Ignacio Ramonet

Ignacio Ramonet Miguez

Ignacio Ramonet, Salon du livre, Geneva (2011).
Born (1943-05-05) 5 May 1943
Redondela, Pontevedra Province
Alma mater Bordeaux Montaigne University

Ignacio Ramonet Miguez (born 5 May 1943 in Redondela, Pontevedra Province) is a Spanish journalist and writer.

He was the editor-in-chief of Le Monde diplomatique from 1991 until March 2008.[1]

An editorial published by Ramonet on December 1997 in this magazine resulted in the launching of ATTAC. In addition, Ramonet is one of the founders of the NGO Media Watch Global, and currently he is president of this organization. Ramonet also frequently contributes to El País and participates in an advisory council to TeleSUR.

Life

Ramonet grew up in Tangier. He studied engineering at Bordeaux, Rabat and Paris, and he has been professor at Paris Diderot University.

Ignacio Ramonet participated in the Stock Exchange of Visions project in 2007.

Ideology

Socialism

Ramonet calls it a betrayal of socialism that some social democrat parties have chosen the third way between socialism and capitalism.[2]

Fidel Castro

The NGO Reporters without Borders had written about Ramonet's strong relationship with Fidel Castro. Ramonet denied this claim in 2002.[3] In May 2004, Ramonet supported Castro in a direct television interview when Castro protested about the Forbes Magazine's list of country leaders wealth. Castro was number 7 on the list.[4] In September 2006, Ramonet published the book Fidel Castro : Biografía a Dos Voces.[5]

In 2006, Ramonet praised Castro in a series of articles,[6] and became his only authorised biographer.[7]

Against globalization and neoliberalism

Ramonet has called for autarky and for regulation, taxes and tariffs that reduce international trade.[2]

Attac

According to Ramonet, globalization and ultra-liberalism threaten the sovereignty of national states. In his December 1997 editorial "Disarming the markets" Ramonet accused globalization for the Asian economic crisis and for threatening the identity of national states. To counter this, he called for an NGO for promoting Tobin tax (i.e., Attac).[2]

Works

Articles

See also

  1. "To our readers". Mondediplo.com. 2008-03-03. Retrieved 2014-02-12.
  2. 1 2 3 Vilka är franska Attac? - Globaliseringskritikernas gurus, Johan Norberg, Liberal Debatt 1-2001
  3. "Anticastrisme primaire, par Ignacio Ramonet (Le Monde diplomatique)". Monde-diplomatique.fr. Retrieved 2014-02-12.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2011-05-15.
  5. ISBN 0-307-37653-2
  6. Ignacio Ramonet: "Cuba's Future is Now", "Castro's Enviable Record" and "Viva Fidel!" in Was Fidel Good for Cuba?, Foreign Policy, December 27, 2006 (pdf)
  7. Cuba’s revolution 50 years on, Financial Times, January 24, 2009
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