20/11/2024

Cop29: Urgent need for climate commitments

 

As Cop29 unfolds, African negotiators denounce 'slow progress' and aim for last minute breakthrough


Negotiators are striving to resolve a deadlock at the UN climate talks in Azerbaijan. African negotiators want to remind wealthy nations that Africa, despite being the least polluting continent, bears the brunt of the climate crisis. Some of them share with me their cautious optimism for a last-minute breakthrough...





While Cop29 has entered its second week of negotiations, most participants expect little progress until the very last day, Friday 22 November.

Greenpeace Africa activists are ramping up their efforts, declaring on social media that they "won’t stop" until they "hold all polluters accountable for their acts of climate injustice!"

The NGO delivered a petition to the Chair of the Africa Group of negotiators (AGN), Ali Mohammed. The petition underscores the importance of the collective power of supporters, volunteers, and partners, they said in a statement on social media. 

Yesterday, I spoke to Juma Ignatius is from Kenya, who works as the senior advisor to the office of the AGN at the UN, and is in Baku to focus on climate adaptation.

"Adaptation remains a key priority for the African continent for many people in Africa," he told me from Azerbaijan.

He says the priority is to make sure that the finance, the technology and the capacity building to ensure that adaptation efforts in Africa are upscaled to levels that help people to live their lives well are in place.

"This is primarily why we're here."

While he believes the negotiations are progressing, he thinks they are moving very slowly.

"There are some tactics employed on purpose here, especially wait and see tactics, to see what happens in what room and then how can other rooms [will] respond to this..." Ignatius said. "We believe this is what is really slowing down the process of the negotiation." 

Regarding the G20 commitments made so far, specifically on the funds for adaptation, he estimates these are positive signs.  

"We've seen reports from the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep), saying that we need money, that is a lot. But... the fractions we are receiving here are very, very small," he also told me.

"The adaptation needs are increasing every day. The gap is increasing between what is really required and what's being pledged. So, we need to see more action."  


Double burden


I also spoke to Dean Bhebhe Bhekhumuzi, who is the intelligence and campaigns advisor at Power Shift Africa, and the lead coordinator for the Don't Gas Africa movement. Originally from Zimbabwe, he's working with the Kenya-based organisation remotely from Johannesburg, in South Africa. 

He believes that no breakthrough will be achieved until the very end of this round of negotiations, probably the last day.

But he also thinks that what's important is to understand the relationship between developing and developed countries.

"When we look at the type of finance that Africa needs to tap into, it becomes important to mention the debt crisis," he says. "Nigeria, Senegal, for example, need to pay off their huge debt."

These two countries use up to 67 percent against their GDP to pay off debt, leaving only 33 percent to tackle energy, healthcare, infrastructure, education, all the essential building blocks for development.

"Developing countries are asking developed countries to essentially manage and pay for emission reductions, and to implement a strategy," Bhekhumuzi explains. 

He underlines that Africa bears the brunt of the climate crisis, yet they are the least responsible for it, and the mechanisms to change this situation are not there.

"Surely we cannot be expected to also contribute financially, despite the debt burden."


No room for pessimism


These negotiators promise to remain alert and focused. 

Both activists want to remain optimistic as they say they cannot give up on the multilateral processes.

"We must reckon that some of the benefits have been achieved," the senior advisor to the office of the AGN, Juma Ignatius, also told me. "For example, the Paris Agreement."

Africa and the G77 at the UN, representing 77 developing economies, called for a total of $1.3 trillion last week. 

For Ignatius, this is achievable this week at Cop29, despite a huge presence of fossil fuel lobbies. So he insists that African negotiators should not be defeated or focus on what's not working. 

"We can encourage ourselves that something greater is coming," he says.  

Bhekhumuzi agrees. "I think what is important is actually uploading Global South countries," he told me and get their voices heard.

"The Africa group of negotiators is pushing for an act that is people centred, one that will empower Africa. Because we're having those critical discussions, this is already a small win," Bhekhumuzi concludes.



