August 31, 2006

Bolivia Revokes Concessions in National Parks

LAJA, Bolivia
Aug 29
Bolivian President Evo Morales stepped up his nationalization campaign Saturday by announcing the withdrawal of energy and forestry concessions inside some 20 national parks.

A staunch leftist, Morales was elected in December 2005 on a platform of nationalization of natural resources, land redistribution and support for coca leaf production. He nationalized the country's energy industry on May 1.

"Here and now, this is the beginning of the nationalization of our natural resources," he told about 100 Indian peasants in Laja, a community 680 miles north of La Paz located within Madidi National Park.

"We have to defend our wood and other natural resources," Morales said. "You all must be the forest rangers."

The government did not specify which energy companies would be affected. But Spain's Repsol YPF, France's Total and Brazil's Petrobras have exploratory concessions within Bolivia's national parks.

"About 20 national parks will once again be run (entirely) by the state," said Erland Flores of the National Service of Protected Areas.

Morales, Bolivia's Vice President Alvaro Garcia and several ministers arrived at this remote corner of the Amazonian jungle, near the border with Peru, in two helicopters provided by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Venezuela and its chief oil client, the United States, often spar as Chavez promotes his self-styled socialist revolution as an alternative to U.S. policies and bolsters ties with U.S. adversaries Cuba and Iran.

Source: Reuters

August 30, 2006

Chavez Wants to Know Where U.S. $$$ is Going


The U.S. government is sending millions of aid dollars to Venezuela. What is not clear is exactly who is getting this money.
Details of the spending are contained in a 1,600-page document of 132 grant contracts, released under the Freedom of Information Act. But names and details of nearly half of those who received money have been blacked out.

US officials say this was done because the Chavez government would harass or prosecute the grant recipients if they were identified.

Fair enough except I don't think the U.S. follows it's own lead when it comes to money coming into the U.S. (not to mention the U.S. being concerned about how other countries spend their money). Does Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez have a right/reason to be concerned?

Looking at how the U.S. has sponsored coups (or shall I say regime change) in other Latin American nations and around the world, maybe so. Certainly Chavez, as President has a right to know what foreign governments are sending money where?

Washington funds activities including human rights seminars, training possible future leaders, advising political parties and giving to charities in the South American country.
As Chavez preps his reelection bid, he's taking aim at "gringo money". It remains to be seen those that live under his rule agree or disagree with his take on this form of U.S. intervention.

Speaking of Hugo Chavez, he's one of the nominees of VL's 2006 Most Influential Latino Poll. There are only two days left to cast your vote.

Via / Aljazeera.Net

Chavez supports Syria against US

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has pledged to stand by Syria in opposition to what he said was US "imperialist aggression" in the Middle East.

Mr Chavez is visiting Syria to show solidarity with it and other Arab nations in their opposition to Israel and the US.

Thousands of Syrians lined the streets of the capital Damascus to welcome him.

Mr Chavez is on a tour of several countries that is viewed as a bid for support for a UN Security Council seat.

In recent weeks, Mr Chavez has visited about a dozen countries, including Iran and Malaysia.

Venezuela is looking for Latin America's next non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council, a move the US is hoping to block, says the BBC's Michael Voss at the presidential palace in Damascus.

Mr Chavez was a fierce critic of Israel's offensive in Lebanon and has found common ground with Syria.

Mr Chavez withdrew his ambassador to Israel shortly after its invasion of southern Lebanon.

Energy deals

On Wednesday, Mr Chavez was given the red-carpet treatment as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad welcomed him at the presidential palace on a hill overlooking Damascus, our correspondent says.

"We have the same political vision and we will resist together the American imperialist aggression," Mr Chavez told reporters upon his arrival at Damascus airport late on Tuesday.

During his visit, Mr Chavez is expected to sign energy deals with the Syrian government.

On Tuesday in Malaysia, the Venezuelan president met a group of local businessmen and urged them to invest in Venezuela's economy.

From Syria, Mr Chavez is to travel to Angola.

August 29, 2006

Mexican leftist refuses to accept election defeat

[Obrador is so obviously not defeated, I love how Reuters just adds that handy dandy word in their headline (not!). There is too much evidence of blatent fraud in those elections to deny that the fix was in from the start..hey...just like in America]

MEXICO CITY
Mexico's leftist presidential candidate refused on Monday to accept defeat in last month's contested election after a top court rejected his fraud claims, and he vowed to fight on to overturn the result.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said the top electoral court had shamed Mexico earlier on Monday by upholding the July 2 election result, which gave ruling party conservative Felipe Calderon a narrow victory.

Mexico court rejects fraud claim

Mexico's top electoral court has rejected claims July's presidential election was riddled with fraud.

The judges said a partial recount of votes had not changed the original result, which gave narrow victory to conservative candidate Felipe Calderon.

Leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has vowed to continue fighting an outcome he says was rigged.

The judges, whose decisions are final, have until 6 September to formally declare a president-elect.

Mr Calderon noted that the court had not yet confirmed his victory, but said its decision "satisfies me enormously".

"I want to be very cautious... but we are going down a good road," he said.

The BBC's Duncan Kennedy in Mexico City says there is little now to stop Mr Calderon from becoming Mexico's next president and his victory will please Washington.

Fears of a left-wing government on their doorstep, albeit in the benign form of Mr Lopez Obrador, can now be put to rest, he says.

Mr Calderon will be seen as a useful regional counterweight to the likes of Venezuela's fiery anti-American leader, Hugo Chavez, our correspondent adds.

'Parallel government'

Mr Lopez Obrador refused to accept the court's verdict, and vowed to continue fighting.

"Never more will we accept that an illegal and illegitimate government is installed in our country," he told thousands of supporters in Mexico City.

Mr Lopez Obrador has led mass protests demanding a recount of all 41m ballots cast in July's election.

The electoral court must formally declare the winner by 6 September.

Mr Lopez Obrador's campaign had filed complaints at around 50,000 polling stations, but the court ordered a recount at just 11,839 of them - about 9% of the national total.

The seven judges decided there was no massive fraud and Mr Calderon had attracted a majority of votes.

The judges said there were only marginal changes to the original results because of recounts and annulments.

They said that all parties lost a considerable amount of votes in the rechecking of ballots, but that did not affect the overall result.

The judges' decision is final and there are no appeals.

The ruling clears the way for Mr Calderon to be declared president-elect - but Mexico's political crisis is not yet over, our correspondent reports.

Mr Lopez Obrador has spoken of forming a parallel government to fight what he calls this electoral injustice.

Our correspondent says that is likely to mean a continuation of the massive street protests that have blocked much of the capital during the past month.

August 28, 2006

VENEZUELA: Oil, revolution and socialism

Luis Tascon is a leading Venezuelan parliamentarian and a founding member of the Movement for the Fifth Republic (MVR). The MVR is the main parliamentary party supporting socialist President Hugo Chavez and the revolutionary process he is leading, dubbed the “Bolivarian revolution”. In July, Green Left Weekly’s Coral Wynter & Jim McIlroy spoke to Tascon.

Tascon told GLW about some of the difference between Venezuela’s revolution and the 1979-90 Sandinista-led revolution in Nicaragua, which Washington successfully defeated through funding the Contras’ bloody insurgency. As with Nicaragua, Venezuela’s revolution has faced stiff opposition from the US ruling elite. This has included a Washington-backed military coup in April 2002 and a devastating lockout by Venezuelan bosses in December the same year.

Tascon explained that Venezuela and Nicaragua had significant differences that have helped the former from so far falling victim to the latter’s fate. “Nicaragua is a very poor country, with very few resources. Venezuela is a rich country, with very substantial resources of oil. We have 12.5% of the internal petroleum market in the US. We are owners of [the state-run oil industry] PDVSA. We could cause a lot of damage to the US economy if our oil was cut off — more than any war.

“This is the context in which President Chavez has entered world politics. Oil has given Venezuela a little power. At present, the US is involved in the Middle East, which is more of a priority than Venezuela right now. The US also has North Korea on its agenda. Because of this, they are using Colombia as a platform against Venezuela, rather than direct intervention. Venezuela cannot be tackled head-on for the time being.

“The price of petrol has risen to close to [US]$76 per barrel. When we began the revolution, oil was at $25 per barrel. Venezuela has the biggest reserves of oil in the world. Inflation is under control. We have managed our strong economy, thanks to the price of petrol. So, it is very different to the situation of Nicaragua [in the 1980s].

Tascon told GLW that the US “must take care”. “Nicaragua only had bananas [to export]. The effect of a war with Venezuela would seriously de-stabilise the world oil market. If this happened, the price of Venezuelan oil could rise to over $100 per barrel, and this would undermine the US economy. The US will do everything it can to bring down Chavez, but under these conditions, Venezuela is a very difficult target for them.”

GLW asked Tascon about the importance of international solidarity for Venezuela’s revolution. Tascon recounted how, when he was in Switzerland in 2002, “I spoke at a forum to explain the Venezuelan situation, and to see the perception of Europeans. Initially, Chavez was ignored by the international left. The left thought that Chavez was just a military populist who had taken over a Latin American country.”

But Chavez demonstrated that the Bolivarian revolutionary project “wasn’t like that”. “It was a popular democracy. Precisely because it was a strengthened democracy, the US was unable to carry out the [April 2002] coup successfully. The president and the parliament were democratically elected. The president was legitimised by a vote of more than double that received by any other president in our history. We have not defeated the opposition in a bloody war, but by votes.

“But the European left perceived Chavez — until the failed coup against him — as a dictator, another [Juan] Peron [Argentina’s former president] and never a revolutionary. But, after the coup, when Venezuela began to be analysed, it was found that the reality was different. The Venezuelan FAN [National Armed Forces] is quite different to the other armed forces of Latin America. Our FAN is of a popular origin. The military officers are not a product of the social elite, but come from the ordinary people.

“Here in Venezuela, it was not prestigious to be in the military. It was more prestigious to be a businessman, an artist or anything else. So there were many popular officers, like Chavez [who was an officer in the parachute division], who do things differently [to the traditional Latin American officer class].

“The FAN also included left currents. The Venezuelan military is not the same as the Chilean army [which overthrew the left-wing government of Salvadore Allende in 1973 in a coup]. The Chilean armed forces were created by the ruling elite.” Tascon said that in Venezuela, there is “an identification between the ordinary people and the FAN”.
'Socialism of the 21st century’

He told GLW that Venezuela’s revolution “is a very particular process, initially defined as Bolivarian, and later as a socialist process. It is still not clear what ‘socialism of the 21st century’ is — the exact form that socialism will take is being worked out in practice.

“Out of [the clarification of the nature of the process], came the projection of Chavez on the world stage, not as a military, but as a revolutionary democratic leader — totally different from the original picture of him.

This was underlined at the World Festival of Youth and Students in Caracas last August and the World Social Forum here in January this year. “These forums provided an international platform to project the democratic character of the new laws, which allowed the different social sectors to act together within a legal framework in Venezuela. [The left] now understands that Venezuela could be a model for other countries, or at least underdeveloped countries — a model that is seeking liberty and a revolution in social equality.

“Right now, we are searching for a further definition of the Bolivarian process — not only the left, but the right as well who remain within the process. In the discussion of ‘socialism of the 21st century’, there will undoubtedly be a confrontation between different Chavistas. I am sure there will be a conflict of particular interests between the left and the right [within the process]. But it will not be the traditional right [who are in opposition to Chavez], but a Chavista right-wing.

“It is important for Venezuela to receive international solidarity because of the actions Chavez has taken to increase social investment of the country’s wealth for the benefit of the poor. Chavez has taken measures to provide a degree of social justice for the people, and the population has responded in support. And these actions will serve as a platform to expand onto the world stage, such as with the literacy campaign in Bolivia.”
Latin American integration

GLW asked about moves by Venezuela to develop the economic and political integration of Latin America, in opposition to traditional US domination of the region. Tascon explained: “We have a platform [for action], one linked with the people [of Latin America]. We have a deep relationship with the movement for independence of Puerto Rico; with the progressive movement in Colombia; and other movements.” Another aspect, he said, is the development of economic and political relations with other governments in the region.

“Our strategy for economic development includes close relations with Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay. Our strategy certainly involves President Evo Morales of Bolivia and Cuba in a close alliance. The Cubans have helped us enormously, above all with the social missions. They provided the people, the doctors, the literacy teachers, and the overall plan. It is a political strategy, with the support and help of the people.”

“The other type of relationship”, Tascon told GLW, “is that of economics, using oil”. “For example, the platform provided by Petrocaribe [an agreement to provide cheap oil to 13 Caribbean nations], Petrosur [which aims to create a united energy company across South America] and the relations of PDVSA with Ecuador and Nicaragua. I fully support the use of petroleum as a platform for unity, principally as a means of changing the [structure] of the world’s energy [distribution and use]. Venezuela is the richest in energy in the world.”

Venezuela left the Community of Andean Nations (CAN), the trading bloc that includes Peru, Colombia, Ecuador and Bolivia, after Colombia and Peru signed free trade agreements with the US. However it entered MERCOSUR, a bloc with Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. “This generates an international bloc, with other governments, some of them friends, even some enemies. This is fundamental to developing a platform of international protection for Venezuela, even with Colombia. This seems illogical, but we have undertaken business with Colombia over the gas pipeline, highways, and bridges. We have established a relationship with Colombia that we cannot afford to lose.

“We now see the possibility of Venezuela obtaining a seat on the United Nations Security Council, against the wishes of the US.”
The corporate media vs Bolivarianism

Tascon told GLW that the corporate media of the world “has tried to stigmatise Chavez and Venezuela”. “FOX, CNN, CBS, and the mass newspapers are a fundamental arm of imperialism. They use the mass media of communication against their enemies, even before their army.”

He said, however, that there is “very little credible said against Venezuela — just that we are ‘terrorists’ or ‘narco-traffickers’. It’s a war [played out] primarily through the media. The principal enemy we face [at this stage] is the international mass media.

“We have challenged them, but only through politics. [In Venezuela], we didn’t close down any newspaper or TV channel. In Venezuela, the only channel that ever got closed down was the government Channel 8, [during the April 2002 coup by the coup leaders]. We have not attacked any enemy with arms, or repression, but with politics. After the [2004 recall] referendum [which attempted to remove Chavez but was defeated by a vote of nearly 60% in his favour], we achieved a major defeat of the old dominant class, historically allied to the US.

“But now we have to defeat the [corporate media] on a world level. The TV and newspapers always lie. They always respond to their own interests. These interests are those of the big multinationals”. Tascon said that to find the truth, “people must read, listen carefully, come to Venezuela — it s a most interesting experience. All revolutions are different, special. But Venezuela is a great political revolution — now we must complete the social and economic revolution.”

From Green Left Weekly, August 30, 2006.

Venezuela Accuses US of Smuggling under Diplomatic Cover

by Gregory Wilpert
Caracas, Venezuela
Aug 26
Venezuela’s Minister of Justice and the Interior, Jesse Chacón, accused the United States embassy of evading customs controls and therefore of smuggling yesterday. On Wednesday, Venezuela intercepted 20 containers that arrived at Venezuela’s main international airport, which the US says are diplomatic and personal affects that are protected by the Vienna Convention.

Chacón explained that the shipment was intercepted because only four of the 20 containers had been declared as diplomatic material. The rest of the shipment must pass through customs, which it did not and was therefore intercepted outside the airport. According to Chacón, the confiscated shipment included 80 kilos of poultry and other “merchandise.” The four containers that could be considered diplomatic material contained various personal affects such as clothing and toys.

According to the US State Department, which filed a formal complaint on Friday, Venezuelan authorities violated the Vienna Conventions when they stopped the four trucks that were carrying the shipment.

The Vienna Convention states that countries are allowed to ship documents and other material related to their diplomatic work to their embassies without passing through customs inspections. Such shipments, known as diplomatic valises, must be announced to the host country’s authorities prior to their arrival.

“Suddenly and without explanation Venezuelan authorities denied the vehicles permission to leave the airport and insisted that it register the valises,” even though US officials presented the “necessary documentation,” said State Department spokesperson Curtis Cooper.

According to a BBC report, US State Department spokesman Edgar Vasquez said, “The impounded cargo consisted of household effects of a US diplomat and a shipment of commissary goods.”

In yesterday’s press conference, Chacón also said that Venezuelan officials had discovered that an earlier shipment of military equipment, which is apparently now located at the US embassy, and had also passed through the Venezuelan airport without proper controls.

The State Department explained that indeed a shipment had been sent to Venezuela with military equipment, which had been ordered by the Venezuelan military ''prior to termination of arms sales to Venezuela.'' A few months ago the US placed a ban on arms sales to Venezuela with the argument that Venezuela was not sufficiently supporting the US war on terrorism.

According to Chacón, however, while shipping documents indicated that the military shipment included ejection seat propulsion motors for Bronco airplanes that had been ordered by Venezuela’s military, there was also other material that it did not order, such as detonators, pliers, rocket motors, and other items. “What is this material coming for? This has us worried,” said Chacón. Also, none of this material has so far been received by Venezuela’s military.

For Chacón it is the US that violated the Vienna Convention. “I have no doubt that in the case of the diplomatic valise of the United States an open and flagrant violation of the Vienna Convention has been committed. Along with Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry we are trying to identify the type of violations the North American government has committed,” said Chacón.

Chacón further explained that the 20 containers on the four trucks measured about 3 meters wide, by 2 meters high. Chacón also demonstrated some of the paperwork that supposedly authorized the shipment, saying that the license plates of the trucks did not match the documentation and that the fees for processing the paperwork were paid a full day after the shipment had arrived.

Diplomatic relations between the US and Venezuela have been tense for a while now. In addition to the US arms sales ban, last February Venezuela expelled the US naval attaché on the grounds of having spied on Venezuela. In retaliation, the US expelled the executive assistant to the Venezuelan Ambassador.

