lunedì 10 ottobre 2011

Spettacoli di teatro narrazione

di Alessandro Ghebreigziabiher
http://teatrodinarrazione.blogspot.com/2011/10/nobel-per-la-pace-2011-alle-donne.html

Nobel per la pace 2011 alle donne africane: spettacolo 18 dicembre a Roma


IL DONO DELLA DIVERSITÀ
Laboratorio di teatro narrazione

In occasione della
Presenta

Il Nobel alle donne africane

Con
Cecilia Moreschi e Oriana Fiumicino

Scritto e diretto da
Alessandro Ghebreigziabiher
 
L’INCASSO SARÀ DEVOLUTO AL PROGETTO PER LA COSTITUZIONE DI UN FONDO DI FINANZIAMENTO PER LE SPESE MEDICHE NEL CAMPO PROFUGHI DI MAI HAINI - AGENZIA HABESHIAPER LA COOPERAZIONE ALLO SVILUPPO, CENTRI ASSISTENZA PROFUGHI ERITREI IN SUDAN/ETIOPIA, ONG GANDHI

18 dicembre 2011 ore 21

degliZingari Gallery
Via degli Zingari 52/54, Roma


Informazioni e prenotazioni:
Tel: 348-9222588

martedì 4 ottobre 2011

62nd Session of the Executive Committee of the UNHCR


Statement by H.E. Archbishop Silvano M. Tomasi, Permanent Representative of the Holy See to the United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva
at the 62nd Session  of the Executive Committee of the UNHCR
                                        Geneva, 4 October 2011

Mr. Chairman,
1.  In the past 60 years since the enactment of the 1951 Refugee Convention, the UNHCR, other relevant UN agencies, hosting States, faith-based and other organizations of civil society have undertaken tremendous efforts to ensure protection of refugees, to safeguard their human dignity and to provide for them a new start in life. In fact, the Convention has been receptive to new emergencies and has included in its protection new victims of persecution by non-State actors and of other forms of violence. The civilizing effect of a treaty giving rights to refugees, asylum seekers and other forcibly displaced persons, some 43 million of them, cannot be overestimated. However, there are still important gaps highlighted by recent dramatic events  like the “people’s revolutions” in some parts of North Africa and the drought and conflict in the Horn of Africa that have sparked large refugee flows as well as by protracted refugee situations in the Middle East and elsewhere. Perhaps the most tragic evidence of an unfinished protection task comes from the more than 1,500 people who died while trying to cross the Mediterranean, others who drowned crossing the Gulf of Aden and the uncalculated numbers who have died walking out of Somalia in search for safety this year alone.
2.  In its Preamble, the 1951 Refugee Convention sets as its purpose “to assure refugees the widest possible exercise of their fundamental rights and freedoms.”  But today in many regions of the world millions of refugees are yet unable to enjoy these rights.  The noble goal set by the Convention at the end of the devastating experience of World War II has lately been eroded. My Delegation would like to point out  just a few areas of concern.   
     Public opinion and political expediency have impacted the need for protection of asylum-seekers  in a negative way. Among these negative consequences, we note with deep regret that detention of asylum seekers and other people in need of protection is rising and it is no longer used as last resort for exceptional cases. These persons who are looking for protection or for ways of trying to survive are literally locked up and guarded as if they were criminal prisoners, and children too are placed in the same condition. Very often their living arrangements in detention  lead to distinctively deteriorative effects upon the individual person. The prison-like environments existing in many detention centers, the isolation from the outside world, the unreliable flow of information and the disruption of a life plan, affect the physical and mental health of asylum-seekers and bring about psychological stress, depression and self-uncertainty, decreased appetite and varying degrees of insomnia. The manner in how detainees see themselves is significantly impacted by detention. In this context, self-perception becomes an important indicator of the effects of detention because as an administrative measure, it should not bring such detrimental personal consequences.  It is, therefore, urgent that alternatives to detention be further developed and promoted as, for example, would be  expanding community based supervised programs, the introduction of monitoring and reporting mechanisms,  the formation of support groups, of drop-in centers, adding to the capacity of  open house projects so that at least families with children may reside in a safe living environment. In this way, administrative detention becomes the very last resort.
     The policy of self-settlement outside camps has met with some success both with more educated and with poor refugees and these positive results seems to support trying it on a larger scale. Besides, the refugees warehoused in refugee camps are not necessarily more likely to repatriate than those who self-settle. Finally, although donors’ solidarity is confronted with a more complex administrative task, it enhances the human development of refugees and gives them a better chance for their future.
3.  Of concern to the Holy See and faith-based agencies are also the many refugees, asylum seekers and failed asylum seekers who find themselves trapped in situations of destitution. All over the world we can see people on the move who for good reasons cannot return to countries of origin and yet are completely excluded from social services in the countries where they are living. These persons are in limbo, in an impasse, without any perspective. It is not simply bad luck but policies of state authorities that completely exclude such groups of uprooted persons from any official assistance and leave them in distress and penury even though they need protection. Without access to housing, to health care, education, social assistance and work the situation of these people is especially worrisome.  At present more than half of the refugee population is located outside camps and it is particularly vulnerable to destitution.  National and local authorities should continue assuming responsibility for these refugees with the  assured solidarity of international agencies. Positive developments have already been initiated by UNHCR through innovative methods to reach ‘urban’ refugees including mailing SMS messages concerning the distribution of assistance, internet access and videos on refugee rights, telephone hotlines to answer questions, and the distribution of bank cards to enable refugees to withdraw financial assistance at their convenience.
4.  Hundreds of unauthorized lone boys from the Middle East and other places are making their way across Europe challenging the protection system of the countries they cross. In fact unaccompanied minors are in the thousands. In 2008 a total of 11,292 applications for asylum were lodged by unaccompanied minors in 22 Member States of the European Union. Some even die hidden in containers or in the undercarriage of trucks. The increased visibility acquired by unaccompanied minors claiming asylum in developed countries calls for a renewed attention to their need of protection and to the development of practical measures to help them adjust to the new environment.
     Unaccompanied minors must be treated first and foremost as children and their best interest must be a primary consideration independently of the reason for their flight. For this reason, detention and closed accommodations prove to be inappropriate for minors in particular, as does the mixing of children with adults in these facilities. Research has shown that as a source of motivation and support religion is considered important by these minors who desire the availability of spiritual advisors. In this context, processing children’s applications for asylum should be given a greater priority with the possibility for the unaccompanied minors  who become adults to continue benefiting from the same determination procedure as those who are under 18 years of age. At times, unfortunately, unaccompanied minors arrive under false pretences as forerunners to trigger family reunion or as victims of smuggling and trafficking and therefore care should be taken to prevent their exploitation.
     Mr. Chairman,
5. The evolving political and humanitarian global situation raises continued challenges to the responsibility of the international community to protect the victims of forced displacement. New strategies and new policies are required that range from the understanding of root causes to border management and integration. Creative compassion becomes possible if there is a genuine sense of solidarity and responsibility toward the needier members of our human family. We should not forget these facts when discussing policies on refugee protection. Refugees are not anonymous numbers but persons, men, women and children with individual stories, with talents to offer and aspirations to be met.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman!

