• Les distractions d’un réplicant - Jeu de Paume
    https://jeudepaume.org/palm/les-distractions-d-un-replicant-blade-runner

    Que se passe-t-il toutefois quand nous songeons à l’alliage entre l’humain et la machine ? À un âge où les questions relatives à l’intelligence artificielle, associée ou pas à des corps automatisés, soulèvent toujours plus de problèmes liés à l’organisation d’un commun au quotidien, le cinéma de science-fiction offre parfois des aperçus suggestifs sur le surgissement de la distraction dans un agencement homme-machine. C’est notamment le cas dans Blade Runner (1982) de Ridley Scott, adapté du roman de Philip K. Dick, Les androïdes rêvent-ils de moutons électriques ? (1968). Dans ce film, les « réplicants » sont des robots physiquement très ressemblants aux humains, conçus par Eldon Tyrell. Tyrell est le seul à pouvoir les reprogrammer pour qu’ils aient une vie plus longue que les quatre ans d’existence qu’il leur a attribués. Pourquoi cela ? Pour éviter que les réplicants, utilisés pour des travaux extrêmement durs dans de lointaines colonies martiennes, s’humanisent, et en s’humanisant possiblement se retournent contre leur créateur. Ce qu’ils feront une fois revenus sur Terre, et sans que Tyrell n’ait pu leur accorder davantage d’années à vivre.

    Trouvaille issue d’une recherche largement inspirée par ce seen :

    https://seenthis.net/messages/1003832

    #xenobots #replicant #blade_runner #Philip_K._Dick #fictions

    • Tu as aussi cette référence :-)

      Réplicateurs (Stargate) — Wikipédia
      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9plicateurs_(Stargate)

      Les Réplicateurs sont au départ présents sous la forme de robots ressemblant à des crabes mécaniques à quatre pattes. Ces crabes sont construits uniquement à partir de blocs élémentaires métalliques dont les dimensions sont de l’ordre du centimètre. Ils tirent leur nom du fait qu’ils se nourrissent de tout ce qu’ils trouvent pour se répliquer (métaux par exemple). Cela fait qu’ils sont capables de se reproduire très rapidement. Contrairement aux êtres vivants organiques, ils assimilent les propriétés du matériau qu’ils mangent sans le transformer : un Réplicateur « répliqué » à partir d’un alliage ferreux peut donc être corrodé par l’eau de mer. Certains évoluent en un stade supérieur. Ils ressemblent à de grands insectes ailés telles les reines dans une ruche. Ils remplissent alors les fonctions de commandement et de réplication mais de façon plus intense. Les Réplicateurs leur obéissent et acheminent vers eux des matériaux pour la réplication, de même qu’ils les protègent coûte que coûte.

  • UK signs contract with US startup to identify migrants in small-boat crossings

    The UK government has turned a US-based startup specialized in artificial intelligence as part of its pledge to stop small-boat crossings. Experts have already pointed out the legal and logistical challenges of the plan.

    In a new effort to address the high number of Channel crossings, the UK Home Office is working with the US defense startup #Anduril, specialized in the use of artificial intelligence (AI).

    A surveillance tower has already been installed at Dover, and other technologies might be rolled out with the onset of warmer temperatures and renewed attempts by migrants to reach the UK. Some experts already point out the risks and practical loopholes involved in using AI to identify migrants.

    “This is obviously the next step of the illegal migration bill,” said Olivier Cahn, a researcher specialized in penal law.

    “The goal is to retrieve images that were taken at sea and use AI to show they entered UK territory illegally even if people vanish into thin air upon arrival in the UK.”

    The “illegal migration bill” was passed by the UK last month barring anyone from entering the country irregularly from filing an asylum claim and imposing a “legal duty” to remove them to a third country.
    Who is behind Anduril?

    Founded in 2017 by its CEO #Palmer_Luckey, Anduril is backed by #Peter_Thiel, a Silicon Valley investor and supporter of Donald Trump. The company has supplied autonomous surveillance technology to the US Department of Defense (DOD) to detect and track migrants trying to cross the US-Mexico border.

    In 2021, the UK Ministry of Defence awarded Anduril with a £3.8-million contract to trial an advanced base defence system. Anduril eventually opened a branch in London where it states its mission: “combining the latest in artificial intelligence with commercial-of-the-shelf sensor technology (EO, IR, Radar, Lidar, UGS, sUAS) to enhance national security through automated detection, identification and tracking of objects of interest.”

    According to Cahn, the advantage of Brexit is that the UK government is no longer required to submit to the General Data Protection Regulation (RGPDP), a component of data protection that also addresses the transfer of personal data outside the EU and EEA areas.

    “Even so, the UK has data protection laws of its own which the government cannot breach. Where will the servers with the incoming data be kept? What are the rights of appeal for UK citizens whose data is being processed by the servers?”, he asked.

    ’Smugglers will provide migrants with balaclavas for an extra 15 euros’

    Cahn also pointed out the technical difficulties of identifying migrants at sea. “The weather conditions are often not ideal, and many small-boat crossings happen at night. How will facial recognition technology operate in this context?”

    The ability of migrants and smugglers to adapt is yet another factor. “People are going to cover their faces, and anyone would think the smugglers will respond by providing migrants with balaclavas for an extra 15 euros.”

    If the UK has solicited the services of a US startup to detect and identify migrants, the reason may lie in AI’s principle of self-learning. “A machine accumulates data and recognizes what it has already seen. The US is a country with a significantly more racially and ethnically diverse population than the UK. Its artificial intelligence might contain data from populations which are more ethnically comparable to the populations that are crossing the Channel, like Somalia for example, thus facilitating the process of facial recognition.”

    For Cahn, it is not capturing the images which will be the most difficult but the legal challenges that will arise out of their usage. “People are going to be identified and there are going to be errors. If a file exists, there needs to be the possibility for individuals to appear before justice and have access to a judge.”

    A societal uproar

    In a research paper titled “Refugee protection in the artificial intelligence Era”, Chatham House notes “the most common ethical and legal challenges associated with the use of AI in asylum and related border and immigration systems involve issues of opacity and unpredictability, the potential for bias and unlawful discrimination, and how such factors affect the ability of individuals to obtain a remedy in the event of erroneous or unfair decisions.”

    For Cahn, the UK government’s usage of AI can only be used to justify and reinforce its hardline position against migrants. “For a government that doesn’t respect the Geneva Convention [whose core principle is non-refoulement, editor’s note] and which passed an illegal migration law, it is out of the question that migrants have entered the territory legally.”

    Identifying migrants crossing the Channel is not going to be the hardest part for the UK government. Cahn imagines a societal backlash with, “the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom being solicited, refugees seeking remedies to legal decisions through lawyers and associations attacking”.

    He added there would be due process concerning the storage of the data, with judges issuing disclosure orders. “There is going to be a whole series of questions which the government will have to elucidate. The rights of refugees are often used as a laboratory. If these technologies are ’successful’, they will soon be applied to the rest of the population."

    https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/48326/uk-signs-contract-with-us-startup-to-identify-migrants-in-smallboat-cr

    #UK #Angleterre #migrations #asile #réfugiés #militarisation_des_frontières #frontières #start-up #complexe_militaro-industriel #IA #intelligence_artificielle #surveillance #technologie #channel #Manche

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur la Bibby Stockholm:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1016683

    • Huge barge set to house 500 asylum seekers arrives in the UK

      The #Bibby_Stockholm is being refitted in #Falmouth to increase its capacity from 222 to 506 people.

      A barge set to house 500 asylum seekers has arrived in the UK as the government struggles with efforts to move migrants out of hotels.

      The Independent understands that people will not be transferred onto the Bibby Stockholm until July, following refurbishment to increase its capacity and safety checks.

      The barge has been towed from its former berth in Italy to the port of Falmouth, in Cornwall.

      It will remain there while works are carried out, before being moved onto its final destination in #Portland, Dorset.

      The private operators of the port struck an agreement to host the barge with the Home Office without formal public consultation, angering the local council and residents.

      Conservative MP Richard Drax previously told The Independent legal action was still being considered to stop the government’s plans for what he labelled a “quasi-prison”.

      He accused ministers and Home Office officials of being “unable to answer” practical questions on how the barge will operate, such as how asylum seekers will be able to come and go safely through the port, what activities they will be provided with and how sufficient healthcare will be ensured.

      “The question is how do we cope?” Mr Drax said. “Every organisation has its own raft of questions: ‘Where’s the money coming from? Who’s going to do what if this all happens?’ There are not sufficient answers, which is very worrying.”

      The Independent previously revealed that asylum seekers will have less living space than an average parking bay on the Bibby Stockholm, which saw at least one person die and reports of rape and abuse on board when it was used by the Dutch government to detain migrants in the 2000s.

      An official brochure released by owner Bibby Marine shows there are only 222 “single en-suite bedrooms” on board, meaning that at least two people must be crammed into every cabin for the government to achieve its aim of holding 500 people.

      Dorset Council has said it still had “serious reservations about the appropriateness of Portland Port in this scenario and remains opposed to the proposals”.

      The Conservative police and crime commissioner for Dorset is demanding extra government funding for the local force to “meet the extra policing needs that this project will entail”.

      A multi-agency forum including representatives from national, regional and local public sector agencies has been looking at plans for the provision of health services, the safety and security of both asylum seekers and local residents and charity involvement.

      Portland Port said it had been working with the Home Office and local agencies to ensure the safe arrival and operation of the Bibby Stockholm, and to minimise its impact locally.

      The barge is part of a wider government push to move migrants out of hotels, which are currently housing more than 47,000 asylum seekers at a cost of £6m a day.

      But the use of ships as accommodation was previously ruled out on cost grounds by the Treasury, when Rishi Sunak was chancellor, and the government has not confirmed how much it will be spending on the scheme.

      Ministers have also identified several former military and government sites, including two defunct airbases and an empty prison, that they want to transform into asylum accommodation.

      But a court battle with Braintree District Council over former RAF Wethersfield is ongoing, and legal action has also been threatened over similar plans for RAF Scampton in Lancashire.

      Last month, a barrister representing home secretary Suella Braverman told the High Court that 56,000 people were expected to arrive on small boats in 2023 and that some could be made homeless if hotel places are not found.

      A record backlog of asylum applications, driven by the increase in Channel crossings and a collapse in Home Office decision-making, mean the government is having to provide accommodation for longer while claims are considered.

      https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/barge-falmouth-cornwall-migrants-bibby-b2333313.html
      #barge #bateau

    • ‘Performative cruelty’ : the hostile architecture of the UK government’s migrant barge

      The arrival of the Bibby Stockholm barge at Portland Port, in Dorset, on July 18 2023, marks a new low in the UK government’s hostile immigration environment. The vessel is set to accommodate over 500 asylum seekers. This, the Home Office argues, will benefit British taxpayers and local residents.

      The barge, however, was immediately rejected by the local population and Dorset council. Several British charities and church groups have condemned the barge, and the illegal migration bill it accompanies, as “an affront to human dignity”.

      Anti-immigration groups have also protested against the barge, with some adopting offensive language, referring to the asylum seekers who will be hosted there as “bargies”. Conservative MP for South Dorset Richard Drax has claimed that hosting migrants at sea would exacerbate tenfold the issues that have arisen in hotels to date, namely sexual assaults, children disappearing and local residents protesting.

      My research shows that facilities built to house irregular migrants in Europe and beyond create a temporary infrastructure designed to be hostile. Governments thereby effectively make asylum seekers more displaceable while ignoring their everyday spatial and social needs.
      Precarious space

      The official brochure plans for the Bibby Stockholm show 222 single bedrooms over three stories, built around two small internal courtyards. It has now been retrofitted with bunk beds to host more than 500 single men – more than double the number it was designed to host.

      Journalists Lizzie Dearden and Martha McHardy have shown this means the asylum seekers housed there – for up to nine months – will have “less living space than an average parking bay”. This stands in contravention of international standards of a minimum 4.5m² of covered living space per person in cold climates, where more time is spent indoors.

      In an open letter, dated June 15 2023 and addressed to home secretary Suella Braverman, over 700 people and nearly 100 non-governmental organisations (NGOs) voiced concerns that this will only add to the trauma migrants have already experienced:

      Housing people on a sea barge – which we argue is equal to a floating prison – is morally indefensible, and threatens to retraumatise a group of already vulnerable people.

      Locals are concerned already overstretched services in Portland, including GP practices, will not be able to cope with further pressure. West Dorset MP Chris Lode has questioned whether the barge itself is safe “to cope with double the weight that it was designed to bear”. A caller to the LBC radio station, meanwhile, has voiced concerns over the vessel’s very narrow and low fire escape routes, saying: “What they [the government] are effectively doing here is creating a potential Grenfell on water, a floating coffin.”

      Such fears are not unfounded. There have been several cases of fires destroying migrant camps in Europe, from the Grand-Synthe camp near Dunkirk in France, in 2017, to the 2020 fire at the Moria camp in Greece. The difficulty of escaping a vessel at sea could turn it into a death trap.

      Performative hostility

      Research on migrant accommodation shows that being able to inhabit a place – even temporarily – and develop feelings of attachment and belonging, is crucial to a person’s wellbeing. Even amid ever tighter border controls, migrants in Europe, who can be described as “stuck on the move”, nonetheless still attempt to inhabit their temporary spaces and form such connections.

      However, designs can hamper such efforts when they concentrate asylum seekers in inhospitable, cut-off spaces. In 2015, Berlin officials began temporarily housing refugees in the former Tempelhof airport, a noisy, alienating industrial space, lacking in privacy and disconnected from the city. Many people ended up staying there for the better part of a year.

      French authorities, meanwhile, opened the Centre Humanitaire Paris-Nord in Paris in 2016, temporary migrant housing in a disused train depot. Nicknamed la Bulle (the bubble) for its bulbous inflatable covering, this facility was noisy and claustrophobic, lacking in basic comforts.

      Like the barge in Portland Port, these facilities, placed in industrial sites, sit uncomfortably between hospitality and hostility. The barge will be fenced off, since the port is a secured zone, and access will be heavily restricted and controlled. The Home Office insists that the barge is not a floating prison, yet it is an unmistakably hostile space.

      Infrastructure for water and electricity will physically link the barge to shore. However, Dorset council has no jurisdiction at sea.

      The commercial agreement on the barge was signed between the Home Office and Portland Port, not the council. Since the vessel is positioned below the mean low water mark, it did not require planning permission.

      This makes the barge an island of sorts, where other rules apply, much like those islands in the Aegean sea and in the Pacific, on which Greece and Australia have respectively housed migrants.

      I have shown how facilities are often designed in this way not to give displaced people any agency, but, on the contrary, to objectify them. They heighten the instability migrants face, keeping them detached from local communities and constantly on the move.

      The government has presented the barge as a cheaper solution than the £6.8 million it is currently spending, daily, on housing asylum seekers in hotels. A recent report by two NGOs, Reclaim the Seas and One Life to Live, concludes, however, that it will save less than £10 a person a day. It could even prove more expensive than the hotel model.

      Sarah Teather, director of the Jesuit Refugee Service UK charity, has described the illegal migration bill as “performative cruelty”. Images of the barge which have flooded the news certainly meet that description too.

      However threatening these images might be, though, they will not stop desperate people from attempting to come to the UK to seek safety. Rather than deterring asylum seekers, the Bibby Stockholm is potentially creating another hazard to them and to their hosting communities.

      https://theconversation.com/performative-cruelty-the-hostile-architecture-of-the-uk-governments

      –---

      Point intéressant, lié à l’aménagement du territoire :

      “Since the vessel is positioned below the mean low water mark, it did not require planning permission”

      C’est un peu comme les #zones_frontalières qui ont été créées un peu partout en Europe (et pas que) pour que les Etats se débarassent des règles en vigueur (notamment le principe du non-refoulement). Voir cette métaliste, à laquelle j’ajoute aussi cet exemple :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/795053

      voir aussi :

      The circumstances at Portland Port are very different because where the barge is to be positioned is below the mean low water mark. This means that the barge is outside of our planning control and there is no requirement for planning permission from the council.

      https://news.dorsetcouncil.gov.uk/2023/07/18/leaders-comments-on-the-home-office-barge

      #hostile_architecture #architecture_hostile #dignité #espace #Portland #hostilité #hostilité_performative #île #infrastructure #extraterritorialité #extra-territorialité #prix #coût

    • Sur l’#histoire (notamment liées au commerce d’ #esclaves) de la Bibby Stockholm :

      Bibby Line, shipowners

      Information
      From Guide to the Records of Merseyside Maritime Museum, volume 1: Bibby Line. In 1807 John Bibby and John Highfield, Liverpool shipbrokers, began taking shares in ships, mainly Parkgate Dublin packets. By 1821 (the end of the partnership) they had vessels sailing to the Mediterranean and South America. In 1850 they expanded their Mediterranean and Black Sea interests by buying two steamers and by 1865 their fleet had increased to twenty three. The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 severely affected their business and Frederick Leyland, their general manager, failed to persuade the family partners to diversify onto the Atlantic. Eventually, he bought them out in 1873. In 1889 the Bibby family revived its shipowning interests with a successful passenger cargo service to Burma. From 1893 it also began to carry British troops to overseas postings which remained a Bibby staple until 1962. The Burma service ended in 1971 and the company moved to new areas of shipowning including bulkers, gas tankers and accommodation barges. It still has its head office in Liverpool where most management records are held. The museum holds models of the Staffordshire (1929) and Oxfordshire (1955). For further details see the attached catalogue or contact The Archives Centre for a copy of the catalogue.

