• 21 euros : le prix d’un enfant ukrainien (déporté)

    420.000 euros. C’est la somme versée par le Kremlin à Maria Lvova-Belova pour organiser les déportations d’enfants ukrainiens, apprend-on dans les Kremlin Leaks qui viennent d’être révélés. Parmi les quelques-uns qui ont pu retourner en Ukraine, Sasha, Ilya et Kira viennent de témoigner lors d’une session privée aux Nations Unies. Les Kremlin Leaks jettent en outre une lumière crue sur les agissements de la Croix Rouge russe, contraires au droit humanitaire.

    https://www.leshumanites-media.com/post/21-euros-le-prix-d-un-enfant-ukrainien-déporté
    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/27/enfants-deportes-ou-sont-ils/#comment-60311

    #international #ukraine #russie

  • « Babi Yar. Contexte » de S Loznitsa, contribution fondamentale à la mémoire des Juifs d’Ukraine.

    Le dimanche 3 mars à 16h, l’UPJB projette le film de Sergei Loznitsa « Babi Yar. Contexte ». C’est un documentaire qui s’appuie de 10 ans de recherche dans les archives cinématographiques et qui permet de reconstituer la dynamique des événements qui ont produit le massacre le plus important de Juifs en Ukraine dans leur propre ville, Kiev. 33 771 personnes ont été assassinées à Babi Yar en deux jours : les 29 et 30 septembre 1941. A partir de 1948, la campagne antisémite du pouvoir stalinien a interdit toute commémoration de ce massacre.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/29/babi-yar-contexte-de-s-loznitsa-contribution-f

    #cinema #histoire #ukraine #juif

  • La violence sexuelle n’est pas un crime de guerre caché en Ukraine

    Travailler aux côtés d’enquêteurs/enquêtrices et de procureur··es sur des crimes sexuels et à caractère sexiste est une expérience horrible. Il s’agit d’écouter, de lire et d’entendre des récits de souffrances inimaginables dans des détails écœurants.

    Pour soutenir le travail du bureau du procureur général de l’Ukraine, des équipes mobiles de justice (EMJ) composées d’expert·es ukrainien·nes et internationaux ont été déployées dans tout le pays pour enquêter sur les crimes de guerre et les actes de violence sexuelle. Grâce à ces équipes, nous avons appris que des centaines de femmes et d’hommes, de filles et de garçons, de personnes âgées et de personnes handicapées de toute l’Ukraine sont hantés par les crimes sexuels commis à leur encontre par les forces russes.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/28/la-violence-sexuelle-nest-pas-un-crime-de-guer

    #international #ukraine #russie

    • Quand tu fais partie des 10 premières puissances mondiales et que seuls les riches peuvent se soigner correctement !!!

    • #sans-dent : la #macronisation était déjà « en marche » ...

      « Je suis à leur service, les plus humbles, les plus fragiles, les plus pauvres, c’est ma raison d’être. »
      « la fonction présidentielle doit être respectée. (...) Pas pour protéger la personne mais pour protéger nos institutions. »

      (François Hollande en réaction à la sortie de « Merci pour ce moment », livre de son ex-compagne Valérie Trierweiler)

      Je me souviens d’un soir, au sortir d’un repas de Noël passé chez ma mère, à Angers, avec tous mes frères et sœurs, les conjoints, neveux et nièces, vingt-cinq personnes en tout. François se tourne vers moi, avec un petit rire de mépris et me jette :

      – Elle n’est quand même pas jojo, la famille Massonneau…

      Cette phrase est une gifle. Des mois plus tard, elle me brûle encore. Comment François peut-il dire cela de ma propre famille ? « Pas jojo, la famille Massonneau » ? Elle est pourtant tellement typique de ses électeurs.

      J’ai longtemps hésité avant de raconter cette anecdote si révélatrice de ce qu’il est, qui va blesser les miens, eux qui étaient si heureux de le connaître et si fiers de le recevoir. Mais je veux me laver de tant de mensonges, sortir de ce livre sans le poids des non-dits.

      Je vous demande pardon, à vous ma famille, d’avoir aimé un homme capable de ricaner sur les « Massonneau pas jojo ». Je suis fière de vous. Pas un de mes frères et sœurs n’a dévié. Certains ont réussi, d’autres moins, mais nous savons tous tendre les bras et exprimer notre amour, les mots « famille » et « solidarité » ont un sens concret, alors que pour François, ce ne sont que des abstractions. Pas une seule fois il n’a invité son père à l’Élysée, ni son frère. Il se veut un destin hors norme, un Président orgueilleusement seul.

      Mais où faut-il donc être né pour être jojo ? C’est vrai, dans ma famille, personne n’a fait l’ENA ni HEC. Aucun d’entre nous n’a possédé de clinique, ni fait des affaires dans l’immobilier comme son père. Nul n’a de propriété à Mougins sur la Côte d’Azur comme lui. Personne n’est haut fonctionnaire ou célèbre comme les gens qu’il fréquente depuis la promotion Voltaire de l’ENA. Les Massonneau sont une famille de Français modestes. Modestes mais fiers de ce que nous sommes.
      Son expression tellement dédaigneuse me hante maintenant que le charme est rompu, que je suis désenvoûtée de son regard. Il s’est présenté comme l’homme qui n’aime pas les riches. En réalité, le Président n’aime pas les pauvres. Lui, l’homme de gauche, dit en privé « les sans-dents », très fier de son trait d’humour.

      (extrait du témoignage de Valérie Trierweiler née Massoneau)

  • Enfants déportés : où sont-ils ?

    Onze enfants de 2 à 16 ans, souffrant de maladies chroniques, viennent d’être rendus à l’Ukraine par la Russie, puissance prédatrice, qui délivre au compte-gouttes quelques-unes de ses proies. Mais plus de 19 000 enfants déportés restent hors des radars, malgré les efforts d’enquêteurs qui tentent de les localiser, et tombent sur de curieux profils de « parents adoptifs » : un politicien membre de la Douma, proche de Poutine, ou encore… un militaire qui aurait participé au massacre de Boucha ! Pour retrouver ces enfants volés par la Russie, dont l’identité a parfois été changée, s’engage une véritable course contre la montre.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/27/enfants-deportes-ou-sont-ils

    #international #ukraine #russie

  • Jury convicts #Ibrahima_Bah : Statement from Captain Support UK

    Following a three-week trial, Ibrahima Bah, a teenager from Senegal, has been convicted by an all-white jury at Canterbury Crown Court. The jury unanimously found him guilty of facilitating illegal entry to the UK, and by a 10-2 majority of manslaughter by gross negligence. This conviction followed a previous trial in July 2023 in which the jury could not reach a verdict.

    Ibrahima’s prosecution and conviction is a violent escalation in the persecution of migrants to ‘Stop the Boats’. Observing the trial has also made it clear to us how anti-black racism pervades the criminal ‘justice’ system in this country. The verdict rested on the jury’s interpretation of generic words with shifting meanings such as ‘reasonable’, ‘significant’, and ‘minimal’. Such vagueness invites subjective prejudice, in this case anti-black racist profiling. Ibrahima, a teenage survivor, was perceived in the eyes of many jurors to be older, more mature, more responsible, more threatening, with more agency, and thus as more ‘guilty’.
    Why Ibrahima was charged

    Ibrahima was arrested in December 2022 after the dinghy he was driving across the Channel broke apart next to the fishing vessel Arcturus. Four men are known to have drowned, and up to five are still missing at sea. The court heard the names of three of them: Allaji Ibrahima Ba, 18 years old from Guinea who had travelled with Ibrahima from Libya and who Ibrahima described as his brother; Hajratullah Ahmadi, from Afghanistan; and Moussa Conate, a 15 year old from Guinea.