49th Series of Meetings of the WIPO Assemblies


Statement by H.E. Archbishop Silvano M. Tomasi, Permanent Representative of the Holy See to the United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva
49th Series of Meetings of the WIPO Assemblies
 September 27,  2011

Mr. Chairman
1.  Let me start by presenting you our congratulations for your election as the chair of the General Assembly and I extend them to your two vice chairs.  My Delegation is confident that under your leadership we will be able to reach a positive outcome.
2. Allow me also to express our support for the efforts of the Director General and his staff in encouraging innovation and creativity over the last year in all the regions of the world, while promoting a balanced and effective international intellectual property system.
3. In this and in other fora, the Holy See has argued that intellectual property deserves protection since it creates incentives for innovation. Such protection, however, must be tempered to allow the spreading of the benefits of innovation as widely as possible. The very creative and innovative impact that IP rights provide should aim primarily at serving the common good of the human community.  Individual persons and associations are called to contribute to the cultural, economic, political and social life of the civil community to which they belong. Since all human beings should contribute to society, special attention is required to make possible also the participation of the most disadvantaged.  For this reason the poor should be helped “to acquire expertise, to enter the circle of exchange, and to develop their skills in order to make the best use of their capacities and resources.”[1] Education is the critical strategy to achieve this goal. In fact,  it endows  needy people with the basic knowledge which enables them to express their creativity and develop their talents. In this way they become active protagonists for their future and no longer  merely passive elements in the social order where the human person “must be and must continue to be, its subject, its foundation and its end.”[2]

