05/10/2023

V V Brown - 'Black British'

 




Musician, Artist, Mother, Activist, Writer



04/10/2023

Can Kenya help solve Haiti's deep insecurity crisis?

 

A piece I wrote last week on an important issue: 


Can Kenya help solve Haiti's deep insecurity crisis? 

Kenya is preparing to lead an international police force to combat gang violence in Haiti – an historic first for the East African nation.


By: Melissa Chemam with RFI 




The Caribbean country has about 10,000 police officers for more than 11 million people. Kenya has pledged to send 1,000 security officers. No other country has been willing to take charge of Haiti's security. Canada considered it before deciding it was too risky. 

More than 2,400 people have died in Haiti's violence since the start of the year, according to the United Nations. 

Haiti welcomes Kenyan offer to lead multinational force to quell gang violence 


History of peacekeeping 

In July Kenya volunteered to lead a multinational police intervention to train the Haitian police, but the mission still needed a green light from the UN Security Council. Kenya's proposition is "bold and comes in good faith", Keith Mines, as an expert on the Caribbean with the United States Institute of Peace, told RFI. 

Nairobi cited its “very long history of global peacekeeping” in Kosovo, neighbouring Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo as a key reason to lead the mission. It is still heavily involved in fighting the Shabaab extremist group in both Kenya and Somalia. 

For Kenyan President William Ruto, the mission to Haiti is a chance to once again perform on the international stage, says Roland Marchal, an East Africa analyst at CERI Sciences Po Paris. "Ruto is also thinking about how much money the Kenyan army and police would receive for such a mission," Marchal told RFI. 

"Given few countries volunteered, for Ruto it's a financial opportunity as much as a choice of external policy, while his predecessors in Kenya were very absent on the international scene."

Ruto last week urged the UN to quickly work out a framework to allow the mission to begin. However, observers say the main weakness of Kenya's plan is the lack of legitimacy of Haiti's own government. 


Multiple challenges 

The Haitian government is unelected, with Prime Minister Ariel Henry coming to power following the assassination of Jovenel Moïse in early July 2022. 

"The international community should  stop supporting the Haitian government because it is illegitimate and corrupt," says Frédéric Thomas, of the Belgian NGO research centre Centre tricontinental (CETRI). It is also unpopular and "contested by the majority of the population", he adds. Amnesty International worries about a "troubling history of abuses and impunity associated with past multinational or foreign interventions in Haiti". 

Thomas says there is also evidence the Henry government is linked to the local gangs, and profits from trafficking. 

Kenya signed defence agreement with United States ahead of planned deployment to Haiti Another issue is the US involvement in the Kenyan mission. 

On Monday, US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin went to Nairobi to sign a deal to establish a plan and a supporting budget for the mission over the next five years. 

Some say the United States has a historic responsibility to help Haiti and that supporting Kenya's mission is insufficient. 

The Kenyan army, meanwhile, is said to have little experience of good urban policing.

 

'Troubled nation' 

The UN discussions on the Kenya-led mission happened as a bleak report on Haiti came out on Wednesday. 

Haiti is sinking further into bloodshed and lawlessness, the United Nations chief Antonio Guterres warned, urging the international community to provide security and financial aid. 

"Gang-related violence has continued to increase in intensity and brutality, with gangs expanding their control within and beyond Port-au-Prince," Guterres said. 

"Sexual violence, including collective rape, continues to be used by gangs to terrorise populations under the control of rival gangs."


03/10/2023

Bristol Festival of Ideas - D-14

 

Hello everyone. 

Most of you here must now know that I'm the biggest fan of the city of Bristol, England, and wrote a book about its culture, well counterculture to be exact, and its tendency to great activism. 

This year, the city is celebrating its 650 years, and we're lucky to have the Bristol Festival of Ideas to ask all the relevant questions! 


On the climate emergency, on citizenship, on community, business, work, how to fight inequality, gentrification, urban planning, and many more key issues. 

I hope to see some of you there at Bristol Ideas - details here: https://lnkd.in/esqcj8D4





I’ll be at more than half of the talks, and will be reporting on climate solutions.

