June 30, 2006

Bolivia launches constitutional reform

by Lisa Garrigues
CUSCO, Peru
It began as a long march by indigenous people through the Amazon jungle in 1990, shook the streets of Bolivia in 2003 and 2005, brought down two presidents and elected the first Indian president of Bolivia in December 2005.

On July 2, the people of Bolivia will finally begin the process which indigenous groups and social movements have been demanding for 15 years: the rewriting of Bolivia's constitution.

Two hundred and fifty-five representatives will be elected, with a quota of women, who will draft the new constitution over the next year. Simultaneously, Bolivians will vote on a referendum for greater autonomy for the country's wealthy eastern region.

In the four months he has been in office, Bolivian president Evo Morales has cut his own salary and the salary of other government officials, nationalized Bolivian oil, begun ambitious land reform and literacy programs, and imported Cuban doctors to work in poor, rural communities.

Now, in his proposal for the new constitution, Morales reframes Bolivia, which is 65 percent indigenous, as a state based on ''plurality, equality, and the dialogue between cultures.'' But as the elected representatives add their own ideas to Morales' proposal, he will be challenged not just by conservatives who opposed his election but by some Indian and campesino organizations who say they have been excluded from the constitutional assembly process.

''Refundar Bolivia,'' a document released by Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) in May, specifically mentions the struggles of Andean indigenous heroes.

It lessens the power of the Catholic Church by redefining Bolivia as a lay state with respect for all religions and beliefs. It makes the Wiphala, a flag that has been a symbol of Latin American Indian unity and resistance, the official flag along with the current one. Aymara, Quechua and Guarani are named as official languages along with Spanish, and Bolivia's indigenous population is ensured the right to their political systems, cultural traditions and natural resource management. The coca leaf, as a cultural tradition, is guaranteed protection by the state.

Several campesino and Indian organizations are mentioned as having worked on the MAS proposal, including the Confederacion Sindical Unica de Trabajadores Campesinos de Bolivia (CSUTCB) and the Consejo Nacional de Ayllus y Marqas de Qollasuyo (CONAMAQ).

But in April, some of the leaders of CONAMAQ, a nongovernmental organization headed by Martin Condori, took to the streets and burned papers representing agreements with MAS, officially ending the relationship. They claimed that MAS had not given them enough representation in its selection of candidates for the constitutional assembly. Vice President Alvaro Linera responded that MAS could not give them more without excluding other groups.

''Evo is one of our sons,'' said Jaime Perez Castro, one of the mallkus, or authorities, of CONAMAQ, ''but is he paying attention to his ancestral culture?''

Castro says CONAMAQ will present Morales with its own proposal, emphasizing indigenous forms of political organization.

''We're not interested in communism or capitalism,'' he said. ''We want to return to the system of Ayllus we had before the colonization.''

Leaders of CSUTCB, which was once headed by Felipe Quispe, Morales' opponent in the 2002 presidential elections, have also expressed dissatisfaction with Morales, ranging from accusations that he is still surrounded by too many members of the previous government to charges that his proposal is ''too European'' or that Hugo Chavez is wielding too much power in Bolivia.

Quechuan activist Marta Orozco, who worked with Morales before his presidency, said some of the dissatisfaction from Indian groups is because ''Morales is a syndicalist, not an Indianist. But it's all healthy self-criticism, a necessary part of the process.''

Faustino Aricagua, Mallku of the indigenous group El Consejo de Suyus Aymaras y Quechuas del Qullasuyu (CONSAQ), emphasized the need for unity.

''Evo is working hard to incorporate all 36 of our national indigenous cultures,'' he said.

''What we need to do is change the cultural self-esteem of every single Bolivian,'' said Aricagua. ''This can't happen in three or four months.''

One of the major criticisms from indigenous organizations and social movements has been that the hurried deadline for gathering signatures made it impossible for them to present candidates, essentially handing over the assembly to political parties and excluding other organizations.

Democracy Center Director Jim Schultz has commented in his Web blog from Bolivia that this may be one of the reasons for the relative lack of enthusiasm for the constitutional assembly elections compared to the presidential elections of December. Without the enthusiasm MAS was able to generate in December, he said, Morales may end up with a majority of assembly members from opposition parties, who have opposed his land reform project and seek greater autonomy for the wealthy, largely European area of Santa Cruz.

Those within MAS see the constitutional assembly as ''the beginning of an important change'' for the indigenous people of Bolivia.

''The peoples of Bolivia, the Guarani, the Aymara and others, were excluded from the writing of earlier constitutions. Now it's our turn,'' said Lorenzo Mamani, Aymaran director of unemployment for MAS.

Mamani said the MAS proposal is a work in progress, and authorities from indigenous communities will continue to be consulted in its development.

He took the criticisms of Morales and MAS in stride. ''You are never going to be able to satisfy everyone,'' he said. ''There will always be criticism.''

In La Paz, women in traditional Aymaran clothing mingled with university students in blue jeans and office workers in suits and ties, at a meeting of Santucos or ''busy little devils,'' a grass-roots MAS group, which has sprung up separately from the MAS leadership to organize for the new constitution on a community level. There, organizers spoke of how to gather suggestions from people on the street to add to the MAS proposal.

''It's not the job of MAS to preach to the people,'' said one organizer, ''it's our job to find out what kind of Bolivia they want.''

US gears up for post-Castro era in Cuba

by Sue Pleming
WASHINGTON
The United States should act fast to boost a transitional government in Cuba when President Fidel Castro's rule ends and get advisors on the ground within weeks, a U.S. government report recommends.

The report, which was ordered by President George W. Bush and is due to be released next week, also recommends a new U.S. "democracy fund" for communist-run Cuba worth $80 million over two years to boost opposition to Castro.

In addition, the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, suggested yearly funding for Cuban democracy programs of $20 million until Castro's "dictatorship ceases."

The report, obtained by Reuters on Friday, was bound to irritate Castro, who has been in power since 1959 and has long accused Washington of meddling in Cuban affairs.

The two countries have no diplomatic ties and the United States has maintained an economic embargo on the Caribbean island for more than four decades. While the report suggested some tightening of enforcement of the embargo it did not suggest drastic changes.

Washington has had plans for a post-Castro transition period for years and its expectations for such a period now appear to rest largely on the leader's eventual death.

Castro, who is 80 in August, has shown no sign of wanting to step down, and has designated his brother, Raul, to succeed him when he dies.

The State Department declined comment, saying the report could change before being made public, most likely on Wednesday. The president still has to agree to its contents.

The report accused Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez of giving funds to subvert democracy in Cuba. Chavez, a firm Castro ally, has helped Cuba economically through oil import deals.

U.S. HELP FOR TRANSITION

Cuba expert Phil Peters of the Virginia-based thinktank, the Lexington Institute, said the tone of the report was more conciliatory than a previous one in 2004, this time suggesting U.S. assistance would be given if requested rather than imposing it on the island.

"The U.S. government will need to be prepared well in advance to help in the event assistance is requested by the Cuban Transition Government," said the report.

However Peters said any of the proposed post-Castro aid could take a while to implement because of strict U.S. laws governing any help for Cuba. "I expect the U.S. will be a spectator there for a long time," said Peters.

The commission, chaired by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Cuban American Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, said that with the end of the Castro government, a transitional government would face daunting challenges to address people's basic needs from health care to providing water.

The United States must be ready to help, said the report, adding such assistance would aid a transitional authority build a democracy.

The report said Cuban exiles could play a crucial role in the transition period.

"The Commission strongly believes that the Cuban community abroad should redouble their efforts to foster reconciliation on and off the island and to undertake steps now to organize and prepare to assist a Transition Government in Cuba."

Hugo Chavez with African Summit

CaracasVenezuela's President Hugo Chavez is due to travel Friday to Gambia to attend July 1-2 the African Union (AU) Summit, in which the South American country is an associated member.

Chavez confirmed Thursday his departure to Africa and said his participation will be quick but very important, to later return Caracas where he will attend a MERCOSUR (Southern Common Market) summit.

The Venezuelan leader stated that his country is associated member and observer of the AU, as part of his government's international policy that "really worries US imperialism."

The Caracas policy of solidarity and brotherhood is continuing in the world and that's why Washington has staged an international campaign to avoid its entrance to the UN Security Council in October.

The Venezuelan head of State is still not sure of his country's entrance in the UN body, because there are three months of battle with United States and its policy of blackmail, threats and pressure in favor of its candidate, Guatemala.

After Venezuela repudiating the recent Israeli attack on Palestine, Chavez stated the US does not want Venezuela on the UN Security Council, because it knows that "with occurrences like these we will continue raising our voices of protest."

U.S. Supreme Court declares trials in Guantánamo prison illegal

WASHINGTON
This Thursday the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that President George W. Bush does not have the authority to order military trials for detainees in Guantánamo.

The ruling is an admonishment to the Bush government, which has been accused of using the war against terrorism as a pretext for exceeding its constitutional powers, reported AP.

John Paul Stevens, a Supreme Court judge, wrote the ruling which states that such trials would be illegal and in violation of U.S. law and the Geneva Convention.

The case from which the ruling emerged focused on Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni detained on the U.S. base in Cuba who had worked as Osama bin Laden’s bodyguard and driver.

From Paris, the news agency EFE reported that Terry Davis, secretary general of the European Council described the U.S. Supreme Court ruling as "a victory of justice over terror and hypocrisy."

U.S. authorities should take advantage of the ruling to "review their policy, close down Guantánamo and abandon the practice of abusive treatment of prisoners as well as other measures contrary to international human rights regulations," said Davis.

Human rights defenders and Democratic Party legislators are also celebrating the Supreme Court decision, according to EFE.

Venezuela is Second Most Proud Country

by Megan Reichgott
When it comes to national pride, Americans are No. 1 in the world, according to a survey of 34 countries released Tuesday.

Venezuela came in a close second for having the most patriotism, according to the report from the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago. People rated how proud they were of their countries in areas such as political influence, economic success, sports and history.

"The two things we (Americans) rank high on are what we think of as the political or power dimension," said Tom W. Smith, who wrote the report and directs the General Social Survey at the university's research center. "Given that we're the one world superpower, it's not that surprising."

Patriotism is mostly a "New World" concept, the survey said. Ex-colonies and newer nations were more likely to rank high on the list, while Western European, East Asian and former Socialist countries usually ranked near the middle or bottom.

The report was based on a survey in 34 countries conducted by the International Social Survey Program. People rated how proud they were of their countries in 10 areas: political influence, social security, the way their democracy works, economic success, science and technology, sports, arts and literature, military, history, and fair treatment of all groups in society.

The U.S. ranked highest overall and in five categories: pride in its democracy, political influence, economy, science and military. Venezuela came in second by ranking highest in sports, arts and literature, history, and fair treatment of all groups in society.

Eric Wingerter, a Washington D.C.-based spokesman for the Venezuelan government, said the country previously imported much of its television programming, movies and pop music from the U.S., but that has changed under President Hugo Chavez's leadership.

Many Venezuelans say Chavez has helped create a new sense of national pride, he said.

"There's been a real emphasis on rediscovering what it means to be Venezuelan," he said.

The debate in Venezuela over Chavez, who makes headlines for nationalistic, anti-U.S. rhetoric, might account for the country's No. 2 ranking, Smith said.

"We looked at, 'Well, is it just the Chavez support, or is it the image of the country?' and they're actually both high," Smith said.

Ireland came in at No. 3, followed by South Africa and Australia.

Cultural differences might explain lower rankings for the three Asian countries on the list--Japan (18th), Taiwan (29th), and Korea (31), Smith said.

"It is both bad luck and poor manners to be boastful about things there," Smith said.

Countries that were part of the former Soviet Union or in the former Eastern Bloc ranked lower because they're still struggling to find new national identities, Smith said. Hungary was the highest Eastern European country on the list at 21.

Cuba condemns Israeli military aggression in the Gaza Strip

STATEMENT FROM THE MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS

THE Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba, has learnt with great concern of Israel’s large-scale military operation that began in the Gaza Strip in the early hours of June 28, 2006 with the mobilization of around 5,000 soldiers, hundreds of tanks and other military hardware, during which it attacked the principal electricity station in the area, leaving half of the territory without electricity, indiscriminately bombarded several bridges connecting different parts of the Strip, reoccupied important southern portions of Palestinian territory, and detained many high-ranking figures from the Palestinian Authority and the Palestinian Legislative Council.

This inhumane and criminal aggression took place just when an agreement had been reached among the Palestinian political forces, which is contributing to the renewal of peace talks between the Palestinians and Israelis, in line with the relevant resolutions of the UN General Assembly and the Security Council.

At the same time, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba rejects the violation of the Arab Republic of Syria’s airspace by Israeli military aircraft which, together with the barbaric actions in the Gaza Strip, once again exposes the Middle East to a dangerous escalation of violence that is putting international peace and security at risk.

As in the past, Israel is acting with the arrogance and impunity afforded it both by U.S. economic and military support and its permanent veto on the UN Security Council.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba wishes to express its most vigorous condemnation of the barbaric Israeli military aggression against the Gaza Strip and calls on the international community and peace-loving forces to mobilize in demand of the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip; a cession of Israeli state terrorism; and respect for the inalienable human rights of the Palestinian people, including the establishment of an independent, sovereign state with its capital in East Jerusalem, the return of refugees, and the unconditional return of all Arab territories occupied in June 1967, as the only way of reaching a just and lasting peace for all the people of that convulsive region.

Havana, June 29, 2006

June 29, 2006

Washington’s Undeclared War Against Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez:

The State Department Human Trafficking Report: Raw Ideology Rather Than Bona Fide Research

In evaluating the standards used to assess the performance of ideological foes in such areas as human rights observance, narcotics, terrorism, respect for religious freedom, and human trafficking, the State Department’s certifications (compiled annually as mandated by U.S. Congress) are little better than fabrications to meet the political requirements of Secretary of State Rice. Depending upon whether the Secretary of State wants to complain about an ideological adversary or praise a loyal ally, the architects of the reports are prepared to spotlight phantom offenses or ignore arrant abuses. Venezuela, which received a Tier 3 (serious offender) rank on Washington’s human trafficking list, could have faired no better at the hands of the Bush administration’s operations.

The State Department’s human trafficking methodology is to rank countries on a three tier system. Tier 3 is comprised of countries that are the most egregious participants in trafficking and are thus subject to heavy sanctions. Tier 2 includes countries complicit in trafficking, but which, from the State Department’s perspective, are making significant efforts to counter the problem; finally, Tier 1 is comprised of countries not significantly engaged in the industry. The problem with this methodology is that a country’s ranking appears to be based far less on well-defined evidentiary standards than on Washington’s readiness to launch a rant against the likes of Chávez.

In its ongoing crusade to impugn the government of Chávez, the Bush administration, during both the Powell and Rice eras, has blacklisted Venezuela. These findings have become famously known in Washington as contrived, spurious, and worthless exercises. Out of all these negative ratings, the one awarded to Venezuela regarding human trafficking has generated perhaps the most moral outrage among independent scholars and may represent one of the more gross cases of faulty research developed by the State Department.

Human Trafficking: Definition and State Department Report
Human trafficking is one of the world’s most reprehensible crimes. Defined in 2000 by the UN as “the recruitment, transfer, harboring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion,” human trafficking frequently encompasses sexual exploitation or forced labor. Until recently, governments and NGO’s did not systematically track information on human trafficking, and only rough anecdotal estimates have been available from the past.

In 2000, the United States passed the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, a measure designed to prosecute traffickers, protect victims, and provide yearly benchmarks on a given country’s effort to minimize human trafficking. The annual assessments mandated by the act were based on information coming from a variety of sources, including U.S. embassies, foreign government officials, NGOs and international organizations. Based on a threshold of 100 or more victims, State Department officials endeavor to determine whether a given country serves as a source, transit point, or destination for trafficking victims. State Department officials, monitoring human trafficking under Director John Miller, offered up their own rather discretionary interpretations of the already highly fluid standards and loose evidentiary arguments to validate the given country. Needless to say, the evaluation of Venezuela – given that Hugo Chávez has been one of the Bush administration’s chosen anti-Christs – was preordained. Critical to the integrity of the process is that judgments now being made must not be politically driven. On this score, the State Department has woefully failed.

In many instances, impartial analysis in today’s State Department has fallen by the wayside. There is simply no way that the human trafficking document, in its reference to the Chávez administration, is delivering anything more than desultory gibberish aimed more at pleasing special interests in Coral Gables, where large numbers of wealthy Venezuelans have second homes, rather than to draft a truly professional evaluation of Caracas’ performance.

A Biased Gavel
In 2005, the United States once again ranked Cuba as Tier 3. The judgment represented Cuba’s third year on the list, and it hardly took any effort at all for the U.S. to deliver its verdict. The initial decision to include the island in the most negative category came about without any new evidence being presented that Havana had committed any offenses since the last reporting period. In fact, Cuba was not even mentioned in either the 2001 or 2002 report, and its reappearance had more to do with the zealotry of the Representative Ros-Lehtinen-led hard-right Miami delegation in the House, than respectable scholarship. The island’s abrupt reappearance on Washington’s rogue list casts severe doubt upon the document’s integrity. Like other annual certifications, the Human Trafficking Report is now subject to ideology, and its chronic lack of objectivity appears to confirm the politicized manipulation and the routine use of selective data.

The 2005 Human Trafficking Report on Cuba illustrates this debauched process. The document relies heavily on hearsay. For example, it notes that “there are no reliable estimates available on the extent of trafficking in the country; however, children in prostitution (are) widely apparent, even to casual observers.” Since U.S. “casual observers” are not permitted by Washington to travel to Cuba, one wonders whether there are members of the U.S.-Cuba interest section in Havana. These are pathetically weak grounds for Cuba’s Tier 3 placement, yet such qualms do not appear to trouble the thoroughly unprofessional State Department personnel working on the project, including, Director John Miller of the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, and Secretary of State Rice.

The Venezuelan Finding
Venezuela was also ranked Tier 3 in the human trafficking category, yet this classification, if anything, represents an even worse perversion of scholarship. Following the release of its latest report, the State Department was forced to admit that its claim that Caracas had failed to prosecute a single human trafficker may have been wrong, since the Chávez government asserted that it had, in fact, prosecuted 21 individuals. Nevertheless, as a result of the ranking, predicated as it was on a very narrow or nonexistent foundation, the South American nation has suffered sanctions involving the blockage of $250 million in international loans in 2005. While Caracas is cited as having a poor preventative anti-trafficking process in place, the State Department report cannot point to a single stated complaint against Venezuelan authorities.

Furthermore, this heavy-handed U.S. designation flies in the face of quality analyses done by other organizations. For example, according to a study recently issued by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Trafficking in Persons: Global Patterns, there are, in fact, more reports on human trafficking incidents applying to a major U.S. ally, Colombia, than Washington’s major adversary, Venezuela; yet the former received only a Tier 1 classification from the State Department, while the book was thrown at Caracas. This discrepancy reveals how much sway political factors have in the methodology behind producing the agency’s annual report. Colombia is one of Washington’s closest regional allies; thus the country’s endemic corruption and the tempo of human trafficking are systematically overlooked or downplayed by U.S. officials. Numerous cases of Colombian women being trafficked into Japan’s sex industry have been cited by entities such as the UN, and the attribution process is cited as an area in need of major improvement.

Venezuela, one of Washington’s chief hemispheric antagonists, is subject to harsh sanctions as a result of these bogus allegations. The Bush administration’s use of a heinous crime like human trafficking as merely another weapon in its anti-Chávez crusade, is nothing more than an example of grossly self-indulgent behavior, worsened by the fact that it degrades the usefulness of the reporting process, as well as the administration’s repeated invoking of lofty rhetoric referring to the importance of building an international community to advance the public good. In fact, the question should be asked whether the entire certification process, in all of its manifestations, should be dropped, because it is obvious, that what is now being done in the name of high-minded reform, is simply shameless self-serving pandering to the White House’s reigning ideological biases.

A Distinguished Report?
In the years since the State Department’s annual report was created, it has received abundant criticism from NGOs and other governments. In 2003, Human Rights Watch observed that the report lacked adequate analysis backed by concrete data and noted that the U.S. document did not include facts about tried, prosecuted, and the conviction rate of traffickers in countries with which it has close ties. Another common complaint has been that some countries are placed in tiers that do not correspond with the relative weight of their alleged human trafficking records. For example, many officials believe Japan’s extensive human trafficking activity and weak legislation to combat it should have landed it in a Tier 3 ranking, but clearly that nation is too important an ally and trade partner to allow for such a designation. Such appellations have their foundation in the White House’s irresistible ideological propellant that leads to the hand out of negative classifications for countries such as Cuba and Venezuela — rankings which are based more on politicized prejudice then on facts.

Beyond Ideology
Unfounded allegations by the State Department are perversions which have further sullied its fast vanishing integrity under its present leadership. While Secretary of State Rice has perfected a techno-babble style of public utterance that seems to say far more than actually is the case, the fact is that if the U.S. intends to be a key player in the fight against human trafficking, its research and reports must be impeccable. Using doctored official findings as handy political weapons, as in the case of Venezuela, will only discourage international cooperation on the issue and result in global derision due to the use of tainted documents, which deserve to be considered almost worthless. If Washington is serious about confronting the problem of trafficking, and not just using it as a vehicle for anti-Chávez propaganda, it must do better than simply continue to push a self-serving political agenda on such an important issue.

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Gabriel Associate
June 28, 2006

Morales making good on pledge to share Bolivia's energy wealth

by Joseph Stiglitz
A few months ago, Evo Morales became Bolivia's first democratically elected indigenous head of state. Indigenous groups constitute 62 percent of Bolivia's population, and those with mixed blood another 30 percent, but for 500 years Bolivians had been ruled by colonial powers and their descendants. Well into the 20th century, indigenous groups were effectively deprived of a vote and a voice. Aymara and Quechua, their languages, were not even recognized for conducting public business. So Morales' election was historic, and the excitement in Bolivia is palpable.

But Morales' nationalization of Bolivia's oil and gas fields sent shock waves through the international community. During his campaign, Morales made clear his intention to increase state control over national gas and oil. But he had made it equally clear that he did not intend to expropriate the property of energy firms -- he wanted foreign investors to stay. (Nationalization does not, of course, necessarily mean expropriation without appropriate compensation.) Perhaps surprising for modern politicians, Morales took his words seriously. Genuinely concerned about raising the incomes of his desperately poor people, he recognized that Bolivia needs foreigners' expertise to achieve growth, and that this entails paying fairly for their services. But are foreign owners getting more than a fair rate of return?

Morales' actions are widely supported by Bolivians, who see the so-called privatizations (or "capitalizations") under former President Gonzalo "Goni" Sanchez de Lozada as a rip-off: Bolivia received only 18 percent of the proceeds! Bolivians wonder why investments of some US$3 billion should entitle foreign investors to 82 percent of the country's vast gas reserves, now estimated to be worth US$250 billion. While there has not yet been full disclosure of returns, or an audit of the true value of investments, it appears that investors would, at the old terms, have recouped all their money within just four years.

Bolivians also ask why foreigners reap all the benefits of today's high prices for oil and gas. It costs no more to extract oil or gas today than it did when prices were one-third of their current level. Yet, the foreign oil companies get 82 percent of the increase -- in the case of oil, this would amount to a windfall for them of US$32 a barrel or more. No wonder that Bolivians thought they were being cheated and demanded a new deal. On May 2, Morales simply reversed the percentages, pending renegotiation of the contracts: the companies operating in the two largest fields would get 18 percent of the production. As part of this new deal, Bolivia should also get a larger share when prices increase. (Bolivia may, of course, not want to bear the risk of a fall in the price, so it may strike a deal to transfer some of the downside risk to foreign companies, giving them in exchange more of the upside potential.)

To most Bolivians, what is at stake is a matter of fairness: Should foreign oil and gas companies get a fair return on their capital, or a supernormal return? Should Bolivia be paid a fair value for its resources? And should Bolivia, or foreign companies, reap most of the windfall gains from increases in energy prices?

Moreover, many deals were apparently done in secret by previous governments -- and apparently without the approval of Congress. Indeed, because Bolivia's Constitution requires the approval of Congress for such sales, it isn't clear that Morales is nationalizing anything: the assets were never properly sold. When a country is robbed of a national art treasure, we don't call its return "re-nationalization," because it belonged to the country all along.

As with many privatizations elsewhere, there are questions as to whether the foreign investors have kept their side of the bargain. Bolivia contributed to these joint enterprises not only with resources, but also with previous investments. The foreign companies' contribution was supposed to be further investment. But did they fully live up to their commitments? Are accounting gimmicks being used to overstate the true value of foreign capital contributions? Bolivia's government has, so far, simply raised questions, and set in motion a process for ascertaining the answer.

The problem in Bolivia is a lack of transparency when contracts are signed and afterwards. Without transparency, it is easy for citizens to feel they are being cheated -- and they often are. When foreign companies get a deal that is too good to be true, there is often something underhanded going on. Around the world, oil and gas companies have themselves to blame: too often, they have resisted calls for greater transparency. In the future, companies and countries should agree on a simple principle: there should be, to paraphrase President Woodrow Wilson's memorable words, "open contracts, openly and transparently arrived at."

If the Bolivians do not get fair value for their country's natural wealth, their prospects are bleak. Even if they do, they will need assistance, not only to extract their resources, but also to improve the health and education of all Bolivians -- to ensure long-term economic growth and social welfare.

For now, the world should celebrate the fact that Bolivia has a democratically elected leader attempting to represent the interests of the poor people of his country. It is a historic moment.
*
Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is professor of economics at Columbia University.

Morales signs new gas agreement in Argentina

Argentina will pay 5 US dollars for every million BTU of Bolivian natural gas, up from the current price of 3.20 US dollars, announced the Bolivian embassy in Buenos Aires.

The agreement, following negotiations which started in May, will be officially sealed Thursday when Bolivian president Evo Morales makes his first official visit to Argentina since taking office last January.

Argentina currently imports a daily average of 5 million cubic meters of natural gas from Bolivia, which Argentina pays at 3.20 US dollars but that in international markets sells for 7 to 8 US dollars per million BTU.

When President Morales last May first took control of the country’s hydrocarbons resources he also announced he would be demanding higher prices from its main customers, Brazil and Argentina.

While Brasilia has yet to begin talks with Bolivia on a new price, Argentina quickly arrived to a new understanding. Buenos Aires is anxious to have terms in place before the completion of a new pipeline that will enable it to increase imports of Bolivian gas to roughly 27 million cubic meters per day.

Bolivian Ambassador Roger Ortiz Mercado in Buenos Aires said that the energy agreement reached “goes beyond the setting of prices" since "it’s not multinational corporations that are reaching an agreement but two sovereign countries”.

Morales agenda in Buenos Aires includes the inauguration next to Argentine president Nestor Kirchner, of a sports stadium in the suburb of Hurlingham where a large community of Bolivians live and a massive rally has been programmed.

Detailed analysis of construction of the South gas pipeline

CARACAS
Engineering plans and construction costs were among issues discussed at the 2nd meeting of the Ministerial Committee of the Great Gas Pipeline of the South, an integration project currently being promoted by the Venezuelan government.

In this second coordination and planning meeting for the work, which covers an area of approximately 8,000 kilometers, the presidents of Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela and Bolivia were given details of this last country’s incorporation into the project.

The Energy and Hydrocarbons representatives from the four nations involved approved the timescale for works on the gas pipeline, which will run from Venezuela to Argentina, passing through Brazil.

They also announced the assignation to Bolivia of $150,000 for the development of an environmental study prior to becoming part of the plan. The committee has programmed its next meeting for September in La Paz.

In addition, it was decided to create a group to study the effects and viability of a Transitory Enterprise Union and another permanent commission to present the terms and conditions for contracting the conceptual engineering for the project.

The project, at an estimated cost of $20 billion, is to incorporate natural gas from Bolivia, a country that has the third largest gas reserve on the continent, into that produced by Venezuela.

The state enterprises ENARSA of Argentina, PETROBRAS of Brazil, Bolivian Fiscal Oilfields (YPBF) and Venezuelan Oil (PDVSA) are responsible for the project.

According to the plans, the gas pipeline should be underway in 2017, which is why technical teams are working on the evaluation of the environmental impact and projected route.

President Hugo Chávez views the project as an investment that would be recouped within a short period, as it was designed on the basis of a plan allowing income via a functioning route.

June 28, 2006

A Call from the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca

The Next “Mega-March” Will Be Held on June 28, As a Popular Struggle is Constructed “From Below”

By the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca, The Other Mexico

CALL FROM THE POPULAR ASSEMBLY OF THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA TO THE SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS AND DEMOCRATIC AND REVOLUTIONARY LABOR UNIONS TO THE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES AND PARENTS TO THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA, OF MEXICO AND OF THE WORLD

Today the people of Oaxaca write one of the best pages in their state’s last 30 years of history, as today, just as durring the years of independence and the Mexican Revolution, our people have decided to take the lead in the development of a national struggle of the workers. In Oaxaca, the Revolution of the 21st Century is brewing. The clamor of all its people for Ulises Ruiz Ortiz to leave our state, together with his accomplices and the big oligarchs and owners of wealth that sustain him, has gone the way of struggle in the streets, with the many mobilizations that have taken place. The people have decided to take the fate of this struggle into their own hands with the creation of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca, which has begun to develop in the different regions of the state. Day by day, the process continues with the integration of the assemblies at the regional, district, municipal and community levels.

At this point in our struggle we have managed to take an impressive step forward in the unity of all the people toward the total defeat of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. Nevertheless, we still have not achieved the goal of this struggle; we still have not kicked that fascist off our Oaxacan soil, as those who sustain him in power remain determined that he continue administering their wealth and hardening his policies toward the workers and people of Oaxaca. That is why there is a prevailing necessity that we continue strengthening our struggle and see it through to the end. For that reason, the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca makes this call:

To the national organizations and labor unions, to strengthen the caravans leaving Monday, June 26 from Oaxaca City toward Mexico City, to present the evidence against Ulises Ruiz Ortiz to the appropriate authorities. We also call on you to attend the next “mega-march” to be held in the city of Oaxaca, on June 28 at 3:00 p.m., within the framework of a “National Civic Strike” and the installation of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca at the end of the march.

To the people of the world, so that they may, from their own countries, using the most diverse forms of struggle, organize demonstrations of solidarity within the framework of our next mega-march.

To the workers, peasant farmers, housewives, indigenous, youth, women, and everyone from the land of Oaxaca, to join the caravans that will leave from all the regions of our state toward the city of Oaxaca. We invite all the people to participate in the next mega-march on June 28, at 3:00 p.m., leaving from the Airport intersection; and to participate in the next session of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca at the end of the mega-march, which will be held at the Benito Juarez Stadium in Oaxaca City.

To all the indigenous peoples and workers from all regions of the state, to put together the popular regional, district, municipal and community or neighborhood assemblies, thus guaranteeing that the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca is constructed from below.

From now on, it will only be in the hands of all the people that we bring this struggle to its conclusion. Our great army of teachers continues to proudly carry out its role, strengthening this struggle that is now everyone’s. That is why we need to strengthen our unity and organization, hitting this government and the rich that sustain it harder and harder, tearing from them al the economic and political power that they have usurped for so many years, usurping the sovereign power of the people.

LET US PROUDLY CARRY OUT OUR HISTORIC TASKS!
DOWN WITH ULISES RUIZ ORTIZ AND HIS ENTIRE GANG OF MURDERERS AND THIEVES!
LONG LIVE THE POPULAR ASSEMBLY OF THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA!

FRATERNALLY:

“ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE”
POPULAR ASSEMBLY OF THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA
Oaxaca de Juárez, Oaxaca.