Chavez slams US from China – China Endorses Venezuela for UN

While on a state visit to China, Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez continued his attacks against the US for opposing Venezuela’s bid for the Latin American rotating UN Security Council seat. “the United States government has unleashed a campaign against us so as to prevent that Venezuela be elected – and then they talk about democracy. This is a dictatorial policy of blackmail and pressure,” said Chavez.
Chavez announced that during his visit to China, its president, Hu Jintao, had assured him that China would support Venezuela for its Security Council seat bid. “We have many successes,” said Chavez, “the support of China, that of Russia announced by [President] Putin, the support of Mercosur [Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Paraguay], of Caricom [Caribbean Community], and a daily increasing number of African countries, the support of the Arab League. These are great successes for Venezuela.”

Louis Farrakhan sends letter to Fidel

Commandante Fidel Castro
Leader of the Cuban Revolution

As-Salaam Alaikum. (Peace Be Unto You)

Dear Commandante Castro,

On behalf of my family, the members of the Nation of Islam and myself, we pray that Allah (God) will grant you a full and speedy recovery that you may resume your duty to the people of Cuba and the world. Also, on behalf of my family, the members of the Nation of Islam and myself, we wish you a happy belated birthday, and we pray that Allah (God) will bless you with many, many more.

Dear Commandante Castro, the idea of servicing the needs of the people rather than the idea of gaining material wealth is the essence of the revolution. This idea of service is the driving force in the Cuban Revolution that represents the seminal stage of what religious people of Christianity, Judaism and Islam call the Kingdom of God. I firmly believe that Allah (God) has chosen you and the Cuban people to begin this process of servicing human needs, thus setting the stage for all people of goodwill to emulate this mode of service to others. Jesus said, "He who would be the greatest among you let him be your servant." In this regard, you are one of the greatest leaders to emerge in the 20th Century, setting the foundation of a true example of service for all who will lead in the 21st Century.

In closing, you and the revolution you inspired have angered many people of wealth and status who have enriched themselves at the expense of the poor. I believe this is why Jesus told the people of His day: "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God."

Please remember what I said to you in our last meeting, that there is no such thing as death for Fidel Castro, for you are an idea whose time has arrived; and that idea is deep in the souls of most of the Cuban people and now in the hearts of many throughout the world. This idea will continue to grow and you will continue to grow with it from beyond the grave.

May Allah (God) continue to shower His Blessings on you and those who help you in the service of others.

Sincerely, and with much love and great respect,

I Am Your Brother and Servant,

The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan
Servant to the Lost-Found
Nation of Islam in the West

August 27, 2006

Alive or passed on, Fidel Castro will be a great symbol to the Cuban people

by Stephen Lendman
Having just turned 80 on August 13 and undergone major surgery for what may have been stomach cancer at the end of July, a transitional time may be near in Cuba with Fidel Castro Ruz beginning to hand over power to his brother Raul and/or others in the months ahead.

It passed without irony or mention of imperial arrogance in a brief front page comment in the August 19 issue of the Wall Street Journal that the US won't invade Cuba but a "dynastic succession" is not acceptable.

It would have been too much to expect the Journal to have noted that same type succession happened in the US in 2000 and 2004 and in elections exposed and documented as badly tainted at least and likely stolen at worst on top of five arrogant Supreme Court Justices refusing to allow a proper recount of the disputed vote and, in effect, annulling the voice of the people and replacing it with their choice for president.
...
The "Liberation" of Cuba, US-Style

From the earliest days of Cuba under Castro, the US imposed harsh conditions on the island state and waged an unending undeclared war against it. It wanted to destabilize the government, kill Fidel Castro or at the least make life so intolerable for the Cuban people, they'd willingly allow themselves to be ruled again by the interests of capital and the dictates of so-called "free market" forces. That many-decade campaign of state-directed terror never worked and likely never will convince the great majority of the Cuban people to favor giving up the essential social gains they now have for a return to what they surely know was a repressive past. They understand if it ever happened, it would be a throwback not just to the days and ways of the hated Batista regime but also to the time US President McKinley "liberated" the island from Spain in an earlier war based on a lie.
...
One of the earliest examples of US dominance was the Platt Amendment the Congress passed in 1901 after the US "liberated" Cuba in 1898. This federal law ceded Guantanamo Bay to the US to be used as the naval base we've had ever since and granted the US the right to intervene in Cuban affairs whenever it deemed it necessary. Theodore Roosevelt later signed the original Guantanamo lease agreement the terms of which gave the US jurisdiction over the territory that can only be terminated by the mutual consent of both countries as long as annual rent payments are made. The US thus gave itself the right to occupy part of sovereign Cuban territory in perpetuity regardless of how the Cuban people feel about it. The Castro government clearly wants the US out and through the years made its views clear by refusing to cash every US lease payment check it got other than the first one right after the successful revolution.
...
Today the US embargo remains in place but is under siege because of its unpopularity among sectors of the US business community that want access to the Cuban market. They include oil and agricultural interests that see the profit potential of trading with Cuba and want to end the restrictions on it now in place. For US oil companies there are potential Cuban oil reserves they want access to, and for agribusiness there's a significant Cuban market for their exports. As a result, the pressure is mounting on the Bush administration which up to now has been defiant in its opposition to Fidel Castro and remains hostile and punitive. But of late the action has been in the Congress with attempts to pass legislation and avoid a Bush veto to ease the current restrictions and allow some economic relations with Cuba that for decades have been banned. For now it's uncertain whether the demands of US business will win out over the fiercely unyielding Bush administration's anti-Castro foreign policy.
...
US restrictive laws also violate international law under Article 12 of the UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights that guarantees everyone the right to leave any country, including one's own, and return to it. Article 13 of the non-binding Universal Declaration of Human Rights guarantees the same thing as does the 1975 US - Soviet Union Helsinki Agreement committing both nations to protecting the right of its citizens to move freely across borders. The US, especially since the advent of the current Bush administration, has shown its contempt for international and US constitutional law ruling instead by Executive Order to pursue whatever policies it wishes in a manner characteristic of a dictatorship and with no restraint put on it by the Congress or the courts.
...
The Cuban government claims only "foreign agents" whose activities endanger Cuban independence and security have been arrested, but Amnesty disagrees even while recognizing the threat to the island by the US and the harm done to it by years of an oppressive and unjustifiable embargo.

Amnesty was quite clear in its language stating: "The economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States against Cuba has served as an ongoing justification for Cuban state repression and has contributed to a climate in which human rights violations occur." Those violations include accusations of police state arrests, unfair trials, arbitrary imprisonments and the right to use capital punishment in cases of armed hijacking even after the Castro government placed a moratorium on the death penalty in 2001. While it's true what Amnesty reports, it's also important to note what it doesn't. No attention is paid to how for decades the US repeatedly tried to destabilize Cuba under Castro, isolate it in the region, destroy its economy, and failed in many attempts to assassinate the Cuban leader.
...
The US-directed terror campaign to oust Fidel Castro began under Presidents Dwight Eisenhower and Kennedy with the failed Bay of Pigs invasion, continued with "The Cuban Project" (aka Operation Mongoose) in 1961 to "help Cuba overthrow the Communist regime" and Fidel Castro and aim "for a revolt which can take place in Cuba by October, 1962." It continued under the same and new names with many dozens of plots through the years to kill Castro including bizarre ones like using a poisoned wetsuit, poison pens, a pistol hidden in a camera (that almost worked), exploding cigars, explosive seashells in Castro's favorite diving places and a special hair removal powder to make the leader's beard fall out (maybe believing the latter scheme would remove Castro's power much like the biblical Sampson lost his physical strength after Delilah had his hair cut). In the mid-1990s, Noam Chomsky commented that "Cuba was the target of more international terrorism than probably the rest of the world combined, up until Nicaragua in the 1980s." And it was conducted by US-initiated state terrorism against the island state to remove a leader because he chose not to govern the way the US wished him to.

Besides the schemes listed above, the list of US terror tactics against Cuba is far too long to list in total here. They include US attacks on Cuban sugar mills by air, a 1960 blowing up of a Belgian ship in Havana harbor killing 100 sailors and dock workers, dynamiting stores, theaters, a Havana department store and burning down another one. In addition, there were dozens of attacks and bombings and over 600 known plans or attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro including the bizarre ones listed above. The CIA also conducted biological warfare against Cuba including introducing dangerous viruses to the island affecting sugar cane and other crops, African swine fever in 1971 that resulted in the need to slaughter half a million pigs, and hemorrhagic dengue fever that caused the deaths of at least 81 children in 1981. These incidents were later confirmed in declassified US documents.
...
[Next in the article is a long list of social accomplishments in Cuba, sounds much better than here in the U.S.]
...
The US may be planning to return the Cuban state to its ugly past, but the best guess ventured here is it won't happen because Cubans won't allow it to. The great majority of them support Fidel Castro and all he's done for them.

August 26, 2006

Evo Morales exposes conspiracy against nationalization

LA PAZ
Aug 24
In a message to the nation, Bolivian President Evo Morales today accused the opposition parties of organizing a new conspiracy against the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources, which was decreed on May 1.

The leader used those terms to refer to the recourse of presenting a proposal for nullity before the Constitutional Court by the Social Democratic Power (Podemos) Party, the Nationalist Revolutionary Movement and the National Unity Party.

Morales mentioned parliamentary deputies Sandra Yánez, of Podemos; Gustavo Ugarte, of the MNR, and Gary Joaquín, of UN, as the promoters of that conspiracy, which aims to return the country to the times of privatization of oil companies.

He also accused their lawyers, Jorge Asbún and Bernardo Wayar (the latter a former deputy minister under the first government of ex-president Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, charged here with genocide), of representing transnational corporations’ interests.

"The people must know who the real advocates of this new conspiracy against the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources, one of the central demands of our social movements," the president said.

Microsoft introduces Windows in Incan language of Quechua

by Eduardo Garcia
SUCRE, Bolivia
Microsoft launched a version of its software in the Incan language of Quechua on Friday, boosting Bolivian President Evo Morales' quest to promote Bolivia's native tongues.

Some 200 people, many of them Quechuan Indians clad in ponchos, joined local Microsoft executives to unveil the version of the Windows operating system and Office software in Bolivia's constitutional capital.

"Open" is replaced by "Kichay" and "Save" by "Waqaychay" in the version in Quechua -- a language spoken by more than 2.5 million people in Bolivia, and some 10 million throughout South America.

Since taking power in January, Morales, an Aymara Indian, has sought to promote Indian culture and end discrimination against indigenous peoples in South America's poorest country.

Government officials said they were excited about the new software but concerned it could be costly for many in Bolivia's poor indigenous majority.

"We congratulate Microsoft for having facilitated the use of computers in our own languages, but we have to advance towards systems that are more open because we still have to pay a license fee (to use the software) to Microsoft," Bolivia's Foreign Minister David Choquehuanca said.

Windows and Office In Quechua can be downloaded free from the Internet, but only by those who already own licensed versions of the software packages.

Maritza Yapu, a 28-year-old Quechua teacher, thinks the new version will help Quechua speakers breach the digital divide with Spanish speakers in Bolivia.

"Quechua is experiencing a revival, some university teachers read their courses in Quechua, and now the (education) Ministry is including the language in primary education," said the teacher.

The Quechua translation was carried out by academics from three Peruvian universities in coordination with the Education Ministry in Peru -- where Quechua is also spoken -- and Microsoft.

August 25, 2006

Venezuela Says China Backs UN Security Council Bid That U.S. Opposes

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced after his meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Beijing that China had expressed support for Venezuela's bid to join the United Nations Security Council. The U.S. is seeking to block Venezuela's bid for a seat and is backing Guatemala instead.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Thursday he is planning to increase oil exports to China over the next decade to one million barrels per day.

Chavez made the announcement after holding talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Beijing. Venezuela is the world's fifth-biggest oil exporter and the move is seen as an important step to reduce its dependence on oil exports to the United States.

But the alliance between China and Venezuela goes beyond just energy. Chavez told reporters after his meeting that President Hu Jintao had expressed support for Venezuela's bid to join the United Nations Security Council.

Five of the ten rotating seats on the Council open up in October, one of them is traditionally reserved for a Latin American country. The United States is seeking to block Venezuela's bid for a seat and is backing Guatemala instead. The race between the two countries is to be decided by the General Assembly in a secret ballot in October.

China is the second of the council's five permanent, veto-wielding members to back Venezuela. Chavez won Russia's support last month. Chavez said China's backing for the seat was "very important from the political and moral point of view."

An even more serious threat to the global corporate empire than Hugo Chavez

by Chris Herz
The US media is studiously boycotting coverage of the mass-protests against the outcome of the Mexican elections. Likewise the serious and on-going civil unrest in the Mexican states of Chiapas and Oaxaca: The homeland of Emiliano Zapata, the great hero of the Mexican Revolution.

We have heard information that US naval and Coast Guard forces in the Gulf of Mexico have been augmented for the purpose of "protecting" PEMEX offshore drilling platforms.

The US Border Patrol has been reinforced in anticipation of serious trouble in Mexico and in anticipation of increased numbers of persons attempting to flee into US territories.

But this information is scantly reported; as usual anything important will be covered once in some newspaper, on page Z28, once ... and then never again mentioned. Certainly not in electronic media outside of the sites like this one ... this being the traditional way US media pretends to being impartial and complete in its work. This is a front in the global class war now underway that bears watching, if for no other reason than the obvious significance the US oligarchy are attaching to it.

* If we read US newspapers and watch US TV with the same spirit of critical assessment with which Soviet citizens watched their propaganda organs, as we should, we can learn as much from its silences as we can from its fulminations.

What is going on at this moment in Mexico is a very big deal, one equivalent entirely to the work of Hugo Chavez Frias in Venezuela since 1992 ... or of what went down in Cuba between 1954 and 1959.

These events in Mexico are of the gravest portent to the efforts of US and other multinational businesses like VOLKSWAGEN to expatriate industrial facilities to low-wage nations whilst repatriating profit back to the imperial motherlands. This may be an even more serious threat to the global corporate empire than the work of Hugo Chavez Frias, the President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela ... it is a deadly menace to some of the largest corporations in the world.

The crisis began with the efforts of the Ejercito Zapatista por la Liberation National (EZLN) to disassociate the working people of Mexico from the corrupted media/electoral process. And then was intensified when the liberal party of the Partido de la Revoluccion Democratica (PRD) had stolen from its presidential candidate for the second time the supposedly democratic election. This by machinations aided by US interests in the favor of the traditional ruling party, the PRI and its successor, the conservatives of the PAN. An unique, Mexican blend of old-style ballot-box stuffing and of sophisticated high-tech electronic manipulations similar to those in the USA herself in 2000 and 2004 has allowed the simulated triumph of corporatist forces in this and in the previous presidential elections.

Unlike the USA, Mexico has seriously committed democratic activists who do not fear to do their duty. And among these is the presidential candidate of the PRD, Lopez Obrador ... and their resistance, has thrown the nation into crisis.

As I write, hundreds of thousands of ordinary Mexicans are blockading various portions of the capital, including the Congress ... and the death-squads are again active. Especially in the state of Oaxaca where the popular forces seized a public TV station. This has now been destroyed, we hear, by government forces ... and several people have been killed in a series of atrocities led by undercover police.

A North American retired professor, resident in Oaxaca, George Saltzman of my own state of Maryland, USA, has been reporting to me on this struggle.

Venezuela's attempt to follow Cuba in breaking with the empire has thus acquired new aid from the very nation most touted as that which has best profited from the corporatist North American Free Trade Association ... an unexpected, but very welcome new partner.

Alas for Mexico ... so far from God ... so near to the United States.

August 24, 2006

Mexico Protesters Willing to Negotiate

by WILL WEISSERT
OAXACA, Mexico
Protesters said Thursday they were willing to enter negotiations to end the monthslong conflict that has paralyzed this colonial city - one of Mexico's premier tourist destinations - but insist the state's governor resign.

The protests that started as a teachers' strike in May have turned into a political battle against state Gov. Ulises Ruiz, with 40,000 teachers, as well as leftists, student groups and anarchists, seizing the city's central plaza and covering historic buildings with graffiti.

They have burned buses, taken over radio and television stations, blocked government buildings and forced many downtown businesses to close. Two protesters have been shot to death.

On Thursday, the U.S. State Departement told Americans that rising political violence might make Oaxaca too risky to visit.

Protest leader Roberto Garcia told The Associated Press on Thursday that demonstrators would accept an offer earlier this week from President Vicente Fox's government to sit down at the negotiating table in Mexico City but only if state officials are not included.

"We want a dialogue with the interior secretary and his officials and no one else," he said.

Garcia said protesters still demand the resignation of Ruiz, whom they accuse of election rigging and using force to repress dissent. He added that negotiations would not take place before Friday.

Fox's government has sent two sets of envoys to Oaxaca in recent months to negotiate a settlement, but the dialogue broke down.

Cerves Nunez, a striking teacher who is overseeing operations at the Radio Ley radio station seized earlier this week in Oaxaca City, said Thursday that even if the state meets the teachers' demand for a 20 percent salary increase, Ruiz still must go.

"The community is organizing against Ulises Ruiz exclusively," he said.

Ruiz became the protesters' central target after June 14, when state police unsuccessfully attempted to disperse protest camps in the central plaza. The governor belongs to the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which has governed the state since 1929.

On successive nights this week, masked gunmen opened fire on a radio and television station occupied by protesters, killing a 52-year-old architect and prompting demonstrators to fortify their street barricades of sheet metal, boulders and burned-out cars. Earlier this month, one of the protesters was shot dead after arguing with local residents during a demonstration.

Night after night, the demonstrators burn tires on the streets to keep police away.

Classes began for students across Mexico on Monday, but public schools remained closed for 1.3 million children in Oaxaca, even as striking teachers continue to draw state salaries. Some private schools have reopened, but others remain shuttered following warnings broadcast by protesters via seized radio stations.

Adan Acosta, a 22-year-old architectural student, said he supported the teachers' strike in the beginning but "things have gotten out of control."

"The movement has turned so political," said Acosta, who has been living with his girlfriend downtown because no buses are running to his home on the city's outskirts. "It's not about education."

Was the Mexican Election Stolen? Questions Raised Over Results From Preliminary Recount

As protests for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador continue in Mexico, we take a look at the country’s contested presidential election. Mexico’s Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Policy Research’s says Mexico’s handling of the recount raises questions about the lack of transparency in the recount and the election.