Éloge de la submersion - La Compagnie (Marseille)






Éloge de la submersion (cosmogramme 2#*) 


Une proposition de Dénètem Touam Bona et la compagnie avec Hawad, Maya Mihindou, Tiphaine Calmettes, Olivier Marboeuf, Intersexion (Arianne Leblanc & Aphelandra Siassia), Sabrina Da Silva Medeiros, Rangitea Bourgeois Tihopu, Magalie Grondin Avec le soutien du programme Art & citoyen de la Fondation Daniel et Nina Carasso 


Ce projet de recherche-création archipélique, « Cosmopoétiques du refuge », se déploie en une série d’escales constituant autant de « cosmogrammes » : des espace-temps visant à proposer d’autres versions de la « réalité » – des sub-versions – via une réhabilitation de la puissance des rêves, de la poésie et de l’utopie en acte, tout cela en « correspondance » avec la recherche scientifique la plus contemporaine (biologie marine, anthropologie, géographie, etc.). 

16.11.24 à 18h et 17.11.24 à 15h : week-end d’ouverture : performances, conférences, projections, rencontres  

21.11 19h à Zoëme Il faut tirer l’existence par les cheveux », projection, rencontre, exposition 

22.11 à partir de 15h Voguer à contre-courant, conférence, rencontres 

25.11 19h en présence de Alexis Pauline Gumbs, lancement de la traduction française de son livre Non-Noyées, Leçons féministes Noires apprises auprès des mammifères marines 

du 28 au 30.11 Cosmographie du bleu, performances, conférences, projections, rencontres 


 

16.11.2024 — 1.02.2025 Eloge de la submersion, une proposition de Dénètem Touam Bona avec la compagnie


lien : https://www.la-compagnie.org/portfolio/elogedelasubmersion/ 

17/11/2024

Marseille activism

 

Marseille demonstration for the liberation of Georges Abdallah, for Lebanon and for Palestine




Marseille citizens are mobilised for peace in Lebanon and Palestine, here demanding  the liberation of political prisoner Georges Abdallah



15/11/2024

Human Rights Watch on the 1884-85 Berlin Africa conference

 

Human Rights Watch reflects on the 140th "anniversary" of the opening of the 1884-1885 Berlin Africa Conference:

This is where 19 European countries and the US came together to expand and organise Europe’s colonial domination and exploitation across Africa.

Have a read:


Europe Has Yet to Address Colonial Legacies



140 Years After Key European Colonial Conference, Ongoing Impacts Require Urgent Action




Hundreds of people of African descent took part in the African Emancipation Day Reparations March in London, August 1, 2017. 
 © 2017 Wiktor Szymanowicz/Shutterstock


(Berlin, November 14, 2024) – European governments have yet to reckon with and meaningfully address the ongoing impacts of their colonial legacies affecting people of African descent on the African continent and in the diaspora, Human Rights Watch said. 

15 November 2024, is the 140th anniversary of the 1884 opening of the Berlin Africa Conference, at which 19 European countries and the US came together to organiee and expand Europe’s colonial domination and exploitation across Africa.

“The Berlin Africa Conference marked a critical point in Europe's colonial history, with its long-lasting impacts still largely unaddressed by responsible states and other actors,” said Almaz Teffera, researcher on racism in Europe at Human Rights Watch. 

“The passage of so many years has not ended the need for European governments to address their colonial legacies and to create victim-centred reparations processes grounded in international human rights law with meaningful participation of affected communities.”

In light of this significant anniversary, on 15 November, Dekoloniale, a German decolonial project collective, will organise a counter-version of the original conference, the Dekoloniale Berlin Africa Conference. Unlike the original conference, which excluded Africans, it will bring together Africans and people of African descent who continue to be affected by the legacy of European colonialism to reflect on the history of the Berlin Africa Conference and its lasting impact today.

In an effort to give voice to the formerly colonised, a diverse group of 19 expert delegates, both from Africa and its global diaspora, will share their perspectives on how to address the many ongoing and structural impacts of colonialism. 

