion in the spirit of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King against one of the most brutal bans that Israel imposes on Palestinian communities in Area C, the portion of the West Bank under full Israeli control. It bars Palestinians from hooking into existing water infrastructure.

    The residential caves in the Masafer Yatta village region south of Hebron and the ancient cisterns used for collecting rainwater confirm the local residents’ claim that their villages have existed for decades, long before the founding of the State of Israel. In the 1970s, Israel declared some 30,000 dunams (7,500 acres) in the area Firing Range 918.

    In 1999, under the auspices of the negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the army expelled the residents of the villages and demolished their structures and water cisterns. The government claimed that the residents were trespassing on the firing range, even though these were their lands and they have lived in the area long before the West Bank was captured by Israel.

    When the matter was brought to the High Court of Justice, the court approved a partial return to the villages but did not allow construction or hookups to utility infrastructure. Mediation attempts failed, because the state was demanding that the residents leave their villages and live in the West Bank town of Yatta and come to graze their flocks and work their land only on a few specific days per year.

    But the residents continued to live in their homes, risking military raids and demolition action — including the demolition of public facilities such as schools, medical clinics and even toilets. They give up a lot to maintain their way of life as shepherds, but could not forgo water.

    “The rainy season has grown much shorter in recent years, to only about 45 days a year,” explained Nidal Younes, the chairman of the Masafer Yatta council of villages. “In the past, we didn’t immediately fill the cisterns with rainwater, allowing them to be washed and cleaned first. Since the amount of rain has decreased, people stored water right away. It turns out the dirty water harmed the sheep and the people.”

    Because the number of residents has increased, even in years with abundant rain, at a certain stage the cisterns ran dry and the shepherds would bring in water by tractor. They would haul a 4 cubic meter (140 square foot) tank along the area’s narrow, poor roads — which Israel does not permit to have widened and paved. “The water has become every family’s largest expense,” Younes said.

    In the village of Halawa, he pointed out Abu Ziyad, a man of about 60. “I always see him on a tractor, bringing in water or setting out to bring back water.”

    Sometimes the tractors overturn and drivers are injured. Tires quickly wear out and precious work days go to waste. “We are drowning in debt to pay for the transportation of water,” Abu Ziyad said.

    In 2017, the Civil Administration and the Israeli army closed and demolished the roads to the villages, which the council had earlier managed to widen and rebuild. That had been done to make it easier to haul water in particular, but also more generally to give the villages better access.

    The right-wing Regavim non-profit group “exposed” the great crime committed in upgrading the roads and pressured the Civil Administration and the army to rip them up. “The residents’ suffering increased,” Younes remarked. “We asked ourselves how to solve the water problem.”

    The not very surprising solution was installing pipes to carry the water from the main water line in the village of Al-Tuwani, through privately owned lands of the other villages. “I checked it out, looking to see if there was any ban on laying water lines on private land and couldn’t find one,” Younes said.

    Work done by volunteers

    The plumbing work was done by volunteers, mostly at night and without heavy machinery, almost with their bare hands. Ali Debabseh, 77, of the village of Khalet al-Daba, recalled the moment when he opened the spigot installed near his home and washed his face with running water. “I wanted to jump for joy. I was as happy as a groom before his wedding.”

    Umm Fadi of the village of Halawa also resorted to the word “joy” in describing the six months when she had a faucet near the small shack in which she lives. “The water was clean, not brown from rust or dust. I didn’t need to go as far as the cistern to draw water, didn’t need to measure every drop.”

    Now it’s more difficult to again get used to being dependent on water dispensed from tanks.

    The piping and connections and water meters were bought with a 100,000 euro ($113,000) European donation. Instead of paying 40 shekels ($11) per cubic meter for water brought in with water tanks, the residents paid only about 6 shekels for the same amount of running water. Suddenly they not only saved money, but also had more precious time.

    The water lines also could have saved European taxpayers money. A European project to help the residents remain in their homes had been up and running since 2011, providing annual funding of 120,000 euros to cover the cost of buying and transporting drinking water during the three summer months for the residents (but not their livestock).

    The cost was based on a calculation involving consumption of 750 liters per person a month, far below the World Health Organization’s recommended quantity. There are between 1,500 and 2,000 residents. The project made things much easier for such a poor community, which continued to pay out of its own pocket for the water for some 40,000 sheep and for the residents’ drinking water during the remainder of the year. Now that the Civil Administration has demolished the water lines, the European donor countries may be forced to once again pay for the high price of transporting water during the summer months, at seven times the cost.

    For its part, the Civil Administration issued a statement noting that the area is a closed military zone. “On February 13,” the statement said, “enforcement action was taken against water infrastructure that was connected to illegal structures in this area and that were built without the required permits.”

    Ismail Bahis should have been sorry that the pipes were laid last year. He and his brothers, residents of Yatta, own water tankers and were the main water suppliers to the Masafer Yatta villages. Through a system of coupons purchased with the European donation, they received 800 shekels for every shipment of 20 cubic meters of water. But Bahis said he was happy he had lost out on the work.

    “The roads to the villages of Masafer Yatta are rough and dangerous, particularly after the army closed them,” he said. “Every trip of a few kilometers took at least three and a half hours. Once I tipped over with the tanker. Another time the army confiscated my brother’s truck, claiming it was a closed military zone. We got the truck released three weeks later in return for 5,000 shekels. We always had other additional expenses replacing tires and other repairs for the truck.

    Nidal Younes recounted that the council signed a contract with another water carrier to meet the demand. But that supplier quit after three weeks. He wouldn’t agree to drive on the poor and dangerous roads.

    On February 13, Younes heard the large group of forces sent by the Civil Administration beginning to demolish the water lines near the village of Al-Fakhit. He rushed to the scene and began arguing with the soldiers and Civil Administration staff.

    Border Police arrests

    Border Police officers arrested him, handcuffed him and put him in a jeep. His colleague, the head of the Al-Tuwani council, Mohammed al-Raba’i, also approached those carrying out the demolition work to protest. “But they arrested me after I said two words. At least Nidal managed to say a lot,” he said with a smile that concealed sadness.

    Two teams carried out the demolition work, one proceeding toward the village of Jinbah, to the southeast, the second advanced in the direction of Al-Tuwani, to the northwest. They also demolished the access road leading to the village of Sha’ab al-Butum, so that even if Bahis wanted to transport water again, he would have had to make a large detour to do so.

    Younes was shocked to spot a man named Marco among the team carrying out the demolition. “I remembered him from when I was a child, from the 1980s when he was an inspector for the Civil Administration. In 1985, he supervised the demolition of houses in our village, Jinbah — twice, during Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr [marking the end of the Ramadan holy month],” he said.

    “They knew him very well in all the villages in the area because he attended all the demolitions. The name Marco was a synonym for an evil spirit. Our parents who saw him demolish their homes, have died. He disappeared, and suddenly he has reappeared,” Younes remarked.