In Mexico, President Vicente Fox said this week that his ruling party ally, Felipe Calderon, was the "clear winner" of the country’s disputed presidential election. His comments came ten days before Mexico"s top electoral court is to rule on fraud claims brought by populist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Fox also warned against what he called "extremist" and "messianic" politics in a clear criticism of Lopez Obrador who has launched massive demonstrations over the past few weeks to press for a full ballot-by-ballot recount of the vote. Official tally results in July put Calderon ahead by two hundred forty thousand votes - or just over half a percentage point. Lopez Obrador soon filed claims challenging the results alleging fraud and government interference.

Supporters of Lopez Obrador have brought the capital to a virtual standstill over the past few weeks with round-the-clock protest camps, blocking streets and launching demonstrations. The electoral court has to rule on the fraud claims by the end of the month and name a new president by September 6th.

The Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research recently conducted an analysis (PDF) of Mexico’s recounted ballots that raises questions about the lack of transparency in the recount.

  • Mark Weisbrot, co-director at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC.

Gov't not to use force to clear Mexico City demonstration

The Mexican government said Wednesday it would not use force to clear the blockade set up by left-wingers in central Mexico City to protest an alleged fraud in the country's July 2 presidential elections.

Since July 30, supporters of left-wing presidential candidate Andrez Manuel Lopez Obrador have been blocking important streets in the city -- Juarez, Reforma and Madero Avenues and the Zocalo central square -- pressing for a recount.

The official results, published a week after the vote, gave right-wing candidate, Felipe Calderon of the incumbent National Action Party, a slender 0.58 percentage point more than Lopez Obrador.

"I trust the words of City Mayor Alejandro Encinas," presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar told reporters at Wednesday's press conference.

Encinas, from Lopez Obrador's Revolutionary Democratic Party, had said he would negotiate with the protestors to make them leave.

On Monday, the first day back in school for around 25 million Mexican schoolchildren, the demonstrators unblocked the main crossroads on the avenues they are occupying.

Aguilar said that Mexican President Vicente Fox is determined to give the famous "cry of independence," known as the Grito (shout), in the Zocalo on Sept. 15: a yearly ritual recalling the shout that began the country's 1810 independence struggle.

He also said that Fox intends to lead a military parade "as scheduled" through the streets that are currently being occupied by protestors.

From TPM Cafe: Latin America and economic development; Fukuyama on Hugo Chávez

"Is Latin America willing to sacrifice some of its traditional Iberian “virtues” in order to develop and, yes, get rich. Or is that too American and “materialistic”?" (blurb from Arts & Letters Daily where I found the link):

Hoover Digest
"LATIN AMERICA: Get Serious, Amigos"
BY William Ratliff

Do the nations of Latin America really want economic development?

William Ratliff is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution.

BUENOS AIRES—The Western Hemisphere meeting in Buenos Aires that drew the most attention recently was the Summit of the Americas in November 2005. But any serious discussion of real issues at the summit was blind-sided by the anti–George W. Bush campaign of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, Bolivian President-elect Evo Morales (a candidate at the time of the summit), and the faded soccer idol Diego Maradona......

Have Asians been more successful over the past 40 years because they are smarter or more virtuous than Latins?....

-----

"History's Against Him"
By Francis Fukuyama

Washington Post, Sunday, August 6

CARACAS, Venezuela

Early on in Hugo Chávez's political career.....

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Ecuadorian presidential candidate visits Chávez

Candidate Rafael Correa for political Movimiento Alianza País party reported Tuesday that he held a meeting recently with Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

Correa told Ecuadorian TV channel Gamavisión that he traveled to Venezuela to deliver a number of conferences. When President Chávez heard from his visit, he invited Correa to his parents' house in western Barinas state.

"I have no links with the Venezuelan Bolivarian movement, but a personal friendship with President Hugo Chávez," Correa clarified. The candidate did not say if during his meeting with Chávez they discussed issues related to the elections in Ecuador next October 15th, Efe reported.

Comic signs up to take on Chavez


Accompanied by a donkey, a popular Venezuela comedian on Wednesday signed up as a candidate to challenge Hugo Chavez in presidential elections.

Benjamin Rausseo - better known as his stage persona, a country bumpkin called the Count of Guacharo - was greeted by hundreds of cheering supporters.

Mr Rausseo said Mr Chavez's seven years in power had brought "only words, speeches and hate".

Polls put Mr Chavez far ahead of his rivals in December's elections.
...

Cuba, Misunderestimated

by Saul Landau
...
Chaired by Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell, Bush’s Cuba Commission foresees a “transition to democracy”—not the succession of one Communist dictator to another. Translating this, I read that the United States will guide Cuba’s political reform. Alongside a U.S.-style electoral system and U.S.-style parties, Washington would also privatize Cuba’s economy. For educated Cubans, the vast majority on the island, the report resonates with the language of the 1902 Platt Amendment, which engraved in Cuba’s first Constitution the right for the United States to intervene in Cuban affairs as it saw fit.

The Commission report reads as if Cubans would naively warm to Bush’s plan. The Commission members must think islanders have grown weary of having free rent and would welcome an onrush of Miami-based exiles to privatize their homes and apartments and charge them rent. Instead of getting free education and health care, they would no doubt improve their standards by shelling out to profit-making enterprises to buy these services, as they would for entertainment, utilities and transportation, which the socialist government subsidizes.

Does Bush think Cubans are stupid or crazy? Despite the hardships of daily life, the absence of a free press or political parties, most Cubans understand that Castro built these public services. Moreover, they will tell any visitor that the revolution put Cuba on the historical map. Hundreds of thousands served in military actions that changed the course of southern African history. Until the Cuban revolution, Latin American nations didn’t dare vote contrary to U.S. desires in the Organization of American States or the United Nation.

Under Castro, Cuba opened 13 medical schools that produce more doctors abroad than the World Health Organization. Its athletes, artists and scientists have etched their accomplishments in the minds of people all over the world. When Pakistan was struck by an earthquake, Cuban, not U.S., doctors poured in to help, as they did in Honduras when Nature punished that country.

These facts—not the lack of freedom, which is a serious issue—should serve as context for Fidel Castro’s letter delegating power to his brother Raul.
...
*
[Speaking of Cuban Doctors...]

Medical graduates: 1,593 from 26 countries, BY MARIANELA MARTIN GONZALEZ
• Cuba lending assistance in 68 nations • Island has 71,000 doctors
IF a system for training doctors en masse like the one implemented by the Cubans is not adopted, the future of the peoples is uncertain, because between epidemics and social marginalization the health of the poor of the planet is constantly threatened.

So said Cuban Health Minister José Ramón Balaguer at the central graduation event for students in Medical Science yesterday afternoon at the Victoria de Girón Institute of Basic and Pre-Clinical Science.

As of yesterday, Cuba has 2,314 new health professionals and 1,593 students from 26 countries also received their medical diplomas.

It was in this same venue, inaugurated by Fidel 44 years ago, that the mass training of doctors began after many of those existing on the island emigrated to the United States as a result of campaigns against the Revolution, he recalled.
...

Bolivian Senate censures energy minister

Bolivia’s opposition-controlled Senate passed a censure motion yesterday against the country’s energy minister — one of the architects of President Evo Morales’ energy sector nationalization.

The vote forces Energy Minister Andres Soliz to present his resignation, though the decision on whether or not to accept it rests with Morales. Morales has backed Soliz in the face of the criticism from the rightist opposition.

The censure motion — the first one passed against one of Morales’ ministers since he took office in January — criticizes Soliz for his handling of parts of the nationalization. It cites alleged corruption in state energy company YPFB, which under the nationalization takes a central role in the energy industry in Bolivia, which has South America’s biggest natural gas reserves after Venezuela.

“The nationalization isn’t a step forward, it’s a step backward, while the corruption in YPFB remains unpunished in spite of the evidence,” Carlos Bohrt, a senator with the rightist Podemos party, told reporters.

Soliz himself has accused YPFB’s president of fraud in relation to a barter deal to swap crude oil for diesel with Brazilian company Iberoamerica at a price below market value.
...

August 23, 2006

Exporting democracy,

by JOHN CHERIAN
The latest U.S. scheme for Cuba has classified sections that are believed to contain plans of attack and assassination.

PRESIDENT FIDEL CASTRO in Cordoba, Argentina, on July 21.

IN the first week of July, Ricardo Alarcon, the President of Cuba's National Assembly, revealed to the world the latest United States plan to destabilise his country. A few days later, the U.S. State Department acknowledged the existence of an $80-million "Cuba Democracy" Plan. The Report, dated June 20, 2006, had first appeared in a seemingly innocuous manner on the State Department's website in the third week of June and had gone unreported in the Western media.

The document was presented in the second week of July at a meeting of the U.S. National Security Council, especially devoted to Cuba. It was attended by President George W. Bush, Vice-President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and the Intelligence Chief, John Negroponte. Alarcon said that what made the Report more sinister than earlier ones on Cuba were the classified sections that had detailed plans to attack the country and assassinate its leaders. The document states that there are contents in the appendix that remain secret for "national security reasons" and to ensure their "effective implementation".

President Bush asserted in the second week of July that the $80 million would help the Cuban people in their "transition to democracy". The Cuban people are not too enamoured of the kind of democracy they have seen in neighbouring Florida. Iraq and Afghanistan are other illustrations of American-sponsored democracies at work. The recent elections in Mexico have not been advertisements for U.S.-style democracy, either.

Cuba is all set to host the Non-Aligned Movement summit in September. Cuba was recently elected to the United Nations Council on Human Rights. The American moves also come at a time when the Cuban people are getting ready to celebrate the 80th birthday of President Fidel Castro.

American officials have been speculating about the post-Fidel Castro political scenario in Cuba. Castro and the Cuban Communist Party have prepared a blueprint for a new leadership to take over. The first Vice-President of Cuba's Council of State and Defence Minister, Raul Castro, Fidel's younger brother and a prominent leader of the revolution that overthrew the puppet regime of the U.S. in 1959, will take over the leadership if Fidel Castro decides to retire or is incapacitated. Fidel Castro, in many of his speeches, has stressed that he wants the younger generation in the Party to take over after a transition period under Raul.

Alarcon has termed the U.S. document "a politically delirious provocation". The Cuban government said that the latest American plan was an act of aggression that violated the country's sovereignty as well as international law. "They will not destroy the nation. They will not succeed in doing that. But they will cause harm and deprivation and suffering of individuals," Alarcon stressed. He was reacting to a statement by Bush approving of the report by the U.S. Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba. The Commission's members included Secretary of State Rice and Commerce Secretary Carlos Guiterrez. Among the measures envisaged in the plan is a tightening of the sanctions against Cuba. The plan recommends that the U.S. spend $80 in a two-year period "to empower... the Cuban democratic opposition to take advantage of the [new] opportunities".

In a separate 90-page report, grandiosely titled "Compact with the People of Cuba", the U.S. State Department accuses Cuba of being a "destabilising force" in the region and President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela of providing Cuba with funds to subvert governments in the region. The Bush administration even went to the extent of offering help to a post-Castro government, provided there was a genuine commitment to hold "free elections and set up a market economy within 18 months".

JAVIER GALEANO/AP

RICARDO ALARCON, PRESIDENT of the Cuban National Assembly, holds up the U.S. report on his country in Havana on July 8 in a press interview.

Washington's posturing has shown how out of touch with reality it has become. Its outrageous offer was received with embarrassment by the handful of dissidents in Cuba. Many of them were quick to distance themselves from the move. Martha Beatriz Roque, a dissident leader, acknowledged that $80 million was a considerable sum but "almost all of it stays in projects made in the U.S.".

If the Bush administration's pipe-dreams are fulfilled, the rich Cuban exiles in Miami, who facilitated George Bush's rise to the presidency, will go back to reclaim their properties and swap up all state-owned ones. The dissidents cannot disregard the tremendous strides the Cuban revolution has made in improving the quality of life in Cuba for the average citizen. Interestingly, the latest American document allows the U.S. to sue, in American courts those companies or business people from third countries who do business in Cuba with nationalised companies which originally belonged to U.S. citizens or to Cubans who have become American citizens. A sum of $15 million out of the $80 million is earmarked for "international efforts" to terminate the Cuban revolution.

Warsaw and Prague are the two European capitals where much of these efforts are currently centred. Others in the pay of Washington are people like the former right-wing Prime Minister of Spain, Jose Maria Aznar. Individuals from Poland, the Czech Republic and other countries visit Cuba to hand over American slush funds to the clutch of dissidents.

There was a similar provocation two years ago. On May 24, 2004, Bush announced a plan to annex Cuba. The 450-page document released that year graphically outlined the plans the Bush administration had in store for the sovereign country. This included the return of all properties to former owners and privatising all sectors of the economy, including health and education. The U.S. government would be in charge of implementation of all these measures through a Permanent Committee for Economic Reconstruction. The supervision of the programme would be done by a U.S. government official with the grandiose title of "Cuba Transition Coordinator". The Bush administration has already named an official, Caleb McCarry, as the coordinator. McCarry has visited a few European capitals in this capacity. "Anybody should know that the commitment to overthrow the government of another country, to seek a political, social and economic regime change, and submit that country to a foreign power, is a scandalous breach of international law, only conceivable in people with a fascist mentality," wrote Alarcon in a recent article titled "Chronicle of a War Foretold".

The new report only adds additional measures which, according to the State Department, are meant to "accelerate" the demise of the Cuban revolution. At a recent round-table conference, Alarcon quoted Fidel Castro as describing the report as "not a very serious document that has to be taken very seriously" and added that it came from "not a very serious government that has to be taken very seriously". Alarcon told the round-table in Havana that "the drunkard opines one thing and the bartender another," but, as far as he knew, "W. Bush is no bartender". The Cuban leader was no doubt referring to the American invasion of Iraq and the recent events in Lebanon. The memory of the "Bay of Pigs" invasion sponsored by the Americans is still fresh in the collective memory of the Cuban people.a

Communications & Information Ministry aims to break media monopoly in Venezuela

by Patrick J. O'Donoghue
Venezuelan Communications & Information (Minci) Ministry has announced that it intends to break media monopoly in Venezuela and give greater prominence to independent agencies.

Minci social responsibility and independent national producers general director, Maria Alejandra Diaz has confirmed the plan, saying new voices should get a chance to take part in helping set up a media discourse ... "it corresponds to the essence of the social responsibility law."

* Diaz rejects charges of media bias, arguing that the idea is not to exclude but to widen the base so that others can have access to information, opinion and opportunity to critique ... "we are embarking on a media model in transition."

While it is logical for private media sources to defend their interests, Diaz comments, the State should pursue common interests .

"What we are seeking is conciliation of interests without losing sight of the fact that when we are building a social rule of law and justice, general interests must take precedence over private interests."

Commenting on declarations made by telecommunications body (Conatel) director, Alvin Lezama regarding penalizing violators of the electoral publicity and propaganda law during the presidential electoral campaign, Diaz is non-committal.

That is a matter for the CNE, Diaz states, but it can ask Conatel for help ... "we are all in the same game and we all want the institutions strengthened."

Venezuela’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 9.2% last quarter

by Steven Mather
Aug 20
Venezuela’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 9.2% last quarter, while inflation and unemployment have both dropped three points over the last year, according to the National Institute of Statistics (INE). This means Venezuela remains one of the world’s fastest growing economies. It has grown consistently for almost three years now.

Sustained high oil prices have provided a bonanza in dollars for the government and that undoubtedly fuels the rest of the economy.

But growth in the oil industry -- aside from actual oil production -- was slow at 1.8%, while the non-oil sector grew by 9.9%.

And, contradicting the socialist rhetoric of President Hugo Chavez the private sector grew by 10.3%, more than twice as fast as the public sector, which grew at only 4.6%.

However, though unemployment did fall 3 points over the previous twelve months from 12.6% to 9.6%, there aren’t enough jobs being created to absorb the young people leaving schools and universities.

So, even though some 280,000 new jobs were created last year in the formal sector, 400,000 young people joined the world of work.

High growth rates are often associated with an increase in inflation due to the increase in demand for goods. And there has been an increase in that demand, but the Venezuelan government has battled with inflation, using exchange controls to fix the Bolivar (the local currency) at 2,150 to the dollar and regulating the banks so as to control the money supply. Price controls on food staples and the low price government subsidized Mercal stores also keep prices down. Mercal stores now account for about 50% of Venezuela’s grocery sales. Consequently, inflation has fallen from 14% to 11% over the last twelve months.

* The artificially low value of the Bolivar has costs, however, as it makes imports cheaper relative to domestic goods. This may account for the relatively low 6.9% growth in domestic manufacturing.

"Overall, there are no significant investments in the manufacturing sector. This sector is using more than their installed capacity, but you can notice that in Maracay and Valencia (two north-central Venezuelan cities hosting major industrial zones) no new manufacturing plants have been built,” said Emilio Medina, economist at Carabobo University.

For an example of this, look no further than the balance of trade with the United States. Chavez may refer to president George W Bush as “Mr. Danger” and Bush may call Chavez a dictator, but trade between the two countries is soaring, reaching over $40 billion last year. Oil accounts for most Venezuelan exports to the US, but non-oil exports also increased by 116% in 2005.

In return, Venezuela imports many industrial products from the US. Car imports have significantly increased over the last year. General Motors sales have risen 28%. Computers and construction equipment imports have also grown from $4.8 billion to $6.4 billion.

So it would seem that capitalism is alive and kicking in Venezuela. But Chavez is a contradictory character. CANTV, the main Venezuelan telecommunications company, is in a dispute with its workers over pensions payments.

The courts sided with the workers over the dispute, but the company has still failed to pay.

Chavez intervened, saying “If they don’t fulfill what is required, I’m going to nationalize CANTV.”

August 22, 2006

Chavez: China to Expand Oil Cooperation


BEIJING
Visiting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said China will expand its cooperation in oil exploration and help his country build a fiber-optic communications network under agreements to be signed in Beijing this week.