      The earliest records within the collection, the ships’ logs at B/BIBBY/1/1/1 - 1/1/3 show company vessels travelling between Europe and South America carrying cargoes that would have been produced on plantations using the labour of enslaved peoples or used within plantation and slave based economies. For example the vessel Thomas (B/BIBBY/1/1/1) carries a cargo of iron hoops for barrels to Brazil in 1812. The Mary Bibby on a voyage in 1825-1826 loads a cargo of sugar in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to carry to Rotterdam. The log (B/BIBBY/1/1/3) records the use of ’negroes’ to work with the ship’s carpenter while the vessel is in port.

      In September 1980 the latest Bibby vessel to hold the name Derbyshire was lost with all hands in the South China Sea. This collection does not include records relating to that vessel or its sinking, apart from a copy ’Motor vessel ’Derbyshire’, 1976-80: in memoriam’ at reference B/BIBBY/3/2/1 (a copy is also available in The Archives Centre library collection at 340.DER). Information about the sinking and subsequent campaigning by the victims’ family can be found on the NML website and in the Life On Board gallery. The Archives Centre holds papers of Captain David Ramwell who assisted the Derbyshire Family Association at D/RAM and other smaller collections of related documents within the DX collection.

      https://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/artifact/bibby-line-shipowners

      –—
      An Open Letter to #Bibby_Marine

      Links between your parent company #Bibby_Line_Group (#BLG) and the slave trade have repeatedly been made. If true, we appeal to you to consider what actions you might take in recompense.

      Bibby Marine’s modern slavery statement says that one of the company’s values is to “do the right thing”, and that you “strongly support the eradication of slavery, as well as the eradication of servitude, forced or compulsory labour and human trafficking”. These are admirable words.

      Meanwhile, your parent company’s website says that it is “family owned with a rich history”. Please will you clarify whether this rich history includes slaving voyages where ships were owned, and cargoes transported, by BLG’s founder John Bibby, six generations ago. The BLG website says that in 1807 (which is when slavery was abolished in Britain), “John Bibby began trading as a shipowner in Liverpool with his partner John Highfield”. John Bibby is listed as co-owner of three slaving ships, of which John Highfield co-owned two:

      In 1805, the Harmonie (co-owned by #John_Bibby and three others, including John Highfield) left Liverpool for a voyage which carried 250 captives purchased in West Central Africa and St Helena, delivering them to Cumingsberg in 1806 (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 81732).
      In 1806, the Sally (co-owned by John Bibby and two others) left Liverpool for a voyage which transported 250 captives purchased in Bassa and delivered them to Barbados (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 83481).
      In 1806, the Eagle (co-owned by John Bibby and four others, including John Highfield) left Liverpool for a voyage which transported 237 captives purchased in Cameroon and delivered them to Kingston in 1807 (see the SlaveVoyages database using Voyage ID 81106).

      The same and related claims were recently mentioned by Private Eye. They also appear in the story of Liverpool’s Calderstones Park [PDF] and on the website of National Museums Liverpool and in this blog post “Shenanigans in Shipping” (a detailed history of the BLG). They are also mentioned by Laurence Westgaph, a TV presenter specialising in Black British history and slavery and the author of Read The Signs: Street Names with a Connection to the Transatlantic Slave Trade and Abolition in Liverpool [PDF], published with the support of English Heritage, The City of Liverpool, Northwest Regional Development Agency, National Museums Liverpool and Liverpool Vision.

      While of course your public pledges on slavery underline that there is no possibility of there being any link between the activities of John Bibby and John Highfield in the early 1800s and your activities in 2023, we do believe that it is in the public interest to raise this connection, and to ask for a public expression of your categorical renunciation of the reported slave trade activities of Mr Bibby and Mr Highfield.

      https://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/latest/news/an-open-letter-to-bibby-marine

      –-

      Très peu d’info sur John Bibby sur wikipedia :

      John Bibby (19 February 1775 – 17 July 1840) was the founder of the British Bibby Line shipping company. He was born in Eccleston, near Ormskirk, Lancashire. He was murdered on 17 July 1840 on his way home from dinner at a friend’s house in Kirkdale.[1]


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bibby_(businessman)

    • ‘Floating Prisons’: The 200-year-old family #business behind the Bibby Stockholm

      #Bibby_Line_Group_Limited is a UK company offering financial, marine and construction services to clients in at least 16 countries around the world. It recently made headlines after the government announced one of the firm’s vessels, Bibby Stockholm, would be used to accommodate asylum seekers on the Dorset coast.

      In tandem with plans to house migrants at surplus military sites, the move was heralded by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman as a way of mitigating the £6m-a-day cost of hotel accommodation amid the massive ongoing backlog of asylum claims, as well as deterring refugees from making the dangerous channel crossing to the UK. Several protests have been organised against the project already, while over ninety migrants’ rights groups and hundreds of individual campaigners have signed an open letter to the Home Secretary calling for the plans to be scrapped, describing the barge as a “floating prison.”

      Corporate Watch has researched into the Bibby Line Group’s operations and financial interests. We found that:

      - The Bibby Stockholm vessel was previously used as a floating detention centre in the Netherlands, where undercover reporting revealed violence, sexual exploitation and poor sanitation.

      – Bibby Line Group is more than 90% owned by members of the Bibby family, primarily through trusts. Its pre-tax profits for 2021 stood at almost £31m, which they upped to £35.5m by claiming generous tax credits and deferring a fair amount to the following year.

      - Management aboard the vessel will be overseen by an Australian business travel services company, Corporate Travel Management, who have previously had aspersions cast over the financial health of their operations and the integrity of their business practices.

      - Another beneficiary of the initiative is Langham Industries, a maritime and engineering company whose owners, the Langham family, have longstanding ties to right wing parties.

      Key Issues

      According to the Home Office, the Bibby Stockholm barge will be operational for at least 18 months, housing approximately 500 single adult men while their claims are processed, with “24/7 security in place on board, to minimise the disruption to local communities.” These measures appear to have been to dissuade opposition from the local Conservative council, who pushed for background checks on detainees and were reportedly even weighing legal action out of concern for a perceived threat of physical attacks from those housed onboard, as well as potential attacks from the far right against migrants held there.

      Local campaigners have taken aim at the initiative, noting in the open letter:

      “For many people seeking asylum arriving in the UK, the sea represents a site of significant trauma as they have been forced to cross it on one or more occasions. Housing people on a sea barge – which we argue is equal to a floating prison – is morally indefensible, and threatens to re-traumatise a group of already vulnerable people.”

      Technically, migrants on the barge will be able to leave the site. However, in reality they will be under significant levels of surveillance and cordoned off behind fences in the high security port area.

      If they leave, there is an expectation they will return by 11pm, and departure will be controlled by the authorities. According to the Home Office:

      “In order to ensure that migrants come and go in an orderly manner with as little impact as possible, buses will be provided to take those accommodated on the vessel from the port to local drop off points”.

      These drop off points are to be determined by the government, while being sited off the coast of Dorset means they will be isolated from centres of support and solidarity.

      Meanwhile, the government’s new Illegal Migration Bill is designed to provide a legal justification for the automatic detention of refugees crossing the Channel. If it passes, there’s a chance this might set the stage for a change in regime on the Bibby Stockholm – from that of an “accommodation centre” to a full-blown migrant prison.

      An initial release from the Home Office suggested the local voluntary sector would be engaged “to organise activities that keep occupied those being accommodated, potentially involved in local volunteering activity,” though they seemed to have changed the wording after critics said this would mean detainees could be effectively exploited for unpaid labour. It’s also been reported the vessel required modifications in order to increase capacity to the needed level, raising further concerns over cramped living conditions and a lack of privacy.

      Bibby Line Group has prior form in border profiteering. From 1994 to 1998, the Bibby Stockholm was used to house the homeless, some of whom were asylum seekers, in Hamburg, Germany. In 2005, it was used to detain asylum seekers in the Netherlands, which proved a cause of controversy at the time. Undercover reporting revealed a number of cases abuse on board, such as beatings and sexual exploitation, as well suicide attempts, routine strip searches, scabies and the death of an Algerian man who failed to receive timely medical care for a deteriorating heart condition. As the undercover security guard wrote:

      “The longer I work on the Bibby Stockholm, the more I worry about safety on the boat. Between exclusion and containment I encounter so many defects and feel so much tension among the prisoners that it no longer seems to be a question of whether things will get completely out of hand here, but when.”

      He went on:

      “I couldn’t stand the way prisoners were treated […] The staff become like that, because the whole culture there is like that. Inhuman. They do not see the residents as people with a history, but as numbers.”

      Discussions were also held in August 2017 over the possibility of using the vessel as accommodation for some 400 students in Galway, Ireland, amid the country’s housing crisis. Though the idea was eventually dropped for lack of mooring space and planning permission requirements, local students had voiced safety concerns over the “bizarre” and “unconventional” solution to a lack of rental opportunities.
      Corporate Travel Management & Langham Industries

      Although leased from Bibby Line Group, management aboard the Bibby Stockholm itself will be handled by #Corporate_Travel_Management (#CTM), a global travel company specialising in business travel services. The Australian-headquartered company also recently received a £100m contract for the provision of accommodation, travel, venue and ancillary booking services for the housing of Ukrainian refugees at local hotels and aboard cruise ships M/S Victoria and M/S Ambition. The British Red Cross warned earlier in May against continuing to house refugees on ships with “isolated” and “windowless” cabins, and said the scheme had left many “living in limbo.”

      Founded by CEO #Jamie_Pherous, CTM was targeted in 2018 by #VGI_Partners, a group of short-sellers, who identified more than 20 red flags concerning the company’s business interests. Most strikingly, the short-sellers said they’d attended CTM’s offices in Glasgow, Paris, Amsterdam, Stockholm and Switzerland. Finding no signs of business activity there, they said it was possible the firm had significantly overstated the scale of its operations. VGI Partners also claimed CTM’s cash flows didn’t seem to add up when set against the company’s reported growth, and that CTM hadn’t fully disclosed revisions they’d made to their annual revenue figures.

      Two years later, the short-sellers released a follow-up report, questioning how CTM had managed to report a drop in rewards granted for high sales numbers to travel agencies, when in fact their transaction turnover had grown during the same period. They also accused CTM of dressing up their debt balance to make their accounts look healthier.

      CTM denied VGI Partners’ allegations. In their response, they paraphrased a report by auditors EY, supposedly confirming there were no question marks over their business practices, though the report itself was never actually made public. They further claim VGI Partners, as short-sellers, had only released the reports in the hope of benefitting from uncertainty over CTM’s operations.

      Despite these troubles, CTM’s market standing improved drastically earlier this year, when it was announced the firm had secured contracts for the provision of travel services to the UK Home Office worth in excess of $3bn AUD (£1.6bn). These have been accompanied by further tenders with, among others, the National Audit Office, HS2, Cafcass, Serious Fraud Office, Office of National Statistics, HM Revenue & Customs, National Health Service, Ministry of Justice, Department of Education, Foreign Office, and the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

      The Home Office has not released any figures on the cost of either leasing or management services aboard Bibby Stockholm, though press reports have put the estimated price tag at more than £20,000 a day for charter and berthing alone. If accurate, this would put the overall expenditure for the 18-month period in which the vessel will operate as a detention centre at almost £11m, exclusive of actual detention centre management costs such as security, food and healthcare.

      Another beneficiary of the project are Portland Port’s owners, #Langham_Industries, a maritime and engineering company owned by the #Langham family. The family has long-running ties to right-wing parties. Langham Industries donated over £70,000 to the UK Independence Party from 2003 up until the 2016 Brexit referendum. In 2014, Langham Industries donated money to support the re-election campaign of former Clacton MP for UKIP Douglas Carswell, shortly after his defection from the Conservatives. #Catherine_Langham, a Tory parish councillor for Hilton in Dorset, has described herself as a Langham Industries director (although she is not listed on Companies House). In 2016 she was actively involved in local efforts to support the campaign to leave the European Union. The family holds a large estate in Dorset which it uses for its other line of business, winemaking.

      At present, there is no publicly available information on who will be providing security services aboard the Bibby Stockholm.

      Business Basics

      Bibby Line Group describes itself as “one of the UK’s oldest family owned businesses,” operating in “multiple countries, employing around 1,300 colleagues, and managing over £1 billion of funds.” Its head office is registered in Liverpool, with other headquarters in Scotland, Hong Kong, India, Singapore, Malaysia, France, Slovakia, Czechia, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland and Nigeria (see the appendix for more). The company’s primary sectors correspond to its three main UK subsidiaries:

      #Bibby_Financial_Services. A global provider of financial services. The firm provides loans to small- and medium-sized businesses engaged in business services, construction, manufacturing, transportation, export, recruitment and wholesale markets. This includes invoice financing, export and trade finance, and foreign exchanges. Overall, the subsidiary manages more than £6bn each year on behalf of some 9,000 clients across 300 different industry sectors, and in 2021 it brought in more than 50% of the group’s annual turnover.

      - #Bibby_Marine_Limited. Owner and operator of the Bibby WaveMaster fleet, a group of vessels specialising in the transport and accommodation of workers employed at remote locations, such as offshore oil and gas sites in the North Sea. Sometimes, as in the case of Chevron’s Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) project in Nigeria, the vessels are used as an alternative to hotels owing to a “a volatile project environment.” The fleet consists of 40 accommodation vessels similar in size to the Bibby Stockholm and a smaller number of service vessels, though the share of annual turnover pales compared to the group’s financial services operations, standing at just under 10% for 2021.

      - #Garic Ltd. Confined to construction, quarrying, airport, agriculture and transport sectors in the UK, the firm designs, manufactures and purchases plant equipment and machinery for sale or hire. Garic brought in around 14% of Bibby Line Group’s turnover in 2021.

      Prior to February 2021, Bibby Line Group also owned #Costcutter_Supermarkets_Group, before it was sold to #Bestway_Wholesale to maintain liquidity amid the Covid-19 pandemic. In their report for that year, the company’s directors also suggested grant funding from #MarRI-UK, an organisation facilitating innovation in maritime technologies and systems, had been important in preserving the firm’s position during the crisis.
      History

      The Bibby Line Group’s story begins in 1807, when Lancashire-born shipowner John Bibby began trading out of Liverpool with partner John Highfield. By the time of his death in 1840, murdered while returning home from dinner with a friend in Kirkdale, Bibby had struck out on his own and come to manage a fleet of more than 18 ships. The mysterious case of his death has never been solved, and the business was left to his sons John and James.

      Between 1891 and 1989, the company operated under the name #Bibby_Line_Limited. Its ships served as hospital and transport vessels during the First World War, as well as merchant cruisers, and the company’s entire fleet of 11 ships was requisitioned by the state in 1939.

      By 1970, the company had tripled its overseas earnings, branching into ‘factoring’, or invoice financing (converting unpaid invoices into cash for immediate use via short-term loans) in the early 1980s, before this aspect of the business was eventually spun off into Bibby Financial Services. The group acquired Garic Ltd in 2008, which currently operates four sites across the UK.

      People

      #Jonathan_Lewis has served as Bibby Line Group’s Managing and Executive Director since January 2021, prior to which he acted as the company’s Chief Financial and Strategy Officer since joining in 2019. Previously, Lewis worked as CFO for Imagination Technologies, a tech company specialising in semiconductors, and as head of supermarket Tesco’s mergers and acquisitions team. He was also a member of McKinsey’s European corporate finance practice, as well as an investment banker at Lazard. During his first year at the helm of Bibby’s operations, he was paid £748,000. Assuming his role at the head of the group’s operations, he replaced Paul Drescher, CBE, then a board member of the UK International Chamber of Commerce and a former president of the Confederation of British Industry.

      Bibby Line Group’s board also includes two immediate members of the Bibby family, Sir #Michael_James_Bibby, 3rd Bt. and his younger brother #Geoffrey_Bibby. Michael has acted as company chairman since 2020, before which he had occupied senior management roles in the company for 20 years. He also has external experience, including time at Unilever’s acquisitions, disposals and joint venture divisions, and now acts as president of the UK Chamber of Shipping, chairman of the Charities Trust, and chairman of the Institute of Family Business Research Foundation.

      Geoffrey has served as a non-executive director of the company since 2015, having previously worked as a managing director of Vast Visibility Ltd, a digital marketing and technology company. In 2021, the Bibby brothers received salaries of £125,000 and £56,000 respectively.

