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	<title>The Tomathon &#187; Current Events</title>
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		<title>French papers&#8217; Mali MIG evidence is photo of a truck</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/french-papers-mali-mig-evidence-is-photo-of-a-truck/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/french-papers-mali-mig-evidence-is-photo-of-a-truck/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Jan 2012 08:16:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Afrique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[When the rebel group MNLA launched its first attack on 17 January, their Parisian supporters made some rather extraordinary claims: that it had captured the large town of Menaka, that a number of Malian soldiers had been killed and vehicles had been destroyed. Press phone calls to residents of the town cast grave suspicions on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/french-papers-mali-mig-evidence-is-photo-of-a-truck/"></g:plusone></div><div id="attachment_1654" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Capturelemonde1.png" rel="lightbox[1651]"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-1654" title="Capturelemonde" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Capturelemonde1-200x200.png" alt="" width="200" height="200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The 25 January Le Monde article and photo</p></div>
<p>When the rebel group <a href="http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20120117-combats-ville-menaka-le-nord-mali" target="_blank">MNLA launched its first attack on 17 January</a>, their Parisian supporters made some rather<a href="http://www.toumastpress.com/actualite/217-menaka-1ere-ville-sous-le-controle-du-mnla.html" target="_blank"> extraordinary claims</a>: that it had captured the large town of <a href="http://menaka.infaplus.org/histoire_menaka.php" target="_blank">Menaka</a>, that a number of Malian soldiers had been killed and vehicles had been destroyed. Press phone calls to residents of the town cast grave suspicions on the rebels claim to have held the town at any point, but the remoteness of the battlefield has left outsiders with only the unsatisfactory, equally decisive if opposite assurances from the Malian armed forces. Amongst the most extraordinary claims, repeated by<a href="http://mnlamov.net/actualites/34-actualites/109-une-semaine-dans-lazawad-.html" target="_blank"> Paris MNLA supporters as recently as the 27th</a>, is that the lightly armed rebels shot down a MIG fighter jet and a helicopter.</p>
<p>Impressively, a photo which was said to be rebels casually posing with a downed MIG, appeared on the 25th.</p>
<p>We now know the &#8220;proof&#8221; that rebels shot down a Malian MIG is a hoax. I suspected this upon seeing it. It was made of large steel beams, rather unlike aircraft. A little digging lead me to a now defunct Nigerien rebel group&#8217;s photo of a burnt Nigerien truck from 2008. It&#8217;s unfortunate that the same group of French and Belgian based rebel supporters, through an interlinked blog, publicized the original 2008 photo at that time. It&#8217;s later use in French based Le Monde and Jeune Afrique has since catapulted the photo into general usage.</p>
<p>Here is the 2008 set of Mouvement des Nigériens pour la justice, publicized by a prominent supporters&#8217; blog.<br />
<a href="http://issikta.blogspot.com/2008/11/les-tir-troupes-dintervention-rapide-du.html" target="_blank">http://issikta.blogspot.com/2008/11/les-tir-troupes-dintervention-rapide-du.html</a></p>
<p><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/issikta.png" rel="lightbox[1651]"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1656" title="issikta" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/issikta.png" alt="" width="573" height="616" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the larger photo.<br />
<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_9zYIBa56jpI/SRHjkN9_IzI/AAAAAAAAAm0/32FyJbZQWqY/s1600/IMGP0399.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[1651]">http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_9zYIBa56jpI/SRHjkN9_IzI/AAAAAAAAAm0/32FyJbZQWqY/s1600/IMGP0399.jpg</a></p>
<p><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/IMGP0399.jpg" rel="lightbox[1651]"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1657" title="IMGP0399" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/IMGP0399.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="600" /></a></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the 2012 &#8220;Malian MIG&#8221; photo. It does not seem accidental that the photo chosen includes a man obscuring the remaining portion of the truck cab. Notice he does not obscure the front bumper or the heavy mid-frame of the truck. This never looked much like an airplane.</p>
<p><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/1634482_3_9592_un-touareg-pose-devant-une-carcasse-d-avion-le_1882ca56248d5381b8446fd3d2f23bdf.jpg" rel="lightbox[1651]"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1658" title="1634482_3_9592_un-touareg-pose-devant-une-carcasse-d-avion-le_1882ca56248d5381b8446fd3d2f23bdf" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/1634482_3_9592_un-touareg-pose-devant-une-carcasse-d-avion-le_1882ca56248d5381b8446fd3d2f23bdf.jpg" alt="" width="540" height="270" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Its first press use appears to be in the French paper Le Monde, in an article by Yidir Plantade  published Wednesday 25 January at 17:46 Paris time. No credit was given, but the article stated &#8220;Des photos publiées sur Facebook montrent une carcasse d&#8217;avion brûlé, supposément un MIG-21 abattu par des rebelles.&#8221;</p>
<p>Who used it first? Who knows. Only the first person to use it can say from where they got it, and why he gave it a false caption.</p>
<p>It seems to have also appeared on <a href="http://facebook.com/nicolas.loizillon" target="_blank">this guy&#8217;s Facebook page</a>  on Wednesday 25 January, with a caption claiming it was the MIG shot down in Mali.  But this looks like it was after Le Monde.  Le Monde has not disclosed who supplied the image and its faked context.  Shortly after Le Monde&#8217;s story appeared, <a href="http://www.facebook.com/ibanakal" target="_blank">this influential rebel supporter&#8217;s  Facebook page</a> showed it reposed.  It even appeared &#8212; with the Le Monde story&#8211; on <a href="http://issikta.blogspot.com/2012/01/dans-le-nord-du-mali-les-touareg-du.html" target="_blank">the blog from which the attributed 2008 photo came</a>.    Interestingly, <a href="http://www.maliweb.net/category.php?NID=86102" target="_blank">two comments on a Maliweb reprint </a>of the Le Monde story promptly identified it as a burnt truck. They were apparently less newsworthy than a claim in a Facebook post.</p>
<p>I have no idea if a Malian MIG was shot down. But claims require proof. And falsified evidence presented as proof seems proof of something else entirely.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<address style="padding-left: 30px;">Here are some examples of this photo&#8217;s usage. I assume they should retract its use.</address>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.jeuneafrique.com/Article/JA2663p010-012.xml0/mali-rebellion-att-rebellion-touareguenord-mali-qui-sont-les-rebelles-du-mnla.html" target="_blank">http://www.jeuneafrique.com/Article/JA2663p010-012.xml0/mali-rebellion-att-rebellion-touareguenord-mali-qui-sont-les-rebelles-du-mnla.html</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.lematindz.net/news/7157-les-touareg-du-mnla-lancent-un-nouveau-conflit-arme-contre-letat-malien.html" target="_blank">http://www.lematindz.net/news/7157-les-touareg-du-mnla-lancent-un-nouveau-conflit-arme-contre-letat-malien.html</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.marocamazigh.com/2053.html" target="_blank">http://www.marocamazigh.com/2053.html</a></li>
<li><a href="http://sahranews.com/news812.html" target="_blank">http://sahranews.com/news812.html</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.maliweb.net/category.php?NID=86102" target="_blank">http://www.maliweb.net/category.php?NID=86102</a></li>
<li><a href="http://juralib.noblogs.org/2012/01/28/une-semaine-dans-lazawad/" target="_blank">http://juralib.noblogs.org/2012/01/28/une-semaine-dans-lazawad/</a></li>
</ul>
<address style="padding-left: 30px;"> </address>
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		<title>Death and Career in the &#8220;Dark&#8221; Sahara: The Sad Fate of Jeremy Keenan</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/death-and-career-in-the-dark-sahara-the-sad-fate-of-jeremy-keenan/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/death-and-career-in-the-dark-sahara-the-sad-fate-of-jeremy-keenan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jan 2012 22:11:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[...]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afrique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Internet Cruft]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lefty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mali]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I would rather be talking about real things. Since September 2011, northern Mali has been on tenterhooks, waiting to see which rumors of risings, rebellions, independence struggles or gang-war will pan out. Yet I am hesitant to even write anything on the situation. I see quite clearly how those living in Kidal and Tombouctou themselves [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2012/01/death-and-career-in-the-dark-sahara-the-sad-fate-of-jeremy-keenan/"></g:plusone></div><div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tuareg.JPG" rel="lightbox[1641]"><img class="zemanta-img-inserted zemanta-img-configured" title="English: Tuareg from the Hoggar (Algeria) sitt..." src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f4/Tuareg.JPG/300px-Tuareg.JPG" alt="English: Tuareg from the Hoggar (Algeria) sitt..." width="300" height="363" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Image via Wikipedia</p></div>
<p>I would rather be talking about real things. Since September 2011, northern Mali has been on tenterhooks, waiting to see which rumors of risings, rebellions, independence struggles or gang-war will pan out. Yet I am hesitant to even write anything on the situation. I see quite clearly how those living in Kidal and Tombouctou themselves seem unsure as to who has been doing what, and even less clear on what is planned by the bulging troupe of demobbed Libyan soldiers, ex-rebels, competing local and national power networks, criminal gangs, militaries of four countries, freedom fighters, and armed salafists.</p>
<p>Cue <a class="zem_slink" title="Jeremy Keenan" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Keenan" rel="wikipedia">Jeremy Keenan</a>. Keenan fears nothing. He has one answer for all questions, one bad guy and one bad guy only who is behind all disorder and suffering. Scholarly rigor and any critical sense are cast aside. Keenan&#8217;s strange status &#8212; he is a &#8220;Professorial Research Associate in anthropology&#8221; who apparently does not teach classes or publish scholarly work &#8212; at <a class="zem_slink" title="School of Oriental and African Studies" href="http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=51.52205,-0.129&amp;spn=1.0,1.0&amp;q=51.52205,-0.129%20%28School%20of%20Oriental%20and%20African%20Studies%29&amp;t=h" rel="geolocation">School of Oriental and African Studies</a>, University of London seems to give weight enough to see his pieces published in otherwise reputable outlets. Al Jazeera has printed a number of Keenan&#8217;s pieces, although at some point in mid 2011 they wisely moved his work from News to &#8220;Opinion&#8221;.</p>
<p>People who don&#8217;t know much about northern Mali would be very poorly served by reading Keenan&#8217;s increasingly odd writing. Keenan used to be a scholar of some note. His 1977 book remains the best English language text on the Ahaggar Touareg of southern Algeria. But over the last decade or two his writing has descended into screed. His 2004 collection of articles, published as &#8220;The lesser gods of the Sahara: social change and contested terrain amongst the Tuareg of Algeria&#8221;, seems his last work with any scholarly pretensions, with a dozen articles and two books since rehashing the same mix of speculation and a shallow version of anti-imperialism. And while I like a good kick against the pricks as much as the next person, his writing has also increasingly lost any critical rigor it once had. All that remains is a sort of mono-maniacal invective against the Algerian DRS. They are a good target: the Directorate of Intelligence and Security have at least as much blood on their hands as any secret police of any authoritarian state. But the increasingly unhinged supposition that their hidden hands are behind all that is bad in the west-central Saharan region is simply unsupportable. As importantly, it lets some equally bad actors off the hook. It also reduces all Touareg (who prefer the label &#8220;<a class="zem_slink" title="Tuareg people" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuareg_people" rel="wikipedia">Kel Tamasheq</a>&#8221; by the way), Arabs, Songhai and other people who make their homes there, to deculturated, classless, ahistoricised puppets. As many people, I had seen Keenan stumble down this unfortunate path for some time. But I never though I would hear him reconfigure the traumatic Tuareg insurgencies of the 1990s and 2000s and their leaders as window dressing for elaborate foreign plots.</p>
<p>And yet here we are, facing Keenan&#8217;s most recent work &#8220;A new crisis in the Sahel&#8221;, which appeared on Al Jazeera English January 3rd. Despite its title, there is nothing &#8220;new&#8221; here. New events are &#8212; in Keenan&#8217;s writings &#8212; simply another manifestation of a single conspiracy. This nefarious plot involves the Algerian state, the CIA, and literally no one else. They have invented and pay off a &#8220;terrorist&#8221; group to allow some sort of power grab by Algeria, and extension the United States. This ignores the obvious fact that the United States political elites, along with some on the Israeli right, are much closer to Algeria&#8217;s arch-foe Morocco. To read Jeremy Keenan is to know that it is here, in the midst of the Saharan desert, that a great game is being played out, in which invented armed groups pose for cameras and fight no one but sacrificial victims arranged by their handlers. Pain and suffering in the Sahara exists solely to influence the popular press in the United States, Europe and Algeria. It is essentially all for our benefit. And God knows, there is nowhere like the desert 600km north of Tombouctou to stage events which will demand the attention of American newsreaders.</p>
<p>When Keenan began this trip in 2003-4, his take was more plausible. Al-Qaida au Maghreb islamique (AQMI) was still the <a class="zem_slink" title="Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Qaeda_Organization_in_the_Islamic_Maghreb" rel="wikipedia">Groupe Salafiste pour la Prédication et le Combat</a> (GSPC), and US spy satellites were tracking a small band of GSPC kidnappers from their homes in Algeria across much of the Sahara. Keenan was good at stating the obvious, missed by much of the press. The Algerian civil war bred unknowably complex corruption and relationships between Algerian power and its opponents. The United States military and government was keen to portray all conflict as part of its global obsession with Osama Bin Laden, no matter how contrived the links. Easily understood enemies bolstered both political powers just as it funded security services with slick appropriation pitches in Washington and backhanders from smugglers in Tamanrasset or Tindouf. By 2005 this simple linkage has overtaken all of Keenan&#8217;s former work. His writing is now almost entirely about this ever deepening, ever more complex conspiracy, the tentacles of which Keenen discovers everywhere. Every conflict, every actor must be hammered into this template. And while his work has slid from the finest academic journals into the popular press and a single journal to which he has some connection, his invitations to cocktail parties thrown by Algeria&#8217;s equally repugnant regional rivals have no doubt increased.</p>
<p>Might we not do better consulting other prominent scholars or (gasp) actual Malians, Nigeriens or Algerians? One consequence of Keenan&#8217;s writing is that it increasingly removes all agency, motivation, and history from Africans, replacing them with mere puppets of unseen foreign forces. While the DRS or AFRICOM have dark motives, the events he sloppily half describes in Al-Jazeera have much more to do with an actual history of a region torn by the after-effects of European colonialism, rentier-state neo-colonialism, multi-sided regional struggles (in which I suspect Keenan of having some interest), poverty, and ill-governance.</p>
<p>On the level of fact (for instance who Iyad Ag Ghali is and his local/national/regional ties) Keenan privileges rumor over history. And sometimes he departs from history altogether. The portrayal of the 2006 insurgency as a one day affair orchestrated by a foreign government is simply inaccurate, and the failure to mention other factions &#8212; such as those led by the late Ibrahim Ag Bahanga or the more conservative Abdoussalam ag Assalat &#8212; seem calculated by Keenan to paper over the gaping holes his statements leave. For his citation of a <a class="zem_slink" title="Le Journal du Dimanche" href="http://www.lejdd.fr/" rel="homepage">Le Journal du Dimanche</a> article claiming Ag Ghali orchestrated the Hombori kidnaps, there are ten others &#8212; citing better informed sources than one anonymous Nigerien security officer &#8212; that speculate the opposite. It&#8217;s as if he read but one of the hundreds of press reports. Except that sheer poor research would hardly result in finding the single article that speculates in Keenan&#8217;s direction. Anyone following these events (again, maybe an actual African!) would tell you this immediately.</p>
<p>Example: why never a mention of French interests? Total just scored a large oil prospecting bloc in the Mauritanian Taoudeni basin just across the border which promises the first oil and natural gas wells in the region. Or French air and ground assets spread from Niamey to northern Burkina to Gao? Or that the Hombori kidnappees were formerly French mercenaries and political fixers for African elites close to Paris? Why not mention the communal conflicts bred of competing nationalisms, bitter caste and class histories, and the deformed half democracy of local governments? Why not mention the affiliations of the former Libyan officers or their history in the 1990s insurgency? Why not mention the extensive interlinked and competing smuggling networks of both local notables and rich men based in Bamako or Tamanrasset? Why not mention AFRICOM&#8217;s much longer involvement with Bamako than Algiers? Why not mention the fact that for the third time in six years, many desert side communities in the region are facing famine rooted in environmental degradation, disappearance of forage for herds, and price spikes driven by foreign food trade and market specualtion. These problems are real. They are complex. And they involve shades other than black and white, players unknown to most Europeans or Americans.</p>
<p>Keenan reduces a complicated living history and society to the maneuvers of the Algerian secret police and the CIA. Those are not nice or well intentioned people: no doubt. But the CIA and Algeria&#8217;s secret police are easily understandable by western readers. It paints a world of binary conflicts, with simple motivations, focused on Western elites and their concerns. Perhaps this is comforting for his foreign reader, but it is also a narrative that removes several million Africans from their own history, as if they all simply take orders from other white folks with whom Keenan has a beef. And I see nothing either liberating or accurate in any of it.</p>
<h3>A Sample of Keenan&#8217;s recent work</h3>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/01/20121274447237703.html">A new crisis in the Sahel &#8211; Opinion &#8211; Al Jazeera English</a></li>
<li><a href="http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Dying_Sahara.html?id=WMRzRAAACAAJ">The Dying Sahara: US Imperialism and Terror in Africa Pluto Press, 2012 ISBN 0745329616</a></li>
<li><a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=IhCSHwAACAAJ">The dark Sahara: America&#8217;s war on terror in Africa. Pluto Press, 2009 ISBN 0745324525</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17539151003594186">Africa unsecured? The role of the Global War on Terror (GWOT) in securing US imperial interests in Africa &#8211; Critical Studies on Terrorism &#8211; Volume 3, Issue 1 Volume 3, Issue 1, 2010 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8322.2009.00677.x/abstract">Al-Qaeda terrorism in the Sahara? Edwin Dyer&#8217;s murder and the role of intelligence agencies &#8211; Keenan &#8211; 2009 &#8211; Anthropology Today</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/20179949">US Militarization in Africa: What Anthropologists Should Know about AFRICOM. Anthropology Today, Vol. 24, No. 5 (Oct., 2008), pp. 16-20</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03056240802411107">Uranium Goes Critical in Niger: Tuareg Rebellions Threaten Sahelian Conflagration &#8211; Review of African Political Economy &#8211; Volume 35, 2008 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02589000601157055">The Banana Theory of Terrorism: Alternative Truths and the Collapse of the ‘Second’ (Saharan) Front in the War on Terror &#8211; Journal of Contemporary African Studies &#8211; Volume 25, Issue 1</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/20406435">US Silence as Sahara Military Base Gathers Dust, Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 34, No. 113, Imperial, Neo-Liberal Africa? (Sep., 2007), pp. 588-590 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-8322.2006.00470.x/abstract">Conspiracy theories and ‘terrorists’: How the ‘war on terror’ is placing new responsibilities on anthropology . Anthropology Today, Volume 22, Issue 6, pages 4–9, December 2006</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/focaal/2006/00002006/00000048/art00011">The making of terrorists: Anthropology and the alternative truth of America&#8217;s &#8216;War on Terror&#8217; in the Sahara. Focaal, Volume 2006, Number 48, Winter 2006 , pp. 144-151(8)</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007145">Turning the Sahel on Its Head: The &#8216;Truth&#8217; behind the Headliness. Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 33, No. 110, Religion, Ideology &amp; Conflict in Africa (Sep., 2006), pp. 761-769 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007064">Military Bases, Construction Contracts &amp; Hydrocarbons in North Africa. Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 33, No. 109, Mainstreaming the African Environment in Development (Sep., 2006), pp. 601-608</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007158">Ray Bush and Jeremy Keenan. Editorial: North Africa: Power, Politics &amp; Promise, Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 33, No. 108, (Jun., 2006) </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007177">Tuareg Take up Arms. Review of African Political Economy Vol. 33, No. 108, North Africa: Power, Politics &amp; Promise (Jun., 2006), pp. 367-368</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007164">Security &amp; Insecurity in North Africa Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 33, No. 108, North Africa: Power, Politics &amp; Promise (Jun., 2006), pp. 269-296 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007082">Famine in Niger Is Not All That It Appears. Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 32, No. 104/105, Oiling the Wheels of Imperialism (Jun. &#8211; Sep., 2005), pp. 405-407</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13629380500336904">Waging war on terror: The implications of America&#8217;s ‘New Imperialism’ for Saharan peoples &#8211; The Journal of North African Studies &#8211; Volume 10, Issue 3-4 2005 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4007039">Political Destabilisation &amp; &#8216;Blowback&#8217; in the Sahel. Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 31, No. 102, Agendas, Past &amp; Future (Dec., 2004), pp. 691-698 </a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4006968">Terror in the Sahara: The Implications of US Imperialism for North &amp; West Africa. Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 31, No. 101, An African Scramble? (Sep., 2004), pp. 475-496</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/4006945">Americans &amp; &#8216;Bad People&#8217; in the Sahara-Sahel Americans &amp; &#8216;Bad People&#8217; in the Sahara-Sahel, Review of African Political Economy, Vol. 31, No. 99, ICTs &#8216;Virtual Colonisation&#8217; &amp; Political Economy (Mar., 2004), pp. 130-139</a></li>
</ul>
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		<title>World Mental Health Day: Facts are the First Step, Action the Next</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/world-mental-health-day-facts-are-the-first-step-action-the-next/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/world-mental-health-day-facts-are-the-first-step-action-the-next/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Oct 2011 19:35:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lefty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Niger]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[European Union]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mental health]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[World Health Organization]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Today &#8212; the 10th of October &#8212; is World Mental Health Day. Take a moment to look through these photos from Niger, where Mahamadoul-kafi Djibrilla spoke at a community discussion of mental illness and treatment in Tahoua Region. Some might think that the least of rural Niger&#8217;s worries would be mental illness. But they&#8217;d [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/world-mental-health-day-facts-are-the-first-step-action-the-next/"></g:plusone></div><div class="zemanta-img" style="margin: 1em; display: block;">
