• Indignations,

    La reconnaissance d’un État palestinien enflamme l’Assemblée nationale à Paris
    https://www.rfi.fr/fr/france/20240528-la-reconnaissance-d-un-%C3%A9tat-palestinien-enflamme-l-assembl%C3%A9e-

    Il a immédiatement provoqué un tumulte important, le mot est faible. De très vives #indignations dans l’hémicycle ont éclaté de la part des élus d’#extrême-droite, de droite et de la #majorité présidentielle ; colère également de la présidente Yaëlle Braun-Pivet.

    La séance a aussitôt été suspendue par cette dernière pour permettre au bureau de l’Assemblée de se réunir en urgence, ce qui est très rare.

    Brandir un drapeau dans l’hémicycle est formellement interdit par le règlement intérieur. Le député Delogu le sait, et il assume.

    Il y a eu des injures virulentes entre députés en venant presque aux mains, pendant la suspension de séance. Ces échanges d’amabilités extraordinairement tendus entre l’insoumis David Guiraud et son collègue de droite Meyer Habib relatent bien la tension extrême ce jour au palais Bourbon.

    #sans_vergogne

  • How Israel twists antisemitism claims to project its own crimes onto Palestinians
    https://www.972mag.com/ihra-antisemitism-israel-inversion-projection

    Crucially, the #IHRA definition manifests the inversion and projection mechanism by which Israel and its supporters deny Israel’s crimes and attribute them to the Palestinians. One of the definition’s examples states, for instance, that “Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination” is antisemitic. Yet Israel’s official policy of settlement, occupation, and annexation for the last several decades has denied the Palestinian people their own right to self-determination.

    This policy has been intensified under Benjamin Netanyahu, who, in January 2024, publicly vowed to resist any attempt to establish a Palestinian state. The governing coalition’s fundamental guiding principles further declare, echoing the 2018 Jewish Nation-State Law, that “The Jewish people have an exclusive and inalienable right over all areas of the Land of Israel.” As Israel actively thwarts Palestinian self-determination, the IHRA definition inverts and projects this onto the Palestinians themselves, calling it antisemitism.

    According to the IHRA definition, “Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the #Nazis” is another example of antisemitism. Here, too, the pattern of #inversion and #projection is evident, as Israel and its supporters continuously link Arabs and especially Palestinians to the Nazis.

    […]

    Thus, what Israel and its supporters accuse Palestinians of inciting, Israeli officials and public figures are explicitly and openly declaring, and the Israeli army is prosecuting. And while Palestinians and their supporters chant for liberation “from the river to the sea,” Israel is enforcing Jewish supremacy “from the river to the sea” in the form of occupation, annexation, and apartheid. 

    We therefore suggest interpreting this inversion and projection not only as a classic case of hypocritical double standards against the Palestinians, but also — as is often the case with processes of projection — a defense mechanism of denial. Israel and its supporters cannot confront the state’s oppressive #apartheid structure, its delegitimization of the Palestinians, or its genocidal rhetoric and crimes, so they twist these allegations and thrust them onto the Palestinians.

    The so-called “fight against antisemitism” that Israel and its supporters are waging, grounded in the IHRA definition of antisemitism, should therefore be seen as yet another means used by a powerful state to deny its criminal acts and mass atrocities. The U.S. government must reject it outright.

    #antisémitisme #déni #génocide

  • Top EU official accused at ICC of ‘complicity’ in Gaza genocide
    https://thecradle.co/articles-id/25109

    GIPRI [The Geneva International Peace Research Institute] notes that Von der Leyen is complicit in violations of articles 6, 7, and 8 of the ICC Rome Statute, including military, economic, diplomatic, and political support to Israel.

    It adds that she “had knowledge of participating, by aiding and abetting, in the commission of the relevant crimes” and that she “has been instrumental in securing the provision of means, under the form of military support, to the IDF.”

    It also notes Von der Leyen’s “unconditional” political support and “encouragement and moral support” to Israel and its army. “Mrs. von der Leyen cannot escape the simple fact that she knew of such crimes, or at the very least she knew of the plausibility of such crimes, as determined by the ICJ in its Order on provisional measures of 26 January 2024 as regards genocide.”

    • https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/05/are-european-leaders-beginning-to-worry-about-their-complicity-in-i

      Très bon article par ailleurs...

      One obvious suspect for complicity in Israel’s war crimes is Ursula von der Leyen, who in the early days of Israel’s Gaza offensive breached her mandate as EU Commission president by lending full EU approval to the offensive despite the fact she has no authority in foreign affairs matters. VdL has already faced a barrage of criticism within EU institutions, including by the Commission’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, as well as in some European capitals, for her early unqualified support for Israel.

      Following her visit to Israel in October, she was accused in a letter signed by 842 EU staffers of turning a blind eye to Israel’s war crimes in Gaza. The letter accused VdL of giving “a free hand to the acceleration and the legitimacy of a war crime in the Gaza Strip”. It also warned that the EU is “losing all credibility” as well as its status “as a fair, equitable and humanist broker,” while ripping into VdL’s “patent” double standards over what is currently unfolding in Palestine and events in Ukraine.

      In early May, Borrell laid into his boss for ignoring a request lodged three months earlier by the governments of Spain and Ireland to conduct a thorough review of the EU’s trade agreement with Israel due to human rights violations in the Gaza Strip. Spanish President Pedro Sánchez and the-then Irish Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar, sent a letter to the EU Commission president in February proposing a reconsideration of the association agreement, which includes among its clauses the possibility of suspending the agreement’s terms if international law is breached. But instead of suspending the agreement, VdL promoted closer EU-Israel cooperation.