The Orphans of July Third, The Zapatistas Challenge the Sanctity of the Vote

by John Gibler
Jun 24
I.
When the Zapatistas launched the Other Campaign in San Cristobal de Las Casas on January 1, 2006—exactly twelve years after they took that city by force—they made clear that the stakes would be high.

“We are putting everything we have into the Sixth [Declaration from the Lacandon Jungle] and the Other [Campaign],” Subcomandante Marcos told the crowd of 20,000. “Our lives are the least of what we have—our moral authority, our prestige, everything we built is in this effort.”

Now, after four months on the road, four hundred Other Campaign meetings held across twenty states, and two hundred and twenty political prisoners taken during the brutal police raid on San Salvador Atenco on the morning of May 4, the Zapatistas have cast their “everything” against the most sacrosanct day of the Mexican political calendar: election day.

At a national Other Campaign gathering in Mexico City on May 29, Subcomandante Marcos called on members of the Other Campaign across the country to gather in Mexico City on June 30 for two days of debate and, on election day, Sunday July 2, to “interrupt into the calendar of the elite [los de arriba] with civil and peaceful organizing and mobilizations.”

A thousand people exhaled simultaneously, filling the old Venustiano Carranza Cinema with the “sssss” sound of worry.

“If the elite now want to pretend as if nothing is going on and have their party without freeing our comrades,” Marcos continued, “then we must step into their calendar and place the demand for liberty there.”

speech in zocalo

II.

Since the beginning, the Zapatistas' Other Campaign has been unashamed to demand the quixotic, to aim for the highest standards of economic and social justice, calling out the roots of exclusion and violence in Mexico with utter disregard for whom they might offend or isolate with their explicit and unyielding description of Mexico's entrenched system of oppression.

The Other Campaign's founding document, the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandon Jungle, and Subcomandante Marcos' numerous communiqués and speeches over the past months leave no doubt as to how the Zapatistas define responsibility for Mexico's back-breaking poverty, marginalization, and political violence: these social ills, they say, are the necessary results of capitalism, coordinated and protected in Mexico by a small class of political elite.

The snowball effect of the Other Campaign—pulling small grassroots struggles into a national political context, and gathering momentum and numbers with each stop along the road—has been completely ignored by the press, political parties, and most intellectuals. Nearly everyone on the outside of the campaign reduces the entire effort to a failed display of Marcos' enormous ego. They compare the Other Campaign to the Zapatista march from Chiapas to Mexico City in 2001, and conclude that the Other Campaign has been a flop simply because it has pulled fewer people to the public speaking events in town squares. This measurement of social value by the sheer summation of numbers shows how little the critics understand of the political project behind the Other Campaign.

The 2001 march, a caravan through 14 states known as the March of Indigenous Dignity, sought to gather support for an indigenous rights bill based on the 1996 San Andres Accords that were widely supported by indigenous communities across Mexico and signed by both the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) and the government of then-president Ernesto Zedillo. The public events along the march mixed social outcry and political analysis with cultural fair and rock star like appearances by Marcos and the EZLN commanders. The march was informally dubbed the “Zapatour,” half-mocking the more entertainment like aspects of the trip.

The media pundits and intellectuals now call the 2001 march a success (they did not then) in order to show that the Other Campaign is a failure. Time and time again they repeat that in 2001 there were so many more people, the plaza was filled, one could barely move, and this is their measure of success, plazas filled with people.

But the 2001 march had a specific political objective: incorporating the indigenous rights protections from the San Andres Accords into Mexican law. And here, the march failed. The legislators passed a gutted version of the law that led the Zapatistas to file back to Chiapas and cut off all relations with the government and the major political parties. All those people who filled the plazas went back to their daily grinds, they did not take to the streets to demand the implementation of the San Andres Accords, nor did they vote the offending legislators out of office in the following 2003 elections. The supposedly left-leaning Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) turned their backs on the indigenous rights law, failing to put up even a theatrical fight in the Mexican Senate. They voted for the gutted version, didn't vote, or simply didn't show up for work that day.

While more people came out for the March of Indigenous Dignity than the Other Campaign, much less was being asked of them.

The Other Campaign is not a Zapatour. It is a call to action, a call to participate in a national organizing effort with the impossible-sounding objective of uprooting capitalism in Mexico along with the corresponding concentration of political power in a small elite class. Whereas the March of Indigenous Dignity called for support within the electoral political system—support for a piece of legislation presented to the legislative branch of government—the Other Campaign calls not only for a sharp split from that very system, but to overthrow it.

The challenge of the first phase of the Other Campaign is not whether it can fill plazas, parks, and auditoriums—which it mostly has, though not as tightly as in 2001—but whether it can pull people into a new, national social movement that overcomes the deep and historic divisions amongst the left. The early results are positive, though not euphoric: since the Other Campaign paused its nationwide road trip to fight for the liberty of the political prisoners taken during the police raid on San Salvador Atenco, thousands of people have answered the call for solidarity, taking to the streets in marches and protests across the country, and on May 28 and 29 bus loads of Other Campaign participants from every state in the country drove into Mexico City for a national march and assembly.

III.

It comes as no surprise that the right wing political parties who have always sought to delegitimize the Zapatista struggle would sling mud at the Other Campaign. What is new, since 2001, however, is the number of left-leaning sympathizers from middle class and academic circles who have turned their backs on the Zapatista initiative.

For the first time in Mexican history a presidential candidate who openly describes himself as a leftist has a good chance of winning the elections. Andres Manual Lopez Obrador, the PRD candidate and former mayor of Mexico City with an activist background in his home state of Tabasco, is running neck-and-neck against the far right, social conservative candidate from President Vicente Fox's Party of National Action, Felipe Calderon.

There is little that is leftist about Lopez Obrador or the PRD. They plan to follow the same macro-economic model as the previous right wing governments, promising only to “put the poor first” by flooding state money into infrastructure programs, many of which—such as the planned shipping corridor across the Isthmus of Tehuántepec, Oaxaca, a spin off project from the Fox administration's Plan Puebla Panama—face serious national and local opposition by indigenous groups, small farmers, and environmentalists.

During the past six-years the PRD has become something of a half-way house for disenchanted politicians defecting from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the dinosaur that ruled Mexico for over 70 years until its defeat by the PAN in 2000. Many of the politicians that aided PRI president Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988-1994) as he eviscerated the indigenous rights and land reform protections in the Mexican Constitution in order to pass the North American Free Trade Agreement, have fled to the PRD, and found a home in Lopez Obrador's campaign team. Mexican historian Adolfo Gilly writes in a recent issue of Latin American Perspectives that former Salinas administration officials such as Manuel Camacho, Marcelo Ebrard, Ricardo Monreal, Federico Arreola, Socorro Diaz, and Leonel Cota, are now “the pillars of the presidential campaign of the PRD and its candidate, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.”

Many are able to ignore the uncomfortable details of Lopez Obrador's candidacy and economic program by focusing on the overall leftist framing of his campaign: the way to fight crime is by fighting poverty, creating employment opportunities, creating a just economy. One of Lopez Obrador's strongest points, however, is that he is not Felipe Calderon, who presents himself as an iron-fisted protector of the “rule of law,” which in Mexico is code for a regime of violent repression and corresponding impunity.

It is very likely that Lopez Obrador's administration would be less corrupt and less bloody than Calderon's. In the context of 7 decades of PRI dictatorship and 6 years of the PAN's special blend of ineptitude and cartel market economics, a Lopez Obrador victory would be a serious shake-up in the power struggles of the elite in Mexico. Add in the celebratory mood over recent left-wing victories in Latin America and it is easy to understand the combination of hope and delusion that accompanies Lopez Obrador's candidacy.

Thus Subcomandante Marcos' pointing out all the ugly particulars about Lopez Obrador, his campaign team, and the PRD has incurred the unique spirit of wrath reserved for spoilers. It is highly likely that a Calderon victory would unleash a tide of fury and resentment against Marcos and the Zapatistas, not criticism of Lopez Obrador's economic program, his ex-PRI campaign team, or his stilted, clumsy, and facile campaign (in the past few months Lopez Obrador refused to attend the first debate, called Vicente Fox a loud bird (chachalaca), failed for months to answer Calderon's smear campaign against him, did not say a word about the atrocities in San Salvador Atenco, and came out in the second debate unveiling a ready made corruption scandal implicating Calderon).

Few are those who are able to walk the middle path between the Other Campaign and the PRD, agreeing with the Zapatista analysis, supporting the Other Campaign, and planning nonetheless to wake up on July 2nd and vote for Lopez Obrador. In the grand tradition of the left, most have chosen sides and curse their opponents as egoists and traitors. And the divisions are now deep.

Although there is reason to believe that Lopez Obrador would lean more to dialogue than Calderon (read: not send in the riot police or the army in the first five minutes of conflict), there is also reason to doubt the depth and sincerity of his commitment to human rights protections and seeking peaceful solutions to social conflicts. Lopez Obrador has refrained from denouncing the massive human rights violations—sexual violence, mass beatings, torture, arbitrary detentions, killings—carried out by local, state, and federal police in Texcoco and San Salvador Atenco on May 3 and 4. Rather than taking on the most calculated and brutal state repression in Mexico in decades, Lopez Obrador has focused the energy of his campaign on bringing out documents linking Calderon to a corruption scandal involving his brother-in-law, Diego Zavala.

During the scripted presidential “debate” on June 6th, no one mentioned the violence in Atenco, though Calderon made reference to the iron-fist (mano dura) necessary to beat back the unruly machetes of protesting farmers. Instead, the three major candidates paraded through the two-hour debate reciting their slogans and general promises and showing their props. Lopez Obrador brought copies of the documents incriminating Calderon's “uncomfortable brother-in-law” in corruption and tax-evasion, as an example of the kind of government for the rich that he would do away with. Calderon brought a full-color PRD flier for Arturo Núñez, a former PRI leader who helped secure a multi-million dollar tax-payer bailout for politicians near bankruptcy in the 1994 peso crisis, the very same scandal that Lopez Obrador uses to smear Calderon and the PAN.

IV.

The Zapatistas launched the Other Campaign challenging the legitimacy of the vote in the context of a repressive economic system controlled by a single political class. There are no choices for us, the underdogs of the left, they said. The challenge, however, was more than anything else, an invitation. The Zapatistas did not call for abstention; they called for reflection, for analysis. Take a close look at all these ugly details in the plans and histories of the three parties and the three candidates, and think: do any of these options address the social forces that push me down? Do any of these candidates offer a program of social change?

Think for yourselves, the Zapatistas reiterated throughout the Other Campaign, but we think you will find that the answer is no, that the answer is: the only change, the only hope for a program of social change that uproots the culture of state corruption, repression, and cartel market economics will come through grassroots organizing, from below, and from the anti-capitalist left. This has been the call of the Other Campaign: it does not matter whom you vote for on July 2nd, if you place your hope and your faith in any of those options, you will be an orphan on July 3rd.

The Zapatistas planned to hold a national Other Campaign assembly in Mexico City on June 24 and 25, and then return to the jungle in Chiapas to spend the days surrounding the presidential elections at home, away from the polls and the television cameras.

No more.

In response to the brutal repression in Atenco, the government's continued denial of the extent and nature of the violence, and the continued incarceration of 31 people detained arbitrarily in Texcoco and Atenco on May 3 and 4, the EZLN and the Other Campaign, are betting everything on taking to the streets in protest on election day.

The risk is extreme. Any act that could be viewed as impeding the vote—a highway or bridge blockade, or even a march—could not only bring down the wrath of the State—police units, the army, clubs, machine guns—but could turn millions of supporters across Mexico and the world against the Zapatistas and the Other Campaign. A highway blockade on July 2 could give the federal government the pretext to once and for all rid themselves of Marcos and his closest supporters.

If done well, however, the Other Campaign could create a mass mobilization of social protest that does not physically threaten or impede voters, that draws from the Zapatistas' world famous sense of humor and artistic creativity, to expose the fallacy of electoral options in Mexico, to mock the sanctity of the vote in a country with 50 percent abstention, a deeply entrenched culture of electoral fraud, and an elite political class with a monopoly-control over government and the resources of the State.

The participants in the Other Campaign will define and agree upon plans for the mobilization on July 2nd during a two-day assembly in Mexico City on June 30 and July 1. It is impossible to know what they will decide, and thus how great the risk will be, beforehand.

Venezuela and U.S. to Sign New Drug Control Agreement

by Gregory Wilpert
Caracas, Venezuela
Jun 26
Venezuela’s director of the National Anti-Drug Office (ONA), Luis Correa, said today that an agreement has been reached between Venezuela and the U.S. to re-start cooperation on fighting drug trafficking. The agreement will be signed between the ONA and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) on July 8.

“The points in which we had differences between the DEA, or the North American government and the Venezuelan, have been solved. Both countries are in agreement about the new work paper,” said Correa.

Venezuela had suspended its cooperation with the U.S. last year, when President Chavez accused the DEA of engaging in unauthorized activity in Venezuela, of spying, and of over-stepping its bounds in its work. He had said the DEA would be expelled from Venezuela. U.S. officials denied the charges at the time.

However, during a press conference in Washington today, DEA administrator Karen Tandy clarified that the threat to expel the DEA was never implemented and that the DEA continued to operate in Venezuela without interruption. “While President Chavez announced through the papers his intent to expel DEA, he withdrew that shortly afterward and has been, through his counternarcotics officials, working with DEA on a memorandum of understanding that we could execute together as to how we will work together in that country,” said Tandy.

The new drug control agreement will be signed by Venezuela’s Minister of the Interior and of justice, Jesse Chacon, and the U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield.

In September of last year, the U.S. officially “decertified” Venezuela as a country that lives up to its international obligations in the fight against drug trafficking. Venezuela, though, pointed out at the time that its drug interdictions have increased substantially since Chavez came into office. Drug interdictions increased from 43 tons in 2004 to 72 tons in 2005. Police estimate that 300 tons of cocaine pass through Venezuela per year.

The decertification normally means a cut-off of all U.S. aid to a country. However, the Bush administration decided to waive this consequence because, “support for programs to aid Venezuela's democratic institutions, establish selected community development projects, and strengthen Venezuela's political party system is vital to the national interests of the United States.”

According to documents released through the Freedom of Information Act, the U.S. government provides over $5 million per year to mostly opposition groups in Venezuela.

Chile and Panama sign free trade pact

Chile and Panama yesterday signed a free trade agreement that will eliminate 98 percent of tariffs on trade between the countries within 10 years.

‘‘Panama and Chile are generating the necessary conditions for an economic takeoff that will allow us to leave underdevelopment behind,’’ said Panamanian Vice-President Samuel Lewis Navarro.

Chilean Foreign Relations Minister Alejandro Foxley described Panama as ‘‘politically close’’ to Chile.

While the agreement will take effect over a period of years, Panamanian Commerce and Industry Minister Alejandro Ferrer said that cooperation between Chile and his country was already bearing fruit.
The two nations have a longstanding commercial relationship.

The majority of the trade is in Chilean exports to Panama, which reached US$111.5 million out of US$122.3 million in bilateral trade last year. Panama hopes the pact will narrow the imbalance.

Chile is the fourth-heaviest user of the Panama Canal, a position which could be boosted by the pact, according to Foxley. He also expressed support for plans to expand the canal.

Fox Chooses U.S. Over Latin America, Continuing Mexico’s Accommodation to Washington’s Regional Primacy

by Michael Lettieri
In the latest test of its tenacious allegiance to the U.S., Mexico has once again planted itself squarely in Washington’s corner. Verbalizing what would eventually be its position, Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez announced to reporters at a lunchtime meeting in Brazil on June 13, that in the race for the temporary UN Security Council seat between U.S.-favorite Guatemala and Venezuela, his country would support the former, and that “the position is quite clear.” The competition for the Security Council slot has sparked vigorous lobbying from Washington in an attempt to block Caracas’ bid. Even veiled efforts have been made, including a meeting in Secretary of State Rice’s office, in order to coerce Chilean foreign minister Alejandro Foxley, and a confidential diplomatic note – leaked to the BBC – which underscored the U.S. position. Yet it is likely that Derbez, just like his predecessor Jorge Castañeda, did not need much of a push. Under President Vicente Fox, Mexican foreign policy in recent years has consistently trended away from an independent stance, in favor of near obeisance to pro-U.S. initiatives, and the supremacy of Washington’s hemispheric wish list.

Doing Things Your Way
Whatever its previous corrupt and repressive domestic profile, Mexico, prior to Fox and his ruling PAN party’s arrival to office, had long maintained a proud and independent foreign policy during decades of uninterrupted rule by the authoritarian PRI. Examples of this are numerous, and include respectful relations with Cuba throughout the Castro era and resistance to Washington’s hegemonic Central American policy during the 1980s. Moreover, Mexico had often served as a de facto interlocutor for Latin American interests with Washington, attempting to advocate a constructive engagement with the region. Yet, under the Fox administration, Mexico witnessed an abrupt and embarrassing turn from such a stance, as first under Jorge Castañeda and then under Ernesto Derbez, Mexican policy became all but indistinguishable from Washington’s, be it Iraq or giving the cold shoulder to Castro at Monterrey.
...

Cuba: not only must the Guantánamo prison be shut down, but that territory must also be returned

Ricardo Alarcón, president of the National Assembly of People’s Power, affirmed today that not only must the prison on the U.S. naval base in Guantánamo, Cuba, be shut down, but that that territory illegally occupied by the United States must also be returned.

Cuba: not only must the Guantánamo prison be shut down, but that territory must also be returned"What must be demanded, of course, is that the torture center is shut down; even Bush (U.S. president) has said that he is in favor of closing it down, but what is more important is that they return it," Alarcón told journalists...
...

Central American Parliament highlights Cuba’s fulfillment of the Millennium Goals

Julio Palacios, president of the Central American Parliament (PARLACEN), highlighted this Monday Cuba’s fulfillment of the UN Millennium Goals on the reduction of poverty, access to education and health and a lower infant mortality rate.
...

Election could bring revolution south of the border

by Ruben Navarrette
SAN DIEGO
Angry over illegal immigration and yet reluctant to take even a sliver of responsibility for it, some Americans have devised an interesting way to fight back: They're calling for a revolution -- in Mexico.

Naturally. Better to change the government on that side of the border than to change our behavior on this side. We want to be free to continue hiring illegal immigrants to increase profits and make our lives easier, but we also want to be able to blame Mexico for supplying the illicit commodity for which we have developed an insatiable appetite.

Now with the approach of Mexico's presidential election on Sunday -- the first such match-up since Vicente Fox and the National Action Party (PAN) triumphed over the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 2000 -- those who say they want radical change may get their wish.

Here's the irony: While many of the Americans in this camp probably consider themselves conservative, the candidate who is most likely to deliver what they want is a left-leaning populist.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the ex-mayor of Mexico City and presidential candidate representing the leftist Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), may just win a contest that is still considered too close to call.

At first glance, you would think that conservatives -- with thoughts of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez running through their heads -- would cringe at the prospect of a populist on the southern border. But in this case, they'd be wise to take a closer look at Lopez Obrador and his appeal to Mexican voters.

The candidate, referred to by members of the Mexican media as AMLO, doesn't waste time blaming the United States for Mexico's woes, as Mexican politicians are prone to do. AMLO cuts to the chase and blames Mexico, specifically the rich elites who prey upon the poor and then react with indifference when those without options leave home to search for opportunities in the United States. He promises to pump government money into the economy to jump-start it.

Of course, there are those in America who instinctively call this kind of talk "socialism" (as opposed to say, New Dealism?) and warn that it could devastate the Mexican economy and send ever more millions of migrants north across the border. Never mind that this is already happening and the situation isn't improving.

AMLO also deserves credit for talking about the human costs of Mexico's national shame -- the fact that millions of its citizens have fled the country and, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, as much as 40 percent of their countrymen would do the same if they could.

For Lopez Obrador, the saddest part of all this is the toll that the exodus takes on families in a country steeped in family values. Despite efforts by Fox to reach out to Mexicans in the United States, that doesn't change the essential fact that Mother Mexico still plays favorites among her children. The country's elites don't care one way or another about those who flee to the north. But throughout Mexico, real mothers care a great deal that their families have been broken apart because of a failure by government and businesses to provide gainful employment at home. No wonder the recurring theme in this election has become jobs, jobs, jobs.

According to the polls and judging from the large crowds that gather to hear him campaign, Lopez Obrador and his message are catching fire, especially with the poor who have lost faith in the alternatives: the PRI, which looted the country in the last century, and the PAN, which didn't create enough jobs in the last six years.
The PRI candidate, Roberto Madrazo, was never in this race. Apparently the Mexican electorate has a good memory of past corruption and no desire to travel that road again.

The inheritor of the PAN's legacy is AMLO's chief competitor -- Felipe Calderon, an ex-member of the Mexican Congress and energy minister. The Harvard-educated Calderon is pro-business, pro-trade and perfectly capable. Should he triumph, Mexico would probably be in good hands.

But there would be no revolution. And that may be exactly what is required.

Clarification: In an earlier column, I wrote that Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter had called for immigration hearings on the bill passed by the House of Representatives. An aide to Specter insists that the hearings are intended to be on the Senate bill, which the Senate has already passed. A story in a Capitol Hill newspaper, The Hill, suggests that the Senate hearings are retaliatory and quotes Specter as saying that, "I don't start wars, but, if I'm forced to, I'll participate."

Election could bring revolution south of the border

by Ruben Navarrette
SAN DIEGO
Angry over illegal immigration and yet reluctant to take even a sliver of responsibility for it, some Americans have devised an interesting way to fight back: They're calling for a revolution -- in Mexico.

Naturally. Better to change the government on that side of the border than to change our behavior on this side. We want to be free to continue hiring illegal immigrants to increase profits and make our lives easier, but we also want to be able to blame Mexico for supplying the illicit commodity for which we have developed an insatiable appetite.

Now with the approach of Mexico's presidential election on Sunday -- the first such match-up since Vicente Fox and the National Action Party (PAN) triumphed over the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 2000 -- those who say they want radical change may get their wish.

Here's the irony: While many of the Americans in this camp probably consider themselves conservative, the candidate who is most likely to deliver what they want is a left-leaning populist.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the ex-mayor of Mexico City and presidential candidate representing the leftist Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), may just win a contest that is still considered too close to call.

At first glance, you would think that conservatives -- with thoughts of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez running through their heads -- would cringe at the prospect of a populist on the southern border. But in this case, they'd be wise to take a closer look at Lopez Obrador and his appeal to Mexican voters.

The candidate, referred to by members of the Mexican media as AMLO, doesn't waste time blaming the United States for Mexico's woes, as Mexican politicians are prone to do. AMLO cuts to the chase and blames Mexico, specifically the rich elites who prey upon the poor and then react with indifference when those without options leave home to search for opportunities in the United States. He promises to pump government money into the economy to jump-start it.

Of course, there are those in America who instinctively call this kind of talk "socialism" (as opposed to say, New Dealism?) and warn that it could devastate the Mexican economy and send ever more millions of migrants north across the border. Never mind that this is already happening and the situation isn't improving.

AMLO also deserves credit for talking about the human costs of Mexico's national shame -- the fact that millions of its citizens have fled the country and, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, as much as 40 percent of their countrymen would do the same if they could.

For Lopez Obrador, the saddest part of all this is the toll that the exodus takes on families in a country steeped in family values. Despite efforts by Fox to reach out to Mexicans in the United States, that doesn't change the essential fact that Mother Mexico still plays favorites among her children. The country's elites don't care one way or another about those who flee to the north. But throughout Mexico, real mothers care a great deal that their families have been broken apart because of a failure by government and businesses to provide gainful employment at home. No wonder the recurring theme in this election has become jobs, jobs, jobs.

According to the polls and judging from the large crowds that gather to hear him campaign, Lopez Obrador and his message are catching fire, especially with the poor who have lost faith in the alternatives: the PRI, which looted the country in the last century, and the PAN, which didn't create enough jobs in the last six years.
The PRI candidate, Roberto Madrazo, was never in this race. Apparently the Mexican electorate has a good memory of past corruption and no desire to travel that road again.

The inheritor of the PAN's legacy is AMLO's chief competitor -- Felipe Calderon, an ex-member of the Mexican Congress and energy minister. The Harvard-educated Calderon is pro-business, pro-trade and perfectly capable. Should he triumph, Mexico would probably be in good hands.

But there would be no revolution. And that may be exactly what is required.

Clarification: In an earlier column, I wrote that Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter had called for immigration hearings on the bill passed by the House of Representatives. An aide to Specter insists that the hearings are intended to be on the Senate bill, which the Senate has already passed. A story in a Capitol Hill newspaper, The Hill, suggests that the Senate hearings are retaliatory and quotes Specter as saying that, "I don't start wars, but, if I'm forced to, I'll participate."

June 27, 2006

Hugo Chávez

by Greg Palast
You’d think George Bush would get down on his knees and kiss Hugo Chávez’s behind. Not only has Chávez delivered cheap oil to the Bronx and other poor communities in the United States. And not only did he offer to bring aid to the victims of Katrina. In my interview with the president of Venezuela on March 28, he made Bush the following astonishing offer: Chávez would drop the price of oil to $50 a barrel, “not too high, a fair price,” he said—a third less than the $75 a barrel for oil recently posted on the spot market. That would bring down the price at the pump by about a buck, from $3 to $2 a gallon.

But our President has basically told Chávez to take his cheaper oil and stick it up his pipeline. Before I explain why Bush has done so, let me explain why Chávez has the power to pull it off—and the method in the seeming madness of his “take-my-oil-please!” deal.

Venezuela, Chávez told me, has more oil than Saudi Arabia. A nutty boast? Not by a long shot. In fact, his surprising claim comes from a most surprising source: the U.S. Department of Energy. In an internal report, the DOE estimates that Venezuela has five times the Saudis’ reserves.

However, most of Venezuela’s mega-horde of crude is in the form of “extra-heavy” oil—liquid asphalt—which is ghastly expensive to pull up and refine. Oil has to sell above $30 a barrel to make the investment in extra-heavy oil worthwhile. A big dip in oil’s price—and, after all, oil cost only $18 a barrel six years ago—would bankrupt heavy-oil investors. Hence Chávez’s offer: Drop the price to $50—and keep it there. That would guarantee Venezuela’s investment in heavy oil.

But the ascendance of Venezuela within OPEC necessarily means the decline of the power of the House of Saud. And the Bush family wouldn’t like that one bit. It comes down to “petro-dollars.” When George W. ferried then-Crown Prince (now King) Abdullah of Saudi Arabia around the Crawford ranch in a golf cart it wasn’t because America needs Arabian oil. The Saudis will always sell us their petroleum. What Bush needs is Saudi petro-dollars. Saudi Arabia has, over the past three decades, kindly recycled the cash sucked from the wallets of American SUV owners and sent much of the loot right back to New York to buy U.S. Treasury bills and other U.S. assets.

The Gulf potentates understand that in return for lending the U.S. Treasury the cash to fund George Bush’s $2 trillion rise in the nation’s debt, they receive protection in return. They lend us petro-dollars, we lend them the 82nd Airborne.

Chávez would put an end to all that. He’ll sell us oil relatively cheaply—but intends to keep the petro-dollars in Latin America. Recently, Chávez withdrew $20 billion from the U.S. Federal Reserve and, at the same time, lent or committed a like sum to Argentina, Ecuador, and other Latin American nations.

Chávez, notes The Wall Street Journal, has become a “tropical IMF.” And indeed, as the Venezuelan president told me, he wants to abolish the Washington-based International Monetary Fund, with its brutal free-market diktats, and replace it with an “International Humanitarian Fund,” an IHF, or more accurately, an International Hugo Fund. In addition, Chávez wants OPEC to officially recognize Venezuela as the cartel’s reserve leader, which neither the Saudis nor Bush will take kindly to.

Politically, Venezuela is torn in two. Chávez’s “Bolivarian Revolution,” a close replica of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal—a progressive income tax, public works, social security, cheap electricity—makes him wildly popular with the poor. And most Venezuelans are poor. His critics, a four-centuries’ old white elite, unused to sharing oil wealth, portray him as a Castro-hugging anti-Christ.

Chávez’s government, which used to brush off these critics, has turned aggressive on them. I challenged Chávez several times over charges brought against Súmate, his main opposition group. The two founders of the nongovernmental organization, which led the recall campaign against Chávez, face eight years in prison for taking money from the Bush Administration and the International Republican [Party] Institute. No nation permits foreign funding of political campaigns, but the charges (no one is in jail) seem like a heavy hammer to use on the minor infractions of these pathetic gadflies.

Bush’s reaction to Chávez has been a mix of hostility and provocation. Washington supported the coup attempt against Chávez in 2002, and Condoleezza Rice and Donald Rumsfeld have repeatedly denounced him. The revised National Security Strategy of the United States of America, released in March, says, “In Venezuela, a demagogue awash in oil money is undermining democracy and seeking to destabilize the region.”

So when the Reverend Pat Robertson, a Bush ally, told his faithful in August 2005 that Chávez has to go, it was not unreasonable to assume that he was articulating an Administration wish. “If he thinks we’re trying to assassinate him,” Robertson said, “I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it. It’s a whole lot cheaper than starting a war . . . and I don’t think any oil shipments will stop.”

There are only two ways to defeat the rise of Chávez as the New Abdullah of the Americas. First, the unattractive option: Cut the price of oil below $30 a barrel. That would make Chávez’s crude worthless. Or, option two: Kill him.

Q: Your opponents are saying that you are beginning a slow-motion dictatorship. Is that what we are seeing?

Hugo Chávez: They have been saying that for a long time. When they’re short of ideas, any excuse will do as a vehicle for lies. That is totally false. I would like to invite the citizens of Great Britain and the citizens of the U.S. and the citizens of the world to come here and walk freely through the streets of Venezuela, to talk to anyone they want, to watch television, to read the papers. We are building a true democracy, with human rights for everyone, social rights, education, health care, pensions, social security, and jobs.

Q: Some of your opponents are being charged with the crime of taking money from George Bush. Will you send them to jail?

Chávez: It’s not up to me to decide that. We have the institutions that do that. These people have admitted they have received money from the government of the United States. It’s up to the prosecutors to decide what to do, but the truth is that we can’t allow the U.S. to finance the destabilization of our country. What would happen if we financed somebody in the U.S. to destabilize the government of George Bush? They would go to prison, certainly.

Q: How do you respond to Bush’s charge that you are destabilizing the region and interfering in the elections of other Latin American countries?

Chávez: Mr. Bush is an illegitimate President. In Florida, his brother Jeb deleted many black voters from the electoral registers. So this President is the result of a fraud. Not only that, he is also currently applying a dictatorship in the U.S. People can be put in jail without being charged. They tap phones without court orders. They check what books people take out of public libraries. They arrested Cindy Sheehan because of a T-shirt she was wearing demanding the return of the troops from Iraq. They abuse blacks and Latinos. And if we are going to talk about meddling in other countries, then the U.S. is the champion of meddling in other people’s affairs. They invaded Guatemala, they overthrew Salvador Allende, invaded Panama and the Dominican Republic. They were involved in the coup d’état in Argentina thirty years ago.

Q: Is the U.S. interfering in your elections here?

Chávez: They have interfered for 200 years. They have tried to prevent us from winning the elections, they supported the coup d’état, they gave millions of dollars to the coup plotters, they supported the media, newspapers, outlaw movements, military intervention, and espionage. But here the empire is finished, and I believe that before the end of this century, it will be finished in the rest of the world. We will see the burial of the empire of the eagle.

Q: You don’t interfere in the elections of other nations in Latin America?

Chávez: Absolutely not. I concern myself with Venezuela. However, what’s going on now is that some rightwing movements are transforming me into a pawn in the domestic politics of their countries, by making statements that are groundless. About candidates like Morales [of Bolivia], for example. They said I financed the candidacy of President Lula [of Brazil], which is totally false. They said I financed the candidacy of Kirchner [of Argentina], which is totally false. In Mexico, recently, the rightwing party has used my image for its own profit. What’s happened is that in Latin America there is a turn to the left. Latin Americans have gotten tired of the Washington consensus—a neoliberalism that has aggravated misery and poverty.