Among them are Alice Nkom, a Cameroonian lawyer and human rights defender; Gary Younge, an award-winning UK author, broadcaster and professor of sociology; and Awet Tesfaiesus, a lawyer and German Green parliament member.

In November 2023, the African Union organised a conference in Accra at which delegates adopted a proclamation that called for reparations to Africans both on the continent and in the diaspora as an acknowledgment of the profound harm caused by Europe’s colonialism, enslavement, and the slave trade. 

The proclamation also declared 2025 the year for “Justice for Africa Through Reparations,” which the 37th African Union Summit in 2024 confirmed. The African Union and its member states should meaningfully consult with affected communities and center on them in those efforts, Human Rights Watch said.

At the European Union level, some members of the European Parliament proposed a draft resolution on reparatory justice and sustainable development, acknowledging the lasting impacts of European colonialism on racial inequities in the world. The resolution was circulated at the end of 2023 but never made it to a vote before the European Parliament elections in June 2024.

The UK parliament’s All-Party Parliamentary Group for Afrikan Reparations, which Labour member Bell Ribeiro-Addy chairs, has also grappled with the question of reparations to redress the legacies of African enslavement and colonialism. Ribeiro-Addy will give a welcoming speech at the Dekoloniale Berlin Africa Conference.

The 19 expert delegates at the Dekoloniale Berlin Africa Conference will call on European parliament members, policymakers, and others to take urgent action on a 10-point list of demands that they will prepare ahead of the conference.

In the framework of this conference, Human Rights Watch, together with Amnesty International and African Futures Lab, will organise a workshop at which community members, civil society, academics, and activists will come together to share struggles and experiences and discuss ways to advance reparations.

“European governments have largely ignored and even rejected communities’ calls for reparations to address Europe’s historic legacies,” Teffera said. “European leaders should understand that addressing the legacies of their states is not a choice but an obligation under international human rights law.” 



-



Podcast - Spotlight on Africa - Episode 16

 




This week's in my podcast, Spotlight on Africa, we dive into Cop29’s critical discussions on climate change – focusing on food systems, green energy funding and who should pay for climate disasters. With talks underway in Baku, Azerbaijan, negotiators and experts are grappling with solutions to the growing crisis.


Listen from our website: https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20241115-africans-push-food-systems-and-climate-justice-at-cop29 

Or from Apple Podcast:
 https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/africans-push-food-systems-and-climate-justice-at-cop29/id1241972991?i=1000677087675




14/11/2024

HRW: Israel’s Crimes Against Humanity in Gaza

 

I wrote this blog post on 30 October 2023:




Haaretz is writing about ethnic cleansing and genocide this week:

Same with the Guardian, this month... 
My thread: 


Why does it take so long to admit reality? and to intervene...?


-


 


Mass Forced Displacement and Widespread Destruction

 

  • Israeli authorities have caused massive, deliberate forced displacement of Palestinian civilians in Gaza since October 2023 and are responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
  • There is no plausible imperative military reason to justify Israel’s mass displacement of nearly all of Gaza’s population, often multiple times. Rather than ensuring civilians’ security, military “evacuation orders” have caused grave harm.
  • Governments should adopt targeted sanctions and other measures, and halt weapons sales to Israel. The International Criminal Court prosecutor should investigate Israel’s forced displacement and prevention of the right to return as a crime against humanity.
 

(Jerusalem, November 14, 2024) – Israeli authorities have caused the massive, deliberate forced displacement of Palestinian civilians in Gaza since October 2023 and are responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The report is being published at the time of an ongoing Israeli military campaign in northern Gaza that has most likely created a new wave of forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians.

The 154-page report, “‘Hopeless, Starving, and Besieged’: Israel’s Forced Displacement of Palestinians in Gaza,” examines how Israeli authorities’ conduct has led to the displacement of over 90 percent of the population of Gaza
1.9 million Palestiniansand the widespread destruction of much of Gaza over the last 13 months. Israeli forces have carried out deliberate, controlled demolitions of homes and civilian infrastructure, including in areas where they have apparent aims of creating “buffer zones” and security “corridors,” from which Palestinians are likely to be permanently displaced. Contrary to claims by Israeli officials, their actions do not comply with the laws of war.