    Marco is Marco Ben-Shabbat, who has lead the Civil Administration’s supervision unit for the past 10 years. Speaking to a reporter from the Israel Hayom daily who accompanied the forces carrying out the demolition work, Ben-Shabbat said: “The [water line] project was not carried out by the individual village. The Palestinian Authority definitely put a project manager here and invested a lot of money.”

    More precisely, it was European governments that did so.

    From all of the villages where the Civil Administration destroyed water lines, the Jewish outposts of Mitzpeh Yair and Avigayil can be seen on the hilltops. Although they are unauthorized and illegal even according to lenient Israeli settlement laws, the outposts were connected almost immediately to water and electricity grids and paved roads lead to them.

    “I asked why they demolished the water lines,” Nidal Younes recalled. He said one of the Border Police officers answered him, in English, telling him it was done “to replace Arabs with Jews.”

    #Financementeuropéen

    • Under Israeli Occupation, Water Is a Luxury

      Of all the methods Israel uses to expel Palestinians from their land, the deprivation of water is the most cruel. And so the Palestinians are forced to buy water that Israel stole from them
      Amira Hass
      Feb 24, 2019 9:45 PM
      https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-under-israeli-occupation-water-is-a-luxury-1.6962821

      Water pipes cut by the Israeli military in the village of Khalet al-Daba, February 17, 2019. Eliyahu Hershkovitz

      When I wrote my questions and asked the spokesperson’s office of the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories to explain the destruction of the water pipelines in the Palestinian villages southeast of Yatta, on February 13, my fingers started itching wanting to type the following question: “Tell me, aren’t you ashamed?” You may interpret it as a didactic urge, you can see it as a vestige of faith in the possibility of exerting an influence, or a crumb of hope that there’s somebody there who doesn’t automatically carry out orders and will feel a niggling doubt. But the itching in my fingers disappeared quickly.

      This is not the first time that I’m repressing my didactic urge to ask the representatives of the destroyers, and the deprivers of water, if they aren’t ashamed. After all, every day our forces carry out some brutal act of demolition or prevent construction or assist the settlers who are permeated with a sense of racial superiority, to expel shepherds and farmers from their land. The vast majority of these acts of destruction and expulsion are not reported in the Israeli media. After all, writing about them would require the hiring of another two full-time reporters.

      These acts are carried out in the name of every Israeli citizen, who also pays the taxes to fund the salaries of the officials and the army officers and the demolition contractors. When I write about one small sampling from among the many acts of destruction, I have every right as a citizen and a journalist to ask those who hand down the orders, and those who carry them out: “Tell me, can you look at yourself in the mirror?”

      But I don’t ask. Because we know the answer: They’re pleased with what they see in the mirror. Shame has disappeared from our lives. Here’s another axiom that has come down to us from Mount Sinai: The Jews have a right to water, wherever they are. Not the Palestinians. If they insist on living outside the enclaves we assigned to them in Area A, outside the crowded reservations (the city of Yatta, for example), let them bear the responsibility of becoming accustomed to living without water. It’s impossible without water? You don’t say. Then please, let the Palestinians pay for water that is carried in containers, seven times the cost of the water in the faucet.

      It’s none of our business that most of the income of these impoverished communities is spent on water. It’s none of our business that water delivery is dangerous because of the poor roads. It’s none of our business that the Israel Defense Forces and the Civil Administration dig pits in them and pile up rocks – so that it will be truly impossible to use them to transport water for about 1,500 to 2,000 people, and another 40,000 sheep and goats. What do we care that only one road remains, a long detour that makes delivery even more expensive? After all, it’s written in the Torah: What’s good for us, we’ll deny to others.

      I confess: The fact that the pyramid that carries out the policy of depriving the Palestinians of water is now headed by a Druze (Brig. Gen. Kamil Abu Rokon, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories) made the itching in my fingers last longer. Maybe because when Abu Rokon approaches the faucet, he thinks the word “thirsty” in the same language used by the elderly Ali Dababseh from the village of Khalet al-Daba to describe life with a dry spigot and waiting for the tractor that will bring water in a container. Or because Abu Rokon first learned from his mother how to say in Arabic that he wants to drink.

      Water towers used by villages due to lack of running water in their homes. Eliyahu Hershkovitz

      But that longer itching is irrational, at least based on the test of reality. The Civil Administration and COGAT are filled with Druze soldiers and officers whose mother tongue is Arabic. They carry out the orders to implement Israel’s settler colonial policy, to expel Palestinians and to take over as much land as possible for Jews, with the same unhesitant efficiency as their colleagues whose mother tongue is Hebrew, Russian or Spanish.

      Of all the Israeli methods of removing Palestinians from their land in order to allocate it to Jews from Israel and the Diaspora, the policy of water deprivation is the cruelest. And these are the main points of this policy: Israel does not recognize the right of all the human beings living under its control to equal access to water and to quantities of water. On the contrary. It believes in the right of the Jews as lords and masters to far greater quantities of water than the Palestinians. It controls the water sources everywhere in the country, including in the West Bank. It carries out drilling in the West Bank and draws water in the occupied territory, and transfers most of it to Israel and the settlements.

      The Palestinians have wells from the Jordanian period, some of which have already dried up, and several new ones from the past 20 years, not as deep as the Israeli ones, and together they don’t yield sufficient quantities of water. The Palestinians are therefore forced to buy from Israel water that Israel is stealing from them.

      Because Israel has full administrative control over 60 percent of the area of the West Bank (among other things it decides on the master plans and approves construction permits), it also forbids the Palestinians who live there to link up to the water infrastructure. The reason for the prohibition: They have no master plan. Or that’s a firing zone. And of course firing zones were declared on Mount Sinai, and an absence of a master plan for the Palestinian is not a deliberate human omission but the act of God.

    • Pendant six mois, ces villages palestiniens ont eu de l’eau courante. Israël y a mis fin
      25 février | Amira Hass pour Haaretz |Traduction SF pour l’AURDIP
      https://www.aurdip.org/pendant-six-mois-ces-villages.html

      Pendant six mois, des villageois palestiniens vivant en Cisjordanie sur une terre qu’Israël considère comme une zone de feu fermée, ont vu leur rêve d’eau courante devenir réalité. Puis l’administration civile y a mis fin.

  • #Venezuela 102ème anniversaire de Juan Vicente Torrealba
    (vidéo[es] incorporée)

    #20Feb Nació Juan Vicente Torrealba, leyenda viviente | Informe21.com
    https://informe21.com/actualidad/20feb-nacio-juan-vicente-torrealba-leyenda-viviente

    Juan Vicente Torrealba, caraqueño por accidente y llanero por tradición, cumple hoy 102 años. Ha compuesto más de 300 temas y cumplió su sueño de escribir un libro titulado “El llano de Juan Vicente”. Comenzó con la música folclórica y alcanzó el grado sinfónico con su Concierto en la llanura.

    Nació en Caracas el 20 de febrero de 1917. A los ocho meses sus padres lo llevaron al llano donde pasó su infancia y gran parte de su adolescencia.

