terça-feira, 14 de outubro de 2014

Islandia: um bastiao avancado do Estado Islamico? -

Visita hoje o Brasil o Ministro dos Negócios Estrangeiros da Islândia, Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson, mas não se sabe o que ele terá discutido com as autoridades brasileiras.
O que se sabe sobre as relações do Brasil com a Islândia?
Aparentemente são distantes e frias, não querendo abuser da geografia e da climatologia.
Mas a Islândia tem excelentes fontes de energia geotérmica, razão pela qual "roubou", se ouso dizer, algumas empresas brasileiras que preferiram se expatriar para lá por uma razão muito simples: custo da energia.
Num momento em que o custo médio mundial da energia anda em torno de 31 dólares por Mgw/hora (ou qualquer outra unidade parecida, pois eu cito de cabeça, mas as proporções são válidas), o Brasil cobra de suas empresas o dobro disso.
Empresas altamente dependentes de eletricidade, como as de alumínio, se mudaram para a Islândia, passando a importar do Brasil apenas a material prima. Perdeu o Brasil, ganhou a Islândia.
É o que dá ter tarifas muito altas de energia, e não é porque a produção e os insumos sejam caros, não, eles estão entre os mais baratos do mundo. É porque no Brasil o imposto aumenta em 100%, eu disse 100% o custo final.
Pronto, agora vem outra notícia, menos agradável:


Why the Islamic State is interested in Iceland 


The Washington Post, October 14 at 2:01 PM 
 
The extremist militants of the Islamic State have surprised many with their sophisticated social media strategy and slick propaganda videos. New details show how the militants' quest for PR professionalism has led its cyber warriors to an unlikely location.
Last Sunday, an Icelandic company announced it had closed down a Web site with the domain khilafah.is that it believed was affiliated with the Islamic State. Iceland's general Web site domains, which end with '.is,' are likely to have drawn a special interest by the Islamic State, which is often abbreviated to IS as well.
The site's purpose was unambiguous: "This is the news publishing website of the Islamic State," the homepage reportedly read, featuring visual material showing the murder of hostages and other gruesome propaganda videos. Now, the site appears to be offline.
According to ISNIC (Internet á Íslandi), the private company in charge of Iceland's web domain registration, the decision was made last Sunday, but the site had reportedly been online since mid-September. "Never before has ISNIC suspended a domain on grounds of a website's content," a statement on the company's Web site read. The decision was welcomed by Iceland's Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson, who told the daily Morgunbladid: "This has nothing to do with freedom of expression, but criminal and monstrous conduct. We have to be able to shut that down."
Apart from legal reasons, ISNIC took into account the possibility that the Icelandic domain's reputation could be threatened "to a great extent," one of the company's legal advisers, Steindor Dan Jensen, told The Washington Post.
Iceland's decision to shut the alleged Islamic State Web site down also drawn criticism. Wikileaks, for instance, condemned the crackdown in several tweets, saying "everyone has the right to see and judge the arguments of IS." It continued.
Helgi Hrafn Gunnarsson, an Icelandic member of parliament representing the Internet-savvy Pirate Party, criticized the decision on Facebook. Instead of discussing whether Islamic State militants should have the right to feature their content under an Icelandic domain the debate should focus on the rights of Icelandic citizens "to be informed about what it is that the Islamic State says, believes and wants," in order to draw own conclusions, according to the politicians' Facebook account.
"ISNIC finds the question of censorship not applicable, since it is not a government entity, but a private company protecting its business," legal adviser Jensen told The Post, reacting to the criticism.
The Islamic State and users affiliated with the militants continue to operate Web sites under other domains, but none of them draw such an obvious connection to a country as in the case of Iceland.
American companies have been particularly harsh in dealing with Islamic State affiliated users: Both Twitter and Facebook have cracked down on online propaganda distributed via their social networks, forcing Islamic State militants to search for less popular alternatives or to face the possibility of having their accounts suspended.
Rick Noack writes about foreign affairs. He is an Arthur F. Burns Fellow at The Washington Post.

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