Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

9 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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2024 likely to be deadliest year for aid workers (Guardian)

Nearly 200 humanitarians have been killed so far this year, the majority local hires, as growing disregard for international law ramps up the risks to those in conflict hotspots

Almost every week this year, Jagan Chapagain has had to sign a letter of condolence to the families of aid workers killed in the line of duty while serving the world’s largest humanitarian network. A volunteer in Sudan, shot while collecting data; a paramedic gunned down while evacuating wounded civilians in the West Bank; and an ambulance driver in Ethiopia, who died of a bullet wound on his way to hospital, are among the 28 staff and volunteers the secretary general of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies has commemorated since the year began.

By late August, 187 aid workers around the world, who play a vital role in delivering food, water and medical supplies during crises, had been killed, making 2024 likely to be the deadliest year ever for aid workers. Last year currently holds that title, when 280 lost their lives compared with 118 in 2022. The Israeli-Gaza war, where more than 280 aid workers have been killed since 7 October, as well as Sudan and South Sudan accounted for most of the deaths.

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9 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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Informe Draghi sobre competitividad europea

 

9 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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Rising repression against women in journalism (Guardian)

A person wearing a purple ribbon on their wrist places photographs of women in a display
Activists display photos of detained Belarusian journalists in Minsk in February 2021. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

For years, as Kiran Nazish worked as a journalist in conflict zones around the world, she watched the female reporters around her struggling against the odds to build their careers, get support and stay safe.

In Mexico, female journalists told Nazish that they had been blackmailed by their bosses to cooperate sexually or face demotion. While working on the frontline in conflict zones Nazish was asked by male colleagues: “Why are you here? Go back to Pakistan.”

When Nazish collapsed and was hospitalised after covering the rise of Islamic State in Iraq in 2015, she knew she had to do something about it.

“I realised that I had had a great career, with support, and if I was there on my deathbed, what was it like for women who did not have the same opportunities?” she says.

So in 2017, after she had recovered, Nazish launched a mentorship scheme for female journalists and the Coalition for Women in Journalism (CFWIJ) was born.

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7 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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How Telegram Became a Playground for Criminals, Extremists and Terrorists (NYT)

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Drug dealers, scammers and white nationalists conduct business and spread toxic speech on Telegram, according to our analysis of millions of messages.

Paul MozurAdam SatarianoAaron Krolik and 

Paul Mozur reports on global technology, Adam Satariano on European technology, Aaron Krolik on data and technology, and Steven Lee Myers on misinformation.

Telegram has become a global sewer of criminal activity, disinformation, child sexual abuse material, terrorism and racist incitement, according to a four-month investigation by The New York Times that analyzed more than 3.2 million Telegram messages from over 16,000 channels. The company, which offers features that enable criminals, terrorists and grifters to organize at scale and to sidestep scrutiny from the authorities, has looked the other way as illegal and extremist activities have flourished openly on the app.

The degree to which Telegram has been inundated by such content has not been previously reported. The Times investigation found 1,500 channels operated by white supremacists who coordinate activities among almost one million people around the world. At least two dozen channels sold weapons. In at least 22 channels with more than 70,000 followers, MDMA, cocaine, heroin and other drugs were advertised for delivery to more than 20 countries.

Hamas, ISIS and other terror groups have thrived on Telegram, often amassing large audiences across dozens of channels. The Times analyzed more than 40 channels associated with Hamas, which showed that average viewership surged up to 10 times after the Oct. 7 attacks, garnering more than 400 million views in October.

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6 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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France’s shift on Western Sahara (WPR)

September 6, 2024

Hello, everyone. Today at WPR, we’re covering France’s policy shift on Western Sahara’s sovereignty and why Donald Trump’s signature campaign issue isn’t so effective anymore.

But first, here’s our take on today’s top story:

France: President Emmanuel Macron named Michel Barnier, a conservative, as the country’s new PM yesterday, two months after snap legislative elections resulted in political deadlock. Barnier is best known internationally as the EU’s Brexit negotiator, but he is a lifelong politician who has served in previous French governments. (Washington Post)

Our Take: The snap legislative elections Macron called in early July left him with a crisis entirely of his own making. The leftist NFP coalition won the most seats in parliament, successfully keeping Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally, or RN, from being able to form a government. But no party or coalition won an absolute majority, meaning Macron had to find a PM who could survive an immediate vote of no confidence—no small task.

Barnier’s name only surfaced in the past few days, after nearly two months of speculation during what Macron called an “Olympic truce” and several weeks of protracted negotiations since the end of the Paris Games. But in retrospect, he is an ideal pick, and perhaps the only one that might get Macron out of his predicament.

On the one hand, Barnier has spent most of the past two decades in Brussels working in various EU positions, allowing him to benefit from the image of a disinterested and nonpolitical technocrat, not to mention that of an elder statesman—he is modern France’s oldest PM, a marked contrast to his predecessor, who was its youngest. On the other hand, he is a lifelong politician and no stranger to French politics, having run for the presidential nomination of his party, the Republicans, or LR, in 2022.

The combination of the two means he will likely have the savvy to navigate what is sure to be a contentious political landscape in the coming months as France enters budget negotiations, a task for which Barnier’s most recent experience as the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator will come in handy.

Notably, Barnier also dramatically hardened some of his political positions when he sought the LR’s nomination in 2022, specifically on migration and national sovereignty, meaning the RN should find him acceptable. That’s important, since the NFP—understandably bitter that it was passed over for the PM position by Macron despite winning the most seats—is set to try and topple Barnier’s government, but can’t do so without the RN’s votes.

Still, even if Barnier might be able to break the post-election impasse, he will not resolve Macron’s and France’s broader political crisis—if anything, he may make it worse. Macron has staked his entire political legacy on being the only barrier keeping the far right from power, and he called the recent elections on the bet that voters would demonstrate as much. Instead, the left proved to be a more effective force than Macron’s centrist coalition at preventing a far-right government.

Yet Macron chose to bypass the NFP due to the presence among its ranks of the far-left France Unbowed party of Jean-Luc Melenchon, selecting instead a PM who might placate the far right, essentially making himself beholden to his chief antagonist and undermining the fundamental promises he made to his supporters. That not only further weakens his own political position, but will also make it incredibly difficult for the center-right members of his centrist coalition—some of whom are already prepping for the 2027 presidential election—to make a credible case to differentiate themselves from the far right.

As a result, the political crisis provoked by Macron is anything but resolved. The NFP had already called for demonstrations this weekend to protest Macron’s refusal to name a PM from its ranks, and those protests are only set to be more bitter and inflammatory now. Meanwhile, although the RN has signaled its openness to Barnier, it has conditioned its support for him on a change to electoral laws to allow for more proportional representation as well as new legislative elections at the earliest opportunity, meaning next July.

Put simply, France is still mired in political turmoil. And with the Paralympic Games ending this weekend, the Olympic Fever that distracted the French from that fact will soon be a distant memory.

On July 31, with little fanfare or attention, France formally recognized Morocco’s sovereignty over Western Sahara, becoming the latest Western country to throw its weight behind Morocco’s unlawful, unilateral annexation of the territory.

This formal recognition of Morocco’s de facto sovereignty over the territory may not at first glance appear to have global ramifications. But it will indeed have reverberations around the world, eroding the rule of international law that prohibits the acquisition of territory by force as well as the recognition of such an illegal act by other states, Sarah Leah Whitson writes.

6 septiembre, 2024
por Felipe Sahagún
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The U.S. Election and Foreign Policy

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