CAOS SIRIA/ Frattini: se viene divisa tra Erdogan e Sauditi, salta anche la Libia



Erdogan non si sarebbe fermato, questo Trump doveva saperlo. Adesso il rischio da scongiurare è la divisione della Siria


Il Medio Oriente è tornato una polveriera, e ogni giorno il bollettino peggiora. Il governo di Hariri in Libano, in seguito alle proteste, ha rassegnato le dimissioni. In Siria, dopo il ritiro dei curdi dalla “zona cuscinetto” resta il rischio di una vera e propria guerra tra le truppe turche e quelle di Assad. In Iraq ci sono stati 250 morti da inizio ottobre tra i manifestanti, nell’ultimo caso uomini dal volto coperto hanno sparato sulla folla. La Giordania ha appena richiamato il suo ambasciatore da Israele, che a suo dire detiene due suoi cittadini illegalmente.
 Il centro del Medio Oriente sta sfuggendo di mano, e ai confini di questo nucleo “caldo” si trovano gli attori regionali più forti: Turchia, Iran, Arabia Saudita e Israele. Quattro Stati con interessi e alleanze divergenti. Col disimpegno Usa, l’unico attore di rilevanza globale nell’area resta la Russia. Il Sussidiario ha parlato con Franco Frattini, due volte ministro degli Esteri con Berlusconi a Palazzo Chigi, che ci ha delineato lo schema del pantano mediorientale, e i pericoli che ne derivano per tutto l’Occidente.

Qual è la strategia della Turchia in Siria?
Ha approfittato del vuoto di potere lasciato dagli Usa. Erdogan ha sempre voluto affermare un principio: i curdi devono vivere in zone sotto il controllo della Turchia, per Ankara questo è un interesse nazionale prioritario. Erdogan lo sta solo portando avanti concretamente, Trump ha sbagliato a credere che si sarebbe fermato.
Il presidente Usa pensava che bastasse una moral suasion per fermare i turchi?
Sì. Trump gli ha chiesto di “andarci piano”, ma Erdogan, saputo del ritiro Usa dal Nordest della Siria, ha agito come se il campo fosse sgombro. Anche lui ha fatto male i conti: dagli Usa ha preso le sanzioni e il riconoscimento del genocidio armeno, e appena gli americani hanno mollato la presa, la Russia si è incaricata della stabilità dell’area, e per ora Putin più o meno riesce a mantenere il cessate il fuoco tra Turchia e Assad. Conosco i turchi: senza un “amico” potente a chiederglielo, non si sarebbero fermati ai 30 km della “zona cuscinetto”. A Idlib, e non solo, avremmo visto un bagno di sangue.
Anche perché l’esercito turco, il secondo della Nato, ha i mezzi per farlo.
Sì, ma non bisogna sottovalutare il contingente di Assad, che è tutt’ora forte e combatte sul suo territorio, un luogo dove chiunque rischia di impantanarsi, questo Putin l’ha capito bene.
Lo stesso vale per Trump, che infatti se ne è tirato fuori. È questa la sua strategia?
Sì. D’altronde a Trump, all’inizio del suo mandato, è scappato detto: “Gli Usa devono smetterla di fare il poliziotto globale”.
Questo però lo dicono un po’ tutti i presidenti Usa. Poi le cose vanno diversamente.
Lui però ha cominciato a farlo. Ha detto agli alleati Nato: non pagheremo più per la vostra sicurezza. E questo si è tradotto nel disimpegno in Libia, ai danni dell’Italia, e in Siria, ai danni di tutto l’Occidente. Anche in Afghanistan e in Iraq ha diminuito gli sforzi. Poi, certo, restano alcune mosse estemporanee.
Tipo?
Prima ha detto di volersene andare dal Nordest della Siria, per poi spiegare che alcune truppe sarebbero rimaste. Allo stesso tempo, le forze speciali americane erano a caccia di Al Baghdadi, il califfo dell’Isis, che alla fine hanno trovato e ucciso. Ma l’idea dietro resta, anche se non è attuata in modo lineare.
Quella di un’America concentrata su se stessa. È questo il fine?
Vuole portare alle elezioni del prossimo anno un’America più ricca al suo interno e più lontana dai teatri di crisi. Trump disse: “Basta con le bare coperte dalla nostra bandiera, voglio che i nostri ragazzi si impegnino negli Usa per il bene della patria”.
A chi va il Medio Oriente? Alla Russia, alla Cina?
La Russia resta l’attore più importante sul campo, e gioca sempre di sponda con la Cina: 2 su 5 dei membri del Consiglio di Sicurezza dell’Onu hanno un occhio attento sulle vicende mediorientali. In più la Russia fa da pontiere con l’Iran, che presto potrebbe avere la bomba atomica. Il grande Medio Oriente si sta del tutto destabilizzando, lo scontro tra Qatar e blocco sunnita di Emirati Arabi Uniti e Arabia Saudita è uno scontro tra sunniti. Non si tratta più solo di scontri tra sunniti e sciiti.
Una vera polveriera, mentre ancora non si capisce come andrà a finire la spartizione della Siria.
La Turchia vuole la sua area d’influenza, questo oltre ai curdi è il motivo del suo attivismo in Siria. Ci saranno tre sfere d’influenza: la Turchia al nord vicino ai propri confini, al centro gli sciiti alawiti di Bashar al-Assad, e al sud i sunniti con influenza e soldi di Arabia Saudita. Sperando che tutto ciò basti a mantenerla unita, perché una sua partizione in due o tre parti sarebbe assolutamente devastante.
Più devastante del rischio che continui una guerra che dopo 8 anni ha lasciato solo macerie?
Sarebbe un rischio ancora più grosso perché creerebbe un effetto domino: perché dovrebbe rimanere unita la Libia se tra Cirenaica, Tripolitania e Fezzan ci sono differenze forse anche più grandi di quelle tra un curdo e un sunnita del sud della Siria?
La forma Stato in Africa non è mai attecchita del tutto. Ma è a rischio anche in Medio Oriente?
Questo è il vizio d’origine dell’accordo franco-britannico che, disegnando con la penna i confini degli Stati, pose le condizioni per aggregazioni e disaggregazioni che quei popoli non riconoscono. Se cade uno di questi Stati e si afferma il principio che la Siria si può dividere, altri la seguirebbero. L’opposto dell’interesse occidentale, che è nella stabilità dell’area.
In Libano, il primo ministro Hariri si è dimesso. Si andrà a elezioni o si rischia la guerra civile?
Hariri, e prima di lui suo padre, si è illuso per anni che la sua coalizione potesse fare accordi con Hezbollah, e ora ne paga il prezzo. Hezbollah è un partito sciita filo-iraniano del tutto assolutista, che vuole vincere e non concepisce accordi. Io non so se dietro le enormi proteste di piazza ci sia o no Nasrallah (il leader di Hezbollah, ndr), so che trovare un nuovo primo ministro sarà difficile per il presidente Aoun. Hariri ci mise un anno per creare il governo.
Anche Israele, paese diverso ma confinante, ha difficoltà nel creare un governo.
Israele uscirà da questa fase, è un paese più dinamico. E ha delle risorse che il Libano purtroppo non ha.
(Lucio Valentini, Il Sussidiario.net) 