      The final member of the firm’s board is #David_Anderson, who has acted as non-executive director since 2012. A financier with 35 years experience in investment banking, he’s founder and CEO of EPL Advisory – which advises company boards on requirements and disclosure obligations of public markets – and chair of Creative Education Trust, a multi-academy trust comprising 17 schools. Anderson is also chairman at multinational ship broker Howe Robinson Partners, which recently auctioned off a superyacht seized from Dmitry Pumpyansky, after the sanctioned Russian businessman reneged on a €20.5m loan from JP Morgan. In 2021, Anderson’s salary stood at £55,000.

      Ownership

      Bibby Line Group’s annual report and accounts for 2021 state that more than 90% of the company is owned by members of the Bibby family, primarily through family trusts. These ownership structures, effectively entities allowing people to benefit from assets without being their registered legal owners, have long attracted staunch criticism from transparency advocates given the obscurity they afford means they often feature extensively in corruption, money laundering and tax abuse schemes.

      According to Companies House, the UK corporate registry, between 50% and 75% of Bibby Line Group’s shares and voting rights are owned by #Bibby_Family_Company_Limited, which also retains the right to appoint and remove members of the board. Directors of Bibby Family Company Limited include both the Bibby brothers, as well as a third sibling, #Peter_John_Bibby, who’s formally listed as the firm’s ‘ultimate beneficial owner’ (i.e. the person who ultimately profits from the company’s assets).

      Other people with comparable shares in Bibby Family Company Limited are #Mark_Rupert_Feeny, #Philip_Charles_Okell, and Lady #Christine_Maud_Bibby. Feeny’s occupation is listed as solicitor, with other interests in real estate management and a position on the board of the University of Liverpool Pension Fund Trustees Limited. Okell meanwhile appears as director of Okell Money Management Limited, a wealth management firm, while Lady Bibby, Michael and Geoffrey’s mother, appears as “retired playground supervisor.”

      Key Relationships

      Bibby Line Group runs an internal ‘Donate a Day’ volunteer program, enabling employees to take paid leave in order to “help causes they care about.” Specific charities colleagues have volunteered with, listed in the company’s Annual Review for 2021 to 2022, include:

      - The Hive Youth Zone. An award-winning charity for young people with disabilities, based in the Wirral.

      – The Whitechapel Centre. A leading homeless and housing charity in the Liverpool region, working with people sleeping rough, living in hostels, or struggling with their accommodation.

      - Let’s Play Project. Another charity specialising in after-school and holiday activities for young people with additional needs in the Banbury area.

      - Whitdale House. A care home for the elderly, based in Whitburn, West Lothian and run by the local council.

      – DEBRA. An Irish charity set up in 1988 for individuals living with a rare, painful skin condition called epidermolysis bullosa, as well as their families.

      – Reaching Out Homeless Outreach. A non-profit providing resources and support to the homeless in Ireland.

      Various senior executives and associated actors at Bibby Line Group and its subsidiaries also have current and former ties to the following organisations:

      - UK Chamber of Shipping

      - Charities Trust

      - Institute of Family Business Research Foundation

      - Indefatigable Old Boys Association

      - Howe Robinson Partners

      - hibu Ltd

      - EPL Advisory

      - Creative Education Trust

      - Capita Health and Wellbeing Limited

      - The Ambassador Theatre Group Limited

      – Pilkington Plc

      – UK International Chamber of Commerce

      – Confederation of British Industry

      – Arkley Finance Limited (Weatherby’s Banking Group)

      – FastMarkets Ltd, Multiple Sclerosis Society

      – Early Music as Education

      – Liverpool Pension Fund Trustees Limited

      – Okell Money Management Limited

      Finances

      For the period ending 2021, Bibby Line Group’s total turnover stood at just under £260m, with a pre-tax profit of almost £31m – fairly healthy for a company providing maritime services during a global pandemic. Their post-tax profits in fact stood at £35.5m, an increase they would appear to have secured by claiming generous tax credits (£4.6m) and deferring a fair amount (£8.4m) to the following year.

      Judging by their last available statement on the firm’s profitability, Bibby’s directors seem fairly confident the company has adequate financing and resources to continue operations for the foreseeable future. They stress their February 2021 sale of Costcutter was an important step in securing this, given it provided additional liquidity during the pandemic, as well as the funding secured for R&D on fuel consumption by Bibby Marine’s fleet.
      Scandal Sheet

      Bibby Line Group and its subsidiaries have featured in a number of UK legal proceedings over the years, sometimes as defendants. One notable case is Godfrey v Bibby Line, a lawsuit brought against the company in 2019 after one of their former employees died as the result of an asbestos-related disease.

      In their claim, the executors of Alan Peter Godfrey’s estate maintained that between 1965 and 1972, he was repeatedly exposed to large amounts of asbestos while working on board various Bibby vessels. Although the link between the material and fatal lung conditions was established as early as 1930, they claimed that Bibby Line, among other things:

      “Failed to warn the deceased of the risk of contracting asbestos related disease or of the precautions to be taken in relation thereto;

      “Failed to heed or act upon the expert evidence available to them as to the best means of protecting their workers from danger from asbestos dust; [and]

      “Failed to take all reasonably practicable measures, either by securing adequate ventilation or by the provision and use of suitable respirators or otherwise, to prevent inhalation of dust.”

      The lawsuit, which claimed “unlimited damage”’ against the group, also stated that Mr Godfrey’s “condition deteriorated rapidly with worsening pain and debility,” and that he was “completely dependent upon others for his needs by the last weeks of his life.” There is no publicly available information on how the matter was concluded.

      In 2017, Bibby Line Limited also featured in a leak of more than 13.4 million financial records known as the Paradise Papers, specifically as a client of Appleby, which provided “offshore corporate services” such as legal and accountancy work. According to the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, a global network of investigative media outlets, leaked Appleby documents revealed, among other things, “the ties between Russia and [Trump’s] billionaire commerce secretary, the secret dealings of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s chief fundraiser and the offshore interests of the Queen of England and more than 120 politicians around the world.”

      This would not appear to be the Bibby group’s only link to the shady world of offshore finance. Michael Bibby pops up as a treasurer for two shell companies registered in Panama, Minimar Transport S.A. and Vista Equities Inc.
      Looking Forward

      Much about the Bibby Stockholm saga remains to be seen. The exact cost of the initiative and who will be providing security services on board, are open questions. What’s clear however is that activists will continue to oppose the plans, with efforts to prevent the vessel sailing from Falmouth to its final docking in Portland scheduled to take place on 30th June.

      Appendix: Company Addresses

      HQ and general inquiries: 3rd Floor Walker House, Exchange Flags, Liverpool, United Kingdom, L2 3YL

      Tel: +44 (0) 151 708 8000

      Other offices, as of 2021:

      6, Shenton Way, #18-08A Oue Downtown 068809, Singapore

      1/1, The Exchange Building, 142 St. Vincent Street, Glasgow, G2 5LA, United Kingdom

      4th Floor Heather House, Heather Road, Sandyford, Dublin 18, Ireland

      Unit 2302, 23/F Jubilee Centre, 18 Fenwick Street, Wanchai, Hong Kong

      Unit 508, Fifth Floor, Metropolis Mall, MG Road, Gurugram, Haryana, 122002 India

      Suite 7E, Level 7, Menara Ansar, 65 Jalan Trus, 8000 Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia

      160 Avenue Jean Jaures, CS 90404, 69364 Lyon Cedex, France

      Prievozská 4D, Block E, 13th Floor, Bratislava 821 09, Slovak Republic

      Hlinky 118, Brno, 603 00, Czech Republic

      Laan Van Diepenvoorde 5, 5582 LA, Waalre, Netherlands

      Hansaallee 249, 40549 Düsseldorf, Germany

      Poland Eurocentrum, Al. Jerozolimskie 134, 02-305 Warsaw, Poland

      1/2 Atarbekova str, 350062, Krasnodar, Krasnodar

      1 St Peter’s Square, Manchester, M2 3AE, United Kingdom

      25 Adeyemo Alakija Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, Nigeria

      10 Anson Road, #09-17 International Plaza, 079903 Singapore

      https://corporatewatch.org/floating-prisons-the-200-year-old-family-business-behind-the-bibby-s

      signalé ici aussi par @rezo:
      https://seenthis.net/messages/1010504

    • The Langham family seem quite happy to support right-wing political parties that are against immigration, while at the same time profiting handsomely from the misery of refugees who are forced to claim sanctuary here.


      https://twitter.com/PositiveActionH/status/1687817910364884992

      –---

      Family firm ’profiteering from misery’ by providing migrant barges donated £70k to #UKIP

      The Langham family, owners of Langham Industries, is now set to profit from an 18-month contract with the Home Office to let the Bibby Stockholm berth at Portland, Dorset

      A family firm that donated more than £70,000 to UKIP is “profiteering from misery” by hosting the Government’s controversial migrant barge. Langham Industries owns Portland Port, where the Bibby Stockholm is docked in a deal reported to be worth some £2.5million.

      The Langham family owns luxurious properties and has links to high-profile politicians, including Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden. And we can reveal that their business made 19 donations to pro-Brexit party UKIP between 2003 and 2016.

      Late founder John Langham was described as an “avid supporter” of UKIP in an obituary in 2017. Now his children, John, Jill and Justin – all directors of the family firm – are set to profit from an 18-month contract with the Home Office to let the Bibby Stockholm berth at Portland, Dorset.

      While Portland Port refuses to reveal how much the Home Office is paying, its website cites berthing fees for a ship the size of the Bibby Stockholm at more than £4,000 a day. In 2011, Portland Port chairman John, 71, invested £3.7million in Grade II* listed country pile Steeple Manor at Wareham, Dorset. Dating to around 1600, it has a pond, tennis court and extensive gardens designed by the landscape architect Brenda Colvin.

      The arrangement to host the “prison-like” barge for housing migrants has led some locals to blast the Langhams, who have owned the port since 1997. Portland mayor Carralyn Parkes, 61, said: “I don’t know how John Langham will sleep at night in his luxurious home, with his tennis court and his fluffy bed, when asylum seekers are sleeping in tiny beds on the barge.

      “I went on the boat and measured the rooms with a tape measure. On average they are about 10ft by 12ft. The bunk bed mattresses are about 6ft long. If you’re taller than 6ft you’re stuffed. The Langham family need to have more humanity. They are only interested in making money. It’s shocking.”

      (#paywall)
      https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/family-firm-profiteering-misery-providing-30584405.amp

      #UK_Independence_Party

    • ‘This is a prison’: men tell of distressing conditions on Bibby Stockholm

      Asylum seekers share fears about Dorset barge becoming even more crowded, saying they already ‘despair and wish for death’

      Asylum seekers brought back to the Bibby Stockholm barge in Portland, Dorset, have said they are being treated in such a way that “we despair and wish for death”.

      The Guardian spoke to two men in their first interview since their return to the barge on 19 October after the vessel lay empty for more than two months. The presence of deadly legionella bacteria was confirmed on board on 7 August, the same day the first group of asylum seekers arrived. The barge was evacuated four days later.

      The new warning comes after it emerged that one asylum seeker attempted to kill himself and is in hospital after finding out he is due to be taken to the barge on Tuesday.

      A man currently on the barge told the Guardian: “Government decisions are turning healthy and normal refugees into mental patients whom they then hand over to society. Here, many people were healthy and coping with OK spirits, but as a result of the dysfunctional strategies of the government, they have suffered – and continue to suffer – from various forms of serious mental distress. We are treated in such a way that we despair and wish for death.”

      He said that although the asylum seekers were not detained on the barge and could leave to visit the nearby town, in practice, doing so was not easy.

      He added: “In the barge, we have exactly the feeling of being in prison. It is true that they say that this is not a prison and you can go outside at any time, but you can only go to specific stops at certain times by bus, and this does not give me a good feeling.

      “Even to use the fresh air, you have to go through the inspection every time and go to the small yard with high fences and go through the X-ray machine again. And this is not good for our health.

      “In short, this is a prison whose prisoners are not criminals, they are people who have fled their country just to save their lives and have taken shelter here to live.”

      The asylum seekers raised concerns about what conditions on the barge would be like if the Home Office did fill it with about 500 asylum seekers, as officials say is the plan. Those on board said it already felt quite full with about 70 people living there.

      The second asylum seeker said: “The space inside the barge is very small. It feels crowded in the dining hall and the small entertainment room. It is absolutely clear to me that there will be chaos here soon.

      “According to my estimate, as I look at the spaces around us, the capacity of this barge is maximum 120 people, including personnel and crew. The strategy of ​​transferring refugees from hotels to barges or ships or military installations is bound to fail.

      “The situation here on the barge is getting worse. Does the government have a plan for shipwrecked residents? Everyone here is going mad with anxiety. It is not just the barge that floats on the water, but the plans of the government that are radically adrift.”

      Maddie Harris of the NGO Humans For Rights Network, which supports asylum seekers in hotels, said: “Home Office policies directly contribute to the significant deterioration of the wellbeing and mental health of so many asylum seekers in their ‘care’, with a dehumanising environment, violent anti-migrant rhetoric and isolated accommodations away from community and lacking in support.”

      A Home Office spokesperson said: “The Bibby Stockholm is part of the government’s pledge to reduce the use of expensive hotels and bring forward alternative accommodation options which provide a more cost-effective, sustainable and manageable system for the UK taxpayer and local communities.

      “The health and welfare of asylum seekers remains the utmost priority. We work continually to ensure the needs and vulnerabilities of those residing in asylum accommodation are identified and considered, including those related to mental health and trauma.”

      Nadia Whittome and Lloyd Russell-Moyle, the Labour MPs for Nottingham East and Brighton Kemptown respectively, will travel to Portland on Monday to meet asylum seekers accommodated on the Bibby Stockholm barge and local community members.

      The visit follows the home secretary, Suella Braverman, not approving a visit from the MPs to assess living conditions as they requested through parliamentary channels.

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/29/this-is-a-prison-men-tell-of-distressing-conditions-on-bibby-stockholm
      #prison #conditions_de_vie

  • Philip K. Dick & Richard Fleischer - Notre Bibliothèque Verte n°47 & 48
    https://www.piecesetmaindoeuvre.com/spip.php?article1735

    Disponible en librairie : Notre Bibliothèque Verte (deux volumes). Voir ici

    C’est un de ces samedis où l’on sort sonné du cinéma. Il fait beau dehors et les gens, insouciants, se pressent place Grenette et aux terrasses des bistrots comme si tout était normal et allait pour le mieux. Comme s’ils ne savaient pas. Ne savent-ils pas ? Est-il possible qu’ils ne sachent pas ? Qu’ils puissent rire, s’amuser et faire comme s’ils ne savaient pas ? Comme si de rien n’était ? On cligne des yeux au jour, on flotte, on marche au ralenti, comme déphasé entre deux réalités parallèles. Peu s’en faut que l’on vacille. Comme si l’on portait seul un secret terrifiant pour l’espèce humaine – et pourtant l’on n’était pas seul dans la salle obscure – même si un silence absolu murait peu à peu les spectateurs dans un (...)

    #Documents
    https://www.piecesetmaindoeuvre.com/IMG/pdf/philip_k._dick_et_richard_fleischer_-_notre_bibliothe_que_verte

  • #Liban, un pays dans la tourmente

    Comment le Liban, « la Suisse de l’Orient », a-t-il sombré dans le chaos ? Alors que la double explosion du 4 août dernier dans le port de Beyrouth a remis au jour la gabegie et la corruption de la classe politique qui gangrènent cet Etat d’Asie occidentale, ce documentaire remonte le cours tourmenté de l’histoire de cette jeune nation à l’identité forgée par 18 communautés religieuses. En donnant la parole à des membres des services de renseignement, à des journalistes et à des artistes, il montre comment ce pays, au cœur des enjeux géopolitiques depuis sa création, s’est retrouvé piégé dans la poudrière du Moyen-Orient.

    –-> documentaire que j’ai regardé sur arte, mais qui n’est plus disponible sur leur site web (et pas trouvé sur youtube non plus).
    Une présentation du documentaire ici :

    https://www.moustique.be/27227/liban-un-pays-dans-la-tourmente

    #documentaire #film_documentaire
    #guerre_civile #camps_de_réfugiés #réfugiés_palestiniens #Arafat #histoire #Empire_ottoman #OLP #Israël #détournement_d'avions #guerre_des_six_jours #Moyen-Orient #Union_soviétique #Syrie #religion #massacres #nettoyages_ethniques #nettoyage_ethnique #Beyrouth #Hafez_al-Assad #Falanges #Bachir_Gemayel #Menahem_Begin #fragmentation #milices #Armée_du_Liban_Sud (#ALS) #Ariel_Sharon #Galilée #Paix_en_Galilée #invasion_israélienne #Philip_Habib #Sabra_et_Chatila #massacre_de_Sabra_et_Chatila #armes #USA #Etats-Unis #attentats-suicides #Hezbollah #Iran #enlèvements #violence #Ronald_Reagan #accord_de_Taëf #Rafik_Hariri #Hassan_Nasrallah #Bachar_al-Assad #révolution_du_Cèdre #guerre_du_Liban

  • #Webinars. #COVID-19 Capitalism #Webinar Series

    Since 1 April, #TNI with allies has brought together experts and activists weekly to discuss how this pandemic health crisis exposes the injustices of the global economic order and how it must be a turning point towards creating the systems, structures and policies that can always protect those who are marginalised and allow everyone to live with dignity. Every Wednesday at 4pm CET.