      It is not just her EU colleagues or underlings accusing VdL of complicity in war crimes. On May 22, two European human rights organisations — the Geneva International Peace Research Institute (GIPRI) and the Paris-based Collectif de Juristes pour le Respect des engagements internationaux de la France (CJRF) — and a group of “international concerned citizens”, submitted a legal brief to the ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan requesting the opening of an investigation into the EU Commission president for her complicity in Israel’s war crimes against Palestinian civilians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including the Gaza Strip.

      According to the accompanying press release sets out, Von der Leyen is complicit in violations of Articles 6, 7 and 8 of the Rome Statute by her “positive actions” (providing military, political and diplomatic support to Israel) as well as in her failure to take timely action on behalf of the Commission to help prevent genocide as required by the 1948 Genocide Convention. It also notes that VdL cannot argue that she was unaware of Israel’s violations of international humanitarian law, “especially following the International Court of Justice’s provisional measures order of 26 January 2024 in the pending ICJ case South Africa v. Israel.”

      The document also states that Von der Leyen “enjoys no functional immunity before the International Criminal Court by virtue of Article 27 of the Rome Statute.” From the final section of the press release:

      [Von der Leyen] should have taken every possible action at her disposal to prevent the continued commission of such crimes, and at the very least not to facilitate in any manner the commission of these crimes, as she unfortunately did. The obligation to prevent the commission of genocide is paramount in the Genocide Convention and the ICC Statute…

      Should President von der Leyen have acted pursuant to her legal duty to act, rather than sought to “ensure freedom of action for Israel in the continuation of the campaign”, the crimes would have been substantially less likely to occur, or at the very least to be perpetrated over such a long period of time, and on such a scale and magnitude.

      Even if this brief is ultimately rejected by the ICC, the looming risk of prosecution in the future, combined with the ongoing criminal investigation into the Commission’s procurement of vaccines from Pfizer BioNTech, may be enough to put paid to VdL’s reelection hopes.

    • 16 mars 2024
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlWp0o5RFj8&t=19s

      Gaza, c’est une toute petite enclave sur la côte proche-orientale de la Méditerranée, terriblement malmenée par l’Histoire récente. Ce sont aussi des hommes et des femmes tourné.e.s vers la mer et la pêche, héritier.ère.s d’une Histoire millénaire. Un monde qui se bat, en ce premier quart du 21e siècle, pour ne pas mourir. Sarah Katz et Samia Ayeb, sur des images tournées, il y a déjà dix ans, donnent à voir les gestes du métier, la confrontation aux vedettes de guerre, et donnent à entendre les voix d’espoir de cette lutte quotidienne.

  • الاتحاد الأوروبي يمدد عقوبات على سوريا حتى يونيو 2025 | رأي اليوم
    https://www.raialyoum.com/%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a7%d8%aa%d8%ad%d8%a7%d8%af-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a3%d9%88%d8%b1

    L’Union européenne prolonge les sanctions contre la Syrie jusqu’en juin 2025. On aurait aimé qu’elle ait le même « courage » vis-à-vis d’Israël...

    ال الاتحاد الأوروبي اليوم الثلاثاء إنه مدد عقوبات على الحكومة السورية وداعميها حتى يونيو حزيران 2025.
    وذكرت دول التكتل أنها لا تزال “تشعر بقلق عميق” بشأن الوضع في سوريا حيث يخضع الآن 316 شخصا و86 كيانا لعقوبات أوروبية تشمل تجميد الأصول وحظر السفر.
    وقال مجلس الاتحاد الأوروبي في بيان “بعد أكثر من 13 عاما، لا يزال الصراع مصدرا للمعاناة وعدم الاستقرار للشعب السوري والمنطقة”

  • En Argentine, la justice ordonne au gouvernement la distribution de stocks d’aide alimentaire - Le Temps
    https://www.letemps.ch/monde/en-argentine-la-justice-ordonne-au-gouvernement-la-distribution-de-stocks-d-
    https://letemps-17455.kxcdn.com/photos/df04d0a1-f94b-43ba-826c-19e5df7feb10/medium
    La vraie gueule du fascisme : répandre la misère, affamer les pauvres.

    Ce « négoce de la pauvreté », un des chevaux de bataille gouvernemental, a conduit mi-mai à des perquisitions et actions en justice contre des soupes populaires « fantômes » pour détournement de l’aide sociale. Lors d’une conférence de presse, le porte-parole de la présidence Manuel Adorni a annoncé que le gouvernement allait faire appel de la décision, expliquant qu’il s’agissait de « réserves » destinées aux « urgences » ou aux situations de « catastrophe » :

    Selon les organisations sociales, il existe quelque 45 000 soupes populaires dans le pays, mais un nombre indéterminé d’entre elles ont cessé de fonctionner lorsque l’approvisionnement qu’elles recevaient de l’Etat a été interrompu, tandis que d’autres fonctionnent grâce à des dons privés. L’Eglise catholique argentine a demandé dimanche au gouvernement de livrer « rapidement » les stocks d’aide alimentaire en sa possession.