    The jury, judge, defense, and prosecution agreed the shipwreck and resultant deaths had multiple factors. These included the poor construction of the boat, water ingress after a time at sea, and later everyone standing up to be rescued causing the floor of the dinghy ripping apart. A report by Alarm Phone and LIMINAL points to other contributing factors, including the lack of aerial surveillance, the failure of the French to launch a search and rescue operation when first informed of the dinghy’s distress, and the skipper of Arcturus’ delay in informing Dover Coastguard of the seriousness of the wreck. Nonetheless, the Kent jury has decided to exclusively punish a black teenaged survivor.

    What the jury heard

    Many of the other survivors, all of whom claimed asylum upon reaching the UK, testified that Ibrahima saved their lives. At the moment the dinghy got into danger, Ibrahima steered it towards the fishing vessel which rescued them. He was also shown holding a rope to keep the collapsed dinghy alongside the fishing vessel while others climbed onboard. One survivor told the court that Ibrahima “was an angel”.

    The story told by witnesses not on the dinghy contrasted greatly to that of the asylum seekers who survived. Ray Strachan, the captain of the shipping vessel Arcturus offered testimony which appeared particularly prejudiced. He described Ibrahima using racist tropes – “mouthy”, not grateful enough following rescue, and as behaving very unusually. He complained about the tone in which Ibrahima asked the crew to rescue his drowning friend Allaji, who Strachan could only describe as being “dark brown. What can you say nowadays? He wasn’t white.” Strachan also has spoken out in a GB News interview against what he considers to be the “migrant taxi service” in the Channel, and volunteered to the jury, “It wasn’t my decision to take them to Dover. I wanted to take them back to France.” This begs the question of whether Strachan’s clearly anti-migrant political opinions influenced his testimony in a way which he felt would help secure Ibrahima’s conviction. It also raises the question if jury members identified more with Strachan’s retelling than the Afghans who testified through interpreters, and to what extent they shared some of his convictions.

    When Ibrahima took the stand to testify in his defense he explained that he refused to drive the rubber inflatable after he was taken to the beach and saw its size compared to the number of people expecting to travel on it. He told how smugglers, who had organised the boat and had knives and a gun, then assaulted him and forced him to drive the dinghy. The other survivors corroborated his testimony and described the boat’s driver being beaten and forced onboard.

    The prosecutor, however, sought to discredit Ibrahima, cross-examining him for one-and-a-half days. He demonised Ibrahima and insisted that he was personally responsible for the deaths because he was driving. Ibrahima’s actions, which survivors testified saved their lives, were twisted into dangerous decisions. His experiences of being forced to drive the boat under threat of death, and following assault, were disbelieved. The witness stand became the scene of another interrogation, with the prosecutor picking over the details of Ibrahima’s previous statements for hours.

    Ibrahima’s account never waivered. Yes he drove the dinghy, he didn’t want to, he was forced to, and when they got into trouble he did everything in his power to save everybody on board.
    Free Ibrahima!

    We have been supporting, and will continue to support, Ibrahima as he faces his imprisonment at the hands of the racist and unjust UK border regime.

    This is a truly shocking decision.

    We call for everybody who shares our anger to protest the unjust conviction of Ibrahima Bah and to stand in solidarity with all those incarcerated and criminalised for seeking freedom of movement.

    https://captainsupport.net/jury-convicts-ibrahima-bah-statement-from-captain-support-uk

    #scafista #scafisti #UK #Angleterre #criminalisation_de_la_migration #migrations #réfugiés #procès #justice #condamnation #négligence #Stop_the_Boats #verdict #naufrage #responsabilité #Arcturus

    • “NO SUCH THING AS JUSTICE HERE”. THE CRIMINALISATION OF PEOPLE ARRIVING TO THE UK ON ‘SMALL BOATS’

      New research shows how people arriving on small boats are being imprisoned for their ‘illegal arrival’. Among those prosecuted are people seeking asylum, victims of trafficking and torture, and children with ongoing age disputes.

      This research provides broader context surrounding the imprisonment of Ibrahima Bah, a Senegalese teenager, who has recently been found ‘guilty’ of both facilitating illegal entry and manslaughter. He was sentenced to 9 years and 6 months imprisonment on Friday 23rd February. In their statement, Captain Support UK argue that “Ibrahima’s prosecution and conviction is a violent escalation in the persecution of migrants to ‘Stop the Boats’.”

      The research

      This report, published by the Centre for Criminology at the University of Oxford and Border Criminologies, shows how people have been imprisoned for their arrival on a ‘small boat’ since the Nationality and Borders Act (2022) came into force. It details the process from sea to prison, and explains how this policy is experienced by those affected. Analysis is based on observations of over 100 hearings where people seeking asylum were prosecuted for their own illegal arrival, or for facilitating the arrival of others through steering the dinghy they travelled on. The report is informed by the detailed casework experience of Humans for Rights Network, Captain Support UK and Refugee Legal Support. It also draws on data collected through Freedom of Information requests, and research interviews with lawyers, interpreters, and people who have been criminalised for crossing the Channel on a ‘small boat’.

      Background

      In late 2018, the number of people using dinghies to reach the UK from mainland Europe began to increase. Despite Government claims, alternative ‘safe and legal routes’ for accessing protection in the UK remain inaccessible to most people. There is no visa for ‘seeking asylum’, and humanitarian routes to the UK are very restricted. For many, irregular journeys by sea have become the only way to enter the UK to seek asylum, safety, and a better life.

      Soon after the number of people arriving on small boats started to increase, the Crown Prosecution Service began to charge those identified as steering the boats with the offences of ‘illegal entry’ or ‘facilitation’. These are offences within Section 24 and Section 25 of the Immigration Act 1971. However, in 2021, a series of successful appeals overturned these prosecutions. This was on the basis that if the people on a small boat intended to claim asylum at port, there was no breach of immigration law through attempted ‘illegal entry’. The Court of Appeal found that those who arrive by small boat and claim asylum do not enter illegally, as they are granted entry as an asylum seeker.

      In response, in June 2022, the Nationality and Borders Act expanded the scope of criminal offences relating to irregular arrival to the UK. First, the offence of ‘illegal arrival’ was introduced, with a maximum sentence of 4 years. Second, the offence of ‘facilitation’ was expanded to include circumstances in which ‘gain’ was difficult to prove, and the maximum sentence was increased from 14 years to life imprisonment. During Parliamentary debates, members of both Houses of Parliament warned that this would criminalise asylum seeking to the UK.

      Who has been prosecuted since the Nationality and Borders Act (2022)?

      New data shows that in the first year of implementation (June 2022 – June 2023), 240 people arriving on small boats were charged with ‘illegal arrival’ off small boats. While anyone arriving irregularly can now be arrested for ‘illegal arrival’, this research finds that in practice those prosecuted either:

      – Have an ‘immigration history’ in the UK, including having been identified as being in the country, or having attempted to arrive previously ( for example, through simply having applied for a visa), or,
      – Are identified as steering the dinghy they travelled in as it crossed the Channel.

      49 people were also charged with ‘facilitation’ in addition to ‘illegal arrival’ after allegedly being identified as having their ‘hand on the tiller’ at some point during the journey. At least two people were charged with ‘facilitation’ for bringing their children with them on the dinghy.