    TNI works closely with allied organisations and partners around the world in organising these webinars. AIDC and Focus on the Global South are co-sponsors for the full series.

    –—

    Les conférences déjà en ligne sont ci-dessous en commentaire.

    –----

    Les prochains webinars:

    On 10 June, TNI will hold a webinar on Taking on the Tech Titans: Reclaiming our Data Commons.

    Upcoming webinars - Wednesdays at 4pm CET

    17 June: Borders and migration
    #frontières #migrations

    24 June: Broken Trade System
    #commerce

    https://www.tni.org/en/webinars
    #capitalisme #vidéo #conférence #coronavirus

    ping @isskein @reka

    • Building an internationalist response to Coronavirus
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5qN35qeB1w&feature=emb_logo


      Panellists:

      Sonia Shah, award-winning investigative science journalist and author of Pandemic: Tracking contagions from Cholera to Ebola and Beyond (2017).
      Luis Ortiz Hernandez, public health professor in UAM-Xochimilco, Mexico. Expert on social and economic health inequities.
      Benny Kuruvilla, Head of India Office, Focus on the Global South, working closely with Forum For Trade Justice.
      Mazibuko Jara, Deputy Director, Tshisimani Centre for Activist Education, helping to coordinate a national platform of civic organisations in South Africa to confront COVID-19.
      Umyra Ahmad, Advancing Universal Rights and Justice Associate, Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID), Malaysia

      #internationalisme

    • The coming global recession: building an internationalist response

      Recording of a TNI-hosted webinar on Wednesday, 8 April with Professor Jayati Ghosh, Quinn Slobodian, Walden Bello and Lebohang Pheko on the likely global impacts of the economic fallout from the Coronavirus and how we might be better prepared than the 2008 economic crisis to put forward progressive solutions.

      The webinar explored what we can expect in terms of a global recession that many predict could have bigger social impacts than the virus itself. How should we prepare? What can social movements learn from our failures to advance alternative progressive policies in the wake of the 2008 economic crisis?

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiP5qJhHsjw&feature=emb_logo

      Panellists:

      Professor Jayati Ghosh, award-winning economist Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. Author of India and the International Economy (2015) and co-editor of Handbook of Alternative Theories of Economic Development, 2018.
      Quinn Slobodian, associate professor of history, Wellesley College. Author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism (2018)
      Walden Bello, author of Paper Dragons: China and the Next Crash (2019) and Capitalism’s Last Stand?: Deglobalization in the Age of Austerity (2013)

      Lebohang Liepollo Pheko, Senior Research Fellow of Trade Collective, a thinktank in South Africa that works on international trade, globalisation, regional integration and feminist economics

      #récession #crise_économique

    • A Recipe for Disaster: Globalised food systems, structural inequality and COVID-19

      A dialogue between Rob Wallace, author of Big Farms Make Big Flu and agrarian justice activists from Myanmar, Palestine, Indonesia and Europe.

      The webinar explored how globalised industrial food systems set the scene for the emergence of COVID-19, the structural connections between the capitalist industrial agriculture, pathogens and the precarious conditions of workers in food systems and society at large. It also touched on the kind of just and resilient food systems we need to transform food and agriculture today?

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9A6WkeqPss&feature=emb_logo

      Panellists:

      Rob Wallace author of Big Farms Make Big Flu and co-author of Neoliberal Ebola: Modeling Disease Emergence from Finance to Forest and Farm.
      Moayyad Bsharat of Union of Agricultural Work Committees (UAWC), member organization of La Via Campesina in Palestine.
      Arie Kurniawaty of Indonesian feminist organization Solidaritas Perempuan (SP) which works with women in grassroots communities across the urban-rural spectrum.
      Sai Sam Kham of Metta Foundation in Myanmar.
      Paula Gioia, peasant farmer in Germany and member of the Coordination Committee of the European Coordination Via Campesina.

      #inégalités #agriculture #alimentation

      –—

      #livre:
      Big Farms Make Big Flu

      In this collection of dispatches, by turns harrowing and thought-provoking, #Rob_Wallace tracks the ways #influenza and other pathogens emerge from an agriculture controlled by multinational corporations. With a precise and radical wit, Wallace juxtaposes ghastly phenomena such as attempts at producing featherless chickens with microbial time travel and neoliberal Ebola. While many books cover facets of food or outbreaks, Wallace’s collection is the first to explore infectious disease, agriculture, economics, and the nature of science together.


      https://monthlyreview.org/press/new-big-farms-make-big-flu-by-rob-wallace
      #multinationales

    • Taking Health back from Corporations: pandemics, big pharma and privatized health

      This webinar brought together experts in healthcare and activists at the forefront of struggles for equitable universal public healthcare from across the globe. It examined the obstacles to access to medicines, the role of Big Pharma, the struggles against health privatisation, and the required changes in global governance of health to prevent future pandemics and bring about public healthcare for all.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KSIRFYF3W8&feature=emb_logo

      Panellists:

      Susan George, Author and President of the Transnational Institute
      Baba Aye, Health Officer, Public Services International
      Mark Heywood, Treatment Action Campaign, Section27 and editor at the Daily Maverick
      Kajal Bhardwaj, Independent lawyer and expert on health, trade and human rights
      David Legge, Peoples Health Movement Moderator: Monica Vargas, Corporate Power Project, Transnational Institute

      #santé #big-pharma #industrie_pharmaceutique #privatisation #système_de_santé

    • States of Control – the dark side of pandemic politics

      In response to an unprecedented global health emergency, many states are rolling out measures from deploying armies and drones to control public space, to expanding digital control through facial recognition technology and tracker apps.

      This webinar explored the political dimension of state responses, particularly the securitisation of COVID-19 through the expansion of powers for military, police, and security forces. It examined the impact of such repression on certain groups who are unable to socially distance, as well as how digital surveillance is being rolled out with little, if any democratic oversight.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KI515hJud8&feature=emb_logo

      Panellists:

      Fionnuala Ni Aolain, UN Special Rapporteur on the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights while Countering Terrorism, University of Minnesota
      Arun Kundnani, New York University, author of The Muslims are Coming! Islamophobia, extremism, and the domestic War on Terror and The End of Tolerance: racism in 21st century Britain
      Anuradha Chenoy, School of International Studies in Jawaharlal Nehru University (retired), and author of Militarisation and Women in South Asia
      María Paz Canales, Derechos Digitales (Digital Rights campaign), Chile

      #contrôle #surveillance #drones #reconnaissance_faciale #démocratie

      ping @etraces

    • A Global Green New Deal

      This sixth webinar in our COVID Capitalism series asked what a truly global #Green_New_Deal would look like. It featured Richard Kozul-Wright (UNCTAD), and leading activists from across the globe leading the struggle for a just transition in the wake of the Coronavirus pandemic.

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

      Panellists:

      Richard Kozul-Wright, Director of the Division on Globalization and Development Strategies at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, author of Transforming Economies: Making Industrial Policy Work for Growth, Jobs and Development
      Karin Nansen, chair of Friends of the Earth International, founding member of REDES – Friends of the Earth Uruguay
      Sandra van Niekerk, Researcher for the One Million Climate Jobs campaign, South Africa

      #transition

    • Proposals for a democratic just economy

      Outgoing UN rapporteur, #Philip_Alston in conversation with trade unionists and activists in Italy, Nigeria and India share analysis on the impacts of privatisation in a time of COVID-19 and the strategies for resistance and also constructing participatory public alternatives.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-IvJq9QJnI&feature=emb_logo

      Panellists:

      Philip Alston, outgoing UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
      Rosa Pavanelli, General Secretary of the global union federation Public Services International (PSI)
      Aderonke Ige, Our Water, Our Rights Campaign in Lagos / Environmental Rights Action /Friends of The Earth Nigeria
      Sulakshana Nandi, Co-chair, People’s Health Movement Global (PHM Global)

      #privatisation #participation #participation_publique #résistance

    • Feminist Realities – Transforming democracy in times of crisis

      An inspiring global panel of feminist thinkers and activists reflect and discuss how we can collectively reorganise, shift power and pivot towards building transformative feminist realities that can get us out of the worsening health, climate and capitalist crises.

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

      Panellists:

      Tithi Bhattacharya, Associate Professor of History and the Director of Global Studies at Purdue University and co-author of the manifesto Feminism for the 99%.
      Laura Roth, Lecturer of legal and political philosophy at Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Barcelona, member of Minim Municipalist Observatory and co-author of the practice-oriented report Feminise Politics Now!
      Awino Okech, Lecturer at the Centre for Gender Studies at School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London who brings over twelve years of social justice transformation work in Eastern Africa, the Great Lakes region, and South Africa to her teaching, research and movement support work.
      Khara Jabola-Carolus, Executive Director of the Hawaii State Commission on the Status of Women, co-founder of AF3IRM Hawaii (the Association of Feminists Fighting Fascism, Imperialism, Re-feudalization, and Marginalization) and author of Hawaii’s Feminist Economic Recovery Plan for COVID-19.
      Felogene Anumo, Building Feminist Economies, AWID presenting the #feministbailout campaign

      #féminisme

    • COVID-19 and the global fight against mass incarceration

      November 3rd, 2015, Bernard Harcourt (Columbia Law School) and Naomi Murakawa (Princeton) present rival narratives about mass incarceration in America. In The Illusion of Free Markets: Punishment and the Myth of Natural Order , Harcourt shows the interdependence of contract enforcements in global markets and punitive authority. InThe First Civil Right: How Liberals Built Prison America, by contrast, Murakawa traces prison growth to liberal campaigns and progressive legislation. Together, Murakawa and Harcourt offer fresh ideas about into the political, economic and ethical dimensions of mass incarceration.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLeXbi4aIno&feature=emb_rel_pause

      Olivia Rope, Director of Policy and International Advocacy, Penal Reform International
      Isabel Pereira, Principal investigator at the Center for the Study of Law, Justice & Society (Dejusticia), Colombia
      Sabrina Mahtani, Advocaid Sierra Leone
      Maidina Rahmawati, Institute of Criminal Justice Reform (ICJR), Indonesia
      Andrea James, Founder and Exec Director, and Justine Moore, Director of Training, National Council For Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls, USA

      #prisons #emprisonnement_de_masse #USA #Etats-Unis

  • [Moacrealsloa] #Ravi_Shankar 100 - troisième épisode
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/moacrealsloa/ravi-shankar-100

    Today it is the 100th anniversary of Ravi Shankar.

    Ravi Shankar (7-04-2020 / 11-12-2012) was an Indian musician and composer best known for popularizing the sitar and Indian classical music in Western culture.

    Playlist :

    #George_Harrison & Ravi Shankar ‎: Prabhuji (Yin & Yang) (East & West, Yin & Yang - Yellow Cat Records - 2002)

    Pandit Ravi Shankar’s extrait interview on Delhi TV - 1987

    Ravi Shankar ‎: Raga Jog(Music Of India - Three Classical Ragas On Sitar - His Master’s Voice - 1956)

    Pandit Ravi Shankar’s extrait interview on Delhi TV - 1987

    Ravi Shankar And #Philip_Glass : Prashanti (Passages - Private Music - 1990)

    Yehudi Menuhin & Ravi Shankar ‎: Rāga: Puriyā Kalyan (West Meets East - His Master’s Voice - 1966)

    Pandit Ravi Shankar’s extrait (...)

    #moacrealsloa #100_year #moacrealsloa,100_year,Philip_Glass,George_Harrison,Ravi_Shankar
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/moacrealsloa/ravi-shankar-100_08633__1.mp3

  • #The_island_of_all_together

    Chaque été, des nombreux touristes européens se rendent à l’île grecque de Lesbos pour des vacances ensoleillées. Cette année, des milliers de réfugiés ont traversés la mer à partir de la Turquie et arrivés aussi sur l’île, à la recherche d’une forteresse securisee dans l’Union européenne. Réalisateur #Philip_Brink et #Marieke_van_der_Velden ont invités les touristes et les réfugiés à parler les uns avec les autres sur la vie alors qu’ils était assis sur un petit banc ayant vue sur la mer. Le résultat est un court documentaire avec des conversations de la guerre, la fuite, la maison, le travail, l’amour, mais aussi des voitures et des animaux. C’est une ode à l’humanisme et montrer ce qui se passe quand nous prenons le temps de nous asseoir et parler les uns avec les autres au lieu de parler sur les uns des autres (23 minutes).


    http://www.theislandofalltogether.com
    #film #film_documentaire #Lesbos #tourisme #rencontre #dialogue #réfugiés #réfugiés_syriens #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Grèce

    –---

    ça rappelle cette autre vidéo, très émouvante :
    Look Beyond Borders - 4 minutes experiment
    https://seenthis.net/messages/619838

    ping @isskein @karine4 @reka

  • If world leaders choose to fail us, my generation will never forgive them

    We are in the middle of a climate breakdown, and all they can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth.

    This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be standing here. I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean. Yet you all come to me for hope? How dare you! You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words. And yet I’m one of the lucky ones. People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction. And all you can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!

    For more than 30 years the science has been crystal clear. How dare you continue to look away, and come here saying that you are doing enough, when the politics and solutions needed are still nowhere in sight.

    You say you “hear” us and that you understand the urgency. But no matter how sad and angry I am, I don’t want to believe that. Because if you fully understood the situation and still kept on failing to act, then you would be evil. And I refuse to believe that.

    The popular idea of cutting our emissions in half in 10 years only gives us a 50% chance of staying below 1.5C degrees, and the risk of setting off irreversible chain reactions beyond human control.

    Maybe 50% is acceptable to you. But those numbers don’t include tipping points, most feedback loops, additional warming hidden by toxic air pollution or the aspects of justice and equity. They also rely on my and my children’s generation sucking hundreds of billions of tonnes of your CO2 out of the air with technologies that barely exist. So a 50% risk is simply not acceptable to us – we who have to live with the consequences.

    To have a 67% chance of staying below a 1.5C global temperature rise – the best odds given by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – the world had 420 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide left to emit back on 1 January 2018. Today that figure is already down to less than 350 gigatonnes. How dare you pretend that this can be solved with business-as-usual and some technical solutions. With today’s emissions levels, that remaining CO2 budget will be entirely gone in less than eight and a half years.

    There will not be any solutions or plans presented in line with these figures today. Because these numbers are too uncomfortable. And you are still not mature enough to tell it like it is.

    You are failing us. But the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us I say we will never forgive you. We will not let you get away with this. Right here, right now is where we draw the line. The world is waking up. And change is coming, whether you like it or not.

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/sep/23/world-leaders-generation-climate-breakdown-greta-thunberg
    #Greta_Thunberg #climat #jeunesse #résistance #croissance #croissance_économique #espoir #discours #collapsologie #effondrement #nouvelle_génération #accusation #responsabilité #technicisme #action

    ping @reka

    • Environnement.À l’ONU, Greta Thunberg s’en prend aux leaders du monde

      Conviée à New York pour s’exprimer lors d’un sommet spécial des Nations unies sur la question du climat, la jeune activiste suédoise s’est lancée dans une allocution enflammée.

      Les paroles utilisées sont fortes et l’image qui les accompagne est tout aussi poignante. Lundi 23 septembre, lors du sommet sur l’urgence climatique organisée par les Nations unies, Greta Thunberg s’est attaquée une nouvelle fois aux leaders du monde, coupables de ne pas en faire suffisamment face aux bouleversements climatiques en cours.

      Je ne devrais pas être là, je devrais être à l’école, de l’autre côté de l’océan. […] Comment osez-vous ? Vous avez volé mes rêves et mon enfance avec vos paroles creuses. Les gens souffrent, les gens meurent. Des écosystèmes entiers s’effondrent, nous sommes au début d’une extinction de masse et tout ce dont vous pouvez parler, c’est de l’argent. Comment osez-vous ? Comment osez-vous regarder ailleurs et venir ici en prétendant que vous en faites assez ? […] Vous dites que vous nous entendez et que vous comprenez l’urgence, mais je ne veux pas le croire.”

      La jeune Suédoise a prononcé ces phrases le visage rempli d’émotion et presque en larmes, comme on peut le voir sur les images de cette vidéo relayée par le quotidien britannique The Guardian :

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

      Hier, le 22 septembre, la veille de cette allocution de Greta Thunberg aux Nations unies, le journal suédois Svenska Dagbladet avait également épinglé le comportement des responsables de la planète en faisant aussi référence aux nombreuses manifestations pour le climat organisées par des jeunes activistes ces deux derniers jours.