    « Nous avons appris qu’il existe deux entrepôts d’aliments au sein du ministère [du Capital humain] qui disposent de cinq millions de kilos d’aliments stockés […],

  • Revealed: Israeli spy chief ‘threatened’ ICC prosecutor over war crimes inquiry
    Harry Davies in Jerusalem | Tue 28 May 2024 | The Guardian
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/28/israeli-spy-chief-icc-prosecutor-war-crimes-inquiry

    Mossad director Yossi Cohen personally involved in secret plot to pressure Fatou Bensouda to drop Palestine investigation, sources say

    The former head of the Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence agency, allegedly threatened a chief prosecutor of the international criminal court in a series of secret meetings in which he tried to pressure her into abandoning a war crimes investigation, the Guardian can reveal.

    Yossi Cohen’s covert contacts with the ICC’s then prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, took place in the years leading up to her decision to open a formal investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in occupied Palestinian territories.

    Cohen’s personal involvement in the operation against the ICC took place when he was the director of the Mossad. His activities were authorised at a high level and justified on the basis the court posed a threat of prosecutions against military personnel, according to a senior Israeli official.

    Another Israeli source briefed on the operation against Bensouda said the Mossad’s objective was to compromise the prosecutor or enlist her as someone who would cooperate with Israel’s demands.

    A third source familiar with the operation said Cohen was acting as Netanyahu’s “unofficial messenger”.

    Cohen, who was one of Netanyahu’s closest allies at the time and is emerging as a political force in his own right in Israel, personally led the Mossad’s involvement in an almost decade-long campaign by the country to undermine the court.

    Four sources confirmed that Bensouda had briefed a small group of senior ICC officials about Cohen’s attempts to sway her, amid concerns about the increasingly persistent and threatening nature of his behaviour.

    That investigation, launched in 2021, culminated last week when Bensouda’s successor, Karim Khan, announced that he was seeking an arrest warrant for the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, over the country’s conduct in its war in Gaza.

    The prosecutor’s decision to apply to the ICC’s pre-trial chamber for arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, alongside three Hamas leaders, is an outcome Israel’s military and political establishment has long feared.

    Cohen’s personal involvement in the operation against the ICC took place when he was the director of the Mossad. His activities were authorised at a high level and justified on the basis the court posed a threat of prosecutions against military personnel, according to a senior Israeli official.

    Another Israeli source briefed on the operation against Bensouda said the Mossad’s objective was to compromise the prosecutor or enlist her as someone who would cooperate with Israel’s demands.

    A third source familiar with the operation said Cohen was acting as Netanyahu’s “unofficial messenger”.

    Cohen, who was one of Netanyahu’s closest allies at the time and is emerging as a political force in his own right in Israel, personally led the Mossad’s involvement in an almost decade-long campaign by the country to undermine the court.

    Four sources confirmed that Bensouda had briefed a small group of senior ICC officials about Cohen’s attempts to sway her, amid concerns about the increasingly persistent and threatening nature of his behaviour.

    Three of those sources were familiar with Bensouda’s formal disclosures to the ICC about the matter. They said she revealed Cohen had put pressure on her on several occasions not to proceed with a criminal investigation in the ICC’s Palestine case.

    According to accounts shared with ICC officials, he is alleged to have told her: “You should help us and let us take care of you. You don’t want to be getting into things that could compromise your security or that of your family.”

    One individual briefed on Cohen’s activities said he had used “despicable tactics” against Bensouda as part of an ultimately unsuccessful effort to intimidate and influence her. They likened his behaviour to “stalking”.

    The Mossad also took a keen interest in Bensouda’s family members and obtained transcripts of secret recordings of her husband, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the situation. Israeli officials then attempted to use the material to discredit the prosecutor.

    The revelations about Cohen’s operation form part of a forthcoming investigation by the Guardian, the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and the Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, revealing how multiple Israel intelligence agencies ran a covert “war” against the ICC for almost a decade.

    Contacted by the Guardian, a spokesperson for Israel’s prime minister’s office said: “The questions forwarded to us are replete with many false and unfounded allegations meant to hurt the state of Israel.” Cohen did not respond to a request for comment. Bensouda declined to comment.

    In the Mossad’s efforts to influence Bensouda, Israel received support from an unlikely ally: Joseph Kabila, the former president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, who played a supporting role in the plot.

    Revelations about the Mossad’s efforts to influence Bensouda come as the current chief prosecutor, Khan, warned in recent days that he would not hesitate to prosecute “attempts to impede, intimidate or improperly influence” ICC officials.

    According to legal experts and former ICC officials, efforts by the Mossad to threaten or put pressure on Bensouda could amount to offences against the administration of justice under article 70 of the Rome statute, the treaty that established the court.

    A spokesperson for the ICC would not to say whether Khan had reviewed his predecessor’s disclosures about her contacts with Cohen, but said Khan had never met or spoken to the head of the Mossad.

    While the spokesperson declined to comment on specific allegations, they said Khan’s office had been subjected to “several forms of threats and communications that could be viewed as attempts to unduly influence its activities”.

    Bensouda sparks ire of Israel

    Khan’s decision to seek arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant last week marked the first time the court had taken action against leaders of a country closely allied with the US and Europe. Their alleged crimes – which include directing attacks on civilians and using starvation as a method of warfare – relate to the eight-month war in Gaza.

