Filed under Featured, Niger by T. Miles on 1 July 2009 at 12:55 am
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I’ve been waiting for the United States and Canadian governments to weigh in on the Nigerien political crisis. Today France released a less than pointed statement, accusing Nigerien government policies of “being outside the constitution”, while the EU was a little firmer, mentioning the cash it provides Niamey. Although members have expressed concern over Tandja’s [...]
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Filed under Featured, French by T. Miles on 30 June 2009 at 8:24 pm
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While reporters continue to carefully attribute the title “Coup d’Etat” to leaders of Niger’s opposition, events of the last 24 hours make it hard to spin the current situation in any other way.
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Filed under Featured, Niger by T. Miles on 27 June 2009 at 12:41 am
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In a radio speech to the nation on Friday night (the sabbath), President Tandja announced he was dissolving the government and would rule by decree.
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Filed under Featured, Niger by T. Miles on 26 June 2009 at 9:32 pm
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Just when you’d like to put it to bed, the constitutional crisis in Niger continues, weaving like a distracted taxi driver: from sigh to scream and back again. I’ll focus a bit on three events of importance. After Tandja sent out a letter lecturing the Constiutional Court on their decision to stop his referendum, his [...]
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Filed under Afrique, Do this by T. Miles on 23 June 2009 at 6:58 pm
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I recently saw an appeal from US high school students, raising funds for anti-malarial bed nets to be delivered to the DRC. “When people find out they can donate $10 to save a life,”
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Filed under Featured, Niger by T. Miles on 19 June 2009 at 6:39 pm
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It seems every time the Nigerien political crisis nears some resolution, it swerves wildly in the other direction. The inevitable end seems to be preordained against President Tandja, barring a true coup d’etat. But his cadre of supporters, comfortable in their offices can’t face it, and are thrashing around looking for a way to square [...]
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Filed under Afrique, Featured by T. Miles on 12 June 2009 at 8:06 pm
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This one image sums up the — still — late Omar Bongo Ondimba better than any words could. If you want to see where the postcolonials learned their tricks, look to their models. Omar Bongo (née Albert-Bernard Bongo) was French through and through, like Mitterrand with a sense of style, or like a shorter Félix [...]
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Filed under Featured, French by T. Miles on 28 May 2009 at 5:43 pm
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Julien Coupet, French situationalist shopkeeper, accused ringleader of “anarcho-autonomous” train saboteurs, and really insufferable pontificator, was finally released yesterday from a Paris jail, on remand.
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Filed under Afrique, French by T. Miles on 27 May 2009 at 7:36 pm
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“If a crocodile buys a pair of trousers, don’t ask where he puts his tail.”
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Filed under Afrique by T. Miles on 27 May 2009 at 4:01 pm
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The headlines last night were a bit hysterical, but there’s no doubt that the President of Niger took a decisive step yesterday. He may not like the consequences of what will happen in the next few months, but there will be consequences. Not General Baré Maïnassara sort of “consequences“, but people are going to remember [...]
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Filed under Afrique by T. Miles on 15 May 2009 at 2:57 am
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Parents and child born in safety, originally uploaded by Julien Harneis.
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Filed under Afrique by T. Miles on 1 April 2009 at 4:34 pm
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Who tries to fool people with birth sex ratios in the Central African Republic? The British Journal Biology Letters and the British press, apparently.
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Filed under Me, Niger by T. Miles on 26 March 2009 at 8:31 pm
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How sad is it that I’m this excited about a book of history – polisci essays? How additionally sad is it that I’m trembling in terror over my girlfriend’s reaction that I just spent $40 on a whim? Regardless, I’m very excited about finding a copy of “Army and Politics in Niger” (“Armee et politique [...]
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Filed under Afrique, Featured by T. Miles on 20 December 2008 at 8:43 pm
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That the western press is unanimous in it’s explanation of the crash and burn which is 2000′s Zimbabwe should give you pause. Mahmood Mamdani, Africanist and Anthropologist at Columbia, and author of 1996′s Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (which I recommend), thinks we don’t know enough to explain Zimbabwe [...]
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Filed under Afrique, Artsy Fartsy by T. Miles on 19 December 2008 at 6:39 am
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Pepe Kalle‘s musical tribute to “the greatest African footballer of the century”, Roger Milla, with the little needed but very enjoyable video evidence.
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Filed under French, Solidarity by T. Miles on 20 November 2008 at 8:15 pm
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The latest news on the Tarnac arestees. Four of the nine are released under the equivilent of bail, but still face possible charges. They were held four four days of interogations, though the police still don’t seem to have any direct evidence against any of them. Five (which the predictably frantic Le Figaro calls “The Hard Core” of situationalist students) remain in jail awaiting trial.
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