PUB: Spoon River Poetry Review

One winning poem will be awarded $1000 and two runners-up will be awarded $100 each. Winning poem, runners-up, and honorable mentions will be published in the 2010 fall issue. This year's judge will be announced after judging is completed.

Guidelines: Submit two copies of three unpublished poems, maximum of ten pages total. Name, address, and phone number of poet should appear on each page of one copy only. Entries must be unpublished and will not be returned.

Entry Fee: Each $16 entry fee entitles entrant to a one-year subscription, or a gift subscription. Please indicate your choice and include current address for each subscription or gift subscription. Include SASE for notification of results.

Mail Submissions to:

The Spoon River Poetry Review Editors' Prize
4241 Dept. of English
Publications Unit
Illinois State University
Normal, IL 61790-4241

Entries cannot be received by FAX or e-mail

Deadline: Postmarked by April 15, 2011

 

PUB: Writer Advice

SIXTH ANNUAL FLASH PROSE CONTEST

Sponsored by Writer Advice, www.writeradvice.com

WriterAdvice, www.writeradvice.com, is searching for flash fiction, memoir, and creative non-fiction that grabs, surprises, and mesmerizes readers in fewer than 750 words. If you have a story or memoir with a strong theme, sharp images, and a solid structure, please submit it to Writer Advice’s Sixth Annual Flash Prose Contest.

 

DEADLINE: April 15, 2011


JUDGES: Former prizewinners, Stephen Bakalyar, Mary Rudy, Denise Turner, and Francine Garson are this year’s judges. Read their pieces and biographies by clicking on the Archived Contest Entries button at www.writeradvice.com.

 

PRIZES: First Place earns $150; Second Place earns $75; Third Place earns $50; Fourth Place earns $25; Honorable Mentions will also be published.


All entries should be typed, double-spaced and submitted in hard copy, not e-mail. Entries must be postmarked by April 15, 2010. Send them to B. Lynn Goodwin, WriterAdvice, and P.O. BOX 2665, DANVILLE, CA 94526.

We accept previously published stories if you own the rights. You may enter UP TO THREE stories. Enclose a $10 check for EACH entry made payable to B. Lynn Goodwin. This will help defray the costs of the contest. If you send multiple submissions, please use one check for all three entries (3=$30). If no prizes are awarded, payment will be refunded.

Include a separate cover sheet with your name, address, phone number, current e-mail address, and each story title. Put your title on the top of each page of the manuscript. Finalists will be asked to submit a brief biography as well as an e-mail copy of the story. Names of all winners will be announced in the summer issue of WriterAdvice.

Want a detailed response? I’m happy to give detailed comments if you send an SASE, but I must charge an extra $10 per entry because of the time that goes into it. Please send all fees in one check and send one envelope (appropriately sized) for all responses. E-mail questions, but not submissions to editor B. Lynn Goodwin at Lgood67334@comcast.net.

 

Personal Standards Go Up

An interview with Tara L. Masih
by B. Lynn Goodwin

Tara L. Masih’s collection of 17 short stories, Where the Dog Star Never Glows, is a global tour viewed through a close-up lens. She captures vibrant characters at critical moments and shows you exactly how events change their lives. Her luscious settings will make you daydream about traveling. Each story offers something unique.

When Therese’s heart broke open at the end of “The Guide, the Tourist, and the Animal Doctor” so did mine. It was a pleasure to be a fly on the wall as Jill and Louis’s relationship shifted and went deeper in “Champagne Water.” Bridgitte’s life and the neediness it has wrought stirred my heart in “Say Bridgitte Please.”

Both “Catalpa” and “Suspended” tell complete stories in under two pages, making the reader look back to see just how the author accomplished so much so quickly. The tension in “Asylum” is both compelling and haunting. Something in the subject matter and the telling of almost every story haunts me.

Author Tara L. Masih is a wise and talented writer. The lyrical descriptions, the global settings, the concise language, and the superb storytelling all make this a rich collection.

Here is her story of discovering the form and sharing her stories with the world.

LG: When did you discover you were a writer?

TLM: It was discovering the joy of reading books, being immersed in them, escaping into them, that sparked my own imagination and made me want to write my own stories. I still have some imagined fairy tales written in pencil, on blue-lined paper, with crayon illustrations in the margins that I created when I was about 8 or 9. Although I didn’t think of myself as a writer yet, I knew I loved books and wanted to center my life around them.

When my grandmother, a book lover herself, told me that jobs existed where you read books and got paid, as a proofreader, I had my aha moment. Writing gradually developed as another goal, but I didn’t read short stories growing up, just novels.

LG: Why do you find short fiction appealing?

TLM: I didn’t start writing stories until high school where the workshop environment encouraged that form. Before that, I stored

away many unfinished novels, mostly handwritten or on onionskin paper in old typewriter font. Also with illustrations. Today, my favorite form is the short story.

LG: The stories in Where the Dog Star Never Glows were

 

 

 

 

 

 

PUB: Robert Frost Farm, Derry, New Hampshire

Robert Frost Farm, Derry, New Hampshire

 

 

The Frost Farm Prize
$1,000 Prize for a single metrical poem. Includes an invitation (with honorarium) to read for The Hyla Brook Reading Series at the Frost Farm in Derry, New Hampshire in the summer of 2011. 
Sponsored by the Trustees of the Robert Frost Farm and The Hyla Brook Poets
Judge: William Baer
Deadline: Postmarked by April 1, 2011
Entry Fee: $5 per poem


Complete Guidelines:
Poems must be original, unpublished and metrical (any metrical form). No translations. There is no limit to the number of poems entered by an individual, but an entry fee of $5 US per poem must accompany the submission (entry fees from outside the United States must be paid in cash or by check drawn on a U.S. bank). Make checks payable to the "Trustees of the Robert Frost Farm." Please type the author's name, address, phone number and e-mail address on the back of each entry. Entries will be submitted to the judge anonymously.