    The ICC case, however, dates back to 2015, when Bensouda decided to open a preliminary examination into the situation in Palestine. Short of a full investigation, her inquiry was tasked with making an initial assessment of allegations of crimes by individuals in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    Bensouda’s decision sparked the ire of Israel, which feared its citizens could be prosecuted for their involvement in operations in Palestinian territories. Israel had long been open about its opposition to the ICC, refusing to recognise its authority. Israeli ministers intensified their attacks on the court and even vowed to try to dismantle it.

    Soon after commencing the preliminary examination, Bensouda and her senior prosecutors began to receive warnings that Israeli intelligence was taking a close interest in their work.

    According to two sources, there were even suspicions among senior ICC officials that Israel had cultivated sources within the court’s prosecution division, known as the office of the prosecutor. Another later recalled that although the Mossad “didn’t leave its signature”, it was an assumption the agency was behind some of the activity officials had been made aware of.

    Only a small group of senior figures at the ICC, however, were informed that the director of the Mossad had personally approached the chief prosecutor.

    A career spy, Cohen enjoys a reputation in Israel’s intelligence community as an effective recruiter of foreign agents. He was a loyal and powerful ally of the prime minister at the time, having been appointed as director of the Mossad by Netanyahu in 2016 after working for several years at his side as his national security adviser.

    As the head of the national security council between 2013 and 2016, Cohen oversaw the body that, according to multiple sources, began to coordinate a multiagency effort against the ICC once Bensouda opened the preliminary inquiry in 2015.

    Cohen’s first interaction with Bensouda appears to have taken place at the Munich security conference in 2017, when the Mossad director introduced himself to the prosecutor in a brief exchange. After this encounter, Cohen subsequently “ambushed” Bensouda in a bizarre episode in a Manhattan hotel suite, according to multiple sources familiar with the incident.

    Bensouda was in New York in 2018 on an official visit, and was meeting Kabila, then the president of the DRC, at his hotel. The pair had met several times before in relation to the ICC’s ongoing investigation into alleged crimes committed in his country.

    The meeting, however, appears to have been a setup. At a certain point, after Bensouda’s staff were asked to leave the room, Cohen entered, according to three sources familiar with the meeting. The surprise appearance, they said, caused alarm to Bensouda and a group of ICC officials travelling with her.

    Why Kabila helped Cohen is unclear, but ties between the two men were revealed in 2022 by the Israeli publication TheMarker, which reported on a series of secretive trips the Mossad director made to the DRC throughout 2019.

    According to the publication, Cohen’s trips, during which he sought Kabila’s advice “on an issue of interest to Israel”, and which were almost certainly approved by Netanyahu, were highly unusual and had astonished senior figures within the intelligence community.

    Reporting on the DRC meetings in 2022, the Israeli broadcaster Kan 11 said Cohen’s trips related to an “extremely controversial plan” and cited official sources who described it as “one of Israel’s most sensitive secrets”.

    Multiple sources have confirmed to the Guardian the trips were partly related to the ICC operation, and Kabila, who left office in January 2019, played an important supporting role in the Mossad’s plot against Bensouda. Kabila did not respond to a request for comment.

    ‘Threats and manipulation’

    After the surprise meeting with Kabila and Bensouda in New York, Cohen repeatedly phoned the chief prosecutor and sought meetings with her, three sources recalled. According to two people familiar with the situation, at one stage Bensouda asked Cohen how he had obtained her phone number, to which he replied: “Did you forget what I do for a living?”

    Initially, the sources explained, the intelligence chief “tried to build a relationship” with the prosecutor and played “good cop” in an attempt to charm her. The initial objective, they said, appeared to have been to enlist Bensouda into cooperating with Israel.

    Over time, however, the tone of Cohen’s contact changed and he began to use a range of tactics, including “threats and manipulation”, an individual briefed on the meetings said. This prompted Bensouda to inform a small group of senior ICC officials about his behaviour.

    In December 2019, the prosecutor announced that she had grounds to open a full criminal investigation into allegations of war crimes in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. However, she held off launching it, deciding first to request a ruling from the ICC’s pre-trial chamber to confirm the court did indeed have jurisdiction over Palestine.

    The spy agency obtained a cache of material, including transcripts of an apparent sting operation against her husband.

    It is unclear who conducted the operation, or precisely what he is alleged to have said in the recordings. One possibility is that he had been targeted by the intelligence agency or by private actors of another country that wanted leverage over the ICC. Another possibility is the information was fabricated.

    Once in the possession of Israel, however, the material was used by its diplomats in an unsuccessful attempt to undermine the chief prosecutor. But according to multiple sources, Israel failed to convince its allies of the significance of the material.

    Three sources briefed on the information shared by Israel at a diplomatic level described the efforts as part of an unsuccessful “smear campaign” against Bensouda. “They went after Fatou,” one source said, but it had “no impact” on the prosecutor’s work.

    The diplomatic efforts were part of a coordinated effort by the governments of Netanyahu and Donald Trump in the US to place public and private pressure on the prosecutor and her staff.

    Between 2019 and 2020, in an unprecedented decision, the Trump administration imposed visa restrictions and sanctions on the chief prosecutor. The move was in retaliation to Bensouda’s pursuit of a separate investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan, allegedly committed by the Taliban and both Afghan and US military personnel.

    However, Mike Pompeo, then US secretary of state, linked the sanctions package to the Palestine case. “It’s clear the ICC is only putting Israel in [its] crosshairs for nakedly political purposes,” he said.

    Months later, he accused Bensouda, without citing any evidence, of having “engaged in corrupt acts for her personal benefit”.

