Thursday, November 25, 2010

Indigestion And Blood In Cervical Fluid

Creative!

"The creativity describes the ability of an individual or group to imagine or construct and implement a new concept, a new object or find an original solution to a problem. "





With the arrival of winter I have want to put even the tip of my nose off! I take this opportunity to spoil me and return to my winter recreation: Point-of-cross, Scrapbooking, Sewing and Knitting the newly. I am pleased with the creative leisure. It is very important to me to appropriate certain objects and to distinguish myself from others in making some things to my image of me. I also like the next "green" (surprisingly) is to do things yourself and recovered items that have joined the garbage otherwise. I love to create with my hands and I think it's a real therapy. Which brings me to a small nod to Creative Journal by Anne-Marie Jobin . A book that helps me make a concrete complex concept: Spirituality. I urge all those who think that meditation is very vague!

Bisouxx

My Leather Sofa Is Ripped Can It Be Fixed

A camel on the shoulder in Ulan Bator, Mongolia

series aired on a Camel on the shoulder (Radio Suisse Romande) from 6 to 10 September 2010.

Ulaanbaatar: urban life in nomadic land

journalist Frederick Lavoie shows us the lives of the Mongolian capital Ulan Bator, between sedentary nomadic traditions and realities.

Yurt lost in the endless moonscape, nomads on horseback bringing their animals scattered across the steppe. The romance of Mongolian life dream.

But since the fall of communism in 1990, the reality is far from rosy for descendants of Genghis Khan. Can no longer count on help from the state after a series of harsh winters, hundreds of thousands of nomads leave the steppe to plant their yurt in the suburbs polluted and unhealthy in the capital.

Result: in 20 years, the population of Ulaanbaatar has grown from 540,000 people to between 1.1 and 1.6 million according to estimates. Ironically, half the three million Mongolians crowded so today in the state capital of the world's least densely populated. At
hillside around a downtown socialist architecture, neighborhoods yurts constantly expanding surround the capital. In those dusty towns, young professionals dream of an apartment, study abroad or work in the Mongolian mining industry booming. Others see the city rather as a necessary step, hoping to quickly raise enough money to buy a herd and return to a nomadic life. If

Mongolian traditions die hard, despite rapid urbanization, the isolated Asian company is still surprisingly liberal. Uninhibited, young rockers with long hair inflame their audiences with their Western-inspired heavy music. In the crowd of skinheads are the Mongolian hello Hitler Recalling that if Mongolia is open, foreigners are not always welcome, especially if they come from threatening neighboring China. After two decades
post-communist relatively quiet Mongolian democracy still looking. Suukhbaatar the square outside the parliament building and a huge statue of the conqueror Genghis Khan, angry citizens braved the cold to remind the government of its unfulfilled promises.
1 / 5: Life yurt (listen or download the show)
Habit and well cared for hair, suitcase in hand, thousands of professionals cross at dawn the door of their yurt in the suburbs Capital unhealthy. Direction: downtown Ulan Bator.

Torbat a young social worker, dreams of a city apartment and study abroad. Meanwhile, he lives with his wife and baby Ankhtsetseg in a yurt equipped: fridge, TV, microwave, stove and ... aquarium.

born in the country, Torbat loves urban life easier and more diverse than his brother knows that pastoralists. But he hates the neighborhood of yurts, where the air polluted by smoke from coal and firewood is unbearable with the arrival of cold weather. He has put all his energy build a better life for her children, even sacrificing his own.

The guest: Gaëlle Lacaze
Ethnologue, a specialist in Mongolia. Lecturer in anthropology at the University of Strasbourg. Author in 2006 of the guide Mongolia: Land of shadows and lights Olizane editions.

Gaëlle Lacaze talks about yurts neighborhoods that surround the capital Ulan Bator, where there are hundreds of thousands of former nomads. She tells us about the extremely precarious living conditions, social dislocation and total lack of prospects in these suburban yurts.
2 / 5: Fragile democracy (listen or download the show)
In the intense cold of April 2010, more than five miles down on Mongols Suukhbaatar Square, central square of Ulan Bator demand the government resign.

At their head, Ouyang, 34, petite woman and hypercharismatique. Surrounded by towering men, the leader of the civil movement denounces the corruption of a government that has lost public trust as it does not fulfill its election promises.

Huddled in a tent on the square, the former journalist with eight companions triggers a strike hunger. Weakened, she talks about her ambitions for democracy in Mongolia still shaky, 20 years after the fall of communism.

Fourteen days later, authorities will forcibly detain strikers to the hospital.

