Thursday, 13 March 2014

Rein Gold’ gives Wagner a techno, Marxist spin

‘Rein Gold’ gives Wagner a techno, Marxist spin
Austrian Nobel Prize winner Elfriede Jelinek's new play 'Rein Gold,' set to songs from Richard Wagner's 'Ring' cycle, ranges from the tedious to the brilliant. Its premiere this week at the Staatsoper Berlin drew a younger crowd than usual to the renowned opera house, with around a third of audience standing out from the sea of white hair and elegant women's hats.
Jelinek's 'Rein Gold' updates the storyline from the first opera in Wagner's four-part masterpiece and puts criticism of modern capitalism at its core. Wotan, played by Jürgen Linn, decides to take on a mortgage to build Valhalla, but his daughter Brünnhilde (Rebecca Teem) is conflicted. The actors playing Wotan's children - Philipp Hauss, Katharina Lorenz, and Sebastian Rudolph - also alternate into speaking roles attributed to Wotan, Brünnhilde and Siegfried. That makes for a complex production in which some roles, like Wotan's, are taken on by more than one actor over the course of the performance.
The children hate the idea of Valhalla being built with money from the bank and accuse their father of enslaving himself to the finance industry. Wotan responds to their protests in song, drawing in part on the score to Wagner's 'Ring' cycle.
But the music for the over three-hour production, which ranges widely from opera to electronica, is unlikely to be to Wagner purists' tastes. At one point, Linn belts out an opera-inflected rendition of 'No More Heroes' by English 80s punk bank The Stranglers. At another, the actors engage in a series of monologues that are set to soft electronic music.
Heavy-handed criticism
Jelinek's play makes frequent reference to anti-capitalist critique, with the actors delivering lines like, 'Huge amounts of money are being moved around, but nothing comes of it,' 'Property itself is theft, and, in the end, we are all thieves' and 'Even God has become a slave to money.'
At one juncture, actors wheel out a piano and a platform filled with synthesizers and computers - seemingly in an effort to suggest how the worlds of modern finance and technology can collude to render workers obsolete. Hauss motions to the orchestra members' empty seats, and then the synthesizers, exclaiming, 'These machines have replaced the workers!'
Long before the play reaches its climax, older audience members begin to exit the opera house in droves. But they leave many of their younger counterparts glued to their seats.
What the frustrated theater-goers may not realize is that many of the ideas about property and money in Jelinek's work stem from Wagner himself - in particular, from his essay 'Die Revolution' (The Revolution), written in 1849 and published in the playbill.
Strong performances, brazen effects
When it comes to Wagner's music, the performances are quite strong at points. But the script often calls on the actors to talk - loudly, into microphones - while Brünnhilde and Wotan are singing. As Linn sings snippets of 'Wotan, Gemahl, erwache!' from Wagner's 'Das Rheingold,' Lorenz begins shouting at him, 'Why do you promise me a hero? You always make promises that you don't deliver on!'
The stage effects are also bold and jumbled, featuring waste paper basket fires, Brünnhilde dressed as a 1950s Stepford wife and money that rains down on the stage, followed by bodies dropping from the ceiling. An actor dressed in a pink panther costume places the bodies into garbage bags - the pink cartoon figure being a reference to the symbol used by the German neo-Nazi group NSU, who killed Turkish and other immigrants with seeming impunity over the course of a decade.
The Rhine maidens fondle the pink panther while singing, 'Germany is ending as a nation, but at least it has learned to have a sense of humor.'
Meanwhile, Wotan drives on stage in a 1970s VW camper - the roof of which is on fire. Then, the actors reenter, riding bicycles around a bellowing Wotan and thrusting up signs with messages such as, 'Germany, the future is in your hands.'
Musically on the safe side?
Though visually striking, the production includes some questionable choices, like forcing the stage actors to croak out arias alongside seasoned Wagnerian singers like Teem and Linn.
However, the work proves that Wagner's music can mesh with the right electronic effects - for a lovely result.
The scene in which the Rhine maidens sing the famous central motif of 'Das Rheingold' offers one example. Draped sensually, like Las Vegas lounge singers in their sequin dresses, the maidens sometimes whispered, sometimes belted out the Rheingold song. Some of their many renditions were set to rumbling bass notes from modular synthesizers (operated by Thomas Kürstner and Sebastian Vogel) and to David Robert Coleman's piano accompaniment.
There was no shortage of musical dabbling on stage. But in talking with the younger people in the audience - and perhaps those older Wagnerians who stayed for the entire hours-long affair would have agreed - there was a shared sense of wanting more musical experimentation than Jelinek's 'Rein Gold' provides.