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 110px"><a href="http://www.daylife.com/image/06rtckj159bFT?utm_source=zemanta&amp;utm_medium=p&amp;utm_content=06rtckj159bFT&amp;utm_campaign=z1"><img class="    " title="HARBE, AFGHANISTAN - MARCH 01:  A mental patie..." src="http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/06rtckj159bFT/100x150.jpg" alt="HARBE, AFGHANISTAN - MARCH 01:  A mental patie..." width="100" height="150" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A mental patient poses for a photograph in a sanitarium in Harbe, Afghanistan. Over 5 million Afghans suffer severe mental disorders resulting from decades of conflict and repression. Image by Getty Images via @daylife</p></div>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Today &#8212; the 10th of October &#8212; is <a href="http://www.who.int/mediacentre/events/annual/world_mental_health_day/en/index.html">World Mental Health Day</a>. Take a moment to look <a href="http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.2083164400077.2104047.1274120145&amp;type=3">through these photos from Niger</a>, where Mahamadoul-kafi Djibrilla spoke at a community discussion of mental illness and treatment in <a class="zem_slink" title="Tahoua Region" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tahoua_Region" rel="wikipedia">Tahoua Region</a>. Some might think that the least of rural Niger&#8217;s worries would be mental illness. But they&#8217;d be wrong. Mental disorders, whether treated by families and communities or by medical professionals are a part of life everywhere, even as most cultures are fearful of even acknowledging their extent.</p>
<p>The World Health Organization chose today to release its &#8220;<a href="http://www.who.int/mental_health/publications/mental_health_atlas_2011/en/index.html">Mental Health Atlas</a>&#8220;, a statistical and policy survey on the mental health and mental healthcare systems of 184 nations. Their conclusion was that &#8220;countries all over the world spend very little on the treatment of mental illness.&#8221; The <a href="http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=39981&amp;Cr=health&amp;Cr1=">UN Secretary General noted that</a>, while mental illness makes up 13% of the world &#8216;disease burden,&#8217; &#8220;<a href="http://globalhealth.kff.org/Daily-Reports/2011/October/10/GH-101011-WHO-Mental-Health.aspx">Resources allocated for mental health by governments and civil society are habitually too little, both in human and financial terms.</a>&#8221;</p>
<p>Global spending on mental health, in rich and poor nations alike, is less than US$3 per capita per year. The report goes on to note that &#8220;up to 50 percent of people suffering from mental disorders in Europe and North America do not receive treatment, and up to 85 percent of people in developing countries do not receive treatment&#8230;&#8221; This coincides with other recent studies that show a United States population, facing increased pressure from unemployment and other crises, <a href="http://blogs.marketwatch.com/healthmatters/2009/05/22/cutting-back-on-health-care-during-the-recession/">has dramatically cut back on its mental healthcare spending</a>, deeming it an unaffordable luxury. Meanwhile, <a href="http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Articles/2011/09/23/The-Recessions-Silent-Mental-Health-Epidemic.aspx#page1">those same pressures have both increased the need</a> for mental healthcare, and cut back funding for such services.</p>
<h3>More Common Than You Think</h3>
<p>The <a class="zem_slink" title="World Health Organization" href="http://www.who.int" rel="homepage">World Health Organization</a> <a href="http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs220/en/index.html">this year estimates</a> 450 million people worldwide are suffering right now from mental illness, but estimates of the percent of people who will suffer some mental illness in their lifetime <a href="http://www.cmha.ca/bins/content_page.asp?cid=3-108">vary from between 5% and 25%</a>.</p>
<p>In the European Union, <a href="http://ec.europa.eu/health/archive/ph_determinants/life_style/mental/docs/stigma_paper_en.pdf">one quarter of people will experience a mental health problem in their lifetimes</a>, 9% will suffer depression in any one year, and 2.6% a year will suffer more severe disorders.</p>
<h3>We&#8217;re Still Not Doing Much</h3>
<p>In the United States <a href="http://www.nami.org/template.cfm?section=about_mental_illness">at least 10% of the population</a> is suffering depression right now.<br />
Yet it would take <a href="http://bhpr.hrsa.gov/shortage/ ">almost 7000 new mental health professionals to meet the needed ratio of just one for every 10,000 people</a>. And that number of needed professionals has <a href="http://www.apa.org/about/gr/issues/workforce/disparity.aspx">increased by almost 2000</a> in the last three years.</p>
<p>In the developing world, the disparity is much greater. In <a href="http://www.afro.who.int/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=1046&amp;Itemid=1932&amp;lang=en">Nigeria the ratio of psychologists and social workers is 0.02 to 100,000 population</a>. In Niger, there were 0.2 psychiatric beds per 100,000 population, and no mental hospital based beds at all. There were 0.4 psychiatric nurses per 100,000, and the same percentage of other mental health professionals. And West Africa is not unusual in this. In Azerbaijan there were 5 psychiatrists and 7.1 psych beds per 100,000. In Ecuador these numbers were 2.1 and 1.69 per 10,000. In Afghanistan they are 0.036 and 0.055 per 10,000. <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=2SXuXnlz3PgC">In most of these, as most developing nations</a>, there is no or minimal and unquantifiably small government support to aid those suffering from acute mental illness, let alone the huge percentage suffering less obvious forms.</p>
<p>It is no better in rapidly industrializing nations. In <a href="http://homepage.newschool.edu/~changd/growingPains.pdf">China there is only one mental health bed per 10,000 population</a> and less than one mental health professional per 100,000. <a href="http://infochangeindia.org/agenda/access-denied/less-than-1-of-our-health-budget-is-spent-on-mental-health.html">In India</a>, where one in six health related disorders are mental, there are just 0.25 mental health beds per 10,000 population.</p>
<h3>Real, Inescapable Illnesses</h3>
<p>We should distinguish between lifetime &#8212; probably genetic &#8212; chronic and severe mental illness and situational mental disorders, both of which can disable those suffering. Mental illness is more prevalent in times of high unemployment, rapid social change, people struck by food insecurity and poverty, and times of population movement. Around 400 million people are suffering from these sorts of mental illnesses right now, but with so few resources to help them, the real numbers may be much higher</p>
<p>In the the United States, like much of the developed world, less chronic forms are mental illness are now recognized as equally severe problems for the society. <a href="http://www.nmha.org/go/state-ranking">Depression is the leading cause of disability in the United States among adults</a>. Suicide rates for those currently suffering depression are well above the general population and are highest in rural areas with the least access to care.</p>
<p>Mental illness strikes those more statistically likely to suffer societal discrimination and poverty. The <a href="http://www.blackwomenshealth.com/blog/black-women-and-mental-health/">depression rate among African American women is 50% higher than that of Caucasian women in the US</a>, just like the unemployment rate. In fact, African Americans make up almost a quarter of all suffering from mental illness in the US, far above their ratio to total population. In a world of increasing disparity, unemployment, poverty, food insecurity, and population movement, mental illness rises as well. The legal systems, even in the richest nations, contribute to the numbers of mental illness rather than help treat those who enter suffering from illness. <a href="http://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/help-information/mental-health-statistics/UK-worldwide/  ">In the UK, Only 1 in 10 prisoners DO NOT suffer a diagnosable mental disorder</a>.</p>
<p>On top of those suffering transitory illness there are millions suffering genetic predispositions to chronic &#8212; and incurable &#8212; severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia. While treatment is making it more an more possible to live a fuller, normal life even with severe mental illness, fewer people have access to even basic mental health care. While schizophrenia affects only <a href="http://www.who.int/mental_health/management/schizophrenia/en/">around 0.3% to 0.7% of the population worldwide</a>, that&#8217;s still 24 million people.</p>
<h3>Fear Compounds Suffering</h3>
<p>I know these things because I work for a charity that provides housing, among other services, to people in my community who suffer chronic mental illnesses. Where I live, we have under 1000 chronic mental illness care beds to a population of 250,000, enough to meet the needs of much less than %1 of population.</p>
<p>But it is next to impossible to build new homes for long term care of those suffering mental illness: <a href="http://www.silive.com/opinion/editorials/index.ssf/2011/02/repurpose_fort_place.html">neighbors, community groups, and the press react with vilification</a> and hatred when new housing is planned.</p>
<p>People suffering from mental illness, according to long-term studies in Europe, New Zealand, and the United States have all concluded that &#8220;<a href="http://ec.europa.eu/health/archive/ph_determinants/life_style/mental/docs/stigma_paper_en.pdf">that the risks of violence by someone with mental health problems are no greater than those for the general population as a whole.</a>&#8221;</p>
<p>People suffering from mental illnesses <a href="http://www.cmha.ca/bins/content_page.asp?cid=3-108">are no more to harm strangers in any fashion than any other population, but are 2.5 times more likely to be the victim of crime than others</a>. Where the severely mentally ill are more likely to be involved in violence is within their home, as a symptom of lack of treatment. The likelihood of committing any form of armed violence once in their lifetime among people with serious mental illness was 16%, as compared with 7% among people without mental illness. This does not include most sufferers of less severe mental illness, nor those who are receiving appropriate treatment. In fact, the vast majority of those suffering from mental illness are not included in these statistics, as they suffer from depression or other disorders that present no danger to others. <a href="http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp068229">The severely mentally ill are more a danger to themselves than anyone else, yet they are feared as violent and dangerous far outside their actual danger</a>. People with no mental disorder who abuse alcohol or drugs are seven times as likely as those without substance abuse to commit violence. And since the rates of substance abuse among the untreated severely mentally ill are very high, much of the statistical relevance may be down to this. In fact, among those severely mentally ill who did not have a history of substance abuse, having been a victim of violence themselves, or homelessness, the likelihood of them engaging in any violence over their lifetime was in line with the general population.</p>
<p>Despite this, the perception of the severely mentally ill as violent &#8212; at least in the United States &#8212; has doubled since the 1950s while more and more severely mentally ill have found treatment that allows them to function normally. Recent <a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/2676305">studies reveal</a> a majority of respondents falsely believe people suffering from Schizophrenia were inherently dangerous.</p>
<h3>What You Can Do</h3>
<p>Where do we go with this? First, educate yourself and others. Learn more about what these illnesses are and how you can avoid them in your life or help those in your family or community. From Tahoua to communities around the world, we need to speak, learn, and demystify mental illness. I often tell people that I pass my agency&#8217;s clients regularly as I walk down to my neighborhood shops to buy a cup of coffee or a newspaper. No one looking at them would ever know these were people with severe and persistent mental illnesses. They look like &#8212; because they are &#8212; regular members of our community. Now imagine how hard it is to identify those who&#8217;ve suffered from episodic mental disorders due to depression or trauma. Look around you and realize one in every five people you pass is in that group.</p>
<p>But like so many things in this world, a large part of the problem must be tackled with funding. We actually know what we need to do. This year, <a href="http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2011/9789241501019_eng.pdf">the WHO published a survey of shortages in mental health care in 144 developing and poorer developed nations</a>. They found these countries would need 1.18 million mental health professionals, almost half of whom would be psychosocial care providers, to care for those suffering and educate others about mental illness. The yearly cost to provide this workforce was estimated at about US$ 4.4 billion.</p>
<p>For comparison that would be <a href="http://www.warresisters.org/pages/piechart.htm">less than 0.5% of the United States annual defense budget</a>. So we&#8217;re actively choosing to spend money we have on other things. It does not have to be this way.</p>
<h3>Look After Yourself and Help Look After Your Community</h3>
<p>So for this World Mental Health day I&#8217;d hope you not only see to your own mental health, but think of the others suffering, whether they be on your street or across the world. They are your brother and sisters and, but for a bit of luck, could be you.</p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://drvitelli.typepad.com/providentia/2011/10/its-world-mental-health-day.html">It&#8217;s World Mental Health Day</a> (drvitelli.typepad.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.thefword.org.uk/blog/2011/10/its_world_menta">It&#8217;s World Mental Health Day, so stop stigmatising my pills.</a> (thefword.org.uk)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2011/09/29/blog-party-world-mental-health-day-october-10/">Blog Party: World Mental Health Day, October 10</a> (psychcentral.com)</li>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://skwillms.wordpress.com/2011/10/09/patients-suffer-when-reimbursements-for-mental-health-care-are-reduced/">Patients suffer when reimbursements for mental health care are reduced</a> (skwillms.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.sociolingo.com/2011/08/useful-who-first-aid-guide-for-mental-health-in-a-disaster/">Useful WHO First-Aid Guide for Mental Health in a Disaster</a> (sociolingo.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>&#8220;The NYPD is doing PR for the protesters&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/the-nypd-is-doing-pr-for-the-protesters/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/the-nypd-is-doing-pr-for-the-protesters/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Oct 2011 01:49:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Yep.  It was a trap.  I saw it myself (and was old and chicken enough to avoid it). But don&#8217;t fret.  Someone said that day that &#8220;the NYPD is doing PR for the protesters.&#8221;  I&#8217;m begining to believe this is bigger than the NYPD &#8220;can possibly imagine.&#8221; My report was posted with my photos below, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/10/the-nypd-is-doing-pr-for-the-protesters/"></g:plusone></div><p><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/bridgetrap.png" rel="lightbox[1545]"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1546" title="bridgetrap" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/bridgetrap.png" alt="Wait... It's a Trap!" width="402" height="299" /></a></p>
<p>Yep.  It was a trap.  I saw it myself (and was old and chicken enough to avoid it). But don&#8217;t fret.  Someone said that day that &#8220;the NYPD is doing PR for the protesters.&#8221;  I&#8217;m begining to believe this is bigger than the NYPD &#8220;can possibly imagine.&#8221;</p>
<p>My report was posted with my photos below, but you should really read<a title="Notes on the Battle of the Brooklyn Bridge" href="http://www.examiner.com/bronx-county-independent-in-new-york/notes-on-the-battle-of-the-brooklyn-bridge" target="_blank"> my friend Billy Wharton&#8217;s account of the October 1st Brooklyn Bridge march</a> and the <a title="Occupy Wall Street – the story of the Brooklyn Bridge 'trap'" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/blog/2011/oct/03/occupy-wall-street-brooklyn-bridge-arrests?fb=optOut" target="_blank">more than forty other stories by people who were there, collected nicely at The Guardian</a>.</p>
<p>In the end, it makes no difference.  We know what Kelly and his men are up to.  Every &#8220;clever&#8221; NYPD attempt to discredit and destroy the Occupy Wall Street movement just seems to backfire, as I&#8217;m sure it will when they inevitably decide to forcibly clear Liberty Square</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll share what I sent out to my friends that evening from the middle of a joyous Liberty Square.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">Liberty sq is amazing: these kids who&#8217;ve just been beaten by cops are gathered, focused inward, not at the cops scowling at them in a cordon/ Singing &#8220;we are unstoppable&#8221; over and over, smiling. It literally sends chills down my spine. One of the most life affirming things I have ever seen. [In Contrast] I walked down wall street, cops nervously guarding Trump tower. The cops were herding, swearing, beating, &amp; arresting them And they are joyful, smiling, welcoming everyone.  The media wants to paint these people as hateful, privileged: come here and see #<a href="http://occupywallstreet.org">occupywallstreet</a></p>
<p>I&#8217;ve seen a lot of demos, marches and occupations, back to anti-nuke &#8220;Freeze&#8221; marches and Anti-Apartheid college occupations back in my teens.  I&#8217;ve never felt anything like this.</p>
<p>These Liberty Square occupiers are optimistic and feel their own power.  The cops and the press and the mayor may lash out at them, but the people in that square can see through it all.  You can feel down there that the press and politicians are on the backfoot, the rich %1 are hiding, and the cops just seem afraid: not of violence, but because they themselves feel they can&#8217;t contain what&#8217;s starting to emerge in that concrete park in the Financial district.</p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://crooksandliars.com/susie-madrak/over-500-protesters-arrested-after-be">Over 500 Protesters Arrested After Being Kettled On Brooklyn Bridge</a> (crooksandliars.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://destructionist.wordpress.com/2011/10/02/occupy-wall-street-protesters-arrested-on-brooklyn-bridge/">Occupy Wall Street protesters arrested on Brooklyn Bridge</a> (destructionist.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/2011/10/02/over-700-arrests-for-occupywallstreet-protesters-on-the-brooklyn-bridge/">Over 700 Arrests for #OccupyWallStreet Protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge</a> (dandelionsalad.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://wilderside.wordpress.com/2011/10/02/blow-by-blow-brooklyn-bridge-taken-by-occupy-wall-street/">Blow by Blow: Brooklyn Bridge &#8220;taken&#8221; by Occupy Wall Street *</a> (wilderside.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.thenation.com/blog/163462/occupywallstreet-searching-hope-america">#OccupyWallStreet: Searching for Hope in America | The Nation</a> (thenation.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://stream.aljazeera.com/story/us-protesters-rally-occupy-wall-street">US protesters rally to occupy Wall Street | The Stream &#8211; Al Jazeera English</a> (stream.aljazeera.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://nypdconfidential.com/print/2011p/110905p.html">The NYPD: Spies, Spooks and Lies</a> (nypdconfidential.com)</li>
</ul>
<p>By the way, I made that image at top, thanks to Upsetter FC.  Use it, but don&#8217;t say you made it yourself.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Also btw, I remembered the quote wrong.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 120239985331937280 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_120239985331937280 a { text-decoration:none; color:#0033ff; }#bbpBox_120239985331937280 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_120239985331937280' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#fafdf7; background-image:url(http://a2.twimg.com/profile_background_images/32228660/CRBGA.jpg); background-repeat:no-repeat'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#000000; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>Arresting thousands of protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge? NYPD should get paid for doing <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23OccupyWallStreet" title="#OccupyWallStreet">#OccupyWallStreet</a>'s PR.</span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 1 October 2011 3:53 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/allisonkilkenny/status/120239985331937280' target='_blank'>1 October 2011 3:53 pm</a> via <a href="http://www.tweetdeck.com" rel="nofollow" target="blank">TweetDeck</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=120239985331937280' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=120239985331937280' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=120239985331937280' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=allisonkilkenny'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a3.twimg.com/profile_images/1436823223/224280_10150185935549730_513309729_6735021_6352044_n_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=allisonkilkenny'>@allisonkilkenny</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>allisonkilkenny</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
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		<title>Finding Bin Laden and Failing.</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/05/finding-bin-laden-and-failing/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/05/finding-bin-laden-and-failing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 May 2011 15:46:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Al-Qaeda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Osama Bin Laden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pakistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War of Terror]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomathon.com/mphp/?p=1485</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While the reliable press are reporting the location of Osama Bin Laden&#8217;s mansion in Abbottabad, they are so far way off. Not even close, in fact. Here are two examinations that are much more careful. Honestly, it&#8217;s people like this who give me hope for basic problem solving skills. The world press just chose the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/05/finding-bin-laden-and-failing/"></g:plusone></div><div id="attachment_1497" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 183px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/afp20110502212402393.jpg" rel="lightbox[1485]"><img class="size-full wp-image-1497" title="afpimage" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/afp201105022124023931.jpg" alt="Osama Bin Laden's house.  The Pakistan Army's Dairy Farm is about 200 meters to the left, married soldiers housing for the Pakistan Military Academy in 400 meters away to the right, and a 24 hour army check point in 150 meters behind the photographer on the main road." width="173" height="117" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Osama Bin Laden&#39;s house.  The Pakistan Army&#39;s Dairy Farm is about 200 meters to the left, married soldiers housing for the Pakistan Military Academy in 400 meters away to the right, and a 24 hour army check point in 150 meters behind the photographer on the main road.</p></div>
<p>While the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2011/may/02/osama-bin-laden-compound-mapped-google">reliable</a> press are <a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/226817/osama_bin_ladens_small_town_hideout_gets_google_maps_treatment.html">reporting</a> the location of Osama Bin Laden&#8217;s mansion in <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/abbottabad" title="Abbottabad" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbottabad">Abbottabad</a>, they are so far way off.</p>
<p>Not even close, in fact.</p>
<p>Here are <a href="http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2011/05/osama_bin_ladens_mansion_in_google.html">two</a> <a href="http://ogleearth.com/2011/05/finding-osama-bin-ladens-abbottabad-mansion-with-google-earth/">examinations</a> that are much more careful.</p>
<p>Honestly, it&#8217;s people like this who give me hope for basic problem solving skills.  The world press just chose the location for the center of town and reported it uncritically.</p>
<p>After my several hours last night trolling through the press reports, I saw someone come up with this seemingly <a href="http://goo.gl/L824h ">likely location.</a></p>
<p>But I&#8217;m much more convinced by the Bilal Town location, as local press reports said it was &#8220;behind&#8221; the Army Housing Scheme Flats (<a href="http://goo.gl/CY6FG">here</a> ) ~ 2 km SSE of first location (and ~ 6km ENE from town center, which is the default location for the town and spot everyone is erroneously reporting).  I&#8217;m also persuaded by people who noted that the house isn&#8217;t on Google earth, as sat images there are from 2001 (some from 2005) and the house was built in 2005. So Bin Laden&#8217;s house would be right about <a title="Likely location of Bin Laden's house, Wikimapia" href="http://wikimapia.org/#lat=34.1677482&amp;lon=73.2361937&amp;z=17&amp;l=0&amp;m=b&amp;v=8">here</a>.</p>
<p>Note the last two likely locations are both less than one km from and on the same road as the main gate for Pakistan&#8217;s &#8220;West Point&#8221; or Sandrington.  The Kukal Road between the two has at least <a href="http://wikimapia.org/#lat=34.1722931&amp;lon=73.2471371&amp;z=15&amp;l=0&amp;m=b&amp;v=8&amp;show=/4380182/PMA-Kakul-MP-Check-Post">one permanent military checkpoint</a> and you can&#8217;t turn around without bumping into a military installation.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a couple of news photos of the actual compound, and they match with the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/picasa" title="Picasa" rel="homepage" href="http://picasa.google.com/">Picassa</a> and <a href="http://www.panoramio.com/photo/25931320">Panoramio</a> pictures you can find scattered around the development called &#8220;Bilal Town&#8221;, including one of a large &#8220;new construction&#8221; that required it&#8217;s own power pylon.  It will be interesting to look in the backgrounds of these mapped snapshots and see if you can find the house.</p>