    A los 31 años Juan Vicente Torrealba deja el llano y busca nuevos horizontes en Caracas, donde conoce a la compositora María Luisa Escobar quien le recomienda grabar su música si la quería dar a conocer.

    Así lo hizo y surgió el llamado “estilo torrealbero” que iba en contracorriente con lo que para ese momento se conocía como música llanera.

    La música torrealbera se dio a conocer por toda Venezuela y gran parte del mundo.

    Sin saber escribir música, Juan Vicente Torrealba no se limitó a un estilo. Comenzó con la música folclórica y alcanzó el grado sinfónico con su Concierto en la llanura.

    Llanero, originaire des llanos, pays d’étendues immenses, d’élevage et donc de garçons vachers (oui, ça sonne mieux en anglais,…) interprète et compositeur pour la harpe vénézuélienne, il est celui qui a introduit cette musique de bouseux dans les salons de l’élite caraquenienne, restée jusque là indéboulonnablement fidèles à la valse avec une solide tradition de valses vénézuéliennes pendant au moins le premier tiers du XXè siècle.

    Sa création emblématique est Concierto en la llanura dont le nom résume parfaitement cette transition de la campagne à la ville…

    En version harpe, cuatro, maracas
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POFmc2-3f1w

    quelques 60 ans plus tard en version symphonique par la_Orquesta Sinfónica Juvenil de Caracas_ sous la direction de Gustavo Dudamel (purs produits de el Sistema)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlkggaIaF4k

  • Amérique latine, l’année de tous les dangers | ARTE

    Ce soir à 23h45 et sur le site jusqu’au 19/04/19.

    https://www.arte.tv/fr/videos/078742-000-A/amerique-latine-l-annee-de-tous-les-dangers

    Pourquoi la gauche subit-elle aujourd’hui des revers retentissants en Amérique latine ? Marco Enriquez-Ominami, candidat socialiste malheureux à la présidentielle chilienne en 2017, interroge le Bolivien Evo Morales, le Vénézuélien Nicolas Maduro, l’Équatorien Rafael Correa, l’Uruguayen José Mujica et la Brésilienne Dilma Rousseff.

    Défaite cinglante au Venezuela, virage à droite en Argentine, à l’extrême droite au Brésil, manifestations d’opposition en Équateur, fin de règne à Cuba... : après une vague de succès fulgurants en Amérique latine, à l’aube du XXIe siècle, la gauche est à la peine et subit aujourd’hui des revers retentissants. Comment comprendre les difficultés qui l’accablent ? Candidat malheureux à l’élection présidentielle chilienne de 2017, Marco Enriquez-Ominami, héritier spirituel de ce courant progressiste, interroge ce bilan trouble et controversé. En allant à la rencontre de ses aînés, amis, modèles ou mentors – le Bolivien Evo Morales, le Vénézuélien Nicolas Maduro, l’Équatorien Rafael Correa, l’Uruguayen José Mujica, la Brésilienne Dilma Rousseff... –, parviendra-t-il à tirer les leçons de l’histoire ?

    Instabilité
    Au tournant du XXIe siècle, l’Amérique latine a connu un extraordinaire cycle de croissance économique et de développement social. Ce mouvement massif a radicalement changé le paysage et donné lieu à l’instauration d’une culture démocratique durable, à la mise en place d’États de droit, à une redistribution des richesses qui a fait reculer de manière impressionnante la pauvreté, à l’émergence de nouveaux leaders politiques. Mais, depuis quelques années, cette ère glorieuse a cédé la place à une période de grande instabilité. Depuis 2016, les politiques de ces dirigeants sont remises en question par les citoyens mêmes qui les avaient portés au pouvoir ; le gong marquant la fin des politiques de gauche de l’Amérique latine a sonné. La crise politique dans laquelle se sont englués plusieurs pays montre que les politiques hier opérantes ne sont plus adaptées aux défis qui s’annoncent. Comment éloigner les démons de la dictature ? Comment enrayer durablement la misère et les inégalités si profondément ancrées dans cette région ? Un tour d’horizon géopolitique qui questionne le passé pour mieux appréhender l’avenir.

  • New report exposes global reach of powerful governments who equip, finance and train other countries to spy on their populations

    Privacy International has today released a report that looks at how powerful governments are financing, training and equipping countries — including authoritarian regimes — with surveillance capabilities. The report warns that rather than increasing security, this is entrenching authoritarianism.

    Countries with powerful security agencies are spending literally billions to equip, finance, and train security and surveillance agencies around the world — including authoritarian regimes. This is resulting in entrenched authoritarianism, further facilitation of abuse against people, and diversion of resources from long-term development programmes.

    The report, titled ‘Teach ’em to Phish: State Sponsors of Surveillance’ is available to download here.

    Examples from the report include:

    In 2001, the US spent $5.7 billion in security aid. In 2017 it spent over $20 billion [1]. In 2015, military and non-military security assistance in the US amounted to an estimated 35% of its entire foreign aid expenditure [2]. The report provides examples of how US Departments of State, Defense, and Justice all facilitate foreign countries’ surveillance capabilities, as well as an overview of how large arms companies have embedded themselves into such programmes, including at surveillance training bases in the US. Examples provided include how these agencies have provided communications intercept and other surveillance technology, how they fund wiretapping programmes, and how they train foreign spy agencies in surveillance techniques around the world.

    The EU and individual European countries are sponsoring surveillance globally. The EU is already spending billions developing border control and surveillance capabilities in foreign countries to deter migration to Europe. For example, the EU is supporting Sudan’s leader with tens of millions of Euros aimed at capacity building for border management. The EU is now looking to massively increase its expenditure aimed at building border control and surveillance capabilities globally under the forthcoming Multiannual Financial Framework, which will determine its budget for 2021–2027. Other EU projects include developing the surveillance capabilities of security agencies in Tunisia, Burkina Faso, Somalia, Iraq and elsewhere. European countries such as France, Germany, and the UK are sponsoring surveillance worldwide, for example, providing training and equipment to “Cyber Police Officers” in Ukraine, as well as to agencies in Saudi Arabia, and across Africa.

    Surveillance capabilities are also being supported by China’s government under the ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ and other efforts to expand into international markets. Chinese companies have reportedly supplied surveillance capabilities to Bolivia, Venezuela, and Ecuador [3]. In Ecuador, China Electronics Corporation supplied a network of cameras — including some fitted with facial recognition capabilities — to the country’s 24 provinces, as well as a system to locate and identify mobile phones.

    Edin Omanovic, Privacy International’s Surveillance Programme Lead, said

    “The global rush to make sure that surveillance is as universal and pervasive as possible is as astonishing as it is disturbing. The breadth of institutions, countries, agencies, and arms companies that are involved shows how there is no real long-term policy or strategic thinking driving any of this. It’s a free-for-all, where capabilities developed by some of the world’s most powerful spy agencies are being thrown at anyone willing to serve their interests, including dictators and killers whose only goal is to cling to power.