4. Since the last Assemblies, meaningful and hopeful progress has taken place in various substantive sectors of the Organization, such as the Standing Committee on the Law of Patents (SCP),  the Intergovernmental Committee on Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore (IGC). The Strategic Realignment Program (SRP) has been refined and its progressive implementation shared through informative briefings offered by the Secretariat.
5. A major success of the Organization has occurred in the Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights (SCCR).  After ten years of a stand-off, a positive and cooperative engagement by Delegations has led to the SCCR’s recommendation to resume the failed 2000 Diplomatic Conference on a treaty for the protection of audiovisual performances. My Delegation looks forward as well to reaching an agreement on the visually impaired and on people with print disabilities. This agreement will make a significant contribution in mitigating the difficulty faced by more than 284 million visually impaired people worldwide[3],  about 90% of whom  live in developing countries[4]. These are people with limited access to education and culture, not because they lack thirst of knowledge or because they lack aspiration to play their part in the material and cultural welfare of the world community, but because of their disability.
6. The rapid development of technology in the area of the media is surely one of the signs of advancement in today’s society;  it is also a challenge for the Member States of this Organization that have to undertake a particular effort to face it. The Holy See, as a practical demonstration of its commitment and recognizing the lead role played by Copyright, has updated its legislation in this field by adopting a new law[5]. Such a decision shows  the significant role played by intellectual property in this State.
7. During the last biennium, the Intergovernmental Committee on Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore (IGC) undertook a tremendous effort towards the development of an international protection instrument and during the last session it has elaborated a proposal for a renewal of its mandate. The Holy See remains engaged in this Committee and  would like to underline a few elements:
·        intellectual manifestations of tradition or folklore deserve recognition first, because they constitute a means of constructing and projecting the identity of the members of the community concerned and, second, because they are a common asset of that same community, which has grown by small, anonymous contributions over many generations;
·        many biological resources bearing great economic and social usefulness are located in territories inhabited since time immemorial by native communities within the jurisdiction of countries other than those where industrial development of genetic material takes place and patents are obtained. Those native communities already have some knowledge and make use of some of the biological properties protected by patents. Indigenous Communities' ancestral concern for the soil needs to be considered: it generates a right to its use and usufruct. This right extends also to the plants and animals of a territory. Consequently, the biological environment tends to be closely associated with the culture of local people, and constitutes an integral factor of their identity and social cohesion.  Native populations' rights over the land and its fruits exist, and have to be protected, even where modern systems of property protection — both movable and immovable property such as intellectual property—do not foresee their recognition and protection to a sufficient extent.[6]
Mr President,
I would like to conclude by reaffirming the right to private property and in particular to intellectual property. This right is under a ‘social mortgage,’ for the satisfaction of essential human needs. It has an intrinsically social function, which is justified precisely by the principle of the universal destination of goods.[7] The universal destination of goods represent the sum total of social conditions which allow social groups and their individual members to arrive at their own fulfilment. The common good, however, is realized if solidarity prevails. In our globalized world, an equitable relationship with others is a must since we are all really responsible for all.

Thank you



[1] Pope John Paul II, Centesimus Annus: On the Hundredth Anniversary of Rerum Novarum, n.34; http://www.vatican.va/edocs/ENG0214/__P6.HTM
[2] 23. Cf. Pius XII, Radio Message, Christmas Eve, 1944, A.A.S. XXXVII, 1945, p. 12
[4] Id.
[5]  Law on the protection of copyright and related rights, March 2011 n.CXXXII.
[6] WIPO/GRTKF/IC/1/7 Cf. ILO, C-169, Articles 13 to 18.  Cf. Pontifical Council “Justice and Peace” “Towards Better Land Distribution — the Challenge of Agrarian Reform,” Vatican City 1997, paragraph 11.  Pontifical Council “Justice and Peace,” Indigenous Peoples in the Teaching of John Paul II, Vatican City 1993, p. 22.
[7] Pope John Paul II, Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, n.42.

Master Immigrati e Rifugiati



Sono aperte le iscrizioni per candidarsi alla X edizione del Master Immigrati e Rifugiati (a.a. 2011-2012) presso il Dipartimento di Scienze Sociali della Sapienza, Università di Roma.
Il Master Immigrati e Rifugiati è il primo master nato in Italia per formare esperti nel campo dell’immigrazione e dell’asilo, con particolare riferimento ai settori della formazione, della comunicazione e dei servizi pubblici. Tra i principali temi trattati: le pubbliche istituzioni, la comunicazione interculturale, il mondo del lavoro, le relazioni internazionali.
Il corso di formazione prevede un totale di 1500 ore (60 Crediti Formativi), suddivise tra 360 ore di didattica frontale, 450 ore di stage e le restanti ore dedicate a laboratori, seminari, convegni e studio individuale.
Per gli stage gli studenti verranno indirizzati, a seconda degli interessi individuali e della possibilità dei diversi Enti, presso istituzioni pubbliche o private, in Italia o all’estero, interessati a vario titolo alla tematica delle migrazioni. Tra questi:  il Ministero dell’Interno, le Prefetture, i Comuni, l’UNHCR – Alto Commissariato delle Nazioni Unite per i Rifugiati, l’OIM – Organizzazione Internazionale per le Migrazioni, il CIR – Consiglio Italiano per i Rifugiati, lo SPRAR – Servizio Centrale del Sistema di Protezione per richiedenti asilo e rifugiati, il Dossier Statistico Immigrazione Caritas/Migrantes, l’ANCI – Associazione Nazionale Comuni Italiani, le Agenzia di Sanità Pubblica, UnionCamere, l’INPS – Istituto Nazionale Previdenza Sociale, Arci, ecc.