<p>Also note that the descriptions of the attack from BEFORE we knew it involved Bin Laden (<a href="http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2011/05/army-chopper-crashes-in-abbottabad/">just one example here</a>) say one helicopter shot down by men on the roof w/ an RPG, crashing and killing those aboard.  This doesn&#8217;t sound like &#8220;no casualties&#8221; and suggests there were more dead on Bin Laden&#8217;s side as well.</p>
<p>Is this important? Only to the extent that it shows Bin Laden was hiding in the middle of a <a class="zem_slink" title="Pakistani Armed Forces" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani_Armed_Forces">Pakistani military</a> base, living in a building conspicuous for many reasons (no telephone or internet, high walls with barbed wire, armed guards, burned their own trash, and I&#8217;m sure much coming and going).  I saw one press story on a 2009 &#8220;passing out&#8221; ceremony from the Pakistan Military Academy, where the head of the nation&#8217;s military banged on about how they were winning the &#8220;war on terror&#8221;. The article notes those graduating included cadets from central Asian dictatorships receiving special training before returning home to &#8216;continue the fight&#8217;.  The parade ground is literally within shouting distance of Osama&#8217;s compound.  Someone on the upper storey might have sat and watched the assembled cadets.</p>
<p>Good thing we started two wars and killed a million people while the ally that the west has been propping up for decades had him the whole time.  One can&#8217;t imagine the motivation the Pakistani military (like the US military, by the way) in keeping Bin Laden lurking in the background.</p>
<p>Or so we think.  Also good they dumped the body at sea so no one will ever prove it, and we can keep busy arguing about if this one guy is alive or dead.</p>
<p>The fact is, Bin Laden and his type were already on the way out in 2001.  The cold war had helped destroy organizations throughout the Muslim world (and elsewhere) that genuinely expressed people&#8217;s anger at poverty, exploitation, imperialism and misrule.  Right wing religious zealotry was one of the few paths left, and was funded (by the US and their clients) through the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/2001_war_in_afghanistan" title="War in Afghanistan (2001–present)" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_in_Afghanistan_%282001%E2%80%93present%29">wars in Afghanistan</a> and the dictatorship in Saudi Arabia.</p>
<p>But no one wanted what Bin Laden was selling when they saw it up close.  It was only through distant, symbolic attacks on distant, faceless victims, that these people gained any support.  That&#8217;s long been over.  The &#8220;Arab Spring&#8221; protests, suppressed so brutally, should have been the answer all along.  Now they show just what a dead end Bin Laden was, whatever his fate.</p>
<p>Why are we still killing, dying, and bankrupting ourselves when we know that?</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Update:</strong></p>
<p>A careful observer named <a href="http://ogleearth.com/2011/05/finding-osama-bin-ladens-abbottabad-mansion-with-google-earth/#comment-5117">Dave at Ogle Earth blog</a> has matched photo backgrounds of the house to landscape <a href="http://wikimapia.org/#lat=34.1677482&amp;lon=73.2361937&amp;z=17&amp;l=0&amp;m=b&amp;v=8&amp;search=34%2010%2014N%2C%2073%2015%2012E">to this exact location</a>.  Remember, the satellite images predate the house.  This seems exactly in line with pre announcement press reports of where the fighting took place.</p>
<p class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;"><strong>UPDATE 2: </strong>Here&#8217;s the confirmed location: <a href="http://wikimapia.org/#lat=34.1693549&amp;lon=73.2425129&amp;z=17&amp;l=0&amp;m=b">Lat 34.1693549 Long 73.2425129</a> This is about 100 meters from the previous spot, and compound is visible on the 2005 imagery, along with all the walls and such that should have made it pretty obvious to the neighborhood.  <a href="http://wikimapia.org/19728497/Osama-bin-Laden-Compound">Details are here</a>, as are the <a title="http://www.nationaljournal.com/nationalsecurity/pictures-u-s-photos-of-the-bin-laden-compound-20110502#photo_0" href="http://www.nationaljournal.com/nationalsecurity/pictures-u-s-photos-of-the-bin-laden-compound-20110502#photo_0" target="_blank">US Military images</a> that match.</p>
<p><strong>More links:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li> A <a href="http://www.panoramio.com/photo/25931320">local&#8217;s photos</a> from nearby home towards the compound</li>
<li> unidentified <a href="http://www.panoramio.com/photo/52041908">press photo </a>of the compound</li>
<li> <a href="http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&amp;ll=34.170092,73.24276&amp;spn=0.007652,0.013626&amp;z=16">Google maps</a> at the location</li>
<li> Wikimedia <a href="http://toolserver.org/~geohack/geohack.php?pagename=Death_of_Osama_bin_Laden&amp;params=34_10_9_N_73_14_33_E_scale:1000">toolserver.org guide</a> for this location</li>
<li><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NlWMsApBOws&amp;feature=player_embedded">Youtube video</a> of the compound after the assault</li>
<li> <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/satellite-images-of-bin-ladens-compound-2011-5">CIA images</a> of the compound</li>
</ul>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;"></h6>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.thenational.ae/news/worldwide/osama-bin-laden-died-in-80-minute-battle-witnesses">Osama bin Laden died in 80-minute battle: witnesses &#8211; The National</a> (thenational.ae)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://mashable.com/2011/05/02/bin-laden-compound-video/">Possible Bin Laden Compound Shown Engulfed in Flames [VIDEO]</a> (mashable.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://discomaulvi.wordpress.com/2011/05/02/some-thoughts-on-the-death-of-osama-bin-laden/">Some Thoughts on the death of Osama Bin Laden</a> (discomaulvi.wordpress.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>More thoughts on Cole&#8217;s uneducated gut</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/more-thoughts-on-coles-uneducated-gut/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/more-thoughts-on-coles-uneducated-gut/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Mar 2011 00:52:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lefty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Liberation Struggles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Glenn Greenwald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Juan Cole]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Left-wing politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libya]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[usa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomathon.com/mphp/?p=1336</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Glenn Greenwald is one of several &#8220;progressive&#8221; (USA-ian for &#8220;Social-Democratic&#8221;) commentators who have been debating Juan Cole on his tempestuous &#8220;Open Letter to the Left&#8221;.   Greenwald&#8217;s &#8220;Question of Juan Cole&#8221; takes what Cole says seriously, and applies serious criticism to the Professor&#8217;s unabashed endorsement of a U.S./NATO air war to oust Gadaffi.   The more [...]]]></description>
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<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mucha_8_Wrzesien_1939_Warszawa.jpg" rel="lightbox[1336]"><img title="&quot;Mucha&quot; weekly, Warsaw: &quot;The Pr..." src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/df/Mucha_8_Wrzesien_1939_Warszawa.jpg/300px-Mucha_8_Wrzesien_1939_Warszawa.jpg" alt="&quot;Mucha&quot; weekly, Warsaw: &quot;The Pr..." width="300" height="339" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Damn Peaceniks!</p></div>
</div>
<p><a class="zem_slink freebase/en/glenn_greenwald" title="Glenn Greenwald" rel="homepage" href="http://salon.com/opinion/greenwald/">Glenn Greenwald</a> is one of several &#8220;progressive&#8221; (USA-ian for &#8220;Social-Democratic&#8221;) commentators who have been debating <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/juan_cole" title="Juan Cole" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Cole">Juan Cole</a> on his tempestuous &#8220;Open Letter to the Left&#8221;.   Greenwald&#8217;s <a title="Salon Glenn Greenwald: 2011/03/30" href="http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/03/30/cole/index.html">&#8220;Question of Juan Cole&#8221;</a> takes what Cole says seriously, and applies serious criticism to the Professor&#8217;s unabashed endorsement of a U.S./NATO air war to oust Gadaffi.   The more I read, the more convinced I am that Cole is not engaging in an intra-Left debate, or even having a Hitchens Moment (a full-on defection from his principles) as some US anti-war activists have claimed.</p>
<p>Cole <em>wants </em>to go to war because he is having a strong emotional reaction to oppression. I empathize, but that&#8217;s not analysis.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s not interested in the Left, except that he sees the Left as the primary impediment to what he wants done.  So he belittles and abuses leftists who oppose this war with &#8220;walk and chew gum&#8221; insults, insinuations we&#8217;re Stalinist &#8216;tankies&#8217; defending the suppression of Prague Spring, or nationalistic &#8220;isolationists&#8221; like the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/molotov-ribbentrop_pact" title="Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov%E2%80%93Ribbentrop_Pact">Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact</a> era Communist Party cadres.</p>
<p>But in the touchstones of his arguments &#8212; formal legality, individual morality as definitional of leaders of states, historical exceptionalism, rejection of motivations for imperial action beyond surface ideologies or party labels &#8211;  Professor Cole reveals himself is a centrist Obama-Clinton Democrat.</p>
<p>If a self identified centrist supporter of &#8220;benign imperial intervention&#8221; said all this we&#8217;d ignore it.  It might even harden opposition from the Left.  So Cole frames this as the plea of a Leftist, trying to bring us back to that magical time before we became knee-jerk ideologues, when we still (apparently) believed in imperial powers enforcing decisions of the handpicked capitalist Security Council through multi-billion dollar airborne defense systems.</p>
<p>Cole points to the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/spanish_civil_war" title="Spanish Civil War" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Civil_War">Spanish Civil War</a> as our inspiration.  Where powerful foreign militaries used state-of-the-art air power and blockades to shift the tide of civil war to those which might best benefit future investments.  (Oh wait, that was the Luftwaffe.)  He appeals &#8212; as a friend and comrade, mind  &#8212; to our shared better nature.</p>
<p>Greenwald doesn&#8217;t peg him so, but he asks the right question: how does the Professor &#8212; who&#8217;s opinions are only really of interest in that they are informed by his education and analysis &#8212; decide when a war is &#8220;justifiable&#8221;.</p>
<p><em>&#8230;regarding his test for whether war is justifiable&#8230;[Cole says] &#8220;My reply would be simple. If you are arguing for war, you don&#8217;t have to ask all these fancy questions. There are really only two questions you have to answer. The first is, would you yourself be willing to die fighting for this cause you have espoused? The second is, would you be willing to see your 18-year-old son or daughter killed for this cause?&#8221;</em></p>
<div>
<p>This, I think, bolsters my previous argument that (while I wish him well) Cole is not of the Left and is not <strong>really</strong> directing his critiques towards the left as most leftists would define that group.</p>
<p>The historic Left has since the mid 19th century defined its values around two elements: that political structures serve class conflicts and that human equallity (what Ernst Nolte in &#8220;<a class="zem_slink freebase/en/fascism_in_its_epoch" title="Fascism In Its Epoch" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascism_In_Its_Epoch">The Three Faces of Fascism</a>&#8221; called &#8220;transcendence&#8221; of all human divisions, against which fascism is a backlash). Most left-wing criticisms of this war  in Libya are based on class (the revolution&#8217;s leadership is no more progressive than Gadaffi in what class it will empower, even if they&#8217;ll be far more humane rulers) and on humanism (we shouldn&#8217;t kill people unnecessarily or by our imperial weight, turn a revolution against despotism into an imperial power game).</p>
<p>If Cole&#8217;s support or opposition is based not on &#8220;fancy questions&#8221; but &#8220;would I be willing to go kill people?&#8221; he&#8217;s not asking <strong>anything</strong> with any relevance to the left.</p>
<p>Again, I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s malicious, but I do believe he&#8217;s targeting the left <strong>only</strong> because the criticism of the left is what he believes is most damaging to a war he wants to fight. Not because he&#8217;s a leftist with a dissenting analysis based on shared values.</p>
<p>So his emotional lectures about how the Left needs to do X, Y, or Z, (in a fairly patronizing tone) should carry no more weight than the Obama, or Secretary Clinton, or G.W. Bush, or Gadaffi.</p>
<p>My response is that we have to support the overthrow of the brutal Gadaffi regime.  But that &#8216;we&#8217; is not the United States military, CIA, or the European states which attacked, killed, tortured, brutalized and stole from so many for so long in Libya and its neighbors in a colonial orgy which ended only 50 years ago.  We as human beings and communities have other options, and we should use them.  There are other less imperial actors who can intervene, and we should encourage them.  But I reject this hair-on-fire &#8220;we don&#8217;t have time to debate just support what didn&#8217;t work in Iraq&#8221; B.S.</p>
<p>Cole has an opinion. Lovely. But it is bolstered only by sterile legalisms, a misreading of the military situation, appeals to ahistoricism (ignore the last two wars), and insult. All of which is covering for reasons no deeper than a gut-check.</p>
<p>I ask more from intellectuals than a gut check, Professor Cole. Your brain got the PhD, and I respect that. Your gut carries no more weight than mine.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Also:</h3>
<p>I highly recommend this thoughtful article by Matt Meyer &#8220;<a title="http://www.truth-out.org/libyas-silver-lining-challenges-and-lessons-western-peace-activists68861" href="http://www.truth-out.org/libyas-silver-lining-challenges-and-lessons-western-peace-activists68861" target="_blank">Libya&#8217;s Silver Lining: Challenges and Lessons for Western Peace Activists.</a>&#8220;  It exemplifies what debate amongst those who share Leftist values should look like.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">In a week of bombing and bloodshed, I have been amazed and saddened at  the amount of confusion, arrogance, and paternalism from supposedly  progressive people of the so-called global north. Perhaps I should not  be so surprised: the US “left” is an under-developed country, and we  would all do well to take some serious lessons — in democracy,  nonviolence, and revolution — from our counterparts in the southern  hemisphere. Perhaps the silver lining is to learn from the lessons of  Libya.</p>
</div>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2011/03/30/cole/index.html">Question for Juan Cole</a> (salon.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/misinformed-commentary-a-response-to-juan-cole-from-the-left/">Misinformed Commentary: A Response to Juan Cole From the Left | The Tomathon</a> (tomathon.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://marccooper.com/juan-coles-open-letter-to-the-left-on-libya/">Juan Cole&#8217;s Open Letter to the Left on Libya</a> (marccooper.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://hughgreen.wordpress.com/2011/03/30/interventions/">&#8216;Interventions&#8217;</a> (hughgreen.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.jackandjillpolitics.com/2011/03/african-cabbie-vs-juan-cole-the-french-cannot-be-trusted-in-africa-vs-libya-2011-is-not-like-iraq-2003/">African Cabbie vs Juan Cole: &#8220;The French Cannot Be Trusted In Africa&#8221; vs. &#8220;Libya 2011 Is Not Like Iraq 2003?</a> (jackandjillpolitics.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://radcontra.wordpress.com/2011/03/30/a-really-progressive-alternative-in-libya/">A Really Progressive Alternative in Libya</a> (radcontra.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.juancole.com/2011/02/saads-revolution-cole-at-truthdig.html">Saad&#8217;s Revolution: Cole at Truthdig | Informed Comment</a> (juancole.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.juancole.com/2011/03/answer-to-glenn-greenwald.html">Answer to Glenn Greenwald | Informed Comment</a> (juancole.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/29/scarborough-libya-hypocrisy_n_842034.html">Scarborough Hits Liberals For Libya Hypocrisy</a> (huffingtonpost.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.juancole.com/2011/03/an-open-letter-to-the-left-on-libya.html">An Open Letter to the Left on Libya | Informed Comment</a> (juancole.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://indigenist.blogspot.com/2011/03/tom-is-moving-in-on-libya.html">Tom is Moving in on Libya</a> (indigenist.blogspot.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://thewesternexperience.com/2011/03/30/libyan-rebels-on-the-run-and-us-not-far-behind/">Libyan rebels on the run and US not far behind</a> (thewesternexperience.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://crooksandliars.com/heather/democracy-now-juan-cole-protests-egypt">Democracy Now: Juan Cole on the Protests in Egypt</a> (crooksandliars.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://scienceblogs.com/mikethemadbiologist/2011/03/dear_left_re_libya_why_do_you.php">Dear Left: Re. Libya, Why Do You Think Obama Will Do What You Want Done? [Mike the Mad Biologist]</a> (scienceblogs.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Misinformed Commentary: A Response to Juan Cole From the Left</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/misinformed-commentary-a-response-to-juan-cole-from-the-left/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/misinformed-commentary-a-response-to-juan-cole-from-the-left/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Mar 2011 18:25:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Juan Cole, a smart and well-intentioned U.S. university professor, has just printed an &#8220;Open Letter to the Left&#8220;, describing objections to the U.S. taking charge of Libya&#8217;s revolution against Gadaffi as &#8220;isolationism&#8221; and knee-jerk &#8220;enemy of my enemy&#8221; ideology. Admittedly, there are those on the Left who are unable to see outside first world struggles [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/misinformed-commentary-a-response-to-juan-cole-from-the-left/"></g:plusone></div><div class="zemanta-img" style="margin: 1em; display: block;">
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Juancole1.jpg" rel="lightbox[1312]"><img title="Photo of Juan Cole" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e7/Juancole1.jpg/300px-Juancole1.jpg" alt="Photo of Juan Cole" width="300" height="376" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Juan Cole</p></div>
</div>
<p><a class="zem_slink freebase/en/juan_cole" title="Juan Cole" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Cole">Juan Cole</a>, a smart and well-intentioned U.S. university professor, has just printed an &#8220;<a href="http://www.juancole.com/2011/03/an-open-letter-to-the-left-on-libya.html">Open Letter to the Left</a>&#8220;, describing objections to the U.S. taking charge of Libya&#8217;s revolution against Gadaffi as &#8220;isolationism&#8221; and knee-jerk &#8220;enemy of my enemy&#8221; ideology.</p>
<p>Admittedly, there are those on the Left who are unable to see outside first world struggles or understand that the US might be bombing assholes who are challenging the global hegemon out of desire to emulate them in their neocolonial adventures. I&#8217;ll wait a moment while you catch your breath from the shock of it all.</p>
<p>But having had every left formation who could gather a dog and a Kinko&#8217;s card force on me copies of their &#8220;Libya statement&#8221; at last week&#8217;s<a href="http://www.leftforum.org"> Left Forum</a>, Cole&#8217;s picture of the Left opposition, as his picture of the Libyan military situation, is not the result of dispassionate study.</p>
<p>Overwhelmingly, Left-wing statements ( see <a title="Taking sides about Libya" href="http://socialistworker.org/2011/02/28/taking-sides-about-libya" target="_blank">the ISO </a>or my own <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/socialist_party_usa" title="Socialist Party USA" rel="homepage" href="http://socialistparty-usa.org/">SP-USA</a> as good examples) support the popular revolt in Libya, and support aid to the rebel forces. They have no illusions that Gadaffi is anything but a blood-soaked fascist.  And left groups want sanction against his supporters and real grassroots aid for the popular revolution.  We just know, as past history going back to the 1880s shows, that inviting the global imperial power to save them will enslave the Libyan people to a more subtle yoke in the coming years. This may be better than  Gadaffi&#8217;s death squads, but that accepts the fallacy which goes completely unnoticed by Professor Cole that there are not simply two choices: domestic tyrant or Pax Imperia.</p>
<p>As to one of his other objections,  the only purpose in describing Americans as &#8220;Isolationist&#8221; is to equate them with the 1930s soft on Hitler American right.  It is not isolationist to see one of the Western Left&#8217;s most important tasks as preventing their governments from invading foreign nations.  Recent history screams that.  800,000 (or more) dead Iraqis and the mess in Afghanistan might have suggested U.S. led &#8220;coalitions&#8221; should be prevented from more adventures.  Noting this is hardly the province of Left ideologues, and is anything but isolationist.  Unless one believes America&#8217;s best interactions with the outside world come via General Dynamics.  Or that Presidential elections which bring in a &#8220;nice guy&#8221; fundamentally change the motivations and use of power by the ruling classes of states.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>There is so much wrong with this piece, but I&#8217;ll try to limit myself to one overarching issue: Cole&#8217;s utter failure to accurately describe the objections leftists are making.  We either buy Gadaffi&#8217;s ridiculous propaganda, think that the revolutionaries are controlled by the right (as a tiny handful of rather pathetic individuals on both the right and left seem to), or are &#8220;absolute pacifists.&#8221; Or we question the legal basis for war.  Que? Since when does the left really care if there is a Security Council vote or not.  Perhaps PoliSci professors are concerned with the formal legality, but we are dealing with questions of morality and outcomes.</p>
<p>Nowhere are described the actual, sophisticated arguments being had: that air bombardments are militarily ineffective against ground forces, dangerous to civilians, and will come with long strings attached to the new government. A simple causality between the revolutionary offensive and US air-strikes is assumed in the first paragraph, even though there is little evidence  apart from CNN talking points to support it suggests Cole has made up his mind about U.S. war-making based on emotion, not fact.</p>
<p>It is an understandable emotion, naive as it might be.  Cole&#8217;s mention of the Soviet invasion of of Czechoslovakia in 1968 is illustrative.  While an utter disaster for Czechs, the Communist Left worldwide, and eventually even the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/soviet_union" title="Soviet Union" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Union">Soviet Union</a>, the notion that the U.S. should have rolled tanks into Prague and gone to war with the Soviets shows as much concern for unintended but entirely predicable consequences as does Cole&#8217;s support for U.S. bombing of Libya.  Apart from starting World War III, turning leftist Czech student protesters into a Cold War pawns would have just resulted in even more dead Czechs, and many foolish people with little access to accurate news rallying to the blood-soaked Soviet&#8217;s propaganda of being &#8220;defenders against outside counter-revolution.&#8221;</p>
<p>Surprising as it might be, there are ways to support people struggling for freedom that do not involve a United States invasion.  Again, Iraqis might have taught us this.</p>
<p>But bringing it up is illustrative of where Cole is coming from.  He sees the revolt against Gadaffi as a &#8216;Good thing&#8217;, and most in the Left agree.  That we should turn ourselves over to the tender mercies of imperial power to fix it for us shows how little Cole has gathered of the Left&#8217;s central analysis: that governments, no matter how well intentioned, work for the powerful, and the powerful are those with piles of cash.  There need be no &#8220;Neoconservative political odor&#8221; as Cole calls it, to make this the case.  The good intentions of those who urge on military intervention mean exactly nothing to the ends of that intervention.  Cole&#8217;s further explanation that:</p>
<p>&#8220;the Neoconservatives hate the United Nations and wanted to destroy it.   They went to <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/iraq_war" title="Iraq War" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraq_War">war on Iraq</a> despite the lack of UNSC authorization&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>This strikes me like hearing a little boy rationalize the loss of a beloved pet with &#8216;Doggie Heaven&#8217;.  It&#8217;s understandable, but it&#8217;s fiction designed to make the speaker feel better about the brutal realities from which he&#8217;s suffering.  States don&#8217;t go to war because of laws or treaties or UN resolutions.  They go to war because of interest, and they carry out those wars in a manner and to ends in line with past experience and the interests of the actors.  All reporting has shown that UN Resolution 1973 was written to the specifications of the U.S. government, and that was dictated by the doctrines of the U.S. military and the objectives of U.S. political leaders.   Law and UN Charters are always a fig leaf, and believing otherwise is to conflate process with motivation.</p>