The Festival is also launching a book I wrote a chapter for:

Bristol 650 Showcase and Book Launch

https://www.bristolideas.co.uk/attend/bristol-650-showcase-and-book-launch/

This event will launch the Bristol 650 book, a collection of newly commissioned essays about the future of Bristol.

Here is a selection of events and talks:

Is There a Future for Democratic Capitalism?
https://www.bristolideas.co.uk/attend/is-there-a-future-for-democratic-capitalism/

Democracy and Cities: How Do We Promote and Extend Democracy? https://www.bristolideas.co.uk/attend/democracy-and-cities/

Make It Real: How We Achieve a Just Transition in Cities: https://www.bristolideas.co.uk/attend/make-it-real-how-we-achieve-a-just-transition-in-cities/


I hope to come back and report more about it all…


See you there,

melissa





28/09/2023

The European Correspondent - Western Europe newsletter - Thursday 28 September 2023

 


The European Correspondent

Western Europe newsletter 


Thursday 28 September 2023



The United Kingdom ・ Climate crisis

British PM waters down climate targets

Rishi Sunak came under immense scrutiny after saying he wanted to be honest about the "costs" of tackling climate change. Announcing slower-moving policies, the deadline for banning fossil fuel cars has been moved by five years and homeowners no longer have to replace inefficient gas boilers.


The United Kingdom ・ Climate crisis

UK greenlights development of largest untapped oilfield amidst climate concerns

The UK has given the go-ahead to develop the country's large untapped oilfield off Shetland, causing emissions equal to those of the world's 28 lowest-income countries. While the firm behind the build claims this will be a "green" oil field, it is unclear how this will allow the UK to reach net zero by 2050.



France ・ Anti-racism

France marches against racism

Tens of thousands rallied in France to protest police violence and racism on Saturday. People took to the streets of different cities in France to protest police violence in demonstrations organised by the left, for a new anti-racist movement, with the main rally in Paris and others taking place in Marseille and beyond.

25/09/2023

Youth 4 Climate: Unprecedented court hearing

 

My latest for RFI English:


Young people take European nations to court over climate failures


Six young European people will bring 32 countries before the European Court of Human Rights for failing to do their part to avert climate catastrophe. The unprecedented hearing, to be held this week, is the world’s largest climate legal action to date.





After witnessing devastating forest fires and experiencing ever-worsening heatwaves, six young people from Portugal decided to act.

Aged between 11 and 24 years old, they launched an unprecedented case against over 32 European countries in the European Court of Human Rights in September 2020.

Three years later, their case will be heard on Wednesday, 27 September.

The applicants argue that European Union member states have contributed to global warming with greenhouse gas emissions, which has resulted, among other things, in heatwaves affecting their living conditions and health.


Collective action

The claimants are supported by activists from Youth 4 Climate Justice and Avaaz, and they are represented by lawyers Stéphanie Caligara and Gearóid Ó Cuinn, of the Dublin-based human rights NGO Global Legal Action Network (GLAN).

"These young people are not even activists," Caligara told RFI. "They are just young people who have been deeply affected by the fires in the Leiria region and by devastating heatwaves, so they wanted to act.

The claimants say they were driven to act by their experiences in the wildfires that ripped through the Leiria region in Portugal in 2017, killing 66 people and destroying 20,000 hectares of forest.

“Climate change has had a profound impact on our lives," 18-year-old claimant Sofia dos Santos Oliveira said in a statement.

"It has limited our ability to partake in activities like going out and enjoying the day. It is not normal, heatwaves damage our daily lives.”  



David vs. Goliath

"This is truly a David and Goliath case," said Ó Cuinn. "It is unprecedented in its scale and consequences.

"It also makes legal history. Never before have so many countries had to defend themselves in front of any court anywhere in the world."

The countries named in the action are the 27 members of the EU, as well as Norway, Russia, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

The hearing comes following the hottest ever summer in Europe on record, with fires and floods ravaging the European continent and beyond.

The case has been supported by a global crowdfunding appeal that raised more than 138,000 euros.

The claimants hope the judges will issue a binding that would force the countries to rapidly escalate their emissions reductions.

Lawyer Caligara hopes the court will recognise that "the inaction of governments affects negatively the right to life of the claimants", and that countries will finally take the "drastic measures" needed to cut carbon emissions.