      In 2022, 1 person for every 10 boats was arrested for their alleged role in steering. In 2023, this was 1 for every 7 boats. People end up being spotted with their ‘hand on the tiller’ for many reasons, including having boating experience, steering in return for discounted passage, taking it in turns, or being under duress. Despite the Government’s rhetoric, both offences target people with no role in organised criminal gangs.

      The vast majority of those convicted of both ‘illegal arrival’ and ‘facilitation’ have ongoing asylum claims. Victims of torture and trafficking, as well as children with ongoing age disputes, have also been prosecuted. Those arrested include people from nationalities with a high asylum grant rate, including people from Sudan, South Sudan, Afghanistan, Iran, Eritrea, and Syria.

      Those imprisoned are distressed and harmed by their experiences in court and prison

      This research shows how court hearings were often complicated and delayed by issues with interpreters and faulty video link technology. Bail was routinely denied without proper consideration of each individual’s circumstances. Those accused were usually advised to plead guilty to ‘illegal arrival’ at the first opportunity to benefit from sentence reductions, however, this restricted the possibility of legal challenge.

      Imprisonment caused significant psychological and physical harm, which people said was particularly acute given their experiences of displacement. The majority of those arrested are imprisoned in HMP Elmley. They frequently reported not being able to access crucial services, including medical care, interpretation services including for key documents relating to their cases, contact with their solicitors, immigration advice, as well as work and English lessons. People shared their experiences of poor living conditions, inadequate food, and routine and frequent racist remarks and abuse from prison staff as ‘foreign nationals’.

      Children with age disputes are being imprisoned for their arrival on small boats

      Research (see, for example, here) by refugee support organisations has highlighted significant flaws in the Home Office’s age assessment processes in Dover, resulting in children being aged as adults, and treated as such. One consequence of this is that children with ongoing age disputes have been charged as adults with the offences of ‘illegal arrival’ and ‘facilitation’ for their alleged role in steering boats across the Channel.

      Humans for Rights Network has identified 15 age-disputed children who were wrongly treated as adults and charged with these new offences, with 14 spending time in adult prison. This is very likely to be an undercount. The Home Office fails to collect data on how many people with ongoing age disputes are convicted. These young people have all claimed asylum, and several claim (or have been found to be) survivors of torture and/or trafficking. The majority are Sudanese or South Sudanese, who have travelled to the UK via Libya.

      Throughout the entirety of the criminal process, responsibility lay with the child at every stage to reject their ‘given’ age and reassert that they are under 18. Despite this, the Courts generally relied on the Home Office’s ‘given age’, without recognition of evidence highlighting clear flaws in these initial age enquiries. Children who maintained that they were under 18 in official legal proceedings faced substantial delays to their cases, due to the time required by the relevant local authority to carry out an age assessment, and delays to the criminal process. Due to this inaction, several children have decided to be convicted and sentenced as adults to try to avoid spending additional time in prison.

      These young people have experienced serious psychological and physical harm in adult courts and prisons, raising serious questions around the practices of the Home Office, Border Force, Ministry of Justice, magistrates and Judges, the CPS, defence lawyers, and prison staff.

      Pour télécharger le rapport :
      Full report:https://blogs.law.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/2024-02/No%20such%20thing%20as%20justice%20here_for%20publication.pdf
      Summary : https://blogs.law.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/2024-02/SUMMARY_No%20such%20thing%20as%20justice%20here_for%20publication.pd

      https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/content/news/report-launch-no-such-thing-justice-here
      #rapport

    • Ibrahima Bah was sentenced to nine years for steering a ‘death trap’ dinghy across the Channel. Was he really to blame?

      The young asylum seeker was forced into piloting the boat on which at least four people drowned. Under new ‘stop the boats’ laws, he’s responsible for their deaths – but others say he’s a victim

      In the dock at Canterbury crown court, Ibrahima Bah listened closely as his interpreter told him he was being sentenced to nine years and six months in prison.

      In December 2022, Bah had steered an inflatable dinghy full of passengers seeking asylum in the UK across the Channel from France. The boat collapsed and four people were confirmed drowned – it is thought that at least one other went overboard, but no other bodies have yet been recovered.

      Bah’s conviction – four counts of gross negligence manslaughter and one of facilitating a breach of immigration law – is the first of its kind. The Home Office put out a triumphant tweet after his sentencing, with the word “JAILED” in capital letters above his mugshot. According to the government, Bah’s sentence is proof that it is achieving one of Rishi Sunak’s main priorities: to “Stop the Boats”. But human rights campaigners are less jubilant and fear his conviction will be far from the last.

      Of the 39 passengers who survived that perilous journey in December 2022, about a dozen were lone children. Bah is a young asylum seeker himself, from Senegal. The judge determined he is now 20; his birth certificate says he is 17. Either way, he was a teenager at the time of the crossing. So how did his dream of a new life in the UK end up here, in this courtroom, being convicted of multiple counts of manslaughter?

      As with so many asylum seekers, details about Bah’s life are hazy and complicated. He has had little opportunity to speak to people since he arrived in the UK because he has been behind bars. His older sister, Hassanatou Ba, who lives in Morocco, says the whole family is devastated by his imprisonment, especially their mother. Hassanatou says her brother – the only son in the family, and the only male after the death of their father – has always been focused on helping them all.

      “He is gentle, kind and respectful, and loves his family very much,” she says. “He always wanted to take care of all of us. He knew about the difficulties in our lives and wanted our problems to stop.”

      In court, the judge, Mr Justice Johnson KC, noted that Bah’s early upbringing was difficult and that he was subjected to child labour. His initial journey from Senegal was tough, too, as he travelled to the Gambia, then Mali (where the judge acknowledged he had been subjected to forced labour), Algeria and Libya before crossing the Mediterranean to reach Europe. The risk of drowning in a flimsy and overcrowded boat in the Mediterranean is extremely high, with more than 25,000 deaths or people missing during the crossing since 2014. The Immigration Enforcement Competent Authority found there were reasonable grounds to conclude Bah was a victim of modern slavery based on some of his experiences on his journey. He told the police the boat journey was “terrifying”, and took four days and four nights in an “overcrowded and unsuitable” vessel.

      Bah and his fellow travellers were rescued and taken to Sicily. From there, he travelled to France and met Allaji Ba, 18, from Guinea, who became his friend and who he has described as his “brother”. The pair spent five months in Bordeaux before travelling to Paris, then Calais, then Dunkirk, spending three months in an area known as the Jungle – a series of small, basic encampments. The refugees who live there are frequently uprooted by French police. The vast original Calais refugee encampment – also known as the Jungle – was destroyed in October 2016, but the camps still exist, albeit in more compact and makeshift forms. Some people have tents, while others sleep in the open air, whatever the weather.

      In the Jungle, Bah met a group of smugglers. He was unable to pay the going rate of about £2,000 for a space on a dinghy to come to the UK, so instead he agreed to steer the boat in exchange for free passage. Smugglers don’t drive boats themselves: they either offer the job to someone like Bah, who can’t afford to pay for their passage; force a passenger to steer; or leave it to the group to share the task between them.

      When Bah saw how unseaworthy and overcrowded the boat was, he refused to pilot it, and in court, the judge accepted there was a degree of coercion by the smugglers. Bah said smugglers with a knife and a gun assaulted him, and other survivors corroborated his account of being beaten after refusing to board the boat.