European Parliament backs common mobile phone charger

European Parliament backs common mobile phone charger
The European Parliament on Thursday approved by 550 votes to 12 an amendment to the bloc\'s radio equipment laws, paving the way for a common charger for mobile devices to be made available to consumers by 2017.
Rapporteur Barbara Weiler said she was particularly glad the modernized Radio Equipment Directive now included details on the introduction of such a charger for mobile phones, tablets and other mobile devices from producers such as Nokia, Sony, Apple, Motorola and Samsung.
'This serves the interests both of consumers and the environment,' Weiler said in a statement. 'It will put an end to charger clutter and 51,000 tons of electronic waste annually.'
Greater monitoring powers
European lawmakers also backed provisions that would give authorities additional market surveillance tools to detect radio equipment products which failed to comply with new safety and non-interference rules.
The draft law only has to be formally approved by the European Council, comprising the EU's heads of state.
The EU's executive commission will negotiate the optimal design with device manufacturers over the coming months.
The EU`s 28 member states will be given two years to incorporate the changes into national legislation, while manufacturers of mobile devices will have an additional year to comply.

Lufthansa airline pays higher dividend despite lower profit

Lufthansa airline pays higher dividend despite lower profit
Lufthansa's net profit for 2013 slumped to 313 million euros ($436 million) from a 2012 bottom line of 1.2 billion euros, Germany's biggest airline announced in its 2013 annual report released Thursday.
The drop by 75 percent had been expected, the airline said, as the 2012 result had largely been boosted by non-recurring income from transferring operations at its Austrian Airlines subsidiary. Moreover, 2013 earnings had been depressed by restructuring costs such as severance pay for laid-off workers, it added, as well as by outlays for projects such as changing seats in Lufthansa's Business Class.
Stripping out the one-off effects, operating profit jumped by 62.1 percent to 1.042 billion euros last year on the back of slightly lower revenues of about 30 billion euros.
Noting that Lufthansa's earning power had again been strengthened in 2013, Chief Executive Christoph Franz said that the airline's performance had been driven primarily by rising passenger numbers.
'This performance in our core business segment has prompted us to propose to the annual general meeting that a dividend of 0.45 euros be paid,' Franz said in a statement.
Lufthansa last paid a dividend in 2011 - one which was considerably lower at 0.25 euros per share.

De Kerchove: ‘Terror threat still present in Europe’

De Kerchove: ‘Terror threat still present in Europe’
Deutsche Welle: Ten years ago, on March 11, 2004, terrorist attacks on trains in Madrid killed 191 people and left 2,000 people injured. How would you evaluate the threat that exists today?
Gilles De Kerchove: I would say that the threat has changed a lot not only since the Madrid bombings but since 9/11. At the time we were confronted with an organization - Al Qaeda, which was very well-structured, like a multi-national company. It has morphed into something completely different. We now have franchises of al Qaeda everywhere in the world. We have seen some 'lone wolves' - people acting by themselves with no link to the al Qaeda core. And we have recently seen a rise of Europeans going to Syria - going there to fight. And that raises a specific security challenge.
Are al-Qaeda-related or inspired groups the main threat or has the threat also shifted to other groups?
The threat raised by al-Qaeda-directed or al-Qaeda-inspired groups remains the most important terrorist problem for Europe. Of course we've had cases in Germany where migrants were killed by right-wing extremists, we've had [Norwegian terrorist Anders Behring] Breivik. We probably have to work a bit more on that. But the threat related to al Qaeda remains the main threat.
How is Europe connected to conflicts taking place in countries like Afghanistan or Syria?
What we see - and that's one factor that amplifies the threat - is that we have more failing or failed states. And we know that these types of groups want to avail themselves of failing states to regroup, to train, to reinforce themselves. And therefore, for the time being, one of the challenges with the so-called Arab Spring countries is that many of these countries had to dismantle their security services - because they were the arm of repression. And they are weaker than they were before because these are democracies under construction.
And this raises an additional challenge because as I said these groups are very mobile. Afghanistan - and you could also mention Iraq - is in deep trouble. Also the countries around Syria, and Egypt with the Sinai, where we see many different groups regrouping. Libya is very weak at the moment. In the southern part of Syria we have a hotspot as well. All these [countries] constitute an important challenge for the European Union. And that should lead us to do more to help them to rebuild their security apparatus.
You mentioned so-called homegrown terrorists - people who have grown up in Europe and go to these 'hotspots,' to return radicalized. How great is the threat from people like that?
The conflict in Syria plays an important role. It is a real magnet. We probably have more than 2,000 Europeans who have been or are getting back from Syria. It's a possible threat because there they get training, they know how to use a Kalashnikov and build a bomb. They will have a network of friends from all over the world. We know from studies that in recent years 60 percent of the attacks have involved someone who was trained abroad, who had fought abroad. And therefore we have to define a smart policy to handle the returnees in the best way possible.
Do you think Europe's coordination of the fight against terror has improved?
We have made a lot of progress. I think we have managed to define an EU policy that is pretty balanced - where we try to not only mobilize the police and criminal justice but we try to invest in prevention. We are more engaged in third countries, we now have specific financing programs to help third states to beef up their capability as well. But the Treaty [of Lisbon] says [member states] are solely responsible for their national security. The European Union is there to help the member states, to make them more effective but we're not there to replace the member states.
Through an intense cooperation between the different security and intelligence services and the police and so on, all member states have been able to prevent concrete attacks. It's not always publicized, sometimes you need to stay discrete. But indeed we have not had a major terrorist attack since the Madrid and the London bombings.
Cooperation with the US is also seen as key to successful counter-terrorism. In light of the recent scandal over the NSA's data collection, how important is collecting all this data in the fight against terrorism?
We need close cooperation with the US. It is a huge provider of intelligence, and it shares a lot of it with all member states and helps us a lot. I've always been in favor of reinforcing transatlantic cooperation even further. We should keep investing in that relationship. On the other hand, the leaks from [Edward] Snowden have raised a lot of concern in terms of privacy. And that's one of the stumbling blocks in our relationship. We would like [the US] to recognize and better protect the privacy of EU citizens.
Do you think an overarching Euopean secret service would be a good idea?
The Treaty of Lisbon is very clear […] that national security remains the sole competence of the member states. The 28 member states are not ready to let the European Union develop an intelligence capacity for the time being. One day you may think that could be developed but that's for after my retirement I'm afraid.
Ten years on, would you say that attacks like the ones in Madrid could never happen again?
No. There is nothing like 100-percent security. But it's much less likely. We share more data, we are much smarter than we were before. But especially in regard to the more than 2,000 Europeans who have been to Syria […], it's very difficult to say that we won't have any attacks. That's why we need to remain extremely vigilant and well-prepared.
Gilles de Kerchove (57) is the second counter-terrorism coordinator the EU has seen. After years working as a legal expert in the European Council, he also teaches European law at several Belgian universities. The position of counter-terrorism co-ordinator was created in March 2004 following the terrorist attacks in Madrid. The first person to take on the job was Gijs de Vries, who resigned in 2007 complaining that member states were not willing to cooperate, undermining his position authority.

Number of children affected by Syrian war doubled in last year, says UNICEF

Number of children affected by Syrian war doubled in last year, says UNICEF
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said in a report released late Monday that at least 10,000 children have been killed in the Syrian conflict. However, the organization noted that the actual number was probably much higher.
After three years of civil war, hundreds of thousands of Syrian children remain trapped in besieged parts of the country, said UNICEF.
'Syria is now one of the most dangerous places on earth to be a child,' said the report. 'In their thousands, children have lost lives and limbs, along with virtually every aspect of their childhood.'
'They have lost classrooms and teachers, brothers and sisters, friends, caregivers, homes and stability,' it added. 'Instead of learning and playing, many people have been forced into the workplace, are being recruited to fight, or subjected to enforced idleness.'
UNICEF has singled out the conflict's use of child soldiers by both rebel and military fighters, launching a campaign last week aimed at ending their recruitment by government forces in the country by 2016.
'The dangers for children go beyond death and injury,' UNICEF said Monday. 'Boys as young as 12 have been recruited to join the fighting, some in actual combat, others to work as informers, guards or arms smugglers.'
Twice the number of children affected
A total of 5.5 million children have been affected by the conflict, more than twice the number UNICEF estimated in March 2013. Nearly 3 million young Syrians have been displaced inside the country, up from 920,000 last year. The total number of child refugees has risen from 260,000 a year ago to 1.2 million. Some 425,000 of those refugees are under the age of five.
The report said 2 million children were in need of some form of psychological support or treatment, while noting the war's devastating impact on schooling.
'The decline in Syrian children's access to education has been staggering,' UNICEF said. 'Today, nearly 3 million children in Syria and in neighboring countries are unable to go to school on a regular basis. That's about half of Syria's school-age population.'
The problems extend outside Syria's borders, said the report. One in every five Syrian girls in Jordan is forced into an early marriage, while one in 10 Syrian refugee children is now working.
'This war has to end so that children can return to their homes and rebuild their lives in safety with their family and friends,' said UNICEF Director Anthony Lake. 'This third devastating year for Syrian children must be the last.'