    The US sanctions were rescinded after President Joe Biden entered the White House.

    In February 2021, the ICC’s pre-trial chamber issued a ruling confirming the ICC had jurisdiction in occupied Palestinian territories. The following month, Bensouda announced the opening of the criminal investigation.

    “In the end, our central concern must be for the victims of crimes, both Palestinian and Israeli, arising from the long cycle of violence and insecurity that has caused deep suffering and despair on all sides,” she said at the time.

    Bensouda completed her nine-year term at the ICC three months later, leaving it to her successor, Khan, to take up the investigation. It was only after the Hamas attacks on Israel on 7 October and the ensuing war on Gaza that the ICC’s investigation gained renewed urgency, culminating in last week’s request for arrest warrants.

    It was the conclusion Israel’s political, military and intelligence establishment had feared. “The fact they chose the head of Mossad to be the prime minister’s unofficial messenger to [Bensouda] was to intimidate, by definition,” said a source briefed on Cohen’s operation. “It failed.”

    #Israel_maître-chanteur

  • Vente d’armes à Israël : la justice refuse d’examiner les demandes de suspension malgré le risque pour les civils à Gaza
    https://disclose.ngo/fr/article/vente-darmes-a-israel-la-justice-refuse-dexaminer-les-demandes-de-suspensi

    Une coalition d’ONG a saisi le tribunal administratif, en avril, pour demander la suspension des exportations de matériel de guerre entre la France et Israël, en raison du risque qu’il soit utilisé contre des civils à Gaza. Le juge a rejeté cette demande en bloc, en reprenant mot pour mot les arguments du ministère des armées, comme le démontre une note obtenue par Disclose. Lire l’article

  • À la porte de leur établissement, les étudiant·es et les agent EHESS dénoncenlt la fermeture administrative, le génocide et la fascisation du monde universitaire
    https://academia.hypotheses.org/56488

    Communiqué des étudiant·es engagé·es de la mention Études politiques, EHESS, 22 mai 2024 Appel au Président de la section LDH de l’EHESS, 25 mai 2024 Communiqué des étudiant.es du Parcours Etudes Environnementales, 24 mai 2024 Pétition pour la réouverture du … Continuer la lecture →

  • Elijah J. Magnier 🇪🇺 sur X : "#BreakingNews: Very significant. #Israel's Knesset decided, in its first reading, to “cut all contacts and relationship with UNRWA and consider this body as a terrorist organisation”. The final Israeli criminal aim is to push the Palestinians to leave #Palestine when there" / X
    https://x.com/ejmalrai/status/1794725173150511337

    Very significant.
    #Israel's Knesset decided, in its first reading, to “cut all contacts and relationship with @UNRWA
    and consider this body as a terrorist organisation”.

    The final Israeli criminal aim is to push the Palestinians to leave #Palestine when there will no longer be any source of income or UN humanitarian support.

    When The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) were to be considered a “terrorist organisation,” the implications on humanitarian and legal levels would be profound and multifaceted.

  • Headless child, charred bodies: Survivors recount Israel’s Rafah camp massacre
    By Ahmed Aziz in Rafah, occupied Palestine and Huthifa Fayyad
    Published date: 27 May 2024 16:01 BST | Middle East Eye
    https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/headless-child-charred-bodies-survivors-recount-israels-rafah-camp-ma

    Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli strike on a camp area for internally displaced people in Rafah on 27 May 2024 (Eyad Baba/AFP)

    Strike on displaced Palestinians kills 45 and leaves many grappling with the devastating aftermath

    After sunrise, survivors of the Israeli bombing of a Rafah displacement camp returned to assess the damage.

    Children peeked through the window of a hollowed-out car, men searched the burnt debris, and journalists took photos of the blackened food cans.

    Around 12 hours earlier, Palestinian families were inside these tents, which were set ablaze after the Israeli military bombed the encampment, located in northwestern Rafah.

    Many had just finished night prayers, some were asleep and others were simply gathered with their families.

    “We were sitting down in peace when we suddenly heard the explosion,” said Layan al-Fayoum, a survivor of the attack.“It was so sudden. The bombs came down without a warning.”
    The young teenager went out of her tent to see what happened and was shocked by the large inferno that had engulfed the site.
    “The flames were huge,” she told Middle East Eye.
    “We saw tents on fire and then had to recover dismembered limbs and dead children.”

    The attack took place around 10 pm local time. Israeli jets dropped bombs on the makeshift camp, causing a fire that burned some 14 tents, according to one eyewitness.

    The camp is located in the Israeli-designated “humanitarian zone” near a UN storage facility, according to analysis by Al Jazeera Arabic.

    The Palestinian health minister said 45 people were killed in the attack. Another 249 were wounded, some seriously, including people with severe burns and severed limbs.

    Health officials said they are overwhelmed by the volume and type of injuries, as only one hospital is operational in Rafah due to Israel’s destruction of the health system across Gaza.

    First responders described similar challenges as 80 percent of the Palestinian civil defence capabilities have been destroyed since 7 October.

    This was all evident after the bombing, as firefighters, paramedics, and residents struggled to contain the fire.

    Chaotic scenes ensued, with panicked survivors running for safety amidst the charred bodies as one man held a headless child and a medic carried another with his brains blown out.

    “I came out of my tent and saw fire everywhere,” said Mohammad Abo Sebah, an eyewitness.
    “A young girl was screaming, so we helped her and her adult brother. When we returned, the encampment was totally destroyed.”