      “Pour les hommes politiques et les entreprises, cela a une grande valeur en matière de relations publiques d’être associés à des jeunes représentant l’espoir pour l’avenir […], mais il y a quelque chose dans les cris de soutien joyeux qui néglige le sérieux du message de ces jeunes”, pointe le journal qui ajoute :

      “Les adultes utilisent des clichés quand ils parlent de la prochaine génération […]. Mais ils deviennent rarement sérieux et ne mènent pas de dialogue réel avec ceux qui, un jour, prendront le relais. Seuls ceux qui ont vraiment le pouvoir peuvent décider du monde qu’ils laissent derrière eux.”

      https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/environnement-lonu-greta-thunberg-sen-prend-aux-leaders-du-mo

      #this_is_all_wrong

    • Women and non-binary people of colour on what the Global Climate Strike means to them

      Today, millions of people across the world mobilised for the Global Climate Strike, calling on their governments to start enacting solutions to climate breakdown.

      Here in the UK, the environmental movement has a whiteness problem. People of colour will be the first to be affected by climate change, but they’re the voices we seem to hear from the least on this matter. The face of the climate movement has seemingly become the white middle-class because they have the privilege of being able to take time off work for these protests, the money to significantly change their lifestyles to be more eco-friendly and the security of being able to trust the police.

      With that in mind, I headed out to Westminster to join the protests and talk to women and non-binary people of colour about why they came out today and what organisers could be doing to better include people colour.


      https://gal-dem.com/women-and-non-binary-people-of-colour-on-what-the-global-climate-strike-mea

    • On environmentalism, whiteness and activist superstars

      After a powerful and emotional speech at the climate summit in New York, climate activist Greta Thunberg’s profile is bigger than ever, as if that were even possible. Founder of the school strike movement, it feels that Greta has played a huge part in galvanising an incredibly cohesive and urgent movement for climate justice in the short period of one year. I am also personally a huge admirer of hers, and am particularly heartened by the way she has discussed disability in the spotlight. But in the past few days, I’ve seen a number of people, notably artist and activist Bree Newsome Bass, discussing Greta’s whiteness in relation to size of her platform.

      In some ways this is an important point – activists of colour like Mari Copeny a.k.a. Little Miss Flint, who has been raising awareness and funds for the water crisis since she was eight, have received far less attention for their activism. But I’m less interested in this criticism levelled towards Greta as a person – she is a 16-year-old, autistic girl who has endured a lot of ableism and misogyny in her time in the public eye. Instead, I think it’s important that we think about the structures that consistently centre whiteness, and white individuals, both within coverage of the climate crisis and outside of it. It is this that speaks to a larger problem of white supremacy and an obsession with individuals in the media.

      We know that under white supremacism, both the media and its audiences disproportionately spotlight and uplift whiteness. And as we saw most recently in criticisms of Extinction Rebellion, the climate justice movement certainly isn’t exempt from reducing people of colour to an afterthought. This feels all the more frustrating when the issue of climate justice disproportionately affects indigenous communities and people of colour, and has rightly led many people of colour to ask: will white people only pay attention to the climate catastrophe when it’s other white people delivering the message? This doesn’t mean we should pay less attention towards Greta on the basis of her whiteness, but instead we should criticise the white supremacist climate that means that activists like Mari Copeny get sidelined.

      “The media prefers individual ‘star’ activists to faceless movements. But this complicates representation”

      Part of this problem also lies in the issue of fame in and of itself. To a certain extent, we buy into the cult of the individual when we inject 16-year-old activists into the realm of celebrity, when they really came to tell us to take action. The media prefers individual “star” activists to faceless movements. But this complicates representation – it’s impossible for one person to truly represent everyone. Equally, when we suggest swapping out one activist for another (e.g. swapping a white autistic woman for say, a black neurotypical man), we buy into a mindset that insists there is only space for one person to speak.

      This focus on the individual is evident in conversations around Greta’s work; each time she makes a speech, pens an article or crafts a viral Instagram post, it feels as though around 50% of the aftermath involves discussion of the climate issues she’s talking about – while the other 50% is usually about Greta herself. This is also why the pressure and criticism directed towards her sometimes feels unfair – it’s worth considering that Greta didn’t ask to be a celebrity, we made her into one. We can address and deconstruct this problem by thinking beyond individuals – and also talking about movements, community groups and even our most abstract modes of thinking about the climate crisis (particularly with regards to decolonisation). This will naturally involve making much-needed space for the voices of people of colour. Although we may always seek leaders and figureheads for movements, an obsession with star power can only take us so far.

      The first and most obvious thing we should do is to remain aware of the ways in which the media, and viewers who participate in it, centre whiteness. Then we should resist it. This doesn’t mean attacking white activists who are doing good work, but instead spotlighting and uplifting activists of colour whose messages equally need to be heard. A good place to start would be reading and listening to the words of Artemisa Xakriabá, Helena Gualinga, Mari Copeny and Isra Hirsi. When we bring focus towards activists of colour, we prove that activism isn’t a project that has only limited space for a certain number of voices. It reduces the amount of misogynistic and ableist abuse that young activists like Greta face, whilst in turn tackling the issue of putting whiteness on a pedestal. Importantly, this goes hand-in-hand with pushing against the media’s constant need to position individual people as the monolithic faces of particular movements. Signal-boosting groups like Black Lives Matter, Wretched of the Earth, Indigenous Environmental Network, Grassroots Global Justice Alliance and Climate Justice Alliance also emphasises the importance of collective work. After all – the issue of the climate operates along so many axes of oppression, including racism, misogyny, ableism and class – so we need more marginalised voices than ever involved in the conversation.

      http://gal-dem.com/on-individualism-whiteness-and-activist-superstars

      #blancs #noirs #activisme #activisme_climatique

    • La haine contre Greta : voici ceux, avec nom et adresse, qui la financent !

      Il est généralement accepté que les vainqueurs des élections européennes du 26 mai ont été l’extrême droite et les Verts. Et il est aussi généralement accepté qu’aux succès des Verts ont contribué grandement les mobilisations sans précédent d’une jeunesse s’inspirant de la combativité et des thèses radicales de la jeune suédoise Greta Thunberg. En conséquence, il n’est pas surprenant que cette extrême droite choisisse d’attaquer ce qu’elle appelle « le mythe du changement climatique » et surtout, cible de plus en plus son attaque sur la personne de cette Greta Thunberg qui galvanise la jeunesse en Europe et au-delà !

      À la tête de la campagne contre Greta, ponctuée de centaines de textes et de photomontages souvent très vulgaires, il y a trois des plus importants partis européens d’extrême droite : Le Rassemblement National français, le #AFD allemand et l’#UKIP britannique. Et derrière ces partis d’extrême droite et de leur campagne abjecte, deux think-tanks climato-sceptiques conservateurs, le #EIKE (Institut Européen pour le Climat et l’Énergie) et le #CFACT-Europe (Comité pour un Lendemain Créatif), lesquels soutiennent de manière multiforme, et pas seulement avec des « arguments » et des conférences, la négation de la catastrophe climatique par l’extrême droite.

      L’Institut #EIKE, de la bouche de son vice-président, nie évidemment d’avoir le moindre rapport avec AFD, bien que ce vice-président du nom de #Michael_Limburg ait été récemment candidat de ce même... AFD ! Il faut dire que EIKE qui, ensemble avec AFD, a pu organiser des journées climato-sceptique même... à l’intérieur du Parlement allemand, est sorti de l’anonymat grâce à la conférence annuelle qu’il organise depuis des années avec un certain succès, puisqu’elle a pu influencer l’attitude de l’Union européenne au sujet du changement climatique. Cependant, c’est exactement cette conférence annuelle de EIKE qui est coorganisée par deux organisations américaines : Le CFACT-US, lequel finance évidemment sa filiale européenne du même nom. Et surtout, l’#Institut_Heartland, lequel, selon The Economist, « est le think-tank mondialement le plus connu parmi ceux qui défendent le scepticisme au sujet du changement climatique dû à l’homme ».

      C’est exactement à ce moment que les enquêtes et les révélations du Institute of Strategic Dialogue (ISD) britannique et de Greenpeace acquièrent une énorme importance politique car elles mettent en lumière les forces économiques qui sont derrière ceux qui nient la catastrophe climatique, mais aussi derrière le « phénomène » d’une extrême droite européenne (et mondiale) qui monte en flèche. En effet, tant CFACT-US que l’Institut Heartland sont financés plus que généreusement par le très grand capital américain, par #ExxonMobil, la famille #Koch, deuxième plus riche famille nord-américaine qui domine – entre autres – dans le secteur du pétrole, la famille #Mercer qui est aussi un des principaux financeurs du président #Trump, ou même #Microsoft et #RJR_Tobacco ! Il faut noter que Heartland a des antécédents en tant que serviteur des visées inavouables du grand capital, puisqu’il fut jadis l’agent principal de la propagande des géants du tabac qui niaient le rapport existant entre le tabagisme et le cancer. Ce n’est pas donc surprenant qu’à cette époque son principal financeur fut... #Philip_Morris... [1]

      Mais, il ne faut pas croire que l’Institut Heartland est un simple “outil” indolore et incolore dépourvu de ses propres thèses et actions. De ce point de vue, le CV de son nouveau président #Tim_Huelskamp est très éloquent et didactique. Dirigeant du très conservateur #Tea_Party, #Huelskamp s’est distingué comme député (qu’il a été jusqu’à 2017) de l’aile la plus réactionnaire des Républicains et a toujours entretenu des liens étroits avec l’extrême droite américaine. Il est aussi à noter que de tous les députés américains, c’est lui qui, pendant très longtemps, a reçu les plus grandes sommes d’argent de la part des compagnies de combustibles fossiles, et qu’il les a « remerciés » en votant toujours contre toute tentative de légiférer contre leurs intérêts...

      Grâce à un document interne de Heartland, qui a fuité, on a pu apprendre – et en détail – non seulement l’étendue de son financement par le très grand capital (plusieurs millions de dollars), mais aussi l’ « investissement » de ces sommes dans un large éventail d’activités qui vont du paiement des « salaires » à des bloggeurs qui influencent l’opinion publique et des « scientifiques » qui parcourent le monde niant la catastrophe climatique, à l’écriture et la publication du matériel propagandiste qui cible les écoles et leurs élèves. Par exemple, le groupe de « scientifiques » chargé de « contredire » les conclusions des travaux du Groupe d’Experts Intergouvernemental... coûte 300 000 dollars par an, tandis que la propagation de la thèse qui veut que « la question du changement climatique soit controversée et incertaine »... dans les écoles primaires leur coûte 100 000 dollars !

      Nous voici donc devant la révélation d’une réalité qui jette quelque lumière sur quelques-uns des grands « mystères » de notre époque. Tout d’abord, l’extrême droite européenne ou tout au moins quelques-uns de ses poids lourds, entretiennent des liens étroits – s’ils ne sont pas dépendants – avec un centre/état-major politique et économique qui se trouve aux États-Unis, et plus précisément à la Maison Blanche et aux financeurs et autres soutiens du président Trump [2] ! Ensuite, ce n’est pas aussi un hasard que cette « internationale brune » semble être arrivée à la conclusion que la question de la catastrophe climatique et plus précisément, le – plus en plus ample et radical – mouvement de jeunes qui luttent contre elle représentent la plus grande menace pour ses intérêts et pour la domination du système capitaliste dans les années à venir. Et enfin, ce n’est pas également un hasard si cette « internationale brune » et plus précisément sa « section » européenne concentrent aujourd’hui en toute priorité leur attaques sur la personne de Greta Thunberg, l’incontestable égérie, théoricienne et en même temps coordinatrice des mobilisations de jeunes presque partout en Europe et au-delà.

      Voici donc comment se présente actuellement le rapport de l’extrême droite avec le grand capital. Non pas de façon abstraite et dogmatique, mais concrètement, avec des financeurs et financés qui ont non seulement nom et adresse, mais aussi des intérêts tangibles et des « causes » à servir. Cependant, tout ce beau monde ne fait que son boulot. Si la gauche faisait le sien, la situation serait bien différente…

      http://www.cadtm.org/La-haine-contre-Greta-voici-ceux-avec-nom-et-adresse-qui-la-financent

  • Former MP, investors evict thousands in Kiryandongo
    https://observer.ug/news/headlines/61572-former-mp-investors-evict-thousands-in-kiryandongo

    Former Kiryandongo district Member of Parliament (MP), Baitera Maiteki, an American and an Indian investor have been accused of evicting thousands of people in the western districts of Kiryandongo and Masindi.

    The evicted people were living in the gazetted government ranches in Mutunda and Kiryandongo sub-counties along the River Nile. Kiryandongo Sugar, allegedly owned by some Indians, Agilis, owned by an American called Philip Investor, and Sole Agro Business Company, also owned by Indians, have been named in the evictions.

    Agilis is said to have bought ranches 21-22, from SODARI, an agricultural farm that collapsed. SODARI got a lease from government, which ends in 2025. However, it was revealed to the Land Commission of Inquiry that Agilis, bought land that was leased, yet legally, no one is supposed to buy leased land.

    Agro Business was reportedly given about 60 hectares and displaced all people in the area. Kiryandongo Sugar also forcefully evicted people in the area and ploughed all the land, denying some residents farmland and access roads.

    #Ouganda #évictions_forcées #terres

  • ’I had pain all over my body’: Italy’s tainted tobacco industry

    Three of the world’s largest tobacco manufacturers, #Philip_Morris, #British_American_Tobacco and #Imperial_Brands, are buying leaves that could have been picked by exploited African migrants working in Italy’s multi-million euro industry.

    Workers including children, said they were forced to work up to 12 hours a day without contracts or sufficient health and safety equipment in Campania, a region that produces more than a third of Italy’s tobacco. Some workers said they were paid about three euros an hour.

    The Guardian investigation into Italy’s tobacco industry, which spanned three years, is believed to be the first in Europe to examine the supply chain.

    Italy’s tobacco market is dominated by the three multinational manufacturers, all of whom buy from local producers. According to an internal report by the farmers’ organisation ONT Italia, seen by the Guardian and confirmed by a document from the European Leaf Tobacco Interbranch, the companies bought three-fifths of Italian tobacco in 2017. Philip Morris alone purchased 21,000 tons of the 50,000 tons harvested that year.

    The multinationals all said they buy from suppliers who operate under a strict code of conduct to ensure fair treatment of workers. Philip Morris said it had not come across any abuse. Imperial and British American said they would investigate any complaints brought to their attention.

    Italy is the EU’s leading tobacco producer. In 2017, the industry was worth €149m (£131m).

    Despite there being a complex system of guarantees and safeguards in place for tobacco workers, more than 20 asylum seekers who spoke to the Guardian, including 10 who had worked in the tobacco fields during the 2018 season, reported rights violations and a lack of safety equipment.

    The interviewees said they had no employment contracts, were paid wages below legal standards, and had to work up to 12 work hours a day. They also said they had no access to clean water, and suffered verbal abuse and racial discrimination from bosses. Two interviewees were underage and employed in hazardous work.

    Didier, born and raised in Ivory Coast, arrived in Italy via Libya. He recently turned 18, but was 17 when, last spring, a tobacco grower in Capua Vetere, near the city of Caserta, offered him work in his fields. “I woke up at 4am. We started at 6am,” he said. “The work was exhausting. It was really hot inside the greenhouse and we had no contracts.”

    Alex, from Ghana, another minor who worked in the same area, said he was forced to work 10 to 12 hours a day. “If you are tired or not, you are supposed to work”, otherwise “you lose your job”.

    Workers complained of having to work without a break until lunchtime.

    Alex said he wasn’t given gloves or work clothes to protect him from the nicotine contained in the leaves, or from pesticides. He also said that when he worked without gloves he felt “some sickness like fever, like malaria, or headaches”.

    Moisture on a tobacco leaf from dew or rain may contain as much nicotine as the content of six cigarettes, one study found. Direct contact can lead to nicotine poisoning.

    Most of the migrants said they had worked without gloves. Low wages prevented them from buying their own.

    At the end of the working day, said Sekou, 27, from Guinea, who has worked in the tobacco fields since 2016: “I could not get my hands in the water to take a shower because my hands were cut”.

    Olivier added: “I had pain all over my body, especially on my hands. I had to take painkillers every day.”

    The migrants said they were usually hired on roundabouts along the main roads through Caserta province.

    Workers who spoke to the Guardian said they didn’t have contracts and were paid half the minimum wage. Most earned between €20 and €30 a day, rather than the minimum of €42.

    Thomas, from Ghana, said: “I worked last year in the tobacco fields near Cancello, a village near Caserta. They paid me €3 per hour. The work was terrible and we had no contracts”.

    The Guardian found African workers who were paid €3 an hour, while Albanians, Romanians or Italians, were paid almost double.

