Back home, after a three-week trek across Brazil. I should
actually say, after visiting a couple of places because the country is so vast
and diverse that in a few weeks one can only get a light grasp of a very rich,
intense and dynamic nation such as Brazil. Three weeks is just enough to get a
break off the pessimism and self-destruction that is gaining ground in Europe
and breath a bit of the optimism and confidence in the future. And feel the
sense of opportunity that is now so strong in that country. Were I young, I
would move there, I thought, on my way back to “little” Europe!
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
Tuesday, 30 April 2013
Absence due to extensive travel schedule
THIS BLOG WILL BE "ABSENT" UP TO 21 MAY.
PUBLICATION WILL RESUME ON 22 MAY.
Thanks.
PUBLICATION WILL RESUME ON 22 MAY.
Thanks.
Monday, 29 April 2013
Mali needs a much longer political transition
There will be a second donor conference for Mali on 15 May
in Brussels. I am afraid it will be another game of smoke and mirrors. Promises,
promises, and further promises. The first one, at the end of January in Addis
Ababa produced over 450 million dollars of pledges but little –only about a
quarter of that amount –has effectively been made available. The
humanitarian needs are far from being met. Food vulnerability is widespread in the North. Money for the reform of the armed
forces and the security sector has not materialised. The dialogue and
reconciliation process is not supported. Public administration is starved of
funds and paralysed
And I am also afraid there will additional pressure on the
Transitional Government to move faster on the preparations for the July
elections –presidential and legislative –when everybody knows that elections at
this early stage are not a solution. The transition phase requires a much
longer period of time.
Labels:
donor community,
ECOWAS,
EU,
EU Commission,
Mali,
MINUSMA,
UN,
West Africa
Sunday, 28 April 2013
Italian politics: some good news
Seen from where I sit, the new Italian government looks
good. It has a broad basis, its outlook is modern and it seems to be able to
have a strong voice in the affairs of Europe. One should be a little optimistic
about its future performance and also about its contribution to balancing power
within the EU.
I am also convinced the markets will react positively to the
composition of this cabinet.
Saturday, 27 April 2013
Brussels lunches and dinners
Brussels is a lobbyists’ paradise. I am told there are close to
30,000 living around the European institutions and other entities. One can
imagine how many invitations for lunch and dinner the big shots in the EU
Commission, Council, Parliament, and elsewhere get every week…One should also
imagine the flow of gifts and favours that is taking place on a daily basis…
It is also a spies’ heaven. Nobody knows exactly how many
they are. The head of the Belgian secret service talks about many hundreds but
who knows? In any case, their presence means plenty of lunch and dinner
invitations too. That’s the most classical way of getting information.
It is also said the city houses the largest press corps in
the world. It is true that the number of journos has decreased during the last few years,
because of the crisis and its impact on the resources made available to the
media. But it is still a large number, close to a thousand people accredited with
the EU alone. That is also a lot of invitations for a good meal…At least, as
far as the largest papers and TV stations are concerned, because the scribblers
from smaller outfits are more interested in being invited that anything else.
They are always looking for a free meal…
Taking all this into account, maybe I should envisage
opening a classy restaurant in the international district of Brussels. I am
sure it is good business…
Thursday, 25 April 2013
A divided country
For reasons of work planning, I had decided that the
family’s weekly grocery shopping should take place this morning. Consequently,
I drove to my local supermarket, a big place just a mile from home.
My first surprise was to see the car parking pretty empty.
Then, I walked to the shop only to find out that it was closed. There was a
strike across the board in Brussels and in the French-speaking part of the
country, I was told. Attendants working for large commercial stores were among
those heavily engaged in the labour action.
Well, a plan is a plan. So, I decided to drive for about
seven or eight miles along the same road out of the capital city and do my
shopping in the Flemish region. In a supermarket of the same chain the one next
to my place belongs to. And I did. In that part of the country what had been
called a national strike was a non-event.
