Thursday, February 3, 2011

"L'état d'urgence bientôt levé en Algérie, dit Bouteflika"

L'état d'urgence bientôt levé en Algérie, dit Bouteflika

Bouteflika essaye d’anticiper pour éviter le sort de ses compères Benali et Moubarak.

Pour nous autres Marocains, la résolution définitive de la question du Sahara ne dépend évidement pas de l’aboutissement des négociations avec le Polisario. Elle nécessitera plutôt un changement vers un système démocratique en Algérie. Tans que les généraux d'Alger sont au pouvoir, le Polisario survivra.

D’un point de vue spirituel et émotionnel, nous prions pour plus de liberté avec autant de ferveur en Egypte qu’en Algérie, les deux peuples étant nos frères de par l’Humanité, l’Islam, la Langue et l’Histoire commune.

D’un point de vue géostratégique, nous sommes de tout cœur avec la révolution Egyptienne en pensant à notre chère Palestine. 


Nous sommes tout autant avec la révolte espérée en Algérie, en pensant à notre cher Sahara…

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Nessma TV's volte-face and the failed "Dance and Shut-up!" media policy




Nessma, the private Tunisian TV channel, was quite a success story in the last few years. It was able to draw significant audiences from Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria to watch its line-up.
For an outside observer, the media landscape in Tunisia seemed to be following a path of liberalization with the burgeoning of many private TV channels (Nessma, Hannibal) and FM radio stations (Mosaïque FM).


The previous resident of the Carthage Palace, who just got the boot from his people, saw it fit to pursue a policy of media pseudo-liberalization by allowing the existence of private media outlets whose sole mission was to overwhelm the audience with endless music shows, football matches, entertainment talk-shows and celebrity gossip.
It was apparent that the red line for Nessma and its peers was any meaningful debate on the issues that matter: namely any substantive discussion on-air about political issues, democracy, problems of economic governance and influence or the plight of the youth living in unemployment and under the poverty line.
Although Tunisia was on the forefront of this façade-liberalization that could be summarized under “Dance and Shut-up!”, it is by no means the only North-African country that followed this failed strategy.


When we tune in to the radio or TV next time, to enjoy our favorite sport, or music or talk show, let us all keep in mind to do so with an alert mind and to not let “controlled” entertainment distract us from the real issues affecting us, our people and our countries.


Or to borrow from Karl Marx’s famous analogy, let it not be our opium!