Q: You have spent millions of dollars of your nation’s oil wealth throughout Latin America. Are you really helping these other nations or are you simply buying political support for your regime?

Chávez: We are brothers and sisters. That’s one of the reasons for the wrath of the empire. You know that Venezuela has the biggest oil reserves in the world. And the biggest gas reserves in this hemisphere, the eighth in the world. Up until seven years ago, Venezuela was a U.S. oil colony. All of our oil was going up to the north, and the gas was being used by the U.S. and not by us. Now we are diversifying. Our oil is helping the poor. We are selling to the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cuba, some Central American countries, Uruguay, Argentina.

Q: And the Bronx?

Chávez: In the Bronx it is a donation. In all the cases I just mentioned before, it is trade. However, it’s not free trade, just fair commerce. We also have an international humanitarian fund as a result of oil revenues.

Q: Why did George Bush turn down your help for New Orleans after the hurricane?

Chávez: You should ask him, but from the very beginning of the terrible disaster of Katrina, our people in the U.S., like the president of CITGO, went to New Orleans to rescue people. We were in close contact by phone with Jesse Jackson. We hired buses. We got food and water. We tried to protect them; they are our brothers and sisters. Doesn’t matter if they are African, Asian, Cuban, whatever.

Q: Are you replacing the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund as “Daddy Big Bucks”?

Chávez: I do wish that the IMF and the World Bank would disappear soon.

Q: And it would be the Bank of Hugo?

Chávez: No. The International Humanitarian Bank. We are just creating an alternative way to conduct financial exchange. It is based on cooperation. For example, we send oil to Uruguay for their refinery and they are paying us with cows.

Q: Milk for oil.

Chávez: That’s right. Milk for oil. The Argentineans also pay us with cows. And they give us medical equipment to combat cancer. It’s a transfer of technology. We also exchange oil for software technology. Uruguay is one of the biggest producers of software. We are breaking with the neoliberal model. We do not believe in free trade. We believe in fair trade and exchange, not competition but cooperation. I’m not giving away oil for free. Just using oil, first to benefit our people, to relieve poverty. For a hundred years we have been one of the largest oil-producing countries in the world but with a 60 percent poverty rate and now we are canceling the historical debt.

Q: Speaking of the free market, you’ve demanded back taxes from U.S. oil companies. You have eliminated contracts for North American, British, and European oil companies. Are you trying to slice out the British and American oil companies from Venezuela?

Chávez: No, we don’t want them to go, and I don’t think they want to leave the country, either. We need each other. It’s simply that we have recovered our oil sovereignty. They didn’t pay taxes. They didn’t pay royalties. They didn’t give an account of their actions to the government. They had more land than had previously been established in the contracts. They didn’t comply with the agreed technology exchange. They polluted the environment and didn’t pay anything towards the cleanup. They now have to comply with the law.

Q: You’ve said that you imagine the price of oil rising to $100 dollars per barrel. Are you going to use your new oil wealth to squeeze the planet?

Chávez: No, no. We have no intention of squeezing anyone. Now, we have been squeezed and very hard. Five hundred years of squeezing us and stifling us, the people of the South. I do believe that demand is increasing and supply is dropping and the large reservoirs are running out. But it’s not our fault. In the future, there must be an agreement between the large consumers and the large producers.

Q: What happens when the oil money runs out, what happens when the price of oil falls as it always does? Will the Bolivarian revolution of Hugo Chávez simply collapse because there’s no money to pay for the big free ride?

Chávez: I don’t think it will collapse, in the unlikely case of oil running out today. The revolution will survive. It does not rely solely on oil for its survival. There is a national will, there is a national idea, a national project. However, we are today implementing a strategic program called the Oil Sowing Plan: using oil wealth so Venezuela can become an agricultural country, a tourist destination, an industrialized country with a diversified economy. We are investing billions of dollars in the infrastructure: power generators using thermal energy, a large railway, roads, highways, new towns, new universities, new schools, recuperating land, building tractors, and giving loans to farmers. One day we won’t have any more oil, but that will be in the twenty-second century. Venezuela has oil for another 200 years.

Q: But the revolution can come to an end if there’s another coup and it succeeds. Do you believe Bush is still trying to overthrow your government?

Chávez: He would like to, but what you want is one thing, and what you cannot really obtain is another.

Investigative reporter Greg Palast, who interviewed President Hugo Chávez for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), is the author of “Armed Madhouse: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class War,” from which this is adapted.

Venezuela: U.S. Would Undermine Election

CARACAS, Venezuela
Venezuela's information minister said Monday that U.S. officials were urging opponents of President Hugo Chavez to boycott a December presidential vote. But U.S. officials dismissed the charge.

Information Minister Willian Lara said U.S. Embassy officials have held meetings with presidential candidates who side with the opposition and urged them to pull out of the election campaign ahead of the Dec. 3 vote.

``We have information about meetings that have been held in which the idea of participating in the electoral campaign until November and then withdrawing from it has been proposed,'' Lara told a press conference.

U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Salome Hernandez, referring to Lara's allegations, said: ``We don't respond to baseless accusations.''

Chavez, a close ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, has repeatedly accused the Bush administration of conspiring with Venezuela's opposition to topple his ``revolutionary'' government. U.S. officials have repeatedly denied the allegation.

Candidates hoping to challenge Chavez in the presidential vote deny taking orders from the U.S. government.

Opposition leaders are demanding an independent audit of the voter registry and a manual vote count to guarantee a transparent election. They have threatened to boycott the vote if their demands are not met by the National Elections Council, which is viewed by many government foes as pro-Chavez.

Colombia remains deadliest country for trade union leaders

AFL-CIO Solidarity Center reports more than 4,000 trade unions murdered since the mid-1980s.

Washington (27 June 2006) - Colombia remains the deadliest place on earth for trade unionists, says a new report by the AFL-CIO Solidarity Center.

Entitled Justice for All- The Struggle for Workers Rights in Colombia, the report provides extensive background and updated information but sums up the situation in a single chilling passage:

"Since the mid-1980s, approximately 4,000 trade unionists have been murdered in Colombia, more than 2,000 of them since 1991," the report says.

"More trade unionists are killed each year in Colombia than in the rest of the world combined. In October 2005, the ICFTU reported that Colombia was once again the 'deadliest country for trade unionists.'"

According to ENS (Escuela Nacional Sindical), 70 trade unionists were killed in 2005 while 260 received death threats, 56 were arbitrarily detained, seven survived attacks in which explosives or firearms were used, six were kidnapped, and three disappeared. Thirty-four trade unionists were murdered in 2004, mostly in connection with collective bargaining disputes or strikes.

International action needed

James Clancy, president of the 340,000-member National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE), says the international community must take action and one of the most obvious ways to exert pressure is through trade agreements.

Clancy noted that the United States is currently negotiating a free trade agreement with Colombia and that there are ongoing negotiations related to Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA), which would extend the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between Canada, the United States and Mexico to more than 30 other Central and South American countries.

"The ongoing FTAA negotiations include the Colombian government," Clancy says.

"This provides all governments, including the government of Canada, with a clear opening to address this barbaric crisis. Canada must take a stand to defend workers rights in these negotiations - indeed in all such talks. A clear message to the Colombian government is needed: stop the violence and respect human and labour rights."

Labour and fundamental rights

AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, in a forward to the report, says labour and human rights are keys to a solution.

"Colombia doesn’t even comply with the most basic human rights," Sweeney argues.

"The first step is to end violence against working people. Colombia also needs to negotiate a just peace [with guerillas], create a democratic environment, build a fair economy, and establish the rule of law, with full support of the international community and every actor in Colombia’s political and economic life," Sweeney says.

"As part of this process, the Colombian government must bring its labor law into harmony with fundamental worker rights and genuinely commit to its enforcement. For Colombia to prosper in peace, Colombian workers must first gain their most basic human rights." NUPGE

Mexico leftist says won't mix economics, ideology

MEXICO CITY
The leftist favored to win Mexico's presidential election this week said on Monday he would not mix ideology with economics, playing down investor fears he could run up debts with populist spending policies.

"There will be responsible management of the economy. Technical, not ideological management of the economy," Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said in an interview published in El Universal newspaper.

Former indigenous welfare officer Lopez Obrador has a slight opinion poll lead ahead of an election on Sunday that will test whether Latin America's political lurch to the left of recent years can take root as far north as the U.S. border.

The leftist's nearest rival, conservative ruling party candidate Felipe Calderon, has said Lopez Obrador would wreck Mexico's economy and exacerbate class tension. Calderon warned on Sunday of a "horror movie" of debt and division if his rival won.

Investors hope Lopez Obrador's economic polices would be closer to those of Brazil's pragmatist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva than the heavy state interventionism of Venezuela's outspokenly anti-U.S. leader Hugo Chavez.

But Lopez Obrador rejected comparisons with either, saying Mexico's proximity to the United States and its economic dependence on its powerful neighbor would put him in a different position from other regional leftist leaders.

"Every country has its story. Mexico is not the same as Brazil or Venezuela," he said in the interview. "We have a ... border with the United States, the most powerful nation in the world, where 20 million of our countrymen live."

Lopez Obrador said that if elected he would work with President Vicente Fox to ensure a smooth handover of power on Dec. 1 and said that it was important to send investors messages of stability and certainty.

June 26, 2006

What is a fair share of state resources?

by Joseph Stiglitz
A few months ago, Evo Morales became Bolivia’s first democratically elected indigenous head of state. Indigenous groups make up 62% of Bolivia’s population, and those with mixed blood another 30%, but for 500 years Bolivians had been ruled by colonial powers and their descendants. Well into the 20th century, indigenous groups were in effect deprived of a vote and a voice. Aymara and Quechua, their languages, were not even recognised for conducting public business. So Morales’ election was historic, and the excitement in Bolivia is palpable.

But Morales’ nationalisation of Bolivia’s oil and gas fields sent shock waves through the international community. During his campaign, Morales made clear his intention to increase state control over national gas and oil. But he had made it equally clear he did not intend to expropriate the property of energy firms; he wanted foreign investors to stay. (Nationalisation does not necessarily mean expropriation without appropriate compensation.) Perhaps surprising for modern politicians, Morales took his words seriously.

Genuinely concerned about raising the incomes of his desperately poor people, he recognised that Bolivia needed foreigners’ expertise to achieve growth, and that this entailed paying fairly for their services. But are foreign owners getting more than a fair rate of return?
...

Inter-American Development Bank seeks new approach to Latin problems

by Jane Bussey
With leftist politicians on the rise throughout Latin America, Washington policymakers are turning their sights on the left-behind majorities fueling the populist surge.

It is the latest struggle for the hearts and minds of people in a region swept first by free market reforms favored by the U.S. government and now buffeted by a shift to more home-grown policies that sometimes fly in the face of the United States.

Sensing a seismic shift in South American sentiment, the Inter-American Development Bank recently unfurled a major initiative in Washington, D.C. to respond to the growing needs of the region's people.

Under the banner ''Building Opportunity for the Majority,'' the IDB recently lined up a series of luminaries -- from the cardinal of Honduras to Latin America's richest man to former President Bill Clinton -- to discuss the Achilles' heel of recent policies: the persistence of poverty.

The IDB initiative showcased baby steps rather than grand strides -- suggesting American and regional policymakers are still grappling with how to address the maverick leaders who are increasingly willing to break with Washington-backed policies.
...

Two Stories about Evo and Catholic Education

From New Zealand Herald
Bolivia's Morales drops secular education proposal
By Mario Roque
LA PAZ, Bolivia
Bolivian President Evo Morales has scrapped a proposal to drop religious education from the school curriculum because of opposition by the country's powerful Catholic Church.

About 80 per cent of Bolivians are Catholics and the leftist government's proposal to replace religion lessons with ethics classes has been one of the few issues to spark controversy as the country prepares to rewrite its constitution.
...

*
From MercoPress, Uruguay
Morales accepts defeat and declares he’s Catholic

Bolivian president Evo Morales said Friday he was Catholic and admitted praying regularly to ask favours from God and therefore will not eliminate religion classes in Bolivian government schools.

Morales back stepped from his original plan to make the government school system strictly laic following massive criticism from different sectors. However he asked that “Catholics” are not manipulated, in response to the strong protests from the country’s three most important cities that vehemently condemned his project to ban religious teaching.

Religious groups in Sucre, Cochabamba and El Alto in La Paz organized noisy protests all along the week demanding that the Morales administration project to “decolonize education” does not lead to the elimination or banning of religious education in the schooling system.

“I want to tell you I’m Catholic and I also believe in the aboriginal religion, that of mother earth, Pachamama, and these two religions have historically lived next to each other, how can I forget that?”, said Morales addressing a group of journalists in La Paz.

“If I ever have to marry, I hope the Pope accepts I marry”, he said jokingly.
...

June 25, 2006

Wall Street Journal calls Chavez a threat to World Peace

by Stephen Lendman
You won't find commentary and language any more hostile to Hugo Chavez than on the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal. Their June 23 piece by Mary Anastasia O'Grady in the Americas column is a clear, jaw-dropping example. It's practically blood-curdling in its vitriol which calls Hugo Chavez a threat to world peace.

The sad part of it is Journal readers believe this stuff and are likely to support any US government efforts to remove the "threat."

The O'Grady article is about the elections scheduled to take place in the fall for five non-permanent UN Security Council seats to be held in 2007. One of them will be for a Latin American seat now held by Argentina. The two countries vying to fill the opening are Guatemala and Venezuela.

You won't have to think long to guess which one the US supports ... its Guatemalan ally, of course.

* And why not ... for over 50 years its succession of military and civilian governments have all followed the dictates of their dominant northern neighbor.

In so doing, they all managed to achieve one of the world's worst human rights records that hasn't abated even after the 1996 Peace Accords were signed ending a brutal 36 year conflict. Although the country today is nominally a democratic republic, it continues to abuse its people according to documented reports by Amnesty International.

Amnesty is aware of sexual violence and extreme brutality against women including 665 murders in 2005 gotten from police records; 224 reported attacks on human rights activists and organizations in the same year with little or no progress made investigating them; forced evictions and destruction of homes of indigenous people in rural areas (echoes of Palestine); and no progress by the government and Constitutional Court in seeking justice for decades of genocidal crimes and crimes against humanity committed by paramilitary death squads and the Guatemalan military.

The sum of these and other unending abuses led Amnesty to call Guatemala a "land of injustice."

That record of abuse hardly matters to the Bush administration nor did it bother any past ones either since the CIA fomented a coup in 1954 ousting the country's democratically elected leader Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. That coup began a half century reign of terror against the country's indigenous Mayan majority. It was fully supported by a succession of US presidents who were quite willing to overlook it as long as Guatemalan governments maintained a policy of compliance with the US agenda. They all did, and in return received the support and blessing of the US and its corporate giants that continue to suck the life out of that oppressed country.

Guatemala fills the bill nicely for the Bush administration and would be expected to be a close ally in support of US positions that come up for votes in the UN Security Council. Venezuela, on the other hand, is a different story. Since he was first democratically elected in 1998, Hugo Chavez has done what few other leaders ever do. He's kept his promises to his people to serve their interests ahead of those of other nations, especially the US that's dominated and exploited Venezuela for decades. He's served them well, and in so doing engendered the wrath of his dominant northern neighbor that already has tried and failed three times to oust him and is now planning a fourth attempt to do it.

The idea of a Chavez-led government holding a seat on the Security Council does not go down well in Washington, and the Bush administration is leading a campaign to prevent it with aid and support of the kind of attack-dog journalism found in the Wall Street Journal.

* Honest observers know this newspaper of record for corporate America has a hard time dealing with facts it dislikes so it invents the ones it does to use in their place.

The June 23 editorial is a good example.

It extols the record of the Guatemalan government with its long-standing record of extreme abuse against its own people falsely claiming it's been "accumulating an impressive record of international cooperation on a variety of UN efforts."

It claims one of its main qualifications is its "active role international peacekeeping" and that the country is now home to a Central American regional peacekeeping school and training center.

Oddly it mentions that Guatemalan peacekeepers are now serving in the Congo, Sudan and Haiti.

What it fails to mention is that those so-called "peacekeepers," along with those from other countries serving with them, have in large part functioned as paramilitary enforcers, and in that capacity have committed gross human rights abuses against the local people rather than trying to protect them. The WSJ writer surely knows this but didn't choose to share that information with her readers. Instead she extols the country's "democratic credentials." But readers with any knowledge of recent Guatemalan history surely know that country's true record is one of extreme violence and abuse against its own people and one no one would think of as a nation representing them democratically.

The WSJ June 23 editorial is titled "A Vote for Venezuela Is a Vote for Iran."

The commentary in it, is one of the paper's most extreme diatribes against the Venezuelan leader which would seem to indicate the Bush administration and corporate America are stepping up their attack on Hugo Chavez in advance of when they plan to make their move to oust him.

The Journal writer calls him a "strongman" in an "oil dictatorship" leading a government that values "tyranny and aggression" who'll use his seat and Council presidency when his nation assumes it to support "hostile states" like Iran, Cuba, Sudan and North Korea.

Observers knowledgeable about Venezuela under Chavez would have a hard time containing themselves as the true Chavez record is totally opposite the one the Journal portrays.

The Journal writer, of course, knows this, but would never report it in her column. Her employer and the interests it serves wouldn't be pleased if she did.

While claiming that a Guatemala seat on the Council is a "voice for the region, not its own national interests," it says Venezuela's "rests largely on oil 'diplomacy' and the capacity to push anti-American buttons around the UN." It goes on to state "It may seem strange Venezuela has any support in the region. Over the past seven years, its meddling in its neighbors' politics 'have' (even the grammar is wrong) earned it a reputation as a bully. Mr. Chavez is persona non grata in more than a few Latin nations. Many countries are worried about Venezuela's 'big spending' to acquire fighter jets and 100,000 Kalashnikovs from Russia."

Readers may need to pause to catch their breath.

What the Journal writer doesn't explain is far more important than what she does -- but she's doing her job as a servant of the US empire. Chavez' so-called "oil diplomacy," in fact, is based on his Bolivarian Alternative of the Americas or ALBA. It's based on the principles of complementarity (not competition), solidarity (not domination), cooperation (not exploitation) and respect for other nations' sovereignty free from the control of dominant powers like the US and its large transnational corporations.

It's the mirror opposite of US-style predatory capitalism and the one-sided trade agreements it uses to exploit other countries for its own gain.

The nations participating in ALBA-style agreements are able to operate outside the usual international banking and corporate trading system in their exchange of goods and services so that each country benefits and none loses -- just the opposite of the one-sided way the US operates. Because Venezuela is rich in oil, it's been able to trade that vital commodity with its neighbors who need it, even sell it to them at below-market prices, and get back in return the products and services its trading partners can supply on an equally favorable basis. It's a true "win-win" arrangement for participating countries but one that angers the US because it cuts its corporations and big banks out of the process.

The Chavez plan is to help his people, not serve the interests of the corporate giants or dominant US neighbor.

The WSJ calls this "meddling" and Chavez a "bully."

What glorious meddling it is, in the true spirit of the country's Bolivarian Revolution, and "bully" to Hugo Chavez for doing it.

As for Chavez' so-called "big spending" for weapons that has "many countries worried," one must wonder which countries the Journal writer means. She mentions none ... which she surely would have and quoted their officials if, in fact, there were any.

The truth, of course, is Hugo Chavez is acting no differently than most all other countries in the region or elsewhere, has expressed no hostility toward any of them, has never invaded a neighbor or threatened to, and is a model of a peace-promoting leader who's only taking sensible steps to upgrade his small military and protect his nation against a hostile US he has every reason to believe will attack him.

But you'll never find that commentary on the pages of the Wall Street Journal.

The Journal editorial ends in grand style.

It demeans the poor countries of the region benefiting from below-market priced Venezuelan oil as likely supporting that country for the Latin American Council seat. It also attacks Argentina for being a "Venezuelan pawn," calling it "once a haven for Nazis" (the US was and still is), and stating "the country has been so incompetent about managing its 'resources' that it too needs charity from Mr. Chavez." Indeed, Argentina had big financial trouble at the end of the 1990s, but the Journal writer doesn't explain why ... it was because the country became the "poster child" model for US-style neoliberal free market capitalism in the 1990s ... it wrecked the economy causing it to collapse into bankruptcy it's still struggling to recover from.

The Journal writer also attacks Bolivia and Cuba for supporting Chavez but is particularly hostile to the Lula government in Brazil for its siding with the Venezuelan leader. She calls that support "surprising" and accused the Brazilian government of being "Bolivia's unofficial energy advisor (that) orchestrated the confiscation of Brazilian assets (in Bolivia) recently."

Bolivian President Evo Morales nationalized his nation's energy resources which Bolivian law clearly states the nation owns. He confiscated nothing, which the Journal writer surely knows but failed to tell her readers. She also mentioned a so-called "eternal Brazilian struggle to prove that it can challenge US 'hegemony' in the region (that) trumps the need to regain dignity and protect its investments abroad."

Left out of the commentary is any mention that Argentina, Bolivia, Cuba and Brazil are sovereign states with the right to support whatever policies and other countries they wish without needing US approval to do it.

About the only final comment the Journal writer can make is to claim Guatemala has the "solid backing of the 'more serious democracies' in the region -- such as Colombia and Mexico." It's likely what the writer means by "serious" is those countries' elections are about as free and fair as ours ... meaning, they only are for the power-elites controlling them who arrange the outcomes they want.

The June 23 Wall Street Journal editorial was a typical example of what this newspaper calls journalism and editorial commentary.

* This writer follows it to learn what the US empire likely is up to.

In the case of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, the US empire is no doubt up to no good.

The continued hostile rhetoric is clearly to signal another attempt to oust the Venezuelan leader at whatever time ... and by whatever means ...the Bush administration has in mind.

Stay tuned.

VENEZUELA: How workers sacked their bosses

by Jim McIlroy & Coral Wynter, Caracas
During its April-May tour of Venezuela, an Australian trade union brigade organised by the Australia-Venezuela Solidarity Network visited the Invepal paper plant at Moron, west of Caracas. After the owners attempted to shut the factory (which was a privately owned firm called Venepal at the time) and sack the work force, workers took the plant over and ran it under their control.

In January 2005, the government of President Hugo Chavez granted workers’ demand that the company be nationalised. Invepal is now run jointly by the workers, organised into a cooperative, and the state — a process referred to as co-management.

Alexis Pereira, a founding member of the Invepal cooperative, explained that in the 1998 presidential elections, when Hugo Chavez was a presidential candidate, “the conglomerate that owned the company announced that if Chavez won they were going to shut Venepal down”. The conglomerate had interests in several other industries in Venezuela, and they threatened to sack all their workers — more than 2000 nationally.

“Venepal workers got together to plan how we could get control of the plant. And at the time there was a very corrupt union involved, so we had to work to get rid of them as well.”

Venepal’s owner “had fled to Spain”, Pereira explained. “In 1996, there was a bank crash and the government got an International Monetary Fund package to save the banks. And as soon as the banks got the money from the IMF, their owners left the country — including Venepal’s owner, who also had a lot of financial capital in banking. The plant’s administrators made themselves the new owners.”

In September 2000, the Venepal workers won control of the union in elections.

“In 2001, the owners wanted to declare themselves bankrupt, but a court ruling gave them one year before they could be declared legally bankrupt. They began to sell off a lot of smaller factories owned by the conglomerate. Hundreds of workers were sacked through this process. They sold off cardboard-making machines to a US company, giving them a monopoly over cardboard-making in Venezuela.

“By July 2003, the workers had already started organising to stop this, and prevented the machines from leaving the factory. We held a popular assembly and we took the plant over.” The plant was shut for 87 days.

“After the ministry of labour came to an agreement with the company, the plant was reopened. [The agreement] didn’t meet all the workers’ demands, but the judge put forward an agreement that the workers would continue to work until another solution came along. The workers refused to sign that agreement, fearing the further solution would be in favour of the owners. We restarted work, but continued occupying the factory.”

“It was a very hard two months”, Pereira told Green Left Weekly, because the workers weren’t being paid. “Workers in the area started helping us, giving us food and so on. But mostly we were asking for money from on the freeway.” Pereira was the union’s secretary at the time.

“The workers were now taking control of production, managing the amount of goods that went in and came out. Of the 850 workers who were in the plant at the start of the stoppage, there were only 345 left. All the rest left through redundancies, including all the women, who had families to support.

“The employers launched psychological warfare against us. They said they didn’t have any money to pay us and they cut our transport. So the union had to get in contact with other unions for assistance. We started sending petitions and letters to the government. We held marches in Moron and Caracas.

According to Pereira, “The petitions were rejected by the state government so we went to the national government. The leaders of the National Union of Workers [UNT — a union federation that supports the revolutionary process led by the Chavez government] really pressured the government to act.” On January 23, 2005, the National Assembly voted to nationalise Venepal. Chavez signed the decree six days later.

“The workers had already formed a cooperative in August 2003, hoping to take over the plant. We had tried all the different legal and political avenues to get the plant under workers’ control.” When Chavez signed the decree, the government also gave the workers US$7 million in credit to aid the cooperative.

“What has come out of the assembly and the agreements with the government is a process called co-management — cooperation between the government and the workers. However, at this stage there is no union here [after the workers voted to dissolve the existing one].

“At the centre of the operation is the workers’ assembly, with 300 workers. The government has 51% ownership, while the cooperative has 49%. There is a management board of five, with two people from the government and three from the workers.

“Different sectors of workers, like the electricians or the mechanics, all have one representative elected by the workers in their department as coordinators. These coordinators meet twice a week, and if they can’t solve problems in those meetings, they’re taken to the assembly, made up of 300 workers.”

The cooperative also plays a role in the community, Pereira told GLW. “We have water trucks here, so where communities need water, we take it to those communities, and we donate paper to schools”.

Invepal workers haven’t had a co-management model they could use as an example. “We’re making this structure up as we go along”, Pereira said. “There is a lack of laws that govern co-managed industries. Laws have been introduced into parliament, but not yet passed.

“The initial worker administration of the cooperative, which had just been named, not elected, because of time constraints, were all replaced by the popular assembly in November because they were moving towards a capitalist-type company. The former president and treasurer were expelled. The rest of the old management team were put back on the shop floor.”

Pereira said that the members of the old management “were not personally corrupt, but were acting like capitalists, and here the workers are socialists, Marxists”. Pereira was included in the new management group.

“The labour minister came to supervise this process and she said that in the interim, while things were stabilising, she would name herself as the president of Invepal.” The Invepal workers said that the president position would be only symbolic and “would have no power, and that [the workers] would run the show”.

“There are associated plants carrying out downstream production that are also owned by Invepal. At Maracay, they have their own assembly. The workers there are on contract, but we are starting to instruct them in how to form their own cooperative.”

“Of all profits that come in, 51% go to the government and 49% go to the cooperative”, Pereira said. Out of the cooperative’s profits, 30% will be spent on health services, education or community spending, or for emergencies. “If there is an extraordinary profit one year, the assembly will decide which capital investment they will put it into, but they will invest it back into the plant. Any wage increase has to be discussed in the assembly and voted on, also taking into account that they need to be careful because they might not have that money next year.

“The owners of the other factories nearby don’t see workers’ control as very favourable to their interests ... Invepal workers have already helped out other workers ... such as at Inveval [a valve-making company also nationalised by the government and run under a co-management system similar to Invepal’s] and there’s a tomato sauce factory where the workers have taken over the plant.”

Invepal workers are also advising workers in other cooperatives, such as at the Gotcha clothing factory. Pereira added that the Invepal workers are giving advice to workers who have taken over a Caracas underwear factory, “so they don’t make the same mistakes as we have made”.

“We have very good relations with the workers in surrounding factories, and with the UNT. We’ve formed a bloc with other workers, and have been involved in marches and in helping put forward demands by other workers for collective agreements.

“Other workers are seen as brothers, and we want to show them that this model of co-management actually works. We want to show other workers that we have a very clear consciousness of what we are doing, and that we are just ordinary people, who did the right thing at extraordinary moments.

“In the years of union struggle, you had to come to some agreement. There always had to be some final position when you come to some agreement with the boss. And when capitalism is strong, they try to get rid of any honest union people. They only want to deal with corrupt unionists. That’s the way capitalism works. We are saying that this model of workers’ control is far in advance of that. You don’t have to come to agreement with any boss; you’re electing your own boss.

“The workers also develop the consciousness that a lot of what we are doing is affecting the local community. Our neighbours, the people we know, are affected by our decisions because any work that is contracted out from the plant isn’t going to be given to a private company. It’s going to be contracted out to a workers cooperative from the community.”

Pereira had this final message for participants in the trade union brigade: “We hope that when you return to Australia, you will take on this question of workers’ control and cooperatives. Australia, like any other country, experiences injustice. If the situation presents itself in Australia, you know that there is a solution to injustice suffered by the workers.”

[To find out how to participate in a solidarity brigade to Venezuela, visit .]

From Green Left Weekly, June 28, 2006.

Landowners, landless clash over Bolivia's reform effort

by Monty Reel
Okinawa , Bolivia
Choei Yara sleeps in a boxy room in the back of his roadside dry goods store, and the lump under his thin pillow is a loaded .45-caliber pistol. It is intended for a specific emergency: an attack so sudden that he'd be unable to reach the pump-action shotgun that leans against a bare concrete wall, just five feet away.

He's not afraid of the store being robbed, but he believes that the piece of paper stating that he owns about 1,400 acres of fertile soil is the kind of thing that can drive men to violent extremes. Property in Latin America is more unevenly distributed than anywhere on the planet, and Bolivia is no exception. But this month the country began a project to shuffle ownership rights affecting 20 percent of its land area, giving most of it to the poor. And tensions are starting to boil.

Those with land are starting to dig in to protect their turf. Those without it, emboldened by the recent government announcements, are taking over more properties on their own, without government approval.

"I've worked this land for 30 years, and I have never had a problem until this past year," said Yara, 63, whose family was among the Japanese immigrants who founded this community in eastern Bolivia after World War II. "But now I get death threats from the landless peasants, and they are threatening to kidnap my family. No one respects private property anymore, not even the government."

On June 9, one man was shot dead and more than a dozen were wounded in clashes as local authorities tried to evict peasants from land they had taken over in western Bolivia. Two days before that incident, two men were shot in similar circumstances in the central region. In this eastern province of Santa Cruz, agricultural organizations have threatened to form self-defense groups to protect farm property if the state tries to take it away. And across the border in Brazil, where property-related violence has been a problem for decades, a federation of landless peasants stormed the parliament building in the capital on June 7, breaking open the glass doors and demanding agrarian reforms.

The conflict in Bolivia is firmly rooted in the stark inequities that President Evo Morales says his "agrarian revolution" is designed to correct. About 90 percent of Bolivian land is owned by the wealthiest 7 percent of the population. Imbalances like that have helped make Bolivia South America's poorest nation: About 63 percent of its citizens -- and nearly 80 percent of its rural population -- live in poverty.

Morales has said much of his nation's land is not being used productively, and he complains that large swaths were given to wealthy elites during the dictatorships of the 1970s. Under his plan, if the government deems land unproductive or obtained illegally, it is subject to confiscation and redistribution.

The tension now, however, is concentrated not so much in the places where land is clearly unproductive as in the places where the definitions of productivity are more subjective and open to argument. Like Yara's place.

Armed guards

Standing behind a rusty pan scale, Yara tilts his head slightly and eyes customers warily when they enter his store, where sacks of potatoes and rice sit on worn planks in the middle of the floor. The way he figures it, he's one unjust decision away from losing everything, and these days he sees injustice in a lot of familiar faces he used to trust.