Wednesday, 24 April 2013
Mali and a divided UN
Albert Gerard "Bert" Koenders has been the Special
Representative of the UN Secretary-General (SRSG) in Cote d’Ivoire since August
2011. He is now being shifted from Abidjan to Bamako to lead the new
peacekeeping mission in Mali ( MINUSMA). He is very new to peacekeeping and to
the African realities, as he spent his time in Dutch politics and as
Development Co-operation Minister.
And he has a major job ahead of him. Which will be further
complicated because there is a very serious rivalry between two UN departments
regarding the Malian agenda: the Department of Political Affairs (DPA) believes
that the political transition should be the priority objective, whilst DPKO,
the Department of Peacekeeping Operations is going to take the lead and push
for the military operations and internal security to be at the forefront.
Interesting, isn't it?
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Mali is not moving in the right direction
Mali’s internal situation continues to be very fragile. The
key international partners of this country need to coordinate better among
themselves and agree on a common strategy in support of the stabilization process
and the political transition. This is a
matter of great urgency.
It is also a matter of great concern to see that a country
that has played an important role in the history of West Africa and has also
been able to produce a large number of fine minds is today politically
fragmented. No leader has emerged. Without a clairvoyant leader as a counterpart
the external friends of Mali will not be able to succeed. It would be a mistake
to forget this evidence.
Labels:
Ban Ki-moon,
DPKO,
ECOWAS,
EU,
EU Council,
Hollande,
Ladsous,
Mali,
MINUSMA,
Paris,
peacekeeping,
UN,
West Africa
Monday, 22 April 2013
Ransom payments
A few years ago, when I was based in N’Djamena, I visited
the Waza National Park, in Northern Cameroon on three different occasions.
The Park is located in a desolated corner of Central Africa. The main road
between N’Djamena and Waza is a very strange place. You feel desperately isolated over
there. It is a Cameroonian road that has seen better days. If you stop your car
and walk to the right hand shoulder of the road you are in Nigerian territory.
If go off road to the left you soon hit the Chadian border. On both sides you
meet from time to time a few villages where life is tough and as arid as the
land. And at certain times of the year, you come across the nomad people known
as Mbororo, a subgroup of cattle-herders linked to the Fulani ethnic group.
Actually, it is much easier to see their cows in the Waza National Park than
wild animals.
It is not a place for mass tourism.
This was the place however where a French family was
kidnapped a couple of months ago. The parents and their children, plus another
male relative, had been on a visit to the park. They were then taken by force across the
border into Nigeria. At the time the media said they had been hijacked by the
terrorist group Boko Haram. Maybe, maybe not, as there are other armed bandits in
the region.
The fact of the matter is that the family was released
without a fight and in very unclear circumstances a couple of days ago. The French government, including the
President himself, were very much at the forefront of this liberation and made
sure the media coverage was as good as it gets. And they were quick to deny that
ransom money had been paid.
I want to believe so. I also know that up to very recently
the French authorities used to pay – and deny it – for the French nationals
that had been kidnapped in Africa to be set free. That was a very wrong
approach to the problem. That was the best way to encourage the bandits expand the business and to look
for more victims.
But is it a better approach to put a lot of political
pressure on the governments of Cameroon and Nigeria for them to make a nice
gesture and open the prison gates to a good number of incarcerated people who
happen to be connected to the kidnappers?
Sunday, 21 April 2013
When the image spirals out of control...
Two friends of mine are travelling to Greece tomorrow for a
week away from our grey skies. They bought a package holiday, the well-known
“all inclusive deal”. Yesterday, when collecting the vouchers, they realised
that the 5-star hotel they had picked is closed for lack of guests, then the
alternative option is also closed; only the third choice is indeed available.
They then realised that Greece has somehow disappeared from the holiday map of
Northern Europe. For now, at least, I should say, and particularly for the high
end segment of the tourism market.
This is no good news for Greece.
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