    “If these ‘benefactor’ countries truly want to assist other countries to be secure and stable, they should build schools, hospitals, and other infrastructure, and promote democracy and human rights. This is what communities need for safety, security, and prosperity. What we don’t need is powerful and wealthy countries giving money to arms companies to build border control and surveillance infrastructure. This only serves the interests of those powerful, wealthy countries. As our report shows, instead of putting resources into long-term development solutions, such programmes further entrench authoritarianism and spur abuses around the world — the very things which cause insecurity in the first place.”

    https://privacyinternational.org/press-release/2161/press-release-new-report-exposes-global-reach-powerful-governm

    #surveillance #surveillance_de_masse #rapport

    Pour télécharger le rapport “Teach ’em to Phish: State Sponsors of Surveillance”:
    https://privacyinternational.org/sites/default/files/2018-07/Teach-em-to-Phish-report.pdf

    ping @fil

    • China Uses DNA to Track Its People, With the Help of American Expertise

      The Chinese authorities turned to a Massachusetts company and a prominent Yale researcher as they built an enormous system of surveillance and control.

      The authorities called it a free health check. Tahir Imin had his doubts.

      They drew blood from the 38-year-old Muslim, scanned his face, recorded his voice and took his fingerprints. They didn’t bother to check his heart or kidneys, and they rebuffed his request to see the results.

      “They said, ‘You don’t have the right to ask about this,’” Mr. Imin said. “‘If you want to ask more,’ they said, ‘you can go to the police.’”

      Mr. Imin was one of millions of people caught up in a vast Chinese campaign of surveillance and oppression. To give it teeth, the Chinese authorities are collecting DNA — and they got unlikely corporate and academic help from the United States to do it.

      China wants to make the country’s Uighurs, a predominantly Muslim ethnic group, more subservient to the Communist Party. It has detained up to a million people in what China calls “re-education” camps, drawing condemnation from human rights groups and a threat of sanctions from the Trump administration.

      Collecting genetic material is a key part of China’s campaign, according to human rights groups and Uighur activists. They say a comprehensive DNA database could be used to chase down any Uighurs who resist conforming to the campaign.

      Police forces in the United States and elsewhere use genetic material from family members to find suspects and solve crimes. Chinese officials, who are building a broad nationwide database of DNA samples, have cited the crime-fighting benefits of China’s own genetic studies.

      To bolster their DNA capabilities, scientists affiliated with China’s police used equipment made by Thermo Fisher, a Massachusetts company. For comparison with Uighur DNA, they also relied on genetic material from people around the world that was provided by #Kenneth_Kidd, a prominent #Yale_University geneticist.

      On Wednesday, #Thermo_Fisher said it would no longer sell its equipment in Xinjiang, the part of China where the campaign to track Uighurs is mostly taking place. The company said separately in an earlier statement to The New York Times that it was working with American officials to figure out how its technology was being used.

      Dr. Kidd said he had been unaware of how his material and know-how were being used. He said he believed Chinese scientists were acting within scientific norms that require informed consent by DNA donors.

      China’s campaign poses a direct challenge to the scientific community and the way it makes cutting-edge knowledge publicly available. The campaign relies in part on public DNA databases and commercial technology, much of it made or managed in the United States. In turn, Chinese scientists have contributed Uighur DNA samples to a global database, potentially violating scientific norms of consent.

      Cooperation from the global scientific community “legitimizes this type of genetic surveillance,” said Mark Munsterhjelm, an assistant professor at the University of Windsor in Ontario who has closely tracked the use of American technology in Xinjiang.

      Swabbing Millions

      In Xinjiang, in northwestern China, the program was known as “#Physicals_for_All.”

      From 2016 to 2017, nearly 36 million people took part in it, according to Xinhua, China’s official news agency. The authorities collected DNA samples, images of irises and other personal data, according to Uighurs and human rights groups. It is unclear whether some residents participated more than once — Xinjiang has a population of about 24.5 million.

      In a statement, the Xinjiang government denied that it collects DNA samples as part of the free medical checkups. It said the DNA machines that were bought by the Xinjiang authorities were for “internal use.”

      China has for decades maintained an iron grip in Xinjiang. In recent years, it has blamed Uighurs for a series of terrorist attacks in Xinjiang and elsewhere in China, including a 2013 incident in which a driver struck two people in Tiananmen Square in Beijing.

      In late 2016, the Communist Party embarked on a campaign to turn the Uighurs and other largely Muslim minority groups into loyal supporters. The government locked up hundreds of thousands of them in what it called job training camps, touted as a way to escape poverty, backwardness and radical Islam. It also began to take DNA samples.

      In at least some of the cases, people didn’t give up their genetic material voluntarily. To mobilize Uighurs for the free medical checkups, police and local cadres called or sent them text messages, telling them the checkups were required, according to Uighurs interviewed by The Times.

      “There was a pretty strong coercive element to it,” said Darren Byler, an anthropologist at the University of Washington who studies the plight of the Uighurs. “They had no choice.”

      Calling Dr. Kidd

      Kenneth Kidd first visited China in 1981 and remained curious about the country. So when he received an invitation in 2010 for an expenses-paid trip to visit Beijing, he said yes.

      Dr. Kidd is a major figure in the genetics field. The 77-year-old Yale professor has helped to make DNA evidence more acceptable in American courts.

      His Chinese hosts had their own background in law enforcement. They were scientists from the Ministry of Public Security — essentially, China’s police.

      During that trip, Dr. Kidd met Li Caixia, the chief forensic physician of the ministry’s Institute of Forensic Science. The relationship deepened. In December 2014, Dr. Li arrived at Dr. Kidd’s lab for an 11-month stint. She took some DNA samples back to China.

      “I had thought we were sharing samples for collaborative research,” said Dr. Kidd.

      Dr. Kidd is not the only prominent foreign geneticist to have worked with the Chinese authorities. Bruce Budowle, a professor at the University of North Texas, says in his online biography that he “has served or is serving” as a member of an academic committee at the ministry’s Institute of Forensic Science.

      Jeff Carlton, a university spokesman, said in a statement that Professor Budowle’s role with the ministry was “only symbolic in nature” and that he had “done no work on its behalf.”

      “Dr. Budowle and his team abhor the use of DNA technology to persecute ethnic or religious groups,” Mr. Carlton said in the statement. “Their work focuses on criminal investigations and combating human trafficking to serve humanity.”

      Dr. Kidd’s data became part of China’s DNA drive.

      In 2014, ministry researchers published a paper describing a way for scientists to tell one ethnic group from another. It cited, as an example, the ability to distinguish Uighurs from Indians. The authors said they used 40 DNA samples taken from Uighurs in China and samples from other ethnic groups from Dr. Kidd’s Yale lab.

      In patent applications filed in China in 2013 and 2017, ministry researchers described ways to sort people by ethnicity by screening their genetic makeup. They took genetic material from Uighurs and compared it with DNA from other ethnic groups. In the 2017 filing, researchers explained that their system would help in “inferring the geographical origin from the DNA of suspects at crime scenes.”