Send entries to:
The Frost Farm Prize
26 Pond Rd
Derry, NH  03038
Enclose a SASE for notification of the contest results.
These are the complete guidelines.
For questions, please email Robert Crawford at bobik9@aol.com.

 

 

WOMEN: Survival, Strength, Sisterhood documents activism for murdered women > Art Threat

Documenting the march for Vancouver’s missing and murdered women

Friday Film Pick: Survival, Strength, Sisterhood

by Stefan Christoff on March 4, 2011 · Comments

Canada’s contested history projects conflicting national narratives on past and contemporary realities facing indigenous peoples in the “true north strong and free.”

In past decades a wave of disappearance and murder targeting women in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside and in communities east to west, speaks to a disturbing culture of social violence that persists in Canadian society, gender-based violence targeting indigenous communities, a reality firmly rooted in Canada’s colonial foundations.

In Survival, Strength, Sisterhood: Power of Women in the Downtown Eastside, collaborators Harsha Walia and Alejandro Zuluaga present a beautifully crafted thirty-minute indy film on grassroots struggles and activism in Vancouver for justice for missing women.

 

Launched on-line in February 2011, the film both contextualizes and celebrates the 20th anniversary of the annual Women’s Memorial March, a grassroots protest lead-by women from the Downtown Eastside every February 14th. Thousands have joined the annual protest in recent years, in 2010 thousands marched during the Vancouver Winter Olympics, illuminated the reality of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada to the world.

Via personal interviews, historical footage, and protest footage the film conveys “the voices of women who live, love, and work in the Downtown Eastside,” challenging “the sensationalism surrounding a neighbourhood deeply misunderstood,” a district often referenced as the poorest postal code in Canada. Instead of victimizing community residents the film aims to celebrate “the complex and diverse realities of women organizing for justice,” according to the filmmakers.

Echoing the annual grassroots decade old march in Vancouver, the annual protest commemorating missing women now occurs from coast-to-coast, including in Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and other communities.

“It was really important to celebrate the strength and resilience that is take to organize for justice over years on an issue that has been so marginalized, not only in mainstream society but also in the left,” reflects filmmaker Harsha Walia, in an interview for Art Threat.

Beyond film making, Walia is a longtime grassroots activist based in Vancouver, a key organizer in the protest convergence opposing the recent Vancouver Olympics and is a celebrated grassroots voice on social justice issues across Canada.

“To many people in Canada this is a tragedy, but people are not moved into action to deal with the systematic issues; poverty, displacement, the main reasons that women end-up in the Downtown Eastside,” outline Walia, “the complete ruptures of indigenous communities and society, the loss of land, the loss of language, the inter-generational impact of residential schools, all reasons why indigenous women are forced into conditions of systemic poverty and find themselves in circumstances that predispose them to high amounts of violence.”

Beyond highlighting the alarming reality facing residents of the Downtown Eastside, the film and Walia’s activism highlights paths of action for people to collectively take action to challenge the economic and political factors in our society that lead to violence against women. Survival, Strength, Sisterhood: Power of Women in the Downtown Eastside is a must view for everyone living in Canada, activists involved in indigenous campaigns for justice, people struggling to end gender-based violence and all people living on these territories that we call Canada, lands that continue to be shaped by colonial realities and violence.

 

OP-ED: U.S. Decline in Global Arena: Is America No Longer No. 1? > TIME

Illustrations by Joe Magee for TIME

Are America's Best Days Behind Us?

 

I am an American, not by accident of birth but by choice. I voted with my feet and became an American because I love this country and think it is exceptional. But when I look at the world today and the strong winds of technological change and global competition, it makes me nervous. Perhaps most unsettling is the fact that while these forces gather strength, Americans seem unable to grasp the magnitude of the challenges that face us. Despite the hyped talk of China's rise, most Americans operate on the assumption that the U.S. is still No. 1.

But is it? Yes, the U.S. remains the world's largest economy, and we have the largest military by far, the most dynamic technology companies and a highly entrepreneurial climate. But these are snapshots of where we are right now. The decisions that created today's growth — decisions about education, infrastructure and the like — were made decades ago. What we see today is an American economy that has boomed because of policies and developments of the 1950s and '60s: the interstate-highway system, massive funding for science and technology, a public-education system that was the envy of the world and generous immigration policies. Look at some underlying measures today, and you will wonder about the future. (Watch TIME's video "Why Cities Are Key to American Success in the 21st Century.")

The following rankings come from various lists, but they all tell the same story. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), our 15-year-olds rank 17th in the world in science and 25th in math. We rank 12th among developed countries in college graduation (down from No. 1 for decades). We come in 79th in elementary-school enrollment. Our infrastructure is ranked 23rd in the world, well behind that of every other major advanced economy. American health numbers are stunning for a rich country: based on studies by the OECD and the World Health Organization, we're 27th in life expectancy, 18th in diabetes and first in obesity. Only a few decades ago, the U.S. stood tall in such rankings. No more. There are some areas in which we are still clearly No. 1, but they're not ones we usually brag about. We have the most guns. We have the most crime among rich countries. And, of course, we have by far the largest amount of debt in the world.

The Rise of the Rest
Many of these changes have taken place not because of America's missteps but because other countries are now playing the same game we are — and playing to win. There is a familiar refrain offered when these concerns are raised: "We heard all this in the 1980s. Japan was going to dominate the globe. It didn't happen, and America ended up back on top." It's a fair point as far as it goes. Japan did not manage to become the world's richest country — though for three decades it had the second largest economy and even now has the third largest. It is also a relatively small country. To become the largest economy in the world, it would have to have a per capita GDP twice that of the U.S. China would need to have an average income only one-fourth that of the U.S. to develop an economy that would surpass ours. (See Americans who are facing long-term unemployment.)