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Franco Frattini presiede il Premio Italia Giovane 2019. Ecco i talenti premiati nel segno di Leonardo Da Vinci.


Franco Frattini presiede il Premio Italia Giovane 2019. Ecco i talenti premiati nel segno di Leonardo Da Vinci.


Hanno tra i 19 e i 34 anni i vincitori della sesta edizione il Premio Italia Giovane, iniziativa ideata dall’Associazione Giovani per Roma che vuole valorizzare le storie e le esperienze professionali di giovani – rigorosamente under 35 – per condividerle e diffonderle nella società.
La cerimonia si è tenuta presso la sede della Luiss Business School a Roma: in tredici (oltre quattro menzioni speciali) provenienti da tutta Italia, hanno ricevuto il premio in funzione di ciò che trasmettono e rappresentano, per i meriti professionali o per le ricerche scientifiche condotte. Volti e nomi legati alla medicina, al mondo delle start up, spazio, fintech e sport, ma anche impegnati nella società civile, nelle professioni e, in particolare per questa edizione, tra le forze dell’ordine impegnate per la sicurezza del Paese. Fanno incetta i candidati romani, tra cui Aurora Almadori, medico chirurgo che aiuta le donne vittime di mutilazione genitale; Andrea Bonaceto (creatore di un fondo di investimento basato sulla blockchain); Filippo Cocca (Commissario Capo della Polizia di Stato intervenuto durante la tragedia del ponte Morandi a Genova), Vincenzo Elifani; oppure il giovanissimo Avvocato dello Stato Andrea Giordano; Federico Palmieri (Fondatore di BizPlace già segnalato da Forbes tra i 100 under 30 più influenti d’Italia). Il premio, dedicato quest’anno al genio di Leonardo Da Vinci, è presieduto da Franco Frattini (presidente del Sioi), con l’alto patrocinio del Parlamento europeo, vantando il prestigioso riconoscimento della medaglia di rappresentanza del Presidente della Repubblica Sergio Mattarella.
A sostegno dell’iniziativa sono intervenuti, con un messaggio, il Presidente del Consiglio Giuseppe Conte e il presidente del Parlamento Europeo David Sassoli.  Ha evidenziato il primo ministro: “La trasmissione delle conoscenze e la condivisione delle esperienze meritano di essere incoraggiate e costantemente stimolate al fine di promuovere nella società la crescita sana e responsabile delle nuove generazioni”. Plauso anche da Sassoli: Siamo pienamente convinti che i giovani europei possono fare la differenza, oltre ad avere la capacità di cambiare la società in meglio, affinando nel contempo le loro abilità e competenze ai fini dello sviluppo personale, sociale, culturale e professionale. Incentivare i giovani a diventare cittadini attivi oggi è il nostro miglior investimento nel futuro”.
Paolo Boccardelli, direttore della Luiss Business School: “Lo spirito del premio è quello di dare un palcoscenico a giovani talenti che hanno realizzato cose di grande successo: per noi valorizzarli è un motivo di orgoglio ed entusiasmo, tra l’altro rispondendo allo spirito del nostro Ateneo: Luiss è nata per generare classe dirigente dai giovani, e questa iniziativa rientra in ciò che per noi è di fondamentale importanza. Continuate così: coltivate passioni e idee, non arrendetevi mai”.
Per Frattini: “Le storie che abbiamo valutato – ne sono arrivare oltre duecento – sono un inno alla creatività, al coraggio, al pensiero laterale: ecco perché nei partecipanti al premio vediamo gli ideali eredi di Leonardo, il primo ad aver scardinato gli schemi classici per proiettare l’Uomo in un futuro che avrebbe conosciuto solo molti secoli dopo.”
Andrea Chiappetta, presidente del comitato promotore: “Il premio è un serbatoio di qualità, che raccoglie ragazze e ragazzi che hanno trovato la loro strada, purtroppo non sempre in Italia, per realizzare il loro sogno. Di recente il Presidente Mattarella, in visita nella Silicon Valley, ha stigmatizzato proprio questo fenomeno: quello delle menti italiane che corrono all’estero per la ricerca di fondi con cui avviare le proprie start up.  Su tutto questo dovremmo interrogarci e chiederci perché questo accade, e come poter invertire questa tendenza”.Sono inoltre intervenuti Mario Alì, presidente Premio Pair e Gennaro Terracciano, prorettore Università degli studi di Roma “Foro Italico”.