<p>There are many Libyans calling for United States military involvement as well, and they are perhaps more easily forgiven for demanding immediate action from whomever is offering without examining who will deliver them what and why.  But it is incumbent upon those outside and within Libya to explain just what that involvement will bring, and what it won&#8217;t.  The U.S. military is not there to fight the war for them.  It will not simply show up and shoot down fighter jets.  In fact, U.S. military doctrine is very clear.  They have first destroyed everything that looks like a missile site in the the coastal region, and attacked most airbases.  The U.S. will then patrol the nation from 30,000 feet, and shoot down Libyan fighter jets.  Those are major psychological weapons of the Gadaffi regime, but most had already been captured or destroyed.</p>
<p>The real bloodbath was coming from 1942 style soviet rocket trucks, armored personnel carriers, mortars, snipers, and militiamen with rifles.  The U.S. and its coalition are neither willing nor &#8212; as proved from the survival of Serbian heavy weapons after two months of U.S. air bombardment in the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/kosovo_war" title="Kosovo War" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_War">Kosovar War</a> &#8212; able to destroy such forces from the air.  The more likely outcome would be that of 1991 in Iraq: the U.S. circles above while the dictator massacres his citizens on the ground.  The nation is divided, sanctions ensue, and the world has yet another open sore.  Control over important oil fields, though, are maintained by the revolution, and the exploitation of these fields quickly passes from now dissolved state companies to large corporations.</p>
<p>The terms of engagement have also been set similar to those so ineffective in Afghanistan.  To meet UN 1973&#8242;s second mandate, individual jet pilots will be given the discretion to intervene when they see citizens being attacked.  Which they will see how from that far up? And let&#8217;s just say that discerning friendly civilian militia from hostile civilian militia might be difficult from that distance should individual pilots really choose to act on that mandate.</p>
<p>Cole&#8217;s argument also accepts at face value the breathless reporting of Gadaffi&#8217;s superior military rolling over Benghazi&#8217;s defenses.  In fact, those forces still loyal to Gadaffi appeared at the beginning of U.S. involvement to number less that 10,000, and despite recent offenses to be both stretched beyond their means and operating in a society that will turn on them the moment they leave town.</p>
<p>In fact, Gadaffi&#8217;s regime has since the 1980s starved his military of training, provided heavy weapons mostly for propaganda value and self-aggrandizing gifting to foreign partners, and set all units in competition with one another. There is no unified command, even in the six &#8220;regime support&#8221; elite units, and no units are allowed training in combined operations, for fear it may be turned against the government.  Apart from entirely untrained thugs of the Revolutionary Committees militias, there are only six operating Brigade strength units fighting for Gadaffi. These internal security units are understrength, under trained, and still dispersed across the country for fear of new risings. Like the popular forces earlier failed advance westward on Syrte, the one and one half Brigades of paramilitary units advancing toward the east were unsupplied and overstretched. Even these elite units witnessed two company level defections (one armor company included) in the days prior to the US air-strikes.  These are the causal relationships at play, not US bombing of Tripoli or antiaircraft emplacements. But Cole ignores all this.</p>
<div id="attachment_1318" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/IMG_3408.jpg" rel="lightbox[1312]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1318" title="IMG_3408" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/IMG_3408-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Some flyers I picked up at the Left Forum last weekend, a Leftist &quot;gathering of the tribes.&quot;  They show unifed opposition to U.S. involvement combined with broad support for the revolution against Gadaffi.  Little of Cole&#39;s description of Leftist rehtoric on Libya is in evidence.</p></div>
<p>Only the most crude sub-<a class="zem_slink freebase/en/revolutionary_communist_party_usa" title="Revolutionary Communist Party, USA" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutionary_Communist_Party%2C_USA">RCP</a>-esqe objections are (far too easily) taken on by Cole, along with those of absolute pacifism. [<em>note: After reading the RCP statement, an organization I deride perhaps more than I should for their sometimes inane rhetoric, I'm struck how they keep opposition to U.S. Imperialism OUT of their view of the Libyan regime, which they do NOT defend.  Apologies to the RCP et. al.</em>] This straw-man creation belies the &#8220;let&#8217;s have a civil debate&#8221; introduction. Either Cole hasn&#8217;t bothered to read substantive left criticism, or is choosing not to engage it.</p>
<p>Cole also ignores the PR boon Gadaffi has been handed by the re-enactment of the 1986 bombings. Such attacks offer no support to the revolution while reminding the world of Gadaffi&#8217;s sole claim to anti-imperialist legitimacy. While it is easy to parody the crude propaganda of such a bloody buffoon, demonstrations supporting him across West Africa and elsewhere have appeared only since the US strikes began. Marches in Conakry (where the U.S. backed President felt the need to defend Gadaffi) have been followed by large rallies in Niamey, Bamako, and Dakar.  We may laugh, but the governments in each of these places have felt the need to ban such gatherings. Some are undoubtedly paid for, but why was he not able to buy such demonstrations of support over the last month?</p>
<p>Note too that &#8220;the Guide&#8221; keeps giving his addresses from the MUSEUM he built to commemorate the 1986 attack.  In front of a giant STATUE commemorating the 1986 attack.  Should that not have awakened some inkling to Gadaffi&#8217;s desire to repaint this revolution into the guise of Ronald Reagan&#8217;s foreign policy?</p>
<p>However misguided (pun intended) support for Gadaffi by PanAfricanists might be, it should not be dismissed. Outright Franco-UK-US involvement has placed Gadaffi in the position he has wanted since the popular rising of his own people began. We may regret the purpose we give his defenders, especially when we think of the more subtle and effective support we &#8212; and Libya&#8217;s neighbors &#8212; might have given his people in this fight.</p>
<p>Really there is so much obviously wrong here, delivered in such a backfill of professorial verbiage, that I can&#8217;t help but conclude that Cole&#8217;s intended audience is not the Left, but centrist Democrats who need a tool to dismiss growing criticism without having to actually engage it. &#8220;See Juan Cole&#8217;s piece here&#8221; Times columnists may now tweet. &#8220;It must be filled with definitive refutations of the Left because It&#8217;s so long that I can&#8217;t finish it! It must be a legitimate Left-wing position because it talks about pacifism without giggling.&#8221;</p>
<p>We are only beginning to learn both the real weakness of Gadaffi&#8217;s oppressive state and the real price the Libyan National Council (led by men who were regime stalwarts a month ago) may have promised the west for this destructive airshow. If professor Cole really wants to engage the Left, he will reflect on what the Libyan people will still be paying off in &#8220;anti-Islamist security structures&#8221; and sweetheart oil deals in the years to come.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>UPDATE</h3>
<p>[<em>Rewrote first section with more detail, uncalled for 'Doggie Heaven' metaphors, correcting Eastern European revolution references, quoting Cole directly rather than from memory, and adding the bits below. 20:43 NYC time Sunday. I won't edit this further except for typos.</em> And typos fixed at 21:00 hrs.]</p>
<p>Perhaps Cole was conflating the Left with this moronic screed that has been making the email and Facebook rounds of late?  How anyone actually in Africa can look at the crap Gadaffi has stirred (Sierra Leone&#8217;s RUF for example) and how much African blood he&#8217;s spilled and buy this tripe is beyond me.</p>
<li><a href="http://www.blackagendareport.com/content/libya-getting-it-right-revolutionary-pan-african-perspective">Libya, Getting it Right: A Revolutionary Pan-African Perspective | Black Agenda Report</a></li>
<p>Credit and demerit where due, there are a handful of foreign defenses of Gadaffi out there, but they are more likely to come from the right than the left.</p>
<p>In fact, all the &#8220;usual suspects&#8221; of Tea Party racist Islamophobes are burning up with opposition to &#8220;Obama&#8217;s support for his Al Qaeda brothers&#8221;.  Here&#8217;s a taste, most from organizations much better funded than any Marxist might dream of.  One wonders, then, why Cole feels the need to sock it to the Left?</p>
<p><em><strong>Warning, serious dumbfucks linked below.</strong></em></p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://patriotupdate.com/4718/al-qaeda-fighters-join-libyan-rebels">AL QAEDA Fighters Join Libyan Rebels – Patriot Update</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/feb/24/al-qaeda-offers-aid-to-rebels-in-libya/">Al Qaeda offers aid to rebels in Libya &#8211; Washington Times</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/connections-between-al-qaeda-and-libyan-rebels-run-deep/">Connections Between Al Qaeda And Libyan Rebels Run Deep</a></li>
<li><a href="http://israelmatzav.blogspot.com/2011/03/shocka-libyan-rebels-admit-al-qaeda.html">Israel Matzav: Shocka: Libyan rebels admit al-Qaeda connection, steal SAM&#8217;s</a></li>
<li><a href="http://creepingsharia.wordpress.com/2011/03/26/obama-and-al-qaida-back-libyan-rebels-us-may-arm/">Obama and al Qaida back Libyan rebels, US may arm « Creeping Sharia</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.theblaze.com/stories/report-al-qaeda-islamic-emirate-established-in-libya-led-by-former-gitmo-detainee/">Report: Al Qaeda ‘Islamic Emirate’ Established in Libya, Led by Former Gitmo Detainee | The Blaze</a></li>
<li><a href="http://patdollard.com/2011/03/truth-revealed-al-qaeda-part-of-libyan-rebels-u-s-helping-fighters-who-killed-americans-in-iraq/">Truth Revealed: Al Qaeda Part Of Libyan Rebels, U.S. Helping Fighters Who Killed Americans In Iraq! at Pat Dollard</a></li>
</ul>
<p><em><strong>End dumbfucks</strong></em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Sources, Bibliography, and Related Articles</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Here&#8217;s some news which might not have yet penetrated the U. S. establishment, and might go some way to describing how the Left can support both the popular revolution and oppose a U.S. military takeover.</strong></p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.africaguinee.com/index.php?monAction=detailNews&amp;id=8407">Libye: le président Condé s&#8217;oppose à l&#8217;intervention militaire contre le Colonel Kadhafi</a></li>
<li><a href="http://alive.in/libya/">Alive in Libya: Reports from the ground</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.libyafeb17.com/2011/03/breaking-revolutionaries-kill-high-ranking-officer-from-khamees-battalion/">BREAKING: Revolutionaries kill high ranking Officer from Khamees battalion | Libya February 17th</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tamtaminfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=5819:crise-libyenne--la-guerre-du-petrole&amp;catid=44:politique&amp;Itemid=61">Niger/Crise libyenne : La guerre du pétrole</a></li>
<li><a href="http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2011/03/201139125740275442.html">De-racialising revolutions &#8211; Opinion &#8211; Al Jazeera English</a></li>
<li><a href="http://networkedblogs.com/fGw0P">Egypt arming Libyan rebels</a></li>
<li><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/libyaNews/idAFN2416626920110324?sp=true">Gaddafi&#8217;s entourage sends out secret peace feelers -Reuters</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.iwallerstein.com/libya-world-left/">Libya and the World Left | Immanuel Wallerstein</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-libya-prisoners-20110324,0,5389027,full.story">Libya uprising: Libyan rebels appear to take leaf from Moammar Kadafi&#8217;s playbook &#8211; latimes.com</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.hrw.org/en/features/libya-stranded-foreign-workers">Libya: Stranded Foreign Workers | Human Rights Watch</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/10/libya-uprising-intervention?CMP=twt_gu">Libya: The illusion of force | Editorial | Comment is free | The Guardian</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/mar/10/libya-uprising-intervention?CMP=twt_gu"></a>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.militar.org.ua/foro/noticias-sobre-el-medio-oriente-t14340-2175.html">An ORBAT of Gadaffi&#8217;s forces on the eve of U.S. attack</a>Regime&#8217;s ground forces comprise an equivalent of six reinforced, mechanized brigades. Five of these include at least one armoured battalion equipped with T-72s, some have battalions of SP-artillery assigned as well, and all have mechanized battalions equipped with ZSU-23-4s, BMP-1s and BTR-60s. All are also reinforced through additions of &#8220;militia&#8221; battalions driving plenty of technicals. These units are deployed roughly as follows:</li>
<li>- Sahban Brigade is operational in western Libya, primarily in Zintan area</li>
<li>- Khuwelidi al-Hammidi Brigade (minus one company of T-72s and one company of mech infantry, lost in fighting and through defections) is either securing Tripoli and Sabratha or besieging Misurata</li>
<li>- 5AB (minus at least one battalion, lost due to defections) is besieging Misurata</li>
<li>- Khamis 32AB is now at Agedabia</li>
<li>- Beni Wallid Brigade (minus nearly an equivalent of a motorised battalion, lost through defections and its attempt to enter Misurata) is somewhere between Misurata and Beni Wallid</li>
<li>- Sa&#8217;adi Tabouli Brigade is in Syrte, with parts assigned to the 32AB and fighting in Agedabia.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><a href="http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/72004">Pambazuka &#8211; Opposing Gaddafi’s massacre and foreign intervention in Libya</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.afriqueavenir.org/en/2011/03/21/pro-gaddafi-movement-set-up-in-burkina/">Pro-Gaddafi movement set up in Burkina</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.twitpic.com/4bld1q">The Sun never too gung ho on Twitpic</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/03/u-s-general-we-wont-help-libyas-rebels-unless-we-do/">U.S. General: We Won’t Help Libya’s Rebels (Unless We Do) | Danger Room | Wired.com</a></li>
<li><a href="http://blogs.channel4.com/world-news-blog/shooting-first-and-hitting-the-people-they-came-to-protect/15620">World News Blog &#8211; Shooting first – and hitting the people they came to protect</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>To read more about the regime use of military forces</strong> &#8212; in classic fascist fashion &#8212; as competitive agents not as effective fighting units, see especially these works.  Note that I am NOT an Arab studies expert, but I did have the common sense to actually read up on the subject before I accepted what CNN was telling me about the working of the Gadaffi regime.</p>
<ul>
<li>SWJ Foltz. &#8220;Libya&#8217;s Military Power,&#8221; Chapt 4 in René Lemarchand (ed) The Green and the Black: Qadhafi&#8217;s Policies in Africa. Bloomington (1988).    This is especially good, if dated, on the weird logic of an untrained and atomized military provided with huge amount of heavy armaments which they do not know how to use.  Much of the failure in Chad is ascribed to this, as is the importance of the six &#8220;Central Support&#8221; Battalions (which range up to Brigade strength).  These too are kept at each others throats, and apart from the officers of the Khamis and some others who are personally loyal to Gadaffi, untrained and barred from carrying out most maneuvers. Note that in the current rising prior to the US involvement, even some elements of these units had defected to the revolutionaries.  Later works (like Mattes) suggest little has changed.  These all suggest notions that Gadaffi could retake the east without outside help are very unlikely.</li>
<li>H Mattes. <a href="http://129.132.36.137/serviceengine/Files/DCAF/23853/ieventattachment_file/7b8d5f97-23c5-43a4-ae81-bb5b0843634c/en/ev_geneva_04071113_Mattes.pdf">&#8220;Challenges to security sector governance in the Middle East: the Libyan case&#8221;</a> Geneva Center for Democratic Control of Armed Forces (2004)</li>
<li>William Blum. &#8220;Libya 1981-1989&#8243; in Killing hope: US military and CIA interventions since World War II. Zed (2003)</li>
<li>Millard Burr, Robert O. Collins. Darfur: the long road to disaster<br />
[esp. pp.139-176] Markus Wiener Publishers (3rd ed., 2008)</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Also see passim in:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Guy Arnold. The maverick state: Gaddafi and the New World Order. Cassell (1996)</li>
<li>Asteris Huliaras. &#8220;Qadhafi&#8217;s comeback: Libya and sub-Saharan Africa in the 1990s.&#8221; African Affairs, (2001) 100 (398): 5-25.</li>
<li>Hussein Solomon and Gerrie Swart. &#8220;Libya’s foreign policy in flux&#8221; African Affairs,  (July 2005) 104 (416): 469-492.</li>
</ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h4 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h4>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://allafrica.com/stories/201103211236.html">allAfrica.com: North Africa: The Problem With Africans And Arabs</a> (allafrica.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/71171">Pambazuka &#8211; The world remade</a> (pambazuka.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://allafrica.com/stories/201103211518.html">allAfrica.com: Libya: Uprising Revives Entrenched Racism Towards Black Africans</a> (allafrica.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://africanarguments.org/2011/03/an-ras-guide-political-change-in-north-africa/">An RAS Guide &#8211; political change in North Africa</a> (africanarguments.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://africanarguments.org/2011/03/libya-the-internal-dynamics-of-collapse/">Libya: the internal dynamics of collapse</a> (africanarguments.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://zunguzungu.wordpress.com/2011/03/04/on-libya-and-african-mercenaries/">On Libya and &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; &#8221; zunguzungu</a> (zunguzungu.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://blogs.channel4.com/world-news-blog/gadaffi-and-the-seven-sons-blond-mercenaries-and-x/15198">World News Blog &#8211; Gaddafi and the seven sons, blond mercenaries and X</a> (blogs.channel4.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Niger: Lucky Seven.  Can a new president signal more responsive politics in Niamey?</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/niger-lucky-seven-can-a-new-president-signal-more-responsive-politics-in-niamey/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/niger-lucky-seven-can-a-new-president-signal-more-responsive-politics-in-niamey/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Mar 2011 20:02:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Afrique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Niger]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hama Amadou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mahamadou Issoufou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mahamane Ousmane]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mamadou Tandja]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Movement for the Development of Society]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ousmane Issoufou Oubandawaki]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Seyni Oumarou]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomathon.com/mphp/?p=1254</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Saturday the 12th of March will see second round voting in Niger&#8217;s Presidential elections, marking a return to civilian rule and the beginning of the Seventh Republic.  It seems certain that front runner and PNDS-Tarayya candidate Mahamadou Issoufou will become the first President of the new republic on 8 April when the military junta that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/niger-lucky-seven-can-a-new-president-signal-more-responsive-politics-in-niamey/"></g:plusone></div><div id="attachment_1258" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/seyni-issoufou-300x224.jpg" rel="lightbox[1254]"><img class="size-full wp-image-1258" title="seyni-issoufou-300x224" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/seyni-issoufou-300x224.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="224" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Mahamadou Issoufou of the PNDS and Seyni Oumarou of the MNSD vote for themselves, presumably.</p></div>
<p>Saturday the 12th of March will see second round voting in Niger&#8217;s Presidential elections, marking a return to civilian rule and the beginning of the Seventh Republic.  It seems certain that front runner and <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/nigerien_party_for_democracy_and_socialism" title="Nigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism" rel="homepage" href="http://pnds-tarayya.net">PNDS</a>-Tarayya candidate <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/mahamadou_issoufou" title="Mahamadou Issoufou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahamadou_Issoufou">Mahamadou Issoufou</a> will become the first President of the new republic on 8 April when the military junta that deposed <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/tandja_mamadou" title="Mamadou Tandja" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamadou_Tandja">Mamadou Tandja</a> on 18 February 2010 formally cedes power.</p>
<p>From one of several opposition parties Issoufou and the PNDS stepped remarkably into the breach left by Tandja.  The party has gone out of their way throughout this campaign to present an image of a unified body of ideas and change.  Issoufou has engaged in unprecedented face to face campaign rallies across the nation, not relying on the Nigerien tradition of local notables cobbling together coalitions to turn out votes.  The PNDS has also presented slick campaign materials, and from early days released a detailed manifesto of the process by which they will raise and spend development funds, including plans to empower local subsistence farmers (not usually a focus, but one that effects a majority of Niger&#8217;s often politically silent population).  The PNDS is undoubtedly the most ideological &#8212; social democratic &#8212; of the major parties, but it too remains mired in the traditional games of regionalism (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tahoua">Tahoua</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illela,_Niger">Illea</a> being the base) and constantly shifting coalition building.</p>
<div id="attachment_1259" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/031012011085247000000oumarou.jpg" rel="lightbox[1254]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1259" title="031012011085247000000oumarou" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/031012011085247000000oumarou-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The MNSD HQ in Niamey: Don&#39;t rule out the Big Baobab.</p></div>
<p>No one should discount their major rival, the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/national_movement_for_the_development_of_society" title="National Movement for the Development of Society" rel="homepage" href="http://www.mnsd-nassara.org/">MNSD-Nassara</a>.  While bruised and bloodied by their association with disgraced President  Tandja, the MNSD predates Tandja&#8217;s leadership from 1991 to last year.  It was formed in 1987 by the military dictatorship which ruled Niger from 1974 to 1991 as a single party built on a corporatist model. Local communities, traditional leaders, elders, youth groups, and professional organizations were channeled into the MNSD, for most as their first experience of mass politics.  The politics which had led to independence in 1960 devolved rapidly into a one party state under Hamani Diori, open only to the elite and generally uninterested in popular mobilization for even the most superficial purposes.  One aspect that the MNSD did carry on from the First Republic was the drafting of traditional rulers and notables into the unitary party.  The MNSD has thus become a traditionalist, conservative and non-ideological body with tremendous support from elites, the military, and many rural communities who remember the rule of Seyni Kountché (1974-87) and his successor <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/ali_saibou" title="Ali Saibou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Saibou">Ali Saibou</a> (1987-93) as a reaction against corruption and famine which dominated civilian rule. The MNSD, for all the purges and infighting which Tandja introduced from 2007, remains for many the &#8220;Grand Baobab&#8221;, the big tent party that welcomes all who profess love of country and traditional values.  Their relative success even in the wake of an extremely popular coup against Tandja&#8217;s corruption and misrule should demonstrate the deep roots that still feed the MNSD.</p>