      Once the dinghy was afloat, survivors have said the situation became increasingly terrifying. Out at sea, under a pitch black sky, the dinghy began taking in water up to knee level. It was when the passengers saw a fishing vessel, Arcturus, that catastrophe struck, with some standing up, hoping that at last they were going to be saved from what they believed was certain drowning.

      At Bah’s trial, witnesses gave evidence about his efforts to save lives by manoeuvring the stricken dinghy towards the fishing trawler, so that people could be rescued.

      One witness said that if it hadn’t been for Bah, everyone on board would have drowned. “He was trying his best,” he said. Another survivor called him an “angel” for his efforts to save lives, holding a rope so others could be hoisted to safety on the fishing vessel and putting the welfare of others first. The judge acknowledged that Bah was one of the last to leave the dinghy and tried to help others after he did so, including his friend Ba, “who tragically died before your eyes”.

      The dinghy was described by the judge as a “death trap”; he also recognised that the primary responsibility for what happened that night rests with the criminal gangs who exploit and endanger those who wish to come to the UK. He noted that Bah was “significantly less culpable” than the gangs and did not coerce other passengers or organise the trip.

      “Everything that has happened to Ibrahima since he was forced to drive the boat in 2022 has been bad luck,” says Hassanatou. “In fact, Ibrahima’s whole journey has been suffering on top of suffering.”

      Had Bah made the journey just a few months earlier, he would not be in this courtroom today. His conviction was made possible by recent changes in the law – part of the Conservative government’s clampdown on small boats. In June 2022, the Nationality and Borders Act (NABA) expanded the scope of criminal offences relating to irregular arrival to the UK. The offence of “illegal arrival” was introduced, with a maximum sentence of four years. This criminalises the act of arriving in the UK to claim asylum – and effectively makes claiming asylum impossible since, by law, you have to be physically in the country to make a claim.

      At the same time, the pre-existing offence of “facilitation” – making it possible for others to claim asylum by piloting a dinghy, for example – was expanded, with the maximum sentence increased from 14 years to life imprisonment. Hundreds of people, including children and victims of torture and smuggling, have subsequently been jailed for the first offence and a handful for the second.

      The reasons Bah and thousands of others are forced into this particularly deadly form of Russian roulette on the Channel is due to government policy not to provide safe and legal routes for those who are fleeing persecution. Last year, the government went further than NABA with the Illegal Migration Act, making any asylum claim by someone arriving by an “irregular” means, such as on a small boat, inadmissible. It is hard to overstate the significance of this change. The right to claim asylum was enshrined in the 1951 Geneva Convention after the horrors of the second world war – and has saved many lives. The UK is still signed up to that convention, but the Illegal Migration Act now makes it almost impossible to exercise that essential right, and has been strongly criticised by the UN.

      None of these legal changes are stopping the boats. Although the number of Channel crossings fell by 36% last year, much of that reduction was due to 90% fewer crossings by Albanians (there had been a spike in the numbers of Albanians coming over in 2022). Those fleeing conflict zones are still crossing in large numbers, and according to a report by the NGO Alarm Phone, measures introduced to stop the boats are likely to have increased the number of Channel drownings.

      Most asylum seekers do not seek sanctuary in the UK but instead head to the nearest safe country. Those who do come here often have family in the UK, or speak English. The decisions people make before stepping into a precarious dinghy on a beach in northern France are not a result of nuanced calculations based on the latest law to pass through parliament. “I come or I die,” one Syrian asylum seeker told me recently, when I asked about his decision to make a high-risk boat crossing after experiencing torture in his home country.

      Some lawyers who have followed Bah’s case and the broader implications of the new legislation are worried about these developments. “There is now no legal way to claim asylum,” one lawyer says.

      “The use of manslaughter in these circumstances is completely novel and demonstrates how pernicious the new laws are. It is the most vulnerable who end up piloting the boats and asylum seekers have no knowledge that the law has changed.”

      Bah’s case has also caused consternation among campaigners. “The conviction of Ibrahima Bah demonstrates a violent escalation in the prosecution of people for the way in which they arrive in the UK,” reads a joint statement from Humans for Rights Network and Refugee Legal Support, two of the organisations supporting Bah. They also point out that Bah had already spent 14 months in prison without knowing how long he would remain there, after a previous trial against him last year collapsed when the jury failed to reach a verdict.

      “He too is a survivor of the shipwreck he experienced in December 2022,” the statement continues. “Imprisonment has severely impacted his mental health and will continue to do so while he is incarcerated. Ibrahima navigated a horrific journey to the UK in the hope of finding safety here through the only means available to him and yet he has been punished for the deaths of others seeking the same thing, sanctuary.”

      The organisation Captain Support is helping 175 people who face prosecution as a result of the new laws to find legal representation. A letter-writing campaign calling for Bah to be freed has been launched.

      Hassanatou says she is struggling to comprehend the UK’s harsh laws towards people like her little brother, and she fears his age will make it particularly difficult for him to cope behind bars. He will be expected to serve two-thirds of his sentence in custody, first in a young offenders’ institute and then in an adult jail.

      In his sentencing remarks the judge said to Bah: “This is also a tragedy for you. Your dream of starting a new life in the UK is in tatters.”

      https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/mar/12/ibrahima-bah-teenage-asylum-seeker-manslaughter

  • Human rights monitors: new UK-Frontex agreement risks “axis of abuse”

    Charities on both sides of the English Channel have hit out at the new cooperation agreement between EU border agency Frontex and UK authorities signed in London today between UK officials and EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson; citing human rights scandals surrounding both organisations and an enforcement approach that is “flawed from conception.”

    - The “integrated border management” between countries described in today’s deal has had serious consequences. Frontex was recently found (https://www.lighthousereports.com/investigation/frontex-and-the-pirate-ship) to be systematically sharing the coordinates of Mediterranean boats in distress with militias and pirates that return people crossing to conditions of abuse and violence.
    - This news came over a year on from the forced resignation of its former director (now a European Parliament candidate for the French far-right National Rally) over the agency’s complicity and cover-ups in Greece’s deadly border campaign, which was supposed to herald a culture change.
    - The number of UK border drownings has doubled in the past year, which rescue NGO Alarmphone says is linked to Anglo-French border policy (https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/jan/29/uk-france-small-boats-pact-doubling-drownings-directly-linked). UK and French authorities have faced allegations of serious shortcomings in responding to Channel shipwrecks.
    - Meanwhile the UK continues to attempt to undermine its own courts and international refugee law with its plans to outsource its asylum processes to Rwanda, and its abuse-ridden detention estate is widely documented.

    Quotes from organisations responding to the move can be found below.

    Michele LeVoy, Director of the Brussels-based Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants (PICUM), said:

    “Frontex is signing this new agreement with the UK border forces after countless reports of complicity by the EU agency in serious violence.”

    “The plan is flawed from conception. Tougher enforcement does not reduce irregular crossings; it only makes people’s journeys more dangerous. These resources should instead be used to provide safe routes and proper support for people seeking safety.”

    Mary Atkinson, Campaigns and Networks Manager at the London-based Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, said:

    “People move – they always have and always will. It’s something we should welcome, not something which needs to be ‘tackled’ or ‘cracked down’ upon. We urgently need change so that people can move without risking – and too often losing – their lives.

    “This latest development is just more of the same tired old thinking. Making our borders more violent has never stopped those in need from coming here and all these measures will do is make it more dangerous. The government needs to wake up and accept that ‘deterrents’ never have – and never will – work. Instead, we need to listen to the evidence and develop policies that prioritise people’s safety and human rights.”