      For outside comparisons, they used DNA samples provided by Dr. Kidd’s lab, the 2017 filing said. They also used samples from the 1000 Genomes Project, a public catalog of genes from around the world.

      Paul Flicek, member of the steering committee of the 1000 Genomes Project, said that its data was unrestricted and that “there is no obvious problem” if it was being used as a way to determine where a DNA sample came from.

      The data flow also went the other way.

      Chinese government researchers contributed the data of 2,143 Uighurs to the Allele Frequency Database, an online search platform run by Dr. Kidd that was partly funded by the United States Department of Justice until last year. The database, known as Alfred, contains DNA data from more than 700 populations around the world.

      This sharing of data could violate scientific norms of informed consent because it is not clear whether the Uighurs volunteered their DNA samples to the Chinese authorities, said Arthur Caplan, the founding head of the division of medical ethics at New York University’s School of Medicine. He said that “no one should be in a database without express consent.”

      “Honestly, there’s been a kind of naïveté on the part of American scientists presuming that other people will follow the same rules and standards wherever they come from,” Dr. Caplan said.

      Dr. Kidd said he was “not particularly happy” that the ministry had cited him in its patents, saying his data shouldn’t be used in ways that could allow people or institutions to potentially profit from it. If the Chinese authorities used data they got from their earlier collaborations with him, he added, there is little he can do to stop them.

      He said he was unaware of the filings until he was contacted by The Times.

      Dr. Kidd also said he considered his collaboration with the ministry to be no different from his work with police and forensics labs elsewhere. He said governments should have access to data about minorities, not just the dominant ethnic group, in order to have an accurate picture of the whole population.

      As for the consent issue, he said the burden of meeting that standard lay with the Chinese researchers, though he said reports about what Uighurs are subjected to in China raised some difficult questions.

      “I would assume they had appropriate informed consent on the samples,” he said, “though I must say what I’ve been hearing in the news recently about the treatment of the Uighurs raises concerns.”
      Machine Learning

      In 2015, Dr. Kidd and Dr. Budowle spoke at a genomics conference in the Chinese city of Xi’an. It was underwritten in part by Thermo Fisher, a company that has come under intense criticism for its equipment sales in China, and Illumina, a San Diego company that makes gene sequencing instruments. Illumina did not respond to requests for comment.

      China is ramping up spending on health care and research. The Chinese market for gene-sequencing equipment and other technologies was worth $1 billion in 2017 and could more than double in five years, according to CCID Consulting, a research firm. But the Chinese market is loosely regulated, and it isn’t always clear where the equipment goes or to what uses it is put.

      Thermo Fisher sells everything from lab instruments to forensic DNA testing kits to DNA mapping machines, which help scientists decipher a person’s ethnicity and identify diseases to which he or she is particularly vulnerable. China accounted for 10 percent of Thermo Fisher’s $20.9 billion in revenue, according to the company’s 2017 annual report, and it employs nearly 5,000 people there.

      “Our greatest success story in emerging markets continues to be China,” it said in the report.

      China used Thermo Fisher’s equipment to map the genes of its people, according to five Ministry of Public Security patent filings.

      The company has also sold equipment directly to the authorities in Xinjiang, where the campaign to control the Uighurs has been most intense. At least some of the equipment was intended for use by the police, according to procurement documents. The authorities there said in the documents that the machines were important for DNA inspections in criminal cases and had “no substitutes in China.”

      In February 2013, six ministry researchers credited Thermo Fisher’s Applied Biosystems brand, as well as other companies, with helping to analyze the DNA samples of Han, Uighur and Tibetan people in China, according to a patent filing. The researchers said understanding how to differentiate between such DNA samples was necessary for fighting terrorism “because these cases were becoming more difficult to crack.”

      The researchers said they had obtained 95 Uighur DNA samples, some of which were given to them by the police. Other samples were provided by Uighurs voluntarily, they said.

      Thermo Fisher was criticized by Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, and others who asked the Commerce Department to prohibit American companies from selling technology to China that could be used for purposes of surveillance and tracking.

      On Wednesday, Thermo Fisher said it would stop selling its equipment in Xinjiang, a decision it said was “consistent with Thermo Fisher’s values, ethics code and policies.”

      “As the world leader in serving science, we recognize the importance of considering how our products and services are used — or may be used — by our customers,” it said.

      Human rights groups praised Thermo Fisher’s move. Still, they said, equipment and information flows into China should be better monitored, to make sure the authorities elsewhere don’t send them to Xinjiang.

      “It’s an important step, and one hopes that they apply the language in their own statement to commercial activity across China, and that other companies are assessing their sales and operations, especially in Xinjiang,” said Sophie Richardson, the China director of Human Rights Watch.

      American lawmakers and officials are taking a hard look at the situation in Xinjiang. The Trump administration is considering sanctions against Chinese officials and companies over China’s treatment of the Uighurs.

      China’s tracking campaign unnerved people like Tahir Hamut. In May 2017, the police in the city of Urumqi in Xinjiang drew the 49-year-old Uighur’s blood, took his fingerprints, recorded his voice and took a scan of his face. He was called back a month later for what he was told was a free health check at a local clinic.

      Mr. Hamut, a filmmaker who is now living in Virginia, said he saw between 20 to 40 Uighurs in line. He said it was absurd to think that such frightened people had consented to submit their DNA.

      “No one in this situation, not under this much pressure and facing such personal danger, would agree to give their blood samples for research,” Mr. Hamut said. “It’s just inconceivable.”

      https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/21/business/china-xinjiang-uighur-dna-thermo-fisher.html?action=click&module=MoreInSect
      #USA #Etats-Unis #ADN #DNA #Ouïghours #université #science #génétique #base_de_données

  • Anti-BDS bill passed Senate, but trouble awaits in House
    Some Democrats are convinced the decision to tie the controversial bill together with motions on aid to Israel and Jordan and sanctions on Syria was designed to spark intra-Democratic fighting
    Amir Tibon Washington
    Feb 10, 2019 11:52 PM
    https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-anti-bds-bill-passed-senate-but-trouble-awaits-in-house-1.6920012

    WASHINGTON – The Senate passed a bill last week that encourages state governments across the U.S. not to sign contracts with supporters of boycotts against Israel and its settlements in the occupied West Bank. The bill has since been introduced in the House of Representatives, but Congressional sources from both parties told Haaretz in recent days they doubt it will pass the House any time soon.

    The bill in question is called the Combating BDS Act. It passed the Senate as part of a “package” of Middle East-related bills after being introduced by Republican Senator Marco Rubio. The other bills in the package deal with non-controversial, consensus issues such as military aid to Israel and Jordan, and sanctions on the Assad regime in Syria.

    Rubio and Senate Republicans added the anti-BDS bill into the package, setting the stage for an intense fight about it on Capitol Hill. The reason is that civil rights organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union are concerned that the Combating BDS Act is unconstitutional and harms American citizens’ freedom of speech.