“The Israeli government cannot claim to be keeping Palestinians safe when it kills them along escape routes, bombs so-called safe zones, and cuts off food, water, and sanitation,” said 
Nadia Hardman, refugee and migrant rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Israel has blatantly violated its obligation to ensure Palestinians can return home, razing virtually everything in large areas.”

Human Rights Watch interviewed 39 displaced Palestinians in Gaza, analyzed Israel’s evacuation system, including 184 evacuation orders and satellite imagery confirming the widespread destruction, and verified videos and photographs of attacks on designated safe zones and evacuation routes.

The laws of armed conflict 
applicable in occupied territory permit displacement of civilians only exceptionally, for imperative military reasons or for the population’s security, and require safeguards and proper accommodation to receive displaced civilians. Israeli officials claim that, because Palestinian armed groups are fighting from among the civilian population, the military has lawfully evacuated civilians to attack the groups while limiting civilian harm. Human Rights Watch research shows this claim to be largely false.

There is no plausible imperative military reason to justify Israel’s mass displacement of nearly all of Gaza’s population, often multiple times, Human Rights Watch found. Israel’s evacuation system has severely harmed the population and often served only to spread fear and anxiety. Rather than ensure security for displaced civilians, Israeli forces have repeatedly struck designated evacuation routes and safe zones.

Evacuation orders have been inconsistent, inaccurate, and frequently not communicated to civilians with enough time to allow evacuations, or at all. The orders did not consider 
the needs of people with disabilities and others who are unable to leave without assistance.

As the occupying power, Israel is obliged to ensure adequate facilities to accommodate displaced civilians, but the authorities have blocked all but a small fraction of the necessary humanitarian aid, water, electricity, and fuel from reaching civilians in need in Gaza. Israeli attacks have damaged and destroyed resources that people need to stay alive, including hospitals, schools, water and energy infrastructure, bakeries, and agricultural land.

Israel is also obliged to ensure the return of displaced people to their homes as soon as hostilities in the area have ceased. Instead, it has left swathes of Gaza uninhabitable. Israel’s military has intentionally demolished or severely damaged civilian infrastructure, including controlled demolitions of homes, with the apparent aim of creating an extended “
buffer zone” along Gaza’s perimeter with Israel and a corridor which will bifurcate Gaza. The destruction is so substantial that it indicates the intention to permanently displace many people.

Israel should respect the right of Palestinian civilians to return to the areas in Gaza from which it has displaced them. For almost eight decades, Israeli authorities have denied the 
right to return of the 80 percent of Gaza’s population who are refugees and their descendants who were expelled or fled in 1948 from what is now Israel, in what Palestinians call the “Nakba,” or the catastrophe. This ongoing violation looms over the experience of Palestinians in Gaza, with many of those interviewed speaking of living through a second Nakba.

From the first days of the hostilities, senior officials in the Israeli government and the war cabinet have 
declared their intent to displace the Palestinian population of Gaza, with government ministers stating that its territory will decrease, that blowing up and flattening Gaza is “beautiful,” and that land will be handed to settlers. In November 2023, Israeli Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Avi Dichter said, “We are now rolling out the Gaza Nakba.”

Human Rights Watch found that forced displacement has been widespread, and the evidence shows it has been systematic and part of a state policy. Such acts also constitute crimes against humanity
.

The Israeli authorities’ organized, violent displacement of Palestinians in Gaza, who are members of another ethnic group, is likely planned to be permanent in the buffer zones and security corridors. Such actions of the Israeli authorities amount to ethnic cleansing.

Victims of serious abuses in Israel and Palestine have faced a wall of impunity for decades. Palestinians in Gaza have been living under an unlawful blockade for 17 years, which constitutes part of the continuous 
crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution that Israeli authorities have been committing against Palestinians.

Governments should publicly condemn Israel’s forced displacement of the civilian population in Gaza as a war crime and crime against humanity, and pressure it to immediately halt those crimes and comply with the International Court of Justice’s 
multiple binding orders and with the obligations laid out in its July advisory opinion.