Guest: Jacques Legrand
Jacques Legrand, professor of Mongolian language and literature, is now president of the National Institute of Oriental Languages and Civilizations (INALCO). He is the author of numerous books on history, culture and language of Mongolia, including a French-Mongolian dictionary (Monsudar, Ulaanbaatar, 2007).

Jacques Legrand tells us about the evolution he travels the country since 1967. It tells the upheavals of the fall of communism, the arrival of a market economy, the decline of nomadism and the discovery of immense wealth in the basement of Mongolia. The opportunity to listen to the sounds of the very special Mongolian language.

3 / 5: In memory of Genghis Khan (listen or download the show)

Swastika in the neck, nor be responsible Gansouren fascist or Nazi. It is nationalistic. As his time was his hero, Genghis Khan, the Mongol conqueror greater.

In a gym, where he teaches taekwondo, leader Khoukha Mongol (Blue Mongolia) speaks of his organization nationalist attacks against Chinese employers "disrespectful" and his great vision of unity for the Mongolian people. His wife Otguirid, weightlifting coach, explains the importance of sports to demonstrate the strength of his nation.

Guest: Françoise Aubin
Françoise Aubin is Research Director Emeritus at the CNRS and the Centre for Research on the Far East of Paris-Sorbonne.

She explains why Genghis Khan is a national hero in Mongolia while the West is always in the as a bloodthirsty barbarian. She tells us that Genghis Khan was and how he himself has built his legend.

4 / 5: Heavy Mongolian (listen or download the show)

This evening of celebration for the cult band Nisvanis. Mongolian rock pioneers, they celebrate leur14e anniversary on stage. Other younger formations come to honor them.

Amgalan, Nisvanis singer is all smiles. He remembers the early days when it was difficult to find instruments in Ulaanbaatar and that his music was inspired by Nirvana escape the crowds.

Sunny, leader The training Lemons, has struggled to make his parents accept her choice to become a rock musician, an occupation not pay very little in the Mongolian population. But today, with its little star, he appears regularly in China and Japan.

Ougui is the head honcho of the Mongolian rock scene. It is he who arranges all the shows. If being a rock star does not lead to capital in Mongolia, he was pleased at least that society is liberal enough not to try him for his long hair and her clothes gothic.

Guests: Gregory Delaplace
Delaplace Gregory, an anthropologist, is conducting a post-doctoral research University of Cambridge (Mongolia and Inner Asia Study Unit) in England, on the dead and the "invisible things" in contemporary Mongolia. Since 1999, his fieldwork in the capital and the north-west, with a population of nomadic pastoralists, have led to interest in subjects as diverse as the new urban practice of feng shui, historiography of collectivization and the Mongolian rap.

Delaplace Gregory is the author of "The invention of the dead. Burials, ghosts and contemporary photography in Mongolia," Northeast Asia Collection, Supplement to Studies & Siberian Mongols, Tibetan & Central Asian, Paris, 2009.

Delaplace Gregory talks about the rock culture in Mongolia, one of the only people to resist nationalism that followed the end of communism and the reconstruction of identity "purely" Mongolia. We present ultra famous groups as Mohanik or Tatar, their vision of Mongolian society, their demands in a country undergoing profound change.

5 / 5: Nomads in the soul (listen or download the show)
Each year, thousands of nomadic herders to leave life to settle in the suburbs polluted and unhealthy Capital. More by necessity than choice.

In one of the city still without electricity in yurts, Batchtolong leveled his newly acquired land, on which he lived with his mother Ningoui. Setter for the air conditioner 26 years, the city is a must. His dream: to buy a herd and return to live in the desert as their ancestors.

At 450 miles away, in the province of Bulgan, and Otgon Tomurbaatar not leave anything in the world for their harsh nomadic life. Even if they have lost half their herd during the harsh winter of 2010, television has taught them that life would be much better in the capital, where there unemployment, pollution and disease. In their yurt lost, at least they are "only to breathe the air" for miles around, pleads Otgon. The guest

: Tsogzolmaa Sambuu
Tsogzolmaa Sambuu organizes tourist trips in Mongolia including working with the Swiss Agency Area East and West. It gives us the latest news from the capital Ulan Bator.

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: The nomadic steppe outside

Article published in the section Holidays / Travel Press September 30, 2010

Ulan Bator, Mongolia - Clean Air, the yurt planted in the middle of nowhere, the farmer to horse leading his flock in the endless steppe: Do not look for the romance of the nomadic Mongolian Ulan Bator, it is not there. However, the traveler who has the courage (or obligation) to linger in the polluted capital will not regret its plunge into the depths of the fascinating culture of Mongolia, Buddhism between nomadism, and ... heavy metal.

Before entering a yurt, the traditional round dwelling nomads, we do not hit. In the countryside, and city. The practice can be confusing for foreigners, accustomed to respect for privacy. But in the dusty outskirts of Ulan Bator, where the eye can extend hillside yurts of the thousands of exiles in rural areas, there is nothing more normal than joining a stranger unannounced to drink tea with milk salty.

Do not expect the great outpouring of politeness and warmth found in other countries with overwhelming hospitality. Accustomed to self-sufficiency and independence of the nomadic life, the Mongols welcome you to their humble abode in you having a stool, sweets and tea ... before returning to go about their business, until you begin the discussion, unfortunately limited by the language barrier.

Think again. You Welcome, you do not disturb. Feel like at home. Really. Not as a guest but as a family member, helping a little, like the others.

And then the departure time arrives. No agonizing separation. You leave as you came, after brief greetings. Without false promise of return.
Coming out of the yurt, the shock is brutal. You're not in the middle of the campaign, as you would have thought to see the cows grazing on the few herbs on dry land. You are in the city.

To keep the privacy offered by the endless steppe, nomads have settled down, paradoxically, all fenced their land. Everyone lives in his little world, limiting the life of the neighborhood trade. Surprising in a society dominated by poverty, neighborhood solidarity that comes with such difficulty in finding a niche.

Mongolian capital


Back downtown, Suükhbaatar place, the main square. Yurts have given way to towering gray buildings. The large glass building in front of you seems straight out of Dubai. In fact, it is mainly a symbol of small failures of capitalism Mongolian. Nearly completed, it remains unoccupied and will be demolished due to problem of foundations.

For centuries, nomads have lived without fixed capital. Until the Communists, in power for more than six decades, launching the first real wave of urbanization, the influence of the Soviet big brother. By failing to test the beauty of the urban landscape, hard to say they have succeeded ...

The arrival of capitalism in 1990 has seen the emergence of several small shops and even pubs and restaurants run by Westerners crossing into Mongolia before you take a wife, so countries.

Shops Mongolian specialize in products instead of cashmere, winter goats hair that makes the country's international reputation in the fashion industry.
By selling the fruit of nomads, they try to forget the pollution of the Avenue of Peace, the main street of the city, where many citizens are protected from contaminated air in surgical masks. The traveler, it would best protect themselves from pickpockets, whose camera from the author of these lines was nearly the victim in the heart of the city in the afternoon ...


A must for most visitors, Ulaanbaatar is a must. Some arrive after a long stay in the railway train from Moscow through Siberia. It is also the transit point for exploring the steppes and the nomadic life on horseback.
Tourists also converge in Ulan Bator in July for the Naadam national celebration, during which the Mongols are measured at archery, running and horse in Mongolian wrestling, always clad in traditional costumes .

Ulaanbaatar is also a point of pilgrimage for some. Ganden Monastery, not far from downtown, became the gateway to the Buddhist heritage of Mongolia in full resurgence. He is one of the few to have survived the repression of religion under communism.

Under his wobbly gait as the capital of a developing country, the liberal mindset of Ulaanbaatar surprises and charm. Mongolian traditions are important but they do not interfere with the aspirations of modern youth. During our stay we were even treated to a spectacle of heavy metal music provided by several groups of the emerging Mongolian scene. It is for such moments of discovery qu'Oulan Bator, despite its ugliness and dirt frontage, deserves to be discovered.

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The Olympian challenge Sochi

File published in La Presse, September 25, 2010

MOSCOW - Sochi is currently a challenge Olympian. Taking short three years ago by obtaining surprise of the 2014 Winter Games, the Russian resort built in haste her Olympic dream. And nothing can stop the Russian government, who wish to e
eyeful to re ste world. Neither a hunger strike citizens expropriated. Neither environmentalists who cry ecological disaster. Neither the explosion of costs just to drive up the bill for tens of billions of dollars.

On the main road to Krasnaya Polyana, the dust never has time to fall. Hundreds of trucks pass each day with a bang to transport materials needed for Olympic construction.

"It may be temporary, but we do not live here temporarily!" Claudia gets carried away, fifty. Resident of the village has always been, she was indignant to see the serenity of Krasnaya Polyana Olympic swept away by the wave.

In 2014, it was in this mountain village 60 km from Sochi that all events will take place with snow. The tiny ski existing outdated now live in the shadow of four major Olympic complex. And the modest homes of the villagers must accustom the tallest hotels under construction.

"I'm against since the beginning. Everybody is against it, but nobody asked us our opinion," says Claudia while carrying her groceries. "They organized the games just to launder money!" she exclaims, exasperated, before disappearing into his car without disclosing his name.

A little later, Vyacheslav Soulimenko, 71, to be responsible "for progress", so for the Olympics. "But on the other hand, I fear for the environment. They have killed thousands of trees and animals have fled," said the hunter and tourist guide, sipping a beer in the middle afternoon on a park bench.

No games green
"We could have a Green Olympics, as the organizers had promised," believes his side Kaptsov Dmitri, a militant faction of the ecologist, a local environmental organization. "But the project ran into Russian reality."

According to him, to hold the Games without environmental consequences Russia should prepare at least four or five years before submitting his candidacy. However, after the speech of Vladimir Putin flamboyant in July 2007, the International Olympic Committee has taken on faith in the project dear to the country's strong man ... even though the city candidate at that time did not have any facilities necessary for the Games.

Taken aback by their victory, the organizers could not carry all the expertise necessary to minimize environmental impacts, says Dmitri Kaptsov. "Instead of respecting the laws, they change. If before it was a crime to cut some trees in an area now is completely legal."

In 2007, green groups have managed to move the planned bobsleigh run, which would have destroyed the natural habitat of many animals. This was their only victory. After a brief collaboration, Greenpeace, WWF Ecologist Faction and turned their backs on the state company responsible for the work, Olympstroï.

"There has never been more attention devoted to environmental projects in Russia," says Alexandra Kasterine for its part, spokesman Olympstroï. It indicates that the damage caused to the environment will be offset by the addition of 20 000 hectares of protected forest to national park near Sochi.

For Green, the main environmental threat touches the river Mzymta. Along the river are being built alongside a new road and a railway to link the airport to the Olympic venues Krasnaya Polyana. "Half the city of Sochi as to drink," Dmitry Kaptsov concerned. At a cost of whopping 6.5 billion, the project includes 23 bridges and six tunnels for railway trains and automobiles.

This road and other "unexpected" charges have tripled the Olympics. In June, the Ministry of Regions has estimated that the private and public investment for the 242 facilities for the Games would total 950 billion rubles, or $ 31 billion.

Critics are pointing to the corruption that plagues the country to explain in part the cost explosion. A contractor accused in particular an official of the presidential administration have demanded 12% of the value of a contract in jars of wine. The officer was dismissed from his post in August and is facing criminal charges.

Hunger Strike
As for the main site of the Games, a few hundred meters from the Black Sea, stadiums and arenas are beginning to take shape. The passage of the Press three years ago, the lowlands of Imereti - as the locals call this area a few villages scattered about forty miles from the center city of Sochi - which were cornfield surrounded by some houses .

In his garden, Lyubov Fourssa has an amazing view on the skeleton of the future ice palace of 12,000 seats, which will host the speed skating short track and figure skating. But not for long. By December, she will leave her home.

It is part of a hundred families expropriated by the authorities. When the city presented its candidacy, however, assured her that no citizen would have to relocate.

After a hunger strike for 24 days in May, failing to receive visits required from Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, Ms Fourssa and eight other residents were able to meet with Olympic officials who promised them better compensation. Like most, she finally accepted a brand new house a few miles away in the nearby village of Nekrassovskoe.

Matioukha Alla's family did the same thing. And as the mother of three children, have been expropriated for their money. "Many families did not even have toilets in their former home," she said. Ms.

Matioukha believed to have been useless anyway to resist the dream cherished by the Prime Minister Putin. "The Olympics is a state project. No matter what we'd said we would have been displaced," she says.

***
Sochi pending future
slogan printed on the t-shirt most popular in Sochi summarizes the ambition of the city: "Sochi: city of the future". If the resort to the Future, because the Soviet past will always overshadow the present.

Sochi would be an international city, but foreigners are still a curiosity. And for good reason. Even the Russians increasingly deserting the subtropical resort, once darling pearl of the Black Sea to the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, whose. Only President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin insist on maintaining an official residence in the "summer capital" of Russia.

Service Russian
The explanation is simple: in Moscow, it is usually cheaper to fly to Egypt or Turkey. There, accommodation and meals are cheaper and better quality. And most importantly, the Russian tourist did not undergo the awful customer service of his fellow ...
is that despite the billions of dollars invested in it for the Games in 2014, traces of Soviet architecture and mentality are struggling to disappear in Sochi.

However, since the first visit of La Presse in Sochi in the summer of 2007, a month after getting win the Games, the city has definitely changed for the better.
Several buildings have sprung up, the facades of apartment buildings have been renovated with fresh - and conditions - the state systems, electric and pipeline have been redone. And Sotchinois are unanimous on the main achievements of the Olympic preparation: the development of roads and widening, which required urban prowess.

***
In Olympic bubble
If Sochi remains deeply Soviet Olympic tourists should still not too worried. The 2014 Winter Games will be held immune from the daily problems of the city. In a well orchestrated Olympic bubble.

Here's the scenario: arrival of visitors and athletes to the brand new airport, opened four months ago only. From there, a German train fast and modern transports in five minutes at the stadium and arenas in the Olympic Park Imereti lowland, a stone's throw from the beach. Direction of the mountains, always by train, we reached in half an hour the village Krasnaya Polyana, site of alpine skiing, nordic and freestyle and the bobsleigh track.

With any luck, winter 2014 will cover the village and neighboring peaks of a natural white coat. This was not the case last season, when the anger sweeping the Vancouver Olympic organizers because of the absence of snow ...

No need to leave the Olympic venues to sleep either. Although bonded facilities, 23,000 hotel rooms are provided for tourists. Visitors

the bravest dare to venture into the center city of Sochi, to over 40 km of the facilities Olympics.

There, at least one socio-economic miracle in the next four years, they gather the real Russian life. In the eyes of a grandmother who tries to sell the products of his garden in a corner to add to his meager pension, or the gaudy richness reflected in the window of the Dior boutique. Away from the Olympic isolation. ***
Sochi
Population: 400,000 inhabitants.
Location: At about 1200 km southwest of Moscow, the city covers 150 km on the edge of the Black Sea, at the same latitude as Toronto.
Area: 3790 km2.
Industries: Tourism (4 million visitors per year) and health (300 spas).
Crowd expected for the games: 1 million visitors and 5,000 athletes.

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Chess and Mars

Article published in La Presse, September 24, 2010

MOSCOW - He says he was abducted by aliens and is suspected of ordering the murder of a journalist. Kirsan Ilyumzhinov eccentric president of a small Russian republic is the head of the International Chess Federation for 15 years. Next Wednesday, it could be checkmated by an ex-world champion.

The real battle, in Khanty-Mansiysk, is place in the shadow of chess. In this small oil town in western Siberia, while the masters are competing this week honors the 39th World Chess Olympiad, two men play their part in the wings.

And all shots are allowed to get the grand prize: the presidency of the International Chess Federation (FIDE).

The reward may seem trivial for ordinary mortals. But not for the eccentric outgoing president Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, who believes that chess, this "cosmic game" available to humans by the aliens, save the world from the Apocalypse ...

Neither Anatoli Karpov, Soviet chess legend, who believes that comedy Ilyumzhinov long enough.

For months, the two Russians are campaigning around the world to gather the support of national federations. Karpov can count on the vote of large countries like France, Germany and the United States.

But in this part, all pieces have equal value. And his opponent is supported by federations of several micro-states and developing countries, which he promised would help. Ilyumzhinov advantage.

Anatoly Karpov has accused the outgoing president of the FIDE have transformed into a "corrupt organization" during her 15 years reign. Corrupt, as the small Buddhist republic of Kalmykia in the Russian Caucasus, led Ilyumzhinov unchallenged since 1993.

Exactly, next month, he will leave politics. The 48 year old millionaire who made his fortune in the booming post-Soviet car, plans to devote to the development of the sport and world peace.

One of his projects: a global center for chess 24-story-shaped piece of a king at Ground Zero. In addition to game rooms, the building would house the temples of the main monotheistic religions.

During his 17 years as head of Kalmykia, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov has made chess a compulsory subject in schools in the republic of 300,000 inhabitants. It also has built-Chess City, a luxury chess which regularly hosts international tournaments.

With aliens

Critics suspect of masterminding the murder of an opposition journalist in 1998, where one of his aides was convicted. Moreover, his account of a journey with extraterrestrials in 1997, on which he returned without discomfort, has dismayed many Russian politicians.

Despite his eccentricity, Ilyumzhinov has managed to survive for long political changes in Russia. In recognition of his unwavering loyalty to power his candidacy for the FIDE has been supported by the Russian chess federation, whose vice president is an adviser to the head of state Dmitri Medvedev.

As for accusations of corruption, Ilyumzhinov has responded with a defamation lawsuit against Anatoly Karpov. He said the world champion of 1975 is any more an "aging player" who can not accept losing the public's attention.

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Medvedev sacks Moscow Mayor

Article published in La Presse, September 28, 2010

The biggest political battle of the last 10 years Russia ended yesterday. The powerful mayor of Moscow Yuri Luzhkov was sacked by President Dmitry Medvedev, whom he had "lost confidence". These are not accusations of corruption and mismanagement that have been right to judge the extravagant ... but the fact that he dared criticize the head of state, says our contributor.

Moscow - Arriving at his office yesterday morning, Yuri Luzhkov was told he was no longer mayor of the capital for several minutes. President Dmitry Medvedev had just published on its website its termination letter. With immediate effect.

The chief magistrate of the capital of 10 million people would Yet had expected. For three weeks he was no longer in the good graces of the Head of State.

At issue: an article signed by him in which he criticized so thinly veiled Medvedev's leadership, suggesting that he preferred that of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, former president and strongman of the country always.

followed a media campaign to discredit him. After years of silence on his alleged embezzlement TV, the channels controlled by the Kremlin competed originality to blacken the image of the colorful mayor: corruption, negligence, favoritism his wife to become millionaire entrepreneur during the 18-year reign of her husband ... All shots were allowed.

Last week, in agreement with the Kremlin, Yuri Luzhkov went reflect on his future in Austria, where he found himself officially with the family to celebrate its 74th anniversary. Upon returning to work Monday, all observers expected his resignation. But the relentless politician did not budge: he would not leave his post on his own.

Prosecutions for?

For the first time in two years as president, Medvedev has had to dismiss a recalcitrant regional leader. The law allows it entirely from the abolition of gubernatorial elections by his predecessor Putin in 2004. In recent months, all other regional dinosaurs had chosen to leave "voluntarily" to power in exchange for a symbolic position or a comfortable retirement free from justice.

The question that arises now the All-Moscow after this affront to the president, the Russian judicial system "rediscovered" it suddenly malpractice era Luzhkov?

One thing is certain, the ousted mayor can not count on Putin to temper a head of state in his wounded pride. Yesterday the Prime Minister said he fully supported the presidential decision.

few names circulate to replace Yuri Luzhkov. We already know that the next mayor of the capital will be more docile than his fiery predecessor, all candidates owe their political career in Putin-Medvedev tandem.

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Lawrence Cannon in Moscow: "We do not at all intend to militarize the Arctic "

Article published in La Presse, September 17, 2010

Moscow - an official visit to Moscow, the Foreign Minister of Canada Lawrence Cannon defended Canadian sovereignty in the Arctic yesterday, but flatly refused to talk about "militarization" the region.

"We do not intend to militarize the Arctic," he said at a news conference, accompanied by his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.

Paradoxically, Minister Cannon went on to pointing out that Canada will exercise its sovereignty in the Arctic "first by a robust presence of Canadian forces and equipment which must necessarily surround their presence."

In August, when the Conservative government unveiled its policy on the Arctic, he said that Canadian sovereignty back to "very far", it is "well established and based on our ownership history. "But she has never been recognized internationally.

Evidence to UN
By 2013, Canada intends to submit to the Committee responsible for implementation the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea evidence that the Lomonosov Ridge is an extension of Canadian territory. "We believe our record will prevail, with the support of scientific evidence," said Minister Cannon yesterday.

But on this point, Russia already has a head start. In 2001, she filed the first studies to support the theory of attachment these seamounts in Eurasian continent. They were neither rejected nor accepted. Since then, the Russians support their case.
Denmark also started the game and seeking recognition as the backbone continuity of Greenland.

The attraction for the Arctic has increased in recent years the melting of the ice cap more accessible deposits of oil which could represent 13% of oil reserves and 30% of undiscovered natural gas the globe. The United States and Norway also have claims.

Ottawa does not worry Moscow
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia did not seem too concerned about the Canadian position yesterday. "Any claim must be based on scientific facts that the commission's review. This is where we decide who is right and who is wrong," said Sergei Lavrov.

Even if Russia also deployed troops in the Arctic, we can not speak of militarization of the territory, he said: "Canada and Russia are of course a liability for the security of their borders and inland Maritime passing near these borders. And we will naturally fulfill this responsibility by practical action steps. "

" We do not see what could be the contribution of NATO in the Arctic, "said Minister Lavrov, without further detail.

