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Le Monde diplomatique
-----------------------------------------------------
June 2001
In this issue:
... read Ignacio Ramonet and Marc Augé on reality television; reports
from Iran, Afghanistan and Morocco; how the US supports religious
cults; France inspects its colonial record in Algeria... and more...
REALITY TELEVISION: BIG BROTHER WATCH
High surveillance *
by IGNACIO RAMONET
Loft Story, shown on France's M6 channel since 26 April, is drawing
audiences of upwards of 10m. A TV programme has never before
attracted this kind of response in France, or fascinated, worried
or irritated so many people. Although we know that images tell us
more about the society watching them than about the images
themselves, their meaning here is far from clear.
Translated by Ed Emery
Really real but only onscreen *
by MARC AUGÉ
Translated by Julie Stoker
MOBILE KING AND STATIC SOCIETY
Morocco: waiting for serious change *
by IGNACE DALLE
Next month Morocco marks the second anniversary of the death of
King Hassan II and Muhammad VIs accession to the Alawite throne. At
first the young king impressed public opinion by the speed with
which he took measures in regard to greater freedoms, political
exiles and victims of repression; and his skill in handling
Islamist groups and the sacking of the former interior minister
were welcomed as evidence of his desire for progress. But recently
this progress has come to a halt, leaving society impatient for the
real change it expects.
Translated by Malcolm Greenwood
THE WORLD ISOLATES THE TALIBAN
Afghanistan all alone
by GILLES DORRONSORO
Adding to their unpopularity, the Taliban decided in May to force
Hindus living in Afghanistan to wear a distinctive sign on their
clothing. The recent UN Security Council embargo has increased the
regimes isolation, but its full force is being felt by the Afghan
people who are also suffering from an unprecedented drought. To
make matters worse, the Taliban have responded to the sanctions by
suspending talks with the opposition. Ahmad Shah Massoud, one of
its most prominent leaders, received expressions of support in
Europe in April. Yet western policy towards Afghanistan remains
deeply ambiguous.
Translated by Malcolm Greenwood
<http://www.en.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/06/04taliban>
FEARLESS AND DYNAMIC YOUNG DEMAND CHANGE
Irans referendum for democracy *
by our special correspondent ÉRIC ROULEAU
On 8 June President Mohammad Khatami won a sweeping victory in
Irans presidential elections. But despite his clear mandate for
political reform, he is still up against strong opposition. The
conservative clergy holds key positions in the power structure and,
during his previous term of office, stepped up its repression,
closing newspapers, detaining and arresting intellectuals and
members of the progressive and liberal opposition. Nonetheless,
Khatami has a powerful ally: the dynamism of Iranian society.
Translated by Linda Butler
NO TOURISTS, NO AID, NO GOVERNMENT
Haitis business is drugs *
by our special correspondent CHRISTOPHE WARGNY
The international community froze all loans to Haiti in 1997
because of the countrys political turmoil. This May President Mejía
of the neighbouring Dominican Republic appealed for aid to be
resumed since its discontinuation is affecting not only Haiti but
the whole region. As the political vacuum grows, the mafia is
expanding to fill it: the traffic in drugs has increased more than
threefold in the space of four years, adding to Haitis already
disastrous image.
Translated by Barbara Wilson
FEARLESS AND DYNAMIC YOUNG DEMAND CHANGE
A mixed record
E.R.
Translated by Linda Butler
<http://www.en.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/06/06iran-box>
BLACK WORLD OF AMERICAN BOXING
The fight game: or the whore, the slave and the stallion *
by LOÏC WACQUANT
African-American boxers are well aware that they are exploited and
they use the language of prostitution and slavery to express their
awareness. But although they lead a tough, ascetic life, they
rarely protest at the poor rewards and resign themselves to being
bodily merchandise. Loïc Wacquant spent three years living and
training with them in Chicagos South Side black ghetto.
Original article in English
EUROPE RESISTS AMERICAN RELIGIOUS CULTS
Secular society at stake
by BRUNO FOUCHEREAU
The Swiss conductor Michel Tabachnik was charged with criminal
conspiracy in connection with the Order of the Solar Temple this
April in France: 71 of its members had died in four so-called
collective suicides from 1994 to 1997. The case focused attention
on groups which claim to be religious sects, but are instead
engaged in money-making activities. France is now ushering in
legislation that will allow the courts to dissolve such movements.
The US administration is, however, trying to ensure their impunity
on grounds of religious freedom and supports various cults which
peddle forms of new-right and neo-conservative ideology in the name
of anti-communism.
Translated by Barry Smerin
<http://www.en.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/06/09sects>
TORTURE IN ALGERIA: PAST ACTS THAT HAUNT FRANCE
False memory *
by PASCAL BLANCHARD, SANDRINE LEMAIRE and NICOLAS BANCEL
The Vichy regime prompted investigation and debate leading to a new
understanding of that period. Yet France's colonial past remains
unmentionable. De Tocqueville, author of Democracy in America and
one of the principal advocates of liberal politics, remains highly
respected despite his support for violence in the conquest of
Algeria. This gives some idea of the pitfalls surrounding the
current French debate on torture during the war in Algeria. Torture
was not just the result of conflict: it was part and parcel of
colonisation. And it revealed the contradictions of republican
France, proclaiming universal emancipation but practising
discrimination.
Translated by Harry Forster
Liberty, equality and colony
by OLIVIER LE COUR GRANDMAISON
Translated by Harry Forster
<http://www.en.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/06/11torture2>
THE SOUTH HELPS THE SOUTH
Redevelopment in Senegal *
by our special correspondent ROLAND-PIERRE PARINGAUX
Cuts in development aid from governments in the last two years have
not as yet been offset by private sector investments. The EU has
abandoned voluntarism by ending the system created as part of the
Lomé convention, and is now focusing exclusively on opening up new
markets. As a result, countries in the South are now embracing
various bilateral ventures, sometimes with surprising results.
Translated by Luke Sandford
TELLING IT HOW IT IS IN THE TOWNSHIPS
South Africa's cleansing soap *
by our special correspondent JEAN-CHRISTOPHE SERVANT
South Africa is still deep in crisis: unemployment, drugs, sexual
violence, homophobia, blatant inequality in schools, vigilantes.
Yizo Yizo, a TV soap with a huge audience, devised in conjunction
with the ministry of education, tackles all these issues,
reflecting the lives of the young in the ghettos. Each episode
provokes heated protest from the new black elite: in today's South
Africa the polemic is no longer racial but social.
Translated by Julie Stoker
ISRAELS LUCRATIVE OSLO YEARS
The market price of peace *
by MARWAN BISHARA
One of the contradictions that Ariel Sharons government faces is
the economic repercussion of the Palestinian intifada, particularly
in view of how, during the 1990s, Israel profited from the Oslo
accords.
Original text in English
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