    It took around 11 fire trucks between one and two hours to finally stop the fire, according to al-Fayoum.

    The teenager said her family were planning to relocate to another camp on Monday morning as the Israeli attacks in Rafah had increased in recent weeks.
    But they have lost their money in the fire, meaning they can’t go anywhere now and have no tent to shelter in.

    “They said these were safe zones,” Abo Sebah told MEE.
    “This occupation is despicable and criminal.”

    ’Destruction, corpses, and killings’

    The Israeli military said it used “precise ammunition” in the attack, allegedly to kill two members of Hamas’ armed wing.

    It added the incident was “under review” and that it regrets “any harm to non-combatants during the war”.

    Abo Sebah, who fled central Gaza to this encampment in January, said he did not buy the Israeli claims.

    “What else do you expect them to say?” he told MEE.

    “We have never seen any resistance fighters here. The fighters are in the combat zones in eastern Rafah.

    “The Israelis just say these things to justify their actions. They want to kill the Palestinian people, forcibly expel them, and destroy their homes.”

    Abo Sebah lost his home in November when it was bombed by Israeli warplanes in an attack that killed two of his sons, his daughter, and her two-year-old infant.

    He came to Rafah seeking safety, as Israel told Palestinians to come to the southern city earlier in the war to avoid dangerous areas elsewhere.

    “There’s no safe place here. No one is safe. Not even the dead who are buried underground are safe,” Abo Sebah said.

    “Destruction, corpses, and killings. This is our life.”

    #Rafah #Génocide

    • Une description exacte des plus anciens poncifs antisémites qui revient.
      Pas plus les Israéliens que les juifs ne commettent de tueries pour commémorer une fête.
      Vous ne pouvez pas transmettre de telles fausses nouvelles sans être une partie du problème.
      En revanche ce qu’on a vraiment vu, ce sont les terroristes le 7 octobre violer des femmes, les tuer, et les trimballer nues au milieu des Palestiniens pour qu’ils crachent dessus.

  • Les écoles privées attirent les étudiants étrangers sans master en quête de titre de séjour
    https://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2024/05/24/les-ecoles-privees-seduisent-les-etudiants-etrangers-sans-master-en-quete-de

    Les écoles privées attirent les étudiants étrangers sans master en quête de titre de séjour
    Par Anjara Andriambelo
    Publié le 24 mai 2024 à 18h37, modifié le 25 mai 2024 à 08h30
    Poursuivre ses études en France, après une licence, est souvent source d’anxiété pour les étudiants étrangers. Et pour cause : l’acceptation dans une formation permet à l’autorité préfectorale d’apprécier le caractère réel et sérieux des études lors du renouvellement de leur titre de séjour. « C’est un parcours du combattant », témoigne Aline (les personnes citées par leurs prénoms souhaitent rester anonymes), 22 ans. Dans l’attente fébrile des résultats de la plate-forme nationale Mon master, rendus publics le 4 juin, l’étudiante chinoise, inscrite en licence d’écogestion à l’université Paris-Saclay, redoute de voir ses craintes se concrétiser et sa situation administrative compromise, en cas de rejet de ses quinze candidatures. Pour ces étrangers, qui représentent 14 % des étudiants inscrits dans l’enseignement supérieur français, l’enjeu est de taille. A ce jour, ni Campus France, l’établissement public chargé de la promotion de l’enseignement supérieur français, ni le ministère de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche ne sont en mesure de chiffrer le nombre d’étudiants de nationalité étrangère recalés. Campus France dit « ne pas s’être penché sur le sujet ».
    Le manque de suivi « est une réalité à dénoncer », déplore Emile Albini, chargé de travaux dirigés en droit administratif à l’université d’Orléans, et vice-président de l’association Voix des étudiants étrangers, dont la mission est d’accompagner ceux-ci gratuitement dans leurs démarches auprès des préfectures depuis 2023. Il dit suivre plusieurs dizaines de cas d’étudiants non affectés, redoutant, dans le pire des cas, une obligation de quitter le territoire français.
    Conscientes de cette vulnérabilité, les écoles privées intéressent ces candidats déçus. Ce qui n’est pas sans risque pour eux. La diversité actuelle de l’offre de formation peut créer de la confusion, entre grades, visas, établissement d’enseignement supérieur privé d’intérêt général, titres inscrits au répertoire national des certifications professionnelles (RNCP) ou encore le label décerné par le ministère du travail Qualiopi.
    D’après le ministère de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche « cette multiplicité a fini par créer un paysage peu lisible, permettant à certains acteurs de jouer sur le flou en prétendant un niveau de reconnaissance par l’Etat qu’ils ne possèdent pas ». (...)
    En 2018, la loi dite « pour la liberté de choisir son avenir professionnel » a engendré un véritable essor de l’alternance qui a séduit notamment de plus en plus les étudiants étrangers, grâce à l’argument de l’employabilité, vendu par les écoles. Selon Emile Albini, cette attractivité s’explique par l’espoir, à terme, de pouvoir plus facilement basculer dans le marché du travail et d’obtenir un titre de séjour salarié auprès de la préfecture.
    Pour ces étudiants, l’apprentissage apporte la garantie d’une meilleure insertion sur le marché du travail. En France, 852 000 nouveaux contrats ont été signés en 2023, ce qui a permis de franchir la barre symbolique du million de jeunes en apprentissage, selon les derniers chiffres publiés par la Direction de l’animation de la recherche, des études et des statistiques. Les entreprises reçoivent jusqu’à 6 000 euros de subventions de l’Etat par apprenti. Un marché attractif pour de nombreuses écoles privées.
    (...)
    « Tout étranger victime de pratiques frauduleuses est légitime à porter plainte pour les faits qui le concernent directement », rappelle le ministère de l’intérieur et des outre-mer. Mais « certains étudiants sont découragés de le faire parce qu’ils peuvent être sous la menace d’une obligation de quitter le territoire français. Ils obtiennent rarement une réponse, et la procédure met l’étudiant qui témoigne dans une situation compliquée », explique le porte-parole de l’association Voix des étudiants étrangers.
    Selon une enquête de la direction générale de la concurrence, de la consommation et de la répression des fraudes en 2022, plus de 30 % des établissements contrôlés se sont révélés être en anomalie en matière de pratiques commerciales trompeuses, usant de mentions valorisantes sans justification vérifiable, comme « mastère, diplôme équivalent master 1, Master of Science, MBA… »
    Le ministère de l’intérieur et des outre-mer déclare collaborer avec le ministère de l’enseignement supérieur et le ministère du travail, dans la mise en place d’un label, en vue d’une meilleure information des étudiants nationaux et internationaux souhaitant entreprendre un cursus d’études dans un établissement privé. « L’objectif est qu’il soit plus simple à lire pour les jeunes et leur famille. Il aura également pour conséquence de limiter les abus liés pouvant parfois apparaître autour du flou sur la reconnaissance de certaines formations », assure le ministère de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche. Le nouveau label, initialement attendu au printemps, est désormais annoncé pour cet été.