" 'Bolivian land should be for Bolivians -- that's what they're telling me now," said Yara, watching one of his daughters weigh rice he'd grown on his land. "It's not right. I've always been supportive of Bolivia. I pay all my taxes. My children are Bolivians, and they're married to Bolivians. I sacrificed a lot to get that land."

Yara took out bank loans three decades ago, paying about $80,000 over the years for his deed. But in the past year, landless peasants have moved onto the fringes of his property, bringing in tractors and planting their own crops on it. He said they told him it was their right to take it because it was unproductive; he said it was just between growing cycles. He sued the peasants twice in local courts, he said, and won both times.

But Yara said that two months ago, Bolivia's minister of rural development -- who oversees the land reform plan -- called him and told him he must remove the 10 armed guards who were protecting his property from a takeover by Bolivia's federation of landless peasants. Yara reluctantly sent the guards away, and now about 50 members of the group, the Landless Movement, are occupying about one-fourth of his property. They keep telling him they'll take more soon, he said, and they promise bodily harm if he doesn't let them have it.

"Now I only have four bodyguards, who I pay to look after me and my family," he said, "but not the land."

Farm guards are a touchy subject around Okinawa. After a Santa Cruz agricultural group suggested this month that self-defense squadrons might be the best way to resist what they consider unjust reforms, the government responded by saying it would not tolerate private armies roaming the countryside. Masanori Toguchi, a farmer who helps operate a grain mill across the road from Yara's store, said he recently hired a team of armed guards, effectively clearing out a group of landless peasants who had taken over a portion of his property. The guards are "more or less trained," he said. He wasn't sure where his lawyer found them.

"They don't have phones, and they're kind of hidden," Toguchi said. "We don't really know who they are."

Promises of land

From Yara's store, a dirt road winds for about 10 miles between freshly planted wheat fields before surrendering to weedy overgrowth. After cutting through the middle of a field of 9-foot-high sugarcane, a clearing comes into view: a dirt expanse dotted with dozens of shacks made of sticks and palm fronds. Of the few hundred people living on that patch of land, about 80 count themselves as members of the landless federation.

Carmelo Ortiz is one. With eight children, his one-room hut is too crowded, so one afternoon recently he searched for fronds for a half-completed addition he hopes to finish in the next couple of months. His daughter wrung a shirt dry over a plastic bucket of cloudy water. One of his sons, stepping out of the dim hut and blinking in the sun, picked a square of mud from his cutoff jeans.

When he can, Ortiz helps local landowners in their fields, earning about $4 for a day's work. But he has dreams of being his own boss, growing his own crops, on his own piece of land. He was part of the group that took over part of Toguchi's land for three months earlier this year, and he was with them when they decided to retreat after hearing about the armed guards. Just last month, he said, he saw guards on another farmer's property shoot at a group of peasants.

Why a farmer who already has a lot of land would get so worked up over sharing part of it, he and others said, is unfathomable to the campesinos in the village.

"God created the resource of land," said Luciano Winchaca, a local campesino advocate who has helped the Landless Movement with its quest for land. "It should be divided equally for everyone, not be given to somebody because they speak better Spanish or come from a certain family. We all have the same rights. These people don't understand the will of God."

That said, most of the landless in Okinawa say things have never been better. When Morales was elected in December, Ortiz and his neighbors threw a party that lasted all night. With his promises to redistribute the wealth of Bolivia among the poor, Morales is nothing short of a folk hero in the village of Okinawa.

"Everything is changing for the campesino," said Ortiz, 40, who is confident he will get a plot of land in the coming months. "We have hope now -- we haven't had that with any government in the history of this country."

Large-scale land reform has been tried in the past in Bolivia, and it failed miserably because of a lack of resources and political will. The country's first agrarian reform plan was passed in 1953, and another was tried in 1996. After nearly $100 million was spent in an attempt to redistribute 250 million acres during the past 10 years, only 17 percent of the target areas changed hands.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez -- an ideological ally of Morales who has promoted smaller-scale land reform in his country -- has pledged financial support. But Bolivia will have to find a lot more money to keep the current effort from joining the long list of failed agrarian reforms in Latin America.

If Ortiz gets a piece of land, for example, he will still need equipment to work it and money for additional supplies and seeds. Ortiz calculates that for each acre of land, he would need about $200. He's not sure where that money would come from, and the government has not yet offered specific details on credit and support programs for the new landowners.

"I have lived like this all my life," Ortiz said, nodding to his hut, where his 8-year-old son was helping his 12-year-old daughter carry water. "But we can't live like this forever."

Venezuela's Chavez names new defense minister

CARACAS, Venezuela
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced on Saturday that army commander Gen. Raul Baduel, who helped the firebrand leftist return to power in 2002, will become Venezuela's next defense minister.

It was not clear when Baduel would assume the post.

Chavez, a former soldier who has promised a socialist revolution in the world's No. 5 oil exporter, has led a campaign to fortify Venezuela's military with arms purchases that Washington has called a military "spending spree."

"I announce the ascent of General Baduel ... he will be the next minister of defense," Chavez said during a military parade. He did not specify what would happen to the current defense minister, Adm. Orlando Maniglia.

In April 2002, Baduel led a military mission to restore Chavez to power after he was briefly ousted by a coalition of opposition politicians and dissident military officers.

Baduel also has helped train Venezuelan reservists and civilians to use guerrilla warfare tactics to fend off a possible U.S. invasion.

Chavez, who led a failed coup in 1992, insists the Bush administration is planning an invasion of Venezuela to take over the nation's oil reserves.

State Department officials pass off the accusations as saber rattling and accuse Chavez of using his oil wealth to destabilize democracy in the region.

The United States this year blocked Chavez from purchasing Spanish planes and ships by denying export permits for U.S. technology used in them, leading Chavez to seek similar vessels from Russia.

The Uprising of Oaxaca – How Far Can it Go?

by Nancy Davies
OAXACA CITY
Two Issues Must Now Be Resolved: Removal of Governor Ulises Ruiz and Resolution of the Teachers’ Educational Demands

Oaxaca is a contentious state, with conflicts in towns, on public and communal lands. Assassinations each year number between 20 and 30. The state has 570 municipalities, but in 2004, 750 cases of agrarian conflict.

Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) has united the people of Oaxaca – in opposition to him, and to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, in its Spanish initials), which has maintained a strangle-hold on Oaxaca for more than seventy years, maintaining caciquismo (the power of local political bosses) and aggravating the agrarian conflicts to divide the people. Selling their votes to the PRI is how towns obtain what should be rightfully theirs, including schools and educational supplies.

The Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) has now met three times. Today, June 24, 2006, at the close of the APPO, the general secretary of the Section 22 of the National Education Workers’ Union (SNTE), Enrique Rueda Pacheco, held a press conference in which he assured the public that the teachers’ strike will be settled this weekend.

Now the question becomes, can the education demands, which may be settled soon, be separated from the demand for URO to resign?

By all reports, the range of APPO attendees extends from the PRI-affiliated, to the anarchists and revolutionaries on the far left. The APPO declared itself unified by a desire to oust URO. Today’s decisions, beyond Pacheco’s statement, are not yet known.

However, Pacheco announced on Friday, June 23, 2006 that the threatened boycott of the July 2 election won’t happen. That’s a withdrawal of previous threats by the union.

Pacheco announced a new group of mediators for the education negotiations, among them some of the least militant personalities of Oaxaca: artist Francisco Toledo, Archbishop José Luis Chávez Botello, the emeritus bishop of Tehuantepec, and businessman Carlos Guzmán Gardeazábal.

The union refuses to negotiate with Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz or with any federal official of second rank – the union demands talks with somebody who has real power, that is, the Secretary of Government (“Segob,” equivalent to Secretary of Interior), Carlos Abascal Carranza, or somebody equivalent.

Segob has made it clear that it cannot negotiate with regard to URO’s removal, but will negotiate with regard to education, which is as much a federal matter as a state one.

Meanwhile, the city of Oaxaca bubbles with spontaneous demonstrations of support for Section 22’s call to remove URO. Yesterday, Section 22 received ten tons of supplies delivered in solidarity by the Union of Mexican Electricians, and an unscheduled people’s march sprang up in the Oaxaca City neighborhood of Rosario, picking up anti-Ruiz voices along its way to the center. It replaced the previously announced and then cancelled fourth SNTE “mega-march.”

Blockades and work-stoppages were announced by Radio Universidad, the united student-teacher station operating out of the Benito Juarez Autonomous University.

Presentations aired on Radio Universidad discuss the exploitation of Oaxaca under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Plan Puebla-Panama, neoliberalism and globalization – previously unmentioned subjects. Information percolates among the general public, which formerly held few conversations on subjects which were the province of “intellectuals” and student radicals. In call-ins to the station, housewives and retired people are suddenly talking about “class” differences. They mention the World Trade Organization and the benefits the rich receive. They mention URO as aligned with capitalist powers and decry how some who call for a return to the classrooms by the teachers actually send their own kids to private school. Many voices are indigenous.

The consciousness-raising politicization of Oaxaca has arrived.

The APPO is having a moderating effect on the teachers, while the strike is radicalizing the people. The foremost demand, that URO resign as governor, has not softened; it’s hard to see how either the APPO or Section 22 could back off on this issue – now that the entire state is ungovernable – without losing any future support from the public.

The astonishing unification of Oaxacan society may be what pushes the teachers’ Section 22 to bury its own internal differences – something that could not be achieved during the tour of Oaxaca by Subcomandante Marcos in his role as Delegate Zero for the Zapatista Other Campaign. At that time, Delegate Zero expressed his unwillingness to meet with groups that could not resolve their own internal conflicts to unite in a common struggle against the authoritarian government.

The Zapatista method of permitting everyone to speak, and listening to them indefinitely, is not practical for the APPO (not surprising given this urgent and stressful time period), but the sessions are still very long. Also, the APPO decided not to function by consensus, but by majority vote. The APPO declared that political parties, like the press, are not allowed in the assembly, but naturally many individuals espouse positions in accord with their politics.

In a marathon session, the second meeting of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca took place on June 20, 2006 lasting from noon to nine o’cock at night. The participating unions included the Health Workers Union, the Telmex (private telephone company) workers’ union, the Benito Juarez University workers, and the bus drivers’ union. A total of 79 groups participated, including popular and student organizations, municipal authorities, social organizations and independent citizens. Today, the day of the third APPO, I hear the student announcers on the radio calling for the presence of colonos and colonas – residents of the suburbs.

At the second meeting several accords were achieved, including how the assembly should be made up and how to maintain communications between different sectors. A very difficult issue will be how to maintain civil peace and conduct a parallel government – before, after or parallel to Governor Ruiz, who is now optimistically referred to as the ex-governor.

Among the action points discussed were the boycott of the federal elections of July 2 (which was cancelled) and further marches and blockades of offices and highways. A statewide work stoppage called for Friday, June 23 was cancelled. A shopping boycott called against the supermarket Pitico, the pharmacy Ahorra, and some of the zócalo (central plaza) restaurants didn’t happen. The Oaxaca zócalo, still in the hands of the teachers, was well-guarded on all sides but open enough for pedestrians to enter.

The entrance to the university building where the second APPO met was controlled by students and other youngsters, all of them members of the Committee for the Defense of Human Rights who, with faces covered with bandannas, carried sticks and machetes and blocked access to the press.

Among the groups present were the Wide Front for Popular Struggle (FALP), and the Revolutionary Popular Front (FRP), as well as the Union of Revolutionary Youths of Mexico, the Committee for Defense of the People, and the General Strike Council of the Autonomous National University of Mexico.

An anarchist faction seeks the removal of powers from all the branches of government in Oaxaca: legislative, judicial and legislative.

A substantial number of the teachers and delegates are adherents to the non-violent Other Campaign of the Zapatistas.

The majority of delegates belong to social non-governmental organizations, which work in Oaxaca to improve conditions for the people without overt politic affiliations, as is required by Mexican law. These organizations were among the first to call for non-violence after the June 14 attack, and pledged their support to the united struggle against Ruiz. They constitute non-militant, middle-of-the-road factions which hope to forge from the APPO a unified popular sector which will act in a reasonable and balanced way (read, non-radical) in negotiating with the government, and continue as an ongoing public voice, regardless of the outcome of the current negotiations.

Many young folks, of course, are implacably radical.

How to maintain the startling moment of unity is the big question. The question for many teachers after this weekend may be, can I go home now? Within Section 22 itself divisions break out between PRD (Party of the Democratic Revolution) and PRI supporters. The national SNTE, led by Elba Esther Gordillo (a widely disliked PRI militant known for both her fierce combativeness and corruption) opposes the presidential candidate Roberto Madrazo. Section 22 is split within, into pro-Gordillo and anti-Gordillo factions, as well as PRD supporters.

The outcome of the federal presidential elections July 2 looms on the horizon. Although Fox won’t jeopardize the candidacy of the PAN candidate Calderón by interfering (the reports of federal troops nearby turned out to be rumors planted to intimidate the teachers), should Calderón or Madrazo be elected, the situation changes. Thus it looks more urgent for Pacheco to agree to some resolution of the teachers’ educational demands before July 2.

The teachers’ educational demands focus on the neglected educational infrastructure and restructuring teachers’ salaries. Education in Oaxaca is poor, and the illiteracy rate is around 25 percent (compared to about 8 percent nationally), with most of the illiterate being indigenous women. Many teachers complain of having to conduct classes in shacks made of laminated cardboard and of a lack of books, supplies and food for the children who arrive hungry. URO was roundly denounced for his neglect of education.

“Ruiz has remained deaf to all demands and necessities of Oaxacan society, causing widespread dissatisfaction in all civil sectors,” the APPO declared in its first meeting. Ruiz is accused of the unauthorized use of public resources for Madrazo’s campaign. So when he claims there’s no money for education the public response is understandable outrage.

Ruiz is also accused of the destruction of the historical, natural and cultural patrimony, harassment of independent media, excessive use of police and repression of unions and independent organizations.

Section 22 went on strike on May 21, 2006, establishing an encampment in downtown Oaxaca City, which effectively brought to a halt the center city’s tourist and commercial activities.

The police attacked the teachers’ strike encampment on June 14 before dawn. A popular corrido (ballad) hit the airwaves of Radio Universidad on June 16, celebrating the teacher-heroes.

The new people’s assembly held its first meeting on June 18, 2006. Today, June 24, the third APPO took place at the Hotel Magisterial. Two clear issues must now be resolved: removal of URO and resolution of the educational demands.

Tomorrow, Sunday, a cultural fiesta in support of the teachers will be held in the zócalo.

June 24, 2006

Chávez urges acceleration of real Latin American integration

PANAMA
Setting all protocol aside and visibly enthusiastic, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez today urged the peoples of Latin American to fight for true integration and open the road to the development of their countries.

In the midst of fervent expressions of solidarity, students, teachers, trade union leaders and representatives of indigenous communities listened attentively to his speech, which went on past midnight, at the University of Panama (UP).

About 2,000 people filled the university’s audirorium, but the number of people who came to show their support for Chávez exceeded expectations, and a giant TV screen had to be set up on the university esplanade.

The Venezuelan president feelingly recounted Bolívar’s last days and death, marked by frustration and sadness in the belief that his sacrifices had been futile.

“If it were possible, something that would give me enormous pleasure would be to embrace the Liberator and tell him that his battles opened the road in a visionary way, they showed the strategy for achieving the supreme goal of giving independence, sovereignty and development to the nations of Our America,” he affirmed.

“Another world is possible; let us remove ourselves from our differences, forge consciousness and determination to struggle; let us be active spectators of our reality, to make Latin America a prosperous and happy region,” he urged.

The leader of the Bolivarian Revolution reiterated his willingness to cooperate dynamically with the Panamanian government in the construction of a refinery and modernization of the country’s oil pipeline.

Likewise, he said that a good possibility exists for including Panama as part of the undersea gas pipeline soon to be built by Venezuela and Colombia from Cartagena de Indias.

“We also talked to Torrijos about creating a joint enterprise for supplying fuel at preferential prices, which would require new legislation here. We are not going to give gasoline to the transnationals so that they can get richer,” he noted.

Chávez explained that for historical reasons and his eternal admiration for the deceased General Omar Torrijos, architect of the recovery of sovereignty over the Panama Canal, his desire is to boost bilateral ties more than ever.

As the most recent examples, he noted the furious attacks by three U.S. Congress members and Representatives, talking nonsense about his person, and mentioned the announcement of a video game that is soon to be put on the market in the northern giant.

“They say unconcernedly that the video game is about invading Venezuela, overthrowing the dictator (me of course), and securing its oil. It is clearly a maneuver to create a climate for invading my country,” he said.

“They are going to be sweeping up our ashes, because we know how to confront military aggression, just as we have said that if they touch Cuba there will be Venezuelan blood defending our projects,” he affirmed.

The Venezuelan leader is carrying out an intense work schedule, including a private meeting with Torrijos, the laying of a floral wreath at a statue of the Liberator, and the signing of memorandums of understanding for bilateral trade, with predominance in the energy sector.

Also during his visit, he spoke at Bolívar Palace, which houses the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; in the National Assembly, and at the Hotel Caesar Park, with business owners.

Bolivia accuses students of spying

LA PAZ, Bolivia
Students attending a conflict resolution course in this politically tumultuous Andean nation got some unexpected extracurricular experience when Bolivia's leftist government accused the program's sponsor of being a front for U.S. spies.

The accusations came in a six-page Bolivian intelligence report riddled with grammatical errors. It claimed one of the course's local coordinators is a CIA agent.

The report was sent to reporters by e-mail on Thursday, two days after President Evo Morales claimed U.S. troops were sneaking into Bolivia disguised as students and tourists.

Morales' charges come amid increasingly strained U.S.-Bolivian relations. Morales is getting cozier with Venezuela and Cuba and shunning U.S. diplomats ahead of a July 2 vote to elect an assembly that will rewrite the constitution.

The U.S. Embassy called the government's accusations "unfounded" and the course's sponsor, the Alexandria, Va.-based Alliance for Conflict Transformation, denied claims that it was an office of the State Department with links to the Pentagon.
Alliance co-founder Nike Carstarphen said that all 26 students in the course, which began June 10 and was continuing in the eastern city of Santa Cruz, were civilians. Half of them are Americans and the rest are from Sweden, Indonesia, South Korea, Mexico and Bolivia, she said.

"It's sad. It's actually quite ironic," Carstarphen said. "They say we're playing war games when we're actually doing negotiations simulations."
The report named one of the students in the course, 26-year-old former Marine Joseph Humire. The former sergeant was born to Bolivian parents and said his seven years in the U.S. military included a combat tour in Iraq and training of Latin America troops.

Humire, of Vienna, Va., said he had been hounded by a man who had identified himself as an immigration agent when he arrived at the Santa Cruz airport from La Paz, where he said he was visiting his grandmother.

The report named another American, Mark Patrick Palaez, who was not among the course's participants.

It said Palaez identified himself as a sergeant stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C., who is visiting his family in Bolivia.

Chavez says Venezuela oil embargo could push price to 100 dollars

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez warned on Friday that oil prices could rocket to 100 U.S. dollars if his country stopped supplies to the United States.

"It's not true that if (an embargo) occurred prices would go up by 11 dollars," Chavez said in Panama, in response to a U.S. government draft report which put possible price hikes at 11 dollars per barrel.

"No, it would increase by more than twice what it says here. Prices would reach 100 dollars. They would pass the 100-dollar barrier."

Chavez has repeatedly threatened to cut oil shipments if the United States invades Venezuela, the world's No. 5 oil exporter which provides around 12 percent of U.S. oil imports.

However, he has also insisted that the embargo would take place only in the event of a U.S. attack.

In a related development, Chavez agreed to supply Panama with natural gas and petroleum in a deal signed during his ongoing visit here, just as Panama is experiencing one of its worst energy crises.

Latest developments in oaxaca

by tataanka
Since last wednesday's brutal police assault in oaxaca, a social movement has been growing which is on the verge of being revolutionary

The week following the early morning police assault on the 14th, the maestros and supporters occupied the zocalo only from the hours of 8 AM to 8 PM. However, they have been doing other things. Tuesday marked their statewide assembly, which I don't have aq huge amount of information on, other than that they've decided to make decisions by taking a vote. Since the beginning of the maestros planton, many other social groups have been involved helping out, and promoting their interests. Saturday was the first Oaxacan Popular Assembly, a meeting of many of the more radical folks who have been helping out, as well as more mainstream folks trying to get a neck in on the action.

OPA is an effort to build a unified opposition to Oaxacan Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz and the PRI, who ordered the bloody police attack. Present at the meeting were folks from the PRD (Democratic Revolutionary Party,) two socialist parties, the electricians union, the telephone union, social security union, The university facvulty of architecture and language, as well as several radical social justice groups based in the pueblos, such as the anarchist CIPO-RFM, and the socialist groups CODEP and OIDHO. All in all a total of 376 folks showed up at their first meeting, and ,deciding to make their decisions by concensus, they agreed on a document demanding for the immediate destitution of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. It should be noted that these folks overlap some, because many of the members of the radical social justice groups happen to be maestros as well, and are constantly pushing from the inside to radicalize things.

Wednesday Ulises Ruiz Ortiz organized a march "in defense of education," the local paper reported that it arrived with "french perfume and the smell of onions," commenting on the fact that while some of Ulises`upper class followers made it there, a large number of the marchers were hired campesinos. Even while paying them, he still managed to garner less than ten thousand folks.

While many of the maestros have been scared away from returning to the zocalo, the social justice groups have been filling in their gaps, and wednesday also marked the first day returned to 24 hr occupation. The campesinos, activists, and teachers have built huge barricades on the streets surrounding the zocalo, have rocks and sticks piled up for the impending attack, and are busy building unity on the inside. The army has troops stationed in a part of the town called the cinco señores, and when a report was issued that they were mobilizing this aftyernoon, the people here quickly commandeered buses and set up blockades, gathering at the perimeters to meet the oppressors. It turned out to be a false alarm, but it shows that they are prepared.

There have also been marches in the towns outside of oaxaca city, and yesterday a group of maestros blocked the highway on the isthmus of tehuantepec for a number of hours, burning a bus in the action.

All of these things point to a growing social movement within Oaxaca that is on the verge of being revolutionary. I saw a poster yestyerday that said "Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, the only governer able to unite all of the people of Oaxaca, but AGAINST him." With a little more time, some serious struggle and hope, things may end up truly changed and truly better, here.

June 23, 2006

News from freedemocracy.blogspot.com

Costa Rica says it wants reference of Iraq invasion support erased from Web

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica
Costa Rica wants its name erased from the list of countries supporting the invasion of Iraq. But the United States says that's not possible.

The Costa Rican government initially supported the invasion, but public sentiment was never strong and polls show now that most Costa Ricans oppose the war.

Opponents of the fighting took the name issue to the country's Supreme Court, which ruled the references to support should be removed.

While the U.S. government removed the Central American nation from the list of the so-called “coalition of the willing” in 2004, it still appears in archive documents and on related Internet Web sites that haven't been updated.

“We are insisting through diplomatic routes that it be clarified our country was removed” from the list, Costa Rican Foreign Relations Minister Bruno Stagno told Radio Eco Thursday.

Stagno asked the U.S. government in May to ensure that the country's name was erased from all lists, but said the State Department told him on June 19 saying that wasn't possible.

U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica Mark Langdale, who delivered the response, said the list is part of the Web page's archives and appear in other parts of the Internet.

“Although they aren't correct anymore, they form part of the historic record and can't be modified or removed,” he said. “We regret any confusion these archives have caused.”

Chile and Peru Discuss Free Trade, Venezuela

SANTIAGO, Chile

Peru's President-elect Alan Garcia met with Chilean officials on Thursday and discussed plans to start trade talks amid signals Peru may counter efforts by Venezuela to widen its anti-U.S. alliance.

Garcia, who takes office on July 28, met with Chilean President Michelle Bachelet in Santiago during a visit that was to last only a few hours.

His trip may signal solidarity efforts among some moderate countries against anti-U.S. populism in the region just as Venezuela accuses the United States of trying to scuttle its bid to secure a seat on the U.N. Security Council.

"Chile, Brazil and Peru are an alternative to the model of state that he wishes to impose from Venezuela, with fewer democratic values," Garcia told reporters after his meeting with Bachelet, referring to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Garcia's election was widely seen as a blow for Chavez, who had openly supported Garcia's leftist opponent.

"Sowing disorder in the rest of the region in order to expand a (political) model does not seem to me to be a good example," Garcia said.

Chilean human rights lawyers took advantage of Garcia's visit to file official legal complaints against him for alleged human rights violations during a first term in office, from 1985 to 1990.

"They are very misinformed," Garcia said.

Energy and free trade also were on the agenda of Garcia's visit—his second trip abroad since winning the election on June 4. He traveled to Brazil last week.

"We would like to reach a free-trade agreement with Peru," Chilean Foreign Minister Alejandro Foxley said earlier in the day.

Negotiating a trade pact could strengthen diplomatic ties between the neighbors who have squabbled off and on since a sea war more than a century ago.

Foxley said Chile would also like Peru to join it, New Zealand, Brunei and Singapore in the so-called T4 trans-Pacific pact promoting trading links with Asia.

"We would like to propose to the countries of the T4 that they consider the incorporation of Peru to this accord, so that Asia is the common market to which the economies of both our countries project themselves," Foxley said.

Ecuador rules out foreign partnership to run oil fields

QUITO
Ecuador's government will not form a partnership with another Latin American state-run oil company to run oil blocks taken over in May from U.S.-based oil company Occidental Petroleum (OXY), the country's top energy official said Friday.

"Despite initially thinking of an alliance with a state company to operate Occidental's former fields, that possibility has been discarded because the president believes that in Ecuador there are sufficient managerial and operational capabilities to maintain production without any problems," Energy Minister Ivan Rodriguez told Dow Jones Newswires.

This month the government will appoint someone to run the three oil fields taken back from Occidental May 15 for a breach of contract. Occidental denies the accusations and is seeking international arbitration.

The possibility of a Latin American alliance surfaced because the government was reluctant to hand the three oil fields over to its own state-owned oil company, Petroecuador, because of concerns about efficiency.

But local authorities and social groups in Ecuador's Amazon region had begun to mobilize efforts to protest any foreign involvement in the fields.
Rodriguez said Ecuador may still hire experts from one of the Latin American state oil firms as advisors. Colombia's Ecopetrol and Chile's Enap have both expressed an interest in helping Ecuador run the fields.

Last weekend, President Alfredo Palacio signed an emergency decree transferring the three fields to a specially-created entity run by various members of his cabinet to manage production, which was around 100,0000 barrels per day under Occidental's control.

Meanwhile, the government continues to negotiate with Venezuela an agreement to send crude oil from the three fields to Venezuela for processing at a refinery there, the minister said. The plan is to send 65,000 barrels per day from July 1, he said. Recent reports have said Venezuela would charge about $5 per barrel for processing the crude.

June 22, 2006

Leftist leads Mexico race, Fox shields economy

by Alistair Bell
MEXICO CITY
Leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador edged further ahead on Thursday in Mexico's tight presidential race, and investors' fears that he may damage the economy eased when the government said it was paying $7 billion in debt early.

Two out of three new opinion polls showed Lopez Obrador, the former mayor of Mexico City, leading conservative rival Felipe Calderon before the July 2 election.

The biggest of the surveys, in the Milenio newspaper, gave anti-poverty crusader Lopez Obrador 35 percent support, ahead of Calderon's 30 percent. Lopez Obrador's lead had increased from 3 percentage points in a Milenio survey two weeks ago.

As he gains confidence that he could win, Lopez Obrador has gone out of his way to counter critics' claims that he would overspend and take Mexico back to bad old days of currency devaluation, capital flight and mass bankruptcies of the 1980s and 1990s.

"How am I going to fulfill my promise to improve families' incomes by 20 percent?" he said in a television ad on Wednesday night. "Above all I tell you that I will not get the country into debt or raise taxes. It's not necessary."

Often a fiery speaker, Lopez Obrador says he wants good relations with the United States and rejects comparisons to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a vocal U.S. foe.

For most of the last three years, Lopez Obrador has led the race to succeed President Vicente Fox but he fell behind Calderon in April and May after the conservative made television spots in which he accused him of being a dangerous populist.

Calderon has slipped in the polls on allegations that his brother-in-law evaded paying taxes and won elusive government contracts when the candidate was in Fox's cabinet.
...

Hugo Chavez in Panama

Panama, Jun 22
Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez is kicking off Thursday a visit to Panama, to deliver two speeches in solemn ceremonies in memory of the 180th anniversary of the 1826 Simon Bolivar's "Congreso Anfictionico."

His stay here has stirred up great expectation, so that large groups of students, professors and unionists will give him a special welcoming at the Panama University tonight.

His agenda also includes, among others, meeting with his counterpart Martin Torrijos, laying wreath at the Simon Bolivar statue in this capital, visiting the Miraflores locks in the Panama Canal Zone, and giving news conferences.

Urgent Security Alert from VHeadline.com

Vheadline.com has received information from two independent and credible intelligence sources that democratically-elected Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez may be in grave danger during his upcoming visit to Panama (Thursday and Friday, June 22-23, 2006) as a special guest for the 180th anniversary of the Anfictionico Congress (called by Liberator Simon Bolivar on June 22, 1826). We have passed details to necessary security organizations!

Gringo alterno-journalists debate Zapatista "Other Campaign"

Submitted by Bill Weinberg
This online debate between John Ross and Al Giordano, two veteran alterno-journalists who have long covered the Zapatista movement in Mexico, is a bit incestuous (and certainly long-winded), as well as self-important and catty. But it does shed some interesting light on the political questions surrounding the Zapatistas' "Other Campaign," the rebels' latest and most ambitious effort to launch a national civil revolutionary movement. It also raises some important questions about the role of alternative media in general. From Giordano's Narco News Bulletin, June 19:

John Ross' "Twenty Questions for Big Al, the Other Campaign, and the Zapatista Army of National Liberation" - A Discussion and Debate Near the Fault Lines Between the Anti-Capitalist Left and Electoral Politics in Mexico and América

by John Ross (Questions) and Al Giordano (Responses)

Al Giordano: In recent weeks, journalist John Ross has sent me various emails criticizing the Zapatista Other Campaign in Mexico and Narco News’ coverage of it, which he considers to be too uncritical. Last week, he sent me “20 Questions” that reflect John’s frustration. These are busy times: I weighed whether it would be worthwhile to answer what are, essentially, loaded questions, rife with statements of "fact" that are, as I point out below, unsubstantiated, based on John’s own suppositions.

Piled one on top of another, these "twenty questions," laced with references to "shameless cheerleading" and "Stalinist totalitarianism," some directly related to the Other Campaign's raining on the electoral parade in Mexico that ends on July 2, make an argument to which there is a counter-argument. John's questions and my responses are reflective of historic debates on the left and in social movements in general and throughout Latin America in particular. If John is honest enough to ask them aloud, there might be others asking them – or repeating their errant claims as "fact" – more quietly. I therefore think it would be useful to respond to John here, and – since neither John nor I hold the last word on such great and sweeping matters – invite our 288 co-publishers and anyone else willing to sign his and her name to join the round table by sending your commentaries to narconews@gmail.com.

20 Questions

John Ross: Why have there been no communiqués from the Comandancia of the EZLN since the Other Campaign began January 1st?

Al: Why are you asking me, friend? I don’t speak for the EZLN, and I won’t be speaking for that organization or any other in the twenty responses that follow. But I can, just like any other colleague, help you to look at the information that is already on the public record. A "refresher course" on the Other Campaign is in order.