The International Criminal Court prosecutor should investigate Israel’s forced displacement and prevention of the right to return as a crime against humanity. Governments should also publicly condemn efforts to intimidate or interfere with the court’s work, officials, and those cooperating with the institution.

Governments should adopt targeted sanctions and 
other measures, including reviewing their bilateral agreements with Israel, to press the Israeli government to comply with its international obligations to protect civilians.

The United States, 
Germany, and other countries should immediately suspend weapons transfers and military assistance to Israel. Continuing to provide arms to Israel risks complicity in war crimes, crimes against humanity, and other grave human rights violations.

“No one can be in denial about the atrocity crimes the Israeli military is committing against Palestinians in Gaza,” Hardman said. “Transfer of additional weapons and assistance to Israel by the United States, Germany, and others is a blank check for further atrocities and increasingly puts them at risk of complicity.”


 -


Fore more: 

‘Hopeless, Starving, and Besieged’: Israel’s Forced Displacement of Palestinians in Gaza,
https://www.hrw.org/preview-link/node/389665/c13b0ba9-251c-41ae-9937-561662b0c21a

For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Israel/Palestine, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/middle-east/north-africa/israel/palestine

For more Human Rights Watch reporting on refugee and migrant rights, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/topic/refugees-and-migrants

 


11/11/2024

MUST READ: 'America’s tech bros now strut their stuff in the corridors of power' - by Carole Cadwalladr

 

A new era dawns. America’s tech bros now strut their stuff in the corridors of power 

 -  Carole Cadwalladr


In hindsight, 2016 was the beginning of the beginning. And 2024 is the end of that beginning and the start of something much, much worse.

It began as a tear in the information space, a dawning realisation that the world as we knew it – stable, fixed by facts, balustraded by evidence – was now a rip in the fabric of reality. And the turbulence that Trump is about to unleash – alongside pain and cruelty and hardship – is possible because that’s where we already live: in information chaos.

It’s exactly eight years since we realised there were invisible undercurrents flowing beneath the surface of our world. Or perhaps I should talk for myself here. It was when I realised. A week before the 2016 US presidential election, I spotted a weird constellation of events and googled “tech disruption” + “democracy”, found not a single hit and pitched a piece to my editor.

It was published on 6 November 2016. In it, I quoted the “technology mudslide hypothesis” a concept invented by Clayton Christensen, a professor at Harvard Business School, who coined the term “disruption” – a process endlessly fetishised in tech circles, in which a scrappy upstart such as Microsoft could overthrow a colossus like IBM.

Whoever wins, I wrote, this election represented “the Great Disruption. With Trump the Great Disruptor.” And, for good measure, I chucked in some questions: “Will democracy survive? Will Nato? Is a free and fair election possible in a post-truth world?”

Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally earlier this year.
Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally earlier this year. Photograph: Chris Carlson/AP

That article was the beginning of my own Alice in Wonderland tumble down the rabbit hole. and I reread it with the sinking knowledge that this next presidential term may yet provide those answers. If it seems like I’m crowing, I wish. This isn’t a valedictory “I told you so”: it’s an eight-year anniversary reminder for us to wake up. And a serving of notice: the first stage of this process is now complete. And we have to understand what that means.

We’ve spent those eight years learning a new lexicon: “misinformation”, “disinformation”, “microtargeting”. We’ve learned about information warfare. As journalists, we, like FBI investigators, used evidence to show how social media was a vulnerable “threat surface” that bad actors such as Cambridge Analytica and the Kremlin could exploit. PhDs have been written on the weaponisation of social media. But none of this helps us now.

There’s already a judiciary subcommittee on the “weaponisation of the federal government” in Congress to investigate the “censorship industrial complex” – the idea that big tech is “censoring” Republican voices. For the past 18 months, it’s been subpoena-ing academics. Last week, Elon Musk tweeted that the next stage would be “prosecutions”. A friend of mine, an Ivy League professor on the list, texts to say the day will shortly come “where I will have to decide whether to stay or go”.