Questi i nomi dei vincitori: Andrea Bonaceto (Fintech), Alberto Atelli (Impegno civico), Antonio Di Franco (Medicina), Vincenzo Elifani (Innovazione), Marco Farci (impresa e internazionalizzazione), Fernando Frediani (Start up), Hady Milani (Spazio), Federico Palmieri ( Start up), Riccardo Patriarca ( Spazio), Edwige Pezzulli (Spazio), Filippo Cocca (Polizia di Stato), Emanuela Perinetti (Start up), Andrea Giordano (Avvocato dello Stato), Aurora Almadori (Medicina), Antonio Vincenti (Medaglia d’oro Carabinieri), Giria Alessandra Russo (Guardia di Finanza) Calogero Terrazzino (polizia penitenziaria).
Tutti i ritratti su www.premioitaliagiovane.it

31.10.19 | Posted in , , , , , , , , | Continua »

Frattini: Italia e Francia hanno “il dovere” di portare avanti una “azione comune” sulla Libia

La Francia e l'Italia. La continua instabilità in Libia
Evento SIOI del 17 ottobre 2019

SIOI, 17 ottobre- Italia e Francia hanno “il dovere” di portare avanti una “azione comune” sulla Libia che possa unire gli attori non-libici attorno a un percorso di institution building che finora è mancato. 

 Lo ha detto oggi Franco Frattini, presidente della Società italiana per l’organizzazione internazionale (Sioi), al convegno “La Francia e l’Italia, la continua instabilità in Libia” tenuto a Roma nell’ambito della decima edizione del Festival della diplomazia. Italia e Francia, secondo Frattini, dovrebbero avere la capacità di portare avanti un “compact libico” che possa mettere insieme “sia il soft power europeo che il political power della Nato”. Un nuovo schema che possa affrontare tutti gli aspetti della crisi in corso: non solo i rischi legati alla sicurezza (traffico di esseri umani, terrorismo, droga), ma anche l'economia libica (e in particolare l'opaco rapporto tra la National Oil Corporatin e la Banca centrale), oltre alla questione legata alle milizie armate da attori stranieri, in particolare non occidentali (Emirati, Egitto e Turchia in primis). © Agenzia Nova

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Evento SIOI: La Francia e l'Italia. La continua instabilità in Libia

Evento SIOI: La Francia e l'Italia. La continua instabilità in Libia

SIOI – Roma | Giovedì 17 Ottobre 2019, h.16.30


Intervengono
Franco FRATTINI, Presidente della SIOI 
Stephen J. MARIANO Dean, Nato Defence College
Alessandro POLITI Direttore, Nato Defence College
Franco VENTURINI Editorialista, Corriere della Sera

Modera
Gabriele CARRER, Giornalista

Evento realizzato in occasione della X edizione del Festival della Diplomazia

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SIOI presents The Arctic Awareness Week: High Level Speakers and the Green Generation meet up to promote international cooperation on Arctic issues and concrete and innovative actions on climate change

The Arctic Awareness Week 
SIOI presents The Arctic Awareness Week: High Level Speakers and the Green Generation meet up to promote international cooperation on Arctic issues and concrete and innovative actions on climate change  

SIOI, Rome 1-4 October 2019 

The Arctic Council Observer States are engaged in the activities of the Arctic Council in several ways with different objectives. One of them is raising awareness among the public and particularly younger generations, as they are the future policy makers, business leaders and global citizens. Youth engagement through conferences, seminars, and workshops is an important aspect of strengthening awareness and accountability of governments, as public opinion can often influence state policies. After Italy’s entrance into the Arctic Council, SIOI has made it a priority to engage in raising awareness within the coming generations concerning sustainable development, protection of the environment and the consequences of climate change in the Arctic region as well as middle latitudes. 