In November 2005 came a communiqué signed by the CCRI-CG of the EZLN (Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee – General Command of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation). Subcomandante Marcos signed it (for the "Sixth Committee") and so did Lt. Colonel Moisés (for the "Intergalactic Committee"). It announces a "cyber-consultation" for people all over the world and a participatory web page to that end. There, you can read subsequent communiqués signed by Lt. Col. Moisés, writing from Chiapas, during 2006. So its not as if we haven’t been hearing from the jungle during this time. And its not as if the Comandancia doesn't have access – indeed, every person on earth can post to that page – to speak any time it wants to issue a communiqué. Your question seems to imply that what you hear as a silence reveals, somehow, a lack of faith in what Marcos is doing out on the Other Campaign trail,

I hear it differently. In this case, silence equals consent and approval; a ratification. Beyond that, each moment when the Zapatistas in Chiapas have not been silent, they have indicated their consent and approval – and enthusiasm – for the direction the Other Campaign has taken.

But your question, really, is in the context of the questions that succeed it. So on to question number two…

John: Why have the Juntas de Buen Gobiernos (JBGs) operating out of the five Caracoles issued few communiqués since January 1st?

Al: What do you mean by "few"? I count four communiqués from Zapatista autonomous municipalities in the past three weeks. They can be read on the Enlace Civil page. There have been thirteen such communiqués, all in all, since March 5th.

Prior to that, I see a March 4 communiqué from the "JGB" (Good Government Council) of the "Caracol" (autonomous government seat) of Roberto Barrios, another dated February 17 from the JGB of the Caracol of Oventik, and another dated February 14 from the JGB of the Caracol of La Realidad, all of them posted on our denuncias page, along with so many others from so many other organizations in so many states that are also, like the EZLN, part of the Other Campaign.

From what I can tell, 2006 has brought more communiqués from Zapatista autonomous municipalities than at most other five-month periods in Zapatista history. Given my different memory, and the facts I’ve just shared, do you think your question continues to make any sense?

Your next question repeats the same theme…

John: Why are there no indigenous comandantes accompanying Delegate Zero on the Other Campaign?

Al: That question, different than the previous two, is based on an actual fact: There have been no, to my observation, EZLN comandantes with Marcos on the Other Campaign trail outside of Chiapas. That's a decision they made – and announced – well in advance of 2006. I’m comfortable with the decision, particularly after witnessing this wave of repression in Atenco, and, really, before that in San Blas Atempa and in other places.

It was the Commandancia, after all, that sent Marcos out to be their "scout" and whose members, according to their own words, will follow him, two by two, into every state for extended stays in Phase Two, once the first national tour is completed. I would like to refresh your memory back to Lt. Col. Moisés' explanation, last September 16, about why they were sending out one scout first – Marcos – to report back on the national terrain, from all the places to where the comandantes and insurgents will fan out later. Here is what Moisés said:

[I]t is our duty to explore the terrain where we will bring the compañeros and compañeras of our people, as well as our soldiers. There is always someone who goes as a vanguard. We call whoever goes forward and views the terrain that we still don't know the vanguard. And the task of he who goes forward as the vanguard is to detect what is there: if the terrain is swampy, stony, or spiny, and of other situations the vanguard observes, and this informs us so we can know what to do and how to do it.

We know that you understand a vanguard to be someone who leads, or those who know how the fight should be waged, or those who give orders, and who are the only ones who are right, those who know more and better… But we don’t understand it that way. The vanguard for us… is he who goes to understand the terrain, for us unknown terrain, and it is necessary to go to that terrain to advance the struggle. This is soldier’s work, the exploration of the terrain…

The vanguard's work of exploration of the terrain for the Other Campaign has been given to compañero Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos. He will be the first to go out and we will come behind him in turn to do the work…

– Lieutenant Colonel Moisés
Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN)
September 16, 2005

That's exactly what the EZLN said it would do from the start. It all seems very natural and consistent to me that they’re keeping their word and sticking to the plan.

John: Why are the voices of Zapatista women not heard on the Other Campaign?

Al: Oh, brother: why are you addressing this question to a man?

You seem to have forgotten that the Other Campaign plan was proposed by an EZLN commission ("the Sixth Committee") that included eight Zapatista women – Gabriela, Rosalinda, Keli, Delia, Ofelia, Yolanda, Ana Berta, and Graciela – with seven men plus Marcos. You remember them – the ones wearing the ski masks – from the six planning meetings last summer in the jungle, of which you attended at least one.

And on September 16, when we heard details of the Other Campaign proposal from Marcos and Moisés we also heard from Comandanta Ramona (four months prior to her death), from Major Ana María, from Comandanta Susana, and various other women comandantas, urging all of us to busy ourselves with the work of their proposal: The Other Campaign.

I know you’ve attended some Other Campaign events and meetings since the first of the year because we saw each other there. Admit it, please, because your question infers otherwise: at every one of those meetings women were heard from on a par with men, at some of them more women spoke than men, and others of the events have been run by women, such as the Women Without Fear concert on May 22nd where Marcos was one of only two men with speaking roles.

You were there on January 1 in Chiapas when, according to our report, by Giovanni Proiettis, Comandantes Keli and Hortensia spoke, sending Marcos off on his voyage.

You haven't been around much since. I didn’t see you, John, in Quintana Roo, Yucatán, Oaxaca, Querétaro, Michoacán, Morelos, Guerrero, Tlaxcala, or the State of Mexico. I saw you twice during events in Mexico City. In all those places, we’ve heard the same vocal participation by women and men (and children, and elders). And others of our team have reported from other meetings in the other states, and reported the same from those places. So the bases for your question are just not accurate. The voices of women, men, elders, kids, indigenous, non-indigenous, and from every other sector have been heard throughout and for hours on end. At each Other Campaign adherents meeting, everybody is invited to the microphone. Everybody gets to speak as long as she likes. Your loaded question implies otherwise. There’s a mountain of reports on the Other Journalism page that disprove your claim. But I don’t have the final word on this. Anybody reading this discussion has the ability to go back and check the record, via our page or others, and there are thousands of eyewitnesses to it all.

Now, maybe by "Zapatista women" you mean only the ones with ski masks on their heads? Like Gabriela, Rosalinda, Keli, Delia, Ofelia, Yolanda, Ana Berta and Graciela? Like Ramona, Susana, and Ana María and others? They explained already why they sent Marcos out to be the scout, and that they'll be coming out in the next wave.

In Chetumal – you might have missed this nugget from the first Other Campaign stop outside of Chiapas – Marcos announced that Comandanta Susana will be one of the two Zapatista commanders who will go to live and organize in the state of Quintana Roo when that time comes, in round two. We’re looking forward to covering her extended stay – and organizing efforts – on that peninsula.

John: Is the Other Campaign really a collective endeavor?

Al: Yes. I challenge you to provide an example of anything this big that has been more collective than the Other Campaign. It’s easy to toss around a vague word like "collective." Let’s hear your stated examples of other national efforts that have been more "collective" than this one. And let’s hear how you define "collective" in that context.

I argue that the Other Campaign has been more collective because the collectivity happens not above among "movement heavies" with a penchant for group process, but from below where the work is being done.

As for the Sixth Committee of the EZLN – one of the organizations that is part of the Other Campaign – I don’t know all the details of their internal decision-making process, although they’ve dropped us many hints over the years.

I think you are speaking of the relationship between other organizations (hundreds) and individuals (thousands) that are part of the Other Campaign and whether the EZLN and its scout, Marcos, have a disproportionate voice. I argue that to the extent they do, it is granted collectively by all the other organizations and individuals involved.

This is how I see it, and it corresponds with what "Delegate Zero" has said in every state along the road: that his fact-finding and listening tour is just one part of the Other Campaign, but that all our efforts in each of our sectors (for example, the sector of authentic journalists, of which I am part, and where you’ve had a placemat at the table since the beginning) and organizations or as individuals are also part of it. And within this Other Campaign we have autonomy and they – the EZLN – also have autonomy. They can say and do what they want. So can we. And so can you. I notice you’re not shy about speaking your mind, John.

For example, as an adherent, when you sit down to write an article or a commentary, do you report to some committee before you publish? I doubt it. Writing works best as a solitary task. Within this collective effort there is also individual and organizational initiative. Nobody has to ask permission of anybody else to do or say anything. The same goes for Marcos: Do you want him to submit his communiqués to a larger committee before sending them out? How about the text of his speeches? What about ad-libbed and improvised comments (I posit that his most important and effective statements and actions have been improvisational; but as you know, I’m partial to jazz), of which there have been many. Are you suggesting that his free speech ought to be subjected to prior restraint by committee? That's not what La Otra is about.

To the extent that those meetings attended by Marcos draw more people, in general, than those Other Campaign events without him, reflects a kind of collective decision. Every individual who attends those events is voting with his and her feet. They – we – attend because it furthers our struggles to do so.

Meanwhile, in twelve states in the North of Mexico, where Marcos has not yet set foot, there is also an Other Campaign, active and visible, from Tijuana to Juárez to Monterrey to San Luis Potosí and everywhere else. There, the EZLN hasn’t attended one meeting. Likewise, should they wait for him to get there before mobilizing? No way! That’s the beauty of La Otra. Nobody waits for orders from headquarters any more. Those days are over in Zapatista and solidarity efforts. And I believe the path is being marked for other movements in other lands to use this recipe – which might be called "autonomy all around" – and achieve great advances.

This new freedom of speech makes it possible for us to do the Other Journalism with the Other Campaign. We have that freedom too. As Marcos said last summer: Take your place in the Other Campaign, maintain it, and defend it, and don’t let any other organization take it away from you. That statement was a turning point for me. It signaled the long-awaited delivery of the promise of autonomy, here and now, not as something to be waited on.

How about the efforts all over the world – the marches and actions in scores of cities in many countries – especially since the Atenco atrocity? Have the people that organized abroad sat around waiting for permission? Have they passed their decisions, slogans, statements, songs, decision-making processes or anything else through a central committee? No, they haven’t done that. They’re autonomous. That, too, is La Otra. (And although, in these 20 questions, you categorize the Other Campaign as an "all but wrecked" venture, do you at least admit that it has inspired more active solidarity efforts from more parts around the world than at any other point in the past twelve years?)

What you seem to be suggesting is that just one of the organizations involved – the EZLN – because of its convocatory power (based in part on its unique success in organizing a grassroots base) should subject its statements and actions – even the proposals it makes to the larger Otra – to a committee or group process. Not only do I disagree with that. I wouldn’t want to participate in anything so boring. I can’t think of anything more doomed to failure than a gringo activism-style "group process" – rigid, anally-retentive, and placing the "talkers" that like to attend meetings as the self-appointed bosses of the "doers" – to rain on everybody’s good work and spirit.

La Otra comes to break that script of defeat! And as long as it keeps doing that, we’ll be here reporting it. Because what also attracts many of us to the story is how the recipe being developed here can be applied in other lands – such as in the US – to break the horrible, doomed, control-freak, bureaucratic, turf-obsessed style of "identity politics" activism in the so-called developed world.

When the Other Campaign does reach the US border, and has its meetings with the Mexicans from the "Other Side" in Juarez and Tijuana, that will be an important test, as to whether this very "other" way of organizing – autonomy all around – can take root in an activist culture that still suffers from many of the vices from which La Otra has freed us down here.

John: How has Marcos bumbled into this dumb war of desgaste (attrition) that has all but wrecked the Other Campaign? (Answer – an absence of collective decision-making.)

Al: As I answered above, the existence or absence of collective decision-making (or desgaste) is in the eye of the, um, spectator.

From where I stand, as a non-spectator – with my experience, stated above, that this is the most collectively run movement I've ever been part of – there's no "war of attrition," the Other Campaign is not at all "all but wrecked" and that you think otherwise simply says to me that you haven’t yet "taken your place, maintained it and defended it" in this effort.

After Mexico’s Election Day, July 2, the Other Campaign will still be here whereas all the electoral campaign committees and political parties will have shot their wads, with only one as the possible victor, and even that might be called into question. Your "statement of fact" that the Other Campaign is "all but wrecked" and "in attrition" is going to be proved false in just two weeks, John, so hold on to your horses and you’ll see that what I'm saying here is demonstrably true, or at least will be very shortly.

Collective, schmollective: The EZLN is an army. You knew that already. It has always admitted that it is hierarchical, that it has a chain of command. You’ve known that for years and it never seemed to bug you before.

Since a term like "collective decision-making" is pretty damn vague, I’d like to hear your specific proposal over how you think decisions ought to be made.

The Other Campaign is a horizontal effort that includes collectives, individuals, some unions (that have their own forms of organization), NGOs with boards of directors and some with paid staff, local ad-hoc organizations formed around it, artists, communicators, indigenous communities with their own diverse decision-making methods from place to place, and, yes, some organizations with hierarchical chains of command.

Do you want the Other Campaign to, instead, be a hegemonic venture? Should any organization that enters La Otra be subjected to a purity test and only admitted if it has "collective" decision-making? And what in hell is "collective decision-making" anyway? Does that mean that a national movement must work by consensus? Or by Robert’s Rules of Order? Or by elections? Should we run slates? Should the Other Campaign have gigantic assemblies prior to any tactical decisions being made? And what about the folks out in the provinces who can’t travel so easily? Should folks from one region, say, Mexico City, dominate it? Or groups with lots of experience out-maneuvering real people with "group process" tricks up their sleeves; should they be in charge? Should people who like to attend meetings – I call them "the talkers" – have the final say over what those doing the grassroots organizing – I call them "the doers" – can and can’t do? Well, that’s when I’d get off the bus. And a lot of other "doers" who can’t stomach silly meetings full of "talkers" who do little or nothing would probably take the same exit door. Not as a protest, but simply because a lot of very creative people have little tolerance for the tyranny of meetings, no matter how "democratic" their processes are claimed to be.

The Other Campaign is set up so that each and every person – including you, John – who wants to take initiative and puts in the elbow grease to do something, can go ahead and do it within parameters that were established in six gigantic meetings last summer where everybody, including you, had a shot at the microphone. The Sixth Commission of the 16 Zapatistas listened to all 106 hours of testimony, without interrupting or even rolling their eyes at what anyone said, then formulated it into a proposal. Thousands of people and organizations expressed their enthusiastic agreement and willingness to participate with that game plan. A gigantic national campaign was launched and continues in the present. Suggestions are made every day on the message board of the Sup's weblog, and many are implemented. From our little corner of it, we’ve made various suggestions via e-mail to the Sixth Commission as to how the Other Campaign could better facilitate coverage of the Otra by us and by others, and most of them were implemented rapidly. It’s clear that the Sixth Commission – and Delegate Zero – read their emails carefully and take everything and everyone into consideration. That, to me, is "leading by obeying" and the epitome of collective effort.

Anyway, I doubt very much that your "20 Questions" were written by committee, or that any "collective decision-making" or even collective effort was made to formulate them. And I would never argue that what you or anybody else writes should be subjected to that. But why, as your question implies, should Marcos, alone, be censored in that way?

John: Why has a Red Alert been imposed on Zapatista autonomous communities in Chiapas? What was the danger? Why has it not been rescinded?

Al: That's a military question. I’m a civilian. And since I am not a resident of any Zapatista autonomous community in Chiapas, I don't consider it my role to answer on their behalf. Again, I respect their autonomy, as they respect mine… and yours, and everybody else’s. What I can say is that, since the Red Alert has been declared, the Other Journalism Road Team and I have done more work each day than before, and that’s your best indication that we’re comfortable with the autonomous decisions made by one of our co-adherent organization, the EZLN.

We don't take orders from anybody. And we respect that other adherent organizations – including the EZLN – don't take them from us. In any case, I don’t foresee anything, based on how its gone so far, that would make us want to exit an effort that we believe in more today than when it started.

In the Other Campaign, nobody from a different organization within the larger one is ever going to be able to tell the EZLN, or the Narco News School of Authentic Journalism, or Marcos, or John, or anybody else what he can and can’t do. Those days are over, thanks to La Otra. It is a development that all of us that vote with our feet and occupy this newsroom cheer.

John: Why was the Red Alert, an EZLN political/military mechanism representing the highest level of danger, imposed from Mexico City by Delegate Zero if, in fact, Delegate Zero is no longer the commander of Zapatista military forces?

Al: The supposition in your question – that Marcos ("Delegate Zero") is "no longer" the EZLN military commander, is incorrect. As we’ve reported throughout the Other Campaign, Marcos is still the military commander of the EZLN. I’m not sure where you got a different idea. As recently as April in Guerrero, when Marcos met with the Community Police in Guerrero, he introduced himself as the "commander in chief" of soldiers and officers of the EZLN, saluting them soldier-to-soldier. I don't have anything in my memory or in my notes from any of the meetings – including last summer, when the plan was laid out – that have suggested that he ever stopped being that.

What has been said various times is that a plan is in place should anything happen to that military chief – Marcos – for someone new to take on the military command. But that shouldn’t be confused with any suggestion that he was at all removed from that position.

In any case, you and everybody else have seen that when the Red Alert was called, the Zapatista communities in Chiapas acted in accordance with it. Doesn’t that also indicate consent? And you don’t know that it was decreed, as you imply, without the full consultation and consent of the Comandancia. Anybody outside of the EZLN command who claims to know what goes on behind closed doors – there or anywhere – doesn’t know anything. Those are decisions appropriate to that organization. I respect it.

John: Why did Marcos begin the Other Campaign as "Sub-delegate" Zero and is now identified as "Delegate Zero?"

Al: You can take that question back if you like.

Here is what Marcos said on September 16, when the Other Campaign plan was announced:

The first trip out, as I already explained, will begin in the month of January and end in the month of June. For six months, the one we call delegate zero – that is, me – will make a first pass touring the country to hold state meetings for the Other Campaign and look at plans for the transportation, lodging, feeding, and movement of the Sixth Committee.

He said "delegate zero," nothing about sub-delegate.

Here’s a link to a translation of the entire speech, made from the same stage where so many of the comandantes (and comandantas) sat and spoke. None expressed any disagreement with that. There’s also a link on that page to the original in Spanish. The words "sub-delegate" aren’t used. Perhaps there is some confusion since his other title is subcomandante? He has been both all along: Subcomandante and Delegate.

There was one communiqué – December 26, I’ll link to it when I reference it, below – that he signed as "Sub-delegado." It was a play on words. Maybe he did that on other occasions. Sheesh, John, you’re a poet. Figure it out.

Your questions seem to imply that he’s off on his own show and that the Comandancia doesn’t back him. But those words come from a communiqué signed by the famous "CCRI-CG of the EZLN," a communiqué that ends with the following signatures of seven women and six men in the command. Here it is:

…The Sexta and the Other Campaign are now no longer only the EZLN’s, but belong to all who want to make it theirs.

For the Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee–General Command of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation,

Comandanta Ramona, Comandanta Susana, Comandanta Esther, Comandanta Miriam, Comandanta Hortensia, Comandanta Gabriela, Comandante David, Comandante Tacho, Comandante Zebedeo, Comandante Ramón.

For the insurgent militia troops of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation,

Insurgent Lieutenant Colonel Moisés

For the EZLN’s Sixth Comizzion,

Insurgent Subcommander Marcos

I hope that clears up any confusion you might have had. On to the next question…

John: Why during his May 3rd appearance at Tlatelolco, after viewing television footage of the first day of battle in Atenco and well aware that the coverage signaled brutal repression by the mal gobierno (bad government) did Delegate Zero urge adherents of the La Otra Campaña to go immediately to Atenco where they were arrested, beaten, raped, and even murdered (Ollin Alexis) the next day, May 4th?

Al: Your question is based on errant claims, again. Fortunately, there are audio and videotape, transcriptions and translations, that disprove your "statement of fact." Here is what was actually said at Tlatelolco, quote:

As the Sixth Commission of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation, an adherent organization to the Other Campaign, we are asking, respectfully soliciting the regional and sub-regional coordinators throughout the country to agree upon and carry out mobilizations in support of the Peoples’ Front in Defense of the Land beginning at 8:00 tomorrow morning, May 4, 2006.

As the Sixth Commission we declare ourselves on alert. The troops of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation have already been declared on red alert, and at that time the Caracoles and Zapatista Autonomous Rebel Municipalities will be closed. From this moment on, the new chain of command is functioning in the Zapatista Army of National Liberation. No matter what happens to me, there are people here to make decisions. We don't know about all of you, but today, we Zapatistas are Atenco.

We are going to be paying attention to your demands. We call for meetings by sector and region for you to think about and agree on these actions. As the Sixth Commission we are canceling all our participation in programmed activities and waiting for word from the Peoples’ Front in Defense of the Land. If they need our presence there, then there we will be. If not, we will participate directly in one of the actions that you program for tomorrow beginning at 8:00 in the morning.

Pay close attention, please, to exactly what was said. Marcos called for mobilizations beginning at 8:00 a.m. on May 4. He didn't say where. And he said, it is very much worth repeating: "we are waiting for word from the Peoples' Front in Defense of the Land. If they need our presence there, then we will be. If not, we will participate directly in one of the actions that you program for tomorrow beginning at 8:00 in the morning."

He said wait for the invitation from the FPDT, the adherent organization in Atenco, and told that the EZLN was waiting for that call, too.

Right after he spoke those words, América del Valle, representing that same FPDT, asked people to mobilize at 8 a.m. May 4 at the University of Chapingo (outside of Atenco) and also at a bridge in Ecatepec (outside of Atenco). Neither she nor Marcos told people to rush off to Atenco. And none of the people who answered the call that was made and went to Chapingo and Ecatepec were arrested, or beaten, or raped, or killed: not one of them.

As adherents, we don't second-guess the autonomous decisions of each organization or individual. We are in solidarity with those who did go (many of whom are now wounded or political prisoners, one of whom, Alexis Benhumea, is dead) and we also respect and support the those who waited for the FPDT to invite them there (including the EZLN).

To us – and this is very much the spirit of the Otra as we interpret it – the autonomy of every organization, of every individual, is paramount, deserving of solidarity and support. The days when sectors of social movements could sing "oh, but we would have done it differently, so therefore we’re withdrawing our solidarity" and could find a significant chorus to sing along are over, at least as far as the Other Campaign has developed.

I can’t think of anything more snooty than the form of activism that insists on purity, that gives and withdraws alliance over disagreements on tactics. That outmoded, egotistical, approach to politics doesn’t work. It’s full of self-importance. It views social movements as consumer products in which the consumer says, "well, I’ll take my business elsewhere!" It’s silly. It never won a single battle for any movement and it has caused the defeat of many. La Otra is a return to the principle of "solidarity forever." That was a song that was sung – and an ethic that was lived – when unions and social movements did win battles. All for one, and one for all: that, to us, is the Other Campaign.

John: Why did Delegate Zero not appear in Atenco until the evening of May 5th?

Al: Because that’s when he was invited. He went on May 5th – one day after the police raid – with thousands of others, all together. That’s when the local organization – the FPDT - invited him and them to go. It seems rather natural and sensible to me.

And to underscore this point, what the people in Atenco have told us (as we’ve been there on and off ever since) is that Marcos – in various cell phone calls with their spokesman, Nacho del Valle on May 3 – offered repeatedly to come right away. And Nacho said no, that they were about to get hit hard there and they needed the Other Campaign still on its feet to get them out once it came down. That, for me, also confirms Nacho's smarts as a strategist and tactician – and his selflessness. Under enormous pressure and repression, he made a cool-headed call. And that’s what has happened. Not everybody went to jail. There’s a movement on the outside fighting for their release that has so far gained the release of 189 of the 217 who were arrested.

Here's a credo that we've repeated around our newsroom a lot over the past month, as we’ve watched everybody's reactions to the Atenco crisis, from the heroic to the effective to the manic to the depressed, to those who chose, in the heat of the moment, to complain and toss spitballs instead of work to get our people out: In an hour of moral crisis, the true character of each individual is revealed.

On May 3 and since, we’ve been able to see who has been methodical, careful, successful, and under enormous pressure. These are the people – not those with knee-jerk reactions whose first instinct in crisis is to start bossing others around and herding them like sheep – that bring a movement to victory.

John: Why did Delegate Zero grant Televisa a lengthy in-studio interview with star anchor Carlos Loret de Mola after denouncing and lampooning the TV monopoly for 12 years and in spite of the Senate’s passage of the infamous "Ley Televisa" just days before?

Al: On May 5th, in Atenco – we were there, reporting, and you can read about it here – Marcos announced, transparently, that he would grant interviews under very specific conditions to any mass media that guaranteed that his words would be broadcast in full and without editing. La Jornada, Televisa, CNN and TeleSUR, in that order, provided those guarantees.

Nobody – at least not below and to the left – has ever openly placed that condition on Televisa or any major TV network, but that’s what he did.

My opinion is that the interview – in that important context, which is omitted from your question – was a victory for the struggle against the Commercial Media and a defeat for Televisa in particular. I see it in the light of my 1997 "manifesto": The Medium Is the Middleman: For a Revolution Against the Media (with updated footnotes reflecting some evolutions in my thoughts dated 2002). Televisa was forced by the Other Campaign into a position of setting a precedent that one can now demand no censorship from them in exchange for granting interviews. And that precedent also establishes that one can do it in what you call a "lengthy" manner (you state the length of the interview as a complaint: No, I say. Winning the right to lengthy, uninterrupted, uncensored, unabridged access to the airwaves is the antidote to the sound-byte dumb-it-down mentality of the TV news!) In any case, I’m granting you an even longer interview than that one right now…

Plus, I thought the interview itself was important on its merits. It was part of the turning the tables on the "official version" of the Atenco story (which was that of an unruly violent mob set right by the forces of law and order) and made it become what it is now: a story about a repressive and illegitimate regime that beats, arrests, rapes and kills to get its way. I wrote about that in "The Zapatista Other Campaign and the Netwar Over Defining Atenco" on May 26 if you'd like more of my thoughts about why it worked.

And, just this past week, we’ve seen how that "turning of the tables" came to play in Oaxaca, leading to the failure of a similar state police raid (this time, on striking teachers), and a very distinct response from the federal government which, this time, refused a governor’s call to send in federal troops to smash heads. That's your best indication that the strategy that included, but was not at all limited to, an appearance on Televisa, worked.

John: Why at public meetings does Delegate Zero now call for the overthrow of the government when in the past the EZLN has repeatedly declared that it was not interested in taking state power?

Al: Toppling a government is one thing. Taking state power would be another and different thing. I don’t agree with your inference that they are one and the same. One can destroy something and not appoint himself its owner afterwards. Perhaps the best example of this in Mexican history is Emiliano Zapata, who toppled a regime, but refused to sit in the president’s chair when it was offered too him.

But this is nothing new, and you know it. If one reviews, as we have, the sum total of everything that Marcos has said along the Other Campaign trail, consistently, in every state, the message is the same as it has been for twelve years. In the first communiqué in 1994, the Declaration of War, they vowed to "overpower" the federal forces and topple the government when the revolt reached Mexico City. It's been repeated for 12 years. And it was certainly said again in the Sixth Declaration, a document that you read, you signed, and you went to the jungle and spoke as an adherent to it. The Sexta calls for the destruction of capitalism. You didn’t express any disagreement with it then, and I’m not sure you really disagree with it now.

The sum of your questions – because in listening, we try to listen as well to what people don’t say aloud – seems to suggest that Delegate Zero is somehow a lone individual abandoned by his bases of support in Chiapas, and that he alone, with his dangerous Svengali-like powers, has taken the EZLN and everybody related off on a different path. You almost suggest that he has betrayed the very principles of Zapatismo. That’s not the story to which we’ve been eyewitnesses and have been reporting nonstop on the road for five months going on six. That scenario is imagined, a fantasy, a theory without substantiation.

John, you’ve been busy finishing a book. On various articles you’ve published during this time, in the author’s description you said "don’t bother me, I’m busy finishing a book." Maybe I should have bothered you, taken you out to a blues club and offered these views then, over a cerveza or two. That priority has also meant that you haven’t seen that much of the Other Campaign out in the provinces, not since January when you were in Chiapas, and more recently at some events in Mexico City. And that’s – here I go again – your autonomous decision. And I respect it. And I’m not going to "pull rank" and imply that you are any less an adherent than I or others on this team are. We'll all face the same firing squad together. But you make representations that simply do not reflect the reality of what all of us that have traveled the south and center of the country in this Other Journalism road team have experienced and witnessed. Our experience along the Other Campaign trail is legitimate. Our reporting of it has been impeccably honest. And it leads us to very opposite conclusions.

In any case, I’m really anxious to get to your next question, about Stalin, because it’s a good one to help me explain better this concept of absolute autonomy, and a few other "core principles" – as well as strategic imperatives – behind our views on it…

John: Why does Delegate Zero say nothing about the portraits of Joe Stalin that now appear at every meeting? Was not the goal of the Other Campaign to build a horizontal left from the bottom, the mirror opposite of Stalinist totalitarianism?

Al: I wrote about the Stalin poster – carried by one organization (not the EZLN) that adheres to the Other Campaign in that recent netwar piece. I think it’s an interesting question that you pose. But let me begin with a reflection.

Not being a child of the 1960s, I was formed by the punk generation of the 1970s, specifically in New York where it attained some of its earliest manifestations. There, an artist by the name of Arturo Vega was the "design director" for the musical group, The Ramones. This was before they had recorded an album. What Bob Dylan was to part of your generation, those punks were to part of mine. And Vega – who was a member of another musical group, a duo, named Suicide – had an apartment where the members of the Ramones lived. And he made his art there.

One day Vega put up an entire wall of day-glo swastikas – very much in the style of, say, the 60s peace-and-love day-glo artist Peter Maxx – and then he’d sit back and watch people’s reactions when they walked in and saw his provocative artwork. And people’s reactions left him howling with a prankster’s glee. He later shared his reflections with Legs McNiel and Gillian McCain for their oral history of punk, Please Kill Me (1996, Grove Press).

Reviewing that book in the Boston Phoenix Literary Supplement, I made an argument that I’ll make again here:

Oversocialized leftists have long argued against negation as a tool to change the world: "Sure, you’re disrupting things," they say, "but what’s your program?" The punk program was disruption. Punk codified the art of "not-niceness." Artist Arturo Vega painted day-glo swastikas that decorated the Ramones’ apartment. He considered the paintings, "a closet Nazi detector," exposing those who most loudly objected as repressing their own authoritarian tendencies ("I always thought that to conquer evil," he says, "you have to make love to it").

And when, during the meetings in the jungle last summer, I saw that poster of Stalin (alongside others of Marx, Engels, and Lenin) and saw the members of the Communist Party of Mexico, flanking it, gleefully, as if putting up a transgressive poster was akin to having just won the revolution, I had "an Arturo Vega punk rock moment" in the jungle.

At first it bothered me, to see it there, just like I still wince when I see a swastika and have to remind myself of the Arturo Vega Doctrine, or, for that matter, when I catch a whiff of anything "New Age" (which seems to me one of the most Puritan fundamentalisms of our era; we all have our pet peeves, no?), and that was the first clue to look deeper. When speech bothers me, I try to look at my own reactions and not at the speech (or the poster, or image, or whatever form of speech it is) because, really, words and images – contrary to the oversocialist leftist view of the developed world and the creatures it deforms us to be – don’t hurt anybody. And as an anarcho-syndicalist, of a Makhnovshchina tendency (which is to say, sworn enemies of Stalinism, not that most people care what tendency any of us subscribe to, but I’ll disclose it for those that do), I really had to think hard about the implications of that Stalin poster.

So there it was: that evil, beady-eyed, Stalin poster glaring at us all somewhere in the mountains of the Mexican Southeast, like a scene out of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. Another adherent came by with a petition to have it taken down. That was the first clue for me: that something like a poster would drive one adherent to want to censor another adherent’s expression. And I thought, "Aha! There was the hidden face of Stalinism in the Other Campaign!" It was not in a poster, but in the urge to banish it to Siberia. The urge to purge is a, if not the, defining characteristic of Stalinism.