The visit by Chavez, who arrived in the Chinese capital early Wednesday, comes amid growing Venezuelan oil sales to China, which wants increased access to Latin American energy sources for its booming economy. Chavez also plans to go to Malaysia and Angola.

In China, Chavez is to meet with President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao and also visit the eastern city of Jinan.

Chavez said Venezuela's growing relations with China are part of his government's efforts to create a "multipolar" world to counter U.S. hegemony. He accuses Washington of using its might to bully countries like his own from developing military technology.

The left-leaning Chavez has forged strong ties with Beijing since taking office in 1998. He said last week that he will buy Chinese-made oil tankers and seal an oil exploration deal.

"We're going to sign a series of agreements for another leap in energy cooperation," Chavez said after arriving in Beijing. He said they would include accords for China to begin extra-heavy oil production in Venezuela's Orinoco River basin and to jointly develop the eastern Zumano oil and gas fields.

Venezuela, the world's No. 5 oil exporter, currently sells 150,000 barrels of crude, fuel oil and other petroleum products a day to China. Venezuela says it plans to increase that amount to 200,000 barrels this year.

The United States is the No. 1 buyer of Venezuelan crude, but Chavez's government has sought to sell more to other countries.

Fraud and Loathing on the Campaign Trail in Chiapas

by Al Giordano
Mexico’s Electoral Institutions Suffer Another Self-Inflicted Wound as Sunday’s Gubernatorial Vote, Marred by Fraud on Both Sides, Is Too Close to Call

Reporting from Chiapas with the Other Journalism with the Other Campaign

August 21, 2006

With 94.08 percent of the precincts reporting (according to the preliminary results of the Chiapas State Electoral Institute), the candidate of the center-left Democratic Revolution Party (PRD, in its Spanish initials) leads the coalition candidate of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and National Action Party (PAN) by only 2,300 votes (0.2 percent of more than 1.1 million votes cast). Amidst evidence of vote buying and fraud on both sides, Mexico’s electoral institutions and political system appear unlikely to be able to establish a credible result, plunging the country into its second post-electoral crisis in seven weeks.

The big winner on Sunday was abstention. A majority of Chiapas voters simply declined to participate (voter turnout on Sunday was below 45 percent). Most of the estimated 400,000 indigenous citizen-adherents to the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN, in its Spanish initials) here in Mexico’s poorest state of Chiapas refused to vote in a process increasingly considered a simulation of democracy.

The Chiapas results also show the slippery slide of Mexico’s main political parties away from any shred of principle or ideology, mere vehicles for factional disputes over the power and money that comes with political office. The PRD’s “center-left” candidate, Juan Sabines, was, until this year, a longtime politician of the PRI. In fact, he sought to be the PRI’s candidate until Chiapas Governor Pablo Salazar cut a deal for him to be the PRD nominee. The PRI candidate, José Antonio Aguilar, up against the significant power of the state government, then had to forge an alliance with President Vicente Fox’s PAN party and other smaller parties to be able to compete in the race.

The Chiapas vote occurred seven weeks after Mexico’s still-unsettled presidential election, in which the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) has attempted to declare PAN candidate Felipe Calderón the winner as supporters of PRD candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador have taken downtown Mexico City to demand a full recount. A partial recount by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (known as the Trife) has revealed a pattern of ballot stuffing and vote theft that legally should cause the annulment of results from more than 7,000 precincts, an order that would invert the official result and make López Obrador the victor. However, the Trife’s reluctance to order a full recount earlier this month was widely viewed as a signal that it will endorse the national electoral fraud and impose Calderón. A third option is that the court could annul the election, Congress would choose an interim president, and new elections would be called within 18 months. The court must rule by September 6, but the week ahead could bring partial rulings that point to the conclusion the Trife is likely to make, possibly sparking a national wave of civil disobedience and resistance unlike in any prior historic moment.

Added to this already explosive situation, the post-electoral mess in Chiapas – a state already occupied by more than 60,000 federal army troops that surround Zapatista communities in the jungle and the highlands – and the yet-to-be announced Zapatista response, the uncertainty coming out of the Chiapas elections opens a particularly sensitive wound in the national zeitgeist.

The Whirlpool of Fraud

By 11 a.m. on Monday, a television news program has reported that one side won the Chiapas state election as the radio reports that a different side won. The official preliminary tally makes liars out of both of them. It’s too close to call. More than 240 precincts display inconsistencies, according to the State Electoral Institute, 89 of them coming from the capital city of Tuxtla Gutiérrez, the electoral stronghold of the PRD candidate Sabines, where the largest bloc of precincts have failed to report the tallies. Opponents accuse electoral officials there of holding back the results in order to tamper with them. Only this time, the accusations of vote rigging come from the PRI and the PAN, and are waged against the PRD, in direct inverse of what is occurring in the national presidential turmoil.

There are no electoral heroes here in Chiapas. The PRD Candidate, Juan Sabines, was, until switching parties, the mayor of the state capital Tuxtla Gutiérrez, son of a former PRIPRI, then the PAN, now PRD), he also counts with the political machine of right-wing former PRI governor Roberto Albores Guillen, who is expected to be Sabines’ right-hand in the government if he obtains it. And Sabines’ slight lead is tainted by the brute force used by the state government now in power to buy votes – with taxpayer dollars, preying upon the pain and poverty of the public – and use of the same electoral fraud tactics used by Fox and his National Action Party (PAN in its Spanish initials) nationwide in the July 2 presidential elections. governor, nephew of the late “Poet of the State” Jaime Sabines, and in addition to the backing of Governor Salazar (formerly of the

For example, in the Northern Chiapas district of Pueblo Nuevo Solistahuacan, the first precincts reporting last night claimed voter turnout of 96 percent (highly unlikely in light of the less than 45 percent turnout statewide). The entire district claims more than 60 percent turnout. And, lo and behold, the governor’s candidate, Sabines, is tallied to be winning by more than ten percent with 51.47 percent versus 41.70 percent for PRI-PAN candidate Aguilar. What was done to the PRD in the presidential contest in more than 4,000 PAN strongholds, mainly in Northern Mexico – ballot boxes impregnated with extra votes for the official candidate – seems likely to have now been adopted as a strategy by the PRD in the South.

An indication of the absolute cynicism of PRD candidate Juan Sabines came on Monday when he told reporters that he will disassociate himself from the national protest movement against electoral fraud, now that he believes he will win the Chiapas vote. But beyond the bizarre triumphalism by a candidate who enjoys the slightest advantage in a vote count not yet finished, Sabines’ words betray his fear of what comes next: “Chiapas is not for demonstrations. Chiapas deserves a climate of unity. It would be incongruent on my part to ask that there not be demonstrations against me but that I will participate in others.” And with those words, he betrayed his most popular backer: Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

The confusion invites national dyslexia. The same “center-left” party that is victim of a gargantuan fraud nationwide is now accused of authoring one in Chiapas. The political right (the PAN), and the institutional right (the PRI) oppose the civil resistance against the presidential race fraud but now may turn to such tactics in Chiapas: sit-ins, blockades, and chants for a recount “vote by vote, precinct by precinct.” Up in Mexico City, each side pushes in one direction. Down in Chiapas, those same forces push in opposite directions. The waters of public opinion thus move in a veritable whirlpool of discontent. Each of the major parties loses credibility in the process. Those, like the Zapatistas, who have firmly maintained that the electoral system is illegitimate, will receive the credibility that those above mishandle. There is not a novelist on earth that could invent a scenario as tumultuous as the real history unfolding out of Chiapas today.

And the Supreme Electoral Tribunal’s pending decisions on the presidential contest are now severely complicated by the scenario unfolding in conflict-torn Chiapas. Despite so much rhetoric about a court that weighs only institutional and legal concerns, political reality now puts the court in an even more difficult situation: If it endorses the fraud nationwide, but annuls the fraud in Chiapas, it ends up supporting the PAN in both cases. If it breaks the fraud nationwide, but defends it in Chiapas, it ends up supporting the PRD in both cases. Endorsing the fraud in both instances is a path fraught with peril. There is no Solomonic decision available when weighing the two big post-electoral conflicts together. In any case, the presidential decision comes first, and that will determine whether the Electoral Tribunal still has any credibility at all to rule on the Chiapas election, in a state where rebel forces and autonomous municipalities are most organized to fill the power vacuum up above.

How much uglier can it get? The failure of electoral politics under capitalism is now laid bare, anew, in the very state from where its first post Cold War resistance to said global capitalism emerged… with the legendary indigenous armed insurrection of 1994.

And if the post-electoral conflict in Chiapas escalates, this time the state will not stand alone: The largely indigenous and nearby states of Oaxaca and Guerrero are at the same precipice, but so is evidently Mexico City, and so is its surrounding state of Mexico, home to a town called Atenco (together, they contain one out of every four Mexicans). And then there are the “sleeper states.” Impoverished and repressed Veracruz, Puebla and Morelos are similarly at the threshold of revolt. And what of that Peninsula that juts out into the Caribbean? Campeche, Quintana Roo, and (believe it or not) Yucatán are hotter than a chile habaneroOther Side? And what of human beings everywhere, who can see what is happening here? Electoral fraud plunges Mexico’s political system into a more severe crisis each day. right now. And what of the Border? What of 35 million Mexicans and Mexican-Americans on the

The Smoking Audiotape

And yet, it would be impossible to place the blame for the fraudulent election in Chiapas on just one side of the dispute. Repeating the whirlpool effect, as the state government of Salazar cooks the books on behalf of one side, the national political party of Vicente Fox, the PAN, and its party boss Manuel Espino, was caught this week, red-handed, violating electoral law, on audiotape. A recording of his telephone conversation with the PRI boss in Chiapas, Victor Hugo Islas – a tape that was played on Saturday by López Obrador on the Mexico City Zocalo and released to the press – revealed the national PAN and state PRI bosses conspired to pump money into the PRI-PAN campaign in Chiapas after the deadline, last week, when all political campaigning, under law, must have already stopped.

And, as every Mexican citizen knows, that money was for one thing only: buying votes and voter credentials.

The audiotape can be listened to online at the daily La Jornada website. The transcript, in the original Spanish, too.

Here is an excerpt, translated, from that conversation:

PRI secretary: Attorney Manuel Espino (is on the phone).

PRI Chiapas leader Islas: Boss?

PAN national leader, Espino: What’s up, Victor?

PRI’s Islas: Sorry to bother you. I’m just checking to make sure we are on the same wavelength. Have you sent the one and a half?

PAN’s Espino: I sent one, tomorrow I will see someone who has the other half.

PRI’s Islas: With the other half?

PAN’s Espino: Yes, I’m working on it.

PRI’s Islas: Yes, I know, I know. But is that all you are going to send?

PAN’s Espino: I think so. I have asked some of your and my friends, the (PRI) governor of Durango (Ismael Alfredo Hernández Deras) and he said he was working on it. I also asked (the PRI governor of) Puebla (Mario Marín Torres), and also I asked Enrique (Peña Nieto, PRI governor of the State of Mexico) and he told me that he would. We’re working on it. To whom do I send it?

PRI’s Islas: Yes, I have been collecting some here. I am going to try to make an effort to give them a little more. I have already given one. I told you that, no?

PAN’s Espind: Yes.

PRI’s Isla: Well, I will make another effort. I will give them another help. You’re saying it will be sent tomorrow?

PAN’s Espinoso: Yes.

PRI’s Isla: Thanks.

Most observers believe that the word “one” in this conversation means “one million pesos” (more than $100,000 dollars) and that the “half” represents another half-million pesos that the PRI sought from the national PAN (which, in turn, sought it from three PRI governors in other states). The going rate in impoverished Chiapas on Sunday to purchase a vote or a credential was 100 pesos: This sum of money would thus buy 15,000 votes. And, in the recorded conversation, the PRI leader (who calls the PAN leader “jefe,” or boss) said he had put in an equal amount. Together, those illegal slush funds would buy 30,000 votes in an election so close that official tallies place less than a 3,000 vote difference between the two candidates.

Whirlpool redux: As the state government in Chiapas used taxpayer dollars to buy votes for one side, the national governing party was doing the same for the other side.

On Sunday, operatives for both sides were caught in the act. Twelve political campaigners were arrested on Sunday while seeking to offer money for votes or for campaign workers:

  • In the capital city of Tuxtla Gutiérrez, water company owner Hector Borges was arrested for allegedly paying 40 youths 200 pesos apiece to interfere with the election process.
  • In the coastal city of Tonalá, national teachers’ union official (the SNTE, in its Spanish initials) Francisco Torres was arrested with a suitcase of 50,000 pesos in hand plus a list of voters as he was seeking them out. The union – allied with the PRI-PAN candidate in Chiapas and with the PAN nationwide – then held a sit-in at the City Hall and threatened a walkout today, Monday, the first day of the new school year.
  • Also in Tonalá, Carolina Grajales Palacios, sister of a PRI member of Congress, was arrested with eight other supporters of the PRI-PAN candidacy for alleged “electoral crimes.”
  • In the Tzotzil-speaking town of San Juan Chamula, operatives for the PRD ran PAN poll-watchers out of town after they denounced that when the polling place opened there were already marked ballots stuffed in the box.
  • On Friday, four PRD operatives were arrested allegedly for utilizing disaster relief aid (meant to go to victims of Hurricane Stan last year) to buy votes.

Both sides did it. How does an Electoral Tribunal settle a mess like that?

But there is a silver lining to the dark cloud hanging over yet another election day in Mexico in 2006. It is that with all that money flying around being offered in exchange for votes in Chiapas, more than half of the state’s population, although suffering intense poverty, did not take the easy money. That indicates that their abstention from voting was not a matter of apathy (an apathetic, disinterested person would avail him or her self of a chance to make a quick 100 pesos). No. It means that the majority abstention from voting, far from indicating a lack of conscience or principle, constitutes, instead, a widespread rejection of participating in a game that is already fixed.

In sum, it indicates that thirteen years into the indigenous rebellion of Chiapas, the institutions – especially the electoral ones – have lost all credibility and authority. The government, by turning elections into a cynical simulation of false democracy, has lost control. Keep that in mind, kind readers, in the coming days, when the Supreme Electoral Tribunal must rule on the July 2 presidential election result. They might not be listening up above, but Chiapas is thundering again with its silence… a silence that, if past is prologue, will be filled when it speaks through the voice of the rebel spokesman of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation and its “Other Campaign,” the only national political force that has not lost its moral weight by participating in the blood sport of Mexican politics: Electoral Fraud. Stay tuned.

NoBorderland

Way down in Mexico you went out to find a doctor and you never came back.
I would have gone after you but I didn't feel like letting my head get blown off. - Bob Dylan

It's such a blinding embarassment of weirdness out there, it's hard to know where to look these days. But we need to keep looking at Mexico. Its loose threads may help us tie up things elsewhere.

Of course there's the staggered rebellion of the disenfrachised, belittled or ignored by the same media that lionized and tub-thumped Ukraine's "Orange Revolution." But there are also some curious developments, seemingly out of the blue, in the case of the Ciudad Juárez ritual killings of hundreds of women that may lead us into the black.

Last Thursday in Mexico City, coincident with the delivery of John Karr into the embrace of Homeland Security, came the crowing announcement from the US Embassy that a Mexican citizen was being held in the United States on suspicion of the rape and killing of at least 10 of the women. By another coincidence, Edgar Alvarez Cruz was arrested in Denver, Colorado.

There have since been two more arrests on American soil, one in West Virginia and the other in Sierra Blanca, Texas. The three are being held in El Paso, and are expected to be handed into the care of Mexican authorities some time this week, at least several of whom would appear to be less than grateful:

Some Mexican authorities said privately that they were caught off guard by what they called U.S. Ambassador Tony Garza's "premature announcement" Thursday of the first arrest. Mr. Garza called the arrest of Mr. Álvarez a "major break" in the investigation. But a Mexican law-enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the announcement could "jeopardize the ongoing investigation."

Have we heard something like that recently? Though to be truthful, there doesn't appear to have been much of an investigation ongoing: just three weeks ago a headline in The Independent read "Human rights groups attack decision to close Juarez murders investigation."

These aren't the first arrests in the case, though the consensus of victims' families is that none of the men previously arrested had anything to do with the murders. Two died in custody, one had his conviction overturned, and two of their attorneys were shot to death.

"This case is the most symbolic of everything that has gone wrong in Juarez," Laurie Freeman, a Mexico specialist with the Washington Office on Latin America, told the Denver Post. "It's the one that makes me believe that there is some sort of official complicity in some of the killings."

When I saw that quote several days ago, I thought it might be a good idea to copy the body of the article and not just make note of the link. It was a good idea: the article has since been updated, and the only change I can see is that Freeman's reference to official complicity has been deleted.

Diana Washington Valdez, an investigative reporter for the El Paso Times and author of Harvest of Women, isn't so shy:

The best information we have is that these men are committing crimes simply for the sport of it.... We know of people who've told stories about escaping from certain parties, orgies, which some of these people were present -- they were recognizable people from Juarez society, from Mexican society.

The authorities know who the killers are, and nothing's being done about it. We have two issues here: people who are getting away with murder, and... authorities who have become accomplices, and so this has become crimes of the state.


But those are the Mexican elites and Mexican parties of Mexican high society, protected by Mexican authority. Such things, of course, are inconceivable across the Rio Grande.
posted by Jeff at 5:28 AM

The Cuban-American National Foundation Is a Terrorist Organization

by Salim Lamrani
Aug 18
On July 22, 2006, the Cuban-American National Foundation (CANF) celebrated its 25th anniversary at the Hotel Biltmore in Coral Gables. However, the most powerful US-based extreme rightist Cuban organization, shaken by a new scandal, could not enjoy that party appropriately.

In fact, a month earlier, on June 22, 2006, Jose Antonio Llama, a former CANF director, revealed publicly what everyone knew for a long time: the CANF is a terrorist organization. Llama acknowledged that he, along with members of the organization´s hierarchy, had set up a paramilitary group to carry out attacks on Cuba and to assassinate its president, Fidel Castro.

