europe

International News Roundup

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Suicide Bombs Just Won’t Stop Afghanistan took another grieving day today after a Taliban suicide bomber packed a tanker truck chock full of explosives and detonated it in Kandahar’s temporary council office. Felt throughout the city, the bomb killed six people, wounded 40 and caused five houses to cave in on themselves. Few newspapers or Web sites ever analyze what bomb-wounded really means: these folks may not be dead, but they’re badly burnt, some of them maimed or blinded, nursing gashes and lost limbs. Even one dead or one wounded is still too many.

Another Bomb and…Attending School is a…Sin? And in the same article as above, we learn that in another part of Afghanistan, the Nangarhar Province, not only did a Taliban suicide bomber slam into an American military convoy, killing what media outlets have estimated at between 56 and 74 people, but also that two as-yet-unidentified motorcyclists sprayed eight adolescent girls on their way to school with battery acid. Why? Because they were women attempting to receive an education.

When Will the Congo Heal If it’s not Belgian oppression, it’s widespread rape. If it’s not rape, it’s coerced fighting. Young men in eastern Congo have run from their homes, choosing displacement over membership to rebel forces. These men have explained the rebels beat their home doors down, seeking new ranks, stopping at nothing to gain new hands to help their cause.

Europe Wants no More from Russia (With Love or Not) Tired of facing the fact that more than 60 percent of its energy comes from imports (two fifths of that Russian in source), the EU is planning a supergrid of internal power supplies (e.g. increasing dependence on North Sea area wind farms) that would rely less on Russian monopoly.

From EU HQ in Brussels: America and Europe Need Each Other

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

Here in Brussels, the capital of the European world, 11 U.S. journalism graduate students are being hosted by the European Commission for week long conferences with European Union and NATO officials. The purpose of the press visit is to teach a new generation of journalists how to cover Europe for an American audience. It is clear that coverage problems of the EU are immense; most Europeans fail to understand the system, making it even more difficult to relate issues across the Atlantic.

Two of us hail from USC, with other graduates traversing from Northwest, Berkeley, Texas, Maryland and Missouri. On Monday, Research Fellow Sebastian Kurpas of the Center for European Policy Studies explained the political effects of an under-covered EU, including the difficulty of European policy makers to pass new legislation. Most notably, the recent Treaty of Lisbon—which was rejected by Ireland in June 2008 because the content was unclear to the general population (warranting campaign slogans such as: “If you don’t know, vote no”). Kurpas explained that a strong media presence is necessary in Brussels if convoluted political legislation is going to be translated to ground level.

But this is part of a much larger problem. Europeans across the continent view the EU as an elite and disconnected entity—not an overarching system of unity. The fundamental paradox at the heart of the system is a difficult one to grasp: maintaining nationalistic pride and conservative values while promoting the pooling of sovereign power and a shared European community. In practice, this means countries consult with the EU before making big decisions, and the recent financial mess proves that Europeans have not yet achieved this level of oneness. Rather than look for a continent-wide solution to the economy’s downturn, such as a European financial fund —a shared “pot” of emergency money to bail out banks across EU member countries, the sentiment has been “Every man for himself.” The UK began nationalizing banks, Germany pulled a surprise card, Ireland announced that it would guarantee all bank accounts, and everyone started clambering in different directions hoping to save themselves.

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