    A spokesperson for Calais-based Human Rights Observers said:

    “Frontex, the EU’s biggest agency, which squanders European taxpayers’ money by massively violating human rights, is preparing to land on the French-British border. With at least 28 people killed by the murderous border policies of France and the UK in 2023, the presence of Frontex would only increase the insecurity of people seeking protection.”

    Josephine Valeske at Europe-wide campaign Abolish Frontex said:

    “UK border policy has seen deaths by drowning double in the last year, and its government continues to insist on violating both UK and international law by deporting people seeking asylum to Rwanda.”

    “Frontex claims to have made progress on rights – but joining the UK for its new so-called “crackdown” on migration shows that nothing has changed. The EU cannot claim to defend human rights while Frontex continues to exist, and expand a European axis of abuse, at our expense.”

    https://picum.org/blog/human-rights-monitors-new-uk-frontex-agreement-risks-axis-of-abuse

    #Frontex #Manche #La_Manche #migrations #réfugiés #contrôles_frontaliers #UK #Angleterre #accord #coopération #frontières #Calais #France

  • Ukraine : 7 conclusions pour un 24 février

    Le point de vue d’un socialiste ukrainien

    1. L’Ukraine a prouvé que sans l’adhésion à l’OTAN, il est possible de résister à la Russie, la puissance impériale la plus militariste de notre époque. Il s’agit d’un témoignage vivant de l’indépendance et du dévouement du peuple ukrainien, en particulier des forces armées ukrainiennes. Poutine s’est lui-même enfoncé dans un piège et il lui est impossible d’en sortir sans une dégradation encore plus grande de la société [russe] dans le sens du fascisme. Nous avons survécu grâce à une solidarité sans précédent, et la perspective de la victoire dépend de sa poursuite au niveau mondial. Mais pour passer à une nouvelle étape, le caractère national de la guerre doit être complété par la prise de mesures socialistes par l’État ukrainien.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/26/ukraine-7-conclusions-pour-un-24-fevrier

    #international #ukraine

  • Nigerian students who fled war in Ukraine are being told to leave Europe

    Overseas students in Ukraine were granted a two-year stay in the EU when Russia invaded. Now their time is running out

    Olabisi* was out to get groceries during her post-graduate clinical rotations at the Ivano-Frankivsk National Medical University in western Ukraine on the morning of 24 February 2022 when she heard loud bangs. Then came breaking news alerts: Russia was invading Ukraine. She rushed home to pack a few belongings.

    “In the course of moving, I lost my certificates and even my passport,” she said.

    She headed towards the border between Ukraine and Romania with hundreds of thousands of others. Thankfully, with her Ukrainian ID card, she was allowed passage. From Romania, she travelled by train to the Netherlands, along with other students whose lives had just been uprooted.

    Olabisi chose the Netherlands because – like a number of western European countries – it had announced plans to take in people displaced from the Ukraine war, and she had heard it was cheaper and more welcoming than others.

    In 2022, the European Union activated a rule called a Temporary Protection Directive, granting those fleeing war a stay for up to two years – until March 4, 2024. In mid 2023, the Netherlands decided that non-Ukrainian citizens or “third world nationals with temporary residence” must leave a year earlier than previously announced. They – most of them students – brought a collective case against the Dutch government insisting that they be allowed to stay the allotted time. The Council of State, the Netherlands’ highest administrative court, agreed.

    But now time is running out for Olabisi and those like her. Roughly 2,200 people from different nationalities are said to be affected. (Students interviewed for this story say they prefer their luck in Europe over the option of returning to Nigeria, where they consider the academic system sub-par and prone to interruptions.)

    Olabisi is one of an estimated 4,000 Nigerian students who had been studying in Ukraine before the war. The eastern European country had attracted African students, particularly medical students, partly due to the relatively low costs of studying and partly as a product of student exchange programmes dating back to the former Soviet Union’s investment in African countries.

    Olabisi and other students say that, to make matters worse, the Nigerian government has not adequately intervened via its embassies to help them.

    They say Nigeria has left them in limbo, just as it did with the 1,625 Nigerian students in Ukraine who were finally evacuated to Nigeria in July 2022, four and a half months after the war broke out.
    Nigerian diplomats missing in action, in Europe?

    The Nigerian mission in the Netherlands disputes this. Eniola Ajayi, Nigeria’s ambassador to The Hague, told openDemocracy: “All the reprieve that students got in the Netherlands was due to my efforts… I have helped them as much as is possible within my capacity. This is the truth.”

    The embassy claimed the mission housed some “families at the Guest Chalet of [Ajayi’s] Residence until they were able to get alternative accommodation” and cash assistance was given to others. The embassy also mentioned the case of a depressed student who was sent back to Nigeria for medical treatment.

    The mission said it had given Nigerian nationals ample notice of the Dutch government’s intentions. To stay beyond the March 2024 deadline, the Dutch government has advised students to either seek asylum if they could prove their lives would be at risk back home, or accept an independent offer of 5,000 euros to return there.

    Olabisi does not qualify for asylum as her life is not at risk in Nigeria but she doesn’t want to return to the country she left since she was 17. Now 30, she cannot imagine rebuilding her life again, especially as Nigeria experiences a steep economic decline.

    Nigerian government, still missing in action

    While the Nigerian government backs the return of students who are currently abroad, there is no safety net for those who do so, the students claim.

    Wasiu Sidiq, 21, was studying at Lviv National Medical University when the war broke out and he was evacuated. When he returned to Nigeria, he attempted to continue his studies remotely – but stopped when the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria said it would not recognise medical certificates issued for online study.

    The government claimed it was providing an option for the evacuated students to continue their education in Nigerian universities instead. The Foreign Affairs Ministry published a call-out on its website asking concerned students to register towards being placed locally – but the website link never worked and no students could register.

    Sidiq, frustrated, decided to return to Europe, where he headed for Lisbon and is currently working in customer services for 890 euros a month. He tried to start uni there, but does not speak Portuguese and so has been unable to.

    “If I don’t go to work, I cannot eat or pay my rent,” he said. “So I don’t have the time to go to the language class. All of us are just doing that.”

    Sidiq claims students have tried to contact the Nigerian embassy in Lisbon for assistance with resettlement and negotiations on residence permits.

    “They have not responded to us at all,” he said. “The embassy is not working. I have to leave Portugal to go and renew my passport.”

    openDemocracy approached the Nigerian embassy in Lisbon for comment. A consular assistant insisted the embassy could only respond in person, in a physical meeting. Written questions and requests for a virtual meeting were ignored. Repeated requests were also made to Aminu Tanko, head of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora and the Abuja office of the Nigerian in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM). The latter promised a response that did not come.

    Consular failures, according to John Osuntokun, a professor and former Nigerian ambassador to Germany, are largely due to lack of priority.

    “It is a large country and there are so many issues waiting for attention and this situation is going to be the least important to them,” he said. “My advice to them will be to come home.”

    Osuntokun said standard practice is for complaints from Nigeria’s foreign missions to be relayed to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for advice.

    Asked if the ministry had received any such requests from the embassy, the foreign ministry spokesperson told openDemocracy: “The ministry has not received any such complaints.”