A successful outcome for the claimants would be a historic milestone in climate litigation, and would require the 32 countries named not only to ramp up emissions cuts, but also to tackle their overseas contributions to climate change, including their exports of fossil fuels.






22/09/2023

French journalist Ariane Lavrilleux about press freedom


My article for RFI


Freed French journalist calls for respect of press freedom after arrest


French journalist Ariane Lavrilleux, who was arrested over her report alleging that French intelligence was used by Egypt to kill civilians, denounced attacks on press freedom on Thursday following her release from custody.





“My arrest shows that journalists have an impact and that we are necessary," Lavrilleux told a media briefing held at the Reporters Without Borders headquarters in Paris.

"We will push our efforts to inform on arms sales to dictatorships so that citizens know what our governments are doing."

In November 2021 the online media outlet Disclose published a series of articles, based on hundreds of secret documents, that said French intelligence had been misused by Egypt to target smugglers on the Libyan border and kill civilians.

Their publication prompted France’s armed forces minister to call for an investigation. 

Lavrilleux was arrested on Tuesday and her home in Marseille was searched. She was freed after 39 hours in custody.

Condemnation

Rights groups condemned what they said was an unacceptable attack on the secrecy of sources – a view backed by Reporters without Borders and the Society of Journalists.

"I am not indicted at the moment, but a sword of Damocles hovers above my head and above Disclose. Three of their journalists have already been targeted by the DGSI," Lavrilleux said.

DGSI, or the General Directorate for Internal Security, is a French agency in charged with countering espionage, terrorism, cybercrime and the surveillance of potentially threatening groups.

France's Ministry of the Armed Forces filed a complaint for "violation of national defence secrecy" following the publication of the articles, and a case was opened in July 2022 by the Paris prosecutor's office that was then placed in the hands of the DGSI.



20/09/2023

On Substack: Time for Some Climate Solutions

 

Latest post on my Substack newsletter


Time for Some Climate Solutions


Can we still curve the Climate Crisis? If we don't try, will we ever know?

Dear readers, friends and allies, Every day, more reports our around the world, from key 

NGOs and at the United Nations levels ring some alarm. In the general news, fires, storms,

droughts and other disasters are broadcast all over the worlds on a daily basis. Somalia, Ethiopia, the Amazon forest in Brazil and beyond, Hawaï, Greece, Portugal, Spain, Japan, China, India… and of course Ukraine. 


All these places and countries have been going through natural disasters or human-made catastrophes more and more in the past few years. Most of them are linked to global 

warming, climate change, massive pollution and crimes against our biodiversity. The next 

UN climate summit, COP28 starts in November, in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates. 


We can all contribute to make a difference if we care, share, stay informed, get involved. 


To contribute to uplifting the mood, and not only listing problems, we, journalists, need to 

do better. 


As an African news journalist, I have a lot to look at… 

-



Read here: 

https://melissa.substack.com/p/time-for-some-climate-solutions



Hamza's and Sarah's story on AJE

 




Aid workers are facing huge challenges in delivering help to those affected by the September 8 earthquake in Morocco. 

Almost 3,000 people were killed in the earthquake. 

Al Jazeera’s Stefanie Dekker and her team followed a personal story deep into Tizi N’test in Morocco's Atlas Mountains.

Read more on Hamza's story here, notably how he became an unexpected hero for my friend Sarah Barden, a British woman trying to find her father, a cyclist who died in the powerful earthquake that struck Morocco.


France: Press freedom is under threat



On Tuesday, journalist Ariane Lavrilleux's home in Marseille was searched and she was arrested for questioning by agents of the DGSI, France's domestic intelligence agency, Disclose announced on Twitter.

Investigative website Disclose published a series of articles in November 2021 based on hundreds of secret documents. 

Information from a French counter-intelligence operation in Egypt, codenamed "Sirli", was used by the Egyptian state for "a campaign of arbitrary killings" against smugglers operating along the Libyan border. 

The website denounced an "unacceptable attack on the secrecy of sources" - a view quickly backed by the Society of Journalists and Reporters Without Borders (RSF). 

"We fear that the DGSI's actions will undermine the secrecy of the sources," RSF said.