But this misses the broader point. The Harvard historian Niall Ferguson, who has just written a book, Civilization: The West and the Rest, puts things in historical context: "For 500 years the West patented six killer applications that set it apart. The first to download them was Japan. Over the last century, one Asian country after another has downloaded these killer apps — competition, modern science, the rule of law and private property rights, modern medicine, the consumer society and the work ethic. Those six things are the secret sauce of Western civilization."

To this historical challenge from nations that have figured out how the West won, add a technological revolution. It is now possible to produce more goods and services with fewer and fewer people, to shift work almost anywhere in the world and to do all this at warp speed. That is the world the U.S. now faces. Yet the country seems unready for the kind of radical adaptation it needs. The changes we are currently debating amount to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. (Comment on this story.)

Sure, the political system seems to be engaged in big debates about the budget, pensions and the nation's future. But this is mostly a sideshow. The battles in state capitals over public-employee pensions are real — the states are required to balance their budgets — but the larger discussion in Washington is about everything except what's important. The debate between Democrats and Republicans on the budget excludes the largest drivers of the long-term deficit — Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare — to say nothing of the biggest nonentitlement costs, like the tax break for interest on mortgages. Only four months ago, the Simpson-Bowles commission presented a series of highly intelligent solutions to our fiscal problems, proposing $4 trillion in savings, mostly through cuts in programs but also through some tax increases. They have been forgotten by both parties, in particular the Republicans, whose leading budgetary spokesman, Paul Ryan, praises the commission in the abstract even though he voted against its recommendations. Democrats, for their part, became apoplectic about a proposal to raise the retirement age for Social Security by one year — in 2050.

Instead, Washington is likely to make across-the-board cuts in discretionary spending, where there is much less money and considerably less waste. President Obama's efforts to preserve and even increase resources for core programs appear to be failing in a Congress determined to demonstrate its clout. But reducing funds for things like education, scientific research, air-traffic control, NASA, infrastructure and alternative energy will not produce much in savings, and it will hurt the economy's long-term growth. It would happen at the very moment that countries from Germany to South Korea to China are making large investments in education, science, technology and infrastructure. We are cutting investments and subsidizing consumption — exactly the opposite of what are the main drivers of economic growth.

See "The End of Prosperity?"

See a graphic showing Amercia's decline.

So why are we tackling our economic problems in a manner that is shortsighted and wrong-footed? Because it is politically easy. The key to understanding the moves by both parties is that, for the most part, they are targeting programs that have neither a wide base of support nor influential interest groups behind them. (And that's precisely why they're not where the money is. The American political system is actually quite efficient. It distributes the big bucks to popular programs and powerful special interests.) And neither side will even talk about tax increases, though it is impossible to achieve long-term fiscal stability without them. Certain taxes — such as ones on carbon or gas — would have huge benefits beyond revenue, like energy efficiency.

It's not that our democracy doesn't work; it's that it works only too well. American politics is now hyperresponsive to constituents' interests. And all those interests are dedicated to preserving the past rather than investing for the future. There are no lobbying groups for the next generation of industries, only for those companies that are here now with cash to spend. There are no special-interest groups for our children's economic well-being, only for people who get government benefits right now. The whole system is geared to preserve current subsidies, tax breaks and loopholes. That is why the federal government spends $4 on elderly people for every $1 it spends on those under 18. And when the time comes to make cuts, guess whose programs are first on the chopping board. That is a terrible sign of a society's priorities and outlook. (See the recession of 1958.)

The Perils of Success
Why have our priorities become so mangled? Several decades ago, economist Mancur Olson wrote a book called The Rise and Decline of Nations. He was prompted by what he thought was a strange paradox after World War II. Britain, having won the war, slipped into deep stagnation, while Germany, the loser, grew powerfully year after year. Britain's fall was even more perplexing considering that it was the creator of the Industrial Revolution and was the world's original economic superpower.

Olson concluded that, paradoxically, it was success that hurt Britain, while failure helped Germany. British society grew comfortable, complacent and rigid, and its economic and political arrangements became ever more elaborate and costly, focused on distribution rather than growth. Labor unions, the welfare state, protectionist policies and massive borrowing all shielded Britain from the new international competition. The system became sclerotic, and over time, the economic engine of the world turned creaky and sluggish. (See how Germany became the China of Europe.)

Germany, by contrast, was almost entirely destroyed by World War II. That gave it a chance not just to rebuild its physical infrastructure but also to revise its antiquated arrangements and institutions — the political system, the guilds, the economy — with a more modern frame of mind. Defeat made it possible to question everything and rebuild from scratch.

America's success has made it sclerotic. We have sat on top of the world for almost a century, and our repeated economic, political and military victories have made us quite sure that we are destined to be No. 1 forever. We have some advantages. Size matters: when crises come, they do not overwhelm a country as big as the U.S. When the financial crisis hit nations such as Greece and Ireland, it dwarfed them. In the U.S., the problems occurred within the context of a $15 trillion economy and in a country that still has the trust of the world. Over the past three years, in the wake of the financial crisis, U.S. borrowing costs have gone down, not up. (Comment on this story.)

This is a powerful affirmation of America's strengths, but the problem is that they ensure that the U.S. will not really face up to its challenges. We adjust to the crisis of the moment and move on, but the underlying cancer continues to grow, eating away at the system.