    The bill encourages the implementation of local legislation passed in recent years by half of the states in the U.S., putting limits on state governments’ abilities to sign contracts with supporters of boycotts against Israel or the settlements. Two such laws have been frozen by federal courts in Arizona and Kansas, following lawsuits by state contractors who said the laws harmed their freedom of speech. Similar lawsuits have recently been filed in Texas and Arkansas.

    When the package bill came up for a vote last week, 23 senators voted against it, including one Republican, Rand Paul of Kentucky. Many of those who voted against it clarified that if every aspect of the bill had been voted on separately, they probably would have supported the bills on assistance to Israel and Jordan and on sanctioning Assad, and would have only objected to the BDS bill, mainly because of concerns surrounding freedom of speech.

    Such a vote could take place in the Senate, where Republicans hold the majority, but not in the House, according to the Congressional sources who spoke with Haaretz. Democrats are convinced that the entire purpose of the Republican decision to add the anti-BDS bill into the broader Middle East package was to orchestrate an intra-Democratic fight over the issue, and force many Democrats to choose between their position on the free speech criticism of the bill, and their general opposition to BDS.

    The Democratic leadership in the House, which has a majority ever since the midterm elections, will most likely break up the package into a number of separate bills. That will allow the House to approve the non-controversial bills on security aid to Israel and sanctions on Syria, without immediately setting the stage for a new round of internal party tensions on the “constitutional right to boycott” question.

    While the other bills are probably going to see quick and easy approval, the anti-BDS bill could be up for a lengthy period of debate in the relevant House committees. There could also be an amendment process. In the Senate, for example, one Democratic senator, Gary Peters of Michigan, offered an amendment that would make it absolutely clear that the bill only refers to large companies, not to small businesses or sole proprietors. Another amendment offered to distinguish in the bill’s language between Israel proper and the settlements in the occupied West Bank.

    Lara Friedman of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, one of the most vocal opponents of the legislation, told Haaretz last week that Democrats in the House “can see what happened in the Senate and take a good guess that it will be even more controversial” in their chamber. “The only ones who benefit from seeing Democrats fight amongst themselves on this issue are the GOP and folks in the U.S. and Israel who want to see Israel turned into a weapon for partisan gain,” she added.

    AIPAC, the powerful lobby that supports the Israeli government, is urging Congress to pass the legislation. The organization wrote in its monthly publication, the Near East Report, that “Congress should take up and pass the Combating BDS Act as quickly as possible. This important bipartisan bill seeks both to protect states against claims they are preempting federal authority, and to demonstrate Congress’ strong support for state measures consistent with Congress’ historic commitment to oppose boycotts of Israel.”

    #BDS

    • En complément : attaquer Omar, Tlaib et Ocasio-Cortez, par imputation d’antisémitisme, pour explicitement diviser les Démocrates : McCarthy pressures Democrats to rebuke two Muslim lawmakers over alleged anti-Semitism
      https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/mccarthy-gop-challenge-house-democrats-to-denounce-alleged-anti-semitism/2019/02/08/aef28514-2bae-11e9-b2fc-721718903bfc_story.html

      Republicans are focusing their ire at the two Muslim women in Congress, accusing them of anti-Semitism and pressuring Democratic leaders to rebuke the lawmakers as attitudes in the party toward Israel shift from unquestioned support.

      The pressure on Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) is part of a larger GOP effort to drive a partisan wedge into the traditionally nonpartisan relationship between the United States and Israel. Republicans are casting themselves as the more resolute defender of Israel, heightening the party’s appeal to traditionally Democratic Jewish voters.

      […]

      Ralph Reed, the head of the Faith and Freedom Coalition and an ally of the Trump White House, said Republicans are working to “change the center of gravity in the American electorate on the issue of Israel.”

      “The leftward drift of the grass roots of the Democrat Party, away from wholehearted and robust support of Israel, means you have people in that party who see Israel through the prism of apartheid and occupation,” he said. “That’s an opportunity for Republicans to say, ‘That’s not how we see Israel.’ ”

      Some Republicans have pointed to a recent phone call between Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), the high-profile young leader of her party’s hard-left wing, to British lawmaker Jeremy Corbyn, the head of the Labour Party who has come under intense criticism for tolerating anti-Semitism in his ranks.

      (Accessoirement donc : internationalisation de la manipulation anti-Corbyn…)

  • Reuters: Pdvsa mueve a Rusia la cuenta para ventas de empresas mixtas
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/reuters-pdvsa-mueve-rusia-cuenta-para-ventas-empresas-mixtas_270204

    Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) informó a los presidentes de las empresas mixtas que los futuros pagos por las exportaciones de crudo serán depositados en la institución bancaria rusa Gazprombank.

    El objetivo de esta medida es esquivar las sanciones económicas impuestas por Estados Unidos, de acuerdo al documento y a lo informado por fuentes a Reuters.

    Las empresas afectadas por esta medida deberán notificar a sus clientes que serán abonados, en dólares o euros, en la nueva cuenta bancaria en Moscú, así lo indica una carta firmada por vicepresidente de Finanzas de Pdvsa, Fernando de Quintal.

    Fuentes cercanas al sector petrolero aseguraron que después de las sanciones financieras impuestas por la administración de Donald Trump, presidente de EE UU, los socios extranjeros deben confirmarle a Pdvsa que continuarán en los proyectos.

    Decenas de barcos cargados de petróleo se mantienen anclados fuera de los puertos del país, debido a dichas medidas económicas. Por esta misma razón, Pdvsa podría detener su producción y mejoramiento de crudo con Equinor y Total, pues los diluyentes necesarios eran importados desde EE UU.

  • ¿Por qué Trump apuesta por Venezuela ?
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/por-que-trump-apuesta-por-venezuela_269484


    Foto : Cortesía

    Question – sans réponse – posée par l’agence espagnole EFE

    El presidente estadounidense, Donald Trump, ha aparcado su habitual tendencia aislacionista y su respeto por las figuras autócratas en el caso de Venezuela, un país que cautivó su atención desde que llegó al poder y que ahora motiva una de sus apuestas más arriesgadas en el plano internacional.

    Trump, un líder crítico con el papel de EE UU como «policía del mundo» y poco preocupado por temas de derechos humanos en países aliados, sorprendió a sus asesores al interesarse por Venezuela en cuanto llegó a la Casa Blanca y esa atención ha culminado en el reconocimiento del opositor Juan Guaidó como presidente interino.

    «Antes de llegar al poder, pasó algo que realmente despertó su interés en Venezuela. Pero no sé qué fue», dijo a Efe un ex asesor de Trump en asuntos latinoamericanos, Fernando Cutz.

    Aunque no descarta la posible influencia en la política hacia Venezuela del asesor de Seguridad Nacional John Bolton, del senador republicano Marco Rubio y del vicepresidente Mike Pence, Cutz cree que Trump siempre tuvo claro que quería actuar en el país sudamericano.

    «Lo veía como un reto de política exterior que definiría su Presidencia, una de sus tres prioridades junto a Corea del Norte e Irán», aseguró el ex funcionario.