A post on Elon Musk’s X account.
A post on Elon Musk’s X account. Photograph: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto/Rex/Shutterstock

Trump’s list of enemies is not theoretical. It already exists. My friend is on it. In 2022, Trump announced a “day one” executive order instructing “the Department of Justice to investigate all parties involved in the new online censorship regime … and to aggressively prosecute any and all crimes identified”. And my friends in other countries know exactly where this leads.

Another message arrives from Maria Ressa, the Nobel prize-winning Filipino journalist. In the Philippines, the government is modelled on the US one and she writes about what happened when President Duterte controlled all three branches of it. “It took six months after he took office for our institutions to crumble.” And then she was arrested.

What we did during the first wave of disruption, 2016-24, won’t work now. Can you “weaponise” social media when social media is the weapon? Remember the philosopher Marshall McLuhan – “the medium is the message”? Well the medium now is Musk. The world’s richest man bought a global communication platform and is now the shadow head of state of what was the world’s greatest superpower. That’s the message. Have you got it yet?

Does the technology mudslide hypothesis now make sense? Of how a small innovation can eventually disrupt a legacy brand? That brand is truth. It’s evidence. It’s journalism. It’s science. It’s the Enlightenment. A niche concept you’ll find behind a paywall at the New York Times.

Carole Cadwalladr

You have a subscription? Enjoy your clean, hygienic, fact-checked news. Then come with me into the information sewers, where we will wade through the shit everyone else consumes. Trump is cholera. His hate, his lies – it’s an infection that’s in the drinking water now. Our information system is London’s stinking streets before the Victorian miracle of sanitation. We fixed that through engineering. But we haven’t fixed this. We had eight years to hold Silicon Valley to account. And we failed. Utterly.

Because this, now, isn’t politics in any sense we understand it. The young men who came out for Trump were voting for protein powder and deadlifting as much as they were for a 78-year-old convicted felon. They were voting for bitcoin and weighted squats. For YouTube shorts and Twitch streams. For podcast bros and crypto bros and tech bros and the bro of bros: Elon Musk.

Social media is mainstream media now. It’s where the majority of the world gets its news. Though who even cares about news? It’s where the world gets its memes and jokes and consumes its endlessly mutating trends. Forget “internet culture”. The internet is culture. And this is where this election was fought and won … long before a single person cast a ballot.

Steve Bannon was right. Politics is downstream from culture. Chris Wylie, the Cambridge Analytica whistleblower, quoted his old boss to me in my first phone call with him. Elections are downstream from white men talking on platforms that white men built, juiced by invisible algorithms our broligarch overlords control. This is culture now.

The Observer’s reporting on Facebook and Cambridge Analytica belongs to the old world order. An order that ended on 6 November 2024. That was the first wave of algorithmic disruption which gave us Brexit and Trump’s first term, when our rule-based norms creaked but still applied.

Meta owner Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos.
Meta owner Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos. Photograph: Getty Images

The challenge now is to understand that this world has gone. Mark Zuckerberg has ditched his suit, grown out his Caesar haircut and bought a rapper-style gold chain. He’s said one of his biggest regrets is apologising too much. Because he – like others in Silicon Valley – has read the runes. PayPal’s co-founder Peter Thiel, creeping around in the shadows, ensured his man, JD Vance, got on the presidential ticket. Musk wagered a Silicon Valley-style bet by going all in on Trump. Jeff Bezos, late to the party, jumped on the bandwagon with just days to go, ensuringhis Washington Post didn’t endorse any candidate.

These bros know. They don’t fear journalists any more. Journalists will now learn to fear them. Because this is oligarchy now. This is the fusion of state and commercial power in a ruling elite. It’s not a coincidence that Musk spouts the Kremlin’s talking points and chats to Putin on the phone. The chaos of Russia in the 90s is the template; billions will be made, people will die, crimes will be committed.

Our challenge is to realise that the first cycle of disruption is complete. We’re through the looking glass. We’re all wading through the information sewers. Trump is a bacillus but the problem is the pipes. We can and must fix this.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk