Jihad rap

Dirty_Kuffar_7Dirty Kuffar (2005), jihad rap from Digihad Sheikh Terrah

Jihad Against Jihad Against Jihad

“Is rap the battleground between Muslims?” asked the American journalist. I watched as her subject, a Casablancan emcee named Soultana, shifted her gaze into the middle distance, her face expressionless. We all went silent.

The journalist, a specialist in Iranian and Lebanese politics, was visiting Casablanca to give a talk. I had arrived a few weeks before to spend a year doing fieldwork for my dissertation on Moroccan hip hop and neoliberalization. I helped the journalist to arrange a day of interviews with Moroccan emcees for a chapter of her next book, on responses to Islamist extremism from the Muslim world. As we sat in the lobby of her downtown hotel that afternoon in 2009, she introduced herself to the four artists interviewed that day with the same message: she was inspired by hip hop in the Arab world after she heard DAM, a pioneering Palestinian-Israeli group, for the first time. DAM was “giving the kids something besides Molotov cocktails and suicide bombs,” she said.Rappers were the only people speaking truth to power in “these closed societies” across the Middle East and North Africa, she said. And their music was the only thing keeping at-risk youth, kids from slums where Islamist mosques provided services and social ties, from joining violent extremists. That’s why she wanted to spend a chapter of the book on the stories of hip hop artists from across the region—to capture the voices of what she called “the jihad against the jihad.”

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Tragedia en Bangladesh


Campaña Ropa Limpia / Clean Clothes Campaign: una forma creativa, eficaz y moderna de lucha internacional por los derechos laborales

El derrumbe en Bangladesh eleva la presión sobre firmas textiles occidentales

Los muertos superan ya los 300 y hay cientos de desaparecidos
Activistas reclaman que las multinacionales se impliquen para mejorar las condiciones de trabajo

Dos propietarios de los talleres han sido detenidos por la policía

Naiara Galarraga, El País, 28 de abril, 2013

Haga la prueba. Vaya a su armario y revise las etiquetas de sus camisetas. Seguro que en muchas —a menudo las más sencillas, esas que puede comprar a solo 6,95 euros, dice “Hecho en Bangladesh” o made in Bangladesh—. Quizá hayan sido cosidas en talleres textiles no tan distintos de los alojados en un edificio de ocho plantas que colapsaron el miércoles en las afueras de Dacca (Bangladesh). Con más de 300 muertos y cientos de desaparecidos es una de las mayores catástrofes de una precaria industria que llena las tiendas de occidente de ropa baratísima y es clave en la economía de Bangladesh.

Miles de trabajadores textiles se han echado a las calles a protestar por sus lamentables condiciones laborales, lo que ha implicado el cierre de cientos de talleres. También pararán este sábado.

La policía de Bangladesh ha anunciado durante la madrugada del sábado la detención de dos de los propietarios de los talleres. “Aquellos que están implicados, en particular la persona que ha obligado a los obreros a trabajar ahí, deben ser castigados”, había asegurado antes el primer ministro Sheikh Hasina.

Mientras continúan las labores de rescate, aumenta el número de víctimas y aumenta también la presión sobre las compañías que comercializan esas prendas. ONG occidentales batallan desde hace años con grandes, y famosas, empresas textiles para que asuman responsabilidades y se impliquen para mejorar las condiciones de trabajo en estos talleres de costura. Varias empresas empresas han admitido que cosían para ellos en el edificio Rana Plaza: la española El Corte Inglés, la británica Primark, la canadiense Loblaw y la danesa Group PWT.

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Syria Forces Push Back at Rebels

SyrianT72 A T-72 decorated with the colors of the Syrian regime

Syria Forces Push Back at Rebels

By HANIA MOURTADA, April 7, 2013

BEIRUT, Lebanon — The embattled Syrian government mounted attacks on rebel positions across the country on Sunday, according to opposition activists.

Fighting intensified in and around Aleppo, the country’s largest city, after government forces regained control of Aziza, a village near the city’s military airport, following weeks of clashes, the reports said. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based activist organization that tracks the fighting, the rebels in the village ran out of ammunition and were forced to withdraw. The village sits on high ground commanding the road between the military airport and the city.

Syrian warplanes hit Aleppo in the north, Latakia on the Mediterranean coast, the eastern province of Deir Ezzor and other locations in an apparent effort to counter recent territorial gains by the rebels, the activists said.

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Heavy Metal Islam

heavy metal islam 001

This is not the Middle East that you know. Not the images we see on the national news and cable shows. Picture an eighteen-year-old Moroccan who loves Black Sabbath and Cannibal Corpse. A twenty-two-year-old rapper from the Gaza Strip. A young Lebanese singer who quotes Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song.”

In Heavy Metal Islam (2008) Mark LeVine explores the incredibly vibrant alternative music scenes sweeping the region and bringing with it a new movement of peace and change in countries as diverse as Morocco, Iraq and Pakistan. Through interviews with musicians and fans, LeVine reveals young Muslims struggling to reconcile their religion with a passion for music and a desire for change. These are the risk-takers and revolutionaries, as much on the front lines of the culture war as the suicide bombers and Al-Qaeda martyrs.

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MANPADs Proliferation in Syria

Syrian rebels teach us how to use SA-7 MANPADs

Addressing the Challenge of MANPADS Proliferation

Remarks

Andrew J. Shapiro

Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Political-Military Affairs

Stimson Center
Washington, DC
February 2, 2012

Excerpts:

“Today, I want to talk to you about our efforts to address the threat posed by shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missile systems, also known as Man-Portable-Air-Defense-Systems or MANPADS. Currently in Libya we are engaged in the most extensive effort to combat the proliferation of MANPADS in U.S. history. But before I talk about Libya, let me first talk a bit about why we are so focused on this threat.

In the wrong hands, shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles pose a major threat to passenger air travel, the commercial aviation industry, and possibly military aircraft around the world. Not only could a successful attack against an aircraft cause a devastating loss of life, but it could also cause significant economic damage. Airline travel is critical to our interconnected global economy. Any successful attack could therefore have very harmful economic effects not only in the region where the attack occurred, but also in countries around the world.

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