    Two years into the war and with fate hanging in the balance, experts believe there is little the embassies can offer now. “Consular services are not services that provide long-term solutions; they are supposed to provide immediate help and assistance,” said Matthew Ayibakuro, a governance adviser at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in Nigeria.

    https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/nigerian-students-who-fled-war-in-ukraine-are-being-told-to-leave-eur

    #étudiants #Ukraine #guerre #guerre_en_Ukraine #réfugiés_ukrainiens #réfugiés_d'Ukraine #Nigeria #Europe #étudiants_nigérians

    –--------

    ajouté à ce fil de discussion:
    Non-white refugees fleeing Ukraine detained in EU immigration facilities
    https://seenthis.net/messages/954460

  • Despair and anger in a concentration camp. Assembly’s interview on the second anniversary of big war in #Ukraine
    https://libcom.org/article/despair-and-anger-concentration-camp-assemblys-interview-second-anniversary-

    3. From the very beginning, your political work and agitation was strongly focused on facilitating desertion and anti-war boycotts. How has this work changed in the last year?

    – Not really. The Assembly is an online newsletter, and if we can help the deserters in any way, then only by giving them a political justification for their acts, so that they do not suffer from remorse, but are proud of their refusal to choose between serving either Vladolf Putler or François Zevalier, personifications of the darkest reaction that only possible in today’s Europe, refusal to choose between the occupying colonial expedition and the defense of what has been grabbed by the Ukrainian ruling class since 1991. Help to deserters is being provided by the Russian liberal initiative Go to the Forest, which has dozens of volunteers and much more experienced organizers than us (By the way, the number of requests to them is growing rapidly: if for the entire 2023 they gave 727 consultations on desertion issues and provided assistance in this matter 235 times, in January 2024 alone – already 161 consultations and 35 assistance provisions, at that such stories usually take place precisely in borderland of our region with Donbass, where the majority of Russian mobilized soldiers serve). We are in contact with them and share their information, but it is impossible to do the same in Ukraine due to the much smaller size of the country (that means a higher likelihood of catching the one who has escaped from a unit) and a ban on departure even for men who are not serving in the army. That’s why we only strive to become some kind of ideological core for those who do not want to fight (not only military but also civilians), in order that this is not just a manifestation for their self-preservation instinct, but a conscious position – disagreement to kill and to die for other’s villas and yachts. Even adherents of pro-Ukrainian positions already often understand that there are no other options: last year convincingly showed that if Russian troops do not leave the occupied territories themselves, the Ukrainian army also will not be able to drive them out, so this will yield nothing except meaningless disposal people. Since there is no reason to believe that the Kremlin is preparing to surrender them, hope remains for processes from below. Soldiers should understand that the real enemy is not on the other side of the trenches, but on the other side of the fence around the administrative buildings.

  • Veteranka

    Fin 2023, près de deux ans mois après l’invasion russe, on décomptait 60 000 femmes dans les forces armées ukrainiennes. Plus de 42 000 d’entre elles occupent des postes militaires, 5000 se trouvent sur la ligne de front, selon le ministère de la défense.
    L’association Veteranka défend les droits de ces femmes soldates, qui sont confrontées non seulement à des discriminations de genre, mais aussi à un manque de dispositifs adaptés lorsqu’elles quittent temporairement ou définitivement l’armée.
    Les dispositions prévues pour les anciens combat- tants hommes ne répondent pas souvent aux besoins spécifiques des femmes, tels que des soins de santé mentale et physique. Outre les tensions liées à la guerre et au combat, un nombre considérable de sol- dates revenant du front doivent faire face à la perte de parents masculins, au déplacement simultané de leur famille et aux difficultés psychosociales et économiques qui en résultent. En outre, elles sont exposées aux menaces de violences sexuelles liées à leur engagement – par exemple, lorsqu’elles sont capturées et détenues comme prisonnières de guerre.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/19/pour-une-paix-juste-et-durable-solidarite-avec-la-resistance-des-travailleuses-et-travailleurs-ukrainiens/#comment-60273

    #international #ukraine

  • Pour les ouvriers-soldats qui déminent en Ukraine

    Les mineurs des mines d’uranium, membres du Syndicat des mineurs indépendants d’Ukraine (NPGU), ont besoin de solidarité internationale en raison de la situation difficile et du manque de ressources dans les zones de première ligne en Ukraine !

    Deux ans après le début d’une invasion russe à grande échelle de l’Ukraine, la classe ouvrière organisée de ce pays déchiré par la guerre poursuit sa résistance armée dans les rangs des forces armées ukrainiennes, tandis que ceux qui restent dans la vie civile organisent toute laide et le soutien possibles pour leurs camarades.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/21/triste-anniversaire-les-mots-de-lan-iii/#comment-60270

    #international #ukraine

  • Aider l’Ukraine, c’est nous aider

    La seule paix durable, qui garantisse la sécurité de l’Europe, c’est la défaite de l’agresseur russe en Ukraine. À l’initiative du collectif Ukraine CombArt, une tribune en soutien de la résistance ukrainienne.

    Plusieurs d’entre nous ont travaillé ou vécu en Ukraine. Nous y avons des proches, tou·te·s engagé·e·s dans la résistance civile ou militaire. C’est aussi en leur nom que nous prenons la parole pour vous dire : le temps presse, venez marcher avec nous le 24 février prochain.
    Troisième année de l’invasion russe à grande échelle destinée à mettre le pays à genoux et l’Ukraine ne plie pas, déjouant les pronostics qui l’annonçaient défaite en quelques jours, soudant ukrainophones et russophones dans la défense d’une nation commune. Malgré le bombardement des populations civiles et la destruction des infrastructures énergétiques. Malgré les crimes de guerre qui s’amplifient : tortures et viols de masse, déportations de dizaine de milliers d’enfants russifiés de force. Malgré un écocide majeur et la transformation de l’Ukraine en pays le plus miné au monde.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/19/pour-une-paix-juste-et-durable-solidarite-avec-la-resistance-des-travailleuses-et-travailleurs-ukrainiens/#comment-60269

    #international #ukraine

    • 24 de febrièr de 2022
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcjxm2_6daQ&t=58s

      Tout commence avec « 24 de Febrièr de 2022 », le 24 février 2022, début de l’invasion de l’Ukraine par la Russie. On ressent distinctement le bruit des bottes dans cette chanson, grâce à la frappe puissante de la batterie de Dimitri. Le chant joue avec les blessures de l’âme slave en occitan. “Ce jour-là, je me suis dit, s’il y avait la guerre, je n’irais pas, et pourtant mon cœur me demande de défendre la démocratie – que se passe-t-il le jour où tu te réveilles en guerre ?” explique Paulin.

      –-

      Al fons de ieu aquesta colèra
      Que tòrna pus fòrt a cada còp
      A las oras de silenci sul front.
      Aquesta alba serà la darrièra
      Sèm totes perduts dins aquela guèrra.
      Menaçavan la mia tèrra
      Dintrèri dins la lor guèrra
      Auriái tan aimat
      Causir l’umanitat
      L’umanitat.
      Ven l’alba guerrièra
      Amb la claror del jorn, lo bruch del sang.
      Lèu la canonada
      Mossegarà dins la carn
      Los umans
      Camaradas fraires
      Se prenètz las armas per quin combat
      que siá
      Nomenaretz la mòrt
      Per capitani
      De deman
      Auriái tant aimat
      Causir l’umanitat

      #guerre_en_Ukraine #Ukraine #guerre #chanson #chanson_et_politique #chanson #occitan #22_février_2022

  • Appel des étudiants de Lviv

    Chers étudiants étrangers, nous sommes étudiants de l’Académie ukrainienne de l’imprimerie et nous appelons à votre soutien.