According to "Toñin", as his friends call him, the CANF had a cargo helicopter, ten ultra-light remote-controlled planes, seven boats, a Midnight Express speedboat and an unlimited amount of explosives. "We were impatient about the survival of the Castro regime after the demise of the Soviet Union and the socialist system. We wanted to speed up democratization in Cuba using any means to achieve it," he said.

The 75-year-old former director explained, without omitting a detail, his terrorist career. For example, he underlined that the plot to assassinate Fidel Castro, planned in 1997 with four of his accomplices, during the Ibero-American Summit on Isla Margarita, Venezuela, was frustrated due to the interference of Puerto Rican authorities when they were on his boat La Esperanza. He and his acolytes were tried and acquitted in December 1999 due to… lack of evidence.

After the trial, Llama distanced himself from the CANF, as the organization refused to pay for the legal expenses resulting from his trial and that of his partners. The revelations of this personage came to light as a result of a financial conflict with the Florida-based extremist organization. In fact, Llama accuses the CANF leaders of having embezzled 1.4 million dollars that he himself had contributed to set up the paramilitary wing. "Where are the boats and planes that I financed with my money? Where did they go? Who has the original titles?", he complained.
...

Mexico: Striking teachers seize 12 private radio stations and set buses on fire

Protesters took the streets on Monday

Striking teachers seized 12 private radio stations in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca and set buses on fire, as a long-running protest worsened.
They acted after unidentified gunmen opened fire on a government radio station already under their control.

The strikers used the stations to tell parents to ignore Monday's start of the school year and keep children at home.

Teachers have been striking since May to demand higher wages and Oaxaca Governor Ulises Ruiz's resignation.

Roads blocked
The shooting began at a government-owned radio station already in the hands of the striking teachers.


Striking teachers set buses on fire on Monday
A number of rounds were fired by unknown gunmen, and the teachers say one of their members was injured.

The attack prompted a violent retaliation by the teachers, and a number of buses were overturned and set on fire.

Dozens of the protestors also took over the privately-run radio stations and started broadcasting messages of defiance.

Others armed with crude weapons blocked off some of the main roads into Oaxaca.

A spokesman for President Vicente Fox blamed the state government for attempting to take back the radio station by force.

He said the attack on the was carried out without consulting the federal authorities and described it as a unilateral decision by the governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz.

Widening protest
Governor Ruiz has become a key target for the teachers.

Although their dispute started out in May as a campaign for more pay, it has since transformed into an attempt to get the governor to resign from office.

The teachers say he is guilty of rigging the state election two years ago and of using heavy-handed tactics to deal with the strikers.

The governor, who belongs to the former ruling party, the PRI, has refused to step down.

Last week a number of people were taken hostage by activists after gunmen opened fired on a teachers' march.

They were later released.
The protests have also taken on a much wider context and have become woven into the continuing row over who won Mexico's presidential election.

Four months into this round of tension and parts of Oaxaca are starting to look ungovernable, and that could be a real challenge for the country's new leader.

August 21, 2006

Questions Mount over Lopez Obrador's Civil Protest

by Hector Tobar
A line of armored vehicles awaits outside Mexico's Congress building. Most are brand new and have never seen action. But many Mexicans wonder if their menacing presence is a harbinger of this divided country's future.

Federal authorities deployed the tanks to prevent supporters of leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador from shutting down Mexico's legislature in a bid to pressure the Federal Electoral Tribunal to order a full recount of all 41 million votes in this country's disputed July 2 presidential election.

Tuesday, a street battle erupted outside the Congress building when federal police arrived to disperse Lopez Obrador's supporters. A handful of congressmen were bruised in the melee.

"What happened at the Legislative Palace may be a rehearsal for what we can expect after the tribunal renders its final decision," said Leo Zuckerman, an analyst here. "Lopez Obrador knows he won't win before the tribunal. ... What he is trying to accomplish now is to start a social movement."

The tribunal's seven judges began meeting privately Thursday to debate the results of a partial recount of 4 million votes. They have until early September to declare a winner, but a decision is expected sooner.

Conservative candidate Felipe Calderon led Lopez Obrador in the initial count by 244,000 votes. According to news reports and figures provided by the two campaigns, the partial recount will narrow Calderon's lead -- but only by 7,000 to 13,000 votes.

Legal experts say the tribunal is not likely to order a full recount, although the judges could annul the election and order a new vote for next year.

Some members of Lopez Obrador's leftist Democratic Revolution Party (known as the PRD, its Spanish acronym) have said they will launch a sustained, nationwide program of civil disobedience if the tribunal declares Calderon the winner.

Gerardo Fernandez Norona, a Lopez Obrador aide, said Wednesday that the candidate's supporters would take a position of "rebellion in the face of authority" and might encourage Mexicans to stop paying taxes. Ferandez Norona is known for being a loose cannon, and some dismissed his statements as bluster.

As the election saga reaches its endgame, there are indications that some members of the PRD would balk at taking the radical actions others in the party favor.

"Violence and riots in the streets are a less probable outcome than many people in Mexico think," said Pamela Starr of Eurasia Group, a risk-analysis company. "But I wouldn't discount it either. With the current high levels of tension on the streets, it's easy for things to spin out of control."

Lopez Obrador's supporters have shut down Avenida Reforma, the city's central axis, since July 30. Mexico City's notorious traffic has worsened significantly, turning even simple commutes into gridlock nightmares.

Many residents feel the capital is being held hostage by Lopez Obrador and his supporters. Even longtime backers of the leftist candidate have said the decision to blockade the capital city's streets has been a grave political mistake.

"The blockade ... is an act of profound callousness that hurts a cause that belongs to many people," Carlos Monsivais and three other prominent leftist writers said in an open letter to Lopez Obrador. "Why pressure the powerful with actions that first and foremost hurt the popular classes?"

The street barricades are seen as a political disaster for Alejandro Encinas, the outgoing mayor of Mexico City and a close Lopez Obrador ally. Encinas' approval rating has plunged in opinion polls since the protest movement began. Encinas controls Mexico City's police force: Rather than reopen the streets, the officers appear to be acting as the protesters' security guards.

Lopez Obrador said Aug. 13 that the street barricades would stay in place during President Vicente Fox's State of the Union speech Sept. 1 and during Mexico's Independence Day celebrations next month.

When Calderon and Fox said preventing the Independence Day celebrations from going forward would be an assault on Mexican patriotism, Encinas responded that the barricades might be lifted temporarily to allow the traditional military parade.

Fox has suggested he won't take any action against the protesters until the tribunal confirms the winner of the election.

Addressing a group of supporters Thursday, Lopez Obrador said Fox might use the Mexican military to clear the streets by force. He said his backers would resist any effort to "provoke" a confrontation with the military.

"Do they think they're going to put a puppet president on the throne with the support of the army?" Lopez Obrador asked his supporters. "They're wrong. We are not going to give them any excuse to use force. We won't give them the pleasure of using their tanks."

U.S. playing favorites in Nicaraguan election


Daniel Ortega, center, presidential candidate of the Frente Sandinista, waves to supporters at a rally campaign in Matagalpa, Nicaragua.
Envoys continue a pattern in region of trying to defeat a leftist, but policy comes with risks

In Nicaragua, one of the smallest and poorest countries in the hemisphere, U.S. envoys seem to be violating what is often considered a cardinal rule of diplomacy: Never publicly meddle in a host country's presidential election, the quintessential internal affair.

The diplomats are loudly promoting a conservative presidential candidate that the Bush administration favors while working to undermine the campaign of a leftist politician it loathes, according to analysts and former American envoys.

Washington's practice of pushing its political favorites, they say, also has been evident in other Latin American countries.

Though U.S. diplomats may discreetly advocate for their preferred politicians, they risk expulsion if they go too far in larger countries such as Colombia, Mexico or Venezuela. But when it comes to smaller countries such as Nicaragua that crave good relations and financial aid from Washington, U.S. officials often go out of their way to influence the vote, the analysts say.

"It's pretty clearly understood that an ambassador should not say anything about elections," said Myles Frechette, who spent 35 years as a U.S. diplomat, most recently as ambassador to Colombia. "That's wise because the United States is big and powerful, and it does use its size to force its will on Latin American countries."

Many experts say Washington's actions are a response to President Hugo Chavez of oil-rich Venezuela, who is openly trying to counterbalance U.S. influence in the region. The Bush administration, which applauded a 2002 coup that briefly ousted the Venezuelan, views Chavez as anti-American and anti-democratic.

As a result, the administration "has become much more interested and overt about trying to see that anti-Chavez candidates get elected," said George Vickers, an analyst with the Open Society Institute, a New York-based foundation.

U.S. officials in Nicaragua, a country of 5.5 million people, have launched a volley of verbal grenades ahead of the Nov. 5 presidential election to discourage voters from electing Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega, who has been publicly endorsed by Chavez.

Another round
It's not the first time Washington has tangled with Ortega.

Two decades ago, after the Sandinistas seized power in the Central American country, the Reagan administration trained and funded the Contra rebels. In a 1987 radio address, President Reagan said the Contra army was following "in the best tradition of our founding fathers" and warned that the Sandinistas had given the Soviet Union a beachhead "only 2,000 miles from the Texas border."

Three years later, the Sandinistas lost an election to a U.S.-funded opponent and Ortega stepped down as president, ushering in 16 years of democratic government.

Now, with another presidential election heating up, American officials are promoting a pro-American candidate while U.S. Ambassador Paul Trivelli has publicly branded Ortega as anti-democratic — "a tiger who hasn't changed his stripes," Trivelli told Nicaraguan reporters.

In addition, American heavyweights past and present — from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former Secretary of State Colin Powell to Reagan-era U.N. ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick — have paraded through Managua to denounce the Sandinistas and Ortega, who leads the five-candidate race in opinion polls.

Writing in a Managua newspaper last year, Roger Noriega, then the State Department's top diplomat for Latin America, warned that should Ortega win, "Nicaragua would sink like a stone."

'Visceral dislike for Ortega'
Relaxing in a rocking chair on a sweltering afternoon after a packed campaign rally in the northern city of Matagalpa, Ortega, who is now 61 and no longer espouses Marxism, said that his government had better relations with the U.S. Embassy in the midst of the Contra war. Back then, Sandinista comandantes sometimes showed up at the embassy's annual July Fourth celebration.

"Even in the worst of times during the Reagan administration, the U.S. envoy was careful with his words," said Ortega, who was dressed in bluejeans and a Sandinista baseball cap. "But the current ambassador acts like he is the governor of Nicaragua."

Trivelli turned down repeated requests for interviews, but high-level U.S. officials denied that they are trying to sandbag Ortega.

"We see ourselves pushing the democratic process," Thomas Shannon, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, said. "It's all about creating political systems that are open, transparent and inclusive."

Some analysts say the administration fears that a Sandinista-run Nicaragua would add to Chavez's political clout. Already, the Venezuelan leader has signed deals to provide cut-rate oil and agricultural products to Nicaraguan cities run by Sandinista mayors.

Others point out that Noriega and several other current or former U.S. officials who helped forge Nicaragua policy also worked in the Reagan administration and were fervent supporters of the Contras.

"There's a kind of visceral dislike for Ortega and for what he stands for," said Anthony Quainton, a U.S. ambassador to Managua in the early 1980s.

In other elections around the region, Washington has made it clear where its sympathies lie.

Across the region
In Venezuela, the U.S. government is funding pro-democracy groups in the run-up to December's presidential election, in which Chavez is running. Some of the groups, including Sumate, which was instrumental in organizing a 2004 recall election against Chavez, openly oppose the Venezuelan leftist.

In Mexico, President Bush and U.S. Ambassador Tony Garza quickly congratulated the ruling party's conservative candidate, Felipe Calderon, as if his apparent razor-thin victory over leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in last month's presidential election was a done deal. But Lopez Obrador refused to concede defeat. He encouraged thousands of protesters to camp in Mexico City's downtown and is demanding a complete recount.

In Peru, U.S. officials shared private polling information this spring about voter attitudes with conservative presidential candidate Lourdes Flores, according to Vickers, the Open Society Institute analyst who is a longtime observer of Latin American politics. Alan Garcia, a center-leftist, eventually won.

In Colombia, the U.S. ambassador appeared to endorse a constitutional amendment allowing President Alvaro Uribe, Washington's closest ally in the region, to seek re-election. The proposal passed; Uribe won in a landslide last May.

"You're damned right we wanted Uribe to win," said Frechette, the former ambassador, pointing out that the Uribe government has received nearly $3 billion in aid from Washington to fight drugs and guerrillas.

Noriega, the former State Department official, said diplomatic standards are different for different countries.

"It's a political calculation," he said. "Probably the best way to help in the case of Nicaragua is to speak out while the best way to advance your interests in other countries is to be as quiet as you can."

Plans don't always work
A key goal of U.S. policy in Latin America has been to strengthen democratic institutions, but many political analysts say Washington's efforts often reinforce the dependence of Nicaragua and other small nations on the United States.

"Their first instinct is to look to outsiders to solve their problems," said Jennifer McCoy, a veteran electoral observer in the region for the Atlanta-based Carter Center.

But partly because the Bush administration is unpopular in many Latin American countries, its diplomatic arm-twisting doesn't always work.

Sometimes the "wrong" candidate ends up winning, "and then you have to deal with him, and it's very difficult to build any kind of a relationship," said Stephen Johnson, a Latin America expert at the Heritage Foundation.

To many observers, the classic case of diplomatic blowback stands as the rise of Bolivia's leftist leader, Evo Morales.

Could it backfire?
Shortly before the country's 2002 presidential election, U.S. Ambassador Manuel Rocha delivered a scathing address denouncing "those who want Bolivia to once again become a major exporter of cocaine."

The speech was portrayed in the Bolivian media as a slam against Morales, then a union organizer of growers of coca, the main ingredient of cocaine. Some of Morales' rivals denounced Rocha, and Morales, who had been languishing in the polls, nearly won the vote. He was elected president when he ran again last December.

"The support that the U.S. Embassy gave Evo was, as Mastercard says, priceless," said Bruce Bagley, a professor of international studies at the University of Miami.

Some experts say Washington's fixation with Ortega could also backfire.

During a visit to Managua in June, Shannon, the State Department's top official for Latin America, snubbed Ortega and met with Eduardo Montealegre, an investment banker also running for the presidency.

Meanwhile, U.S. Ambassador Trivelli encouraged the badly divided Constitutional Liberal Party to hold a primary, a move seen here as an effort to unify the rightist party behind Montealegre.

"This is excessive," said Michael Shifter of the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington.

"Even if Montealegre does win," Shifter said, "he'll always be seen as the candidate the gringos put in."

john.otis@chron.com

Evo Morales Says the People Own Bolivia

La Paz
Aug 18
Bolivian President Evo Morales highlighted that the country s natural resources belong to its native peoples, which should be on the watch for their use by the State.

In a meeting on Thursday with social movements from eastern Santa Cruz department, the president explained a contract signed with the Indian Jindal Stell Company to mine El Mutun iron deposits.

Morales said those will never be taken away from their true owners.

The popular movements expressed their satisfaction with Jindal s promise to invest over $2.0 billion and create 21,700 direct and indirect jobs.

Colonial Oaxaca, Mexico, still a fascinating visit

by JB Smith
OAXACA, Mexico
The Texan lines up the shot on his tiny digital camera: A vandalized Volkwagen Beetle police car, stolen and dumped in the central plaza of this colonial city, as if part of a fraternity prank. He smiles at the sight of the little cruiser, about as fearsome as a cop on skates.

A cheerful man with a mustache approaches to chat. He introduces himself as Abram and answers questions about the teachers’ strike that has paralyzed Oaxaca this summer. Hundreds of teachers and their sympathizers have barricaded themselves into a tent city they have erected in the plaza, or zocalo.

They have seized police cars and buses, taken over state offices and television stations and scrawled graffiti around the city demanding the resignation of Oaxaca Gov. Ulises Ruiz.

After a while, Abram acknowledges he is one of those striking teachers, from an outlying village.

“And you have no fear in being here?” he asks in Spanish.

“No,” the Texan says, pocketing his camera. “Should I be?”

Abram only chuckles. Apparently, there’s no definitive answer to that question.

Oaxaca, known around the world as a Mexican capital of art, food and culture, is on the verge of something — perhaps peaceful change, perhaps revolution, government repression or just anarchy. Since June, when the governor’s police tried to clear out the protesters with rubber bullets and tear gas, a simple strike over teacher pay has escalated into a broad popular movement, mixed in with demands for sweeping social reform and anger over the disputed federal presidential election.

The protesters even shut down Oaxaca’s biggest summer event — a dance festival called the Guelaguetza — complaining that it was too expensive for anyone but tourists and local elites.

“Uprising in Oaxaca,” proclaims one spray-painted slogan on a historic stone building. “The revolution of Century XXI.”

In the meantime, the stream of tourists still flows through Oaxaca, though diminished. On this particular evening, Aug. 7, Oaxaca was struggling to put on its best face, preparing for a semblance of its usual nightlife.
...
I asked him if the drop-off in tourism had harmed his livelihood. Yes, he said, it was very difficult. So was he in support of the demonstrations?

“Yes,” he said, with a defiant smile, stomping on the sidewalk. “The government tramples us.”

I found the same reaction from several taxi drivers: They were willing to suffer the blockades and the loss of business in hopes that the protests would bring social and political change. Talking to local university students at a coffeehouse near Santo Domingo, I heard a range of opinions about the protesters, but they agreed the atmosphere of anarchy was part of a deliberate strategy. The protesters, the students said, were trying to prove that the governor had lost his ability to govern, which is grounds for impeachment by the state legislature.

Luis, my Oaxacan-Wacoan friend who was observing the events closely, agreed.

A native of Oaxaca who grew up shining shoes on the streets, he now teaches Spanish at Baylor University and is finishing a doctoral dissertation on the economics of social revolution in southern Mexico.

Although Ruiz has said he will not step down, Luis believes the state of Oaxaca is at a political tipping point, with a growing number of people demanding reform in one of Mexico’s poorest states.

“It’s a social crisis,” he said. “It has to do with inequality. In the last five years, Oaxaca hasn’t shown any promise in any indicators of human development. ... Even if the teachers want to quit, the movement will continue.”