Per maggiori informazioni: www.masterimmigrati.it

Direttore: Prof.ssa Maria Immacolata Macioti
Contatti:                                                                                                                                             
   masterimmigrati@yahoo.it                                                                          
Tel. 0649918445
cel. 3496106643   

EUROPEAN EXTERNAL ACTION SERVICE



EUROPEAN EXTERNAL ACTION SERVICE THE HEAD OF DIVISION
DIRECTORATE North Africa, Middle East, Arabian Peninsula, Iran Iraq
A/836491


Dear Ms Toelgyes, Mr Zerai,
President Barroso has asked me to reply to your e-mail regarding the situation of refugees in the Northern Sinai.
The EU has been following the case of the group of refugees of various backgrounds held hostage on the Egypt-Israeli border since the beginning of December 2010, when the civil society organizations brought this case to the attention of HR/VP Catherine Ashton. The recent developments in Egypt may prove to be a way forward toward a renewed cooperation in areas where progress has been difficult in the past. The EU keeps encouraging the Egyptian authorities to ensure respect for human rights including the protection of migrants and refugees.
The EU Delegation in Cairo contacted local civil society organisations and liaised with UNHCR Regional Representation in Cairo to establish the facts. In coordination with the Member States, the EU Delegation repeatedly met with the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs to express our concerns and urge appropriate follow-up. The issue was also discussed at the EU-Egypt Association Committee held on 14 December 2010 in Cairo. Since then it has been regularly put on the agenda of meetings with local human rights organisations and has been repeatedly raised with the Egyptian authorities, with views being exchanged with the offices of the UNHCR and IOM. Unfortunately, progress in this matter has been limited so far, but the EU continues to exert pressure upon the Egyptian authorities.
Yours sincerely,

Ilkka Uusitalo

Service Européen pour l'Action Extérieure, B-1046 Bruxelles / Europese dienst voor extern optreden, 


B-1046 Brussel - Belgium. Telephone: (32-2) 584 11 11.

venerdì 30 settembre 2011

Usa: denunciati 6 Stati per leggi crudeli sugli immigrati

IL PUGNO DURO DI OBAMA SUL FENOMENO MIGRATORIO


Arizona, Alabama, Utah, Georgia, Indiana e South Carolina

Usa: denunciati 6 Stati per leggi crudeli sugli immigrati
ore 10:15 - 
WASHINGTON – Che sia una mossa “acchiappavoti” o meno, sta di fatto che l’amministrazione americana ha deciso di citare a giudizio, dinanzi alle Corti Statali, le leggi sull’immigrazione che di recente sono state approvate in 6 Stati. Barack Obama non ha usato mezzi termini nel definire l’accusa “molto grave”: per colpire il fenomeno dei clandestini, queste leggi si rivelano crudeli e discriminatorie nei confronti degli immigrati legali. Oltre l’Arizona, dinanzi al giudice saranno portato anche Alabama, Utah, Georgia, Indiana e South Carolina.
Questa iniziativa è stata subito definita “senza precedenti”: “mai nella storia americana il dipartimento di Giustizia ha attaccato in modo così aggressivo leggi dei singoli Stati sul singolo argomento”. Tale decisione di Barack Obama sembra arrivare dopo che la Corte Suprema, l’anno scorso, dichiarò incostituzionale una parte della legge dell’Arizona, in virtù della quale la polizia era autorizzata a chiedere i documenti a un cittadino basandosi solo sul suo cognome o sul suo accento: una norma che ovviamente fece sollevare tutto lo Stato.
Se da una parte cerca di tutelare gli immigrati regolari, dall’altra il presidente Obama deve dimostrare fermezza contro i clandestini, per non perdere voti nei ceti più moderati che chiedono la sicurezza dei confini, legge e ordine. E per farlo, la sua amministrazione ha promosso imponenti interventi di polizia contro l’immigrazione clandestina. Solo ieri, una vasta retata da parte della polizia migratoria americana ha infatti portato all’arresto di oltre 2900 clandestini con precedenti penali in oltre 50 Stati. L’operazione, denominata “Cross Check”, cioè “posto di blocco”, è stata condotta dagli agenti del Us Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) al termine di una settimana di indagini e controlli. 

EWTN Global Catholic Television Network: Vaticano

Fr. Mussie Zerai, talk with CNA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5oxyqGPLtqI