    “I worked with Albanians. They paid the Albanians €50 a day,” (€5 an hour), says Didier. “They paid me €3 per hour. That’s why I asked them for a raise. But when I did, they never called back.”

    Tammaro Della Corte, leader of the General Confederation of Italian Workers labour union in Caserta, said: “Unfortunately, the reality of the work conditions in the agricultural sector in the province of Caserta, including the tobacco industry, is marked by a deep labour exploitation, low wages, illegal contracts and an impressive presence of the caporalato [illegal hiring], including extortion and blackmailing of the workers.

    “We speak to thousands of workers who work in extreme conditions, the majority of whom are immigrants from eastern Europe, north Africa and sub-Saharan Africa. A large part of the entire supply chain of the tobacco sector is marked by extreme and alarming working conditions.”

    Between 405,000 and 500,000 migrants work in Italy’s agricultural sector, about half the total workforce. According to the Placido Rizzotto Observatory, which investigates worker conditions in the agricultural sector, 80% of those working without contracts are migrants.

    Multinational tobacco companies have invested billions of euros in the industry in Italy. Philip Morris alone has invested €1bn over the past five years and has investment plans on the same scale for the next two years. In 2016, the company invested €500m to open a factory near Bologna to manufacture smokeless cigarettes. A year later, another €500m investment was announced to expand production capacity at the factory.

    British American Tobacco declared investments in Italy of €1bn between 2015 and 2019.

    Companies have signed agreements with the agriculture ministry and farmers’ associations.

    Since 2011, Philip Morris, which buys the majority of tobacco in Campania, has signed agreements to purchase tobacco directly from ONT Italia.

    Philip Morris buys roughly 70% of the Burley tobacco variety produced in Campania. Approximately 900 farmers work for companies who supply to Philip Morris.

    In 2018, Burley and Virginia Bright varieties constituted 90% of Italian tobacco production. About 15,000 tons of the 16,000 tons of Italian Burley are harvested in Campania.

    In 2015, Philip Morris signed a deal with Coldiretti, the main association of entrepreneurs in the agricultural sector, to buy 21,000 tons of tobacco a year from Italian farmers, by investing €500m, until 2020.

    Gennarino Masiello, president of Coldiretti Campania and national vice-president, said the deal included a “strong commitment to respect the rights of employees, banning phenomena like caporalato and child labour”.

    Steps have been taken to improve workers’ conditions in the tobacco industry.

    A deal agreed last year between the Organizzazione Interprofessionale Tabacco Italia (OITI), a farmers’ organisation, and the ministry of agriculture resulted in the introduction of a code of practice in the tobacco industry, including protecting the health of workers, and a national strategy to reduce the environmental impact.

    But last year, the OITI was forced to acknowledge that “workplace abuses often have systemic causes” and that “long-term solutions to address these issues require the serious and lasting commitment of all the players in the supply chain, together with that of the government and other parties involved”.

    Despite the code, the migrants interviewed reported no change in their working conditions.

    In 2017, Philip Morris signed an agreement with the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) to hire 20 migrants as trainees within the Campania tobacco producing companies, to “support their exit from situations of serious exploitation”. Migrants on the six-month trainee scheme receive a monthly salary of €600 from Philip Morris.

    But the scheme appears to have little impact.

    Kofi, Sekou and Hassan were among 20 migrants hired under the agreement. Two of them said their duties and treatment were no different from other workers. At the end of the six months, Sekou said he was not hired regularly, but continued to work with no contract and low wages, in the same company that signed the agreement with Philip Morris.

    “If I didn’t go to work they wouldn’t pay me. I was sick, they wouldn’t pay me,” he said.

    In a statement, Huub Savelkouls, chief sustainability officer at Philip Morris International, said the company is committed to ensuring safety and fair conditions in its supply chain and had not come across the issues raised.

    “Working with the independent, not-for-profit organisation, Verité, we developed PMI’s Agricultural Labor Practices (ALP) code that currently reaches more than 350,000 farms worldwide. Farmers supplying PMI in Italy are contractually bound to respect the standards of the ALP code. They receive training and field teams conduct farm visits twice a month to monitor adherence to the ALP code,” he said.

    “Recognising the complex situation with migrant workers in Italian agriculture, PMI has taken supplementary steps to gain more visibility and prevent potential issues through a mechanism that provides direct channels for workers to raise concerns, specifically funding an independent helpline and direct engagement programme with farm workers.”

    On the IOM scheme, he said: “This work has been recognised by stakeholders and elements are being considered for continued action.”

    Simon Cleverly, group head of corporate affairs at British American Tobacco, said: “We recognise that agricultural supply chains and global business operations, by their nature, can present significant rights risks and we have robust policies and process in place to ensure these risks are minimised. Our supplier code of conduct sets out the minimum contractual standards we expect of all our suppliers worldwide, and specifically requires suppliers to ensure that their operations are free from unlawful migrant labour. This code also requires suppliers to provide all workers, including legal migrant workers, with fair wages and benefits, which comply with applicable minimum wage legislation. To support compliance, we have due diligence in place for all our third-party suppliers, including the industry-wide sustainable tobacco programme (STP).”

    He added: “Where we are made aware of alleged human rights abuses, via STP, our whistleblowing procedure or by any other channel, we investigate and where needed, take remedial action.”

    Simon Evans, group media relations manager at Imperial Tobacco, said: “Through the industry-wide sustainable tobacco programme we work with all of our tobacco suppliers to address good agricultural practices, improve labour practices and protect the environment. We purchase a very small amount of tobacco from the Campania region via a local third party supplier, with whom we are working to understand and resolve any issues.”

    ONT said technicians visited tobacco producers at least once a month to monitor compliance with contract and production regulations. It said it would not tolerate any kind of labour exploitation and would follow up the Guardian investigation.

    “If they [the abuses] happen to be attributable to farms associated with ONT, we will take the necessary measures, not only for the violation of the law, but above all to protect all our members who operate with total honesty and transparency.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2019/may/31/i-had-pain-all-over-my-body-italys-tainted-tobacco-industry?CMP=share_b
    #tabac #industrie_du_tabac #exploitation #travail #migrations #Caserta #Italie #néo-esclavagisme #Pouilles #Campania

    ping @albertocampiphoto @marty @reka @isskein

  • These People Did Something For This Show In 2018
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/moacrealsloa/these-people-did-something-for-this-show-in-2018

    Tonight we will present you the music of a lot of musicians who did something (playing and/or interview) for Moacrealsloa in 2018, it is a random selection chosen from these participants :

    #Osilasi, #Jacques_Foschia, #Pak_Yan_Lau, #Aloysius_Suwardi, #Eduardo_Ribuyo, #Judit_Emese_Konopas, #Drew_McDowell, #Ka_Baird, Philip Jeck, #Han_Bennink, #Kurt_Overbergh, #Dirk_Serries, #Guy_Segers, #Chris_Corsano, #Joëlle_Léandre, #Niels_Van_Heertum, #Michael_Baird, #Charlemagne_Palestine, #Geoff_Leigh, #Xylourius_White, #Renaldo_and_The_Loaf, #Kanker_Kommando, #Weiland, #Stefan_Christensen, #Guillermo_Lares, #Stefan_Schneider, #Peter_Zummo, #Tomoko_Sauvage, #Hariprasad_Chaurasia, #Yoshio_Machida, #Lu_Edmonds, #Bruce_Smith, #Beatriz_Ferreyra, #Robin_Storey, #Ghédalia_Tazartès, #Walter_Robotka, #Lori_Goldston, #Ben_Bertrand, Fumihico (...)

    #SEF_III #Fumihico_Natsuaki #Red_Brut #Zarabatana #Jung_An_Tagen #Niels_Latomme #Philip_Jack #Transport #Tommy_De_Nys #Sandra_Boss #Frosty #YPY #Radian #Vomit_Heat #Jacques_Foschia,Guy_Segers,Ben_Bertrand,Kanker_Kommando,Han_Bennink,Chris_Corsano,Weiland,Stefan_Christensen,SEF_III,Fumihico_Natsuaki,Drew_McDowell,Beatriz_Ferreyra,Renaldo_and_The_Loaf,Tomoko_Sauvage,Michael_Baird,Geoff_Leigh,Dirk_Serries,Red_Brut,Eduardo_Ribuyo,Zarabatana,Jung_An_Tagen,Ka_Baird,Judit_Emese_Konopas,Niels_Latomme,Xylourius_White,Philip_Jack,Peter_Zummo,Ghédalia_Tazartès,Stefan_Schneider,Walter_Robotka,Pak_Yan_Lau,Transport,Tommy_De_Nys,Hariprasad_Chaurasia,Robin_Storey,Niels_Van_Heertum,Osilasi,Yoshio_Machida,Aloysius_Suwardi,Lori_Goldston,Guillermo_Lares,Sandra_Boss,Kurt_Overbergh,Charlemagne_Palestine,Lu_Edmonds,Bruce_Smith,Frosty,YPY,Radian,Vomit_Heat,Joëlle_Léandre
    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/moacrealsloa/these-people-did-something-for-this-show-in-2018_05997__1.mp3

  • L’#industrie_du_tabac manœuvre pour tracer les #cigarettes

    Du 8 au 10 octobre, s’est tenue à Genève la première réunion du Protocole pour éliminer le commerce illicite des produits du tabac. Le texte exige des États la mise en place d’un système de #traçabilité indépendant des industriels, accusés par le passé d’alimenter la #contrebande. Mais en coulisses, les cigarettiers manœuvrent pour jouer un rôle, allant jusqu’à recruter d’anciens policiers français.



    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/111018/l-industrie-du-tabac-manoeuvre-pour-tracer-les-cigarettes
    #tabac #OMS #lobby #Codentify #Sicpa #Burkina_Faso #Montenegro_Connection #Sicpatrace #Philip_Morris_International #Inexto #Impala #British_American_Tobacco #Philippe_Chatelain #PMI_Impact #Marlboro #Luis_Moreno_Ocampo #Jürgen_Storbeck #Europol #Alain_Juillet #Association_de_lutte_contre_le_commerce_illicite #ALCCI #Hervé_Pierre #Dominique_Lapprand #Tracfin #Bercy #Pierre_Moscovici

    Un article de @marty et photos @albertocampiphoto de @wereport

  • [Wikipédia] L’Affaire Philip Cross, par Craig Murray soverain.fr - Craig Murray - Flavien Rehaut
    https://www.soverain.fr/laffaire-philip-cross/?cn-reloaded=1&cn-reloaded=1
    Repris par : https://www.les-crises.fr/wikipedia-laffaire-philip-cross-par-craig-murray

    Note Soverain : Cet article de Craig Murray https://www.craigmurray.org.uk met en évidence les liens entre Wikipédia, généralement réputée pour être une encyclopédie libre et participative (et donc une référence dans le domaine de l’information), et la manière dont elle est utilisée à des fins (géo)politiques avec la complicité supposée de son fondateur et de certains rédacteurs. Cet article traite de l’affaire « Philip Cross », un utilisateur de Wikipédia qui a un grand nombre de révisions à son actif, toutes en faveur des médias néo-conservateurs britanniques et en défaveur des médias indépendants et alternatifs. Cet article apporte des éléments de réponse pour juger de la neutralité de Wikipédia, et permet d’avoir un aperçu des difficultés rencontrées par d’autres personnes physiques ou morales (partis politiques, associations), même en France, pour disposer d’une page objective.

    « Philip Cross » n’a pas eu un seul jour de répit https://wikipedia.fivefilters.org sur sa page Wikipedia depuis presque cinq ans. « Il » a édité tous les jours du 29 août 2013 au 14 mai 2018. Y compris cinq jours de Noël. Ça fait 1 721 jours consécutifs de révisions.

    133 612 modifications ont été apportées à Wikipédia au nom de « Philip Cross » sur une période de 14 ans. C’est plus de 30 éditions par jour, sept jours sur sept. Et je ne l’utilise pas au sens figuré : Les révisions Wikipedia sont enregistrées dans le temps, et si vous les tracez, la carte de temps pour l’activité Wikipedia de « Philip Cross » est étonnante si il s’agit d’un seul individu :


    L’activité se déroule comme une horloge, sept jours sur sept, toutes les heures de la journée, sans variation significative. Si « Philip Cross » est vraiment un individu, on ne peut nier qu’il soit maladivement obsédé. Je ne suis pas psychiatre, mais à mes yeux tout à fait inexpérimentés, cela ressemble au comportement d’un psychotique dérangé sans activités sociales en dehors de son domicile, sans travail (ou un patron incroyablement tolérant), vivant sa vie à travers un écran. Je dirige ce qui est sans doute le blog politique le plus lu au Royaume-Uni, et je ne passe pas autant de temps sur Internet que « Philip Cross ». Ma « timecard » montre les endroits où je regarde le football le samedi, je vais boire le vendredi, je vais au supermarché et me promener ou sortir en famille le dimanche, et en général, je me détends beaucoup plus et je lis des livres le soir. Cross n’a pas les schémas d’activité d’un être humain normal et parfaitement équilibré.

    Il y a trois options. « Philip Cross » est soit une personne très étrange en effet, soit une fausse personne déguisant une activité payante pour contrôler le contenu de wikipedia, soit une vraie personne de façade pour une telle opération en son nom.

    Pourquoi cette qualification d’obsessionnel compulsif sans amis – pour prendre l’explication officielle – est justifiée ?

    Parce que le but de l’opération « Philip Cross » est de systématiquement attaquer et de miner la réputation de ceux qui jouent un rôle de premier plan dans la remise en cause du discours dominant des entreprises et des médias d’Etat, en particulier dans les affaires étrangères. « Philip Cross » cherche aussi systématiquement à faire briller la réputation des journalistes des médias grand public et d’autres personnalités qui jouent un rôle de premier plan dans la promotion de la propagande néoconservatrice et dans la promotion des intérêts d’Israël.

    C’est important parce qu’un lecteur ordinaire qui tombe sur un article questionnant (disons le comme ça) le récit officiel sur les Skripals, est très susceptible de se tourner vers Wikipedia pour obtenir des informations sur l’auteur de l’article. En termes simples, le but de l’opération « Philip Cross » est de s’assurer que si ce lecteur recherche une personne antimilitariste comme John Pilger, ils concluront qu’ils ne sont pas du tout fiables et peu dignes de confiance, alors que s’ils recherchent un journaliste MSM de droite, ils concluront qu’ils sont un modèle de vertu et qu’il faut leur faire pleinement confiance.

    Le traitement « Philip Cross » est réservé non seulement aux partisans de l’aile gauche, mais à tous les sceptiques du néo-conservatisme et qui s’opposent aux « guerres d’intervention ». La liste des victimes de Cross comprend Alex Salmond, Peter Oborne, John Pilger, Owen Jones, Jeremy Corbyn, Tim Hayward, Diane Abbott, Neil Clark, Lindsey German, Vanessa Beeley et George Galloway. Comme on peut s’y attendre, « Philip Cross » est particulièrement actif dans la modification des articles de Wikipedia des médias alternatifs et des sites de critique MSM. « Philip Cross » a fait 36 révisions à la page Wikipedia de The Canary et, de façon stupéfiante, plus de 800 révisions sur Media Lens. George Galloway reste la cible favorite de l’opération « Philip Cross » avec un nombre incroyable de 1 800 révisions.

    Tout aussi révélateurs sont les gens que « Philip Cross » cherche à protéger et à promouvoir. Sarah Smith, l’uber-syndicaliste de la BBC Scotland, a demandé à « Philip Cross » de supprimer les références de son entrée sur Wikipedia aux liens familiaux qui (ahem) ont pu l’aider dans sa carrière. La députée Ruth Smeeth, de Labour Friends of Israel, a fait référence au câble diplomatique américain Wikileaks qui a montré qu’elle était une informatrice à l’ambassade des États-Unis https://search.wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/09LONDON956_a.html
    sur les secrets du Parti travailliste, supprimé par « Philip Cross ». La chroniqueuse de droite Melanie Phillips et son déni du changement climatique s’est fait exciser par Cross.

    « Philip Cross » ne se contente pas de veiller et protèger soigneusement la page Wikipedia de l’éditrice du Guardian Katherine Viner, qui a changé sa plume pour le camp néo-con, mais Philip Cross a aussi rédigé la page hagiographique (NDLT : écriture de la vie des saints) originale. Le contact MI6 du Guardian, Luke Harding, est particulièrement pris en charge par Cross, de même que leurs obsessifs anti-corbyn Nick Cohen et Jonathon Freedland. Il en va de même pour Murdoch, David Aaronovitch et Oliver Kamm.

    Il ne fait aucun doute que Kamm, chef de file du Murdoch’s Times, est en lien avec l’opération « Philip Cross ». Beaucoup de gens croient que Kamm et Cross sont la même personne, ou que Kamm fait partie d’une personne multiple. Six fois j’ai eu personnellement des modifications hostiles à ma page Wikipedia par « Philip Cross » faites en liaison directe avec des attaques de Kamm, soit sur Twitter, dans un éditorial du Times ou dans le magazine Prospect. Au total, « Philip Cross » a effectué 275 modifications sur ma page Wikipedia. Il s’agit notamment d’appeler ma femme strip-teaseuse, de supprimer ma photo, de supprimer ma réponse aux attaques lancées contre moi par Kamm et Harding, entre autres, et de supprimer mon refus de tous les honneurs alors que j’étais diplomate britannique.