For strengthening relations between Italy, other Observer States and the Arctic States, SIOI organizes, in collaboration with the Royal Norwegian Embassy, the United States Embassy to Italy and the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research, the first Arctic Awareness Week that encompasses all aspects of the Arctic region including the environment, sustainable development, economy and inter-state cooperation. 

The Arctic Awareness Week, October 1-4, is composed of two large events. The first, an International Symposium “Arctic Connections: A trust-building Arctic cooperation on Energy, Security and Blue Economy” (October 1), in which Arctic States and Observers will be invited to participate and discuss pressing issues relating to sustainable development through Arctic infrastructure and communication, national interests and energy opportunities. The blue economy also will be part of the Conference, as a “blue thinking” approach that looks at eco-sustainability and renewable resources as an ocean of possibilities for the benefit of social and economic growth. The aim of the Conference, which will be paneled by international experts, is to create synergies between the human population and environmental reactions, with a specific focus on the Arctic region. In addition to scientific cooperation, the Observer States, like Italy, can play a key role in raising awareness beyond the Arctic Circle and drawing attention to the importance Arctic climate change, and how it can affect areas outside of the Arctic. 

Climate change can be faced only through a sustainable development approach that includes practical aspects such as energy, security and blue economy. 



The second, ZeroHackathon on Oceans and Poles (October 2-4), is an event aimed at youth participation. Youth are invited to develop innovative, high-impact ideas and projects to promote international cooperation, raising awareness on the most pressing issues related to Oceans and Poles, strengthening resilience of multi-scale changes, addressing the rapidly changing climate and the consequences of pollution, improving a safe and secure use of marine protected areas and the Arctic and Antarctic resources. 





More on: www.sioi.org 

27.9.19 | Posted in , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Continua »

Moscow: Franco Frattini speaks about modern politics and global threats at RANEPA

Franco Frattini speaks about modern politics and global threats at RANEPA 

On September 13, former Italian Foreign Minister (2004-2008), President of the Institute for Eurasian Studies Franco Frattini delivered a lecture at RANEPA on Important aspects of West-East relations: Challenges and prospects. 

The honorable guest was introduced by the Rector of the Presidential Academy, Vladimir Mau. Franco Frattini thanked the students for coming to his lecture. The last time he visited the Academy, he was awarded the RANEPA Doctor Honoris Causa title, the speaker said, adding that he was happy to continue cooperation with the Presidential Academy.

He spoke with the students about the relationship between Russia and the European Union and Russian-Italian relations. He noted that during his tenure as Italian Foreign Minister, relations between the two countries, as well as between Russia and the EU, were at the highest level. Franco Frattini regretted that contacts between Russia and the West are tense now, aggravated by the anti-Russia sanctions. He believes the EU has made a number of mistakes, which eventually led to the crisis. 


During his presentation, Mr. Frattini emphasized Russia’s prominent strategic role in promoting the resolution of the Syrian crisis, appreciating its strong presence and results achieved in the fight against terrorism. The speaker noted that while Russia was in Syria and contributed to the fight against terrorism, the EU did not intervene. He also discussed North Africa, including the role of Egypt, and Libya before and after Muammar Gaddafi. According to the speaker, the West should realize there are common interests, and the enemy is not the East or Moscow, but all those “asymmetric threats” such as cybercrime and chemical weapons in the hands of terrorists. We need to confront all these threats together, Mr. Frattini said.

Mr. Frattini’s lecture was organized by the Department of International Regional Studies and Regional Management of RANEPA Institute of Public Administration and Civil Service. 

Franco Frattini was awarded the RANEPA Doctor Honoris Causa title by Rector Vladimir Mau in 2018. Also in 2018, he agreed to co-head a new program on International Humanitarian Cooperation (a Russian-Italian program with in-depth study of foreign languages) at the IPACS Department of International Regional Studies and Regional Management.






What unites Russia and EU is (much) more than what divides them 
Lectio Magistralis 
Prof. Franco Frattini
Moscow, 13 September, 2019
RANEPA, The Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration


I recall with a certain emotion when, in my quality of Foreign Affairs Minister of Italy, in 2002, I could attend an event that helped to make a step forward in the relations between the West and Russia. I’m referring to the historic handshake between President Putin and President Bush, under the auspices of the Italian Government of those days, which admitted Russia to be part of a NATO-Russia Council, thus breaking a cultural, historical, political and diplomatic wall. 

Much more than seventeen years have gone since that far-away 2002. It seems an entire historical period has gone, and unfortunately, today we see as the reestablishment of relations, of a strategic partnership are both in a complex, difficult, in some ways even frozen phase. I’m referring to the strategy that has resulted in the introduction of sanctions against Russia and, of course, to the Russian answer to Europe. 

If I go back to the origin of this crisis, namely the question of Ukraine, with the violent deposition of President Yanukovich, I think we should say that both sides - Ukraine and Russia - have made mistakes; but in my quality of European, of Italian citizen, coming from one of the founder countries of Europe, I am afraid I must say that big errors have been made by Europe. I also remember – I was then still Minister of Foreign Affairs – when in 2009 we celebrated the start of the so-called Eastern partnership, dedicated to Countries – such as the Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia – Europe had declared the intention of strengthening economic and political relations with; well, a failure of Europe dates back to that time, to the initial period of the Eastern partnership. And it's a mistake that, speaking at that 2009 Summit, I had signalled. 

Let me better explain. There was the temptation, maybe the tendency, and in any case we gave the impression, that Europe had created – through the Eastern partnership – a new fast track to the future adhesion of partners to the European Union and maybe even to NATO membership. After many years of negotiations for enlargement, following the success of the 2004 and subsequent enlargements, we gave the impression of wanting to overcome rules, procedures, policies, everything that we call « the acquis » – which any candidate State must reach – while indicating a new “political” process of accelerated accession. 

Certainly this accelerated accession neither would nor should have ever been referred to as perspective. This primarily because there are procedures that all countries must respect. And secondly because, doing so, we gave the impression – and it's an impression that surely did not correspond to the wishes of countries like Italy or France and Spain, which shared on this our same position – that this Eastern partnership was born and developed against Russia: not to cooperate but to counter. It appeared as a new containment policy that, extending to the future of NATO enlargement, certainly gave the impression the Europeans were not acting friendly toward Russia. A few years later, at the time of the negotiations for the signing of the agreement on cooperation and partnership between Ukraine and the European Union, once again that agreement was presented as an alternative arrangement in any Ukraine's ability to continue to work on the East with its main strategic partner, Russia. In other words, it gave the impression that for some EU countries (but not for the others) the real political choice was that Ukraine was faced with an alternative: either you choose the signature with Europe, or you choose the alliance with Russia. 

This alternative was wrong. I believe it is one of the causes of the crisis that followed, but today we have to analyse it calmly. Then, and it’s recent history, we saw the annexation of Crimea, the clashes in the Eastern provinces of Ukraine, and -as I said- errors by all the parties involved, up to the Minsk accords, which today constitute at the same time an objective and a start, because they establish the basis for commitments that must be fully respected on both sides. 

I hope that President Zelensky is changing the Ukraine attitude to engage with Russia, maybe within the “Normandy format” to the full implementation of Minsk Agreement. The announced exchange of prisoners would be a much welcome first step. Italy's position is known, and has been reiterated at the highest levels of the Italian Government. Italy accepted the sanctions policy against Russia for a duty of loyalty, in order to avoid splitting the unity of the European Union, and not because it was (or is) convinced that the way forward is that of economic sanctions, which, among other things, will damage some countries - first of all Italy -, much more than other EU countries. 

Unfortunately, after some years, the Italian successive governments were not strong enough to pretend, at the moment of renewing the sanctions, a deep and substantial political debate, instead of confirming every 6 months. Italy believes that a policy of re-engagement of Russia as a strategic partner is not only necessary, not only urgent, but even indispensable for some major themes of global geopolitics. 

And I'll explain. Our world is going through global and globalized crisis that certainly we cannot solve if the Russian Federation (and incidentally China) are not fully involved along with the West. Russia has certainly a key role in the Syrian issue, because its strategic role and military presence and the strong results achieved against Daesh are well known; where, unfortunately, we must admit, with the policy of the international community we are leaving Syria in the drama, terror, despair of millions and millions of refugees. 

Let’s look to North Africa, to Egypt, where Russia has been able to consolidate a strong presence, providing also with assistance and training to the Egyptian institutions, precisely at a time when some Western countries (but, I want to emphasize, this does not apply to Italy, which increased its relationships) had begun to abandon the current Egyptian Government, with the consequence of a greater fragility in that country. I think no one can deny how much more decisive a strong commitment of Russia in the UN Security Council would be, resulting in a more coordinated framework of solution for Libya, a country battered, divided, where the West thought they can do alone, while the Arab world is in its turn divided inside. The necessary consequence of all this is that, even today, the Security Council is unable to find a way to a resolution that will promote political unity, support, but also launch a serious offensive against terrorism and trafficking of human beings. 