I said to the compañero, "nothing stops you from putting up an anti-Stalin poster next to it," declining to sign his petition. As a free-speech absolutist, I began to think of the whole hullabaloo differently. And I began to look at those Communist Party members as a kind of punk rocker, putting up what they considered to be the most transgressive or "radical" gesture, and like Arturo Vega, watching the reactions as the people walked in. They were definitely getting a kick out of it. And that seemed more, well, anarchist than Stalinist, that spirit of mischievousness. It was their version of a Whoopee Cushion under the seats of the humorless.

Then, when they brought that poster along the Other Campaign trail, and started putting it up wherever Marcos appeared, I had to think about it some more, this time from a propaganda perspective, because Stalin's mug is not exactly a turn-on for many good people. And of course all the rest of us with other political tendencies got talking among ourselves about it. The Marxist-Leninists of the Party of Mexican Communists – a different group than that of the CP with the Stalin poster, an organization that decidedly rejects Stalinism – and the Trotskyites, the anarchists, the punks, the pacifists, the Catholics, the evangelicals, the human rights NGO types, the alternative media geeks (your compadre Hermann Bellinghausen says that the Caravan is like Noah's Ark because there are at least two from every tendency) and everybody – except for the grand majority of folks without a stated "tendency" – was talkin’ about that poster.

Simultaneously we began to get to know these "Stalinists," share meals with them, talk with them, and it became clear that these folks were no threat to any of us. They had senses of humor. When stuff needed to be organized in a hurry, they were really good at it. They worked well together as a team. We could tease them about El Gran Pepe. And they could tease us about being motley anarchos or punks or whatever. And over time they showed by example what Marcos meant when he said, "take your place in the Other Campaign, maintain it and defend it." Because, man, they really had to defend that move from a lot of people who wanted to remove their poster or purge them altogether. It was openly debated at the September 16 plenary session in the jungle, but the overwhelming majority of adherents considered the debate to be a divisive sideshow. There was no groundswell for banning the speech of another. So, as far as a great many in the Other Campaign is concerned, the proposal to censor was a non-starter nine months ago. And now, wherever that Stalin poster goes, black anarchist A-flags are shadowing it: two conflicting ideologies finding common ground in the Other Campaign and getting along with each other toward a greater shared goal. I find that encouraging, not discouraging.

Fast-forward to Atenco, May 4: Two of those compañeros with the Stalin poster that I had gotten to know in so many stops along the road – Bertín and Pedro – went to prison. And we fought just as hard to get them out as everybody else. And I was proud to know them on May 28 when they burned their prison uniforms in public.

The problem with the oversocialized left is that it preaches tolerance to level of fetish for "identity groups" (that is, the classifications of ethnicity, race, gender, sexual orientation, etcetera) but shows zero tolerance for, gasp, differences of opinion. The pacifists want us to renounce revolutionary violence and even confrontation, and the militants want us to renounce pacifism and even nonviolence. The anarchists want to purge the commies and the commies want to put Whoopee Cushions under the seats of the anarchists. And the hippies hate the punks and the punks loathe the hippies and there's an army of kids coming up behind us that see hippies and punks as fogies (and they’re right, as youth tends to be about the previous generations), but they’re still willing to work alongside us in the Other Campaign. Never mind the historic backstabbing and turf-wars that went on – before the Other Campaign – between alternative media organizations: that's mostly over now. And heaven help you if you’re just a normal person that hasn’t staked out any political tendency but knows that injustice is wrong and that you simply believe in democracy, freedom and justice. The left is paralyzed by this mutual intolerance all the time.

The Other Campaign has put a stop to that, not by "banning" or "censoring" or "purging" people, but by providing a better, more attractive, path of unity. And with the co-existence of all these disparate tendencies, alongside of so many "normal people," too, on the caravan has proved that it can be done. Hermann is right. The Other Campaign is the new Noah’s Ark. It is getting us through the flood. And when the rain stops, we’ll be able to live with each other – and collaborate – in ways that few of us thought possible before the ship left port.

As for Marcos' decision to "say nothing" (your words) about it, ask him. I repeat, it was already debated in an assembly of thousands of adherents, and there was little support for censoring anybody’s expressions or tendencies in the Other Campaign. I’ve said plenty about it but clearly my conclusions are different than yours. I'm not bothered by a poster: So purge me, too. And those who seem overly bothered seem to me like Mrs. Teasdale when confronted by another Marx named Groucho. And my own anarchist, anti-Stalinist principles – I haven't forgotten them or changed my mind about the failures of Stalinism – cause me to defend speech even when I disagree with it. And on the flip side, I kind of get an Arturo Vega kick out of watching various supposed anti-authoritarians indulge their own censorious Stalinist impulses in the name of anti-Stalinism. We’re in a process of self-education, all of us, in this thing, too. So, you sat on that Whoopee Cushion. Big deal. Brush yourself off and get back into the fight. And if you still feel that strongly about it, bring your own anti-Stalin poster to the next event instead of asking Marcos or somebody else to do it for you. That, too, is the Other Campaign.

John: Why were several adherents who attended the June 10th rally in the Zocalo in memoriam of Ollin Alexis expelled from the meeting? Were they "porras" as a handful of General Strike Council members insisted?

Al: I've heard nothing about the event you describe. I wasn’t there. Maybe you were. But my journalists’ mind asks: What do you mean that people were "expelled" from the Zocalo? How does somebody get "expelled" from a public park, the most public in all of Mexico? Did, like, the Other Campaign call the police? I doubt it.

Now, maybe someone said he wouldn’t speak if they were present – that’s happened before along the Other Campaign trail (Elena Poinatowska of the non-other campaign being the only one to complain about it publicly) – but that’s everybody’s right, not to speak in front of someone they don’t want to speak to. There have been moments in my blues concerts when I've stopped the concert because somebody that I didn't want to sing for walked in, and waited until they left before resuming. Perhaps you've seen similar things occur in poetry readings. That's everyone's prerogative as a public person: silence as a right. But I very much doubt that anyone was expelled from the Zocalo. I'd be interested in reading your account of it if they were. But it doesn’t pass the reality test, not the way you’ve described it.

John: Wasn't the Other Campaign supposed to be inclusive?

Al: I think what I've just described, regarding inclusion of even the Stalinists, proves that it is.

But let’s not place an over-value on inclusiveness. We’ve all paid the price of letting someone who is either power hungry or emotionally unstable or perhaps a provocateur enter our projects or our lives. To make room to include some, there often has to be exclusion of those who would derail a project. And to make room for the inclusion of the Other Campaign – anti-capitalist and to the left – there has been a marked exclusion of militants, candidates and officials from electoral political parties. At this stage in the process – in the heat of the Mexican presidential campaign – that makes sense to me.

Those hooked into the electoral clock – 13 days and ticking down – are in a frenzy, obsessed with only one thing, one vote, on one date. ¡Uta Madre! Even the Patricia Mercado supporters – your real spoilers this year – are insufferable about it. Once they enter a room, nothing else is allowed to happen, they're so zealous about it. This "Noah's Ark" that is the Other Campaign would never have been achieved if those people had been around, jerking us again and again toward the electoral imperative, which, for all its religious fervor, will be over in less than two weeks. Noah didn't invite two of the smallpox species onto the boat either. And that's the day – the end of an election and the beginning of "what comes next" – when I think that many who have dismissed the Other Campaign, or viewed it as a joke, will begin to understand it, really, for the first time. Because the electoral blinders will, finally, be off and the false hopes that many have in what happens up above will begin to crash on the reefs of realpolitique.

John: Is the PRD really happy about Ollin Alexis’s death as Delegate Zero asserts? Is the PRD really as bad as the PAN and the PRI? Is worse better?

Al: You’re asking me, again, to speak for someone else, this time for the political parties. A political party can't be happy or unhappy about anything. Only individuals can be happy or unhappy. I'm sure there are members of each party that are saddened by it and others that are gloating over it. And I'm unsure of the exact citation on your claim of what Marcos said, since we’ve translated virtually everything he’s said on the matter of Alexis, and don't recall such a quote. But maybe he did say such a thing. I repeat: you’re a poet. If you don't like another poet's poem, write a better one. There's not much you can do about anybody else's words. And it's an unworthy goal to try and censor anybody else.

One question I can answer: I don't believe worse is better. I don't believe things have to get worse to create the objective conditions for revolution. Things are bad enough already. We don't need any more impetus to revolt. Nor do I believe that the Other Campaign is trying to provoke an openly rightwing party to win the presidency of Mexico, as some in the PRD (Party of the Democratic Revolution) mistakenly say. Something else is going on down below and on a different clock.

What I can say is that I've served my time in the prison of looking above. I did it for years as a political reporter in the United States. And I've done it in Latin America. When Lula da Silva was elected in Brazil I went down there to live, hoping to witness and be part of a great leap forward. But it didn't happen, did it? And Lula was a bona fide leftist! That was a hard lesson.

The Other Campaign has been very clear: How to vote or whether to vote is a personal decision. It hasn't wanted militants of any of the parties involved with La Otra – that's not new, it was announced from the first day – and, in my observation, that’s been a smart call. It has to make sure that people who will be outside of the government – anti-capitalist and to the left – are organized together to confront any administration of any party, left, right, or center, when it takes office.

I also don't believe that elections, in Mexico or in the United States are fair or free, or even close to authentic democracy. In the US, I believe Gore won the popular and electoral vote in 2000 and that Kerry won the Electoral College vote in 2004 and that the evidences of fraud have been well documented, although not in the Commercial Media. And I agree that things are worse because Bush is in the White House for everyone on earth and that his defeat would have been preferable. But computer fraud is easy to do and hard to detect. I believe we’ve seen examples of it in recent years. And what's to stop them from doing it in Mexico, where you can’t even have poll watchers counting the votes at each polling place? All this talk about "how much the vote counting safeguards have evolved in Mexico, blah, blah, blah," is bullshit. If you can't count the damn votes at the polling place you can't guarantee against computer fraud, a la 1988.

Furthermore, I believe that money and the cost of media make such "elections" unfair from the starting gate. They're a sick joke. The decision over the presidency of Mexico will be made up above, as it was six years ago when the Empire bet on Fox.

And if those above decide it should be Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the "center-leftist," they would have good reasons, from their own interests, to do so. Because if, conversely, they decide it will be the rightist Felipe Calderon of the PAN (National Action Party) a lot of people aren't going to swallow it, the collective memory of fraud that you wrote so well about the other day and the revolt could uncloak maybe as soon as July 3. And I still don’t discount a scenario where the system pops out Roberto Madrazo and the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party) as the supposed winner. But the system can buy more time with Lopez Obrador than it can with the others. It’s a risk for the system because there's still the chance, albeit small, that Lopez Obrador will surprise us, as Chávez has in Venezuela, and maybe do some big things right. The only way he would be able to do that is if there were a grassroots movement outside of his government to push him, like what occurs in Venezuela and what might occur in Bolivia; we’ll see. Once again, it all comes back to the need for the Other Campaign.

So, John, pretend it is now July 3rd. If Lopez Obrador is declared the winner, who will push that government from below and to the left? You will need the Other Campaign. And if Calderon is declared the winner: who will lead the charge to call out its illegitimacy? You will need the Other Campaign. And if the Jack-in-the-Box lid springs open and – surprise! – Madrazo is smiling up at you, oy, you’ll really need the Other Campaign then. Elections are fleeting things; like the World Cup, it will all be over soon. Who has thought about what comes next? Many of the adherents to Other Campaign have done so to a degree that I don’t think any of the candidates or parties have accomplished.

John: Why does the alternative press say nothing about all of this? Isn’t it the role of the alternative press to be critical?

Al: It seems to me that we're having this discussion right now. The fact remains I don't share your views. I obviously disagree with many of your statements of "fact" and I've offered the exculpatory evidence above. Much of what you've claimed is, to me, on the level of unsubstantiated supposition and guessing. And although others have said similar things, they’ve mainly been either corporate media or anonymous whiners on the Internet, and there’s no use conducting a debate with pseudonyms. But this is good: John and Al having a conversation in public, with our names attached. It means we’re accountable for what we say and it makes us more honest in saying it. And hopefully it means that if one of us demonstrates, with facts, that the other is in error, the other of us will adjust his position accordingly.

There are many different kinds of "alternative" media. At Narco News we don’t describe ourselves that with that word. "Alternative to what?" In the United States, the "alternative media" is big businesses. And it doesn't even humor anti-capitalist struggle, as it did 30 years ago, much less report on it. We prefer the term "authentic journalism" because we are not reacting to them, or to the mainstream media. We are just doing what we think is right. To us, all those simulators up above are the "alternative" – they literally invent an alternative reality and then impose it on everyone else – whereas we try to report the reality we live, in struggle from below.

And as real people, as human beings who choose to do journalism, we don’t check our humanity at the door and assume a distant "objective" stance (as if that were even possible). We don’t even try. We don’t consider it a worthy goal. We’re a class of workers that is abused mainly by the private sector, not by State censorship, but by the gag order of the New State, which is the Media. It preaches freedom as it daily silences speech; more accurately, it drowns out truthful speech under an ocean of lies. I don’t need to tell you this. You know what it’s like out there. It’s awful. And often, the "alternative press" is the worst abuser of labor. And so we have our own struggle. And in allying ourselves with the struggles of other workers, of farmers, of all the other sectors in the Other Campaign, we are doing what we think is best for everyone, but also for ourselves.

The Sixth Declaration was attractive to us because it is anti-capitalist and to the left, and, to us, that means taking back the means of production. As media workers, that means taking back the airwaves, the printing presses, the distribution networks, or destroying the ones that exist and making a space for everyone in society to construct new ones. Its not that we want to become the new directors of Televisa or the next New York Times correspondents in Latin America, any more than the Zapatistas want to be congressmen or that Zapata wanted to be president. No. It’s that we are destroying the convocatory power of Televisa, the New York Times and all the others, we are "toppling" their credibility and people’s belief in them, as we build something else, something "other," ourselves. For six years, Narco News has been a subject in that fight, and as individuals even longer.

So when we’ve seen that the Zapatistas – a majority of them farmers – took back the farmlands from the plantation owners and the workers own their own jobs again, and that they’ve held that ground for twelve years, we look at how that recipe can be applied to journalism. And when we read in the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandon Jungle that it’s time for every sector to do this, we answered the call from our own place in all this. And our method of being part of this cause – not separate from it, not up on some Olympus on high masturbating with the "intellectuals," but part of it – has been to do what we do: journalism, but as part of something greater than journalism. And we disclose our bias. So what’s the beef?

To speak of "the alternative press" as if it is some monolith is very mistaken. Before the Other Campaign began, few of us could agree on lunch. But among those who have entered it, as we have, we’ve seen other projects like Radio Pacheco, like the two Indymedias in Mexico and Chiapas, like Radio KeHuelga, and Radio Sabotaje, and others grow as we have. We’ve seen some interesting upstart projects too on the local and regional level, or nationally such as the Palabras de La Otra magazine. It turns out that none of these projects – although some acted like it in the past – were ever competing for the same spaces or the same personnel. That each, through its adherence to the Other Campaign, has found an ever-expanding pool of like-minded folks that are comfortable with each different style (and it’s obvious that the styles between each of these projects are very different from one another). And each has also expanded its public reach. When Marcos commented, in February, that, "the alternative media has merely just used the Other Campaign as its backstage," I think he "got it" in a big way. He meant it in the most positive sense. That La Otra is a space for many different kinds of worthy projects to grow and prosper; well, not financially, but in all the other important ways.

So, how you define your job as "alternative media" may well be different than from how I define mine, or how other members of our team define theirs. La Otra has room for all of us in all our hues. But I don’t tell you how to do your job. And I sure don’t let anybody tell me how to do mine. I’ve fought too hard to win this freedom to let it go now.

Despite so many differences, we do look for ways to collaborate. You send us articles. We publish them. Our network of readers distributes them and draws attention to them. You read what other colleagues here publish and we read yours and "a bigger truth" comes from the combination. I don't want John Ross to be like me. And I sure don't want to be forced to be like anybody else. And that's also the spirit of the Otra. The Zapatistas, the other organizations and individuals, have "got it." They don't want either of us, or anybody else, to be like them. We all agree that we want freedom for ourselves and we want freedom for everybody else. And we realize that we only win this freedom if everybody wins it. And so we struggle together and build "one big fight" which resonates well with the old IWW credo of "One Big Union."

It think that "the left" in the United States is particularly confused on this point in a way that the Mexican left increasingly is not: so many of our paisanos want to tell everyone else what they should be doing. But hegemonic activism doesn't work. It doesn't advance any struggle or cause. I really can’t wait for La Otra to hit the border because, yes, we’re going to jump over at that point, if not physically then at least in terms of seeing whether a blueprint for a better mousetrap comes out of the cross-pollination of movements on each side of the border. There is great interest in the Other Campaign up the North. It's on our radar in a bigger way than I think it is for most. We’ve heard from so many readers up there that are planning to come to the bi-national meetings when they happen in Tijuana and Juarez. When it comes to fruition, would you like a reminder card about your prediction that the Other Campaign was already "all but wrecked" and "in attrition" in June 2006?

John: Is the shameless cheerleading of the alternative press a condition of accompanying the Other Campaign?

Al: Days before the launch of the Other Campaign tour, on December 26 of last year, came a communiqué out of the Lacandon Jungle in which Marcos asked the local organizing organizations throughout Mexico to "give preferential treatment to the compañeros of the 'other' that 'cover' this tour, since these alternative media are at a disadvantage in the face of the mass media, and if this is the 'other,' well, we ought to be 'other' in the aspect of communication…"

Yet, despite its clarity, it took various weeks of the Caravan being on the road for that ethic to sink in. There were early efforts – in Chiapas, in Yucatán, in Oaxaca – by some local organizers to place themselves as gatekeepers in ways that inhibited the spirit of the communiqué. I remember one meeting in which a local organizer told us we couldn’t film "on orders from Marcos." We passed a note to the EZLN's Equipo de Apoyo (support team) and five minutes later one of its members came out and told the guy, in front of a bunch of people, that no such statement had been made. And we all turned on our cameras. But we had to fight for it; nicely, politely, but it was a fight. In other places, like Quintana Roo, the local organizers grasped the ethic right away and made it possible for all of us to do our jobs. That was wonderful. It was there that the new and better mousetrap was built, by people we’d never met before, like the late Julio Macossay and the youths at Rincón Rupestre, some of whom then joined the caravan. When the Other Campaign left Chiapas and entered Chetumal it was as if a long cloud of gatekeeper abuses had finally lifted. And, basically, after a few bumps in Oaxaca, the situation has been consistently good. But you had a brush with that old vice in Chiapas, right? I remember that. Your next question refers to it…

John: If all media is invited to cover the Other Campaign as Delegate Zero communicated January 1st, why am I barred from press conferences?

Al: You can't honestly speak of "press conferences," plural. There has only been one "press conference" during the entire five-and-a-half months of the Other Campaign, on its third day, and the way it went down, I imagine, has everything to do with why there haven’t been more.

I wasn't there. You were. And you denounced it afterwards. And I supported you very forcefully, as you know, but in my own style of doing it without turning what I considered an internal matter into a public denouncement. I think we agree on those facts.

The first problem was "how do you define who is alternative media and who is not?" There is, for example, our friend Hermann Bellinghausen. He works for a commercial newspaper, La Jornada. But his reporting is "from below and to the left." Now, you went to those meetings in Palenque, I think it was January 3 or 4, and signed the press list as being from, as I recall, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, a commercial alternative weekly newspaper owned by another good friend, Bruce Brugmann. Suddenly, Marcos called a press conference, and a list of alternative media present was read as the list of invitees. And you weren’t on it. And Hermann was. And so, clearly, there wasn’t consistency in the standards applied. Maybe if you had signed the list as "Narco News" instead – you had already signed on with the Other Journalism – you would have gotten in. Or maybe not: it was early, and the process of sweeping out old vices had only just begun. Whoever was making the list probably just had never heard of the Bay Guardian. Sometimes we all tend to read too much into a situation and interpret an impersonal blunder or ignorance as an intended personal sleight. I really don't think that’s what happened there.

That was one problem: If you are going to give a press conference just for "alternative media," how do you decide who gets in and who doesn't? It's a very difficult call. And you know that I protested it, because you have a copy of the private emails I sent supporting you to you-know-who. But I protested it privately. Is that what you mean by "shameless cheerleading"? That when I have an internal complaint I file it internally? If so, I plead guilty, and proudly so: I think another problem in social movements is when one faction tries to fight with another through the media, alternative or mainstream. You'll notice that on Narco News we don't report about internecine disputes in social movements unless they've already taken on a public component through other media or occurred in a public forum. But we're never the ones to break a story that says so-and-so is fighting with so-and-so about such-and-such. We do report about debates over philosophy, strategy and tactics. But we don’t consider personality conflicts or the inevitable logistical problems (such as who got invited to a press conference) to be "news," because there is nothing "new" about it.

A case in point: In Yucatán state, last December and January, there had been a bitter division between various organizations inside the Other Campaign prior to Marcos' arrival. They were divisions that were, in some cases, thirty years old. The dispute was over where in the state Marcos would go during his three days in the state: it was a dispute about something that really mattered. Both sides petitioned him to mediate it, and he said no, you guys work it out. One of the groups then went to the Diario de Yucatán to air its dispute publicly. Another, on the same side of the dispute – the artisans from the Chichen Itza archeological zone – chose not to air its complaint publicly and kept advocating its position privately: they wanted Marcos to visit the ruins and bring attention to their cause. Later, Marcos arrived in Yucatán, saw what was really going on, and decided there to break the script and go to Chichen Itza. It was an historic moment for the Other Campaign because it was when he started to see that there were vices in local committees, and gate-keeping mentality, and he chose to crash down the gates.

There, when he spoke, he thanked the Chichen Itza artisans for not airing their complaint through the media. He, like us, seems to believe that a movement does better when it doesn’t involve the enemy (the media) in internal disputes. And his presence indicated that the artisans of Chichen Itza had won their argument by waging it as they had: internally.

In a movement, that’s how it ought to be done. Otherwise, one just gives fuel to the counter-insurgency efforts of the mass media, to divide and conquer, to distort, to turn small things into big things and cloud out what really are the important things. And since we are adherents and part of this movement, we fight internal battles internally and save our public ammunition for the stuff that really is news.

That doesn’t mean that we don't have open discussions, like this one, that are sincere efforts to flesh out philosophical, strategic and tactical visions, and to try to agree at least on what the facts are: from there sprouts (sometimes) a movement’s evolution and advance. And it's amazing what can happen between diverse tendencies when suddenly they can at least come to agree on the facts. That's the first step to unity. And then there are some tactical questions, on which we can disagree, but still advance together. In a way, that's what we've been doing in spite of these disagreements. Likewise, if you think I'm working with an inaccurate roadmap, I invite you to correct or argue otherwise, either by sending me a response to be published here or by taking advantage of your account in The Narcosphere. It's not as if I'm getting or taking the last word on any of this

I don’t consider it my job to be lecturing any other adherent organization – including the EZLN – as to how it should do its job. We are not some elite "press" that is on the outside of or above a cause. We are a media organization that is adherent to it. If you want to call that "shameless cheerleading" that’s your prerogative. But you know that I frequently voice my criticisms and complaints privately to anyone I wish. (If anything, the complaint about me is that I do it too much and too passionately, and people get their feelings hurt). That I don’t do it publicly at the moment when it happens, I think, has a lot to do with getting those grievances redressed and with successfully correcting the wrongs. And this doesn't tell anybody else they have to do things the same way or hush up about anything. It’s simply one autonomous stance in a movement where other ways of doing things also coexist.

In any case, you ought to know that there is no policy "banning" you from "press conferences." And your extrapolation of one incident into what you term now as an ongoing policy lacks the journalistic rigor that more often marks your work.

But there’s another point that I think has even more weight as to why there haven’t been more "press conferences" for the "alternative media," and I don't think it has to do with the surmountable problem of who gets in and who does not. It's that, in general, the "alternative media" doesn't yet know how to make use of a press conference and in other ways is still taking baby steps toward what it can and will become. That press conference in Palenque was called, I believe, in part to demonstrate the Other Campaign's preference for alternative media. It was there that Marcos said that the alternative media would be "the spinal column of the first phase of the Other Campaign" and urged us not to disappoint the Otra by fading away. That first and only press conference came a week after his December 26 communiqué, when he urged "the consolidation of the different alternative communication projects that exist below and to the left in Mexico." The idea was that somehow all the alternative media projects could consolidate into something bigger.

But the proposal for "consolidation" went against the grain of the decentralized, autonomous spirit of La Otra. And the fact that it didn’t happen proves my point that the Other Campaign really is a collective venture. One adherent organization – the EZLN – proposed (I stress, proposed; it didn't order anyone to do anything) that the various adherent media organizations consolidate. But the various adherent media organizations did not show any enthusiasm for that proposal and just kept doing their own thing, us included. Within a few weeks, the EZLN and its spokesman adjusted its position, accepted the reality of counting with different media organizations with very different styles, and began to shine the light on those specific media organizations that were working on the most daily basis to cover the Otra. It put links to some of us on its website. It mentioned specific alternative media organizations in a recent communiqué. And the most active adherent media organizations all seem to be pretty happy with this arrangement. It preserves each of our respective autonomies and freedom to advance our projects exactly how we want to advance them. There didn't have to be any meeting, any group process, any vote called, or any consensus reached. The voting was made through the work that was done by the working class within this movement: "the doers."

That, to me, is the only truly collective process: one in which those who actually do the work determine what happens on the shop floor. To paraphrase Zapata: the movement belongs to he and she that work it.

"Group process" and empty rhetoric about "collective decision-making" have been wielded as undemocratic swords by the "upper classes" of social movements: those educated and sedentary persons – often the paid staff – with ability to travel, with the time and the inclination to attend meetings at the expense of getting the hard work done where their struggles are fought, on the ground. It's a major problem for movements inside the United States. The last thing that the Other Campaign needs, in my opinion, is a process of gringotization of its group processes. To the contrary, those who believe that "collectivity" only exists in a meeting room have much more to learn from the Other Campaign.

And, really, John: neither of us are "meetings people." You're a poet. I’m a musician. We also happen to be journalists. Do you really want to turn the Other Campaign into an endless series of meetings and assemblies and processes to arrive at "decisions" (that tend to come only when too few people are left standing in the room to implement them)? I somehow doubt that you do. And I'm sure you wouldn’t like the results.

I hope that once this election up above is over, in less than two weeks, that you find your way back to a place you find comfortable in the Other Campaign, one that lets John be John, and that you maintain it, and that you defend it. I do think that after July 2, everything will be much clearer then.

John Ross’ Making Another World Possible – Zapatista Chronicles 2000-2006 will be published by Nation Books this October.

I expect the US military to try to hide the truth for as long as possible

by Oscar heck
Yesterday, I wrote an article about a video in which an ex-US soldier described the atrocities he and others committed against innocent women and children in Iraq (remember Vietnam ...). As a result of this article, I have received emails telling me that Jesse Macbeth, the person in the video, is a fraud and that it has (apparently) been proved that he is indeed a fraud.

Eight of ten emails sent to me were with denigrating insults (why, I don't know ...?) ... the other 20$ were kind and simply stated that my information was wrong and that Jesse is indeed a fraud.

I want to thank the two kind readers who brought this to my attention ... and I would like to say to the rest, the other 80% (who sent me insults instead), that I am also human and have feelings ... I do not like being insulted the way you have insulted me. Have you never erred?

Or did I insult them by writing about the video?

Did I imply that the US military is a criminal organization that assassinates innocent women and children? If I did imply this, regardless of the validity of the video, I did not mean it as an insult ... I meant it as fact!

(I am presently researching a list of about 5,000 Iraqis killed in this US invasion of Iraq. The numbers of children and women killed is astoundingly high in terms of percentage. I will present the results in a few months ... it is a lengthy process.)

But ... I have questions. Why do 8 of 10 emails express such violence? Am I not fallible and, occasionally, am I not mistaken? I am not God, nor have I ever claimed to be.

Now, back to Jesse.

If you click here you can read what Iraq War Veterans Against the War have to say ... and they do state that Jesse is a fraud.

But I still have questions.

Why is it that what 'Jesse the Fraud' (I will call him this for now) recounts bear such a striking similarity to stories which were recounted to me directly by US soldiers who themselves partook in very similar acts during the Gulf War in 1991?

When I watched the 'Jesse the Fraud' video, I felt I was back in Kuwait (1991) ... listening again to young soldiers telling their horrifying stories. As I watched, I tried to see if he was perhaps a fraud ... but everything I saw and heard appeared to be real ... much too close to the reality I personally experienced 15 years ago.

I also though of something related to this ... in terms of what is true and what is not.

During the Gulf War. it was claimed in the news (and by the US government) that Iraqis had blown up the oil wells just outside Kuwait City. However, I was told by several Kuwaitis ... and later by several Saudis (and by others who were private pilots and some who worked in tandem with Lockheed Martin mercenary services) ... that it was the US that blew up the wells to blame Saddam Hussein.

Now, coincidentally, not too long ago, I met an ex-special forces British Marine who was in the war at the same time as I. He confirmed that it was the US that ordered the destruction of the oil wells ... he was on one of the special forces operations to blow up one of the wells. He also said that he can not talk about this stuff openly for fear of getting into some kind of trouble (he did not expound).

Who do I believe? CNN and the mass media who claimed that it was the Iraqis who blew up the wells ... or the British ex-special forces Marine who was involved in blowing up an oil well on behalf of the USA? I have no reason not to believe this person. He is a best friend of someone very close to me and who I trust implicitly ... should I trust CNN instead?

  • Now, in the case of 'Jesse the Fraud,' I have no reason not to believe him. What he says is so real ... just like the oil wells being blown up (I was there). I also expect the US military to try to hide the truth for as long as possible.

The US military would never have come out on their own to say something to the effect of "We are torturing people in Abu Ghraib" ... or ... "We treat prisoners at Guantanamo like animals" ... or ... "Yes, we did use nuclear warheads in Afghanistan and Iraq" ... or ... "Yes, we financed the violent Venezuelan opposition in their violence-ridden coup against democratically-elected President Hugo Chavez in 2002 and we also financed their violence-ridden economic sabotage of the country in 2002 and 2003."

They will certainly not admit to the fact that the US military has been, and is, assassinating innocent Iraqis ... which is a fact ... and I know this to be a fact. The killerrs told me themselves how they assassinated innocent Iraqi children and old men (they did not mention women) ... just like the British ex-Marine told me about how he was involved in blowing up an oil well.

Who blew up the towers in NYC?

Who killed Kennedy?

Is Chavez really a dictator?

Is Chavez a communist who harbors terrorists?

Who is hiding information from us?

  • Jesse the Fraud or the US government?
  • The media?

If 'Jesse the Fraud' is indeed a fraud, he really did a great job ... and he should become an actor. He is very good. If Jesse is not a fraud ... and I suspect that he is not ... then he will continue to be ridiculed until he either commits suicide, goes crazy or is disappeared.

If I am ridiculed for believing that 'Jesse the Fraud' is not a fraud, so be it ... I have a very difficult time believing certain things, especially with regard to the US military. I do not believe what I have read so far about 'Jesse the Fraud' being a fraud ... just as I don't believe half of what CNN or the US government says. Do you?

If the US government is so shameless as to lie about Iraq and Saddam Hussein and the invisible WMD ... if CNN can go along with it ... if the US government can erroneously call Iran a terrorist state and a threat to the USA ... if most of the mass media assists in propagating such falsehoods, and ... if the US government can wrongly accuse Chavez of being everything from a dictator to an autocrat to a danger to the region and a harborer of terrorists, hey, then just imagine how easy it must be for the US government to discredit the words of a puny bothersome flea like 'Jesse the Fraud.'