<p>This is best seen in the aftermath of the first round of these elections.  Just days before the vote, almost every political party other than the favored PNDS met to form the Alliance for National Reconciliation.  This included all but two of Issoufou&#8217;s closest allies. The ARN promised to support whichever of their number could make it to the second round against the PNDS, tipped to be either the  MNSD-Nassara or the new personal party for former MNSD Prime Minister <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/hama_amadou" title="Hama Amadou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hama_Amadou">Hama Amadou</a>, the MODEN-FA Lumana.  Two things were stunning here.  One was that so many parties that had led marches to oust and faced repression by Tandja&#8217;s MNSD-Nassara in 2009 were willing to reconcile so quickly with their former foes.   Perhaps more stunning: Hama Amadou, the former heir apparent to the MNSD signed on so enthusiastically.  Hama had been impeached on curiously timed corruption charges in 2007, just as he seemed ready to take the party&#8217;s leadership from Tandja, and then found himself imprisoned for over a year, his supporters ejected from their party and purged from the government.  At one point Hama claimed that prison had struck him so low with disease that he feared death.  On his temporary release he fled the country, saying that the government was planning to assassinate him should he stay. And yet he was willing just a year later to literally embrace the man who led the MNSD purge of his supporters, Seyni Oumarou. Nigerien politics is nothing if not dramatic.</p>
<p>The question on everyone&#8217;s lips leading up to the Parliamentary and first round Presidential elections was what support Hama&#8217;s untested MODEN-FA Lumana would have.  Taking with him elements of the vaunted MNSD machine in strongholds like Tillaberi, many thought he might cruise into the second round.  In the event, Hama&#8217;s new cadre was no match for the entrenched party system.  The PNDS scored %36 in the presidential vote and 39 of the 113 assembly seats.  The MNSD followed with %23 and 26 seats, while Hama&#8217;s supporters provided a reasonable showing of 23 seats but only %19 for his presidential bid.</p>
<div id="attachment_1260" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 442px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/0000000000000000ListeDefinitif.gif" rel="lightbox[1254]"><img class="size-full wp-image-1260" title="0000000000000000ListeDefinitif" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/0000000000000000ListeDefinitif.gif" alt="" width="432" height="238" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The first round candidates, clockwise from top left: Hama Amadou, Mahamane Ousmane, Mahamadou Issoufou, Seyni Oumarou, Ousmane Issoufou Oubandawaki, (second row, right to left) Amadou Cheiffou, Abdoulaye Amadou Traoré, Amadou Cissé, Bayard Mariama Gamatié, Moussa Moumouni Djermakoye </p></div>
<p>The following 48 hours proved again the mercenary nature of Nigerien politics.  All but two of the sizable parties in the ARN coalition again defected, clearly demonstrating that the desire to side with a winner was more important than any ideology, personal loyalty, or even shame.  Hama led the charge back to the Issoufou camp, and speculation remains rife whether he has demanded the Prime Ministership or the Presidency of the Assembly as his price.</p>
<p>There are several sidelines here worth noting.  Former President <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/mahamane_ousmane" title="Mahamane Ousmane" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahamane_Ousmane">Mahamane Ousmane</a> and his CDS–Rahama, once the dominant party of the 3rd Republic and a powerhouse based in Zinder collapsed completely, with %8 of the Presidential vote and only 3 seats in the assembly.  The CDS had played a pivotal role in first opposing, then supporting Tandja, while becoming a linchpin of the opposition to the President&#8217;s 2009 power grab called the 6th Republic.  Whatever the basis, Ousmane has long been among the top vote traders in the Niamey political game.   Not content to crash and burn, the CDS seemingly ripped itself apart in the post election realignment.  Elements of the youth section and the central committee fought Ousmane to remain tied to MNSD-Nassara, when he seemed to jump ship.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_1261" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/armee_niger_election_uh.jpg" rel="lightbox[1254]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1261" title="armee_niger_election_uh" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/armee_niger_election_uh-300x199.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Signs welcoming the 2010 military coup: the year long military rule has reinforced many Nigerien&#39;s view of the military as a more trustworthy than most civilian governments.</p></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>This is important because the CDS and Ousmane represent the quintessential personal party in Niger.  It has long been assumed that most parties &#8212; with the exception of the PNDS and the MNSD &#8212; are entirely vehicles of their leaders.  There certainly is little ideological content to Nigerien parties, and the regional bases, while relied upon for a foundation, do not make most of them strictly regionalist or ethnic parties.  Nigerien parties are invariably a constellation &#8220;big men&#8221; and more quiet local traditional notables with the backing of one or two regionally important business moguls.</p>
<p>While much of this definition remains, the utter destruction of the CDS was mirrored in several other smaller parties that had long provided vehicles for individual party heads and their backers to demand a cut of the benefits that come with governance.</p>
<p>Political fixture Amadou Cheiffou&#8217;s <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/social_democratic_rally" title="Social Democratic Rally" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Democratic_Rally">RSD-Gaskiya</a> disappeared from the assembly, former PM Amadou Cissé&#8217;s UDR-Tabbat fell to six seats.  And while the RDP-Jama&#8217;a  and <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/nigerien_alliance_for_democracy_and_progress" title="Nigerien Alliance for Democracy and Progress" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerien_Alliance_for_Democracy_and_Progress">ANDP-Zaman-Lahiya</a> retained 7 and 8 seats respectively, these two regional parties (Agadez and Dosso) lost their charismatic leaders, and seem to survive only as supports for larger parties.  Of the former loyal PNDS coalition partners throughout the last decade (<a class="zem_slink freebase/en/nigerien_self-management_party" title="Nigerien Self-Management Party" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerien_Self-Management_Party">PNA-Al&#8217;ouma</a>, PPN-RDA, and UNI), only UNI managed to win a single seat.  Publishing magnate Sanoussi Jackou&#8217;s PNA-Al&#8217;ouma has hardly caused a ripple as <a title="http://nigerdiaspora.info/politique/6610-presidentielles-2011-mahamadou-issoufou-et-ses-allies-rendent-visite-aux-populations-de-tillabery-" href="http://nigerdiaspora.info/politique/6610-presidentielles-2011-mahamadou-issoufou-et-ses-allies-rendent-visite-aux-populations-de-tillabery-">the last of the 35 small parties to endorse Issoufou in the second round</a>.</p>
<p>The pattern here is of political coalescence.  As in the days before the second round and grand total of 35 political parties lined up with the PNDS, Niger&#8217;s political ecosystem might appear varied, there is some reason to believe two major parties and three or four major political barons are emerging to dominate.</p>
<p>Rumors have challenged this reading, especially from within the CDS faction fight.  There are those who claim the MNSD, after signing parties onto their ARN coalition in the first round, passed out campaign materials in areas dominated by their new partners that advised supporters of smaller parties should vote on the MNSD line, and that vote would be then divided between the coalition partners at counting.  Honestly, I have not seen a explanation of this strategy that is coherent enough to have convinced many voters.  It&#8217;s likely that it is just recriminations on the part of ARN partners, whose obvious craven maneuvering &#8212; even by Nigerien politician&#8217;s standards &#8212; drove their voters to other parties, or to abstain.</p>
<p>The actual institutions of the Seventh Republic are worth noting as well.  Niger has now seen three cycles of democratic rule, political deadlock, and military coup since the protests and National Convention in 1991.  Every time the new constitution has been rewritten to avoid the failure of the last.  Niger&#8217;s recent political history has been an oft-ignored constitutional laboratory unlike few others in history.  A too weak and divided semi-presidential Third Republic was revised into a more strongly Presidential Fifth.  The power grab that resulted when it was time for the President to leave has led to a more divided governing model for the Seventh Republic.  Among the more interesting innovations, the Leader of the Opposition is given formal powers, and must play a part in successful legislation.  The Prime Minister and the President of the National Assembly share powers given to the Prime Minister in a Parliamentary system, and both check the President.  Is this a recipe for gridlock? Or is this a system designed to function despite gridlock?  This last might be a healthy innovation, where no office is expected to do much alone, and therefore doesn&#8217;t feel they are being prevented.  Sadly, the success or failure of this system will once again come down to the relative personalities of a handful of political leaders, notorious for their outsized egos, and frequently the subject of whispers about personal enrichment.</p>
<p>It should be noted as well, that for all the talk of change, the same men (and they are almost entirely men) of the Nigerien political class were players from the beginning of Niger&#8217;s multiparty experiment in 1992-3. If Issoufou us to make good on his rhetoric of principled governance, opening the doors to every political operative with a party office is not a promising start.</p>
<p>Any discussion of Niger&#8217;s political future, even on a purely formal basis, would be remiss if it did not mention the majority of Nigeriens to whom politics means very little.  Three million voters came out for the first round in a nation of over fourteen million people.  The seventy or eighty percent of the population who are engaged in subsistence farming and seasonal labor abroad have no time for politics, and are rarely included in the discussion.  The PNDS has pointed out ways in which it will tackle the chronic malnutrition which has been a fact of life for many rural communities since the 1970s.  But those struggling in rural areas are more acted upon than actors.  Were they to be given real power themselves, we might see the depth of changes Niger needs.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Some background:</h3>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=50471">NIGER: First Steps Towards the Restoration of Democracy? &#8211; IPS, Ousseini Issa</a>: (Feb 28, 2010)</li>
<li><a href="http://www.politicsafrica.com/2010/08/13/niger-new-constitution-first-step-towards-democracy/">Niger: New Constitution First Step Towards Democracy « Politics Africa</a>: The Seventh Republic is Approved (2010)</li>
<li><a href="http://csis.org/blog/democratization-desperate-places-nigers-seventh-attempt">Sebastian Elischer: Democratization in Desperate Places: Niger’s Seventh Attempt</a> Center for Strategic and International Studies (Jan 28, 2011)</li>
<li><a href="http://www.starafrica.com/en/news/politics/article/niger-civilians-armed-forces-sign-stabi-152520.html">Niger civilians, armed forces sign stability pact:</a> The Military goes out on a high note, signing a pact with political parties that it will not intervene in constitutional politics (2011)</li>
<li><a href="http://www.politicsafrica.com/2010/05/16/niger-junta-to-feed-one-million/">Niger Government To Feed One Million For Free « Politics Africa</a>: The Military&#8217;s role as saviors from corrupt civilian rule is again reinforced (2010)</li>
<li><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Armee-politique-Niger-Kimba-Idrissa/dp/2869782160">Kimba &amp; Idrissa&#8217;s recent collection: Armee et politique au Niger (9782869782167)</a> a great collection of essays on the military&#8217;s involvement in Nigerien politics, published just before the 2010 coup.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.unisa.ac.za/default.asp?Cmd=ViewContent&amp;ContentID=11625">Jibrin Ibrahim, Abdoulaye Niandou Souley: &#8220;The rise to power of an opposition party the MNSD in Niger Republic&#8221;</a> a fairly definitive look at the strength, and failing, of the Third Republic (1992-1995)</li>
<li><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/topNews/idAFJOE54P0EL20090526?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=topNews"> Niger&#8217;s Tandja dissolves parliament (Reuters, 2009)</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.tamtaminfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=1372:declaration-du-bureau-politique-cds-rahama-sur-le-schema-l-tazartche-r-propose-au-president-de-la-republique&amp;catid=44:politique&amp;Itemid=61"> CDS Rahama Breaks with Tandja, deeping his isolation (2009)</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.conseilconsultatif-niger.org/images/stories/constviirep.pdf"> &#8220;Constitution de la 7ème République&#8221;</a> full text, PDF, in French, from the website of the Consultative Council which drafted it</li>
</ul>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/nigerNews/idAFLDE7131TW20110204?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=nigerNews">UPDATE 1-Tandja ally heads into Niger presidential run-off</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/nigerNews/idAFLDE7122O620110203?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=nigerNews">Tandja ally heads into Niger presidential run-off</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/02/11/niger-elections-has-mahamadou-issoufou-clenched-it/">Niger Elections: Has Mahamadou Issoufou Clenched It?</a> (sahelblog.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/nigerNews/idAFLDE71L2JX20110222?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=nigerNews">CORRECTED &#8211; Niger top court validates poll, run-off March 12</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFLDE70R1O020110128?sp=true">PREVIEW-Niger races to secure poll for civilian rule | Agricultural Commodities | Reuters</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/nigerNews/idAFLDE70R1RQ20110128?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=nigerNews">TIMELINE-Niger holds presidential elections</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/02/04/niger-elections-head-to-run-off/">Niger Elections Head to Run-Off</a> (sahelblog.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/01/25/countdown-to-nigers-elections/">Countdown to Niger&#8217;s Elections</a> (sahelblog.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/02/01/niger-elections-so-far-so-good/">Niger Elections: So Far, So Good?</a> (sahelblog.wordpress.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>An Echo of New York&#8217;s Unfinished Struggles: A. Philip Randolph, Frank Crosswaith and the Socialist Party</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/an-echo-of-new-yorks-unfinished-struggles-a-philip-randolph-frank-crosswaith-and-the-socialist-party/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/an-echo-of-new-yorks-unfinished-struggles-a-philip-randolph-frank-crosswaith-and-the-socialist-party/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Mar 2011 20:14:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a fascinating new article on the history of Harlem activists A. Philip Randolph and Frank R. Crosswaith, and their involvement with the Socialist Party (riven by right and left factionalism) in the 1920s. It places them in contrast to Black Nationalism, but highlights the abuse they were willing to put up with at the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/03/an-echo-of-new-yorks-unfinished-struggles-a-philip-randolph-frank-crosswaith-and-the-socialist-party/"></g:plusone></div><div id="attachment_1246" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 248px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/S1537781410000010_fig2g.gif" rel="lightbox[1239]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1246" title="S1537781410000010_fig2g" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/S1537781410000010_fig2g-238x300.gif" alt="Frank R. Crosswaith, New York City labor organizer and socialist political activist." width="238" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Frank R. Crosswaith, labor organizer and political activist. </p></div>
<p>Here&#8217;s a fascinating new article on the history of Harlem activists <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/a_philip_randolph" title="A. Philip Randolph" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._Philip_Randolph">A. Philip Randolph</a> and <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/frank_rudolph_crosswaith" title="Frank Crosswaith" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Crosswaith">Frank R. Crosswaith</a>, and their involvement with the Socialist Party (riven by right and left factionalism) in the 1920s.</p>
<p>It places them in contrast to Black Nationalism, but highlights the abuse they were willing to put up with at the hands of some purported &#8220;comrades&#8221; for their belief that race and class struggles are inextricable.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s also a nice picture of the diversity of the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/socialist_party_of_america" title="Socialist Party of America" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialist_Party_of_America">Socialist Party of America</a> at the time, which in the <a title="Socialist Party of  New York" rel="homepage" href="http://www.newyorksocialists.org/state/">New York Socialist Party</a> was made up of many dozens of active locals.  The full text of the article is available [<a href="http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=6&amp;fid=7970533&amp;jid=JGA&amp;volumeId=10&amp;issueId=&amp;aid=7970532&amp;fulltextType=RA&amp;fileId=S1537781410000010#cjofig_fig02">in html</a> and <a href="http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=1&amp;fid=7970534&amp;jid=JGA&amp;volumeId=10&amp;issueId=01&amp;aid=7970532">in pdf</a> ] for a limited time.  Some excerpts are below.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The history confirms my longstanding dislike of Victor Berger and Morris Hillquit (the right wing apparatchiks that overtook the party in the 20s) and my love of <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/eugene_v_debs" title="Eugene V. Debs" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_V._Debs">Eugene Debs</a> and Big <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/bill_haywood" title="Bill Haywood" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Haywood">Bill Heywood</a>, men continually struggling with the blindness of their times.</p>
<p>In the wake of this, I&#8217;m also eager to read more about St.Croix born New Yorker, labor activist and socialist Frank Crosswaith. Crosswaith, although a young radical, a lifelong socialist and <a title="www.aaregistry.org" href="http://www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/soldier-black-labor-frank-crosswaith" target="_blank">prominent trade union organizer</a>, in the 30s and 40s chose the Social Democratic blind alley of Roosevelt and various anti-communist Democratic party front groups.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Cornelius L. Bynum. <a href="http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=6&amp;fid=7970533&amp;jid=JGA&amp;volumeId=10&amp;issueId=&amp;aid=7970532&amp;fulltextType=RA&amp;fileId=S1537781410000010#cjofig_fig02">The New Negro and Social Democracy during the Harlem Renaissance, 1917–37</a> The <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/journal_of_the_gilded_age_and_progressive_era" title="The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era" rel="homepage" href="http://www.jgape.org/">Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era</a> (2011), 10: 89-112 </strong></p>
<blockquote><p>Randolph and Crosswaith&#8217;s assessment of socialism&#8217;s radical potential to counter racial discrimination aligned closely with the basic position that Eugene Debs took on race and the Socialist Party. Despite the clear racial animosity that both leaders and rank-and-file members openly expressed from the party&#8217;s inception, Debs recognized and strongly argued that racism and racial discrimination fundamentally violated the party&#8217;s core principles and mission. Though he was equally susceptible to the kind of personal failings on race that he so forthrightly criticized in others, Debs insisted that economic freedom and political equality went hand-in-hand.  This reasoning fit with the sense of open participation at the center of Randolph and Crosswaith&#8217;s notion of social justice. Even as Socialist Party leaders and rank-and-file members continued to exhibit deep racial hostility, Deb&#8217;s position on economic justice and racial equality largely matched key aspects of Randolph and Crosswaith&#8217;s appraisal of African Americans&#8217; plight.</p></blockquote>
<p>&#8230;&#8230;.</p>
<blockquote><p>By the time Randolph and Crosswaith joined the Socialist Party it had lost much of the organizational cohesion of its first years.  Nevertheless, they still viewed it as African Americans&#8217; best political option. Portraying the plight of black workers as fundamentally caused by the impact of racial discrimination on their ability to “sell their labor in the market effectively,” they were convinced that the solution to this problem lay in greater labor organization and overhauling industrial capitalism.  They and others maintained that the competition at capitalism&#8217;s core accentuated the economic roots of racism. The Socialist Party&#8217;s determination to redress the ills of industrial capitalism and promote unionization led Randolph and Crosswaith to believe that it was central to challenging racial discrimination and fostering the kind of social justice that they envisioned. It was this link between unionization and social justice that propelled them into the Socialist Party and became such a central component of the radical message that they preached in the postwar years.</p></blockquote>
<p>&#8230;&#8230;..</p>
<blockquote><p>For Randolph, Crosswaith, and the small group of African Americans recruited into the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/socialist_party_of_new_york" title="Socialist Party of New York" rel="homepage" href="http://www.newyorksocialists.org/state/">New York Socialist Party</a>&#8216;s Twenty-first Assembly District in Harlem,  this commitment to progressive reform and political mobilization was attractive. Randolph and Crosswaith in particular recognized the significant, if unintended, implications embedded in this electoral strategy for African Americans “seeking human status and full freedom.”  The participatory nature inherent in drawing workers into local and regional politics fit neatly with their conception of social justice. As Crosswaith explained years later in reflecting back on his role in building interracial trade unions, he and Randolph understood that “the nation&#8217;s labor could not exist half-slave and half-free.” They looked to mobilization and interracial labor solidarity to promote the kind of industrial democracy that would ensure an “equality of responsibility and equality of benefits” for all workers.  In fact, their willingness to turn a blind eye to clear racial antipathy in the party seemed largely predicated on the argument that African Americans could only “become a power to be feared and respected throughout this nation” by joining the Socialist Party.  Their belief that the party&#8217;s emphasis on social and economic reform could be turned to the specific advantage of African Americans certainly seemed to have factored into Randolph&#8217;s decisions to accept the party&#8217;s nomination to run for New York state comptroller in 1920 and secretary of the state assembly in 1921. Even if Berger and Hillquit never really intended to engage an agenda of social justice for African Americans, Randolph and Crosswaith nonetheless found meaningful resonance between the reform strategies they promoted and the conception of social justice he and Crosswaith were formulating.</p>
<p>Randolph also found common cause with the syndicalist element of the Socialist Party concentrated in the mining and lumber states of the Mountain West. Primarily organized around William “Big Bill” Haywood&#8217;s Western Federation of Miners that gave rise to the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/industrial_workers_of_the_world" title="Industrial Workers of the World" rel="homepage" href="http://www.iww.org/">IWW</a> in 1905, this wing of the party endorsed industrial sabotage and violence as acceptable protest tactics and believed that workers should use the ballot to gain administrative control over government&#8217;s police powers to protect striking workers. They adamantly opposed any program of progressive reform on the grounds that it merely forestalled the inevitable workers revolution. Instead, Haywood and the IWW pushed for a general strike to reorganize society around factories, mines, and other places of production. Haywood was an especially strong advocate of industrial unionism. Focusing almost exclusively on labor&#8217;s immediate demands, he looked to organize all workers into one vast and well-disciplined labor organization with enough political power to successfully challenge their opponents. Most importantly perhaps for Randolph, Haywood and the IWW attacked all divisions of the working class—racial, religious, and ethnic—as detrimental to the cause of overthrowing of industrial capitalism. This decidedly inclusive organizational policy fit neatly with Randolph and Crosswaith&#8217;s conception of social justice and their determination to bring African Americans into the working-class fold.</p></blockquote>
<p>&#8230;&#8230;..</p>