He said he is excited to see demands for change in his hometown, though he wishes both sides would avoid violence.

“It’s sad that in Oaxaca, the protection of the rights of the people never comes peacefully,” he said.
...

CIA spy chief for Venezuela

The United States has named a "manager" for its intelligence operations against Venezuela and Cuba.

North Korea and Iran are the only other countries that have been assigned so-called "mission managers", who supervise intelligence operations against them.

In a statement released on Friday, the office of John Negroponte, the natioinal intelligence director, said the manager would be responsible "for integrating collection and analysis on Cuba and Venezuela across the intelligence community" and "ensuring the implementation of strategies" that have not been disclosed.

"Such efforts are critical today, as policymakers have increasingly focused on the challenges that Cuba and Venezuela pose to American foreign policy," the statement said.

The director's office said the manager would also be asked to ensure "that policymakers have a full range of timely and accurate intelligence on which to base their decisions".

The document did not say what kind of decisions US officials could be making with regard to either country.

The statement said that J Patrick Maher, whose previous job was deputy director of the CIA's office of policy support, will assume the role temporarily until a permanent candidate is found.

His biographical sketch supplied in the announcement indicates he was one of the architects of the CIA's current counterterrorism strategy in Colombia and managed the agency's operations in the Caribbean basin.

Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, said he believed that Maher's appointment was linked to presidential elections due in December that he is widely expected to win.

"This shows us that the empire does not rest, that it is hatching a plan for December or a period before December," he told reporters. "But whatever it is, we will thwart it."

August 20, 2006

4 accused of vote-buying scheme in Mexico

TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, Mexico
Mexican police said Saturday they had broken up a vote-buying scheme in Chiapas on the eve of state elections, which will be closely watched in a country already straining under the turmoil of a disputed presidential election last month.

Four supporters of Mexico's leading leftist party were arrested Friday after authorities said they were caught trying to give away 36 tons of construction material to Hurricane Stan victims who promised to support the party's gubernatorial candidate.

The suspects were charged with violating electoral laws, said Jose Domingo Perez, spokesman for the state attorney general's office.

Chiapas resident Rosendo Paniagua said he was asked to hand over his voter registration card and told to vote for Juan Sabines, the former mayor of Tuxtla Gutierrez, or he wouldn't receive a box of soup, milk, cooking oil and other basic food supplies from the city.

Tape revives Mexican conspiracy theory

MEXICO CITY
Recording backs losing presidential candidate's claim of plot against him

Claims by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador that a powerful cabal of politicians and the mega-wealthy have conspired to rob him of this summer's presidential election have long been dismissed by his critics as paranoia.

But the interrogation of a real estate developer, taped two years ago in Cuba and broadcast here Friday on a radio program, might well confirm the notion that just because a man could be paranoid doesn't mean people aren't out to get him.

On the tape, jailed businessman Carlos Ahumada alleges that several Mexican Cabinet ministers, a powerful senator from President Vicente Fox's party and former President Carlos Salinas de Gortari engineered the February 2004 release of other videotapes showing the developer bribing senior aides to Lopez Obrador.

"It's the fight for 2006, that's what they won," Carlos Ahumada, a native of Argentina who had been active in Mexico City construction, says on the tape. "I mean, they practically pulled Andres Manuel out of the presidential race."

Most of the men accused of planning the bribery scandal denied Friday that there was any such conspiracy.

The 2004 bribery scandal, combined with a separate criminal prosecution that would have disqualified Lopez Obrador from running, nearly derailed his quest for the presidency.

The Fox administration shelved the federal prosecution, involving the illegal building of a road in Mexico City while Lopez Obrador was mayor, after hundreds of thousands of people marched in protest against it.

Lopez Obrador did run. Now, he's challenging official results that show him losing by a wafer-thin margin to conservative Felipe Calderon of Fox's National Action Party.

Mexico City protest
Lopez Obrador's supporters have all but paralyzed central Mexico City in protest as a federal tribunal decides the election, which will be resolved by the end of the month.

"This confirms what Andres has been saying all along," said Rafael Hernandez Nava, a city legislator for Lopez Obrador's party, at a sit-in in downtown Mexico City. "It was a plot conjured up by (Diego) Fernandez de Cevallos (a National Action senator), by Salinas and Fox."

"It's a plot by the same rich people in this country who have always opposed Andres."

The 2004 bribery videotapes show Lopez Obrador allies Rene Bejarano and Carlos Imaz taking large amounts of cash from Ahumada, presumably in return for favors on his development projects in the Mexican capital. A separate tape shows Mexico City's finance chief gambling large sums of money at a Las Vegas casino.

An unsuspecting Bejarano was ambushed with the video he's in on a politically slanted Mexico City talk show in which the host interviews senior officials and other guests dressed as a circus clown.

While defending Bejarano and the others, Lopez Obrador and Mexico City officials had long pointed to political enemies, including Salinas, as likely behind the public release of the bribery videos.

On the newly released recording, Ahumada claims that the effort to make the bribery public went "to the highest level. The interior minister and the attorney general were aware of this from the beginning."

Ahumada tells interrogators that his lawyer, Juan Collado, worked in tandem with Fernandez de Cevallos in reviewing the bribery tapes and plotting how to make them public. He suggests that Salinas, whose family Collado has also represented in legal matters, was involved.

Asked for $30 million
He had originally asked for $30 million in financing for his businesses in exchange for the tapes, Ahumada said in the interrogation. But he settled for what he termed "official protection" for himself and his family and the chance to win government contracts in the future.

"Its difficult for me to believe that the president didn't know, in a matter of this magnitude," Ahumada says of Fox. "Do you think the government secretary and the attorney general knew, and not the president?"

Fernandez de Cevallos, a prominent lawyer who was his party's presidential candidate in 1994, denied any wrongdoing. He said he advised Ahumado as a lawyer — pro bono — on what to do with the tapes and how to defend himself in problems with the city government.

He said he had no contact with Salinas about the tapes.

"He never gave me a single video," Fernandez told W Radio, the network that broke the story. Fernandez said he had all his dealings with Ahumada strictly documented.

Santiago Creel, interior minister at the time the bribery scandal broke, denied knowing or dealing with Ahumada in a written statement Friday.

"Neither did I know of the existence of the videos to which he refers before they were disseminated by the mass media," Creel said in a statement.

Saying he wouldn't lend himself to the "game of those who try to obtain political advantage through slander or manipulation," Creel said he'd make no further comment on the matter.

Rafael Macedo de la Concha, the attorney general at the time of the scandal, resigned last year when the charges against Lopez Obrador were shelved.

But the attorney general's office had "no official comment at this moment," spokesman Jose Luis Manjarrez said. Macedo de la Concha, currently military attache in Mexico's embassy in Rome, was unlikely to comment, the spokesman said.

A presidential spokesman declined to discuss the allegations Friday, telling a news conference that officials "weren't afraid" of their impact.

Lopez Obrador's representatives said they would present the tape to the election tribunal, called the Trife, as further evidence of the fraud they said was perpetrated against him.

A hovering presence
Though imprisoned on various charges, Ahumada has been something of a hovering presence throughout this year's bitter election season. Many people suspected — and not a few feared — that new incriminating videos would appear in time to influence against Lopez Obrador.

Indeed, Ahumada announced new videos implicating other Lopez Obrador allies would be released in early June.

Those plans changed a few days later when gunmen allegedly shot up the car in which his wife and children were riding in a posh Mexico City neighborhood.

Police investigators said the shooting, in which no one was injured, appeared to be staged.

No charges were filed, and the investigation was dropped. No further bribery videos appeared. And Ahumada faded from public interest.

Until Friday.

dqalthaus@yahoo.com;

marionlloyd@gmail.com

August 19, 2006

West promoting 'people power' when it suits

The US and the Western media back protests over controversial elections when it is convenient to their interests, but they are keeping silent about the current situation in Mexico

A couple of years ago television, radio and print media in the West just couldn't get enough of "people power." In quick succession, from Georgia's rose revolution in November 2003 and Ukraine's orange revolution a year later, to the tulip revolution in Kyrgyzstan and the cedar revolution in Lebanon, 24-hour news channels kept us up to date with democracy on a roll.

Triggered by allegations of election fraud, the dominoes toppled. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was happy with the trend.

"They're doing it in many different corners of the world, places as varied as Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan and, on the other hand, Lebanon ... And so this is a hopeful time," she said.

But when a million Mexicans try to jump on the people-power bandwagon, crying foul about the July 2 presidential elections, when protesters stage a vigil in the center of the capital that continues to this day, they meet a deafening silence in the global media.

Despite Mexico's long tradition of electoral fraud and polls suggesting that Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador -- a critic of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) -- was ahead, the media accepted the wafer-thin majority gained by the ruling party nominee, Harvard graduate Felipe Calderon.

Although Mexico's election authorities rejected Lopez Obrador's demand for all 42 million ballots to be recounted, the partial recount of 9 percent indicated numerous irregularities. But no echo of indignation has wafted to the streets of Mexico City from Western capitals.

Maybe Israel's intervention in Lebanon grabbed all the attention and required every hack and videophone. Back in 2004, CNN and the BBC were perfectly able to cover both the battle for Fallujah and the orange revolution. Today, however, not even a news junkie like me can remember a mainstream BBC bulletin live from among the massive crowds in Mexico City.

Faced by CNN's indifference to the growing crisis in Mexico, only a retread of an old saying will do: "Pity poor Mexico, so far from Israel, so close to the United States."

Cuban President Fidel Castro's failing health gets more air time than the constitutional crisis gripping thecUS' southern neighbor, which is one of its major oil suppliers. Apparently, crowds of protesters squatting in Mexico City for weeks protesting against alleged vote-rigging don't make a good news story.

Occasionally the commentators who celebrated Ukrainians blocking Kiev's main thoroughfares condescend to jeer at Mexico's sore losers and complain that businessmen are missing deadlines because dead-enders with nothing better to do are holding up the traffic.

Ukraine's Viktor Yushchenko was decisive when he declared himself president, but isn't Lopez Obrador a demagogue for doing the same?

The color-coded revolutionaries of the former Soviet Union had a pro-Western agenda -- such as bringing Georgia and Ukraine into the US-European security organization and the EU -- but in Latin America radicals question the wisdom of becoming members in US-led bodies such as NAFTA and the WTO. The crude truth is that Washington cannot afford to let Mexico's vast oil reserves fall into hands of a president even half as radical as Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.

But didn't the Western observers certify the Mexican polls as "fair," while they condemned the Ukrainian elections? True, but election observers are not objective scientists. The EU relies on politicians, not automatons, to evaluate polls. Take the head of its observer mission, Jose Ignacio Salafranca: as a Spanish speaker in Mexico, Salafranca had a huge advantage over many of the observers in Ukraine, but he is hardly neutral. His right-wing Popular Party is an ally of Calderon's National Action Party, which is in power in Mexico. Calderon was immediately congratulated by Salafranca's colleague Antonio Lopez-Isturiz on the "great news."

The days of left-wing fraternalism may be over, but the globalist right has its own network, linking the Spanish conservatives, US Republicans and Calderon's party -- and they provided the key observer.

To paraphrase Stalin: "It doesn't matter who votes, it matters who observes the vote."

Salafranca has a track record as an election observer. In Lebanon's general elections last year he had no problem with the pro-Western faction sweeping the board around Beirut with fewer than a quarter of voters taking part and nine seats gained without even a token alternative candidate.

"It is a feast of democracy," he declared.

His mood changed when the democratic banquet moved to areas dominated by Hezbollah or Christian maverick General Michel Aoun.

Suddenly, "vote-buying" and the need for "fundamental reform" popped up in the EU observation reports.

Unanimity on the scale seen across Lebanon suggests that the cedar revolution -- despite the hype -- did nothing to promote real democratic pluralism. Hezbollah's hold on the south is the most controversial aspect of the sectarian segmentation of Lebanese society, but everywhere local bosses dominate their fiefdoms as before. Similarly, more scepticism about Ukraine's revolution would have left people better informed than the orange boosterism that passed for commentary 18 months ago.

But Mexico is different because it is so under-reported. The cruel reality is that "people power" has become a global brand. But -- like so many global brands -- it is owned by those in the US. Mexicans and any other "populists" who try to copy it should beware that they're infringing a copyright. No matter how many protesters swarm through Mexico City or how long they protest, it is US President George W. Bush and company who decide which people truly represent "The People." People power turns out to be about politics, not arithmetic.

Mark Almond is a history lecturer at Oriel College, Oxford University.

Mexico Election still Mired

Aug 18
...
The electoral court, which must rule on vote results before September 6, decided to recount only nine percent of the 130,477 voting booths, a process that ended Monday and whose results are still unknown.

Opposition alliance speaker Claudia Sheinbaum insisted if the TEPJF annuls the results of 7,532 polling booths where the recounting proved serious alterations, it would confirm the win of Lopez Obrador.

According to the coalition, different fraudulent actions gave 149,653 additional ballots to the pro-government nominee and took away 692,299 from the opposition candidate.

Those denunciations were rejected by governing PAN and Calderon, who designated his work group to coordinate the transfer of powers scheduled for December 1.

Meanwhile, thousands from the For the Good of All alliance remain assembled in camps installed on the streets and squares of the nation in peaceful civil resistance against possible electoral fraud and to defend democracy.

Faced rumors they will be evicted on Saturday by the Police, Lopez Obrador reaffirmed his movement will avoid confrontations with security forces but will keep on sitting.

He reiterated if the electoral court recognizes the fraud and the imposition of Calderon, they will define actions to take on September 16 at Mexico City s Zocalo square.
...

August 18, 2006

Chavez: Venezuela Captured 4 U.S Spies

by Ian James
CARACAS, Venezuela
President Hugo Chavez said Friday that Venezuela has caught four people spying for the U.S. government and has turned them over to the Americans.

Speaking at a campaign rally, Chavez referred to the four after reading aloud a news report about the U.S. naming a "mission manager" for Cuba and Venezuela to oversee U.S. intelligence efforts for the two countries.

The Venezuelan leader gave few details about the circumstances, or how recently the four cases occurred. But he said one woman was caught not long ago while taking photos - of what it remained unclear - in the north-central city of Valencia.

"I've caught four of their spies, four, and I've put them back in their hands. Not long ago we caught a very beautiful woman in Valencia, taking photos," Chavez told the rally in western Venezuela.

Chavez consistently accuses the U.S. of conspiring to oust him and often asserts the CIA is working to destabilize his government. Last year he ordered one U.S.-based missionary group out of Indian communities where they worked, accusing them of spying for the CIA.

In his latest comments, Chavez apparently was counting among the four a naval attache at the U.S. Embassy whom he accused of spying in February and ordered out of the country. The U.S. government responded to that move by expelling a Venezuelan diplomat from Washington.

A U.S. Embassy official did not immediately return calls seeking comment about Chavez's accusations.

Speaking to a sea of supporters, Chavez read the name of the official who will head the Cuba and Venezuela mission, 32-year intelligence veteran J. Patrick Maher.

"These are signs that the empire doesn't rest," Chavez said, referring to the U.S. "The plan to try to destabilize us has already begun."

He predicted the U.S. could try to discredit the results of Venezuela's Dec. 3 presidential election, in which Chavez is seeking another six-year term, or could try to provoke violent unrest around the time of the vote.

U.S. officials have denied trying to overthrow the leftist Chavez, who is Cuban President Fidel Castro's close ally and friend. President Bush's government has repeatedly labeled Chavez a threat to democracy.

BY THE LIGHT OF A BURNING BRIDGE: A Permanent Goodbye to the United States

by Michael C. Ruppert
...
As the human race enters the first stages of inevitable collapse resulting from Peak Oil, it does so ass-backwards, in complete denial, and in the one way most certain to guarantee the greatest amount of suffering and death for future generations. It does so because, for a time at least, U.S. foreign, military, and economic policy holds the steering wheel of human destiny through dollar hegemony, military force, technology and globalization.

This control is inevitably weakening, and other hands in other countries are successfully struggling for an ever-increasing measure of influence. The Empire is dying from within, and like all wounded beasts, it is becoming more vicious and dangerous in the process; its lies more transparent.

A different world is possible. A better world is possible. It took the imminent threat of my own death at the hands of my government to make me fully admit to my innermost self what I have known for years. Having failed to change my country’s direction after 30 years of effort, I had to stop living in the problem and start living in the solution. If I did not, my soul would have died just as surely as my body would have died after the recent burglary that savaged our offices.

I do not know where I will spend the rest of my days. Maybe in Venezuela, maybe in Mexico with the Zapatistas, maybe in Bolivia, maybe in France, Germany, or even Russia. But because Venezuela has become the singular world leader in resisting US domination under the courageous, intelligent, and inspired leadership of Hugo Chavez, I want to begin the rest of my days here.

Being freer to speak, to learn, to experience and to witness real solutions being discovered and implemented by peoples willing to take risks and who understand the challenges, I will be better able to report usefully to FTW readers and the world in future books and articles. I am currently in a country where the people have changed and are changing their government; where the elected head of state has won six elections while George W. Bush has stolen two. Is it any wonder I feel better already?

One thing is certain about fascism and that is that its behavior and evolution are remarkably predictable. Five years ago I helped bring into world consciousness a forgotten quote from Benito Mussolini wherein he said that, “Fascism ought to more properly be called corporatism since it is the merger of state and corporate power.” Nothing better describes the state of the world today.
...

Arrest Warrants Issued for Over 50 Grassroots Leaders in Oaxaca, Mexico

We go to Oaxaca in southern Mexico where over 50 arrest warrants have been issued for grassroots leaders staging a peaceful encampment in the city center. In June, Oaxaca's governor, Ulises Ruiz, ordered a police crackdown on the more than 70,000 teachers on strike. We turn to Mexico where massive street demonstrations continue in the capital in support of populist presidential candidate, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

Monday marked the first day that police used tear gas and truncheons to break up the demonstrators. But while the world's attention is on Mexico city, another battle is gaining intensity in the south of the country, in the state of Oaxaca.