A crucial aspect of beginning to turn things around would be for the U.S. to make an honest accounting of where it stands and what it can learn from other countries. This kind of benchmarking is common among businesses but is sacrilege for the country as a whole. Any politician who dares suggest that the U.S. can learn from — let alone copy — other countries is likely to be denounced instantly. If someone points out that Europe gets better health care at half the cost, that's dangerously socialist thinking. If a business leader notes that tax rates in much of the industrialized world are lower and that there are far fewer loopholes than in the U.S., he is brushed aside as trying to impoverish American workers. If a commentator says — correctly — that social mobility from one generation to the next is greater in many European nations than in the U.S., he is laughed at. Yet several studies, the most recent from the OECD last year, have found that the average American has a much lower chance of moving out of his parents' income bracket than do people in places like Denmark, Sweden, Germany and Canada.

And it's not just politicians and business leaders. It's all of us. Americans simply don't care much, know much or want to learn much about the outside world. We think of America as a globalized society because it has been at the center of the forces of globalization. But actually, the American economy is quite insular; exports account for only about 10% of it. Compare that with the many European countries where half the economy is trade-related, and you can understand why those societies seem more geared to international standards and competition. And that's the key to a competitive future for the U.S. If Olson is right in saying successful societies get sclerotic, the solution is to stay flexible. That means being able to start and shut down companies and hire and fire people. But it also means having a government that can help build out new technologies and infrastructure, that invests in the future and that can eliminate programs that stop working. When Franklin Roosevelt launched the New Deal, he spoke of the need for "bold, persistent experimentation," and he shut down programs when it was clear they didn't work. Today, every government program and subsidy seems eternal.

See 10 steps that led to the financial meltdown.

See 10 big recession surprises.

What the Founding Fathers Knew
Is any of this possible in a rich, democratic country? In fact it is. The countries of Northern Europe — Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland — have created a fascinating and mixed model of political economy. Their economies are extremely open and market-based. Most of them score very high on the Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom. But they also have generous welfare states and make major investments for future growth. Over the past 20 years, these countries have grown nearly as fast as, or in some cases faster than, the U.S. Germany has managed to retain its position as the world's export engine despite high wages and generous benefits.

Now, America should not and cannot simply copy the Nordic model or any other. Americans would rebel at the high taxes that Northern Europeans pay — and those taxes are proving uncompetitive in a world where many other European countries have much lower rates and Singapore has a maximum personal rate of 20%. The American system is more dynamic, entrepreneurial and unequal than that of Europe and will remain so. But the example of Northern Europe shows that rich countries can stay competitive if they remain flexible, benchmark rigorously and embrace efficiency. (See "The World Economic Forum in Davos: A Changed Global Reality.")

American companies are, of course, highly efficient, but American government is not. By this I don't mean to echo the usual complaints about waste, fraud and abuse. In fact, there is less of those things than Americans think, except in the Pentagon with its $700 billion budget. The problem with the U.S. government is that its allocation of resources is highly inefficient. We spend vast amounts of money on subsidies for housing, agriculture and health, many of which distort the economy and do little for long-term growth. We spend too little on science, technology, innovation and infrastructure, which will produce growth and jobs in the future. For the past few decades, we have been able to be wasteful and get by. But we will not be able to do it much longer. The money is running out, and we will have to marshal funds and target spending far more strategically. This is not a question of too much or too little government, too much or too little spending. We need more government and more spending in some places and less in others.

The tragedy is that Washington knows this. For all the partisan polarization there, most Republicans know that we have to invest in some key areas, and most Democrats know that we have to cut entitlement spending. But we have a political system that has become allergic to compromise and practical solutions. This may be our greatest blind spot. At the very moment that our political system has broken down, one hears only encomiums to it, the Constitution and the perfect Republic that it created. Now, as an immigrant, I love the special and, yes, exceptional nature of American democracy. I believe that the Constitution was one of the wonders of the world — in the 18th century. But today we face the reality of a system that has become creaky. We have an Electoral College that no one understands and a Senate that doesn't work, with rules and traditions that allow a single Senator to obstruct democracy without even explaining why. We have a crazy-quilt patchwork of towns, municipalities and states with overlapping authority, bureaucracies and resulting waste. We have a political system geared toward ceaseless fundraising and pandering to the interests of the present with no ability to plan, invest or build for the future. And if one mentions any of this, why, one is being unpatriotic, because we have the perfect system of government, handed down to us by demigods who walked the earth in the late 18th century and who serve as models for us today and forever. (See how to restore the American dream.)

America's founders would have been profoundly annoyed by this kind of unreflective ancestor worship. They were global, cosmopolitan figures who learned and copied a great deal from the past and from other countries and were constantly adapting their views. The first constitution, the Articles of Confederation, after all, was a massive failure, and the founders learned from that failure. The decision to have the Supreme Court sit in judgment over acts of the legislature was a later invention. America's founders were modern men who wanted a modern country that broke with its past to create a more perfect union.

And they thought a great deal about decline. Indeed, it was only a few years after the Revolution that the worrying began in earnest. The letters between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, as the two men watched America in the early 19th century, are filled with foreboding and gloom; you could almost say they began a great American tradition, that of contemplating decay. Americans have been concerned about the health of their country for much of its existence. In the 1950s and '60s, we worried about the Soviet Union and its march toward modernization. In the 1980s, we worried about Japan. This did us no harm; on the contrary, all these fears helped us make changes that allowed us to revive our strength and forge ahead. Dwight Eisenhower took advantage of the fears about the Soviet Union to build the interstate-highway system. John Kennedy used the Soviet challenge in space to set us on a path toward the goal of getting to the moon. (Comment on this story.)

What is really depressing is the tone of our debate. In place of the thoughtful concern of Jefferson and Adams, we have its opposite in tone and temperament — the shallow triumphalism purveyed by politicians now. The founders loved America, but they also understood that it was a work in progress, an unfinished enterprise that would constantly be in need of change, adjustment and repair. For most of our history, we have become rich while remaining restless. Rather than resting on our laurels, we have feared getting fat and lazy. And that has been our greatest strength. In the past, worrying about decline has helped us avert that very condition. Let's hope it does so today.