More generally, I see the need for a revival of our engagement with Russia; it is necessary to recreate a strategic partnership in order to counter the challenge to global security and to fight against terrorism, which means cyberterrorism, the so-called cyber-crime; which means economic terrorism, with the huge amount of funding that terrorism still succeeds in collecting through illegal trafficking; and, finally, pure and simple criminal terrorism, Daesh's terrorism, which every day threatens to hit the heart of Europe, and in some case has already affected the European countries, and where – for reasons of convergence of interests – the Russian Federation has exactly our same interest in fighting terrorism before it reaches our homes. I know that the Minsk accords must be implemented; I know that the administrative decentralization of certain regions of Eastern Ukraine must be completed and strengthened to a structure whose virtuous example we Italians have in South Tyrol : the example of a really strong and advanced autonomy. 

I know that there are still investigations and doubts about many victims on each side. All of that is well known. I am equally well aware, in my experience, of the institutional concerns of the Baltic countries, countries that suffered during the Soviet period, countries which aim more to a defence and to a containment rather than to a re-engagement of Russia. I understand these feelings. But I believe that feelings of this kind may be partially mitigated, compensated, looking at an even stronger interest: the global interest, the interest to deal with problems that are common to all of us. That interest, not the divisions, should prevail. I believe this is the meaning of leadership that we expect, that my country expects, that – I think – many Europeans expect from the European Union, its institutions, the Governments of the European countries and also by the Government of the Russian Federation. I see an even worse scenario, if really Trump’s administration will deepen the impact of the U.S. withdrawal from international treaties on non proliferation and arms reduction. I hope that president Trump will be able to react to those, in many American élites and circles, who are pushing him to another cold war era, including nuclear tests and deployment of missiles, that would be exactly the opposite of what the world of today needs. 

It’s time for EU to first gradually review the sanctions-based policy vis-à-vis Russia. Maybe, making a first concrete step by re-opening channels and projects funding from the EBRD to the Russian small and medium enterprises, and so establishing a virtuous circle in view of lifting useless and – for EU and ITA – counterproductive sanctions. I think we should encourage President Trump’s proposal to invite back Russia to join G7, working again as G8 beginning with next year’s U.S. Presidency of G7. France was in favour during last month’s Biarritz G7, and Italy as well. Unfortunately, UK and Germany, because of their current political weakness, were unable to support that move. I hope that U.S. will insist. 

The newly appointed Italian government would be surely in favour. I believe that, rather than repeating mutual accusations, rather than risking falling back into a terrible logic of a new Cold War, it would be good to put on the table, as I tried to do quickly, subjects on which there is a converging interest: our interest as Europeans, Russian friends’ interest, and the entire Western world’s interest, because America and Europe share a goal of global security which cannot be conflicting with the objectives of security which the Russian Federation pursues against drug trafficking or arms trafficking or in contrast to nuclear proliferation. Russia as part of global solution: this should be a key, provided that in the West there are leaders strong enough to elaborate on that principle. These are truly global objectives, because they are goals corresponding to the rules, the founding principles of the United Nations themselves. 

I think today everyone must rethink the logic of confrontation and revive the logic of collaboration, being obviously ready to report when one or the other should let down a transparent sincere and loyal collaboration. 

Thank you very much.

23.9.19 | Posted in , , , , , , , , , , | Continua »

SIGA Inter-regional Summit, Doha 16th-17th September, 2019

SIGA Inter-regional Summit, Doha 16th-17th September, 2019
“Sport Integrity – The Power of Collective Action in the Middle East, Asia and Africa’.


The Chairman of the Sports Integrity Global Alliance (SIGA) Franco Frattini took part in the SIGA Inter-regional Summit, hosted in Doha on September 16th and 17th at Marsa Malaz Kempinski, on the topic “Sport Integrity – The Power of Collective Action in the Middle East, Asia and Africa’. Organized by SIGA, the summit is co-hosted by the International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS) and Qatar Airways, under the patronage of the Minister of Culture and Sports, H. E. Salah bin Ghanem Al Ali.

The conference is the occasion to discuss a number of important topics with experts and specialists in sport integrity from the Middle East, Asia and Africa. The meeting also aims to highlight the gravity of corruption in sport in the region and to develop solutions by encouraging countries to adopt SIGA’s international standard legislation.


Franco Frattini, Chairman of SIGA, said: “We are delighted to hold our second Inter-Regional Summit in Doha and want to thank our partners for their support. The need for sport integrity is greater than ever and SIGA works relentlessly to deliver this fundamental mission. We call upon all countries, all governments and the entire sports industry to join us in this quest and support our efforts. By sports organizations adopting our Universal Standards we will ensure that the game is clean from undue influence and corruption.” SIGA, the world’s largest coalition in the field of sports governance and integrity, presents the Inter-Regional Summit as a neutral and action-oriented platform to bring together thought leaders and international experts from the world of sport, governments, global business and civil society to engage in an open dialogue on the most pressing issues surrounding the integrity of sport.

