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En Guinée-Bissau, un Mémorial de l’esclavage a ouvert ses portes

LeMonde / Afrique - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 13:23
Le bâtiment flambant neuf propose un parcours chronologique mis en valeur par des objets et des documents historiques, afin de conserver la mémoire des milliers d’esclaves envoyés en Amérique par les Portugais.
Categories: Afrique

Présidentielle 2017 : pour Raffarin, l'élection se joue à la primaire de la droite

Le Point / France - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 13:22
"La probabilité que François Hollande soit absent du second tour, comme l'a été Lionel Jospin en 2002, est très forte", a estimé l'ancien Premier ministre.
Categories: France

Ausführungen von Präsident Donald Tusk vor dem Gipfeltreffen zur Migration über die Balkanroute

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 13:20

Seit dem Beginn der Migrationskrise gibt es für mich keinen Zweifel, dass der Schlüssel für eine Lösung darin liegt, die wirksame Kontrolle über die Außengrenzen der EU wiederherzustellen. Es liegt auf der Hand, dass dies nur möglich ist, wenn wir eng mit unseren Partnern auf dem Balkan und in der Türkei zusammenarbeiten.

Heute sollten wir darüber beraten, wie wir unseren Maßnahmen mehr Wirksamkeit verleihen können. Wir müssen – sowohl politisch als auch praktisch – bestätigen, dass die Westbalkanroute für die irreguläre Migration endgültig geschlossen ist. Deshalb begrüße ich die Initiative von Bundeskanzler Kern, dieses Treffen zu veranstalten.

Categories: Europäische Union

Ivorian footballer Aurier gets jail term

BBC Africa - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 13:14
Ivory Coast footballer Serge Aurier, who plays for Paris St-Germain, is sentenced to two months in jail for assaulting a police officer.
Categories: Africa

[Revue de presse] Présidentielle : Les projets européens des candidats se dessinent

Toute l'Europe - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 13:12
Sur fond d'euroscepticisme croissant en France, les candidats à l'élection présidentielle française commencent à esquisser leurs programmes pour l'Union européenne. Nombre d'entre eux appellent à une refonte du projet européen, mais leurs motivations demeurent particulièrement divergentes.
Categories: Union européenne

Cikk - Ezen a héten az EP-ben: Panama-iratok, roaming, uniós költségvetés

Európa Parlament hírei - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 12:31
Általános : A Panama-iratok botrányát kirobbantó újságírókat hallgatja meg kedden az EP bizottsága, amely az offshore cégeket és haszonélvezőiket vizsgálja. A roamingdíjak eltörlése is napirenden lesz, az ipari szakbizottság az Európai Bizottság második határozat-tervezetét tárgyalja hétfőn. A költségvetési szakbizottság az Unió 2017-es büdzsétervezetéhez érkezett mintegy 2200 módosító javaslatról szavaz.

Forrás : © Európai Unió, 2016 - EP

Prague’s Terrorist Perils

Foreign Policy Blogs - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 12:25

 

In late August 2016, a Czech entomologist and anti-immigrant nationalist named Martin Konvicka planned and staged a fake ISIS assault in the middle Prague’s Old Town Square. The incident took place near some restaurants, close to the astrological clock and the statue of Catholic priest, reformer, and martyr Jan Hus. While Wenceslas Square is packed with tourists mostly  in its shopping district, it is Old Town Square near the Charles Bridge that is marked more by a carnival atmosphere with snake charmers, magicians, restaurants, Thai massage parlors, singers, and men making bubbles that children chase.

Konvicka was clever, taking advantage of that carnival like condition to apply to City Hall for a permit to indulge in a “protest” where his theatrics would blend into a city where theatrics of some sort are common place to note. What Konvicka did in Prague was what any competent terrorist would do when planning an attack—he used legal means and an exploited vulnerability to procure a venue and a method of operation where he and his crew would blend into the environment prior to his strike so well that he could literally walk a camel into his target – Old Town Square.

What was disturbing to me even after only a few weeks after this hoax was the lack of a robust physical police presence in Old Town Square when I visited only a few days later. In Wenceslas Square, there is noticeable police presence, especially as you walk up the hill towards the monument where two Czechoslovakian students, Jan Palach and Jan Zajik killed themselves in 1969 to protest the failed uprising of Secretary Alexander Dubcek and Soviet invasion in August 1968. However, in Old Town Square where all the uproar happened, there was only one small police van with the occasional police car driving by that I could see, with two or three lightly armed police officers helping tourists.

Even with the assumption that heavier weapons were inside that van, the time it would take to retrieve them in the midst of a real attack and for reinforcements to arrive would be critical and probably very costly. Our tour guide did explain that plainclothes police were stationed throughout the area but should an active barricade/hostage or other “sophisticated” terrorist situation unfold, as Kent Layne Oots might call this, police would be at a disadvantage in a reactive situation and possibly facing terrorists with superior firepower at least initially, and armed with grenades, plastic explosives, IEDs and a coherent well thought through plan of action.