Restoring the American Dream: Getting Back to No. 1 — a Fareed Zakaria GPS Special premieres on CNN at 8 p.m. E.T. and P.T. on March 6 and airs again at 8 p.m. E.T. and P.T. on March 12.

See "Where the Jobs Are: The Right Spots in the Recovery."

See pictures of Cleveland during the recession.

 

A LUTA CONTINUA: Libya Is In Africa - Africans In Libya > AFRICA IS A COUNTRY

Libya’s African Problem

As the report by Al Jazeera English, above, indicates, being black in Libya, always a precarious existence, have become even more dangerous since the revolt against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime commenced. I asked my former PhD advisor, David Styan–who writes on politics in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa and who is based at Birkbeck College’s School of Politics and Sociology in London–to unpack for AIAC some aspects of the revolt in Libya.  David sent back answers, not just on the media’s reporting of Gaddafi’s use of “African/black mercenaries,”* but also the Libyan’s regime’s political legacy in the continent, especially in the Sahel and West Africa, and Libya’s role in European immigration politics.

 

How should we decipher the outcry over ‘Black Africans’ in the Libyan crisis?

Media views of the ‘African’ dimension of Libya’s crisis are contradictory and fluid. The political crisis has prompted most of Libya’s estimated 1.5m migrants to try and flee. Labourers from neighbouring Egypt and Tunisia flocked to land-borders. European oil personnel, plus Chinese, Turkish and Asian workers have been evacuated by their governments. Yet many Africans migrants remain trapped in extremely dangerous and uncertain conditions.

As the clip above highlights, Sub-Saharan Africans face several acute problems. First and foremost there is a widespread local perception that forces loyal to Qadaffi comprise ‘Black’ – implying non-Libyan – Africans. While this perception has been the catalyst for violence, it is fanned by deeper-seated discrimination. The contradictions surrounding this, and Qadaffi’s diplomacy towards the continent, have prompted debate over representations of Libya this week (see in the introduction to this post).

The livelihoods of sub-Saharan Africans in Libya are precarious; most having neither assets nor legal status in the country. Some arrived initially in the hope of transiting to Europe. Effectively trapped by poverty and EU-Libya migration accords, many tens of thousands, primarily from West Africa have nevertheless scraped a living as labourers and petty-traders in Libya’s post-sanctions oil-boom. Other recent arrivals, particularly from the Horn of Africa, have faced a bleaker outlook, incarcerated in camps or repatriated, notably to Eritrea.

What lies behind the ‘black mercenaries’ story?

There is a gulf between perceptions and reality; initially both European and Arab journalists echoed what Libyans told them, that Qadaffi’s forces comprised only ‘foreign’ and ‘black’ troops. This perception rested on a double-amalgam: firstly that anyone supporting Qadaffi is a ‘foreign mercenary’; secondly that these mercenaries were drawn principally from sub-Saharan Africa.

To date, there is little evidence that either is true. Initial fighting in Benghazi produced images of a single mutilated corpse of an ‘African’.  Yet Libya’s own population is racially variegated, with ‘black’ populations straddling Libya’s vast Sahelian borders with Niger and Chad. Qadaffi’s power has rested in part on patronage and clan allegiances, which are particularly pronounced within his diverse security forces.

Qadaffi has contorted political ties with southern neighbours; disillusioned with the failures of Pan-Arabism, since the late-nineties he reoriented diplomacy towards the continent, investing heavily in his Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN-SAD) and the African Union. Financial and political support brought many African leaders, rebels and militias to Tripoli, both from the Sahel and further afield.

More specific are Libya ties with Chad. In addition to the border war of the 1980s, Qadaffi has been a key player in successive Chadian civil wars. In 2008, alongside France, he supplied arms to prevent the overthrow of Chad’s President Déby and is the key power broker between both Déby and his opponents, as well as in the fractious Chad-Sudan rivalry over Darfur. Diverse Chadian militia are present in Tripoli and Sirte and Chadian websites in Europe, which are far from reliable, claim they have evidence that Chadian forces and commanders are helping defend Qadaffi.

Did Libya welcome sub-Saharan migrants?

Hardly, some Sahelian groups from Chad and Niger have long had a presence in Libya. Yet while cash-handouts via CEN-SAD has boosted the number of African diplomats in Tripoli, the influx of migrant workers  has more to do with shifting migration patterns from West Africa overland via Niger. Since 2007 the EU moved, with some success, to halt illegal migration via Morocco and the Canaries. Migrant trafficking from the Libyan coast to Malta and Southern Italy then increased.

This route has particularly drawn migrants from the Horn of Africa, notably Eritreans and Somalis (ironically, like Libya, both former Italian colonies) funnelled through Sudan, via the southeasten Libya oasis town of Kufra, to the coast.  US-based Human Rights Watch has provided extensive research and documentation of the plight of these migrants over the past five years.  First Italy, thence the EU has worked increasingly closely with Libya in recent years to monitor and control these migrant flows.

So Qadaffi’s Libya has been a key partner in the European Union’s migration controls?

Yes, while ample publicity has been given to the way in which Britain, France and Italy rushed to sign oil, defence and construction contracts with Libya, less attention has been paid to the migration dimension of Qadaffi’s rehabilitation. Particularly for Paris and Rome, where governments face acute electoral pressure over race and migration, getting Libya to control migrant flows has been important. In 2008 Italy signed a bi-lateral deal, and in 2010, the EU agreed to a Euro50m package whereby Libya would “manage  migration” and process refugee for the EU [N4].  This was hugely controversial and prompted significant and ongoing protests. (See here and here).   The EU’s ad-hoc border force ‘Frontex’ was mobilised after the Tunisian government fell, and an EU summit has been called on Migration on 11 March.