Morales: US Sending Soldiers in Disguise


In this handout photo released by Bolivian presidential palace, Bolivian president Evo Morales Ayma speaks to supporters in the village of Punata, near Cochabamba, Bolivia on Tuesday, June 20, 2006. Morales accused the U.S. government on Tuesday of sending "soldiers disguised as students and tourists" to Bolivia, just as the leftist leader's political opponents denounced his government's coziness with Venezuela's military.

U.S. Denies Sending Troops to Bolivia, By FIONA SMITH
Associated Press Writer

LA PAZ, Bolivia
President Evo Morales drew a sharp denial from the U.S. Embassy when he claimed in a speech that the United States is sending soldiers disguised as students and tourists to Bolivia.

The accusation, which the U.S. Embassy dismissed as unfounded Wednesday, comes as Morales faces attacks by political opponents for his cozy relationship with President Hugo Chavez's Venezuela, including accepting aid from that country's military.

Morales said in a speech Tuesday that U.S. Ambassador David Greenlee had sought a meeting with him.

"I don't know what he's looking to discuss. I'm not at all afraid of talking _ or perhaps he's angry," Morales told thousands of poor supporters.

"But I also have the right to complain because U.S. soldiers disguised as students and tourists are entering the country," said Morales, a leftist who has pledged revolutionary changes for the poor, including his recent move to nationalize Bolivia's natural gas industry.

Morales offered no evidence to back his claim. Spokesman Alex Contreras said Morales would provide evidence, though he did not say when.

The U.S. Embassy called Morales' charge "unfounded," saying in a statement: "We reiterate once more that we are supporting Bolivian democracy in a consistent way."

U.S. military Special Operations teams have been sent to Latin America for the last few years. U.S. officials have said the teams are not covert, and are known to the host governments, but won't say where they're deployed. A report in The Washington Post in April noted the teams were in 20 countries worldwide, and that the Defense Department no longer needs U.S. ambassadors' approval for the missions.

Relations between Bolivia and the U.S. have been frosty since Morales took office in January. While he has built close ties with Venezuela and Cuba, his remarks toward the U.S. have grown increasingly strident.

Earlier this month, Morales said without offering specifics that the U.S. had tried to assassinate him in the past.

Speaking to coca growers Sunday, Morales used a phrase in the native Quechua language that he said may have irritated the U.S. ambassador.

"I shouted, 'Qausachun coca (Long live coca!), wanuchun yanquis (die Yankees!),'" Morales said Tuesday. "If he complains, I, too, have the right to complain."

Meanwhile, a former president Jorge Quiroga, a key opponent, accused Morales this week of compromising Bolivia's sovereignty by inviting Venezuelan soldiers.

It's unclear how many Venezuelan troops are in Bolivia, but Venezuelan pilots have been ferrying Morales around the country for the past two weeks in two loaned military helicopters.

Military cooperation with the United States, meanwhile, has ebbed. The U.S. Embassy would not specify how many Defense Department employees it has in Bolivia, saying only that they number about a few dozen.

Morales' latest accusation comes as Bolivia seeks to extend a preferential trade agreement that has been an economic boost, helping it export $380 million in goods to the U.S. last year. U.S. officials have said it's unlikely Bolivia will get an extension of the Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, which expires Dec. 31.
*
Associated Press writers Carlos Valdez and Frank Bajak contributed to this report.

June 21, 2006

The Ominous Shadow of 1988 Hovers Over this July’s Mexican Presidential Election

by John Ross
Jun 13
Mexico City
With 20 Days to Go before the Vote, the Spectre of Electoral Fraud - and Subsequent Repression - Haunts a Nation

Driving in from the airport, the U.S. reporter asked the usual dumb questions. In his New York Times Magazine hit piece, David Rieff had just reported that airport taxi drivers were being pressured not to vote for leftist Andrés Manuel López Obrador in the July 2nd presidential election. Was this true?

“On our site, they threatened two drivers if they don’t vote for Calderón (Felipe Calderón, the rightwing National Action Party – PAN in its Spanish initials – candidate) but no one is going for it,” corroborated Hector S., a 36 year-old National University business grad who is forced to push a hack for a living, “How can they do that? Isn’t the ballot supposed to be secret?” the driver asked his passenger but didn’t wait for an answer. “To me, it’s a lot like 1988 when they stole the election from Cárdenas. Like I said, we’re not going for it this time.” Hector had been an 18 year-old student about to enter the university in 1988 and had joined the protests that followed the Great Fraud with his older brothers.

As the taxi glided to a stop at the light on the wide slum avenue, a ragged youth threw himself gracelessly on the cab’s hood and started soaping the windshield. Hector waved him off sadly and dropped a coin in his cupped hand. “How can a country so rich have so many poor people?” The cabbie answered himself again. “This is two countries, amigo. One up there for Calderón” – he pointed to a bank of skyscrapers in the distance – “and the rest of us down here with López Obrador.”

The July 2nd Mexican presidential election is the most pertinent one since the watershed year of 1988 when Cuauhtemoc Cárdenas, the son of Lázaro Cárdenas, the nation’s last leftist president (1932-38) squared off against a Harvard-trained neo-liberal technocrat named Carlos Salinas in a contest that pitted the Washington Consensus against the revolutionary nationalism of the Mexican left, an election that would decide the future of Mexico at least up until now.

As it turned out, Salinas and the then-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the longest ruling political dynasty in the known universe at the time, stole the election and NAFTA (the North American Free Trade Agreement) was next on the agenda. On July 2nd, Andrés Manuel López Obrador intends to change all that but in Mexico, history is a closed loop, the same boneheaded mistakes and miscalculations are made over and over again, and what happened back then is apt to repeat itself now.

July 2nd is this reporter’s fifth Mexican presidential election but none have ever equaled the high drama of 1988 when the PRI, blindsided by the arrogance of power, failed to see Cárdenas coming and had to steal ballot boxes and burn their contents, falsify tally sheets and crash vote-tabulating computers. On election night July 6th, electoral officials lied to reporters that the system had collapsed and it didn’t come back up for ten days when the free market champ Salinas was declared the winner by 51% of the popular vote. Thousands of voting stations were never included in the final results. No one believed them anyway. Whenever I jumped into a cab in those tremulous days, the driver would laugh and tell me how the people had “chingared” (fucked over) the PRI.

The post-electoral period was a bloody one. Cárdenas’s people went into the streets and Cuauhtemoc tried to control them. I got ten straight front pages for the San Francisco Examiner as Mexico bordered on nervous breakdown.

The Great Fraud of ‘88 was confected by a compromised electoral “authority.” Cárdenas was subjected to lacerating media attack. Cuauhtemoc’s people were set upon by the PRI government, his aides-de-camp assassinated on election eve. But the PRI malfeasance was met with a groundswell from the bottom, the people the color of the earth as Subcomandante Marcos tags them, who rose up against the only party they had ever known and demanded economic and political democracy – and that the pinche ballot boxes be reopened and all the votes recounted. More than 500 members of Cárdenas’s fledgling Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) were killed in political violence between 1988 and 1991. In 1991, the PRI and the now-ruling PAN voted to destroy the evidence and burnt the ballots.

For many veterans of that terrible time, the shadow of 1988 casts itself ominously over July 2nd. For one thing, the maximum electoral authority, the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE), which grew out of the debacle of 1988 and which comported itself with admirable equanimity in 2000 when the long-ruling PRI was deposed from power by Vicente Fox, seems once again to be a creature of ruling party interests – only this time around, the ruling party is the PAN. Time and again in the run-up to July 2nd, the IFE and its gray-faced president Luis Carlos Ugalde have come down hard on Andrés Manuel López Obrador (known as “AMLO”) while condoning Calderón’s dirty tricks.

Item – Ugalde forbade López Obrador from traveling to Los Angeles when he was invited by that city’s first Mexican mayor since 1842 to deliver the Grito of Independence last September because, in the IFE director’s judgment, the trip would violate new laws on campaigning in the U.S. PAN president Manuel Espino was subsequently greenlighted by the IFE to canvas California.

Item – the IFE winks at the intervention of non-Mexicans in the presidential campaign so long as they are working for Calderón – Spain’s former right-wing prime minister Jose Maria Aznar and his media hit man Antonio Sola, Fox News commentator and “political consultant” Dick Morris – but international observers who might side with López Obrador are warned that they can be expelled from the country under Article 33 of the Mexican Constitution if they interfere in the electoral process.

Item – the IFE allows the PAN to run a blizzard of venomous hit pieces for months attacking López Obrador as a DANGER to Mexico – the big red letters are stamped across the screen – before finally pulling the plug under court order.

“All that seems to be missing is that the system collapses” Luis Cota, a veteran of ‘88, sourly chuckles when the two of us bump into each other on the night of the Great Debate June 6th in the cavernous Zócalo plaza where the PRD would show the face-off on the big screen to tens of thousands of militants, almost all of them, as always, the color of the earth.

For months, the hit pieces have flickered across the tube, sometimes four to a commercial break. Lopez Obrador’s pugnacious mug intercut with such boogiemen as Hugo Chávez and Subcomandante Marcos, the police riot at Atenco, a brutal lynching in the city’s southern suburbs, the city itself collapsing into dust. Lopez Obrador is a PELIGRO for Mexico!

Inciting the “voto del miedo” – the Vote of Fear – ran up big numbers for Ernesto Zedillo in 1994 after the Zapatistas had risen in Chiapas and Salinas’s hand-picked successor Luis Donaldo Colosio was gunned down in Tijuana. The message hasn’t been lost on Calderon’s handlers who have invested millions of Yanqui dollars in the TV onslaught.

The “presidenciales” mean big bucks for Mexico’s two-headed television monopoly, Televisa and its junior partner TV Azteca – about $1.3 billion USD in primetime spots by the time its all done. From the campaign get-go on January 19th when it broadcast Calderón’s kick-off live, Televisa has tilted to the PANista and attacked López Obrador, sometimes showing AMLO in herky-jerky frames with lots of spooky music to accentuate the DANGER. Back in ‘88, Televisa and its star anchor Jacobo Zabludowsky, then staunch PRIistas, gave Cárdenas the same treatment.

One reason for the bias in 2006: Fox and the PAN put on a full court press in the Senate this April to pass what is called here “the Law of Televisa” that lets 40-year concessions for the entire electro-magnetic spectrum to the two TV titans.

Alternating with the Get AMLO blitz is a Fox government crusade to extol its questionable accomplishments – nearly a half million spots since January if a PRI count can be believed, most of them emanating from the Social Development Secretariat (SEDESO) and vaguely suggesting that the checks might dry up if Calderon is not elected president. Former SEDESO secretary Josefina Vazquez Mota is Calderón’s right-hand woman and a Calderón brother-in-law installed a SEDESO system that contains the names and address of every recipient of the ministry’s largesse during the Fox administration. Fox’s efforts to bribe the poor with checks and social programs on Calderón’s behalf rival the PRI in its prime.

As an interventionist president, Fox’s brash grandstanding for a Calderón presidency (the codewords are “economic continuity”) is unparalleled in the annals of Mexican presidential campaigns. Although both the PRD and the PRI have gone to court to force Fox to cease and desist, the nation’s attorney general (a Fox appointee) claims no jurisdiction to initiative an investigation and Ugalde’s response is limited to feeble hand wringing.

The PAN-PRI putsch to beat back López Obrador, who led the presidential pack by as much as 18 points for 30 months before sliding under Calderón hit pieces, reached fever pitch in 2005 when Fox and the unctuous PRI standard-bearer Roberto Madrazo joined forces to try and bar López Obrador from the ballot (the “desafuero”) – and even to imprison him for the heinous crime of trying to build an access road to a hospital (he was enjoined by court order). But AMLO turned this legal lynching on its head by mobilizing 1.2 million citizens for a silent march through the city he then governed as mayor last April 24th , the largest political demonstration in the history of this republic.

Before there was the “desafuero”, the PAN and the PRI had tried to hang López Obrador with a series of videotapes secretly shot by a crooked construction tycoon pissed off at AMLO for denying him city contracts. On the tapes, Carlos Ahumada appears to be bribing PRD officials but the “bribes” were legal tender for a party election. The videos, aired over and over again on Televisa and TV Azteca throughout 2004 never touched López Obrador and, in fact, strengthened his lead for the presidency.

Then, on the eve of the June 6th (6/6/6) debate when for the first time AMLO would confront his tormentors, the imprisoned Carlos Ahumada, in classic 1988 style, announced that his wife would distribute new videos testifying to López Obrador’s corrupt moral values at High Noon the next day.

At allegedly 6:10 AM that morning, a beige bullet-proof Suburban allegedly carrying Cecelia Gurza, Ahumada’s annoyed-looking wife, her three children, and her rogue cop chauffer, was allegedly raked by gunfire as it allegedly slid out of the driveway of her palatial home in southern Mexico City. Televisa sped to the scene of the “hit.” The lurid black and white footage ran all day diminishing AMLO’s debate victory that night. Now there were bullets in the campaign, Madrazo, in third place and way out of the money, tsktsked. Calderon’s brain trust prepared new poisons. Meanwhile Ahumada’s lawyers called off distribution of the new videos and Presidential spokes Ruben Aguilar decried the muzzling as yet another López Obrador plot.

But to Mexico City district attorney Bernardo Batiz, the whole deal smelled bad. Even the street video camera that recorded the scene had been disabled. In fact, Mrs. Ahumada and her chauffer stand accused of shooting up their own car. Shades of 1988.

Despite the deluge of fear and loathing – the Ahumada shooting, the horrific police riot at San Salvador Atenco, the murder of two striking steelworkers in Michoacan all designed to induce the “voto de miedo” – López Obrador went into the 666 debate neck and neck with Calderón, 35-35 in most newspaper polls. But polling is not a serious business in Mexico – most of the capital’s 20 newspapers are controlled by parochial political interests and the parties pay to have their own polls published as the Gospel Truth.

Samples are skewed towards the middle class and up. All polling is done on the phone and a lot of AMLO supporters are too poor to have one. Mitofsky Associates, whose guru Roy Campos is contracted by Televisa to feign neutrality in 2006, is notorious for making this mistake. In 1988, the pollster reported that Carlos Salinas had a 25 point edge on Cuauhtemoc Cárdenas. Despite such egregious errors, the pollsters are in command in this election and their prognostications may well dictate the results.

Like all staged political spectaculars, the debate proved to be really a string of set pieces with some heavy sniping between Calderón and López Obrador over who was the bigger liar. The PANista tried to look authoritative but looked more authoritarian, “tough on crime” with the “mano dura” (“hard hand”), robotically thrusting his index finger at the camera, frenetically fending off AMLO’s insinuations that he was the candidate of the rich.

AMLO, on the other hand, is the candidate of the poor – “The Poor First!” has been his campaign cry from day one. That’s what this campaign has always been about: rich vs. poor, white vs. brown, the bottom vs. the top. López Obrador is sworn to do something about the yawning divide that puts 70,000,000 Mexicans under and around the poverty line while an infinitesimal clique of fat cats swill champagne from silver goblets.

AMLO’s detractors, most prominently the Zapatista mouthpiece Subcomandante Marcos, tend to scoff. After all, López Obrador’s moneybags – at least at the beginning of his wildly popular reign as Mexico City mayor, was multi-billionaire Carlos Slim, the third richest man in the world.

Looking positively presidential at the debate and not at all the red-eyed devil of danger that Calderón excoriates, Andres Manuel was calmly passionate in his commitment to “los de abajo”, pledging to defend them from the depredations of Calderón and the neo-liberal elites. We’ll se about that later on.

So López Obrador won the Great Debate hands down although the pundits were reluctant to concede it and given that there are a lot more poor Mexicans than Calderón’s fat cats, he should bring home the bacon on July 2nd if he is not assassinated a la Colosio ‘94 before that date or cheated out of victory like Cárdenas in ‘88.

Although Mexico’s electoral process is said to have moved on since those bad old days, the shadow of 1988 darkens this election. If indeed AMLO is denied victory, his people, like Cárdenas’s, will not believe he did not win.

There is generalized conviction amongst the pundits that the presidential election will be very close, decided by 100,000 or less votes out of a probable 42 million (53% of the electorate) to be cast July 2nd. If the IFE awards Calderon victory, AMLO’s supporters – with or without AMLO (a gifted street protest leader) – will hold what before NAFTA “modernized” Mexico’s electoral process, used to be called “the second election in the street.”

Back in 1988, the anger of the “jodidos” (the underclass) was palpable and got away from Cárdenas. The National Palace was firebombed, highways were blockaded, government offices invaded. PRIistas death squads stalked the city and Salinas sent in the military. Luis Cota and I went to a lot of funerals. Francisco Xavier Ovando and Ramon Gil, close collaborators of Cuauhtemoc, were gunned down just a few blocks from the Zocalo. That’s the part Luis remembers most.

“Ovando and Gil” I sighed. We stood on the edge of the great plaza as the debate was about to begin and eyed the dark thunderheads pushing up from the south of the city with suspicion. “Ovando and Gil” Luis sighed back. “Ojalá compañero that it doesn’t happen again.”
*
John Ross is in Mexico City waiting to see how it all turns out so that he can write the epilogue to “Making Another World Possible – Zapatista Chronicles 2000-2006” to be published in October by Nation Books.

Joaquin Cienfuegos: Live from the Struggle in Mexico – Days 1 and 2

The following is a correspondence from Joaquin Cienfuegos, traveling throughout Mexico reporting on the struggles on the streets, the anarchist movement, the Other Campaign, the Zapatista’s, and the over all radical climate that is building. More updates to come. All messages are free for broad distribution and will be sent across the net. Please forward, and let this be an inspiration to a growing movement in North America towards internationalism.
*
I arrived in Mexico City at 6:00 AM (4:00 AM Pacific Coast Time). When I arrived to El Zocalo (or Downtown Mexico City) signs and banners stood out in the town square for support of the EZLN and La Otra Campana/Other Campaign. Banners read, "Vivan los Zapatistas/Long live the Zapatistas" and "Free Political Prisoners in San Salvador Atenco."

In the evening, I attended an event at the Centro Social Libertario-Ricardo Flores Magon. They held a speaking engagement for 2 organizers and writers from the Basque Region in Spain. One of the speakers, Juan Ibarrondo, mainly spoke about the libertarian science fiction novel he recently wrote entitled "Retazos de la Red," which was also the name of the event. The Centro Social Libertario - Ricardo Flores Magon is a social space on the way to becoming a community center that is run by a collective Colectivo Autonomo Magonista that is linked up with other collectives and organizations in Oaxaca under the Alianza Magonista Zapatista. The event was a forum presentation by the speakers followed by group discussion.

The novel gave a criticism of science and technology, because this was the cause of an apocalyptic event due to global warming because of science and technology. The topic of the discussion was based on the destruction of the environment due to the direction of capitalism. The main speaker, Juan Ibarrondo, also talked about his post-leftist view on production and factories, or what they say, "the abolition of work." At the same time he gave a criticism of Green-Anarchists, or Anarcho-Primitivists, (as white and American), because of their belief that there needed to be a human holocaust. Primitivists believe that human beings are the cause of the destruction to the environment, not capitalism, so humanity needs to be wiped out (except for the primitivists of course because their idea and their way of life will save themselves and anybody that follows them). He also criticized dogmatic anarchists who say that to have an identity or to own your identity is death. That position disregards indigenous struggles where their fight for liberation is also upholding their identities as indigenous people. In the discussion there was some talk of the struggle in the Basque region in Spain. A woman asked if there was much participation of women, the other speaker answered (which reminded some of the movement in the US), "They’re not that involved because they’re not comfortable with how these groups work."

I did disagree with some of the Utopian arguments made by the speaker, who spoke of this future Utopia -- that will come about on its own without the need for organization, collective - class struggle, and revolution. The discussion was pretty lively but there was no talk of organizing, just a focus on ideas around a Utopia, the collective and the individual, Kropotkin, and Bakunin. I participated in the discussion and posed a question to the main speaker, Juan Ibarrondo. I introduced myself and mentioned I was visiting from Los Angeles, CA. I talked about my political position as an Anarcho-Communist, and my view on the importance of the ecology but also strategizing and organizing in communities. How the problem is not technology or science, but the monopoly by the capitalists of technology. If humanity had direct control of the means of technology and production (and if they’re conscious) they would use technology for the benefit of humanity not profit as done under capitalism. I also asked him about his idea about the abolition of work and the anarcho-communist position of building the institutions and structures that will replace the capitalist system, their social relationships and its oppression. He answered that his criticism is for the position that factories don’t make people and individuals. There was also intellectual discussion following this by the members of the collective space. While this anarchist event didn’t really interest me much, I did get a chance to connect and meet with the compas from the Centro Social Libertario.

The compas filled me in on what events were coming up in Mexico City and which I should attend. We talked about the Other Campaign, and my collective organizing work in Los Angeles where I talked about Cop Watch LA, what we do and how we want to participate in the process of building autonomy, self-determination and the self-defense of our communities. I talked about what is going on with La Otra Campana organizing in Los Angeles. I talked about my experience with the Los Angeles Chapter of the Southern California Anarchist Federation. They told me about their efforts to build something similar throughout Mexico. I talked about my criticisms of the anarchist movement in the US and the privileged leading it and building an organization of the oppressed that come from these oppressed communities. The comrades have edit a newspaper entitled Autonomia, and also work to edit with the Alianza Magonista Zapatista newspaper entitled, Viva Tierra y Libertad. It was great meating with the Colectivo Autonomo Magonista, and they said they will connect me to what is going on in Mexico in terms of the Other Campaign (which they’re adherents to, and so is Cop Watch Los Angeles) and the libertarian-anarchist movement throughout Mexico. I will continue to build a relationship with these compas who also wanted to participate in the speaking tour of the Consejo Indigena Popular de Oaxaca-Ricardo Flores Magon, where they can present a view of the entire struggle in Oaxaca not just one of an organization.

en lucha,

Joaquin Cienfuegos
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Report from Mexico City DF 06-17-06
By Joaquin Cienfuegos

Today I had more of a chance to walk and talk to people, especially the people who seem to have some support for the movement being built within the Other Campaign. There is a general feeling from a lot of people that they are tired of all the political parties; they want to seek freedom from their rule. A lot of people see them all falling soon.

In the early afternoon I attended the Chopo Cultural Tianguis. The Chopo has been around for 25 years and has been a place where young people in Mexico City can come together, hang out, buy their clothes, their music, and get whatever resources they need for their lifestyle. There are vendors for graffiti writers, punks, metal heads, artists, skaters. At the end of all the vendors there is usually music. El Chopo happens every Saturday. Today there was an emo band that was playing, and I got a chance to talk to some of the people who were vendoring. Some gave me their contact information to go to their house so they can hook me up with some music. I talked to some of them about politics, and they all anticipated the fall of the Mexican government.

I had a chance today to visit El Museo de Fida Kahlo in Coyoacan, Mexico. This part of the city seemed to be more for tourists, where there were more cafes and had more of an artsy crowd. The museum was great. As for Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, they were great artists, but they were into old ideas and were very eclectic. Frida Kahlo seemed to be into Marx, Mao Tse Tung, Stalin, and Trotsky (even though she didn’t have a picture of him on her wall).

Throughout the day I met people who had tables set up in support of the EZLN and La Otra Campaña. I had a chance to talk to some of them, and mentioned that I was from Los Angeles. Many people had already heard about the struggle in the South Central Farm in Los Angeles and were asking questions about it, I will try to get them some information in Spanish (if people can also send me updates of what is going on and information on the farm in Spanish, that would be great).

In the evening I hooked up with people at the Centro Social Libertario-Ricardo Flores Magon and el Colectivo Autonomo Magonista (CAMA). They were holding an asemblea popular or an assembly of anarchists from all over the City of Mexico. There were different trends from Mexico City, anarco-punks, Magonistas, anarco-comunistas, and anarco-feministas. They read the notes on the last assembly that they had, where the discussion was around the role of anarchists within the Other Campaign (there are disagreements with the groups involved, for example the Communist Party of Mexico and their position that they are the vanguard party of the proletariat and their upholding of Stalin). Other points from the last assembly included, knowing our objectives as anarchists before we jump on board of anything, criticism of Subcomandante Marcos´ protagonism, and some anarchists thought that there shouldn’t be a division between the adherents and those who aren’t adherents to La Otra Campaña. The points of unity or principles of unity that they came up with were: Autonomy, Horizontalism, Self-Organization (autogestion), and Direct-Democracy.

In the assembly of today the discussion was more focused around a national encuentro of anarchists in Mexico City that will happen closer to elections in Mexico. The discussion was focused around a proposal of building a national federation, and/or a much more solid organization of the different collectives of anarchists throughout Mexico. The anarchists of Mexico City would propose this at the encuentro to the anarchists of Mexico. They would organize around the unity of anarchism and around people who identify themselves as anarchists. The encuentro will be held for two days, one will be for the Aderentes de La Otra Campaña (adherents of the Other Campaign), and the other day will be open for all anarchists whether they’re aderentes or not. There was also discussion of security for the encuentro and acknowledging that they’re living in a super-repressive atmosphere in Mexico right now (that anarchists are suffering from as well as anybody rebelling, resisting, organizing, and fighting).

The idea of building a federation nationally, but connecting with people internationally, was something that everybody consensed on. There is an urgency in Mexico in general, but as well as anarchists and libertarian socialists in particular, to build a movement nationally. Anarchists in Mexico feel that regardless of which party wins, building a strategy, find tactics based on which party wins, The PAN are Francoists or Neo-Francoists who persecuted anarchists in Spain, the PRD has also repressed anarchist contingents in Mexico DF. I was able to share some of my own experience in Los Angeles in this discussion, but also I let people know that they know the situation and the conditions in Mexico and I know the ones in my communities (ultimately they’re going to do what they feel is best for themselves, as a visitor I can only give my experience in my community and create a space so we can learn from each other’s struggle) which are much different at this point. I talked about my experience within the Southern California Anarchist Federation and the Los Angeles Chapter, and how it failed because the unity was around anarchism, and there were some political differences, and a divide between those who were serious about a revolutionary organization and those who wanted an anarchist network. I also acknowledged as another compa at the meeting did, that it’s important to keep on trying if you fail once, to keep on learning from experience. I mentioned how this is what also happened with us, the collectives and projects still exist and we’re still organizing, and working closely with people we have more unity with politically and strategically. I talked about the project that I´m working with now and how we want to participate in the process of building self-organization (autogestión), autonomy, self-determination, and the self-defense of our communities. The people within that organization, along with others, are also building a specifically revolutionary, anti-imperialist, horizontal, solid organization (federation, but the structure is still being discussed) made up of people who come from oppressed communities and the oppressed themselves (I gave my opinion also and my critique of the anarchist scene in the US and how it is made up in the majority with people with privilege white, middle-class/upper-middle class, males where we feel the oppressed need their autonomy because our ideas and our urgency to free is much greater but where we can support from privileged communities who are also organizing and fighting for their own liberation). We discussed organizing in communities workplaces, and schools. We then discussed the anarchists role within popular social movements in particular the Other Campaign (which has become a movement on the national level with support internationally from people who are building in other communities, regions, and countries).

There was a question asked about what are the social movements that anarchists support in the US or the ones we work in within the US. I could only talk to the ones that I´ve been involved with recently. I talked about Cop Watch, what we do, and what is our goal, and why feel that we need to organize for autonomy, self-determination, and self-defense within our communities. I talked about our involvement at the South Central Farm (some people had heard about it already). I also talked about the immigrant rights movement and the marches that took place in Los Angeles recently. Also I wanted to offer our solidarity, and my position that the best solidarity we can offer for the people of the world is a revolution and building a revolutionary movement in the US (that is connected to people fighting internationally) because this country is responsible for the suffering of people around the world and the people in oppressed communities within the US.

En lucha,

Joaquin Cienfuegos

P.S. people thought my last name Cienfuegos, :] was great, we talked about Camilo Cienfuegos from Cuba and his libertarian ideas.

June 20, 2006

Special - US Empire: Case Studies in Latin America

Broadcast Times
Wednesday, June 21 8:00 PM
Wednesday, June 21 11:00 PM
Thursday, June 22 2:00 AM
Thursday, June 22 5:00 AM

US Empire: Case Studies in Latin America (Four Hour Special)
In four hours of special programming, Link TV will take its viewers to Panama, Colombia and Venezuela to examine the rising tide of Anti-American sentiment and the region’s most vocal and visible symbol: Hugo Chavez.

PART 1 (First Two Hours)
Produced by the Empowerment Group, The Panama Deception, includes never before seen footage of the invasion of Panama and its aftermath, network news clips and interviews. Hosted by Link TV correspondent, independent journalist and author Mark Hertsgaard and special guest musician, actor and social activist Harry Belafonte. The segment offers a startling look into one of the nation’s most critiqued military efforts and the mainstream perceptions of Latin America. “The Panama Deception” presents a view of the invasion which widely differs from that portrayed by the U.S. media and exposes how the U.S. government and the mainstream media suppressed information about this foreign policy disaster.

PART 2 (Second Two Hours)
In the second portion of this special, Mark Hertsgaard will host a broadcast of Plan Colombia: Cashing in on the Drug War Failure, a documentary detailing 20 bloody years of the U.S. “War on Drugs” in Colombia. The film, which is produced by Los Angeles-based husband-and-wife team Gerard Ungerman and Audrey Brohy, investigates how the U.S. State Department shifted its priorities in Colombia from “counter-narcotics” to “counter-insurgency” and explores what is left of the alleged anti-drug purpose of the U.S. Plan Colombia. Throughout the evening, independent journalist Greg Palast comments on U.S. foreign policy and shows clips from his film, Finding Bolivar's Heir, in which he travels to Venezuela to get beyond the U.S. media image of President Hugo Chavez and to find out why the Bush administration is trying to oust him. He also travels the country for other perspectives by talking to the opposition party and ordinary Venezuelan citizens about life under Chavez.

Venezuela mayor tried over siege

by Greg Morsbach
An opposition politician has gone on trial in Venezuela, accused of involvement in a siege of the Cuban embassy during a failed coup in 2002.

The charges against Henrique Capriles date back to when President Hugo Chavez was briefly ousted from power.

Mr Capriles, an opposition mayor, denies the accusations, saying he did everything in his power to control an angry crowd of anti-Chavez protesters.

The judge heard opening arguments and ordered the trial to resume on 30 June.

The court hearing began with the prosecutor reading out six charges against Mr Capriles, accusing him of breaking international law by trespassing into the Cuban embassy compound and intimidating its staff.

Due to inadmissible evidence, the judge threw out three of the six charges which accused Mr Capriles of damaging the embassy building.

Mr Capriles called for the Cuban ambassador to testify as a witness.

The Cuban embassy is located inside Mr Capriles' municipality of Baruta, in the east of the Venezuelan capital, Caracas.

The allegations date from 12 April 2002, the day President Chavez was briefly removed from power in a coup.

A crowd of Venezuelans laid siege to the Cuban embassy, claiming that government ministers were hiding inside the building. The demonstrators cut off water and electricity supplies and damaged vehicles belonging to diplomatic staff.

Cuba's ambassador has told local media Mr Capriles should have used his authority as mayor but did nothing to protect his embassy.

The ambassador says the opposition mayor entered the premises to demand that the building be searched for any fugitive pro-Chavez officials. But Mr Capriles maintains he did everything he could to try to calm the angry protesters outside.

June 19, 2006

Morales opens Chavez-funded coca factory

LA PAZ
Bolivian president Evo Morales visited a coca-growing region on Saturday to open a Venezuelan-funded factory where coca leaves will be made into legal products such as tea and soft drinks.

Morales rose in politics as the leader of coca farmers and part of his anti-drug policy is to encourage licit uses for coca the plant used to make cocaine, which is also revered by Andean peoples for its medicinal properties.