Canada regularly intercepted Russian bombers that s 'nearing its air space in the North. In August, during a visit to the Arctic, where he had gone to observe the military exercises more and more impressive each year, Prime Minister Stephen Harper s That was indeed functioning as an incident of its kind to justify the purchase of 65 stealth fighters he had to announce at a cost of $ 16 billion.

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Mayor of Moscow in the sights of the Kremlin

Article published September 13 in La Presse

The days of the powerful mayor of Moscow at the head of the Russian capital are numbered. In trying to sow discord between President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, Yuri Luzhkov has won their anger. To discredit the Kremlin has launched an unprecedented media sling.

Moscow - "Moscow suffocated in the smoke while the mayor was saving his bees?" Asks the narrator in a serious tone. This is the kind of criticism that had not wiped Yuri Loukjov for over a decade Russian TV. But last week, the "investigations" incriminating against Moscow Mayor flood the federal channels, carefully controlled by the Kremlin.

Friday, NTV got the ball rolling. The chain, owned by the state gas giant Gazprom, has aired a documentary entitled "The case is in the hat", referring to the distinctive headgear of the mayor.

The report accused Luzhkov particular have dropped his countrymen during forest fires this summer. While his city was suffocated by smoke, he waited several days before to interrupt his vacation abroad.

Upon his return, the narrator notes, the mayor has allocated 105 million rubles (3.5 million) for the care of victims of fires and 256 million ... for those bees. Beekeeping is a favorite pastime of the colorful mayor.

The report "revealed" as the fortune accumulated by his wife (2.9 billion according to Forbes), queen of real estate in Moscow, was no stranger to the duties of her husband ...
Accusations of corruption and mismanagement at the site of Luzhkov are not new. What is new is that they find their way up airwaves.

In 18 years as head of the capital, Yuri Luzhkov has been able to navigate through the changes of guard in the Kremlin to maintain control of his megalopolis of 10 million.

Open Letter

But last Wednesday, he committed the unpardonable. In an open letter, the mayor criticized as thinly veiled President Medvedev's decision to stop construction of a section of highway at the request of environmentalists. He suggested that Putin's authoritarian approach, which tends to favor the continuation of work, is better to resolve the country's problems as the head of state, more inclined to compromise.

Following publication, an anonymous source in the Kremlin told the Interfax news agency that the attack "would not remain without appropriate response." Since then, the documentary-shock swarm.

Luzhkov again on Friday asserted that he had no reason to leave office before the end of his fifth term in 2011.

Legally, Dmitri Medvedev may refer the mayor as he pleases. But he must first find a successor, and no name currently appears to be unanimity in the corridors of the Kremlin. Meanwhile, the propaganda is responsible for burning down the mayor of 73 years, who dared to choose confrontation.

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Abkhazia a" country "in seduction mode burns

Article published in the newspaper La Presse, Le Soir and La Croix in August-September 2010

late August, Russia announced it had deployed in Abkhazia missiles pointed at the very pro-Western Georgia. Abkhazia? Officially, this is a region of Georgia. However, this area claims to be an independent nation. Moscow has recognized two years ago almost to the day.


is a normal summer day at the border between Russia and Abkhazia Psaou. Russian side of the Abkhazian border traders rusty old push their carts filled with melons five wickets to passport control. A few dozen Russian tourists in flip-flops are dragging their suitcases with wheels and seek to exceed the merchants. The tone rises. "We go to the sea, we! "Says a Russian, irritated by the long wait in the unbearable heat that suffocates the entire region for weeks. Abkhaz side, however the duty is a matter of seconds. All those who come from Russia are welcome!

The meandering 100 km border separating the capital, Sukhumi, roll on a new road now, courtesy of Russia, now on asphalt fragmented from before the fall of the USSR. At the time, Abkhazia and its 213 km of seafront on the Black Sea was the Soviet tourist paradise. Today, 99% of the approximately 800,000 tourists it receives each year are Russian.

Sukhumi. Or Sukhumi, Georgian, since except for Russia, Venezuela, Nicaragua and the microscopic island of Nauru, the Abkhazia region of Georgia remains legally.

Two years ago too, the capital of some 50 000 people had only one traffic light. Today, they number a few dozen brand new. Several buildings still bear the scars the bloody war of secession against Georgia in 1992-1993, which left 13 000 dead. But new buildings are gradually starting to sprout.

"Thank you Russia!"