* For those further interested the subject of “black mercenaries” have also been covered in detailed blog posts elsewhere; like that by KonwomynTomathon.com and on Pambazuka News, to name a few.

__________________________

How Qaddafi Reshaped Africa

The Libyan leader's dark legacy already includes some of the continent's worst regimes and conflicts 

qaddafip.jpg
Whenever most of us think of oil-rich, Arab-speaking countries, our imagination performs a trick with our sense of geography, placing us by default in the Middle East.

Of the three North African countries at the heart of the popular uprisings that have riveted the world over the last several weeks, Libya's Muammar Qaddafi has always done the most to assert his country's African identity, staking its prestige, its riches and his own personal influence above all on its place in the continent.

As a deep-pocketed and sparsely populated state ever in need of labor, it has always made sense for Qaddafi to look south. Libya is far too small and peripheral for it to ever aspire to real influence in the Arab world. By comparison, the almost equally small but far poorer countries of nearby West Africa, wracked as they are with chronic misrule and instability, loom temptingly on the horizon as fruit ripe for picking.

Whatever our loose or flawed sense of geography tells us, things have always been thus. For at least 1,000 years, Morocco's kingdoms have periodically thrust southward, establishing shape-shifting realms from present-day Niger all the way to Senegal. 

Qaddafi's big idea was to meld a modern, anti-Western, anti-imperial discourse with an impassioned pan-Africanism, an ideal that still resonates deeply across the continent. 

For decades in Africa, Qaddafi has put his money where his mouth was: showering petro-dollars on favored clients, funding liberation groups, nurturing political movements, and even paying civil servants. To make sure that no one missed the message, he has often paid a huge portion of the operating costs of the continental body, the African Union.

The problem with Qaddafi's pan-Africanism, like his rule in general is that it has steadily turned into a vessel for his megalomania.

As a reporter with a career-long association with the African continent, I have been in a rare position to witness this trend beginning with some of Qaddafi's earliest African exploits.

In 1983, I scrambled from Ivory Coast to Chad to witness the breakout of war between French and Libyan forces there. Qaddafi had recently spoken of fully "integrating" his country with its southern neighbor. 

I quickly found my way to the eastern front, where I watched the conflict from a desert foxhole with French soldiers as they spotted screaming, low-flying Jaguar fighter bombers pounding Libyan positions nearby. That same year, I traveled to Burkina Faso, where Qaddafi had flown to celebrate the seizure of power by a charismatic young army captain, Thomas Sankara, who he clearly saw as a promising understudy. 

They met at a military base near the border with Ghana. From there, Sankara's comrade, Blaise Compaoré had recently rallied paratroopers to free Sankara from detention and install him as president. 

When I showed up, Qaddafi, surrounded by his famous all female bodyguard corps, angrily objected to my presence and demanded that Sankara not allow an American to ride with the motorcade for their triumphal, flag-waving trip to the capital, Ouagadougou. Sankara, who already knew me well, insisted on my presence. Four years later, he would be dead, murdered by Compaoré, it is widely believed, with Qaddafi's encouragement.

The Libyan's determination to eliminate his erstwhile protégé had nothing to do with me, of course. Most signs point instead to Sankara's refusal to acquiesce in a much bigger decision: to sponsor an invasion of Liberia by Charles Taylor, a leader who is now before the Hague on war crime charges related to his instigation of what would go on to become one of Africa's most horrific conflicts.

Taylor, a kindred megalomaniac, who was trained and financed by Libya, invaded Liberia in 1989. A few years later, I would cover that war for The New York Times as well, watching the rebel leader ride one of the first mass deployments of child soldiers into power. 

Were it not for the British intervention in Sierra Leone's civil war next door, another Libyan project, the Taylor-Qaddafi axis would have taken over that country next, before turning its sights on other wobbling dominos nearby, whether Guinea or Ivory Coast. From Liberia, I went to Zaire to cover the fall of Mobutu Sese Seko at the hands of Laurent Kabila, an obscure revolutionary who had cut his teeth in 1960 liberation movements before seemingly going into hibernation. Although Rwanda was his main patron, it turns out that Qaddafi had invested in Kabila, too.

A map of the places where I watched Qaddafi play similar games would stretch from Seychelles to the Central African Republic to Guinea, far vaster even than the Moroccan domains of old.

Even today, when one looks around the continent at zones of conflict, it's a safe bet that the Libyan leader has a line in, ever willing to take long odds that eventually his strategy of cobbling together a pan-African realm will pan out. 

As such dreams crumble along with his power, however, Qaddafi will leave a final destabilizing legacy for the continent. Among the million-plus sub-Saharan migrants living in his country, many have already faced suspicion and brutal reprisals because of Qaddafi's use of black mercenaries as a desperate, final rampart. 

But there is worse still. It is all but certain that there are new Charles Taylors out there, trained and armed by Qaddafi and eager to mount violent bids for power. And with their patron going down in flames, they will be heading home.

Image by Alex Hoyt

 

A LUTA CONTINUA: Ivory Coast is heading toward civil war and once again women are the chief victims of violence

Côte d'Ivoire:

Who Killed the Seven Women Protestors? (Videos)

Unrest between supporters of Cote d'Ivoire's two opposing leaders, Laurent Gbagbo and Alassane Ouattara, has taken a further violent turn. Since December 3, 2011, both politicians have claimed to have won the November 2010 presidential election.

Ivorian women have held demonstrations against the political situation since February 25, 2011.

Bloody Thursday

What was supposed to be a peaceful march ended up as a bloodbath on Thursday March 3, 2011. During an all female protest organised in Abobo, a pro-Ouattara district of economic capital Abidjan, seven women were shot dead, apparently by Gbagbo's national Defense and Security Forces.

Videos of the gunfire rapidly spread online via video sharing service Youtube.