    #Covid-19#migrant#migration#france#etudiantetranger#universite#OQTF#campusfrance#titredesejour#sante

  • S’il y a quelque chose dont je suis déjà certain : dans une quinzaine d’années, on subira un flot de films israéliens réalisés par d’anciens soldats, expliquant à quel point ils souffrent intérieurement d’avoir dû génocider des familles entières à Gaza et, de Télérama à Télé 7 Jours, du festival de Cannes aux cinéclubs pour vieux gauchistes, on applaudira à ces films si émouvants, si vrais, si…

    (Ainsi va notre monde de peigne-culs.)

  • Ce réseau libertarien qui veut imposer ses idées en France - Basta !
    https://basta.media/reseau-libertarien-veut-imposer-idees-france-Atlas-Javier-Milei-Trump-Ifrap

    Un rapport de l’Observatoire des multinationales met en lumière l’un des facteurs méconnus de la progression des idées d’extrême droite en Amérique et en France : le soutien d’un réseau états-unien de think tank libertariens, appelé Atlas.

    Mais que font nos cellules anti-fake news ?

  • Le réseau Atlas, la France et l’#extrême-droitisation des esprits - Observatoire des multinationales
    https://multinationales.org/fr/enquetes/le-reseau-atlas-la-france-et-l-extreme-droitisation-des-esprits


    Finalement, tous ces fachos qui popent partout dans le monde comme les cèpes après une pluie d’automne, ce n’était pas le fruit du hasard.
    https://multinationales.org/IMG/pdf/atlasfr_v3.pdf

    Notre rapport Le réseau Atlas, la France et l’extrême-droitisation des esprits, qui s’appuie en partie sur des documents internes inédits, est à la fois une présentation de l’Atlas Network, encore inconnu du public français, et une enquête sur ses partenaires dans l’Hexagone, dont certains comme l’Ifrap sont omniprésents dans les médias, tandis que d’autres comme l’IFP jouent un rôle clé dans la formation et la mise en réseau de leaders et porte-parole de droite et d’extrême-droite.

    Lancé dans les années 1980, l’Atlas Network est aujourd’hui l’un des plus importants réseaux de think tanks au monde, financé par des fondations américaines comme celles des frères Koch et par des multinationales. Son objectif avoué est de recouvrir le monde de think tanks et autres organisations libertariennes et souvent ultraconservatrices pour « changer le climat des idées » et s’attaquer à des causes comme l’action climatique, la promotion des droits des femmes et des minorités, la justice fiscale ou encore les services publics.

    Le réseau se prévaut de nombreuses victoires politiques tout autour de la planète, comme le rejet de référendums au Chili et en Australie, le Brexit, le départ forcé de Dilma Rousseff au Brésil ou encore l’élection en Argentine de Javier Milei, très proche du réseau. Aux États-Unis, il se mobilise au côté des Républicains et espère fixer le programme politique de Donald Trump s’il est élu.

  • Assurance chômage : le gouvernement s’acharne sur les chômeurs les plus précaires | Alternatives Economiques
    https://www.alternatives-economiques.fr/assurance-chomage-gouvernement-sacharne-chomeurs-plus-preca/00111203

    Reportées à cause de la crise néo-calédonienne et de l’assassinat de deux agents pénitentiaires, les nouvelles mesures concernant l’assurance chômage devraient enfin être dévoilées par le Premier ministre en début de semaine prochaine, voire dès ce week-end.