In June, Oaxaca's governor, Ulises Ruiz, ordered a police crackdown on a peaceful encampment of 70,000 teachers on strike in the city center.

Since then, others have joined the teachers to create a broad movement opposed to Ruiz's government. Over the past month the Oaxacan People's Assembly, known as APPO, has launched a campaign of civil disobedience aimed at forcing Ruiz to step down. Protesters have blockaded streets and government buildings. This past week a group of women took over the state run Television station Canal 9.

Since the uprising began, the state has intensified its use of force. As many as four members of APPO were fatally shot this past week. Nearly ten people have been injured and many more detained. Allegedly state-backed gunmen have also raided media outlets critical of the government.

We are joined on the line from Oaxaca by three guests:

* Jill Freidberg, filmmaker who has spent several years in Oaxaca. She is producer of the film "Granito De Arena", which documents the Oaxaca teacher's union movement. More information at Corrugate.org.

* John Gibler, journalist whose articles have been published on ZNet, and will appear in Z magazine as well as in These Times Magazines next month. John is also a Human Rights Fellow with Global Exchange.

* Sergio Beltran, general coordinator for Universidad de la Tierra in Oaxaca, or Unitierra, an NGO for alternative education. Through Unitierra he has been a participant in the Oaxaca People's Assembly. He also is part of the broadcasting team of Oaxaca's community radio station: Radio Planton, where he produces a show on the mass media.
Listen to segment

Senator Mel Martínez accused of complicity with Bacardi company

by GABRIEL MOLINA
The decision by the discredited government of George W. Bush allowing the Bacardi company in the United States to take over the well-known Havana Club rum brand comes at the same time as accusations that the administration’s former housing secretary illegally accepted funds from that powerful company, owned by Cuban-born businessmen.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), a U.S. political corruption watchdog group, filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) on August 7 against Bush’s former housing secretary and current Senator, Cuban-American Mel Martínez, of having illegally accepted more than $60,000 from the Bacardi beverage and rum company, which controls a good share of the world market for alcoholic beverages, for his 2004 Senate election campaign.

CREW fights against corruption in the U.S. government via creative litigation. It has recently stood out for exposing a corruption network in the U.S. Congress, created by Jack Abramoff, whose connections led to the resignation of Tom DeLay, majority leader in the House of Representatives and an ally of Cuban-American legislators who were also affected by the scandal.

The watchdog group is accusing Bacardi of violating FEC regulations by soliciting contributions from a list of the corporation’s distributors for Martínez’ Senate campaign, and for using corporate funds to pay for food and beverages at a May 11, 2004 campaign event.

The complaint says that employees of at least three of Bacardi’s distributors — Hunton & Williams, Chesapeake Enterprises and the MWW Group — made contributions to Martínez’ Senate campaign, responding to an appeal by the company.

Bacardi has already admitted to the FEC that it broke the law by using corporate funds to pay for an election campaign event, and was fined $750 for "failing to report in a timely manner on campaign contributions."

The CREW group said that Martínez violated election law by failing to identify the employer of Bacardi executives, including Eduardo Sardiña, chief executive officer of Bacardi USA, and Frederick Wilson, general counsel to Bacardi USA, who together contributed $5,000 to the Senate campaign. Likewise, CREW demanded that the FEC carry out an investigation and audit of Martínez’ 2003-2004 campaign for the Senate.

Melanie Sloan, CREW executive director, noted that the situation was "an archetypal example of how special interests use corporate money to buy influence in Washington."

In an apparent coincidence, the complaint was filed 24 hours before the Wall Street Journal published an article August 8 saying that Bacardi was about to re-launch the Havana Club rum brand in the U.S. market.

The U.S. Treasury Department cleared the way for Bacardi by denying the necessary license to renew trademark rights with the U.S. Patent and Trademark office to Havana Club International, a joint enterprise between French company Pernod Ricard and Cuban enterprise Havana Rum and Liquors. Havana Club International (HCI) distributes Havana Club rum all over the world except in the United States, where, in spite of owning the rights to the trademark since 1974, sale of the rum is prohibited by the U.S. blockade against Cuba – known in the United States as the embargo.

The long history of disregard for brand and patent laws came to a peak in 1996 when Bacardi introduced onto the U.S. market a rum called Havana Club produced in the Bahamas. Havana Club International filed a lawsuit, given that Cuba has owned the rights to the brand since 1974, transferred to HCI.

However, an April 13, 1999 ruling by Judge Shira Scheindling of a New York district court threw out the lawsuit, and Havana Club Holding (HCH) decided to appeal.

Scheindling’s ruling was based on Section 211 of the Budget Law approved by the U.S. Congress a few months earlier, in October 1998, described by analysts as a legislative move to benefit Bacardi.

The Cuban/French company decided to appeal to the Patents Office. At the request of the vice president of Bacardi, Jorge Rodríguez Márquez, Governor Jeb Bush James Rogan, president of the Office.

But although HCI won the appeal, the pressure continued and the Treasury Department maneuver to deny the license to prolong the right, allowed the Office to declare it extinguished. The Bush government’s decision this month is over and above the law.

Mel Martínez, who was Secretary of Housing and Urban Development at the time, together with fellow Cuban-American Congress members Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and the Díaz-Balart brothers, financed by Bacardi, were the architects of that legal freak (Section 211), which has been criticized by business organizations like the National Foreign Trade Council (NFTC). Bill Reinshi, its president, warned that there are currently more than 5,000 U.S. trademarks in Cuba vulnerable to being infringement, thanks to that private interest legislation. The business sector is concerned about the future of trademark rights being infringed on, with incalculable consequences.

Bacardi rum could even be produced in Cuba if this mockery of the Trademarks and Patents Act becomes generalized.

Chilean copper mine suspends work


Managers at the world's largest privately-owned copper mine, Chile's Escondida, have suspended operations as a strike enters its 12th day.

Escondida said it had shut down work because striking staff had blocked access roads to the mine for two days, causing a health and security risk.

The firm, which is majority owned by global giant BHP Billiton, also said it had broken off talks with the union.

Union staff at the mine are striking in a dispute over pay.

While their picketing is continuing, earlier this week the workers appeared to soften their stand, cutting their pay rise demand from 13% to 10%.

Managers are continuing to only offer 3%.

Prices rise

Escondida, which had claimed that it was producing more than half its usual output during the strike, said it had no choice but to temporarily halt production.

"The company wants to maintain its operational continuity and renew operations as soon as possible, as soon as the police can insure the full safety of people who work in the company," it said in a statement.

The Escondida mine produces 8% of the world's copper, and the strike has caused already high copper prices to rise still further.

In early Friday trading, copper prices were up 2.5% on Thursday's close.

Copper prices have hit record highs this year - due to strong global demand led by China - and this is the main reason why workers at the mine say they deserve a substantial pay rise.

In addition to BHP Billiton's 57.5% stake in Escondida, its global mining rival Rio Tinto holds 30%.

August 17, 2006

Corporate do-gooders

by Jens Erik Gould
CARRIZAL, VENEZUELA
In Venezuela, companies get the message to give back

Inveval hasn't produced an oil-field valve in more than three years.

But Antonio Galvis is thrilled with the valve company's socialist-style makeover that is helping him learn how to read and write while it gears up to go back into production. The 69-year-old machinist, who had toiled for 27 years in the factory, has nothing but scorn for past management.

"The only thing they wanted was to exploit us," said Galvis, who was shaping up old plant equipment. "The company's improved now because we don't have anyone to give us lashes on our backs."

The transformation at Inveval is part of a sweeping initiative by the Venezuelan government to promote local oil service companies, and to encourage them to become cooperatives that devote more resources to social development.

Another part of the program requires international service companies to designate some of their subcontracting to these cooperatives and boost social spending or lose their contracts with state-owned oil company Petróleos de Venezuela, known as PDVSA.

"We want the private company to really be committed to society," said Susana Manzano, PDVSA's director for the program. "It's obligatory. All of PDVSA's contracting companies must be enrolled in the program."

International service companies, many with ties to Houston, are cooperating, so far, with the program. But they are just getting details about how it will affect them and they have many unanswered questions about its less-than-clear legal framework.

"It would be one thing if I entered something very clear and well-defined legally," said Giuseppe Castagna, president of CTA, a Caracas-based company that builds and maintains electrical systems for oil installations. "Here everyone's big worry is that the only option is to comply, but we're putting ourselves on a path without knowing at all where it's taking us."

Service companies are not openly resisting the mandatory social services program, although some grumble off the record. Many are reluctant to complain to the press because they don't want to arouse the ire of a government that is evaluating their proposals for future contracts with PDVSA.

Small companies benefit
Meanwhile, small local companies that are converting into cooperatives under the program, Companies of Social Production, known by the Spanish acronym EPS, are benefiting from incentives from PDVSA like special access to state contracts.

President Hugo Chavez, who inaugurated a $100 million fund to create the EPS program last November, said it is an example of his effort to reinvent businesses as socialist entities. Chavez said he is leading Venezuela toward the "new socialism of the 21st century."

Government support has already generated a sharp escalation in the number of new cooperatives in industries not related to oil, from manufacturing to agriculture.

The EPS program aims to reverse a trend in which a small percentage of companies, many of them large multinational firms, account for the majority of PDVSA's contracting work.

In 2004, over 1,000 companies were registered with PDVSA as contractors, but just 148 companies earned 83 percent of the money paid, the government-owned oil company said.

"It is true that there is a sort of club or elite industries that capture the bulk of the contracts with PDVSA," said Roger Tissot, an analyst based in Canada who works for a Washington, D.C., firm, PFC Energy. "Opening opportunities to more companies through EPS will provide more access to revenues to Venezuelan businesses."

Lessening dependence
Inveval planned to restart production last year, but workers are still fixing up the plant. They say it will be back to producing a variety of valves for PDVSA by next year, hoping to lessen the state company's dependence on international suppliers.

The state expropriated the company, formerly National Valve Constructor, last year from its previous owners, who shut it down as part of national strikes ending in early 2003.

As an expropriated plant, Inveval is in the special position of receiving loans from the state, which owns 51 percent of the stock, with the rest of the shares held by workers.

This allows it to focus on social development rather than concerns about meeting the bottom line that occupy traditional private companies. The company has even set up a school for Galvis and others to get the elementary education they never received.

Some international companies say they are making the transition to the program smoothly.

Services company Schlumberger, which has increased its social development budget in Venezuela even without the help of the EPS program, said as early as April that it had already enrolled. At the oil conference where Manzano made her presentation, the company's stand featured a Schlumberger logo entwined with a Venezuelan flag and the words "social development."

Favel, which has offices in Houston and a contract with PDVSA to study a reservoir in Lake Maracaibo, said it will now devote 8 percent of its project income in Venezuela to social development, up from the 3 percent social budget it had in past years.

"We don't mind paying extra if we see the benefit," Favel President Clive Ferebee said. "The program makes companies more socially aware, and that's been missing in developing countries."

The latest step
Putting social obligations on service companies is the latest step in the Chavez government's drive to redirect oil profits toward low-income Venezuelans. It announced in June that companies like Chevron and Shell must devote a portion of their royalties to social development under new joint ventures with the government.

Venezuela also recently demanded that operating companies convert their contracts to give PDVSA a majority stake.

Most service companies are just now figuring out the rules of the EPS program.

Company representatives crowded around Manzano after a presentation she gave at an oil conference here in April, interrupting her interview with journalists with their own questions about requirements for the EPS program.

Four months later, some of them say PDVSA has still not set clear guidelines about its structure. Companies say legal troubles could arise because they depend on local cooperatives who may not be up to doing the job.

One international service company said PDVSA assigned an agricultural cooperative to build a school to satisfy its social obligations under the EPS program, even though that cooperative has no experience in construction.

Some firms say they don't know if the government will hold them liable if a cooperative does a sloppy job or does not complete a project.

"I have to commit to social activities that could be outside of my technical capacity," Castagna said.

Giving wheelchairs
Venezuelan company Forjacentro has proposed donating 200 wheelchairs to a senior citizens home. The company expects PDVSA to weigh its social offer as strongly as its technical offer when considering its proposal.

"It's an additional cost, but we think it's right," said Hernan Matute, Forjacentro marketing manager. "Someone needs to bring about this social work, and not all companies will make the effort if invited or given incentives. I think this obligates us to guarantee a success."

Galvis and his fellow employees at Inveval agree that obliging companies to help with the social projects will make Venezuelan communities better off.

"They must share it with the population, with the whole society," said Antonio Betancourt, who has worked at the plant since 1982. "If we don't see it from that point of view, we're selfish."

Hardly any surprise: CITGO sells Houston refinery share ... but at what a price?

In a short article dated August 3, I asked VHeadline.com readers to watch this space...

* The hot news is that the Venezuelan Oil Minister has announced that CITGO agreed to sell its minority share in the Houston refinery to its partner, Lyondell Chemical.

This was expected ... the surprise is that the price is only about $1.3 billion.

We were told the best offer (by a third party) for all the shares had exceeded $5 billion. On that basis, CITGO's 41.25% stake was worth over $2 billion ... and the shortfall needs to be explained.

* It seems the Minister has not told us all the relevant facts that justify the low price.

It may have something to do with the crude supply contract, which has irked Lyondell Chemical for some time, because (under the formula-based pricing system) the refinery has been paying PDVSA over $5 per barrel in excess of market prices.

Could the Minister kindly tell us if the present supply contract ... due to run out in 2017 ... will continue under Lyondell’s full ownership?

If so, will the same formula-based system remain in force till 2017; will it be modified or will it be scrapped and replaced by market prices?

This is the least we should know about the negotiation.

It is strange we have not yet seen an announcement by Lyondell Chemical, though this may well appear later today.

Pistol Policy: State denial and repression in Oaxaca

by John Gibler
Throughout the past week gunmen of have opened fire on members of the People’s Assembly of Oaxaca (APPO for its initials in Spanish) killing four and wounding at least 10.

Organizations and citizens across Oaxaca formed the APPO shortly after the governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz’s (Institutional Revolutionary Party) failed June 14 raid on a teachers’ encampment in downtown Oaxaca City. The teachers had been camping out, on strike, since May 22. The APPO united the teachers’ union and a broad swath of political and social organizations to demand the immediate renunciation or destitution of Ulises Ruiz. The APPO led massive marches with up to half a million people in attendance before deciding to step up their civil disobedience tactics on July 26 by shutting down all branches of the state government, setting up encampments around government office buildings. On August 1, some 3000 women led a women’s only march through town that led to the unarmed take over of the state television and radio corporation, CORTV. APPO’s explicit strategy is to generate “ungovernability” (ingobernabilidad) to force Ulises Ruiz’s exit from office.

The response of Ruiz and the state government has been to simply disappear from downtown Oaxaca, to lobby the federal government to intervene, to arbitrarily and illegally detain APPO leaders, and—apparently—to send thugs and gunmen to terrify and break up the APPO protests.

The recent wave of violence started last Sunday when four federal agents arbitrarily detained Catarino Torres Pereda, a social movement leader from Tuxtepec and member of the APPO. Agents beat Pereda and then took him to the La Palma maximum-security prison outside of Mexico City.

Then, on Monday, August 7, local and national reporters witnessed police chief, Aristeo Lopez Martinez, shooting at a student protest from the back of a BMW motorcycle (Milenio, 8 August 2006, “Estalla Oaxaca”). No one was wounded and the protesters repelled the police with rocks. From that day on rumors have run through town that the Big Raid is coming. That night gunmen executed a university professor, Marcos Garcia Tapia, in his car in downtown Oaxaca.

The next day, Tuesday, August 8, students paid to sabotage the university radio station set a bus on fire to distract the radio workers; they ran into the console and dumped sulfuric acid on the radio transmitter. Radio workers caught the students in the act and detained them.

One of the first victims of the June 14 raid was the teachers’ Radio Plantón (Encampment Radio). Police officers destroyed all of the radio equipment and beat and arrested three of the programmers in the first minutes of the raid. That very day, a group of seven students decided to take over the university radio station and immediately continue their broadcasts. On July 22, armed gunmen opened fire on the radio station from pick-up trucks. No one was injured, nor was the equipment damaged. Radio workers said that the shooting was an attempt to scare them.

“The government said that the shootings on July 22 were a “self-hit” (autoatentado),” one worker who asked to remain anonymous told me. “We say it was a government action to chase us off, to threaten us and wear us out psychologically. We blame the government. We are conscious of what is at risk here, and if it is necessary, we are ready to give our lives for our university, for our radio.”

The teachers and social movements across Oaxaca have long used the radio not only for political discussion and analysis, but also for emergency coordination during state repression. The police attacks and sabotage attempts against the radio stations are strategic military actions, seeking to break up the movement’s communication network.

On Wednesday, August 9, a gunman busted into the offices of the Oaxaca state newspaper Noticias at 7:24 AM, firing Uzi machine guns at the ceiling and wounding six employees with bullet fragments that ricocheted off the ceiling. Noticias has been the constant victim of state repression since June 28, 2004 when thugs took over the newspapers’ office building. In response, the Inter-American Human Rights Commission called on the Mexican federal government to take precautionary measures to ensure the safety of 117 employees of the paper.

Later that day, gunmen ambushed and opened fire on Triqui indigenous members of the APPO near Putla in the Mixteca region of the state, killing three people and wounding two; the Triquis were on their way to an assembly meeting.

Also that day, federal and state agents dressed in civilian clothes and armed with AR-15 assault rifles, beat and detained a leader of one of the largest organizations in the APPO, the Popular Revolutionary Front (FPR), German Mendoza Nube. Nube has been wheel-chair bound since 1987 when he was shot in the lower spine. He also suffers from severe diabetes. Two friends and neighbors were helping Nube get out of a car and into his wheelchair when the armed men pulled up in three cars and immediately beat him and threw him into the back of a pick-up truck. They also beat the neighbors and friends, arresting three of them (they were released the next day). The agents have moved Nube between several different prisons in Oaxaca and Puebla, making it impossible for family to locate him.