Youtube user Dreamdav posted a seven minute long video, in which unarmed women can be seen chanting “ADO” (Alassane Dramane Ouattara), when suddenly (at 3:32), national police tanks shoot at the demonstrators, dispersing them and forcing them to seek shelter.

Other citizen videos posted show the same incident (WARNING: GRAPHIC).

This video posted by SuperDjatou and shot by a protestor within the crowd shows the confusion a few seconds after the gun shots:

Another video shows four dead bodies lying on the ground:

Sadness and anger are just some of the feelings being shared by Ivorians netizens and others in the wake of the attack. Here are some of the reactions from social microblogging network Twitter, sent to the hashtag being used for the unrest, #civ2010.

@KDGF2505 replying to another Twitter user says:

narrow-minded are ones killing innocent women…do you think that hatred can be stopped in that way?

@SenamBeheton, a Twitter user from Benin names the 7 dead women “martyrs”:

La boucherie d'Abobo (8 martyres) est une erreur grave que Gbagbo regrettera.

Abobo slaugther (8 martyrs) is a serious mistake that Gbagbo will regret.

@kanazan reminds us that International women day is arriving soon and wonders:

comment celebrerons nous le 8 mars en? #civ2010 femmes abattues …

How will we celebrate March 8 in Côte d'Ivoire? women killed..

Pointing Blame

In an article [fr] published on the website of French daily paper Liberation, a source claims that the people who shot the women were in a 4×4 vehicle. When contacted via email, the journalist behind the article, Thomas Hofnung, confirmed that the source is reliable.

According to another testimony by a military source to a Reuters journalist, it was an accident:

Une source militaire a confirmé la fusillade en expliquant qu'il s'agissait d'un accident justifié par la «nervosité des forces de sécurité à la suite de précédents accrochages»

A military source confirmed the gunfire explaining that it xas an accident justified by the “nervosity of Forces of Security following previous clashes”

Another version of the facts was shared on Laurent Gbagbo's fan page on social network Facebook. According to this interpretation, these women were killed by rebels loyal to Prime Minister Guillaume Soro's Forces Nouvelles (New Forces), who in turn are loyal to President Ouattara:

Des femmes de la commune d’Abobo qui ont décidé de marcher hier (3 mars 2011) matin, ont essuyé des tirs des éléments de la rébellion de ladite commune.

Women of Abobo who decided to march yesterday (March 3, 2011) in the morning, were shot by rebellious elements.

Today, Notre Voie, one of the main daily newspapers in Côte d'Ivoire, accused the mysterious ‘Invisible Commandos‘ - a group of pro-Ouattara masked men - of the killings. In an unequivocal frontpage headline, the newspaper writes: ‘”The Invisible Commandos” Kill Seven Women'.

'"The Invisible Commandos" Kill Seven Women'. Frontpage of Ivorian newspaper Notre Voie, N° 3822, Friday 4 March, 2011.
Notre Voie N° 3822 du Friday mars 04 2011

The same denial has been aired on the national television station RTI: Côte d'Ivoire army spokeperson, Colonel Major Hilaire Babri Gohourou has said [fr]:

les troupes sont restées stationnées dans leur cantonnement d'Abobo.

the troops were confined in their headquater in Abobo

DjibiTV [fr], a web television station reputed to belong to one of Laurent Gbagbo's daughters, Marie Patrice Gbagbo, maintains this version:

Des femmes qui marchaient pacifiquement ont essuyé des tirs de cette force négative [le commando invisible ndlr] qui ont fait une diziane de morts. Cet acte s’est déroulé dans la commune d’Abobo où est logé la rébellion d’Alassane Ouattara qui tue et égorge les paisibles populations.

Women who were marching peacefully were shot by this dark force [the ‘Invisible Commandos'] who killed dozens of people. This happened in Abobo where Alassane's Ouattara rebellion is headquartered, killing and cutting the throats of peaceful people.

 

 

__________________________

Protesters defy militia as thousands flee Cote d'Ivoire


Image: @Sanders225
Burningciv-large

Six women have reportedly been killed at a march in favour of Alassane Ouattara in Ivory Coast. Ouattara and the incumbent president Laurent Gbagbo have been running rival administrations following contested elections four months ago. Results indicated that Gbagbo, had been deposed in favour of newcomer Ouatarra. However Gbagbo initially vacillated, then refused to yield, leaving the West African country in a precarious, and often violent state of limbo. Two presidents still face off across the capital of Abidjan, with the country’s economy, and fragile peace, in tatters. Refugees are streaming across the border into Liberia. In an apparent escalation of tension this week, international radio signals have been cut and some electricity supplies stopped.

Updated about 9 hours ago

The uploader of this video says unarmed woman were attacked and killed for asserting their choice of president. The incident took place on Thursday. The video shows the panic which overtook the demonstration once gunfire is heard. Please be advised that this video shows graphic images of some of those killed and injured, which you may find distressing.

From dreamdav

Updated about 12 hours ago

The United Nations High Commission for Refugees warned on Friday that the situation in Ivory Coast was becoming extremely difficult. It warned of the problems of communications disruption in Abobo, and concerns for the fate of a group of families trapped inside a church in the area. Access to UNHCR’s own offices has proved difficult.

UNHCR is warning today that access for humanitarian organizations in Abidjan and other parts of Côte d'Ivoire is shrinking rapidly amid widening insecurity.

In Abidjan, the estimated number of displaced people now exceeds 200,000 – most of these are people who have fled the fighting in Abobo. Many are staying with friends or relatives, but large numbers – possibly a quarter of the displaced – are staying in temporary locations around the city, including in churches and other communal places. These groups are in urgent need of humanitarian help.