Source: Ambasciata d'Italia a Doha 


Speech delivered by Franco Frattini



Ladies and Excellences, 

I thank you all for coming from all over the world to this extraordinary regional forum in Doha. We are happy that the first, comprehensive SIGA regional forum in the Middle East on sport integrity is held, with the invaluable support of the government and our sponsors in a Country that is having the responsibility to organize – I’m sure very well – important sport world event, starting by athletics in few days. 

My warm thanks go first to Emanuel Medeiros, our CEO, and his staff, Katie first, for the tireless commitment to make this forum a great reality! I also warmly thank my vice – chairman and friend Mohammed, also deeply committed for a big event in his country, this Country. 

Being myself a judge dealing with anti-mafia cases at the Italian Supreme Court, I know well how much all the components of our societies run the risk to be permeated by criminality in its various forms, from the mafia’s contamination of economic sectors, to the penetration of organized crime and corruption in the field of sports. The universal values of Olympic Charter are first of all a very powerful instrument to educate the younger generations, towards fair and loyal competitions, rigorous training rules, and sacrifices to get every day better results; the pollution, the denegation of those values, instead, tends to lead the youth towards unfair rules to prevail anyway, or to get “easy money”. 

Many supranational Institutions focus now on this topic, from OECD, to the Council of Europe, to UNODOC, and, recently, even the G7, during 2017 German Presidency. Fighting together for sport integrity, rule of law, and international binding rules is and should be a moral, and then an institutional obligation, for States, sport governing bodies, law enforcement authorities, and private sector. In the world of today, organised crime, in search for more profit in a variety of sectors, diversifies its actions, from corruption, to tax crimes, to document forgery with the aim of maximizing economic profits, influencing the Public Administration, laundering illicit money and finally controlling entire territories. 

We have experience, also in Italy, and this is my judicial job, of infiltrations trough various, often converging instruments: from cash – intensive business, to figureheads, to secrecy jurisdictions. The common denominator is the promotion of cultural acceptance of corruption. Sport is now a new risk area; organized crime is unfortunately very attracted by huge flows of money around sports (first, professional football sector), by the visibility of sport events and even more, for the mafias, by the possibility of cleaning criminal reputation through creating consensus rooted in a given territory that they want to control. Failing cannot be an option! 

We call for a big, world alliance of rule of law against those that try to destroy our hopes! Many hidden forces are against us, working for the “Kingdom of the profit” at the expenses of our future and the one of the younger generations! I learned also in my judicial experience of President of the Italian High Court for Sport Justice – this is my second judicial hat – that the way to eradicate the cancer of corruption, spreading illegality, match fixing, exploitation of the youth, is to address and cut the financial routes of crime, that lead to enrich a few against the rest of our societies. From the tracking of sport financial transactions, to the attention needed to the management of sports clubs and facilities, to the ticketing activities, to a deep reform of the main sport governing bodies, to a fair public/private cooperation between decision makers. 

This is the way. 

It shouldn’t be just a dream, a new world where any euro or dollar confiscated to sport criminals under binding rules applicable worldwide is re-invested for new sport initiatives or infrastructures, to the good of the whole societies. Money earned illegally should be reversed to the good of honest people! SIGA aims at spreading worldwide common verification criteria for sports institutions and private sectors involved, to show a kind of “evidence of immunity” from criminal infiltrations and risks related. SIGA aims at promoting global binding rules on sports integrity. Those who like the status quo repeat that “sport should be autonomous and free from any imposition. But exactly because this is the essence of sport, I think that to be free and autonomous, all the sport activities must be first “crime – free!” 

I don’t want to see the current and the new generations live in a crime – dominated world of sport. It is within the reach, if we all believe in it. 

This is SIGA mission, this is why your support and commitment is the key to succeed! 

Thank you.


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White Paper on sport integrity in January, says SIGA Chairman 




Praising Qatar’s efforts in promoting sports and sport integrity in the region, Chairman of the Sport Integrity Global Alliance (SIGA), Franco Frattini, said that the Alliance will present in Rome a White Paper on sport integrity in January next year. 

“The next goal of the SIGA is to present proposals which can become one day binding rules at international level, applicable to all States in the international community. It is quite an ambitious goal,” said Frattini in an interview with The Peninsula. 

Frattini was in Doha to participate in the Inter-regional Sport Integrity Summit on the topic ‘Sport Integrity – The Power of Collective Action in the Middle East, Asia and Africa’. 

He said that the SIGA is an international alliance which has got together sports institutions, States, public institutions and private sector. “Our idea is to bring together all those aimed at improving integrity in the field of sport, preventing illegality and fighting all kinds of criminal activities related to sport.” 

Frattini served twice as Italian Foreign Minister (2002-2004 and 2008-2011), and as Vice-President of the European Commission and Commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security (2004-2008). Frattini said that the first regional summit in Doha was an important step towards achieving SIGA’s goal of adopting universal standards. 