    Neil Clark et Peter Oborne sont unes des nombreuses victimes de Philip Cross sur Wikipedia en même temps que les attaques de Kamm sur d’autres médias. Clark poursuit Kamm en justice pour harcèlement criminel – et « Philip Cross » a supprimé toute référence à ce fait de la page Wikipedia de Kamm.

    Ce qui est clair, c’est que Kamm et Cross ont des opinions politiques extrêmement similaires, et que la ligne de démarcation entre ceux qu’ils attaquent et ceux qu’ils défendent est basée clairement sur les principes du Manifeste d’Euston (NDLT : une déclaration de principes d’un groupe de journalistes et activistes libéraux basés au Royaume-Uni). C’est peut-être un peu flou, mais il s’agit en fait d’une importante déclaration blairite de soutien à Israël et aux guerres néo-conservatrices d’intervention, et elle était liée à la fondation de la Henry Jackson Society. Qui est responsable de l’édition de la page Wikipedia du Manifeste d’Euston ? « Philip Cross ».

    Ce qui est particulièrement intéressant, c’est que les positions de « Philip Cross » sont exactement les mêmes que celles de Jimmy Wales, le fondateur de Wikipedia. Jimmy Wales a été sur Twitter ces trois derniers jours extrêmement grossier et désagréable pour quiconque remettait en question les activités de Philip Cross. Son engagement en faveur de la liberté de Cross d’opérer sur Wikipedia serait bien plus impressionnant si l’opération Cross ne faisait pas la promotion des propres opinions de Wales. Jimmy Wales s’est activement prononcé contre Jeremy Corbyn, soutient le bombardement de la Syrie, soutient Israël, est tellement blairite qu’il a épousé la secrétaire de Blair, et siège au conseil d’administration de Guardian Media Group Ltd aux côtés de Katherine Viner.

    L’attitude extrêmement défensive et le caractère surnaturel des réponses twitter de Wales sur l’opération « Philip Cross » est très révélateur. Pourquoi pensez-vous qu’il réagit ainsi ? C’est assez intéressant. Le bras mendiant de Wikipedia UK, Wikimedia UK, les a rejoint avec des réponses hostiles identiques à tous ceux qui remettent en question Cross.

    En réponse, de nombreuses personnes ont envoyé des preuves à Jimmy Wales, qu’il a ignorées, tandis que sa » fondation » s’est fâchée contre ceux qui remettent en question les activités de Philip Cross.

    Wikimedia est arrivé sans y être invité dans un fil twitter discutant des activités « Philip Cross » et a immédiatement commencé à attaquer les gens qui remettent en question la légitimité de Cross. Quelqu’un voit-il quelque chose d’insultant dans mon tweet ?

    Je le répète, la coïncidence des opinions politiques de Philip Cross avec celles de Jimmy Wales, alliée à l’hostilité immédiate de Wales et de Wikimedia à l’égard de quiconque remet en question les activités de Cross – sans avoir besoin d’examiner des preuves – soulève un grand nombre de questions.

    Philip Cross ne cherche pas à cacher son mobile https://wikipedia.fivefilters.org ou sa haine de ceux dont il attaque les pages de Wikipedia. Il les raille ouvertement sur Twitter. La malhonnêteté évidente de ses révisions est évidente pour tout le monde.

    Dans le passé, j’ai échangé des messages avec « Philip Cross ». Il dit qu’il est une personne, et qu’il édite en lien avec les tweets d’Oliver Kamm parce qu’il suit Kamm et que ses tweets l’inspirent à éditer. Il dit qu’il a rencontré Kamm et admet être en contact électronique avec lui. Cet échange que j’ai eu avec Cross, c’était il y a quelques années. Communication plus récente avec Cross (qui a maintenant changé son ID Twitter en « Julian »).


    a été moins coopératif et il n’a pas répondu :
    George Galloway offre une récompense de £1,000 pour le nom et l’adresse de « Cross » afin qu’il puisse également intenter une action en justice.

    Je pense que Philip Cross est probablement une personne physique, mais qu’il fait la couverture d’un groupe agissant sous son nom. Il est incontestable, en fait le gouvernement s’en est vanté, que le MOD et le GCHQ ont tous deux des opérations de « cyberguerre » visant à défendre le récit « officiel » contre les médias alternatifs, et c’est précisément le but de l’opération « Philip Cross » sur Wikipedia. L’extrême régularité de la production plaide contre le fait que « Philip Cross » soit une opération à un seul homme ou bénévole. Je n’exclus cependant pas la possibilité qu’il ne soit vraiment qu’un seul fanatique extrêmement obsédé par la droite.

    Enfin, il convient de noter que sur Wikipedia, une campagne visant à renforcer la narration des médias grand public et à dénigrer les sources alternatives présente l’énorme avantage que seule l’information provenant des médias grand public est autorisée dans les articles politiques.

    En conclusion, quelques images des pages de révision des articles de Wikipedia pour donner un petit aperçu de ce dont je parle :


    Je m’inquiète un peu, de peur de devenir moi-même obsédé. Trouvez-vous cela aussi fascinant que moi ?

    #Philip_Cross #Wikipédia #propagande #censure #entreprises #médias #Jimmy_Wales #cyberguerre #information_alternative #Wikimedia #encyclopédie #cyberguerre #décodex

    • New figures reveal at least 449 homeless deaths in UK in the last year

      On the streets, in a hospital, a hostel or a B&B: across the UK the deaths of people without a home have gone unnoticed.

      Tonight we’re attempting to shed new light on a hidden tragedy.

      Research by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism suggests at least 449 homeless people have died in the UK in the last year – at least 65 of them on the streets.

      The homeless charity Crisis says the figures are “deeply shocking”. They want such deaths to be better investigated and recorded.

      https://www.channel4.com/news/new-figures-reveal-at-least-449-homeless-deaths-in-uk-in-the-last-year

      #statistiques #chiffres

    • “A national scandal”: 449 people died homeless in the last year

      A grandmother who made potted plant gardens in shop doorways, found dead in a car park. A 51-year-old man who killed himself the day before his temporary accommodation ran out. A man who was tipped into a bin lorry while he slept.

      These tragic stories represent just a few of at least 449 people who the Bureau can today reveal have died while homeless in the UK in the last 12 months - more than one person per day.

      After learning that no official body counted the number of homeless people who have died, we set out to record all such deaths over the course of one year. Working with local journalists, charities and grassroots outreach groups to gather as much information as possible, the Bureau has compiled a first-of-its-kind database which lists the names of the dead and more importantly, tells their stories.

      The findings have sparked outrage amongst homeless charities, with one expert calling the work a “wake-up call to see homelessness as a national emergency”.

      Our investigation has prompted the Office for National Statistics to start producing its own figure on homeless deaths.

      We found out about the deaths of hundreds of people, some as young as 18 and some as old as 94. They included a former soldier, a quantum physicist, a travelling musician, a father of two who volunteered in his community, and a chatty Big Issue seller. The true figure is likely to be much higher.

      Some were found in shop doorways in the height of summer, others in tents hidden in winter woodland. Some were sent, terminally ill, to dingy hostels, while others died in temporary accommodation or hospital beds. Some lay dead for hours, weeks or months before anyone found them. Three men’s bodies were so badly decomposed by the time they were discovered that forensic testing was needed to identify them.

      They died from violence, drug overdoses, illnesses, suicide and murder, among other reasons. One man’s body showed signs of prolonged starvation.

      “A national disgrace”

      Charities and experts responded with shock at the Bureau’s findings. Howard Sinclair, St Mungo’s chief executive, said: “These figures are nothing short of a national scandal. These deaths are premature and entirely preventable.”

      “This important investigation lays bare the true brutality of our housing crisis,” said Polly Neate, CEO of Shelter. “Rising levels of homelessness are a national disgrace, but it is utterly unforgivable that so many homeless people are dying unnoticed and unaccounted for.”
      “This important investigation lays bare the true brutality of our housing crisis"

      Our data shows homeless people are dying decades younger than the general population. The average age of the people whose deaths we recorded was 49 for men and 53 for women.

      “We know that sleeping rough is dangerous, but this investigation reminds us it’s deadly,” said Jon Sparkes, chief executive of Crisis. “Those sleeping on our streets are exposed to everything from sub-zero temperatures, to violence and abuse, and fatal illnesses. They are 17 times more likely to be a victim of violence, twice as likely to die from infections, and nine times more likely to commit suicide.”

      The Bureau’s Dying Homeless project has sparked widespread debate about the lack of data on homeless deaths.

      Responding to our work, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has now confirmed that it will start compiling and releasing its own official estimate - a huge step forward.

      For months the ONS has been analysing and cross-checking the Bureau’s database to create its own methodology for estimating homeless deaths, and plans to produce first-of-their-kind statistics in December this year.

      A spokesperson said the information provided by the Bureau “helps us develop the most accurate method of identifying all the deaths that should be counted.”
      Naming the dead

      Tracking homeless deaths is a complex task. Homeless people die in many different circumstances in many different places, and the fact they don’t have a home is not recorded on death certificates, even if it is a contributing factor.

      Click here to explore the full project

      There are also different definitions of homelessness. We used the same definition as that used by homeless charity Crisis; it defines someone as homeless if they are sleeping rough, or in emergency or temporary accommodation such as hostels and B&Bs, or sofa-surfing. In Northern Ireland, we were only able to count the deaths of people registered as officially homeless by the Housing Executive, most of whom were in temporary accommodation while they waited to be housed.

      For the past nine months we have attended funerals, interviewed family members, collected coroners’ reports, spoken to doctors, shadowed homeless outreach teams, contacted soup kitchens and hostels and compiled scores of Freedom of Information requests. We have scoured local press reports and collaborated with our Bureau Local network of regional journalists across the country. In Northern Ireland we worked with The Detail’s independent journalism team to find deaths there.

      Of the 449 deaths in our database, we are able to publicly identify 138 people (we withheld the identity of dozens more at the request of those that knew them).

      Of the cases in which we were able to find out where people died, more than half of the deaths happened on the streets.

      These included mother-of-five Jayne Simpson, who died in the doorway of a highstreet bank in Stafford during the heatwave of early July. In the wake of her death the local charity that had been working with her, House of Bread, started a campaign called “Everyone knows a Jayne”, to try to raise awareness of how easy it is to fall into homelessness.

      Forty-one-year-old Jean Louis Du Plessis also died on the streets in Bristol. He was found in his sleeping bag during the freezing weather conditions of Storm Eleanor. At his inquest the coroner found he had been in a state of “prolonged starvation”.

      Russell Lane was sleeping in an industrial bin wrapped in an old carpet when it was tipped into a rubbish truck in Rochester in January. He suffered serious leg and hip injuries and died nine days later in hospital. He was 48 years old.

      In other cases people died while in temporary accommodation, waiting for a permanent place to call home. Those included 30-year-old John Smith who was found dead on Christmas Day, in a hostel in Chester.

      Or James Abbott who killed himself in a hotel in Croydon in October, the day before his stay in temporary accommodation was due to run out. A report from Lambeth Clinical Commissioning Group said: “He [Mr Abbott] said his primary need was accommodation and if this was provided he would not have an inclination to end his life.” We logged two other suicides amongst the deaths in the database.

      Many more homeless people were likely to have died unrecorded in hospitals, according to Alex Bax, CEO of Pathways, a homeless charity that works inside several hospitals across England. “Deaths on the street are only one part of the picture,” he said. “Many homeless people also die in hospital and with the right broad response these deaths could be prevented.”
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      Rising levels of homelessness

      The number of people sleeping rough has doubled in England and Wales in the last five years, according to the latest figures, while the number of people classed as officially homeless has risen by 8%.

      In Scotland the number of people applying to be classed as homeless rose last year for the first time in nine years. In Northern Ireland the number of homeless people rose by a third between 2012 and 2017.

      Analysis of government figures also shows the number of people housed in bed and breakfast hotels in England and Wales increased by a third between 2012 and 2018, with the number of children and pregnant women in B&Bs and hostels rising by more than half.

      “Unstable and expensive private renting, crippling welfare cuts and a severe lack of social housing have created this crisis,” said Shelter’s Neate. “To prevent more people from having to experience the trauma of homelessness, the government must ensure housing benefit is enough to cover the cost of rents, and urgently ramp up its efforts to build many more social homes.”

      The sheer scale of people dying due to poverty and homelessness was horrifying, said Crisis chief executive Sparkes.“This is a wake-up call to see homelessness as a national emergency,” he said.

      Breaking down the data

      Across our dataset, 69% of those that died were men and 21% were women (for the remaining 10% we did not have their gender).

      For those we could identify, their ages ranged between 18 and 94.

      At least nine of the deaths we recorded over the year were due to violence, including several deaths which were later confirmed to be murders.

      Over 250 were in England and Wales, in part because systems to count in London are better developed than elsewhere in the UK.

      London was the location of at least 109 deaths. The capital has the highest recorded rough sleeper count in England, according to official statistics, and information on the well-being of those living homeless is held in a centralised system called CHAIN. This allowed us to easily record many of the deaths in the capital although we heard of many others deaths in London that weren’t part of the CHAIN data.

      In Scotland, we found details of 42 people who died in Scotland in the last year, but this is likely a big underestimate. Many of the deaths we registered happened in Edinburgh, while others were logged from Glasgow, the Shetland Islands and the Outer Hebrides.
      “We know that sleeping rough is dangerous, but this investigation reminds us it’s deadly”

      Working with The Detail in Northern Ireland, we found details of 149 people who died in the country. Most died while waiting to be housed by the country’s Housing Executive - some may have been in leased accommodation while they waited, but they were officially classed as homeless.

      “Not only will 449 families or significant others have to cope with their loss, they will have to face the injustice that their loved one was forced to live the last days of their life without the dignity of a decent roof over their head, and a basic safety net that might have prevented their death,” Sparkes from Crisis. No one deserves this.”

      A spokesperson from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said:

      “Every death of someone sleeping rough on our streets is one too many and we take this matter extremely seriously.

      “We are investing £1.2bn to tackle all forms of homelessness, and have set out bold plans backed by £100m in funding to halve rough sleeping by 2022 and end it by 2027."


      https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2018-10-08/homelessness-a-national-scandal?token=ssTw9Mg2I2QU4AYduMjt3Ny
      #noms #donner_un_nom #sortir_de_l'anonymat

    • Homelessness kills: Study finds third of homeless people die from treatable conditions

      Nearly a third of homeless people die from treatable conditions, meaning hundreds of deaths could potentially have been prevented, a major new study shows.

      The research by University College London (UCL), which was exclusively shared with the Bureau, also shows that homeless people are much more likely to die from certain conditions than even the poorest people who have a place to live.

      The findings come as the final count from our Dying Homeless project shows an average of 11 homeless people a week have died in the UK in the last 18 months. We have been collecting data dating back to October 2017 and telling the stories of those who have died on the streets or in temporary accommodation; our tally now stands at 796 people. Of those people we know the age of, more than a quarter were under 40 when then they died.

      While many might assume hypothermia or drug and alcohol overdoses kill the majority of homeless people, this latest research by UCL shows that in fact most homeless people die from illnesses. Nearly a third of the deaths explored by UCL were from treatable illnesses like tuberculosis, pneumonia or gastric ulcers which could potentially have improved with the right medical care.

      In February 2018, 48-year old Marcus Adams died in hospital after suffering from tuberculosis. The same year, 21 year old Faiza died in London, reportedly of multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis. Just before Christmas in 2017, 48-year-old former soldier Darren Greenfield died from an infection and a stroke in hospital. He had slept rough for years after leaving the army.

      “To know that so many vulnerable people have died of conditions that were entirely treatable is heartbreaking,” said Matthew Downie, Director of Policy and External Affairs at Crisis. The government should make sure all homeless deaths were investigated to see if lessons could be learned, he said.

      “But ultimately, 800 people dying homeless is unacceptable - we have the solutions to ensure no one has to spend their last days without a safe, stable roof over their head.
      “To know that so many vulnerable people have died of conditions that were entirely treatable is heartbreaking”

      “By tackling the root causes of homelessness, like building the number of social homes we need and making sure our welfare system is there to support people when they fall on hard times, governments in England, Scotland and Wales can build on the positive steps they’ve already taken to reduce and ultimately end homelessness.”
      Twice as likely to die of strokes

      Academics at UCL explored nearly 4,000 in-depth medical records for 600 people that died in English hospitals between 2013 and 2016 who were homeless when they were admitted. They compared them to the deaths of a similar group of people (in terms of age and sex) who had somewhere to live but were in the lowest socio-economic bracket.