Updated about 14 hours ago
 #Photos: Running for Shelter in Côte d'Ivoire http://ow.ly/47MzF 70K Ivorian#refugees now in E. #Liberia since last Nov #CIV2010
Updated 3 days ago

View Cote d'Ivoire violence in a larger map
Updated 3 days ago
 @cocoloposo#civ2010 URGENT: confrontations with machetes RHDP/LMP at terminus 25 koumassi #Abidjan #IvoryCoast
Updated 3 days ago
 Many people stranded in Abobo and we would like to have access to help.#civ2010
Updated 3 days ago

On Monday, it was the turn of hundreds of women dressed in white to march against Gbagbo and state their demands – that he step down.

Open-uri20110301-6805-19delec-0-large
Updated 3 days ago
 #IvoryCoast Stalemate Breeds Mass Destruction #civ2010 via M&Ghttp://ow.ly/45sUa
Updated about 14 hours ago

Informal comments to the media by H.E. Mr. Li Baodong, Permanent Representative of China and President of the Security Council on the situation in Côte d’Ivoire.

Updated 3 days ago

United Nations allegations that Ivory Coast's incumbent government is breaking an international arms embargo is increasing tension between government supporters and U.N. peacekeepers in Ivory Coast. U.N. officials believe the government is now arming civilians.

Incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo tried to expel the entire U.N. mission, shortly after it certified his rival, Alassane Ouattara, as the winner of November's presidential election.

But the United Nations refused to terminate the mission because it no longer recognizes Gbagbo's authority.

Updated 3 days ago

At least 10 soldiers loyal to the disputed presidency of Laurent Gbagbo have been killed by unidentified "commandos" amid renewed political violence in Côte d'Ivoire, according to reports.

The ambush followed clashes in a stronghold of Gbagbo's rival, Alassane Ouattara, and an Amnesty International investigation that uncovered a wave of murders, beatings and gang rapes.

An African Union delegation led by President Jacob Zuma has failed to end the crippling power struggle between Gbagbo and Ouattara, who is widely acknowledged as the winner of elections in November.

An adviser to Ouattara, who did not wish to be named, told the Associated Press that "invisible commandos" seized at least four military and police vehicles in a pro-Ouattara neighbourhood in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire's largest city, killing forces loyal to Gbagbo. The death toll could not be independently confirmed. BBC News put the toll at least 10.

 

VIDEO: Amiri Baraka’s “Dutchman” (Black Man’s Neuroses) > Shadow And Act

Amiri Baraka 

Watch Now – Amiri Baraka’s “Dutchman” (Black Man’s Neuroses)

Picture 1Made in 1966, Dutchman is the filmed version of Amiri Baraka’s controversial one-act stage play. It won the Obie Award for best off-Broadway play, thrusting Baraka into the limelight. It stars Al Freeman Jr. & Shirley Knight.

The story, for those unfamiliar, goes… A sinister, neurotic, lascivious white girl, Lula, lures to his doom, a good-looking young black man, Clay – a stranger she picks up in the subway. She mocks him for wearing the clothes, and employing the voice and manners of what she deems the conventional white intellectual. The man, who, at first, sees no reason to resist the girl’s advances, perceives too late that he is being used by her. He then drops his so-called “white” disguise, and launches into a counterattack, against the girl, and at whites in general, leading to its haunting, shocking conclusion.

Dutchman initially played to primarily white audiences, until Baraka moved it to a Harlem theater that he founded, in order to reach, and to educate his intended black audience. It was the last play produced by Baraka under his birth name, LeRoi Jones. At the time, Jones/Baraka was in the process of divorcing his white Jewish wife and embracing Black Nationalism.

It certainly shows :)

 

And now… Dutchman (It’s about an hour long; if you’re not at all familiar with the play that the film is based on, I encourage you to watch it all the way to its end to fully appreciate the work):

 

VIDEO: Lupe, Mos Def, Kanye West with The Robert Glasper Experiment – Revivalist Music

Lupe, Mos Def, Kanye West with The Robert Glasper Experiment

Last Saturday night (2/26/11) The Robert Glasper Experiment (Chris “Daddy” Dave- Drums, Derrick Hodge-Bass, Casey Benjamin – Alto Sax/Vocoder) took to the stage with guest vocalist Lupe Fiasco in a monumental collaboration mixing the jazz and hip-hop realms. Different on this night though, were the other guest vocalists who arrived later in the show, Mos Def and Kanye West. Mos has worked with Robert before on numerous occasions, while Kanye has worked with Experiment bassist, Derrick Hodge. As Robert would put it, “they like my shit too.” For all the newcomers just joining the bandwagon because Kanye showed up at an Experiment concert, welcome to a whole new world of the most talented musicians you never knew existed. Stick around for a little bit and check out what they have to offer, because hey, if Kanye will play with them they must be good, right?

Credits: Event took place at Blue Note Jazz Club NYC produced in association with Jill Newman Productions

 

Photo By Meghan Stabile

 

 

 

The Revivalist: What’s going down tonight with Lupe?

Robert Glasper: I met Lupe because he did some article in Ebony Magazine where they asked him if he could take one song to the moon, what song would it be. He said one of my tunes. So my label got the Google Alert and then they saw that. Then actually not too far after that he got my number from Q-Tip I believe, and called me. He wanted to do this project, but this project had to go on hold. He wanted to do something else, so we talked about that project, but we haven’t done it yet. I was like whenever I get a chance and all that. This came around so I gave him a call and here we are.

 

Lupe , Mos Def and Kanye West with The Robert Glasper Experiment

 

<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/20528442?portrait=0" _mce_src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/20528442?portrait=0" frameborder="0" height="283" width="500">

Mos Def “Umi Says” ft. The Robert Glasper Experiment , Kanye West, & Lupe Fiasco

 


Credits:
Words and Media By Meghan Stabile & Eric Sandler
Video Shot By Meghan Stabile (Revive Music Group)