“The first Summit was the American SIGA Summit, which was held in March this year. Doha’s Summit is the first inter-regional summit in the Middle East.” He added that the SIGA would prepare a formal proposal in order to have universal standards to be accepted and applicable in States for sports governance. 

“Our aim is to finalize within few months a White Paper on sports integrity.” He said that suggestions for the White Paper would be collected from all the stakeholders such as States, sports federations, private and public institutions, to shape them into a final proposal. 

Frattini said that the SIGA White Paper would most likely be formally presented in Rome next year sometimes in January. He said that a ‘Common Verification System’ was already in place and very well operational. “Some entities decided to subscribe or accepted these standards to be applicable.” 

Frattini — who also served as President of the De Gasperi Foundation from 2011 to 2013—said that another extremely important idea of the SIGA was to propose to States that money confiscated from criminal organizations be reverted to good initiatives benefiting young generations, such as the construction of stadiums, courts, camps. 

“Every dollar confiscated should be re-used to implement these initiatives in the same country where it was confiscated,” he noted. He said that sports has become a ‘sector at risk’ because of huge flows of money. “Match fixing, briberies, money laundering through sports activities and criminal organisations are putting sport at risk”. Another horrible crime is the exploitation of young athletes by unscrupulous clubs. “Many young athletes from Asia, Africa and Latin America are bought by unscrupulous clubs which bring them to Europe and later they treat them as trash,” he said, adding that a strong fight against this phenomenon is needed. 

On SIGA’s achievement since it was founded in 2015, he expressed his complete satisfaction. “A number of new entities are asking to become full member of the SIGA. We have at present 115 members including States, sports federations, private and public institutions.” He said that the SIGA had signed memorandums of cooperation with many UN agencies and recently signed an agreement with US Sports Council. 

“The Summit in Doha is paving the way for expanding SIGA in the Middle East.” Talking about other SIGA projects in the pipeline, Frattini said that the SIGA was set to launch the initiative ‘Sports Integrity and Diplomacy’ to attract ambassadors for the adoption of common binding rules worldwide. He said that this initiative would be launched by the beginning of next year. To a question, he said that the role of all entities is important for sport integrity. 

“NGOs work on ground and report illegalities. Sports bodies can prevent the spread of corruption within the organizations. States make laws.” He said that the SIGA would give soon a presentation at the European Parliament. “I am also meeting soon the Commissioner for Sport in the European Commission with the aim to develop common rules in the European Union.” 

 Frattini said that he had high expectations with the summit in Qatar because it was being held for the first time in the Middle East. “It is a confirmation of the commitment to organize clean sports events in this part of the world.” 

 He said that Qatar had the capacity to organize clean sports events with no concerns and suspects. “Athletics Championship is set to start and then Qatar will host FIFA World Cup in 2022.” Regarding the preparation of FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022, he said: “They are simply amazing. I was the Foreign Minister of Italy when Qatar won the vote for hosting the 2022 World Cup. All preparations are very well-advanced. It will be a very successful sport event.” He also praised Qatar for its efforts to become a sports hub in the region. “We need countries which can become sports hubs in the region, which is currently critical for security and stability. 

Therefore the focus of the countries should be on sports instead of wars. It is better for everybody.” He said that Qatar had undertaken many important initiatives for the wellbeing of its people. “Likewise, the Italian Government and the Embassy of Italy in Doha are extremely committed to promote wellbeing by raising awareness – especially among young generations – on the importance of sport and sport values to conduct a healthy lifestyle. 

This shared approach could lead Italy and Qatar to work together to devote territories to sport and well-being by creating districts renowned for wellness expertise and high quality of life. This project could make of Doha the first example of ‘Wellness City’, contributing to channelize and guide people through a wellness path. Sport is a life habit not only a competition.”



PRESS RELEASE

The Peninsula - Summit praises Qatar’s sports integrity and governance 
September 18 2019: https://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/18/09/2019/Summit-praises-Qatar%E2%80%99s-sports-integrity-and-governance 

Gulf Times - ‘Qatar is serious on campaign vs corruption in sports’, says SIGA chairman 
September 17 2019: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/641953/Qatar-is-serious-on-campaign-vs-corruption-in-spor 

Gulf Times - PM meets SIGA chairman 
September 17 2019: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/641942/PM-meets-SIGA-chairman 

Gulf Times - Minister meets SIGA officials 
September 17 2019: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/641889/Minister-meets-SIGA-officials 

The Peninsula - Sports summit aims to promote transparency, integrity 
September 17 2019: https://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/17/09/2019/Sports-summit-aims-to-promote-transparency,-integrity 

Gulf Times - ‘Brand reputation and integrity vital for making sponsorship decisions’ 
September 17 2019: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/641955/Brand-reputation-and-integrity-vital-for-making-sp 

Gulf Times - QSL signs co-operation agreement with SIGA
September 17 2019: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/641956/QSL-signs-co-operation-agreement-with-SIGA

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