    L’annonce d’un nouveau tour de vis ne fait guère de doute. La question est de savoir quels sont les leviers que le gouvernement choisira en définitive d’activer : durée de travail nécessaire pour être indemnisé (6 mois aujourd’hui), période de référence pendant laquelle le demandeur d’emploi doit avoir travaillé (24 mois actuellement), durée maximale d’indemnisation (18 mois pour les chômeurs de moins de 53 ans à ce jour), délai de carence avant de toucher une allocation ou encore révision des règles concernant les seniors…

    Pris isolément ou combinés entre eux, ces paramètres auront des conséquences plus ou moins sévères selon les catégories de chômeurs et généreront des économies conséquentes, voire massives. C’est ce que montre un document de travail de l’Unédic diffusé aux partenaires sociaux mais non rendu public.

    https://justpaste.it/2o52b

    • Sur un réseau craignos (mais pas trop), Yann Gaudin nous informe :

      Petit répit avant la sauvagerie

      On nous annonce finalement l’entrée en vigueur au 1er décembre 2024 de la nouvelle lame très tranchante en matière de protection des salariés en situation de chômage, avec les détails techniques dans un décret au 1er juillet.

      Nous serons alors quasiment le pays le plus insécurisant d’Europe tous paramètres combinés (conditions d’accès, durée et montant d’indemnisation).

      Il faudra désormais avoir travaillé minimum l’équivalent de 8 mois à temps plein sur 20 mois pour bénéficier de la protection par une indemnisation, sinon ce sera la très grande pauvreté du RSA (rien du tout pour les jeunes) ou le suicide.

      Vous ne serez plus indemnisés que maximum 15 mois si vous avez moins de 57 ans. Après ce sera la très grande pauvreté du RSA (rien du tout pour les jeunes) ou le suicide.

      Vous ne serez plus indemnisés que maximum 30 jours par mois, donc vous perdrez des jours d’indemnisation.

      Pour rappel, il n’y a actuellement qu’1 emploi pour 5 personnes en situation de chômage et encore, en comptant les contrats courts et à temps partiel. Appauvrir sauvagement des millions de français, est-ce que ça va faire pousser des emplois ?

      A la fin de cette année 2024, les salariés ne vivront plus vraiment en France :
      😑 Il n’y aura plus de liberté de choisir son parcours professionnel, si vous souffrez dans votre emploi vous devrez y rester quand même sous peine de finir vite dans un désastre personnel et familial, et bon courage pour négocier une augmentation de salaire quand votre employeur vous rappellera votre chance d’avoir au moins un emploi.
      😑 Il y aura encore moins d’égalité entre les citoyens aisés aux gros revenus garantis & gros patrimoines protégés et les travailleurs appauvris ou menacés en permanence de l’être.
      😑 Enfin il n’y aura quasiment plus de fraternité envers celles & ceux qui n’auront pas la chance d’avoir un CDI à temps plein bien payé et épanouissant.

      Amis salariés, une pensée à vous et à vos proches, il va y avoir des drames parmi vous, et la délinquance voire la criminalité risquent fort d’augmenter car toutes les insécurités sont liées.

      https://www.facebook.com/yann.gaudin/posts/pfbid02rv5wyz3p21oKSNV3GYM5VteFfoQ3CtATFLLUDyEcMA5F9mekGDd4R5gAaC4VYEgWl

    • chez Mediapart : https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/economie-et-social/260524/assurance-chomage-le-grand-jeu-de-massacre

      Pour inciter les entreprises à embaucher des séniors, le premier ministre dégaine le « bonus emploi » permettant de cumuler salaire et allocations-chômage. [...]

      Rien de coercitif, donc, pour les entreprises qui jettent des salarié·es jugé·es trop âgé·es. Mais tout pour les patrons qui cherchent de la main-d’œuvre, qualifiée et expérimentée, pour pas trop cher. « Je suis une entreprise, je balance tout le monde à 55 ans, et après deux ans de chômage je les récupère à moitié prix », commente dans Libération le président de la CFE-CGC, François Hommeril.

      (qui cite Libé : https://www.liberation.fr/economie/social/assurance-chomage-gabriel-attal-confirme-une-reduction-de-la-duree-dindem )

    • une petite explication historique de la manip de Macron pour virer le paritarisme de l’assurance chômage, avoir (enfin) les mains libres, et abattre cette partie du système social en toute tranquillité. Le plan était visiblement prévu de longue, les premieres actions datent de 2018 :

      https://ses.ens-lyon.fr/articles/main-basse-sur-lassurance-chomage

      Quatre mois plus tard (juin 2018), la loi pour la liberté de choisir son avenir professionnel (LCAP, art. 54) réécrit l’article L 5422-9 du code du travail qui édicte que l’allocation chômage est financée par des contributions des salariés. Celles-ci sont donc supprimées, si bien que l’affirmation selon laquelle cette « exonération » serait « sans aucun impact sur les droits sociaux » (annexe 4) s’efface au profit d’une autre lecture.

      Le président de la République précise en effet que cette réforme « transforme la philosophie même de notre solidarité nationale [qui] est de moins en moins une assurance individuelle, assortie d’un droit de tirage, financée par l’ensemble des contribuables, […] l’assurance chômage aujourd’hui n’est plus du tout financée par les cotisations des salariés » mais « par les cotisations des employeurs et par la CSG. Cette transformation, il faut en tirer toutes les conséquences ; il n’y a plus un droit au chômage, au sens où on l’entendait classiquement, il y a l’accès à un droit qu’offre la société mais sur lequel on ne s’est pas garanti à titre individuel, puisque tous les contribuables l’ont payé [4] ».

      Alea jacta est : l’assurance chômage est plongée dans le grand bain de la politique sociale [5].