<blockquote><p>In the years immediately following World War I, A. Philip Randolph and Frank R. Crosswaith began devising a notion of social justice that set them apart from other African American radicals in Harlem and mainstream white socialists. Although they too believed that transforming industrial capitalism was central to combating racial discrimination, they rooted their assessment of modern industrial society in a conception of social justice that stressed the shared humanity of all and insisted that all were equally entitled to benefit from society&#8217;s advances. In fashioning their critique in these terms rather than the more standard producer theory associated with mainstream socialism, Randolph and Crosswaith articulated a position that set out to adapt the broader spirit of postwar reform to the particular conditions and concerns of Harlem. Even as their message of interracial cooperation in organized labor was simultaneously drowned out by the powerful appeal of Garveyism, ignored by white labor unions, and undermined by the Socialist Party&#8217;s inability to address the Negro question, the conception of social justice that Randolph and Crosswaith formulated in these years creatively fused black racial identity and class consciousness into an authentic and largely independent strain of black radicalism.</p></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li">The <a title="http://www.nypl.org/archives/3581" href="http://www.nypl.org/archives/3581" target="_blank">Frank R. Crosswaith Papers, 1917-1965</a> at the New York Public Library.</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://harlemworldblog.wordpress.com/2010/12/25/hw-bio-hubert-henry-harrison/">HW Bio: Hubert Henry Harrison</a> A short introduction to the famous Harlem Socialist, Hubert Harrison (harlemworldblog.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a title="socialistwebzine.org" href="http://www.socialistwebzine.org/2011/02/celebrating-hubert-harrison.html" target="_blank">Celebrating Hubert Harrison</a> (socialistwebzine.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li">On the Harlem Socialist activists: <a title="http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/145.html" href="http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/145.html" target="_blank">Afro-Americans and radical politics (From &#8220;Richard B. Moore: Caribbean Militant in Harlem,&#8221; edited by W. Burghadt Turner and Joyce Moore Turner)</a> 1969, reprinted 1999.</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li">the <a title="http://www.spnyc.org" href="http://www.spnyc.org" target="_blank">Socialist Party of New York City</a> (SP-USA)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/2011/02/21/african-americans-and-the-struggle-for-socialism-1901-1925-by-abayomi-azikiwe/">African Americans and the struggle for socialism, 1901-1925 By Abayomi Azikiwe</a> and <a href="http://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/2011/02/19/how-debs-became-a-socialist-by-paul-damato-1989/">How Debs became a socialist by Paul D&#8217;Amato (1989)</a> both deal with the same history from a Black Nationalist perspective (dandelionsalad.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/study-shows-depth-of-unemployment-for-blacks-in-new-york/?src=busl">Study Shows Depth of Unemployment for Blacks in New York &#8211; NYTimes.com</a> a little reported survey showing the depth of the ethnic disparity still seen in a &#8220;colorblind&#8221; New York under &#8220;Business Friendly&#8221; capitalism (economix.blogs.nytimes.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Libya&#8217;s &#8220;African Mercenary&#8221; Problem</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/02/libyas-african-mercenary-problem/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/02/libyas-african-mercenary-problem/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Feb 2011 04:07:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[As I write this, Saif Gaddafi is speaking to a Libyan people who have seemed to have already moved past his father&#8217;s regime.  His late and desperate attempt to scare his countrymen into rejecting a revolution which has engulfed his nation touched one element with which, seemingly, those opposing him might agree.  He blamed &#8220;crimes&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/02/libyas-african-mercenary-problem/"></g:plusone></div><div id="attachment_1218" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 210px"></p>
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<p><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/436x328_62618_138351.jpg" rel="lightbox[1201]"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-1218" title="436x328_62618_138351" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/436x328_62618_138351-200x200.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="200" /></a></p>
<p><p class="wp-caption-text">A still from a video, reposted on Al-Arabiya, showing the corpse of an &quot;African Mercenary&quot;, killed in Benghazi.  He wears what appears to be the uniform of Libya&#39;s internal security forces.</p></div>
<p>As I write this, <a title="en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saif_al-Islam_Muammar_Al-Gaddafi" href="en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saif_al-Islam_Muammar_Al-Gaddafi" target="_blank">Saif Gaddafi</a> is speaking to a Libyan people who have seemed to have already moved past his father&#8217;s regime.  His late and desperate attempt to scare his countrymen into rejecting a revolution which has engulfed his nation touched one element with which, seemingly, those opposing him might agree.  He blamed &#8220;crimes&#8221; on &#8220;Africans, paid by criminals&#8221; to kill Libyans.</p>
<p>There is a very widespread and dangerous trope being played upon when Libyans accuse Gaddafi&#8217;s crimes of being committed by &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221;, hints of which are being <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8336467/Libya-protests-foreign-mercenaries-using-heavy-weapons-against-at-demonstrators.html" target="_blank">picked up in the foreign media</a>.</p>
<p>CNN has just prominently shown a Libyan woman, tear stained, crying out on the newly liberated streets of Egypt.  She calls for justice for her people, for the killing to end, begs Obama to intervene, and then repeats &#8220;Gaddafi is killing us with his Africans!&#8221;  She is not alone in arranging this revolution between the Libyan people on one side, and Gaddafi, his family, and dark-skinned &#8220;outsiders&#8221; on the other.</p>
<p>For the benefit of those unfamiliar with the use of a map, Libyans are  Africans.  But Africans here means &#8220;black people&#8221; and there is a very  long very pernicious racism in their part of the world towards &#8220;black  Africans&#8221;, not unlike that in my part of the world.  When I see tweets  like the following, I cringe.  I also see a history of fear and contempt  slipping out in a time of unparalleled suffering.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 39415041090396160 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_39415041090396160 a { text-decoration:none; color:#009999; }#bbpBox_39415041090396160 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_39415041090396160' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#131516; background-image:url(http://a2.twimg.com/a/1299193975/images/themes/theme14/bg.gif);'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#333333; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>Gadafi is ordering african mercenaries to break into homes in <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Benghazi" title="#Benghazi" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Benghazi</a> to RAPE Libyan women in order to detract men protesters! <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb" title="#Feb" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Feb</a></span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 20 February 2011 3:04 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/khalidAlotaibi/status/39415041090396160' target='_blank'>20 February 2011 3:04 pm</a> via web<a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=39415041090396160' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=39415041090396160' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=39415041090396160' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=khalidAlotaibi'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a1.twimg.com/profile_images/1255347595/1_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=khalidAlotaibi'>@khalidAlotaibi</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>Khalid Alotaibi</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p><!-- http://twitter.com/raulrodriguezxD/status/39182647657897984 --> <!-- .bbpBox39182647657897980 {background:url(http://a1.twimg.com/profile_background_images/205882297/chocolate-bite.jpg) #301f16;padding:20px;} p.bbpTweet{background:#fff;padding:10px 12px 10px 12px;margin:0;min-height:48px;color:#000;font-size:18px !important;line-height:22px;-moz-border-radius:5px;-webkit-border-radius:5px} p.bbpTweet span.metadata{display:block;width:100%;clear:both;margin-top:8px;padding-top:12px;height:40px;border-top:1px solid #fff;border-top:1px solid #e6e6e6} p.bbpTweet span.metadata span.author{line-height:19px} p.bbpTweet span.metadata span.author img{float:left;margin:0 7px 0 0px;width:38px;height:38px} p.bbpTweet a:hover{text-decoration:underline}p.bbpTweet span.timestamp{font-size:12px;display:block} --></p>
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<p>In all honesty, I support the people of Libya&#8217;s righteous anger against the brutal Gaddafi regime.  It will not be going out on a limb at this point to say they will succeed, and that the entire region (including Tchad, Mali, &amp; Niger) will be better off without Gaddafi&#8217;s almost constant destabilization of his African neighbors.</p>
<p>But like much of northern Africa, in Libya there is a long history of fear, hatred, and oppression based on skin color.  There is a distinct minority of &#8220;black&#8221; Libyans whose slave origins mean they are still regarded with contempt by some, as there is a large number of political and economic refugees in what is a relatively prosperous state.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 39175912884940800 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_39175912884940800 a { text-decoration:none; color:#990000; }#bbpBox_39175912884940800 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_39175912884940800' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#EBEBEB; background-image:url(http://a3.twimg.com/profile_background_images/35796171/Libya_desert1.jpg); background-repeat:no-repeat'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#333333; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'><a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a> @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/CNN">CNN</a> @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/CBC">CBC</a>. Confirmed the African mercenaries were raised in campus around Sabha and West Mountain since childhood as salves.</span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 19 February 2011 11:14 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/AlMingar/status/39175912884940800' target='_blank'>19 February 2011 11:14 pm</a> via <a href="http://twitter.com/" rel="nofollow" target="blank">Twitter for iPhone</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=39175912884940800' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=39175912884940800' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=39175912884940800' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=AlMingar'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/1251988465/Flag_of_Libya_normal.png' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=AlMingar'>@AlMingar</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>MR KANADA</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p><strong>Foreign Fighters</strong></p>
<p>And while oppression organized by skin color has a long history,  the Gaddafi regime has contributed a different angle to this prejudice: the foreign fighter.  Since the early 70s, Libya has offered aid, by degrees of openness, to revolutionary and opposition groups in most every corner of the world.  Begun as an extension of Soviet Cold War policy, <a href="http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/libya/facility.htm" target="_blank">Gaddafi&#8217;s involvement with foreign dissident groups &#8212; funded by the oil boom of the 1970s &#8212; has extended beyond ideology or geopolitics</a>.  For those of us who remember the Cold War, it&#8217;s easy to see a degree of hysteria &#8212; almost equal to today&#8217;s anti-Islamist hysteria in the west &#8212; in<a href="http://www.jstor.org/pss/1148221" target="_blank"> the views current in the 1980s that Gadaffi was behind most every threat, from Belfast to Managua</a>.   But to whatever small degree his support was really effective, <a href="http://www.mail-archive.com/ugandanet@kym.net/msg01861.html" target="_blank">most  every African nation has seen some of it&#8217;s citizens trained in Libyan camps</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/foday-sankoh-dies-in-un-custody-1.110596" target="_blank">Foday Sankoh</a>, <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/aug/11/westafrica.simonjeffery" target="_blank">Charles Taylor</a>, <a title="Moses Blah" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses_Blah">Moses Blah</a>, <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/blaise_compaore" title="Blaise Compaoré" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaise_Compaor%C3%A9">Blaise Compaore</a> trained in Libya.   Future Malian and Nigerien Tuareg rebels trained in Libya in the late 70s, <a href="http://www.minorityrights.org/?lid=5315&amp;tmpl=printpage" target="_blank">recruited from refugees fleeing famine and oppression</a>.  The <a href="http://www.emusic.com/features/spotlight/294_200708.html" target="_blank">band Tinariwen </a>actually formed in one such camp.</p>
<p>Libya has developed a sophisticated infrastructure to support rebel groups, based around Tripoli&#8217;s &#8220;<a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=R1Z2m6RTAp0C&amp;pg=PA150&amp;lpg=PA150&amp;dq=%22Al-mathaba+al-alamiyya%22&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=Lzd1PXdt9M&amp;sig=CTYyzkuorp7s35Z-0V21TdpLoCM&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=d5lhTavpJ42osQPE8dDPCA&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CBUQ6AEwAA" target="_blank">Al-mathaba al-alamiyya…&#8221; &#8212; &#8220;World Center for the fight against Imperialism Racism and Fascism</a>&#8220;.  While support offered to leftist militants from Palestine, <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=Dy9WENSLHyQC&amp;lpg=PA138&amp;dq=libya%20support%20IRA&amp;pg=PA138#v=onepage&amp;q=libya%20support%20IRA&amp;f=false" target="_blank">the Provisional IRA in Ireland</a>, Nicaragua, and, <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=JGE-XB5QlD8C&amp;lpg=PA733&amp;dq=libya%20support%20ANC&amp;pg=PA733#v=onepage&amp;q=libya%20support%20ANC&amp;f=false" target="_blank">the ANC fighting Apartheid South Africa</a>,  may represent an ideology which matches the admirable title (at least to this leftist), most &#8220;Al-mathaba&#8221; operations have taken &#8220;anti-imperialism&#8221; to rather vaguely coincide with Gaddafi and the Libyan elite&#8217;s nationalist expansion.</p>
<p>The most famous local manifestation of this was surely <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libya-Chad_conflict">the 1970s &amp; 80s Tchadian war</a>. Libya was early to bankroll FROLINAT  and it&#8217;s splits. The Soviets (most notably the GDR) helped early in this process, as part of a strategy against the undoubtedly neocolonial French supported government in Tchad.  But Libya had nationalist motivation, in particular the desire to expand control over the Uranium rich <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/aozou_strip" title="Aouzou Strip" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aouzou_Strip">Aozou Strip</a>. Gaddafi&#8217;s support at times made <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/hissene_habre" title="Hissène Habré" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiss%C3%A8ne_Habr%C3%A9">Hissène Habré</a> and <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/goukouni_oueddei" title="Goukouni Oueddei" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goukouni_Oueddei">Goukouni Oueddei</a> almost entirely creatures of Libyan policy.  Habré, now endlessly awaiting trial in Senegal for his brutality as Tchadian president, saw the flexibility of Gaddafi&#8217;s support, when Goukouni was in turn supported as insurgent leader against Habré&#8217;s government.  The U.S. backed Libyan dissidents were later set up in mirror image camps until <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/1991/03/29/world/libyan-prince-is-taking-control-of-rebels.html?src=pm" target="_blank">ejected by a Tchadian ideological shift in 1991.</a></p>
<p>Since, Libya has most notably hosted<a href="http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/world/libya/proxy.htm" target="_blank"> Sudanese, Liberian, Sierra Leonian, Ethiopian, Eritrean, Tunisian, Egyptian, Tuareg, and Somali rebel groups.</a> There is, in this, little discernible ideological continuity apart from a desire to maintain Libya as a player to be courted by leaders of every troubled nation in the area.</p>
<p>But note from the list above, dissidents hosted in the past by Gaddafi are as likely to be &#8220;white&#8221; Arabs as &#8220;Black Africans.&#8221;</p>
<!-- tweet id : 39032909859917824 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_39032909859917824 a { text-decoration:none; color:#1F98C7; }#bbpBox_39032909859917824 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_39032909859917824' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#C6E2EE; background-image:url(http://a2.twimg.com/profile_background_images/111789719/Papageien_Blume_87780.jpg);'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#663B12; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>RT @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/iyad_elbaghdadi">iyad_elbaghdadi</a>: Reports that "African mercenaries" are from Chad, Niger, Uganda, Mali, and Burkina Faso <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Feb17" title="#Feb17" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Feb17</a></span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 19 February 2011 1:45 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/feld_art/status/39032909859917824' target='_blank'>19 February 2011 1:45 pm</a> via <a href="http://www.tweetdeck.com" rel="nofollow" target="blank">TweetDeck</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=39032909859917824' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=39032909859917824' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=39032909859917824' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=feld_art'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a1.twimg.com/profile_images/986381115/thai-schirmQ_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=feld_art'>@feld_art</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>Frank</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<!-- tweet id : 38661640769638400 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_38661640769638400 a { text-decoration:none; color:#009999; }#bbpBox_38661640769638400 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_38661640769638400' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#131516; background-image:url(http://a3.twimg.com/profile_background_images/202432832/250720101482.jpg);'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#333333; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>RT @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/alithelady">alithelady</a>: RT @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/KCDalis">KCDalis</a>: @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/samiyusuf">samiyusuf</a>  African mercenaries infiltrate every city in Libya, carrying swords to kill. <a href="http://mtw.tl/lvjmgt">http://mtw.tl/lvjmgt</a></span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 18 February 2011 1:10 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/_iima/status/38661640769638400' target='_blank'>18 February 2011 1:10 pm</a> via <a href="http://m.tweete.net" rel="nofollow" target="blank">m.tweete.net</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=38661640769638400' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=38661640769638400' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=38661640769638400' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=_iima'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a2.twimg.com/profile_images/1258228984/edited_me_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=_iima'>@_iima</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>Halimatu Syadiah</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p>Current numbers are even harder to discern.  Tchadian and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libyan%E2%80%93Sudanese_conflict" target="_blank">Sudanese rebels</a> must be the largest groups still in the country.  But even these are not huge contingents: a few hundred at most.  Some blurry photos and one <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qERIb-viJmc" target="_blank">video</a> show <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/a7fadhomar/5462003780/" target="_blank">two dozen yellow capped men identified as &#8220;African Mercenaries.</a>&#8221; Little can actually be discerned from the photos, but assuming the poster is accurate, and these are &#8220;black Africans&#8221;, and they are working with the security forces, and they are armed, they might be wearing the yellow turbans favored by some Tchadian and Sudanese ethnic Zaghawa and some of the Darfuri Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) rebels.  But that is a lot of ifs.</p>
<p><strong>Foreign Migrants</strong></p>
<p>Large numbers of &#8220;Africans&#8221; seen in Libyan cities are much more likely to be foreign workers and those trying to reach Europe.  Libya has alternated in support and oppression directed to refugees passing into their country from the south.  These are not all &#8220;Black Africans&#8221;, but include South Asians and others, many trafficked from Nigeria, through Niger via a brutal desert crossing.  West Africans are periodically outraged by news stories of <a href="http://www.refugeesandimmigrants.org/countryreports.aspx?id=2359" target="_blank">migrants deported by force, or simply dumped in the desert by Libyan government</a>.  More scandalous are stories of robbery, abuse, and even killing by criminal gangs and (less frequently, but more disturbing) <a href="http://www.worldpress.org/Africa/1270.cfm" target="_blank">by xenophobic Libyans</a>. Many migrants are<a href="http://allafrica.com/stories/200908180334.html" target="_blank"> locked up in camps across Libya, kept in conditions unmonitored by outsiders</a>.</p>
<p>This has played into some of the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/18/libya-protests-massacres-reported" target="_blank">&#8220;African Mercenary&#8221; rumors of the last few days</a>, with reports of ever increasing amounts paid to migrants by Libyan security forces to carry out crimes against civilians.</p>
<p>No one should doubt that there are dark skinned men in the Libyan security forces.  Despite the unspoken assumptions of some Libyans, most are surely their fellow Libyans.  There are also, undoubtedly, foreign born guerrillas under arms in Libya, or former fighters long ago enrolled in the security services.  But again, these cannot be a large number.</p>
<p><strong>Who Pulls the Trigger?</strong></p>
<p>Reports of &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; have become, since 17 February, a  staple of Libyan revolutionaries&#8217; news feeds.  We have seen reports,  repeated as fact, that almost every time Libyans have been massacred by  the state security forces, &#8220;Africans&#8221; have been to blame.  &#8220;Africans&#8221;  are said to have been flown into Benghazi and Tripoli to protect them  for the state, 1300 by one rumor.  <a href="http://www.euronews.net/2011/02/19/libyan-city-of-ajdabiya-a-free-city/" target="_blank">A widely quoted report comes from a revolutionary in Ajdabiya  saying</a>:  &#8220;The regime has sent African forces into the city but we are here  waiting in the square of the martyrs. Everyone here is ready to defend  the city against the mercenaries. We’ve discovered that these African  mercenaries are going to land at Zouitina airport. I can assure you that  everybody here is ready to fight against these traitors and African  mercenaries.”  Not that he has seen any, but he believes they are coming  none the less.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 39182647657897984 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_39182647657897984 a { text-decoration:none; color:#1c4c99; }#bbpBox_39182647657897984 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_39182647657897984' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#301f16; background-image:url(http://a1.twimg.com/profile_background_images/205882297/chocolate-bite.jpg);'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#080707; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>RT @<a class="tweet-url username" href="http://twitter.com/LibyanThinker">LibyanThinker</a>: URGENT!!! From contact in the Army: So far, 1300 African Mercenaries have arrived in <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a>  to date. Cant' the World  .</span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 19 February 2011 11:40 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/raulrodriguezxD/status/39182647657897984' target='_blank'>19 February 2011 11:40 pm</a> via <a href="http://iTweet.net" rel="nofollow" target="blank">iTweet.net</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=39182647657897984' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=39182647657897984' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=39182647657897984' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=raulrodriguezxD'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/1246545711/da64f1a34eb74f9bc7df9e7fe2df9baf5abcdefg_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=raulrodriguezxD'>@raulrodriguezxD</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>Raul Rodriguez</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p><a href="http://therevolutionblog.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Photos</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=193774883979515&amp;oid=197898230226131" target="_blank">videos</a>, many horrific, have been provided of a handful (I have seen five total) dead uniformed soldiers with varying degrees of dark skin.  This is hardly proof of the hysterical rhetoric built around thousands of black Africans raping women and murdering protesters.</p>
<p>More reports, including those showing troops attacking civilians, point to the Army and the internal security forces.  The Security Battalions (&#8216;Kataeb al Amn&#8217;) include forces directly under the command of  Colonel Massud Abdul Hafiz al-Gaddafi.  Not only are these groups w<a href="http://www.wikileaks.ch/cable/2009/12/09TRIPOLI960.html" target="_blank">ell armed and trained, they are carefully chosen for loyalty and ideologically motivated</a>.  If there is any truth in the &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; rumors, Tchadians or other former foreign guerrillas, long ago integrated into these internal security forces, would be cause.  But the Libyan military and security establishment is gigantic: 50,000 regular troops and almost as many reserves, bolstered by <a href="http://en.rian.ru/mlitary_news/20100707/159723546.html" target="_blank">recent spending sprees on Russian and other western equipment</a>.  It strains credulity that a few hundred, even a few thousand, &#8220;black African&#8221; mercenaries would be able to enforce submission upon the Libyan people without the participation of these forces.</p>