    Durante su frenética primera semana en el poder en enero de 2017, Trump encontró tiempo para pedir a su equipo en el Consejo de Seguridad Nacional de la Casa Blanca (NSC, en inglés) que le pusiera al día sobre Venezuela.

    Cutz organizó entonces una sesión en la que Trump exigió «desarrollar opciones» para hacer frente a lo que consideraba una inaceptable crisis humanitaria en el país.

    «Me preguntaba sobre la gente, sobre por qué estaban sufriendo tanto. Preguntaba por qué pasaba eso en un país tan rico, y cómo podíamos ayudarles», relató Cutz, que dejó la Casa Blanca el año pasado y que ahora trabaja en la consultora The Cohen Group.
    […]
    Los defensores de Maduro apuntan a un posible interés por el petróleo venezolano de Trump, quien hace años lamentó que EE UU no se quedara con el crudo de Irak cuando invadió el país; y tampoco faltan quienes especulan, sin aportar pruebas, sobre un hipotético lazo empresarial del presidente en Venezuela.
    […]
    En cualquier caso, el discurso de la Casa Blanca se endureció a partir de la llegada el pasado abril de Bolton, quien ha definido a Venezuela, Cuba y Nicaragua como una «troika de la tiranía» y se ha rodeado de figuras afines como Mauricio Claver-Carone, de origen cubano y encargado de Latinoamérica en el Consejo de Seguridad Nacional de los Estados Unidos.

    Ni Cutz ni Feierstein descartan tampoco que Trump pueda estar pensando en su campaña de reelección en 2020, dada la importancia de Florida, «donde hay una creciente diáspora de estadounidenses de origen venezolano», en palabras del primero.

    Sea cual sea la causa, el interés de Trump en Venezuela ha derivado en la audaz decisión de apostar todas las cartas al triunfo de Guaidó, que por ahora no tiene el control de facto del país.

    «Es arriesgado porque no hay garantías de que funcione, y si no funciona estaremos en apuros. Habremos usado todos los mecanismos de presión que teníamos, y podríamos vernos forzados a intervenir militarmente», concluyó Cutz.

  • Forget Tlaib and Omar, Democratic 2020 front-runners should worry Israel more

    While the new generation of pro-BDS lawmakers are making news, Democratic presidential contenders’ opposition to ’pro-Israel’ legislation signals a much deeper shift
    Amir Tibon Washington
    Feb 04, 2019
    https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premium-forget-tlaib-and-omar-democratic-2020-front-runners-worry-israel-m

    WASHINGTON – Two newly elected congresswomen may be generating a lot of headlines, but Israeli officials are most concerned about the heated Senate debate about Israel in the past month than the pro-boycott statements of Democratic Reps. Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar.

    While Israeli officials are worried about the media attention Tlaib and Omar are receiving – which is seen as helping to advance their views and possibly creating more support for them – they are not perceived as having the potential to weaken or delay pro-Israel legislation in Congress. The representatives’ ability to pass laws that would harm or upset the Israeli government is seen as even more limited.
    Haaretz Weekly Ep. 13Haaretz

    But talking with Haaretz, Israeli officials admit greater concern that close to half of all Democratic senators voted against the anti-boycott, divestment and sanctions legislation proposed by Sen. Marco Rubio (Republican of Florida) last week.

    Almost all of the Democratic senators who are potential 2020 presidential nominees – from Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris and Bernie Sanders (an independent who caucuses with the Democrats) to Sherrod Brown, Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand – opposed the legislation, citing concerns over freedom of speech. The senators said that although they oppose BDS, they also oppose legislation that would force state contractors to sign a declaration saying they don’t boycott Israel or its settlements in the occupied territories.
    Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar smiling during a news conference with Nancy Pelosi on Capitol Hill in Washington, November 30, 2018.
    Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar smiling during a news conference with Nancy Pelosi on Capitol Hill in Washington, November 30, 2018.Bloomberg

    The anti-BDS legislation being opposed by high-ranking Democratic senators and presidential hopefuls has been a flagship project of the pro-Israel lobby in the United States for the past decade. It has also received strong support and encouragement from senior officials in the Israeli government. The pushback on the Democratic side to the legislation, which is coming from the mainstream of the party, is more consequential in the long-term than the provocative statements of freshman members of the House of Representatives, according to Israeli officials.

  • Exclusive : Venezuela plans to fly central bank gold reserves to UAE - source | Reuters
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-politics-gold-exclusive-idUSKCN1PP2QR

    Venezuela will sell 15 tonnes of gold from central bank vaults to the United Arab Emirates in coming days in return for euros in cash, a senior official with knowledge of the plan said, as the crisis-stricken country seeks to stay solvent.

    The sale this year of gold reserves that back the bolivar currency began with a shipment on Jan. 26 of 3 tonnes, the official said, and follows the export last year of $900 million of mostly unrefined gold to Turkey.

    In total, the plan is to sell 29 tonnes of gold held in Caracas to the United Arab Emirates by February in order to provide liquidity for imports of basic goods, the source said, requesting anonymity in order to speak freely.

    Socialist President Nicolas Maduro is under intense pressure to step down, with Venezuela in deep economic crisis and the government facing widespread international condemnation for elections last year seen as fraudulent.

    The United States, which is backing an attempt by the opposition to oust Maduro and call new elections, warned bankers and traders on Wednesday not to deal in Venezuelan gold.

    Republican U.S. Senator Marco Rubio sent a tweet to the United Arab Emirates embassy in Washington on Thursday warning that anybody transporting Venezuelan gold would be subject to U.S. sanctions.

    Fin novembre 2018, les réserves d’or du Venezuela s’élevaient à 132 tonnes d’or répartis entre la Banque centrale du Venezuela et la Banque d’Angleterre.
    (cité par El Nacional)
    Reuters : BCV venderá 15 toneladas de oro a Emiratos Árabes
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/reuters-bcv-vendera-toneladas-oro-emiratos-arabes_268963

    El Banco Central de Venezuela ya hizo un primer envío de unas tres toneladas a esa nación el 26 de enero

    • Bolton: ¿Maduro está robando recursos para pagar una intervención rusa?
      http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/bolton-maduro-esta-robando-recursos-para-pagar-una-intervencion-rusa_26

      John Bolton, consejero de Seguridad Nacional de Estados Unidos, insinuó este viernes que los recursos de oro que está entregando Nicolás Maduro serían para financiar una intervención rusa en el país.

      «Maduro no solo requiere apoyo paramilitar extranjero para mantener los hilos restantes de una dictadura fallida, pero los informes demuestran que está volando los activos venezolanos. ¿Está robando recursos de la gente para pagar la intervención rusa? », escribió Bolton vía Twitter.

      El Banco Central de Venezuela (BCV) venderá en los próximos días 15 toneladas de oro a Emiratos Árabes a cambios de euros en efectivo. El informe indica que el plan es vender más de 29 toneladas de oro para febrero.