      The research gives unprecedented insight into the range of medical causes of homeless deaths, and provides yet another reminder of how deadly homelessness is.

      The homeless group was disproportionately affected by cardiovascular disease, which includes strokes and heart disease. The researchers found homeless people were twice as likely to die of strokes as the poorest people who had proper accommodation.

      A fifth of the 600 deaths explored by UCL were caused by cancer. Another fifth died from digestive diseases such as intestinal obstruction or pancreatitis.

      Our database shows homeless people dying young from cancers, such as Istvan Kakas who died aged 52 in a hospice after battling leukaemia.

      Istvan, who sold The Big Issue, had received a heroism award from the local mayor after he helped save a man and his daughter from drowning. Originally from Hungary, he had previously worked as a chef under both Gordon Ramsay and Michael Caines.

      Rob Aldridge, lead academic on the UCL team, told the Bureau: “Our research highlights a failure of the health system to care for this vulnerable group in a timely and appropriate manner.”

      “We need to identify homeless individuals at risk earlier and develop models of care that enable them to engage with interventions proven to either prevent or improve outcomes for early onset chronic disease.”

      Of the deaths we have logged in the UK 78% were men, while 22% were female (of those where the gender was known). The average age of death for men was 49 years old and 53 years old for women.

      “It is easy for them to get lost in the system and forgotten about”
      The spread of tuberculosis

      In Luton, Paul Prosser from the NOAH welfare centre has seen a worrying prevalence of tuberculosis, particularly amongst the rough sleeping migrant community. A service visits the centre three times a year, screening for TB. “Last time they came they found eight people with signs of the illness, that’s really concerning,” said Prosser.

      “There are a lot of empty commercial properties in Luton and you find large groups of desperate homeless people, often migrants, squatting in them. It is easy for them to get lost in the system and forgotten about and then, living in such close quarters, that is when the infection can spread.”

      “When people dip in and out of treatment that is when they build a resistance to the drugs,” Prosser added. “Some of these people are leading chaotic lives and if they are not engaging that well with the treatment due to having nowhere to live then potentially that is when they become infectious.”

      One man NOAH was helping, Robert, died in mid-2017 after moving from Luton to London. The man, originally from Romania, had been suffering from TB for a long time but would only access treatment sporadically. He was living and working at a car-wash, as well as rough sleeping at the local airport.

      Making them count

      For the last year the Bureau has been logging the names and details of people that have died homeless since October 1, 2017. We started our count after discovering that no single body or organisation was recording if and when people were dying while homeless.

      More than 80 local news stories have been written about the work and our online form asking for details of deaths has been filled in more than 140 times.

      Our work and #MakeThemCount hashtag called for an official body to start collecting this vital data, and we were delighted to announce last October that the Office for National Statistics is now collating these figures. We opened up our database to ONS statisticians to help them develop their methodology.

      We also revealed that local authority reviews into homeless deaths, which are supposed to take place, were rarely happening. Several councils, including Brighton & Hove, Oxford, Malvern and Leeds have now said they will undertake their own reviews into deaths in their area, while others, such as Haringey, have put in place new measures to log how and when people die homeless.

      Councillor Emina Ibrahim, Haringey Council’s Cabinet Member for Housing, told the Bureau: “The deaths of homeless people are frequently missed in formal reviews, with their lives unremembered. Our new procedure looks to change that and will play an important part in helping us to reduce these devastating and avoidable deaths.”

      Members of the public have also come together to remember those that passed away. In the last year there have been protests in Belfast, Birmingham and Manchester, memorial services in Brighton, Luton and London, and physical markers erected in Long Eaton and Northampton. Last week concerned citizens met in Oxford to discuss a spate of homeless deaths in the city.

      In a response to the scale of the deaths, homeless grassroots organisation Streets Kitchen are now helping to organise a protest and vigil which will take place later this week, in London and Manchester.

      After a year of reporting on this issue, the Bureau is now happy to announce we are handing over the counting project to the Museum of Homelessness, an organisation which archives, researches and presents information and stories on homelessness.
      “The sheer number of people who are dying whilst homeless, often avoidably, is a national scandal”

      The organisation’s co-founder Jess Turtle said they were honoured to be taking on this “massively important” work.

      “The sheer number of people who are dying whilst homeless, often avoidably, is a national scandal,” she said. “Museum of Homelessness will continue to honour these lives and we will work with our community to campaign for change as long as is necessary.”

      Matt Downie from Crisis said the Bureau’s work on the issue had achieved major impact. “As it comes to an end, it is difficult to overstate the importance of the Dying Homeless Project, which has shed new light on a subject that was ignored for too long,” he said. “It is an encouraging step that the ONS has begun to count these deaths and that the stories of those who have so tragically lost their lives will live on through the Museum of Homelessness.”

      The government has pledged to end rough sleeping by 2027, and has pledged £100m to try to achieve that goal, as part of an overall £1.2bn investment into tackling homelessness.

      “No one is meant to spend their lives on the streets, or without a home to call their own,” said Communities Secretary James Brokenshire. “Every death on our streets is too many and it is simply unacceptable to see lives cut short this way.”

      “I am also committed to ensuring independent reviews into the deaths of rough sleepers are conducted, where appropriate – and I will be holding local authorities to account in doing just that.”

      https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2019-03-11/homelessness-kills

      #statistiques #chiffres #mortalité

    • Homeless Link responds to Channel 4 report on homeless deaths

      Today, The Bureau Investigative of Journalism released figures that revealed almost 800 people who are homeless have died over the last 18 months, which is an average of 11 every week. The report also shows that a third (30%) of the homeless deaths were from treatable conditions that could have improved with the right medical care.
      Many other deaths in the study, beyond that third, were from causes like suicide and homicide.

      Responding Rick Henderson, Chief Executive of Homeless Link, said: “These figures bring to light the shocking inequalities that people who experience homelessness face. People are dying on our streets and a significant number of them are dying from treatable or preventable health conditions.

      “We must address the fact that homelessness is a key health inequality and one of the causes of premature death. People who are experiencing homelessness struggle to access our health services. Core services are often too exclusionary or inflexible for people who are homeless with multiple and complex needs. This means people aren’t able to access help when they need it, instead being forced to use A&E to “patch up” their conditions before being discharged back to the streets. Services need to be accessible, for example by expanding walk-in primary care clinics or offering longer GP appointment times to deal with people experiencing multiple needs. We also need to expand specialist health services for people who are homeless to stop people falling through the gaps.

      “This research also highlights the other causes of death that people who are homeless are more likely to experience. Research shows that people who are homeless are over nine times more likely to take their own life than the general population and 17 times more likely to be the victims of violence.

      “Homeless Link is calling on the Government in its upcoming Prevention Green Paper to focus on addressing these inequalities, start to tackle the structural causes of homelessness, and make sure everyone has an affordable, healthy and safe place to call home and the support they need to keep it.”

      https://www.homeless.org.uk/connect/news/2019/mar/11/homeless-link-responds-to-channel-4-report-on-homeless-deaths

  • Bientôt sur ARTE :
    #Interpol, une police sous influence

    Pour pallier un budget insuffisant, Interpol, la police mondiale, noue d’étranges partenariats avec des #multinationales (#Philip_Morris, #Sanofi...), des institutions accusées de corruption (la #Fifa), et des pays controversés (#Qatar, #Émirats_arabes_unis...). Une #enquête sidérante au cœur de la collusion public/privé.

    Interpol, la mythique #police mondiale, souffre d’un sous-financement chronique. Ses 192 États membres ne mettent pas suffisamment la main à la poche. En 2000, #Ron_Noble, son nouveau secrétaire général, de nationalité américaine – une première pour une institution qui, auparavant, puisait ses dirigeants dans le vivier européen –, lui fait prendre un virage à 180 degrés. Dans les médias, il martèle qu’il lui faut un milliard de dollars, au lieu des quelques dizaines de millions qui lui sont alloués. Mais les États font la sourde oreille. L’organisation se lance alors dans d’ahurissants partenariats public/privé avec des multinationales (Philip Morris International, Sanofi…), des institutions accusées de corruption (la Fifa), et encaisse les chèques mirobolants d’États controversés (Qatar, Émirats arabes unis…). Consacré à la lutte contre la cybercriminalité, le Complexe mondial pour l’innovation d’Interpol, inauguré en 2015, a ainsi vu son budget multiplié par cinq grâce à la « générosité » de Singapour (qui, jusqu’en 2009, figurait sur la liste des paradis fiscaux). Ce dernier a financé, à lui seul, la construction du bâtiment, érigé sur son territoire alors qu’il devait au départ se situer près du siège lyonnais d’Interpol. Ces financements influent sur les enquêtes de l’organisation, engendrant de graves conflits d’intérêts. Le successeur de Ron Noble, l’Allemand #Jürgen_Stock, arrivé en 2014, tente d’infléchir cette tendance, mais les interrogations demeurent.

    Opacité
    Pendant cinq ans, deux journalistes indépendants, l’un français, Mathieu Martiniere, l’autre allemand, Robert Schmidt, ont mené une enquête à quatre mains et sur trois continents sur l’Organisation internationale de police criminelle (Interpol). Rares sont en effet les médias invités à franchir ses grilles. Accompagné d’un commentaire limpide décortiquant l’enchevêtrement des intérêts publics et privés, le film s’appuie sur des images d’actualité, de nombreuses interviews de journalistes et de chercheurs, mais aussi d’anciens et actuels dirigeants d’Interpol. Il dresse ainsi un état des lieux de nos polices, à l’heure où la sécurité se privatise et où la cybercriminalité atteint un tel degré de technicité qu’elle contraint les agents à coopérer avec des entreprises. Au passage, le documentaire lève le voile sur quelques dérives : des notices rouges (les célèbres avis de recherche d’Interpol) instrumentalisées pour traquer des dissidents chinois ou turcs, une coopération insuffisante entre États membres… À travers le cas d’école d’Interpol, une plongée éclairante au cœur de la collusion entre pouvoirs économique, politique et régalien.


    https://www.cinema-comoedia.com/film/249533

    C’est encore les @wereport qui sont derrière cette enquête
     :-)

  • « Bad Banks », une Allemagne dévergondée
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/culture-idees/280218/bad-banks-une-allemagne-devergondee

    Dallas... ou #Wall_Street-sur-le-Main. © #Arte Arte diffuse en deux soirées, les 1er et 2 mars, la mini-série allemande #Bad_Banks, illustrant la plongée vertigineuse de la banque traditionnelle francfortoise, pilier du capitalisme rhénan, dans la finance mondialisée à la mode anglo-saxonne. Beaucoup d’adrénaline, à défaut de pédagogie.

    #Culture-Idées #banque_d'investissement #Billions #Christian_Schwochow #Deutsche_Bank #Liars_Poker #Paula_Beer #Philip_Augar #salle_de_marché #The_Big_Short

  • Au Benelux, de nouveaux venus bousculent le scrutin
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/310517/au-benelux-de-nouveaux-venus-bousculent-le-scrutin

    Sophie Rauszer en campagne à #Bruxelles, lors de la Belgian Pride, le 20 mai 2017. © @sophierauszer #Pieyre-Alexandre_Anglade, 30 ans (La République #En_marche), et #Sophie_Rauszer, 29 ans (La #France insoumise), bousculent l’offre politique aux #législatives pour les Français installés au Benelux. Un second tour les opposant n’est pas exclu, dans cette circonscription plus à gauche qu’il n’y paraît.

    #Belgique #Bénélux #insoumis #Luxembourg #Pays-Bas #Philip_Cordery #PS

  • Philip K. Dick : “Il y a toujours de très forts préjugés contre la SF”
    https://www.actualitte.com/video/philip-k-dick-il-y-a-toujours-de-tres-forts-prejuges-contre-la-sf/69964

    En 1977, Philip K. Dick, immense écrivain de science-fiction, est l’invité du Festival du livre de science-fiction de Metz : Yves Breux, François Luxereau et René Lubin en profitent alors pour interviewer celui qui n’est alors connu que par une poignée de lecteurs avertis...

    Au cours de cet entretien d’une vingtaine de minutes, Philip K. Dick aborde une large variété de sujets, à commencer par son statut d’écrivain de science-fiction aux États-Unis : à l’époque, le genre est encore déconsidéré, et traîne toujours « de très forts préjugés » souligne Philip K. Dick.

    Il aborde également l’anti-intellectualisme des Américains, ses romans préférés (Madame Bovary et Le Rouge et le Noir), la réception de ses livres en France ou encore... les fouilles dont son domicile était la cible, de la part du gouvernement américain, selon ses soupçons.

    Whaouh, une vidéo de Philip K. Dick pour cet interview resté célèbre.

    #SF #Philip_K_Dick

  • Paroles sans musique, Glass, Philip, Philharmonie de Paris, Rue Mus - Ecrit, 9791094642092 - Librairie Grangier
    https://www.librairie-grangier.com/livre/10421850-paroles-sans-musique-glass-philip-philharmonie-de-paris

    #Philip_Glass est doté d’une oreille extraordinairement réceptive aux nuances des mondes qu’il a traversés, comme aux évolutions musicales de son temps. Dans ce récit de vie à la première personne, les lieux marquent les souvenirs et font émerger des sonorités : le magasin de disques de son père à Baltimore, les clubs de be-bop à Chicago, la scène expérimentale à New York, les exercices d’« écoute » de Nadia Boulanger à Paris, l’intensité rythmique des concerts de Ravi Shankar… Sa formation musicale, la fréquentation d’artistes majeurs, mais aussi ses voyages, qui sont autant d’incursions dans les musiques indienne, himalayenne, africaine, sud-américaine, lui permettent d’inventer les outils nécessaires à la composition et font de lui un praticien hors du commun.

    Pas lu #livre

  • #Donald_Trump, entre réalité et fiction
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/culture-idees/060117/donald-trump-entre-realite-et-fiction

    Les #Simpson, « Bart dans l’avenir », 2000. Le documentariste Michael Moore n’est pas le seul à avoir prédit l’élection de Donald Trump : les Simpson aussi. Au-delà de l’effet de gag (tragique), la quête frénétique de préfigurations de Trump dans la pop culture américaine répond à une triple nécessité : comprendre d’où le phénomène vient, imaginer où il va, essayer de le combattre.

    #Culture-Idées #Octavia_E._Butler #Philip_K._Dick #Sinclair_Lewis #Star_Wars

  • La saillance et le discours sur le #relief

    Samia Ounoughi
    La saillance et le discours sur le relief [Texte intégral]
    Une introduction
    Salience and Relief-Related Discourse [Texte intégral | traduction]
    An introduction
    Aurélie Tremblet
    Du Sublime de la montagne chez #Philip_James_de_Loutherbourg et #Joseph_Mallord_William_Turner [Texte intégral]
    The Mountain Sublime of Philip James de Loutherbourg and Joseph Mallord William Turner [Texte intégral | traduction]
    Laurence Roussillon-Constanty
    La #topographie selon #Ruskin : saillance du visible et du lisible dans Modern Painters [Texte intégral]
    Of Ruskinian Topography : Visible and Legible Salience in Modern Painters [Texte intégral | traduction]
    André Dodeman
    L’ascension de l’artiste dans The Mountain and the Valley (1952) d’#Ernest_Buckler [Texte intégral]
    The Ascent of the Artist in Ernest Buckler’s The Mountain and the Valley (1952) [Texte intégral | traduction]
    Alexandra Baudinault
    « Relief » et « montagne » : les enseignants de l’école élémentaire confrontés à la mise en mots et en images de la saillance [Texte intégral]
    “Relief” and “Mountains” : Primary School Teachers Confronted with Discursive and Visual Framing of Salience [Texte intégral | traduction]
    Marie-Dominique Garnier
    Saillance et #cécité : parcours haptique sur le #Mont_Gins [Texte intégral]
    Sur HelenKeller Or Arakawa de Madeline Gins
    Salience and Blindness : A Haptic Hike on Gins Mountain [Texte intégral | traduction]
    A Reading of Madeline Gins’s Helen Keller or Arakawa

    http://rga.revues.org/3380
    #art #peinture
    #revue #Alpes #montagne

  • Who really won the legal battle between Philip Morris and Uruguay?
    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/jul/28/who-really-won-legal-battle-philip-morris-uruguay-cigarette-adverts

    The question however is for whom is the system working? In investment arbitration cases, states never win. States can never file lawsuits against investors, so the best-case scenario for them is if the tribunal dismisses the investor’s accusations.

    In this case, although #Philip_Morris was required to contribute $7m for legal costs, #Uruguay will still have to pay a further $2.6m in financial costs and much more in terms of the non-material resources it has taken to fight this.

    [...] The arbitration panel’s decision to hear the case put a brake on the adoption of similar tobacco control measures in Costa Rica, Paraguay and New Zealand, among others.

    Moreover, the lawsuit may have encouraged legal threats and actions by other corporations, hopeful that they could secure either revision of government policies or financial compensation.

    #arbitrage