<p>On twitter, users have dubbed stories of &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; &#8220;Confirmed&#8221; after Al Arabiya &#8211; and later Al Jazeera &#8211;<a href="http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2011/02/19/138351.html" target="_blank"> reported as unconfirmed the same stories of &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; twitter users had earlier broadcast</a>.  A news agency, I should remind readers, cannot &#8220;confirm&#8221; a story by reporting that you are saying it.  It would need multiple individual, reliable, first hand sources providing consistent stories of having seen the original event themselves.  We only have inconsistent third hand reports so far.</p>
<p>And this is not the first time recently we have heard such stories.</p>
<p>In Bahrain, where the military opened fire on unarmed protesters with assault riffles, anti-aircraft weapons, and helicopter fire, some locals have accused &#8220;Iraqi&#8221;, Pakistani&#8221; or other mercenaries of having infiltrated the army.  In the recent massacres on Guinea Conakry and Abidjan, victims have blamed Liberian mercenaries for having murdered and raped protesters.  Again and again, as here in Libya, we hear the cry that &#8220;no fellow countryman would do this!&#8221;  &#8220;Gaddafi couldn&#8217;t get Libyans to kill Libyans, so he brought Mercenaries&#8221;, not Arab mercenaries, not western mercenaries, but those people who resemble the &#8220;lowest&#8221;, most &#8220;foreign&#8221; of our fellow citizens.  There have, just today, been a couple of isolated reports that North Koreans were shooting protesters in Libya, but such reports have not gotten the traction that the &#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; have.  I must ask why this is?</p>
<p><strong>Flawed Evidence</strong></p>
<p>Apart form those mentioned above, the photographic evidence for <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/a7fadhomar/5461624996/">&#8220;African Mercenaries&#8221; include these photos on Flickr</a>.</p>
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<p>I cannot help but note some possible problems with images from Libya that are said to be of an identity card carried by a Guinean captured or killed in Benghazi.  The reports are the man was fighting with Libyan government forces against citizens. That there is no direct evidence linking the man on the card with violence might be the first question.</p>
<p>I am not an expert but I am tempted to refer to that old internet meme: &#8220;<a href="http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/this-looks-shopped" target="_blank">This picture is shopped,</a> <a href="http://www.lurkmore.com/wiki/Photoshop" target="_blank">I can tell from some of the pixels</a>&#8230;&#8221; Honestly, my observations are no proof either way, but it raises enough questions to suggest that someone better qualified in photographic forensics should look at these images.</p>
<div id="attachment_1221" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/carte_problem_001.jpg" rel="lightbox[1201]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1221" title="carte_problem_001" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/carte_problem_001-300x129.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="129" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">A %600 blowup of the bottom of one of these photos (click for larger)</p></div>
<p>Note the circled areas in one section of one of the pictures I examined.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/carte_problem_002.jpg" target="_blank" rel="lightbox[1201]"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-1211" title="carte_problem_002" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/carte_problem_002-1024x441.jpg" alt="" width="574" height="247" /></a></p>
<p><strong>1) </strong>Unnatural distinct blur marks, the largest in a square shape.<br />
<strong>2) </strong>Red stamp patterns that don&#8217;t conform consistently to the fold mark.<br />
<strong>3)</strong> The text has been sharpened.  It is dark, consistent, and the background between letters is pixelated, different from the background in other parts of the card, which is smooth.  This may merely be artifacts of a sharpening attempt so the text was made legible.  Or it is an artifact from pasting.<br />
<strong>4)</strong> This same text lines do not conform to the card where bent.  All such text lines are parallel to one another, where the other text is skewed..<br />
<strong>5)</strong> Artifacts where the background bleeds through the fingers which are supposed to be in front of it.</p>
<p>All this said, A Guinean legally in Algeria would be expected to carry a consular id card.  <a href="http://ambaguineeparis.free.fr/index.php?page=Pages/etatCivil.html" target="_blank">Guinean</a> and <a href="http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,IRBC,,GIN,456d621e2,3f7d4d9b23,0.html" target="_blank">Canadian government </a>sources confirm this type of ID is issued by Guinean embassies abroad.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 39126355857780736 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_39126355857780736 a { text-decoration:none; color:#2FC2EF; }#bbpBox_39126355857780736 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_39126355857780736' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#1A1B1F; background-image:url(http://a3.twimg.com/a/1298664727/images/themes/theme9/bg.gif); background-repeat:no-repeat'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#666666; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>NEW! <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Gaddafi" title="#Gaddafi" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Gaddafi</a> has given the African Mercenaries full freedom in raping Libyan women. <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a></span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 19 February 2011 7:57 pm' href='http://twitter.com/#!/LibyanThinker/status/39126355857780736' target='_blank'>19 February 2011 7:57 pm</a> via web<a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=39126355857780736' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=39126355857780736' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=39126355857780736' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=LibyanThinker'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a3.twimg.com/profile_images/1247829068/old_libya_by_s_h_g-d2fa1ym_normal.jpg' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=LibyanThinker'>@LibyanThinker</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>The Libyan Thinker</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p><strong>Stabbed in the Back</strong></p>
<p>Everything alleged by the photographer above may be true.  But I hesitate as these stories play into a natural combination of nationalism,  existing social prejudices (of low class &#8220;slave&#8221; &#8220;Blacks&#8221;) and fears (of  foreign looking immigrants, familiar to xenophobic discourse in Europe  and America).  They are understandable, but should they go unchallenged in the lore of this revolution, the new Libya being build risks becoming a no less cruel and unjust place, if for a smaller part of its citizens, adjudged outsiders and traitors by their skin color.</p>
<!-- tweet id : 38258000787542016 --><style type='text/css'>#bbpBox_38258000787542016 a { text-decoration:none; color:#009999; }#bbpBox_38258000787542016 a:hover { text-decoration:underline; }</style><div id='bbpBox_38258000787542016' class='bbpBox' style='padding:20px; margin:5px 0; background-color:#131516; background-image:url(http://a3.twimg.com/profile_background_images/200814804/168132_10150138870091807_783511806_8028067_1661632_n.jpg);'><div style='background:#fff; padding:10px; margin:0; min-height:48px; color:#333333; -moz-border-radius:5px; -webkit-border-radius:5px;'><span style='width:100%; font-size:18px; line-height:22px;'>African mercenaries now in <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Benghazi" title="#Benghazi" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Benghazi</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/search?q=%23Libya" title="#Libya" class="tweet-url hashtag">#Libya</a> sources in Libya say they're chasing and killing people with knives and swords. We only fear God</span><div class='bbp-actions' style='font-size:12px; width:100%; padding:5px 0; margin:0 0 10px 0; border-bottom:1px solid #e6e6e6;'><img align='middle' src='http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/plugins/twitter-blackbird-pie//images/bird.png' /><a title='tweeted on 17 February 2011 10:26 am' href='http://twitter.com/#!/AliLePointe/status/38258000787542016' target='_blank'>17 February 2011 10:26 am</a> via <a href="http://twitter.com/" rel="nofollow" target="blank">Twitter for iPhone</a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?in_reply_to=38258000787542016' class='bbp-action bbp-reply-action' title='Reply'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Reply</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/retweet?tweet_id=38258000787542016' class='bbp-action bbp-retweet-action' title='Retweet'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Retweet</strong></span></a><a href='https://twitter.com/intent/favorite?tweet_id=38258000787542016' class='bbp-action bbp-favorite-action' title='Favorite'><span><em style='margin-left: 1em;'></em><strong>Favorite</strong></span></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=AliLePointe'><img style='width:48px; height:48px; padding-right:7px; border:none; background:none; margin:0' src='http://a0.twimg.com/profile_images/1238143207/805d6f28-e150-4fc0-a0a9-481c1b1cd133_normal.png' /></a></div><div style='float:left; padding:0; margin:0'><a style='font-weight:bold' href='http://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=AliLePointe'>@AliLePointe</a><div style='margin:0; padding-top:2px'>Jibreel</div></div><div style='clear:both'></div></div></div><!-- end of tweet -->
<p>These phobias of the &#8220;other&#8221; neglect the horrible reality that Libyans have lived for the last four decades.  They have been oppressed, murdered, tortured and exploited by their fellow Libyans.  It has been said that ‘The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.’ (<a title="http://tartarus.org/~martin/essays/burkequote2.html" href="http://tartarus.org/~martin/essays/burkequote2.html">A mangled false quotation of Edmond Burke</a>, but I digress.)</p>
<p>The quote perhaps survives because it speaks to what Europe learned in the 20th century: oppressive states survive by fear and collusion.</p>
<p>The most dramatic example of this, the murder of 12 million Jews and others by Nazi Germany in the 1940s, provides some of the most despairingly stark lessons.  For decades, scholars sought some explanation, some psychological profile of those who carried out this mass murder.  I come back again and again to writers like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Mason" target="_blank">Tim Mason, an historian of resistance and collaboration with the Nazis</a>, and his despair in finding so much of the latter.  Or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Browning" target="_blank">Chris Browning, whose book &#8220;Ordinary Men&#8221;</a> showed those who took part in war crimes were neither born monsters, warped sociopaths, or cold ideologues, but victims of the pedestrian social pressures to conform, turned to the most extreme ends.</p>
<p><strong>Libyans:</strong> your fellow citizens have enabled this regime to oppress you for so many years. You must come to terms with this in the aftermath of this revolution, or it will be no revolution at all.</p>
<p><strong>But you have already learned the converse: you have the power to stop this oppression.  You are doing it now, and the world, awed by the bravery and audacity in the Arab world this year, stand now amazed by your fearlessness.</strong></p>
<p>But Libyans, you do yourself an injustice with these fears directed at &#8220;Africans&#8221;. <strong>You, in more than one sense, are these Africans</strong>.  You cannot build a society of justice by until you learn this.</p>
<p><!-- end of tweet --></p>
<h4 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em; text-align: center;">UPDATE 2011-02-21 23:49 EST</h4>
<p>Please take a look at this VERY useful article focusing on color politics in Libya in the light of these events: <a title="Gaddafi is killing us with his Africans! by N. Thompson, published at &quot;My Weku&quot; Magazine, 2011-02-21" href="http://www.myweku.com/2011/02/gaddafi-is-killing-us-with-his-africans/" target="_blank">Gaddafi is killing us with his Africans!</a> by N. Thompson, published at &#8220;My Weku&#8221; Magazine, 2011-02-21 A useful look at the immigrant condition in Libya from 2000: <a href="https://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/oct2000/liby-o28.shtml" target="_blank">Ethnic violence and mass deportations of immigrants in Libya</a> By Trevor Johnson, WSWS 28 October 2000</p>
<p class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;"><strong>And please read and support <a title="http://www.libyafeb17.com/" href="http://www.libyafeb17.com/" target="_blank">http://www.libyafeb17.com/</a> : sometimes hard to watch, but vital news from inside Libya, as the people try to get free.</strong></p>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.unwatch.org/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=bdKKISNqEmG&amp;b=1313923&amp;ct=8411733"> Libya Must End Racism Against Black African Migrants and Others</a> UN Watch Written Statement, UN Human Rights Council 13th Session, 16 February 2010</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://no-racism.net/article/3201/"> Libya: &#8216;Beaten and deported to the Sahara&#8217;</a> Article translated from the Italian by Francesca Megna, published first on 18. Dec 2009 by :: fortresseurope.blogspot.com.</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2000/dec/16/news/mn-761"> Migrant Workers From Ghana Who Fled Libya Cite Racism</a> Los Angeles Times</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://khaldoun.wordpress.com/2008/12/14/racism-arab-black-african-relations-in-north-africa/"> Racism: Arab-Black African Relations in North Africa</a> Noah Bassil,  Khaldoun, 2008</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.arabist.net/blog/2009/9/5/losing-libya.html">Losing Libya &#8211; Blog &#8211; The Arabist</a> (arabist.net)</li>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/benghazi-defies-gaddafi-2220638.html">Benghazi defies Gaddafi</a> (independent.co.uk)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://r.zemanta.com/?u=http%3A//www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8336925/Libya-US-accuses-Britain-of-legitimising-Gaddafi.html&amp;a=36134646&amp;rid=dac232d0-949d-44dd-b000-f6c44563e434&amp;e=3d2e854a7605d7cdd346edb9c6cf6274">Libya: US accuses Britain of legitimising Gaddafi</a> (telegraph.co.uk)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1284132/Tony-Blair-special-adviser-dictator-Gaddafis-son.html">Tony Blair our very special adviser by dictator Gaddafi&#8217;s son | Mail Online</a> (dailymail.co.uk)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://leninology.blogspot.com/2011/02/libyas-uprising.html">LENIN&#8217;S TOMB: Libya&#8217;s uprising</a> (leninology.blogspot.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://enoughgaddafi.com/?page_id=450">Demonstrations in solidarity with the Libyan people February 19th, 2011 &#8221; Enough!Khalas</a> (enoughgaddafi.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Niger&#8217;s Presidential Elections are Underway</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/02/nigers-elections-underway/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/02/nigers-elections-underway/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2011 22:09:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The 31st of January saw Niger&#8217;s Legislative elections, combined with the first round of the Presidential elections. Results are not yet known, and the top two in the Presidential race will re-run on 14 March. Here&#8217;s some tools to follow it. The best immediate updates on the polls and count can be found at the [...]]]></description>
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<div id="attachment_1183" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Issoufou_Niamey_siege.jpg" rel="lightbox[1182]"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1183" title="Issoufou siege Niamey" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Issoufou_Niamey_siege-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" align="left" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The PNDS Campaign headquarters in Niamey, photo from Niger Elections.</p></div>
</div>
<p>The 31st of January saw Niger&#8217;s Legislative elections, combined with the first round of the Presidential elections.  Results are not yet known, and the top two in the Presidential race will re-run on 14 March. Here&#8217;s some tools to follow it.</p>
<p>The best immediate updates on the polls and count can be found at the African Elections observer site&#8217;s <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/nigerelections">@NigerElections Twitter feed</a> as well as their news site at <a href="http://www.africanelections.org/niger">africanelections.org/niger</a>.  Their <a href="http://twitpic.com/photos/nigerelections">photo gallery</a> is also wonderful (and the source for the image above).</p>
<p><strong>[UPDATE 2:40 GMT Feb 2 :</strong> There are no official results yet announced. Rumored provisional results are being passed around -- <a href="http://www.tamtaminfo.com/tamforum/viewtopic.php?f=4&amp;t=1181">an example is here</a> -- but their simple repetition of the urban conventional wisdom makes them either suspect or expected.</p>
<p><a class="zem_slink freebase/en/mahamadou_issoufou" title="Mahamadou Issoufou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahamadou_Issoufou">Mahamadou Issoufou</a> (<a class="zem_slink freebase/en/nigerien_party_for_democracy_and_socialism" title="Nigerien Party for Democracy and Socialism" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerien_Party_for_Democracy_and_Socialism">PNDS-Tarayya</a>) in the upper 20s, followed by either <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/seyni_oumarou" title="Seyni Oumarou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seyni_Oumarou">Seyni Oumarou</a> (<a class="zem_slink freebase/en/national_movement_for_the_development_of_society" title="National Movement for the Development of Society" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Movement_for_the_Development_of_Society">MNSD-Nassara</a>) and/or <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/hama_amadou" title="Hama Amadou" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hama_Amadou">Hama Amadou</a> (<a href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=120650541315597">MODEN/FA LUMANA</a>) from 20% to 24%.  This would match both the aggregate Municipal/Departmental election results of  January and the relative profile of the parties.  While <a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2046&amp;ID=75">Issoufou is the favorite</a>, there is no accounting for tactical endorsements for the second round.  Note that an <a href="http://www.hausa.rfi.fr/afrika/20110105-kididiga-kan-zaben-shugaban-kasa-jumhuriyar-nijar">RFI reported telephone survey</a> (seen via <a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/01/25/countdown-to-nigers-elections/">Sahelblog</a>) reporting Issoufou with over 40% support seems a possible result of sample bias towards urban educated voters.  A run off is almost certain, and the questions will be how Legislative results set the stage for the new government, and whether the PNDS faces the new MODEN LUMANA or the MNDS, reversed in last years coup.  Each could color the results -- <a href="http://tamtaminfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=5486:les-alliances-politiques-au-niger-histoire-dune-multitude-recomposition&amp;catid=44:politique&amp;Itemid=61">and the mandatory backroom deals</a> -- very differently.</p>
<p>The<a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2064&amp;ID=75"> reports of attacks</a> by PNDS militants in their heartland of Tahoua, as well as <a href="http://english.souslemanguier.com/nouvelles/news.asp?id=10&amp;idnews=30257&amp;pays=259&amp;rub=">unconfirmed charges by Hama</a> of<a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2057&amp;ID=75"> fraud and intimidation against his party in Tillaberi</a> and Niamey, are not evidence of some general breakdown in law or a pattern of vote-rigging. Apart from <a href="http://nigerdiaspora.info/politique/6357-elections-legislatives-et-presidentielles-1er-tour-pnds-tarayya-en-tete-seconde-du-modenfa-lumana-et-du-mnsd-nassara-qui-occupe-la-troisieme-place-">17 polling stations in Tassara</a> (which seem to have been foiled by some local communal conflict), and reports of chronic <a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2054&amp;ID=75">petty delays and procedural fumbling</a>, the poll seems to have <a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2065&amp;ID=75">proceeded in peace</a> and <a href="http://medianiger.info/Index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2056&amp;ID=75">openness</a>.  While turnout (30%-50%) is low, it is the historical norm, and some rural areas reported <a href="http://tamtaminfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=5493:-le-niger-dans-lattente-des-resultats-de-la-presidentielle&amp;catid=44:politique&amp;Itemid=61">record-breaking numbers of women voters</a>.  <a href="http://medianiger.info/index.asp?affiche=News_Display.asp&amp;ArticleID=2068&amp;ID=75&amp;SID=">ECOWAS observers,</a> among 250 official NGO or foreign poll monitors, have seconded this impression.</p>
<p>Rather they may be a prescient image of petty  parliamentary conflict in the 7th Republic, not unlike that between the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_and_Social_Convention">CDS </a>and the MNSD of the early 1990s which drove the 3rd Republic into gridlock.</p>
<p>Regardless, it will likely be several days before we get any real numbers, and several more before more distant of the more than 2000 polling offices report. <strong>]</strong></p>
<p>You can also follow the <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/search?q=%23niger2011">#Niger2011 Twitter channel</a> for updates and links to news, including some of my translations. <strong> [Update:</strong> <a href="http://twitter.com/amadoudjibril">Amadou Djibril</a> is collecting these links in a Daily Digest <a href="http://paper.li/tag/niger2011">here</a>. <strong>]</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/">Alex Thurston&#8217;s Sahel Blog</a> has the usual informed coverage and discussion <a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/02/01/niger-elections-so-far-so-good/">here</a> and  <a href="http://sahelblog.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/niger-votes-today/">here</a>.</p>
<p>And of course, the best <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/niger" title="Niger" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niger">Nigerien</a> news coverage is always collected on <a href="http://nigerdiaspora.com">http://nigerdiaspora.com</a> and <a href="http://tamtaminfo.com">http://tamtaminfo.com</a> .</p>
<p><strong>UPDATE, INTERNET CAMPAIGNING:</strong> Nigerien politics has begun to capture the social media bug, especially in the sizable diaspora community.  You can follow announcements from the two Facebook pages (<a href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=120650541315597">here</a> and <a href="http://fr-fr.facebook.com/pages/MODEN-FA-LUMANA/139550056062798">here</a>) of  Hama Amadou&#8217;s Mouvement Démocratique Nigérien Pour une Fédération Africaine MODEN-FA Lumana (as well as <a href="http://www.moden-lumana.net/acceuil.html">their website</a>), the two Facebook pages for Mamadou Issoufou&#8217;s PNDS (<a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001464502642">here</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001924173388">here</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=87559146413">their French section here</a>) and <a href="http://pnds-tarayya.net/news/news.php">their official website</a> (a French section also has <a href="http://mdnv-mi.net/">a web presence</a>).  The MNSD, perhaps tellingly, has no Facebook presence apart from this &#8220;<a href="http://www.facebook.com/?ref=logo#!/group.php?gid=310838098039">Free Mamadou Tandja</a>&#8221; page.  I might also note that the <a href="http://www.mnsd-nassara.org/">official MNSD website</a> was never updated after Hama and his supporters split form the party in 2009.</p>
<p>Nigerien parties and their supporters have made use of internet video in this campaign as never before.  <a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xe2rd1_a-ouverture-congres-lumana-africa-m_news">Highly produced videos of MODEN FA LUMANA events</a>, <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHgBitCrQd4">videos of Mahamadou Issoufou&#8217;s PNDS campaign</a> &#8212; including <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oMcW2E4cfE">scenes from his recent appearances</a> in all corners the country (not a normal feature of campaigns) &#8211;  and <a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xg1d0v_hymme-du-mnsd_music">MNDS rallies </a>have appeared on You Tube and DailyMotion.  There&#8217;s even several <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkl3i6LiEWc&amp;feature=related">MNSD Nassara &#8211; Seini Omarou music videos</a>.  Wherever you come down politically, they&#8217;ll have you taping your toes. <strong>]</strong></p>
<p>Here are some of the latest news stories that caught my eye:</p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gbPqxdv1eTwxLjLhG0Ufkvc_jiwA?docId=CNG.0a272664987adaa3bf793f4d11f4fe3a.a21">AFP: 50 percent turnout in Niger polls: electoral panel</a></p>
<p>*<a href="http://observers.france24.com/fr/content/20110201-calme-transition-democratique-niamey-niger-mamadou-tandja-Issoufou-Oumarou-Amadou-Ousmane">Une élection présidentielle un peu trop calme(France24:The Observers)</a>: includes an inside look at the polling process and photo gallery.</p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.indianexpress.com/news/democracy-in-action-in-niger;-7-million-vote-in-general-election/744633/">Democracy in action in Niger; 7 million vote in general election (Wire via India Express)</a></p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.courrierinternational.com/article/2011/02/01/le-pouvoir-civil-va-reprendre-la-main">Niger:Le pouvoir civil va reprendre la main( Courrier international)</a></p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.africareview.com/News/-/979180/1099558/-/i65o66z/-/">Niger junta says poll went on without a hitch (Africa Review)</a></p>