"Manufacturing coca doesn't do any harm because coca isn't a drug," Morales told hundreds of coca farmers gathered in a stadium in the town of Irupana.

The law allows 29,650 acres to be grown in the Yungas, although government and US officials have expressed concern that cultivation is rising in the world's third-biggest cocaine producer.

US funds coca-eradication programs in Bolivia's other main coca-growing region, Chapare, where Morales led sometimes violent protests against forced crop destruction.

From Below and to the Left: The Zapatistas' "Other Campaign" & US Movement Building

From Below and to the Left: The Zapatistas' "Other Campaign" & US Movement Building
June 19-21

For the past twelve years, the Zapatistas' struggle for democracy and indigenous rights in Mexico has been a major inspiration to social justice movements throughout the world, particularly the Americas. The initial uprising in January of 1994 became a global reference point for the resistance to the policies of neo-liberalism and corporate globalization.

The Zapatistas are now in the midst of their largest grassroots mobilizing effort, La Otra Campaña (The Other Campaign), which is seeking to build a grassroots movement "from below and to the left" uniting struggles throughout Mexico's 31 states. Recently the campaign has come under serious attack from the Mexican government, including mass arrests, torture, rape, and several murders.

From June 19-21st we want to invite local activists and organizers to a conversation with a diverse group of US based activists who have all recently traveled to Mexico to cover the Other Campaign and the Zapatistas movement. We will be discussing the current state of the campaign and what this means for those of us in the US looking to expand our own movement building efforts. One thing that the Zapatistas have always asked of us is that we "be rebels where we are," which means building our own movements here in the "brain of the monster."
The event will also serve as a celebration for the five-year anniversary of Left Turn magazine, a movement publication which has featured the writings of several of the presenters.
featuring: Ashanti Alston, Kristin Bricker, Walidah Imarisha, RJ Maccani

June 19th 7pm [Washington DC]
Cafe Nema
1334 U Street NW
Upstairs Lounge
www.cafenema.com <http://www.cafenema.com>;

June 20th 7pm [Baltimore]
The Contemporary Museum
100 W Centre St, btw Cathedral St and Park Ave.
www.contemporary.org <http://www.contemporary.org>;

June 21st 7pm [Philadelphia]
LAVA Space
4134 Lancaster Ave
www.lavazone.org <http://www.lavazone.org>;

June 18, 2006

Bolivia unveils anti-poverty plan


Bolivia is the poorest country in South America
by Daniel Schweimler
The government of Bolivia has announced a radical plan to reduce poverty and create employment in the poorest country in South America.

Almost $7bn (£3.8bn) will be invested in ambitious public works programmes.

The economic plan announced by Planning and Development Minister Carlos Villegas aims to create 100,000 jobs a year for the next five years.

It is the latest measure in a series implemented by President Evo Morales since taking office in January.

The people of South America, and especially Bolivia, have often heard their leaders promise to reduce poverty and create jobs.

But President Morales appears to mean it and many Bolivians believe what he says.

The money will come from the recently nationalised gas industry, supplemented by international lending and foreign investment.

The plan, presented in the presidential palace in La Paz, also aims to deliver more basic public services such as school meals and better access to clean water.

Speedy changes

Since he came to office, Evo Morales, a former coca leaf grower, has launched a number of ambitious projects to reduce poverty and close the gap between rich and poor in Bolivia.

He cut wages in the public sector, including his own, and sent troops in to take control of oil and gas installations after he nationalised the industries. He has forged links with Venezuela and Cuba and worries Washington.

Few in Bolivia deny that the country needs radical changes.

The speed with which President Morales has moved to implement those changes has delighted his supporters, but left wealthy Bolivians and foreign investors nervous and uncertain how they should react.

Venezuela Gov't Seeking State Control of Mines

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's administration has sent a bill to Congress that would "rescue inactive mining areas" by creating joint ventures in which the government would have a majority stake.

The leftist-populist government's plan is to do away with the domination of mines by large companies and "recover sovereignty over almost one million hectares (2.5 million acres,)" Heavy Industries and Mining Minister Victor Alvarez said June 16 at a news conference after submitting the bill to lawmakers.

According to the minister, "most" of the mining fields "acquired more than 10 years ago via concessions or mining contracts remain inactive," thereby leaving thousands of miners in the southern state of Bolivar unemployed.

Bolivar, which is home to large deposits of quartz, gold, bauxite and diamonds, is also the heart of Venezuela's iron and aluminum industry. The bill that was sent to the entirely Chavez-controlled legislature offers the possibility of recovering mining areas and "reassigning them in different ways," said Alvarez.

One portion of these areas would be placed under government control for "strategic reasons," others would be granted to small miners organized in cooperatives and still others "will be given to joint ventures that are majority-owned by the government," Alvarez told the government-run ABN news agency.

"Those mining areas controlled by companies applying for permits will also be recovered," because the permit process has been used "as an excuse and pretext for justifying inactivity," he said. Alvarez added that Venezuelan and foreign companies that have "complied with the law and with their contracts will be respected by the government."

Chavez, a self-described "revolutionary" and close ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, said in September 2005 that his administration would not grant new mining concessions and that production would be put in the hands of a government-run company.

Earlier this year, foreign oil firms in Venezuela, the world's fifth-largest crude exporter, were forced to accept arrangements whereby they were made minority partners in joint ventures with state-owned oil company PDVSA.

COLOMBIA: FARC leader: 'We want peace with social justice’

by Robyn Marshall & Bill Mason
On May 27, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country’s main revolutionary guerrilla movement, marked 42 years of struggle. Speaking from a jungle camp, Raul Reyes, secretary for international relations and a member of the FARC’s national secretariat, explained the group’s background and current policies.

By many estimates, the FARC controls up to 40% of Colombian territory. The group is active in all parts of the country, politically and militarily.

Successive Colombian governments have attempted to crush the FARC, including the current regime of President Alvaro Uribe. Reyes was interviewed before the country’s May 28 election, when Uribe successfully won another term.

The efforts to destroy the FARC have been backed by a force of 20,000 US troops, acting under the cover of Plan Colombia and Plan Patriot — projects by Washington and Bogota to counter the guerrillas under the guise of waging a war against drug trafficking.

Reyes was a trade unionist and a deputy in the Colombian National Assembly, but had faced death threats. He spent some time in jail but was eventually released because there was no proof he had committed any crimes. On his release, he immediately left for the countryside. That was in 1981. Reyes has now spent 25 years in the jungle as a member of the FARC.

He began his political life in the youth wing of the Communist Party (the FARC was originally the CP’s military wing but it broke away). “Although my family were not communists, let alone supporters of the FARC, they were not rich. We didn’t go hungry, but I was very concerned about my people, the widespread poverty and misery. The decision was all mine.”

The FARC fights for “a democratic and pluralist government, ... this will be a government that defends its sovereignty and the dignity of our people ...

“It must defend the right to strike, the right of free association, the right to work and the right to live, the most important of all the rights that we have. This government needs to guarantee work for all the people, with decent wages, with stability of work, study and health for all Colombians, with the cost paid by the state ...

“We have to finish with paramilitarism, corruption [and] narcotrafficking, because narcotrafficking is a cancer which affects everyone. Narcotrafficking ... is an expression of world capitalism ...”

Reyes said that Washington uses the issue “to attack the revolutionaries, but they are the same people who traffic in heroin, cocaine, and are also the greatest producers and sellers of armaments in the world. The money from the drug trade is used to fund the arms trade.”

The charge that the FARC profits from the drug trade, Reyes said, is a “great lie, part of the war that the class enemy promotes, part of the campaign of lies by the US and Uribe against the FARC”. He said that the FARC charges a 10% “peace tax” on businesses and that “a good part of the Colombian economy is involved in narcotrafficking”.

He explained: “A good proportion of the money from narcotrafficking is now in commercial business, in the banks, in industry, in education, in sport, because the narcotraffickers can buy the best vehicles, they have their children at the best schools, they can import agricultural machinery, they can trade in pharmaceuticals. They import everything and they launder the money from the [drugs trade]. It is very difficult for us to know when we ask for the tax where the money has come from ...”

The drugs trade “finances a great part of the costs of the Congress of the [Colombian] republic. Many of the military officers and generals of the army, the police and the aviation industry also have business with the narcotraffickers. The government talks about combating narcotrafficking, but they are quietly left alone.

“This is what happened to Uribe ... Uribe’s father was a narcotrafficker ...”

In the early days of the FARC, the guerrillas had uprooted the coca plants grown by campesinos (peasants). But, Reyes explained, the campesinos told them: “Companeros, if you are going to pull out the coca, we will not be able to live. We don’t have any means of subsistence. We have debts, we are dying of hunger, what will we do?”

“So”, Reyes said, “confronting this problem, we could not continue pulling out the coca plants, we had to leave them. We said, 'This business is very dangerous and illegal. You must plant food — plantano, yucca, and so on, and you and your sons must construct a new economy. You must never consume these products. If we consume this, we will call attention to ourselves.’

“So, the consumption of drugs is prohibited by the FARC, because it affects the health of all Colombians. At no time does the FARC order the campesinos to plant and cultivate coca. The FARC does not charge a tax on the campesinos, only on commercial businesses, the big cattle ranchers and so on.”

He said that the production of coca in Colombia “is a problem that can only be solved in a political manner, not by repression of the campesinos”.

The current situation in Colombia is a “total war”, Reyes said. The US and Uribe are “using everything they have” to try to annihilate the FARC — “all their forces, the information war, the threats, the bombings, the repression against the civilian population, the campaigns of terrorism, and the use of the narcotrafficking issue to delegitimise our fight”.

“At this stage, there is a polarisation of the fight in Colombia”, he explained. “A big sector of the population, 70%, is tired of the war and want peace — but peace with social justice. We all want peace with employment, with housing, with justice, with equality of wealth and with national sovereignty. There can be no peace with a free-trade government, with neoliberal policies. The people want respect and self-determination ... we must construct socialism in this country. We will never take the path of giving up the fight.”

In regard to the presidential elections, Reyes commented: “The FARC wants Uribe to be defeated. If he is re-elected, it will mean four more years of poverty, corruption, narcotrafficking, the violations of our sovereignty, the crimes of the state, augmented by paramilitarism ...

“We maintain the demand for dialogue, but if Uribe is re-elected, it is difficult to foresee a dialogue of peace, because Uribe’s is an illegitimate government, a corrupt government, a government that does not represent the people of Colombia, but a minority of the ultra-right ...”

The struggle of the FARC is taking place in a new political context for Latin America, with the rise of new left-wing forces opposed to US imperialism. In Venezuela, socialist President Hugo Chavez is leading a “Bolivarian revolution” — a popular movement to build a new society based on principles of social justice and participatory democracy.

In January, Evo Morales was sworn-in as Bolivia’s president, coming to power on the back of militant social movements that overthrew the previous two presidents. Venezuela and Bolivia, along with revolutionary and Cuba are emerging as a new “axis of hope” in Latin America.

Reyes said that “the FARC certainly supports the Venezuelan revolution because the FARC is part of the Bolivarian movement. We are Bolivarians ...

“For us, the achievements of Venezuela and Commandante Hugo Chavez are very important. He has gained magnificent results with the support of the Venezuelan people, in health, education, housing and so on, to the point where people are now talking about socialism. All sectors of society are helping to develop the Bolivarian revolution.

“The Bolivarian revolution also takes everyone into account, and we are part of the Bolivarian contingent. It’s clear, in Bolivarianism, you find everybody — revolutionaries, communists, socialists, anti-imperialists, progressives and so on. The development of the Bolivarian concept has permitted an increase in the fight against imperialism, the fight against the oligarchy, the fight against neoliberalism, the fight against the International Monetary Fund, and, above all, the [Andean free-trade agreement] that affects our people fundamentally ... We enter the 21st century with the real hope of fundamentally changing the map of Latin America and the Caribbean.”

There is evidence that right-wing Colombian paramilitaries have been infiltrating Venezuela with the aim of destabilising the Chavez government. Reyes said that this “is part of the political plan of the US against the Venezuelan process, against Hugo Chavez, against all the revolutionaries of the region. In this, they count on the help of Alvarez Uribe, who is on the point of launching, on behalf of the US, the destabilisation of the Bolivarian revolution ...”

Reyes said that there are “good signs” in Bolivia, citing Morales’s nationalisation of the country’s formidable natural gas reserves and the moves to carry out land reform. The Bolivians “have won credibility with all the revolutionaries”. “Here, all the impressions of Evo Morales are that he has signed agreements with [Cuban President Fidel] Castro and with Chavez, and there is an integration of Bolivia with the economic plans of ALBA [the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas — a Venezuelan initiative to develop an alternative to the neoliberal Free Trade Area of the Americas], which will contribute a lot to the development of the government of Morales.”

He also said that “Cuba is a symbol of dignity in Latin America [and] in the world, because Cuba faced the US blockade ... and despite the fall of the Soviet Union, kept going, building socialism”. “Fidel and the Cuban government keep fighting for the Cuban people, and have achieved many excellent results, in education, health and other areas. And the Cuban people continue to show strong solidarity for those who are fighting for independence and national liberation in the world.”

From Green Left Weekly, June 21 2006.

Cuban, Venezuelan services aid poor

LA PAZ, Bolivia
Gladys Melani was nearly blind from cataracts. Juana Mamani was illiterate. Sharon Mayra didn't officially exist. What these three Bolivians had in common was poverty, and help from Cuba and Venezuela in solving their problems.

Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez have made a fast and extensive start in providing President Evo Morales' three-month-old, left-wing government with humanitarian aid, winning the thanks of its beneficiaries as well as political points.

It's part of what Morales, in a veiled taunt to the Bush administration, calls an "axis of good."

Melani's cataracts were removed for free by one of about 700 Cuban doctors who have fanned out to the farthest corners of Bolivia. Cuban teaching materials are helping Mamani learn to read and write.

Technology from Venezuela got 17-year-old Mayra the ID card without which she couldn't travel abroad, vote, enter government buildings or accumulate a pension. An estimated 1 million poor Bolivians, nearly 10 percent of the population, are expected to get the same help.

Venezuela also is helping to set up 109 rural radio stations so Morales can spread his socialist gospel much as Chavez has done.

Morales, an Aymara Indian, won office in December in a landslide of discontent with the traditional ruling class. On April 29, he signed a "trade agreement of the people" with Castro and Chavez, a mostly symbolic alternative to free trade agreements Washington has reached with other Latin American countries.

Two days later, he decreed the nationalization of Bolivia's natural gas, an even more forceful assertion of state control of mineral resources than Chavez has taken with his nation's oil.

The United States remains Bolivia's single biggest foreign donor, contributing a bit less than half of the $360 million annually with which rich nations collectively pay 60 percent of the Bolivian government's bills.

But the Cuban and Venezuelan largesse has mounted as Morales continues to veer to the left. And critics see dangers. Fernando Messmer, an opposition congressman and former foreign minister, says Venezuela could use the database set up for the ID cards to keep tabs on Bolivians.

He has no proof, but contends Venezuela and Cuba are concerned more with promoting Morales than helping the poor.

"It's dangerous because it's moving toward consolidating a totalitarian state," he said.

Venezuela's state energy company, meanwhile, has signed a contract to build an ethane, methane and propane plant in Bolivia, and Venezuelan experts are involved in the details of Morales' gas nationalization. Chavez has offered Bolivia diesel fuel that can be paid for with farm products such as soy.

Flush with petrodollars, Chavez has offered fuel at preferential rates to 13 Caribbean countries as well as some poor U.S. districts, and scholarships for Haitians.

The Cubans, who in Cold War times sent soldiers to fight in Angola and Nicaragua, have focused on bringing medicine and literacy to friendly neighbors, Venezuela included.

A literacy campaign modeled on the one Cuba ran in Venezuela aims to teach Bolivia's 720,000 illiterates to read and write in two years. Cuba has delivered 30,000 TV sets plus workbooks and videotapes for Bolivian volunteer teachers.

It is equipping 20 rural Bolivian hospitals, providing free eye surgery in three new ophthalmology centers, and offering to pay for 6,000 Bolivians to study in Cuba.

The Bolivian Medical Association objects, saying the country has 10,000 unemployed doctors of its own. But Melani, 75, feels only gratitude to the eye doctors at a newly equipped center in La Paz.

"Thank God the Cuban doctors arrived with all their understanding and care. They operated on me, and thanks to them I can see, I can keep working," she said.

Morales' opponents accuse him of using the Venezuelan and Cuban aid programs to mobilize support in July 2 elections for an assembly to rewrite Bolivian's constitution -- a pattern similar to that which helped Chavez consolidate power in Venezuela.

But independent political analyst Cayetano Llobet thinks the fears are overblown.

"There's a prejudiced mentality in the middle class that believes we're practically being invaded by Cuba and Venezuela," he said. "I don't think it's that serious or alarming."

Factory provides legal use for coca leaves in Bolivia

LA PAZ, Bolivia
Bolivian President Evo Morales visited a coca-growing region Saturday to open a Venezuelan-funded factory where coca leaves will be made into legal products such as tea and soft drinks.

Morales rose in politics as the leader of Bolivia's coca farmers and part of his anti-drug policy is to encourage licit uses for coca — the plant used to make cocaine, which is also revered by Andean peoples for its medicinal properties.

"Manufacturing coca (products) doesn't do any harm because coca isn't a drug,"

Morales told hundreds of coca farmers gathered in a stadium in the town of Irupana, in the Yungas region 85 miles from La Paz. The event was broadcast on state television.

Coca has been cultivated in the rolling green valleys of the Yungas for centuries and the region's coca crops are grown for traditional uses such as chewing or making tea to ward off hunger and altitude sickness.

The law allows 29,650 acres to be grown in the Yungas, although government and U.S. officials have expressed concern that cultivation is rising in the world's third-largest cocaine-producing nation.

Washington funds coca-eradication programs in Bolivia's other main coca-growing region, Chapare, where Morales led sometimes violent protests against forced crop destruction. U.S. officials say most Chapare coca is used to make cocaine.
The government is optimistic of finding markets for the country's legal coca products in Venezuela, Cuba, China and India — which officials say have already expressed interest.

Morales has formed close ties with his fellow leftists, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuba's Fidel Castro, since taking office in January, and Chavez has pledged $1 million to fund two coca-processing factories, Agriculture Minister Hugo Salvatierra told state television.

"They're going to make flour, tea, soft drinks and other products in the first two plants," he said.

Coca tea bags can be found in any Bolivian supermarket, and health shops already stock a selection of coca-based products ranging from cakes and cookies to syrups and skin creams.

Mexico Hopeful Takes Hard Line Vs. NAFTA

TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, Mexico
Leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said for the first time Saturday he would not honor Mexico's commitment under NAFTA to eliminate tariffs on U.S. corn and beans if he is elected.

Tariffs on all agricultural products must be removed in 2008 under the North American Free Trade Agreement. But Lopez Obrador said he opposed eliminating tariffs on U.S. white corn and beans, showing no allegiance to a deal he sees as harmful to Mexican farmers.

"We are not going to accept this clause that they signed," Lopez Obrador told supporters in Chiapas, an extremely poor farming state.

With two weeks to go before the July 2 election, the fiery ex-Mexico City mayor is running about even with his main opponent, Felipe Calderon of the conservative governing National Action Party, or PAN.

Mexican farmers say hefty agricultural subsidies in the United States give American white corn and beans an unfair advantage over the Mexican market, which depends in large part on small-scale and mostly subsistence farmers. As Mexico's staple crops, corn and beans also carry immense symbolic importance.

Mexicans worry that if these farmers can't sell the nation's signature crops at a price that competes with trucked-in produce from the United States, they will go out of business altogether.

That could severely damage Mexico's agricultural economy, which farmers say has already suffered since the trade deal went into effect in 1994, forcing many to migrate to the United States.

Mexico's agriculture minister pleaded with Canada and the United States this month to reconsider the removal of the corn and bean tariffs, but U.S. Undersecretary for Agriculture J.B. Penn flatly rejected the appeal, saying "we have no interest in renegotiating any parts of the agreement."

Despite the concern, the administration of outgoing President Vicente Fox has stood by NAFTA, saying Mexico honors its trade commitments.

Lopez Obrador said he is confident many Mexicans will vote against his rival Calderon because they are angry with Fox for not fulfilling his campaign promises, which included creating millions of jobs.

Lopez Obrador has promised to raise the income of poor families by as much as 20 percent by providing them with subsidized power and basic goods. He also has promised to extend the free pensions for the elderly he established in Mexico City to the rest of the country.

Lopez Obrador, who lives modestly in a small Mexico City apartment, has said the handouts _ estimated to cost about $7 billion _ would be funded by cutting the salaries of Mexico's army of government workers, particularly of the top earners. He has also promised to draw half the salary of Fox, who received $238,000 last year.

Calderon and other critics say Lopez Obrador's promised social programs would push Mexico into an economic crisis, and in a series of attack ads, compared him to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, an authoritarian socialist. But Lopez Obrador says the comparison is ridiculous.

His Democratic Revolution Party has never held the top office, but many claim victory was stolen from the party in 1988 through fraud perpetrated by the then-governing Institutional Revolutionary Party.

BuzzFlash interview: Greg Palast

Uncovering the 'Armed Madhouse' of the Bush reign of greed, fear and stolen elections
...
BuzzFlash: I think it was $73 on Friday. And with the Iranians saying that if the U.S. continues to put pressure on them, they’re going to lower their output, the price of oil may go up even more.

Greg Palast: Right. They are playing a nice little game. The next war isn’t with Iran – it’s with Venezuela, as I explain the book.

BuzzFlash: Because they’re the second-largest exporter to the U.S. – isn’t that right?

Greg Palast: Let me explain. I was able to obtain a document. That’s why we have all these illustrations in the book – because I want people to actually see these things. I got a document from inside the Department of Energy, which says that Venezuela – in other words, Hugo Chavez - has more oil than Saudi Arabia, and that’s a real shake-up.

BuzzFlash: You mean according to geological surveys?

Greg Palast: Yes, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, a lot more oil than Saudi Arabia. That’s a disaster for George Bush because – and that’s why I have that chapter called “The Assassination of Hugo Chavez.”

I showed the chart to Chavez himself last month in Caracas, and he said, “That’s absolutely right. And we’re going to demand that OPEC recognize Venezuela, not Saudi Arabia, as the leader.” That’s big, bad news for the Bush House of Saud cartel because you have to understand that King Abdullah will always sell us his oil. He’ll never cut it off.

But that’s not the most important point here. Abdullah sends back his oil earnings. After he takes his slice and gives his slice to Exxon, the remainder goes back to the United States in the form of Treasury Bill purchases. They would never lend a dime to their Muslim brothers. They just lend it back to George to fund his oil wars and his tax cuts. And that’s the game. Abdullah lends us back the petro-dollars, and we lend him the 82nd Airborne to stay in business.
...

June 17, 2006

TV broadcasters licenses under threat

June 14th
* During the delivery of Russian AK-103 assault rifles to Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez said he has ordered the revision of concessions the Venezuelan State granted to television operators, which are due in 2007, according to the ruler.

Chávez said that the operators do whatever they want in the name of "a supposed freedom of speech." "We cannot act in such an irresponsible way, we cannot continue granting concessions to a small group of people for them to operate TV channels in the radio-electric space that belongs to the State -that is, to the people- and use it against ourselves, right under our very nose. I don't give a damn about the opinion of world's oligarchies. I care about my country's fate."

June 16th
* The independent US-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) Thursday issued a press release to reject President Chávez' threats to block the renewal of broadcasting licenses for privately owned television and radio stations that oppose his government.

"We urge President Chávez to refrain from making these kinds of menacing statements which could have a chilling effect on the press," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper, AFP reported. "The allocation of broadcast frequencies should be based on technical considerations not politics."

CPJ underscored the statements made by Venezuelan Information and Communication minister William Lara, who said that the Venezuelan government was legally entitled to refuse license renewals to stations whose behavior it deemed "to be in violation of the law." He said he had "noticed a systematic tendency to violate the law."

* President Chávez' threat to review broadcasting licenses of private TV networks in Venezuela caused concern among broadcasters, who labeled Chávez' remarks as an intimidation and smoke screen.

"This is a new attempt at intimidating the serious, professional job of journalists," said Oswaldo Quintana, an executive officer with the Venezuelan Television Federation and TV network RCTV Legal Affairs Chief Executive. "They are trying to distract attention from the electoral issue."

Local news TV network Globovisión director Alberto Federico Ravell told AP that Chávez' announcement amounts to "another threat from an authoritarian president who does not believe in freedom of speech."

Ravell said Chávez intends to have TV networks behave the way he wants during the present electoral year.

Quintana said RCTV broadcasting license is valid through 2020. Any review or termination of such agreement would be a violation of the National Constitution, the Telecommunications Law, and the Inter American Convention on Human Rights.

Globovisión legal counsel Ana Cristina Núñez said this news TV network's broadcasting license is in force through 2015.

She added that, if the government intends to revoke licenses -just like the Information and Communication minister William Lara said on Thursday-, then it has to prove that TV channels have breached the agreements' terms.

* Ombudsman Germán Mundaraín Friday agreed with President Chávez' proposal to review TV broadcasting licenses in Venezuela.

At the National Assembly, the official labeled the debate as timely, clarifying that this discussion should be seen as an attack against the private media.

He ratified that in Venezuela there is freedom of speech, and therefore any debate can emerge "without any need to make such a fuss." He was referring to the fact that a number of sectors have rejected Chávez' remarks in this connection.

Mundaraín advocated formulas to avoid licenses from being granted with a view to favor economic groups, but to "put a public service in the hands of many people."

He claimed TV broadcasting licenses should be used to inform, entertain, educate, make calls for peace and coexistence.

* The National Assembly Science, Technology and Social Communication Committee supported President Chávez' proposal to review broadcasting licenses granted to private TV networks.

The committee head, Rosario Pacheco, made the statement on Friday, and claimed that Chávez' warning was the response to "a clamor of a society that wants equality and equity."

The ruling party parliamentarian said private media are "against the construction of a new model of society, designed for peace, harmony, and most sublime interest of the country," official news agency ABN reported.

A Comment

Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution shows how popular a government can be when it actually cares about its people. Unlike the terror regime in Washington (total surveillance of all Americans, torture, disappearances, illegal invasions of defenseless countries, and 'signing statements' exempting the White House from any and all law, utter loyalty to corporatism, i.e. fascism in the purest sense), when a government actually helps its people with TANGIBLE aid as opposed to empty rhetoric and propaganda the people respond. Chavez has, in fact, done more for AMERICA'S poor (see: http://www.americans-for-chavez.com/Citgo.html) than our oil profit-bloated regime has. When a foreign head of state cares more about the fate of America's poor than the American government, obviously it is time for a change. --- Americans for Chavez, http://www.americans-for-chavez.com
--
Posted by Anonymous to White Light Black Light at 6/16/2006 10:00:07 PM

June 16, 2006

Greg Palast on Venezuela

[Thanks to "NEWS CONSUMER" for the links]

Listen:

http://www.nysoundposse.com/mp3/20060613-tncwia.ram

http://www.nysoundposse.com/mp3/20060613-tncwia.m3u

http://www.nysoundposse.com/mp3/20060613-tncwia.mp3

And BBC investigative reporter and bestselling author Greg Palast will preview tales of economic conflict from his new book, Armed Madhouse: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class War. Moderated by Randi Rhodes of The Randi Rhodes Show.

We are following in the path of Comandante Guevara

Proclaims President Evo Morales in La Higuera

LA HIGUERA, Bolivia, June 14.—For those who are fighting today in Our America for equality, justice, solidarity and for a life in harmony with nature, the only path we have to follow is that taken by Che Guevara, affirmed the president of this South American nation, addressing hundreds of Bolivians, Venezuelans and Cubans gathered here to celebrate the 78th anniversary of the birth of the heroic guerrilla.

We are following in the path of Comandante GuevaraRight in the small settlement where Che was murdered 39 years ago, the sons and daughters of the three countries met to reaffirm that nothing will halt their ties of cooperation in fields like those of health and education, because, Morales recalled: "Our continent is experiencing times of profound change, of the restoration of its national dignity and sovereignty."

Today La Higuera is a virtually unpopulated place; it never had many inhabitants, but its inhospitable conditions, the lack of work and hope have forced numerous people to emigrate over the decades. Nonetheless, the locality is still much loved on account of its wealth of symbolism, the exhortation not to forget anything that has happened there, because the enemies of today are the same as before, and their methods are no different.

Evo Morales highlighted in his speech that, as opposed to U.S. imperialism and that of other powerful nations, aid from Cuba and Venezuela is happening without conditions of any kind, in a spirit of solidarity, total respect for equality and Bolivia’s decisions. Those are realities that Bolivian health professionals who have rejected the development of medical cooperation should understand, he commented.

A medical post was officially inaugurated in La Higuera and the first 15 people in the area to become literate via the "Yes, I Can Do It" method devised by Cuban specialists were acknowledged in the act of tribute.

For families living in the area these are great events; and that is what everyone says in their own way when they are asked. Pedro Calzadilla, a rural school teacher for 31 years, affirms that to give people health and education is to offer them invaluable well-being; without healthy people with educated minds it is difficult to think about development and national independence, he says.

Speakers at the event included Alvaro García Linera, vice president of Bolivia; Osvaldo Peredo (the brother of Inti and Coco, two valiant fighters in Che’s guerrilla force); and Julio Montes and Rafael Dausá, the Venezuelan and Cuban ambassadors in Bolivia, respectively.

Dausá noted how in less than four months the Cuban medical brigade has attended more than 600,000 patients, has helped to save more than 1,000 lives and performed more than 15,000 eye operations. At the same time, he added, the donation of modern medical equipment destined for 20 hospitals is underway, including that belonging to Valle Grande, a facility reopened with the participation of President Evo Morales and the Cuban authorities.

A further example of that solidarity are the 120,000-plus men and women who are already incorporated into classes to learn to write and write.

The event closed with a cake topped with white meringue and 78 red candles, which would have been Che’s age today. People spoke of sadness, of the intrepid revolutionary and daring thinker who commanded his men with valor and gallantry until the last minute.

Not one detail of the crime has been forgotten but, in the end, those present preferred to sing Happy Birthday to an Ernesto Guevara whom they feel is still alive, converted into millions in every compatriot disposed to fight for the second and definitive independence of this great homeland that is Our America.

Wave of Repression Continues in Mexico. Yesterday, Atenco. Today, Oaxaca.

by Sara McMullen

Today, June 14 at 4:30 a.m., some 3000 elements from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead. The Teachers Union office building was also broken into and the installations of Radio Plantón were destroyed (Radio Planton is a free/un-licensed community radio station that has been a point of reference for social movements in Oaxaca).

With 3 weeks until elections and with the events in San Salvador Atenco still present (with 28 persons charged and jailed), once again the use of force instead of dialogue is the privileged response to citizens exercising their constitutional rights.

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Since May 15, the first day of the present period of action in the teachers’ struggle, an atmosphere of hostility and confrontation against the teachers union has been has been sown within Oaxacan society. This, far from fortifying the search for a peaceful and negotiated solution to the teachers’ demands, has encouraged the conditions of scaled-up violence against this sector.

May 22 was the first day of Section 22 of the SNTE teacher-working class actions (some of the teachers are adherents to The Other Campaign) to support the educational demands of the people of Oaxaca. 70,000 teachers begin an extended sit-in in the center of the city in front of the old Government Palace and in 56 surrounding streets, to ask for fulfillment of their list of demands (first presented on May 1) that includes improvements to educational infrastructure (construction of classrooms, laboratories and workshops; uniforms; free student breakfasts; and more funding for scholarships and staff hiring), legal recognition of Radio Plantón, salary increases and recognition of the legitimacy of the union.