      Venezuela poseía reservas de hasta 132 toneladas del mineral entre las cámaras del BCV y el Banco de Inglaterra a fines de noviembre del pasado año.

      tweet de J. Bolton en réponse à la dépêche Reuters ci-dessus,…
      https://twitter.com/AmbJohnBolton/status/1091333152658915328
      @AmbJohnBolton

      Not only does Maduro require foreign paramilitary support to keep remaining threads of a failed dictatorship, but reports show he is flying out Venezuelan assets by the plane full. Is he stealing resources from the people to pay for Russian intervention?

  • Accidents du travail en série dans un centre d’appels de Free
    https://www.latribune.fr/technos-medias/telecoms/accidents-du-travail-en-serie-dans-un-centre-d-appels-de-free-804734.html


    L’entrée de Certicall, qui compte autour de 580 salariés, dont la moitié, environ, de téléconseillers.
    Crédits : DR

    Selon l’inspection du travail, qui a saisi le procureur de la République, un grand nombre de téléconseillers de Certicall, un centre d’appels d’Iliad, maison-mère de Free, à Marseille, ont été victimes « d’incidents acoustiques » depuis trois ans. Ceux-ci ont entraîné de nombreux accidents du travail, des inaptitudes au poste et des invalidités. Des syndicalistes et des employés dénoncent l’attitude de la direction, qui n’a, selon eux, pas fait le nécessaire pour protéger correctement son personnel.

    Il a suffi d’un bruit, puissant, pour chambouler sa vie. Marco (*) a la vingtaine, il est téléconseiller chez Certicall, un centre d’appels du groupe Iliad (maison-mère de Free) à Marseille. L’hiver dernier, il répond, comme d’habitude, aux clients de l’opérateur de Xavier Niel qui rencontrent des problèmes avec leurs abonnements Internet fixe ou mobile. Le téléphone sonne une énième fois. Il décroche. Mais soudainement, un très fort bruit retentit à travers son casque. Selon lui, « c’est comme un gros grésillement qui arrive dans les oreilles ». Marco arrache tout de suite son casque. Mais la douleur demeure. Marco se rend d’emblée à l’infirmerie. « J’ai commencé à avoir la tête qui tourne, dit-il. Je ne pouvais plus bouger. Si je me levais, je savais que j’allais tomber à cause des vertiges »

    Marco sait parfaitement ce qui vient de lui arriver. « Ces dernières années, j’ai déjà eu plusieurs gros chocs acoustiques », affirme-t-il. Le jeune homme quitte le travail, file chez son médecin généraliste qui le met en accident du travail, puis consulte un ORL, spécialiste des affections aux oreilles. Il passe des tests auditifs, qui ne sont pas bons.

    « J’ai une grosse perte de mon audition, raconte Marco. J’ai des acouphènes [des sifflements ou des bourdonnements dans les oreilles, Ndlr], et une hypersensibilité au bruit. »
    […]
    Le problème, c’est que sa mésaventure n’est pas un cas isolé. Chez Certicall, les chocs ou incidents acoustiques, débouchant sur des accidents du travail plus ou moins graves, n’ont rien d’exceptionnel. Le mois dernier, une antenne de l’inspection du travail des Bouches-du-Rhône en a fait le constat dans une lettre adressée à un syndicat, qui fait suite à une enquête de ses services, à laquelle La Tribune a eu accès :
    « En 2016, 2017 et 2018, un nombre important d’incidents acoustiques ont généré des accidents du travail pour un grand nombre de salariés de l’entreprise Certicall, ainsi que des inaptitudes au poste et des invalidités », lit-on.

    Le courrier ne mentionne aucun chiffre. Mais selon Tarik Djarallah, délégué syndical central de Force ouvrière chez Certicall, le premier syndicat de l’entreprise, « entre 100 et 150 personnes ont déclaré des chocs acoustiques » depuis 2016. Sachant que Certicall compte aux alentours de 580 salariés, dit-il, dont la moitié environ de téléconseillers ou "Free-helpers", comme Free les qualifie. Interrogé à ce sujet, Iliad n’a pas donné suite à nos sollicitations.
    […]
    Surtout, Martin décrit « une atmosphère hostile envers les conseillers victimes de chocs acoustiques et qui ont été longtemps en arrêt de travail ». « Sur le plateau, en discutant avec d’autres conseillers, on m’a mis en garde, on m’a dit que je risquais de perdre mon travail », raconte-t-il, affirmant que Certicall cherche aujourd’hui à licencier les salariés victimes de chocs acoustiques avant qu’ils aient été déclarés inaptes par la médecine du travail pour économiser de l’argent.

    Dans son courrier, l’inspection du travail a jugé que l’employeur n’a pas fait le nécessaire pour protéger suffisamment les salariés. Certicall a notamment tardé à fournir aux téléconseillers des protections auditives.
    « Le fait de ne pas avoir mis à disposition de l’ensemble des salariés concernés par les risques d’incidents acoustiques des protecteurs auditifs performants est une infraction aux articles [...] du code du travail, [...] réprimée [...] d’une amende de 10.000 euros appliquée autant de fois qu’il y a de travailleurs de l’entreprise concernés indépendamment du nombre d’infractions relevées dans le procès-verbal », souligne l’inspection du travail.

    Celle-ci reproche aussi à l’employeur de « ne pas avoir mis à jour son document unique d’évaluation des risques ». Pour ces infractions, elle a saisi le procureur de la République, et invite aujourd’hui « les salariés qui ont été victimes de ces incidents » qui le veulent à « se porter partie civil ». Et ce « notamment dans l’objectif de saisir le tribunal des affaires sanitaires et sociales pour engager une action ou demande de reconnaissance d’une faute inexcusable de la part de l’employeur ». Marco et Martin, pour leur part, comptent bien demander des comptes à Certicall.

  • Venezuela : une trentaine d’émeutes à la veille d’une journée de manifestations contre Maduro
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/01/22/venezuela-une-trentaine-d-emeutes-a-la-veille-d-une-journee-de-manifestation


    Émeute dans le quartier de Cotiza à Caracas, le 21 janvier. YURI CORTEZ / AFP

    Ces manifestations se sont déroulées dans différents quartiers de Caracas avec l’objectif de soutenir les militaires qui se sont insurgés lundi contre le régime du président Nicolas Maduro.
    […]
    Ces violences ont fait monter la tension, à la veille d’une journée de grandes manifestations mercredi – jour de célébration du 61e anniversaire de la chute de la dictature de Marcos Pérez Jiménez, le 24 janvier 1958. L’opposition a appelé à une mobilisation dans tout le pays pour réclamer la mise en place d’un gouvernement de transition et l’organisation de nouvelles élections. Il s’agira de la première mobilisation d’envergure après les grandes manifestations de 2017, qui ont fait 125 morts.
    Les partisans du président socialiste ont, de leur côté, prévu également d’importants rassemblements à travers le pays pour défendre la légitimité du deuxième mandat de six ans de Nicolas Maduro, investi le 10 janvier. Un mandat contesté par l’opposition, majoritaire au Parlement, et non reconnu par une grande partie de la communauté internationale.