<p>*Le Sahel&#8217;s official statement:<a href="http://nigerdiaspora.info/politique/6356-le-president-du-conseil-supreme-pour-la-restauration-de-la-democratie-chef-de-letat-le-general-de-corps-darmee-djibo-salou-a-procede-au-lancement-des-operations-de-vote-sous-le-signe-de-lespoir"><br />
&#8220;Le Président du Conseil Suprême pour la Restauration de la Démocratie, Chef de l’Etat, le Général de Corps d’Armée Djibo Salou, a procédé au lancement des opérations de vote : sous le signe de l’espoir&#8230;&#8221;</a></p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.afrik.com/breve27210.html">Présidentielle au Niger : taux de participation faible à Niamey (Afrik.com)</a></p>
<p>*<a href="http://www.rfi.fr/mfi/20110201-niger-memes-hommes-memes-intrigues">Niger : Mêmes hommes, mêmes intrigues ? (radio analysis from RFI)</a>: Probably, would be my answer.<br />
<!-- *PREVIEW-  races to secure poll for civilian rule (31 Jan 1st rnd pres/parl) http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFLDE70R1O020110128?sp=true #Niger2011 Election Next Week (Bloomberg) Misidentifies members of ARN http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-01-28/niger-election-to-mark-return-to-civilian-rule-amid-spate-of-kidnappings.html #Niger grants uranium permits to Gazprom gov says expecting $5m devel&#038; %20 cut Toulouk II&#038;IV, ~ 90km WNW of Agadez http://af.reuters.com/article/investingNews/idAFJOE70R0BA20110128?sp=true #Tandja granted blocs to Earthstone grp in 2008, expecting $2m devel. Either taken back or returned undevelopped http://www.tamtaminfo.com/index.php?option=com_content&#038;view=article&#038;id=594:recherches-minieres-octroi-de-nouveaux-permis-dans-le-domaine-de-luranium&#038;catid=49:societe&#038;Itemid=96 #Niger gov on Gazprom deal, change terror laws, new commune in Say Dept, fix RN1 http://www.lesahel.org/index.php?option=com_content&#038;view=article&#038;id=6539:au-conseil-des-ministres-le-gouvernement-adopte-plusieurs-projets-de-lois-et-des-mesures-individuelles&#038;catid=34:actualites&#038;Itemid=53 --></p>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE70I4T020110119">Candidates seek new election body for Niger poll</a> (reuters.com)</li>
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		<title>A Cairo Revolution</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/a-cairo-revolution/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/a-cairo-revolution/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Jan 2011 00:07:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Marching in Imbaba, Cairo, originally uploaded by RamyRaoof. One overlooked media revelations from the Arab Revolutions of 2011 is the amount of material released with reusable copyright. Ramy Raoof in Cairo is releasing his work with a CC Attribution license, meaning popular media, as well as outlets like Wikipedia, have access to images of these [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/a-cairo-revolution/"></g:plusone></div><div style="float: left; text-align: center; margin-right: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;"><a title="photo sharing" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/ramyraoof/5395968524/"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5054/5395968524_f22998dc9f_t.jpg" alt="Marching in Imbaba, Cairo" /></a></p>
<p><span style="font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px;"><br />
<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/ramyraoof/5395968524/">Marching in Imbaba, Cairo</a>,<br />
originally uploaded by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/people/ramyraoof/">RamyRaoof</a>.<br />
</span></p>
</div>
<p>One overlooked media revelations from the Arab Revolutions of 2011 is the amount of material released with reusable copyright.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/ramyraoof/sets/72157625805754031/">Ramy Raoof</a> in Cairo is releasing his work with a <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en">CC Attribution license</a>, meaning popular media, as well as outlets like Wikipedia, have access to images of these historic events.</p>
<p><a class="zem_slink freebase/en/al_jazeera" title="Aljazeera" rel="homepage" href="http://english.aljazeera.net/">Al Jazeera</a>, whose coverage of the Egyptian rising has been praised as &#8220;<a href="http://muckrack.com/dougsaunders/statuses/31035800346960000">what Baghdad 1991 was for CNN</a>&#8220;, has <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/al_jazeera_releases_egypt_coverage_under_creative.php">released much of its coverage under a cc license</a>.  The collective around the &#8220;<a href="http://www.facebook.com/elshaheeed.co.uk">We are Khaled Said</a>&#8220;, one of the prime social media instigators of the Egyptian diaspora has done the same.</p>
<p>This may seem a small thing.  But remember that in most nations, corporate forces have been for the last three decades repeatedly extending, through force of law, ownership of writing and images far beyond the lives of their creators.  The enforcement of such regimes has been strengthened, pushing past conventional understandings of free usage which existed beside copyright law.  This has been a noticeable change even in my lifetime.  The <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/photocopying" title="Photocopier" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photocopier">Xerox machine</a> was first available to mass users in the 70s, articles and books were commonly copied and passed between readers.  Such actions, even for out of print works by long dead creators, have been both criminalized and made taboo.</p>
<p>Most worryingly, these legal controls married to internal self censorship, are especially prevalent in academia.  While academic books and journals, as well as newspapers, have been successfully digitized and shared across the internet, their diffusion has increasingly been restricted to institutions willing to pay exorbitant sums.  <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/jstor" title="JSTOR" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSTOR">JSTOR</a>, the exclusive home of most humanities journals, charges as a subscriber as much as $2,450 per journal title (and there are hundreds) per year. Remember, these are are reprints of old journal articles, which had covered their costs at the time of production either by paper sales or institutional support.</p>
<p>We confront a world in which documents of our own history, especially the powerful medium of video, are owned by entities who punish their dissemination.  Like much of the products of our society, most images made since the 1920s have been converted into commodities.  Abstracted from their real value, they are mechanisms for making money, and their withholding is crucial to this status.</p>
<p>This, like the Arab oligarchies, is in dire need of a revolution.</p>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://r.zemanta.com/?u=http%3A//www10.nytimes.com/2011/01/29/world/middleeast/29jazeera.html%3F_r%3D5&amp;a=34008371&amp;rid=631ea460-4317-4625-83d1-f278d00b5f54&amp;e=1ce2e319b1f474903a0bf005f673ccbb">On Al Jazeera, a Revolution Televised Despite Obstacles</a> (nytimes.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://r.zemanta.com/?u=http%3A//www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/01/29/pintak.arab.media/index.html&amp;a=34060557&amp;rid=631ea460-4317-4625-83d1-f278d00b5f54&amp;e=bef8abbdbf4593d81495ba06ac94b2e0">Arab media revolution spreading change</a> (cnn.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2011/01/al-jazeeras-revolution-ctd-1.html">Al-Jazeera&#8217;s Revolution? Ctd</a> (andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.alternet.org/world/149724/the_egyptian_revolution_will_not_be_tweeted%253A_a_first-hand_report_from_cairo">The Egyptian Revolution Will not Be Tweeted: A First-Hand Report from Cairo</a> (alternet.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.democracyjournal.org/15/6726.php">Shadi Hamid for Democracy Journal: The Cairo Conundrum</a> (democracyjournal.org)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.arabist.net/blog/2011/1/27/a-womans-ordeal-in-cairo-jan25.html?SSScrollPosition=0">A woman&#8217;s ordeal in Cairo #jan25 &#8211; Blog &#8211; The Arabist</a> (arabist.net)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://themoornextdoor.wordpress.com/2011/01/28/vague-thoughts-on-the-arab-winter-uprisings/">Vague thoughts on the Arab Winter Uprisings &#8221; The Moor Next Door</a> (themoornextdoor.wordpress.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://firedoglake.com/2011/01/29/mubarak%25e2%2580%2599s-secret-police-thugs-try-to-disupt-revolution/">Mubarak&#8217;s Secret Police &#8220;Thugs&#8221; Try to Disrupt Revolution</a> (firedoglake.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>The US Military &#8220;Cut&#8221; is Window-dressing</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/the-us-military-cut/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/the-us-military-cut/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Jan 2011 02:14:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[...]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Lefty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[BBC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Federal government of the United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Military budget]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pentagon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Gates]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[United States Department of Defense]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[US Military corruption disinformation war]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The US press, even the left, seems to have taken as gospel the announced DoD budget cuts. This is largely smoke an mirrors. The BBC correctly points out that &#8220;The defence budget was more than $700bn last year &#8211; representing the largest portion of the US federal government&#8216;s discretionary budget.&#8221; But their purported $178b cut [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2011/01/the-us-military-cut/"></g:plusone></div><p>The US press, even the left, seems to have taken as gospel the announced <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/department_of_defense" title="United States Department of Defense" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Defense">DoD</a> budget cuts.</p>
<p>This is largely smoke an mirrors.  <a title="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12130628" href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12130628" target="_blank">The <span class="zem_slink freebase/en/bbc">BBC</span> correctly points out that</a> &#8220;The <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/military_budget" title="Military budget" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget">defence budget</a> was more than $700bn last year &#8211; representing the largest portion of the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/federal_government_of_the_united_states" title="Federal government of the United States" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_government_of_the_United_States">US federal government</a>&#8216;s discretionary budget.&#8221;  But their purported $178b cut is not a cut at all.  A $14b a year give away to private corporations to develop a future amphibious vehicle program will be dumped.  Most of the rest of the reputed $100b savings will be gained over ten years, although most of that will be &#8216;moved around&#8217; to other parts of the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/the_pentagon" title="The Pentagon" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pentagon">Pentagon</a>: so we&#8217;re at less than a $24b cut to the $721b.  But that $721b was going to go up for inflation and growth within individual projects.</p>
<p>And  the Pentagon budget DOES NOT include the costs of the Iraq and <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/2001_war_in_afghanistan" title="War in Afghanistan (2001–present)" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_in_Afghanistan_%282001%E2%80%93present%29">Afghanistan wars</a>, nor pensions nor VA benefits, nor Department of Energy and other government activities done under contract for the pentagon.  These numbers for FY2011 top $1,398b.  This dwarfs WIC payments, roads and bridges, welfare, policing, agricultural policy.  The combination of these is less that %10 of the total military spending for FY2011.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1167" title="_50704426_01_11_us_defence_budget464_2" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/50704426_01_11_us_defence_budget464_2.gif" alt="" width="464" height="330" /></p>
<p>The DoD provided chart gives no figures for the special war spending, or defense run programs carried out by other US agencies.  This leaves aside pensions, veteran support services, healthcare and the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/veterans_health_administration" title="Veterans Health Administration" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veterans_Health_Administration">VA hospital</a> system (the closest we have to a national health service).  Much of these are already woefully underfunded and will be sorely stretched by hundreds of thousands of vets returning with trauma, injuries, and facing an economy in collapse.</p>
<p>Ever wonder why newspapers or the TV never shows you a pie chart when rambling on about government spending?  The WRL does one every year.  It paints a picture rarely seen by American citizens: one which might give them pause about supporting a dozen huge multinational corporations who do nothing but survive on military contracts (and whose ranks of lobbyists are filled with former politicians).</p>
<div id="attachment_1168" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 586px"><a href="http://www.warresisters.org/federalpiechartnumbers"><img class="size-full wp-image-1168" title="FY2011pie" src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/FY2011pie.jpg" alt="FY2011 piechart" width="576" height="567" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">FY2011 Federal budget: Defence in pink.</p></div>
<p>Ever wonder why this isn&#8217;t reported? Because it is rather stunning evidence that the United States government has become a mechanism of transferring wealth, under threat of foreign attack and being accused of not being patriotic, from the working poor and middle classes to the very rich.</p>
<p>A 10% or less cut  spread out over five to ten years &#8212; one which will likely be &#8216;corrected&#8217; back up in midstream &#8212; will do little to change that reality.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>See WRL&#8217;s invaluable yearly pie chart flier at <a title="http://www.warresisters.org/federalpiechart" href="http://www.warresisters.org/federalpiechart" target="_blank">the War Resisters League website</a>.</strong></li>
</ul>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/01/06/national/w005222S51.DTL">Gates proposing program cuts in military budget</a> (sfgate.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.drudge.com/news/140029/gates-makes-78-billion-military-cuts">Gates Makes $78 Billion in Military Cuts</a> (drudge.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.executivegov.com/2011/01/not-every-defense-dollar-sacred-gates-announces-budget-details-cuts-to-weapons-programs/">Not Every Defense Dollar &#8216;Sacred&#8217;: Gates Announces $78B in Cuts &#8230;</a> (executivegov.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://r.zemanta.com/?u=http%3A//www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-us-canada-12130628&amp;a=32015519&amp;rid=10afe66f-231f-41d9-9821-d0e50283f25e&amp;e=cc6be4f2fbcb4154a466a58152bd705b">Pentagon budget to get $78bn cut</a> (bbc.co.uk)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&amp;fd=R&amp;usg=AFQjCNGJxEoB0Pppmx3i5cs65Dn-Oi0rWA&amp;url=http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/national_world/stories/2011/01/07/pentagon-facing-cuts-of-78b-over-5-years.html?sid%253D101">Pentagon facing cuts of $78B over 5 years &#8211; Columbus Dispatch</a> (news.google.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2011/01/08/defense_deficit_hysteria/index.html">Republican deficit hypocrisy off to a great start on defense spending</a> (salon.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://hotair.com/archives/2011/01/06/should-defense-be-immune-from-cuts/">Should Defense be immune from cuts?</a> (hotair.com)</li>
</ul>
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		<title>Leaking a President out of Power</title>
		<link>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2010/12/another-president-wont-leave/</link>
		<comments>http://tomathon.com/mphp/2010/12/another-president-wont-leave/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Dec 2010 21:23:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>T. Miles</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Afrique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alassane Ouattara]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Côte d'Ivoire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Félix Houphouët-Boigny]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laurent Gbagbo]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tomathon.com/mphp/?p=1158</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Cote d&#8217;Ivoire presidential elections drama, after decades of civil war and chicanery, has proven in its final act to be, well, dramatic. Even wire reports are saying that the vote totals are confirmed, with Alassane Ouattara (representing both the conservative parties heir to Félix Houphouët-Boigny and the marginalized Muslim north) taking between 53% and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div name="googleone_share_1" style="position:relative;z-index:5;float: right; margin-left: 10px;"><g:plusone size="small" count="1" href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/2010/12/another-president-wont-leave/"></g:plusone></div><p><div id="attachment_1164" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 451px"><a href="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/CIV_2010_result.png" rel="lightbox[1158]"><img src="http://tomathon.com/mphp/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/CIV_2010_result.png" alt="CIV_2010_result" title="CIV_2010_result" width="441" height="183" class="size-full wp-image-1164" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The provisional vote totals leaked to press and governments, are bad news for President Gbagbo. </p></div>The Cote d&#8217;Ivoire presidential elections drama, after decades of civil war and chicanery, has proven in its final act to be, well, dramatic.  </p>
<p>Even wire reports are saying that the vote totals are confirmed, with <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/alassane_ouattara" title="Alassane Ouattara" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alassane_Ouattara">Alassane Ouattara</a> (representing both the conservative parties heir to <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/felix_houphouet-boigny" title="Félix Houphouët-Boigny" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%A9lix_Houphou%C3%ABt-Boigny">Félix Houphouët-Boigny</a> and the marginalized Muslim north) taking between 53% and 55% of the total vote.  It seems this is a further lesson, if one is needed, of the inability of governments to contain bad news in the internet age.</p>
<p>A PDF floating around, supposedly a scan of the electoral commission totals, is making the rounds of Ivorian government offices and foreign capitals.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s no way of confirming this yet.  There&#8217;s no meta info in the file, but it shows reasonable totals by Region and Departement (with a margin of error column to the right cut off, suggesting it is the provisional result).  It seems to be a report generated from an Excel spreadsheet, as it has the distinctive Excel &#8220;division by zero&#8221; error code of &#8220;#DIV/0!&#8221; in a couple of places.  There are no seals.</p>
<p>The results, if even close, are damning: 55.01% to ADO for 44.99% Gbagbo (the 100% suggests either completeness or falseness).  In some places in the north, ADO is shown with over 80%, even over 90% of some Departements.  If Gbagbo&#8217;s strategy is to contest northern results, he will have to win MANY disputed stations to make up for ADO&#8217;s competitive results elsewhere.</p>
<p>As with so many elections in West Africa, the ruling President <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/laurent_gbagbo" title="Laurent Gbagbo" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurent_Gbagbo">Laurent Gbagbo</a>&#8216;s closest supporters seem determined to win at all costs.  The latest rumors go that those around Gbagbo, unwilling either to give up their lucrative positions, or fearing investigation into their past dealings, are pushing for a state of emergency, declarable by the President under<a href="http://www.ladocumentationfrancaise.fr/dossiers/cote-divoire/constitution.shtml"> Article 48 of the 2000 Constitution</a>.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">Art. 48. Lorsque les Institutions de la République, l&#8217;indépendance de la Nation, l&#8217;intégrité de son territoire ou l&#8217;exécution de ses engagements internationaux sont menacées d&#8217;une manière grave et immédiate, et que le fonctionnement régulier des pouvoirs publics constitutionnels est interrompu, le Président de la République prend les mesures exceptionnelles exigées par ces circonstances après consultation obligatoire du Président de l&#8217;Assemblée nationale et de celui du Conseil constitutionnel. Il en informe la Nation par message. L&#8217;Assemblée nationale se réunit de plein droit.</p>
<p>Of course there is no <em>grave and immediate threat to the Nation, Institutions of the Republic, territorial integrity, or international obligations</em>.  At least not one that has developed in the last few days or months.  State TV (RTI) is reportedly been running interviews (on a 24/7 loop) with Gbagbo supporters in the north who claim grave irregularities in the areas controlled by the <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/forces_nouvelles_de_cote_divoire" title="Forces Nouvelles de Côte d'Ivoire" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forces_Nouvelles_de_C%C3%B4te_d%27Ivoire">New Forces</a> rebel movement of the Prime Minister.  That these troops were disarmed or integrated into government forces prior to the election (at least according to the government) is one point which doesn&#8217;t ring true.  That international observers are not reporting any systemic abuse at northern voting stations is another.</p>
<p>Gbagbo&#8217;s supporters disrupted an attempt to read provisional results by the CEI voting commission on 11/30.  Today (12/1) is the last day votes may legally be chalenged, so the window of legality is closing.  Time is another enemy of Gbagbo&#8217;s supporters.</p>
<p>Finally, the internationally community is not their friend.  The UN mission there has certified the election as fair, and called on the results to be released immediately.  The EU, France, The US, and a variety of foreign observers have as well.  Reports are that these nations, with the help of the Burkinabe Embassy, are negotiating a climb down.</p>
<p>What is frightening is that Gbagbo&#8217;s cronies are the ones with the least to lose from pushing the nation back into civil war.  The President is missing his chance to either retire as a statesman or head the opposition, and his exile or prosecution by the next government becomes more likely the more he resists.  But the influential business people allegedly grouped around his wife, parliamentary leader <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simone_Gbagbo">Simone Ehivet Gbagbo</a> have more to lose from allowing him to retire.  Prosecutions will likely follow in the coming years, and their resources will surely dry up. Simone has already come under suspicion in the events surrounding the 2004 death of French-Canadian journalist <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/guy_andre_kieffer" title="Guy-André Kieffer" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy-Andr%C3%A9_Kieffer">Guy-André Kieffer</a>, who disappeared while investigating cocoa industry corruption. The paramilitary forces of ultra nationalist thugs like <a class="zem_slink freebase/en/charles_ble_goude" title="Charles Blé Goudé" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Bl%C3%A9_Goud%C3%A9">Charles Blé Goudé</a> may find a future without Gbagbo&#8217;s protection rather dangerous.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://docs.google.com/document/pub?id=1eYbY1YEGZMR5L7sKo7rUUW5BIHTbCP29jTXZwJ1ptHQ">Purported Results of the Second Round</a></strong></p>
<p><iframe src="https://docs.google.com/document/pub?id=1eYbY1YEGZMR5L7sKo7rUUW5BIHTbCP29jTXZwJ1ptHQ&amp;embedded=true"></iframe></p>
<ul>
<li>Generally very good Wikipedia background on the 2010 election : <a href=" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivorian_presidential_election,_2010">English </a>&amp; <a href="http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89lection_pr%C3%A9sidentielle_ivoirienne_de_2010">French</a></li>
</ul>
<h6 class="zemanta-related-title" style="font-size: 1em;">Related articles</h6>
<ul class="zemanta-article-ul">
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/ivoryCoastNews/idAFLDE6AQ0B020101128?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=ivoryCoastNews">NEWSMAKER-Gbagbo plays nationalist card for Ivorian run-off</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
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<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://www.theafricareport.com/archives2/interviews/3296837-laurent-gbagbo-qim-here-im-stayingq.html">Laurent Gbagbo: &#8220;I&#8217;m here, I&#8217;m staying&#8221; | African news, analysis and opinion &#8211; The Africa Report.com</a> (theafricareport.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/ivoryCoastNews/idAFLDE6AT1DL20101130?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=ivoryCoastNews">UPDATE 1-Poll scores delayed in Ivory Coast, security tight</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
<li class="zemanta-article-ul-li"><a href="http://af.reuters.com/article/burkinaFasoNews/idAFLDE6B00K020101201?feedType=RSS&amp;feedName=burkinaFasoNews">Pressure grows on Ivory Coast to issue poll result</a> (af.reuters.com)</li>
</ul>
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