    Le ministère de l’Éducation et des Sciences de l’Ukraine a dévoilé un plan napoléonien visant à fusionner un certain nombre d’établissements d’enseignement supérieur ukrainiens de différentes régions du pays. Ces données à elles seules sont inquiétantes et montrent la montée en puissance autoritaire du ministère de l’Éducation et des Sciences (la liste a été présentée non pas lors de discussions publiques avec des étudiants de différentes universités, mais lors d’un à huis clos avec les recteurs).

    Les soi-disant « fusions » désignent la liquidation effective des établissements d’enseignement, sans garantie que le personnel enseignant, les locaux et les dortoirs soient préservés. En fait, ce n’est qu’un moyen pour le gouvernement de réduire les coûts de l’éducation. Ces mesures ne garantissent pas non plus la préservation des spécialités et des programmes universitaires.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/23/appel-des-etudiants-de-lviv

    #international #ukraine

  • Tristan Leoni - En #Ukraine, des anarchistes sous l’uniforme ?
    https://ddt21.noblogs.org/?page_id=3572

    On le voit, ces textes de référence, qui dénoncent les « tendances autoritaires de notre société » et insistent sur la défense des animaux et la lutte contre le changement climatique, ne s’embarrassent d’aucun des mantras d’une prose anarchiste classique contre le capitalisme, l’armée ou l’État (encore moins contre la démocratie) ; y domine au contraire une très pragmatique vision du changement social que l’on pourrait qualifier de social-démocrate, teintée de thèmes politiques à la mode. L’évocation de « valeurs antiautoritaires » est suffisamment vague pour plaire de nos jours à nombre de militants et sympathisants d’extrême gauche, altermondialistes ou écologistes. En fait, au-delà d’un flou idéologique apparent, les positionnements du groupe, les textes et les témoignages ou bien encore le profil des combattants montrent que, s’il s’y trouve une cohérence politique, elle ne relève pas de l’anarchisme mais, plus banalement, de l’antifascisme, de cette volonté de participer à un front interclassiste et transpartisan pour la défense de la démocratie ukrainienne contre le danger autoritaire russe ‒ une union sacrée qui repousse à une période indéterminée (la paix) toute autre lutte… alors que le gouvernement profite, lui, du conflit pour attaquer les syndicats et accélérer le démantèlement de l’état social ukrainien. La guerre étant uniquement perçue comme une confrontation idéologique et morale, le fait que l’Ukraine soit le terrain d’enjeux économiques majeurs et contradictoires entre Russie, Union européenne et États-Unis, ou bien encore que les prolétaires russes et ukrainiens n’aient pas les mêmes intérêts que leurs bourgeoisies respectives, semble pour les auteurs tout bonnement impensable ; il est vrai que prendre un peu de hauteur peut parfois s’avérer dérangeant.

  • Hanna Perekhoda : Ukraine AN III
    Des élu(e)s de gauche appellent à soutenir pleinement l’Ukraine à l’occasion du deuxième anniversaire de l’invasion russe
    Les élu(e)s de la gauche québécoise et le droit à l’autodétermination... des ukrainien.nes : un appel à la solidarité

    La guerre russe en Ukraine entre dans sa troisième année, et rien n’indique que Poutine ait changé son objectif initial, à savoir le démantèlement total de l’État ukrainien. En Occident, nombreux sont celles et ceux qui s’impatientent, évoquant la perspective que l’Ukraine doive céder des « terres » (et les personnes qui y vivent) en échange de la « paix ».

    La fatigue de la guerre en Ukraine s’accroît en Occident, affirment les médias. Mais personne n’est plus fatigué·e de cette guerre que les Ukrainien·nes elles·eux-mêmes. Des dizaines de villes et des milliers de villages sont rasés. Des centaines de milliers de personnes, notamment des enfants, ont été déportées de force en Russie. Des millions de personnes ont dû fuir l’Ukraine et beaucoup d’autres ont été déplacées à l’intérieur du pays.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/22/ukraine-an-iii

    #international #ukraine

  • Triste anniversaire + Les mots de l’an III

    Les Cahiers de l’antidote : Soutien à l’Ukraine résistante (Volume 27)

    Terrible anniversaire que celui de l’invasion impérialiste des troupes de Poutine. Deux ans de bombardements quotidiens. Deux ans de destruction des infrastructures du pays. Deux ans de rapts et de déportation d’enfants. Deux ans de viols comme stratégie de guerre. Deux ans d’un écocide ravageant le plus vaste territoire d’Europe. Deux ans de massacres de civils et de militaires. Deux ans de crimes de guerre et de crimes contre l’humanité.

    Et pourtant l’Ukraine tient bon. Appuyée sur la formidable résistance de tout un peuple, l’armée a pu reprendre des territoires autour de Kherson et sécuriser le transport en mer Noire en obligeant la flotte russe à se replier.

    À la verticale autocratique du pouvoir poutinien répondent, en Ukraine, des formes multiples d’auto-organisation à la base (mobilisation de volontaires, associations de défense des droits civils, syndicats indépendants, mouvements féministes, notamment) qui témoignent de la capacité d’initiative de la population ukrainienne et soudent son unité.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/21/triste-anniversaire-les-mots-de-lan-iii

    #international #ukraine

  • Complicit of data surveillance tools? Bordering and education data tracking tools

    The University of #Sheffield has recently introduced an attendance monitoring app which tracks the location of students. Attendance monitoring was introduced in UK universities in order to fulfill the requirements around international student monitoring for the purposes of Home Office visa issuing status. While attendance monitoring, now in app form, is couched in the language of student wellbeing, monitoring and now tracking actually reflect the imperatives of government immigration monitoring.

    https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/migration-research-group/events/complicit-data-surveillance-tools-bordering-and-education-data-tracking
    #université #UK #Angleterre #frontières #surveillance #contrôles_frontaliers #Home_Office #app #hostile_environment #visas #géolocalisation #étudiants_étrangers #complicité

    • New tools available to support attendance monitoring

      New tools to support staff with attendance monitoring - following a successful pilot scheme - are being made available in the Faculty of Science.

      Staff across the Faculty will begin to use two tools to support attendance monitoring following a successful pilot undertaken in the previous academic year.

      The tools will support departments to efficiently collect attendance data in a transparent way that complies with UKVI and GDPR requirements, and supports greater consistency in the student experience across the University.

      The Digital Register app (used by students for data collection) will be supported by a new Attendance and Engagement Dashboard which shows - at a glance- where there may be attendance concerns, so that appropriate support can be offered to students.

      Dr Thomas Anderson, Director of Education in Chemistry, said: "It has been transformative for our administrative team in checking attendance of international students which they need to report for visa reasons - avoiding a great deal of paperwork and dealing with personal tutors directly. This has saved a significant amount of staff time.

      “The system has been excellent for easily being able to identify students at-a-glance who are serial non-attenders, allowing us to intervene before their situation becomes irrevocable.”

      More information about the tools are available on the web support pages. An online demo is also available that lasts just over two minutes.

      In preparation for teaching in semester one, lecturers should download the iSheffield app from the Apple App Store or Google Play store and look for the check in tile. Before each teaching event, a six-digit code will be accessible that lecturers will need to share with students. Students will then input this code into their sheffield app to register their attendance at their event.