Avenue de la Paix, elderly people waiting outside a bank the security guard's signal to go collect the 500 rubles ($ 17) pension paid to them Abkhazia. "Thank you Russia!" Without her we would only have that! " Launches Lyudmila, 68, a retired physician who continues to teach at the university and hospital care. Later, she will go to another bank harvest the 2900 rubles offered by the Russian state.

is that, as more than 90% of Abkhazians, Lyudmila was easily obtained Russian citizenship in the early 2000s. If Russia does not consider at the time the Georgian separatist regions as countries, it was already made in their respirator. Recognizing Abkhazia and South Ossetia, August 26, 2008, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has simply formalized the relationship.

Less than 24 hours after our interview request, Abkhaz President Sergei Bagapsh, receives us in his presidential office. Abkhazia, in recognition of evil, is in seduction.

"We do not intend to beg anyone to recognize us," said the president, however, in office since 2004. "The most important thing is to build a rule of law, democracy, respect for the international community understands that we want peace and stability, not war, and therefore that we must recognize."

The fact that the International Court of Justice has confirmed, on July 22 last, the legality of Kosovo's independence, recognized by 69 states, do not change anything for his "country", said Sergei Bagapsh. "But this demonstrates again that the decision Russia's recognition of Abkhazia was absolutely right. "

Protected in war

For President, safeguarding independence pass through economic development, mainly from tourism and agriculture, Abkhazia is a major producer of citrus. But, ironically, it all depends on Russian money.

This year, with Russia will almost double the Abkhaz meager budget of about 135 million dollars. Including services to Russian citizens in Abkhazia, triple it.

Another paradox, the Russian military presence in Abkhazia ensures independence of the republic, Sergei Bagapsh believes. It deters the President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili, seeking to regain by force the separatist territories, as in the blitzkrieg of August 2008 in South Ossetia.

And here lies the main achievement of this conflict, says the president of Abkhazia. After years of uncertainty, "people feel now that peace has come, they themselves can decide their fate." The pensioner Lyudmila

confirms: "We know that if a war with Georgia, the Russians will be there to defend ourselves."

Georgians left behind

In south-east of Abkhazia, populated mostly by Georgians, we see the situation from a different perspective.

The road to get to Gali is also dilapidated and depressing than the city itself. During the 1992-1993 war, the majority of residents have fled to Georgia for fear of reprisals by Abkhaz separatists.

Since then, nothing has been rebuilt, and the town is now too large for its population of several thousand people, or that of a big village.

Here, most people have secretly Georgian citizenship in addition to the Abkhaz. Some also have a Russian passport, to be entitled to services. Education in Georgia is prohibited, many parents send their children to school across the "border".
In a cafe, Russian soldiers control a bottle of vodka. In their view, men grumbled to whisper in Georgia.

At the entrance stands a giant portrait Gali President Bagapsh, as if to mock men recycled taxi drivers waiting at his feet for unlikely customers. Languages take time to untie. "In 20 years they have not even managed to redo the road!" finally complains Guram, pot-bellied fifties, after a long apology ironic Abkhazia independent.

"Before, the town was bustling, people strolling, remembers there. Now, life is bad. In Georgia, for cons, everything is beautiful! Especially the roads!"

Monday, November 22, 2010

Are Clorox Tablets Bad For Toilets



It happened lots of things:

September 27 to October 17, 2010 - last show in the great Hall of the City of Refuge Army Hi (the room will be requisitioned to retrieve the furniture and offices that are in places that will be rehabilitated)

from early June to mid November 2010 - exhibition of artist flags (2nd festival of the flame) to Felletin Lavaveix-les-Mines and Crocq (Creuse)

from mid-July to August 15, 2010 - group exhibition at Lavaveix-les-Mines

May 2010 - exhibition at the small cafe Aubusson, "the Fabulous Destiny."


I'm tired I sleep like a log at the moment and I'm typing too much on the computer for computer next year ... I'd like a slave for the slave machine type on which slavery would tell me what I must endure.


a Facebook account for my rant is available to everyone because I have nothing to hide who is already known and as is already known, I rely on people to relate to others what they did not understand (the usual formula for deforming what was already malformed): Jean Luc Moreau Romain

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Cool Facts Triple X Syndrome

NOVALIS

"The only real journey is not to go to other landscapes, but in having new eyes. "Marcel Proust (in Search of Lost Time)

" Novalis "was an exploratory Corinne Boutella. The artist's hand gesture graph - writing - up 'that meets the canvas ...
Then she uses the memory structure becomes an atmosphere, a place of color, a journey inside feelings.
ambiences Hugo's emerge from these small sizes while maintaining a very contemporary line.

Novale, is, n: newly cleared land, fallow. in plur. fields.