Gaza barrage prompts Israeli warnings

Gaza barrage prompts Israeli warnings
Islamic Jihad militants claimed responsibility for Wednesday's rocket fire from Gaza. Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said the Jewish state had 'no alternative' but to re-occupy the 'entire Gaza Strip.'
He made his remark to the private Israeli Channel 2 television. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu avoided a reoccupation threat but said his country would act against those who launched the rockets 'with great force.'
'We will continue to foil and hurt those who want to hurt us,' Netanyahu said in a social network message.
Israel responds with shelling
The Israeli military said its artillery and tanks stationed on the Gaza border replied by shelling at least two launching sites in Gaza.
Visiting Jerusalem, Britain's Cameron said the rocket attacks were 'completely indiscriminate.' Referring to lengthy diplomatic efforts to establish a Palestinian state alongside Israel, he said 'there is no violent route to statehood.'
Largest in two years
Wednesday's rocket barrage from Gaza was the largest since 2012, the militant group said, referring to an eight-day offensive against Gaza militants four years ago that claimed the lives of 177 Palestinians and six Israelis.
The Islamic Jihad said Wednesday it had fired the rockets to avenge an Israeli airstrike that killed three of its fighters on Tuesday.
One rocket landed in the southern Israeli town of Sderot, but caused not injuries, said Israeli officials, adding that eight rockets had impacted in built-up areas. The others fell in open areas.
Residents were told to shelter indoors. Of some 30 rockets fired, three were intercepted by Israel's 'Iron Dome' missile system, said Israel's military.
Border crossing closed
Palestinian officials said Israel also responded to the attack by closing indefinitely the Kerem Shalom border crossing for freight.
In 2005, Israel pulled its soldiers and settlers out of Gaza, which is now run by Hamas Islamists. Israel has since maintained a naval and air blockade.
Last week, Israeli special forces captured a ship in the Red Sea that was carrying rockets and other weapons that Israel claims were supplied by Iran and destined for Gaza.

Libyan ex-premier flees to Europe

Libyan ex-premier flees to Europe
Ex-premier Ali Zeidan reportedly fled to Europe on Wednesday, a day after Libya's interim parliament in Tripoli voted him out of office for failing to stop an oil export by rebels from eastern Libya.
Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat told the state-owned Maltese television TVM that Zeidan stopped over on the Mediterranean island nation late on Tuesday.
Maltese government sources quoted by Reuters said Zeidan left on board a private plan bound for Germany. This was not confirmed by German authorities.
Zeidan lived for many years in Europe before the 2011 uprising against the late-Muammar Gadhafi encouraged exiles like him to return home.
Libya's parliament, the General National Congress (GNC), removed Zeidan on Tuesday after rebels holding three key ports in eastern Libya disobeyed government orders and let shipments be handled by the state-run National Oil Corporation.
On Tuesday, the large North Korea-flagged tanker Morning Glory, loaded with crude oil from the rebel-controlled port of Sidra, escaped through a improvised naval blockage imposed by Zeidan. The tanker then entered international waters.
Last Saturday, Zeidan had threatened to bomb the 37,000-ton vessel if it set sail.
Fighting broke out briefly later on Tuesday in the central coastal city of Sirte, between rebels and pro-government forces.
Caretaker premier
The interim parliament appointed Defense Minister Abdullah al-Thini as caretaker premier for 15 days. The parliament's speaker, Nuri Abu Sahmain, had been engaged in a power struggle with Zeidan,
Since the 2011 ouster of Gadhafi, Libya has been divided along tribal, regional and political lines, with hardline Islamists opposed to more liberal figures such as Zeidan.
The country has no effective army or police and its Tripoli-based government risks running out of money because of rebel activities