      Jo Marriott, Deputy Faculty Director of Operations in the Faculty of Science, is overseeing the implementation of the tools in our departments and is keen to hear about your experiences as we move over to this new way of attendance monitoring. Questions, and details of any challenges you face, can also be directed to the wider development team at StudentProductTeam@sheffield.ac.uk

      https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/science/news/new-tools-available-support-attendance-monitoring

  • Pour une paix juste et durable : Solidarité avec la résistance des travailleuses et travailleurs ukrainiens !

    Le 24 février 2022 Vladimir Poutine ordonnait l’invasion à grande échelle de l’Ukraine donnant un coup d’accélérateur à la destruction et au dépeçage de ce pays qu’il a entrepris depuis 2014 avec l’annexion de la Crimée et de la déstabilisation du Donbass.

    Ses espoirs de remporter une victoire éclair étant brisés par la résistance du peuple ukrainien, Vladimir Poutine s’est alors engagé dans une guerre d’usure où tous les coups sont permis en violation du droit international humanitaire et des droits de l’homme.

    Les conséquences économiques de cette guerre se font sentir partout dans le monde, alternativement menacé d’embrasement nucléaire, de catastrophe environnementale, d’inflation galopante, notamment sur les prix de l’énergie, ou de famine céréalière. La vie de centaines de millions de personnes a ainsi été bouleversée par le choix tragique de Poutine de réinviter la guerre à grande échelle sur le sol européen.

    En Russie et au Bélarus, la répression musèle les voix de celles et ceux qui dénoncent la guerre et le totalitarisme de Poutine et de Loukachenko. Le mouvement syndical indépendant du Belarus est anéanti, ses responsables ont écopé de lourdes peines de prison, des rafles ont encore eu lieu dans les usines du pays fin 2023.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/19/pour-une-paix-juste-et-durable-solidarite-avec

    #international #ukraine #russie #belarus

  • Guerre en Ukraine  : Violent incident en Norvège : quatre militaires belges arrêtés dans un pub

    Quatre soldats ont été arrêtés en Norvège après un violent incident, rapporte la police de Møre og Romsdal au journal norvégien Dagbladet. L’information a été confirmée par le ministère norvégien de la Défense, qui précise que les hommes sont des soldats du régiment des opérations spéciales de l’Armée belge.
    . . . . . .
    Les militaires belges étaient présents pour effectuer un entraînement hivernal dans le pays auraient entre 20 et 40 ans. Ils sont en train d’être interrogés.
    . . . . .
    https://www.dhnet.be/resizer/T-0tcsfT2x2HFbs7INUZUhLdj-8=/768x512/filters:format(jpeg):focal(1495x1005:1505x995)/cloudfront-eu-central-1.images.arcpublishing.com/ipmgroup/55GLCT3LQ5BTTKEXAORWBOXPMQ.jpg

    Source : https://www.lalibre.be/belgique/societe/2024/02/18/quatre-militaires-belges-arretes-en-norvege-7BWT2PKQ3NEIPAXPMTTVD7I44U

    #Norvège #Ukraine #guerre #armée #soldats #baltringues #Belgique

  • Ukraine : Agir, le nouveau zine syndical étudiant

    Un an après sa fondation, février 2023, le syndicat étudiant ukrainien Action directe (Priama Diia) vient de publier le premier numéro d’Agir, le zine du syndicat. Quelques semaines auparavant, Action directe avait tenu son premier congrès et adopté un manifeste « Les étudiants sont la force de l’université ». Depuis un an, Action directe a organisé plusieurs mobilisations, le plus souvent victorieuses, en défense des droits et intérêts des étudiants ukrainiens.

    https://entreleslignesentrelesmots.wordpress.com/2024/02/17/ukraine-agir-le-nouveau-zine-syndical-etudiant

    #international #ukraine

  • Au Royaume-Uni, un rapport parlementaire étrille le projet de loi qui permet l’expulsion de migrants vers le Rwanda

    Une commission parlementaire britannique a estimé dans un rapport publié lundi que ce texte est « fondamentalement incompatible » avec les obligations du Royaume-Uni en matière de droits humains.

    Considéré par le gouvernement britannique comme le socle de sa politique migratoire, le projet de loi visant à expulser les migrants arrivés illégalement au Royaume-Uni vers le Rwanda a été sévèrement critiqué par une commission parlementaire, lundi 12 février.

    Celle-ci, composée de douze membres travaillistes et conservateurs de la Chambre des communes et de la Chambre des lords, a jugé dans un rapport que ce texte est « fondamentalement incompatible » avec les obligations du Royaume-Uni en matière de droits humains.

    Le projet de loi a été rédigé en réponse à la Cour suprême britannique qui a jugé illégal en novembre 2023 d’envoyer des migrants au Rwanda où leurs demandes d’asile seraient évaluées. Pour les hauts magistrats, le pays ne pouvait être considéré comme sûr pour les clandestins. Pour répondre à ce camouflet juridique, le gouvernement britannique avait signé un nouveau traité avec Kigali en décembre 2023 afin de garantir « entre autres que le Rwanda n’expulsera pas vers un autre pays les personnes transférées dans le cadre du partenariat », avait alors assuré le ministère de l’intérieur britannique. Le gouvernement avait également annoncé la présentation d’une « législation d’urgence » pour désigner le Rwanda comme un pays sûr.

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    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2024/02/12/au-royaume-uni-un-rapport-parlementaire-etrille-le-projet-de-loi-qui-permet-

    Le texte adopté par la Chambre des communes

    C’est ce projet de loi qui a été étrillé lundi par la commission parlementaire. Dans son rapport, cette dernière s’inquiète ainsi de « l’obligation pour les tribunaux de considérer le Rwanda comme un pays “sûr” et de la limitation de l’accès aux tribunaux pour faire appel des décisions ». De plus, il n’est « pas clair », selon elle, que les migrants expulsés vers le Rwanda puissent avoir « la garantie » de ne pas être envoyés dans un pays où ils pourraient être persécutés.

    « Les droits humains sont universels », souligne la commission parlementaire. Mais le projet de loi « porte atteinte à ce principe essentiel en refusant à un groupe particulier [les migrants expulsés] les protections garanties par la loi sur les droits humains ». Avec ce projet, des organismes publics seraient « autorisés à agir en violation de la Convention européenne des droits de l’homme », alerte la commission.

    Qualifiant ce projet de « priorité nationale urgente », le premier ministre britannique, Rishi Sunak, souhaite par ce biais dissuader les migrants de traverser la Manche sur des embarcations de fortune – près de 30 000 personnes sont arrivées par ce moyen sur les côtes britanniques en 2023.

    Malgré de nombreuses critiques au Royaume-Uni – le projet divise même au sein du parti conservateur de M. Sunak –, le gouvernement est parvenu à faire adopter son texte en janvier par la Chambre des communes en récoltant 320 votes pour et 276 contre. Alors qu’il est débattu actuellement à la Chambre des lords, le Labour, mené par Keir Starmer, a d’ores et déjà promis de l’abroger s’il arrive au pouvoir après les législatives, prévues en l’état à l’automne.

    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2024/02/12/au-royaume-uni-un-rapport-parlementaire-etrille-le-projet-de-loi-qui-permet-
    #UK #Angleterre #asile #migrations #réfugiés #externalisation #offshore_asylum_processing
    #rapport_parlementaire

    –-

    ajouté à cette métaliste sur la mise en place de l’#externalisation des #procédures_d'asile au #Rwanda par l’#Angleterre
    https://seenthis.net/messages/966443