Likewise, what appeared to be similar problems were evident in parts of Prague’s Jewish Quarter—all of which are prime targets for Islamic extremists. For example, when we passed the Maisel Synagogue, which is noted for the golden hat that is perched inside its Star of David at its entrance, I did not see any security in front, even though one or two others said they saw guards on the street at or near the synagogue. Security at the Old New Synagogue, located on a fairly large street next to some stairs was conspicuously absent. At the Old Jewish cemetery where tourists flock, our prepaid tickets were scanned but there were no handbag or electronic searches. In fact, the only place I saw where systematic detection was in place and operative was at Prague Castle where detectors and wands were used by police to scan visitors at turnstiles.

As disconcerting as all the foregoing was, it was not as disturbing from a security point of view as the visit my wife and I took to the concentration camp Terezin, also known as Theresienstadt. We visited on a separate tour two days before our tour in Prague began. Terezin is located in a part of the Sudentenland area and, like Prague’s Jewish Quarter and all concentration camp sites, it is a potential target of Islamic extremists because of its inherent Jewish nature and high symbolic value.

From the terrible Dresden barracks, now in disrepair, throughout the town, and up through the prison which is about a quarter of a mile or so away from the center of town, there was no sign of police or military presence. I asked our guide about this and she told us that the only security change she could think of was that buses could no longer pull up in front of the Yizkor (“Remembrance”) museum. Our guide remarked she had never seen Terezin so desolate; usually it was full of tourists and she could only surmise this had something to do with recent terrorist assaults in Western Europe.

That Terezin goes unprotected for those who want to learn more about the Holocaust and that the Jewish Quarter at the very least suffers from gaps in security is shameful given the recent terrorist assault hoax perpetrated that has illuminated security shortfalls and the set of terrorist attacks in the European Union. Czech officials need to embrace anticipatory foresight into their thinking about security and view their place in the EU as part of a dynamic environment that reverberates with change and ripple effects that spread. This ISIS hoax underscores some bureaucratic security problems to be corrected and there appear to be areas for security improvement against the backdrop of very vulnerable targets. Benchmarks for improvement and timetables for implementation are required now before yet another tragedy occurs.

The post Prague’s Terrorist Perils appeared first on Foreign Policy Blogs.

Sauvetage des migrants: reportages à bord de l’«Aquarius»

RFI (Europe) - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 12:22
RFI embarque à bord de l’Aquarius, le bateau de l’association SOS Méditerranée qui porte secours aux migrants au large des côtes libyennes, avec son partenaire Médecins Sans Frontières. 130 500 personnes ont atteint l’Italie depuis janvier 2016, et plus de 3 000 sont mortes pendant la traversée. Lancée fin février, l’opération SOS Méditerranée a déjà permis de sauver 3 700 vies et a vu naître deux enfants à bord. Notre envoyée spéciale vous fait partager le quotidien de l’Aquarius et de ses équipes, retrouvez ici les dernières nouvelles du bord.
Categories: Union européenne

La Ville de Paris favorable à la création d’une zone naturiste dans la capitale

France24 / France - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 12:04
Le Conseil de Paris doit débattre lundi d'une proposition du groupe écologiste : la création d'une zone naturiste dans la capitale. Un adjoint de la mairie de Paris a d’ores et déjà annoncé qu’il soutiendrait le projet.
Categories: France

Sarkozy dénonce le manque "de courtoisie" de Hollande en 2012

Le Point / France - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 12:04
VIDÉO. Sur Europe 1, l'ex-chef de l'État est revenu sur la passation des pouvoirs et le fait que François Hollande ne l'a pas raccompagné à sa voiture.
Categories: France

Artikel - Diese Woche im EP: Panama Papers, Roaming, EU-Haushalt

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 11:59
Allgemeines : Die EU-Abgeordneten beginnen diese Woche mit ihren Untersuchungen zu den Panama Papers-Enthüllungen. Es findet eine Aussprache mit einigen der investigativen Journalisten statt, die die Papiere offengelegt haben. Der Industrieausschuss befasst sich mit einem neuen Vorschlag der EU-Kommission bezüglich der im Juni 2017 stattfindenden Abschaffung der Roaming-Gebühren, der Verbrauchern und Betreibern Vorteile bringen soll.

Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2016 - EP
Categories: Europäische Union

Debate: Corbyn re-elected as Labour leader

Eurotopics.net - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 11:52
After months of infighting Jeremy Corbyn has been re-elected as the leader of the Labour Party with 61.8 percent of the vote. Corbyn had come under pressure from within his party among other things because he didn't endorse the UK remaining in the EU. Commentators speculate on how his re-election will influence the Brexit negotiations.
Categories: European Union

Debate: Balkan route to be closed for good?

Eurotopics.net - Mon, 26/09/2016 - 11:52
Close borders, ramp up Frontex - at a refugee summit in Vienna eleven EU member states have agreed on measures aimed at stopping irregular migration along the Balkan route for good. Some journalists see the decisions as progress, while for others closing more doors is tantamount to capitulation.
Categories: European Union

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