The next day, Thursday August 10, the APPO convoked a march to demand the liberty of Torres Pereda and Mendoza Nube. Around 12,000 people marched toward the occupied CORTV station when they were ambushed in a narrow stretch of Morelos Avenue around 7:15 at night. Gunmen shot from both sides of the street, wounding three people and killing one. Jose Colmenares, a 50 year-old mechanic, joined the march to support his wife, a junior-high teacher from Ejutla. A gunman who ran out into the street shot Colmenares in the neck and heart. He died minutes later.

Marchers detained at least 8 suspects, and found a pistol, gloves, police boots and jackets in the house and health clinic from which the shots had been fired. Protestors set fire to the house to force hiding gunmen out, but they appeared to have escaped, and within half an hour protestors allowed firefighters access to the house. Firefighters extinguished the flames within minutes.

In the town square, tourists continued to sip coffee and listen to roaming mariachi musicians apparently oblivious to the gunshots and flames only a mile away.

On Friday, August 11, police detained Erangelio Mendoza, a long-time leader of the teachers’ movement, and held him in a car while they waited for a helicopter to take him away. His whereabouts are still unknown.

The APPO’s explicit aim has been to generate “ungovernability.” They have succeeded. In over a month in Oaxaca, I have not seen one uniformed police officer. The idea that the state maintains its monopoly of the legitimate use of violence has been obliterated. But the APPO has refrained from resorting to violence itself in this total power vacuum. Their tactics are extreme—shutting off access to all government buildings; commandeering government vehicles; occupying the town square; taking over the state television station—but never violent. The state, in turn, responds with outright violence such as the failed June 14 police raid, or covert violence such as the arbitrary detentions, beatings, shootings, sabotage attempts and assassinations of the past week.

Army intelligence officers videotape over land travelers to and from Oaxaca. Spies follow journalists throughout the day. Plainclothes cops with machine guns pick APPO leaders off the street. No one knows where the governor is, not even his press secretary. Gunmen fire into crowds.

On Friday, Flavio Sosa, one of the APPO spokespeople, publicly called for a meeting with Carlos Abascal, the Minister of the Interior, to discuss possible solutions to the conflict in Oaxaca. “Ulises Ruiz is leading us into a situation practically of civil war, and our movement is non-violent,” he said in a press conference in the occupied town square. “Our movement is non-violent. In fact, it is a movement against violence, against a system of violence that excludes us, against the violence of police brutality.”

US Homeland Security linked to Venezuelan coup conspirators' prison break?

Venezuelan police investigations into the escape of four conspirators from a military prison in Caracas Sunday, detected US electronic communications related to the perfectly-coordinated flight.

VEA daily's director Guillermo Garcia Ponce urged authorities to be alert in the face of possible attempts at destabilization, as he believes there is evidence of a counterrevolution and a fifth column in the nation..

The four fugitives are ex-union leader Carlos Ortega, serving 16 years for civil rebellion, instigation to break the law, and use of false public documents, Col. Jesus Faria and Capt. Rafael Faria, serving a nine years for assisting Colombian paramilitary to enter the country, and Col. Dario Faria, awaiting trial for the stealing war weapons, among other charges.

In an interview with Confianza program on Venezolana de Television, Garcia Ponce pointed out the police detection of an e-mail sent by Leopoldo Torres, who works in the US Homeland Security, to Edith Ruiz, an assistant of Alberto Federico Ravell, director of opposition Globovision channel.

* VEA revealed that Leopoldo Torres is the son of Betty Torres, a former judge sentimentally connected with Carlos Ortega.

It notes further that the e-mail included a sound archive with the voice of Col. Jesus Farias, read by Globovision, in which he addresses the nation to explain the causes of his getaway.

From the VEA disclosure, some conclude that the conversation signifies the fugitives have left Venezuela, although this could be a trick to confuse investigators.

August 16, 2006

"Cuba Libertaria" #3: Other voices - interview with Canek Sánchez Guevara, grandson of Che Guevara

There is not the slightest doubt that the Castrist revolutionary rhetoric ishaving less and less effect and that faced with the daily reality that the Cuban people are forced to put up with, there are more and more who say, as Saramago said: "I have gone along this far!". However, also because there are still some of good faith who are waiting for an impossible regeneration of the "Cuban Revolution", we reproduce here some extracts of a declaration by the grandson of Che Guevara, Canek Sánchez Guevara, which appeared in the Mexican magazine REFORMA on 17th October 2004:

"(…)In the western press, so barely free in reality (so full of implications that nobody understands, and with more than superficial, flat criticism), it is common for questioning of the Cuban regime to begin with insulting the continuance of it in practices which are outdated and ineffective, tyrannical and victimist, heroic and poor. The system is attacked with total ignorance, a lot of disinformation and, worse, is described as communism. My posture, however, is different, even contrary, if you like. All my criticism of Fidel Castro and his followers is based on their distancing themselves from libertarian ideals, of their betrayal of the Cuban people and of the terrible surveillance established to keep the State in a position of dominance over its "people".

The immobility that the work of the revolution fell into has its origin in the concept of itself that it introduced: permanency. In order to be permanent, the revolution (once the initial highly revolutionary decade had passed) had to remain immobile because otherwise it would free the libertarian forces implicit in it. What remains then, is not revolutionary action but the social class that holds the control of the "revolutionary" institution. The revolution (the movement that this was) died years ago in Cuba - of a natural death, by the way - and it had to be killed off by those who had started to keep it from turning against them. It had to be institutionalized and smothered by its own bureaucracy (indeed, Che had already warned us of this), by corruption ("robolución", it was called), by nepotism ("sociolismo") and by the vertical nature of that famous organization: the Cuban "revolutionary" State. Thus, popular wisdom soon abolished the concept of dictatorship of the proletariat removing the qualifier and leaving only the noun, absolute and forbidden: dictatorship.

The new socialist bourgeoisie did not delay in adopting the most abject arguments and methods of the recently dethroned right in everything relating to private life, and even bettered the right with regard to political association (let's be honest, a rebellious youth like Fidel Castro was, in today's Cuba, would immediately be shot, not even exiled); all this was made worse by the fact that it was a "left-wing" government originating in a most heterogeneous and heterodox civilian and military movement. The persecution of homosexuals, hippies, free thinkers, syndicalists, poets (dissidents of sort) certainly seems in excess of what was being combatted. The criminalization of being different has nothing to do with freedom. Neither does the concentration of power in the hands of a few form part of libertarian ideas, and even less so the perpetual surveillance of individuals or the prohibition of any associations that may beformed on the margins of the State. Undoubtedly power is in the hands of the people but only symbolically; the real power, the taking of decisions, is not. It belongs to the State, and the State is Fidel. (…)

The insistence by the regime's leaders and insulters that this is a Marxist system surpasses all absurdity, given that in Cuba, Marxism is only a school subject, a watchword of the Party and other "organizations of the masses", and at best a dream cut short. For Marx (for any libertarian, in fact), freedom and dictatorship are in enduring conflict. Sure, they walk together (like any pair of opposites), but not on the same path, and by doing so (by seeking to do so, I mean), they will never arrive at the same place: if the end justifies the means, then the means foreshadow the end... in other words, freedom cannot be reached by way of imposition. Never...

A sort of falsely proletarian aristocracy was gestating within the "popular" government, opposing the democratization of the revolutionary project with all its strength. The Cuban revolution was not democratic because it engendered within itself the social classes dedicated to impeding it: the revolution gave birth to a bourgeoisie, a repressive apparatus intended to protect itself from the people and to a bureaucracy that distanced itself from the people. But above all it was anti-democratic because of its leader's religious messianism.

Appointing oneself saviour of the Nation is one thing; remaining so for ever is another thing. In effect, Fidel, with his troops and the better part of civilian society, liberated Cuba from Batista's gangster dictatorship; but, by obstinately remaining in power he only turned into the same thing - dictator.

From young revolutionary to old tyrant there is an abyss, the same as there is between the dissenting of that young rebel and the orders of an old man who has gone mad with power and glory. (…) Instead of struggling for a sceptical society, free-thinking and critical, he applauded credulity, submission and absolute obedience in the people. Everything that he questioned in the old regime has been triplicated in the new one. Everything that he attacked as a youth, he has endorsed as an old man. (…) Fidel fought as a free man but today he denies the freedom of men: he has become one of them, despotic, cynical and arrogant to the point of paroxysm; neither better nor worse than any Fox, Bush, Berlusconi or Putin. Castro is one of them: just the same, the very same, the same rubbish, albeit in another guise and keeping its distance. Not only has the struggle for freedom not been concluded in Cuba, neither has it been concluded in Mexico or Vietnam, in the United States or in Chile, in Angola or in Russia, in China or in Nicaragua... It has not been concluded because we are still slaves of conditions that are imposed on us: all that we are comes from what we are allowed to be. And that, my friend, is not freedom."

Note: The full text can be read (in Spanish) on the web

'Siege' warning to Mexico rival

Supporters of Mexico's left-wing presidential candidate have pledged to place his rival "under siege" if he is declared winner of the disputed poll.

A spokesman for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's party said Felipe Calderon would not be able to operate outside his office if he was made president.

Mr Lopez Obrador disputes the official results which give a narrow victory to his rival and wants a full recount.

A partial recount has been completed, but the results are not yet known.

Election officials have until 6 September to declare a president-elect or annul the election.

If declared the victor, Mr Calderon "will be a president under siege... he will not be able to operate outside his office", said Gerardo Fernandez, of the left-wing Democratic Revolution Party (PRD).

Protesters have also pledged to disrupt outgoing President Vicente Fox's last state-of-the-nation address on 1 September. The day "will not be a picnic", Mr Fernandez said.

Mr Lopez Obrador's supporters clashed with police outside the Congress building on Tuesday, for the first time since they began camping out in Mexico City in protest at the election result.

At least eight people were injured in the scuffles which only lasted a few minutes but saw police use batons and teargas to break up the crowd.

Federal police have denied accusations that they were heavy-handed.

Mr Lopez Obrador has alleged fraud after losing by some 240,000 votes, and has called for a full recount of the 41 million votes cast in the 2 July poll.

Earlier this week, Mr Calderon - the candidate of President Fox's National Action Party - said he was confident the court-imposed recount of votes from 9% of polling centres would confirm his win.

Mr Fox has said he will take all the necessary actions to ensure that whoever is declared president-elect in September is allowed to assume power.

Mexico’s Partial Vote Recount Confirms Massive and Systematic Election Fraud

by Al Giordano
Part V of a Special Series for The Narco News Bulletin

With Less than 9 Percent of Precincts Recounted, More than 126,000 Votes Are Found to Have Been Disappeared or Illegally Fabricated

Finally, the hard numbers are starting to come in. In the “partial recount” of paper ballots from the July 2 presidential election in Mexico, ordered by the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (known as the Trife), the recount has been completed in 10,679 precincts of the 11,839 ordered by the court (about 9 percent of Mexico’s 130,000 precincts). From these precincts, Narco News has obtained the following preliminary numbers that confirm the massive and systematic electoral fraud inflicted on the Mexican people:
  • In 3,074 precincts (29 percent of those recounted), 45,890 illegal votes, above the number of voters who cast ballots in each polling place, were found stuffed inside the ballot boxes (an average of 15 for each of these precincts, primarily in strongholds of the National Action Party, known as the PAN, of President Vicente Fox and his candidate, Felipe Calderón).
  • In 4,368 precincts (41 percent of those recounted), 80,392 ballots of citizens who did vote are missing (an average of 18 votes in each of these precincts).
  • Together, these 7,442 precincts contain about 70 percent of the ballots recounted. The total amount of ballots either stolen or forged adds up to 126,282 votes altered.
  • If the recount results of these 10,679 precincts (8.2 percent of the nation’s 130,000 polling places) are projected nationwide, it would mean that more than 1.5 million votes were either stolen or stuffed in an election that the first official count claimed was won by Calderon by only 243,000 votes.
  • Among the findings of this very limited partial recount are that in 3,079 precincts where the PAN party is strong and where, in many cases, the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) of candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador did not count with election night poll watchers, one or more of three things occurred: Either the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE, in its Spanish initials) illegally provided more ballots than there are voters in those precincts, or the PAN party stole those extra ballots, or ballots were forged.
Taqueo and Saqueo

These preliminary recounts demonstrate mainly two kinds of fraud: “taqueo,” or the stuffing of ballot boxes with false votes as if putting extra beans inside a taco, and “saqueo,” or “looting,” that is, the disappearance of legitimate ballots cast.

A significant problem, now, for Mexican democracy (for those who claim that the election was fair, and also for those who view this evidence as proof of electoral fraud) is that there is no way to tell, inside each ballot box, which of the ballots were legal and which were not; nor which ballots were stolen and which were not.

In some past post-electoral disputes for state and local offices, the Trife electoral court has opted, based on this kind of evidence, to annul the results from those precincts where stuffing or looting occurred.

If the Trife follows the law and its own established precedents, and annuls the results in these 7,442 precincts where the fraud took place, it would reverse the official results and López Obrador would emerge the victor by more than 425,000 votes nationwide.

Specifically, Calderón would lose 1,225,326 votes from his tally, while López Obrador would lose just 556,600; a difference of 668,726. When factoring in IFE’s claim that Calderón has a more than 243,000 vote advantage, López Obrador would still win the election by those 425,000 votes plus some.

In other words, if the Supreme Electoral Court determines that only half of the problematic precincts are to be annulled, López Obrador would still be declared the presidential victor. To continue to impose Calderón, at this point, would require the court’s endorsement of results from at least 4,000 precincts that the recount has demonstrated were scenes of the electoral crimes of ballot-stuffing and ballot-theft. By failing to annul those precincts, the court would, in effect, annul the legitimacy of the Mexican State, lighting the fuse on a social conflict much larger than anything that has yet occurred in the wake of the fraudulent election.

The Clock Is Ticking

The Trife court has a constitutional deadline of August 31 to complete its computations and of September 6 to either declare the presidential winner or, alternately, to annul the elections. The court has very broad and absolute power to annul up to 20 percent of the precincts without annulling the entire election (annulment would mean that Congress would choose an interim president and new elections would be called within two years). If the Trife annuls more than 20 percent of the precincts, the entire election would have to be annulled.

López Obrador and his supporters have demanded a full recount of all precincts: “Vote by vote, precinct by precinct.” And, indeed, the results of the partial recount strongly suggest that a full recount would demonstrate that they won the election. As the tension has risen, and the deadlines approach, López Obrador supporters maintain a 12-mile encampment in downtown Mexico City, have symbolically closed government office buildings, held mass marches with millions of protesters, maintained encampments outside of IFE offices throughout the country, and this past week began “takings” of toll booths on federal highways, allowing motorists to pass through without paying.

López Obrador has already announced that if the Trife tries to impose Calderón, there will be “civil resistance” at the halls of Congress on September 1, when President Vicente Fox must give his annual State of the Union address, and that on Mexico’s national Independence Day, September 15, when the president traditionally leads the “cry of pain” from the Mexico City Zocalo, the opponents to the electoral fraud will displace Fox with a cry of their own.

Many observers viewed the Trife court’s initial rejection of a full recount as a reflection of the court’s own bias and willingness to impose Calderón as president at any cost. Others believe that the electoral court’s own established precedent of annulling precincts where ballot stuffing or theft occurred puts it in a position of having to annul those 7,442 precincts (almost six percent of all precincts nationwide), reversing the results of the election. Also, recently, one of the justices of the nation’s Supreme Court suggested in public that if the Trife doesn’t or can’t establish certainty over the result, the highest court may then intervene. In other words, September 6 might not be the final date of the legal conflict over this very tarnished election.

Presence of Malice


Photo: D.R. 2006 El Universal
The partial recount has also revealed more evidence of a pattern of malice on the part of IFE officials. The existence of more ballots than there are voters in PAN stronghold precincts indicates that either the IFE illegally sent more ballots than allowed to those precincts, or somehow the party in power obtained them by other illegal means. The recount has also revealed a massive number of precincts where the seals on the ballot boxes had been broken since Election Day, opening the possibility that ballots were inserted or removed after July 2nd.

Mexico’s television duopoly – Televisa and TV Azteca – have declined to report the irregularities that have surfaced as a result of the partial recount. The same goes for much – but not all – of the corporate media. The facts have instead broken the media blockade via Internet and organization, as well as the detailed reporting of the daily La Jornada in Mexico City, the daily Por Esto! in Yucatán (two of the nation’s four largest newspapers) and some other media. Add to this mediatic schizophrenia the factor that those who support Calderón and insist the election was clean are passive, lacking conviction, whereas those millions who believe an electoral fraud was committed are active, and in the streets, and it is evident that just as the Mexican State has lost legitimacy, the corporate (especially television) media have lost credibility and power to spin public opinion.


Photo: D.R. 2006 Reforma
This morning, part of the protest encampment in downtown Mexico City, along Madero Street, was dismantled by its participants and thousands moved, en masse, to the entrance to the halls of the Federal Congress. Riot police blocked them from reaching the doors. There was some pushing and shoving, as the accompanying photos show, but demonstrators – who outnumbered police by a factor of thousands – by and large remained peaceful, still holding out a cubic-centimeter of hope that the Trife electoral tribunal will do the right thing and fix the fraud. But that patience is as thin as a razor, and as the clock counts down to the decision that the Trife must make by September 6, the electoral court and its seven judges now have the facts in hand, the evidence of systematic fraud that changed the results, which the partial recount has furnished.

The anti-fraud protestors have maintained a peaceful round-the-clock vigil outside the halls of Congress in the Mexico City neighborhood of San Lazaro for various weeks, in which many of the current senators and congress members from the PRD party have participated. At 2:15 this afternoon, elements of the Federal Preventive Police (PFP, in its Spanish initials, the same agency that invaded San Salvador Atenco in May) attacked the vigil encampment, according to this wire report from La Jornada. (The report states that six congressmen and women were wounded in the attack; El Universal reports the number of legislators wounded by police at 11.) When police forces attack and prevent duly elected senators and congress members from entering their own governing hall, the term for that is coup d’etat. It is an invitation to social revolution. The events of recent weeks and months in Mexico suggest that Vicente Fox and his attack troops would be wrong to presume that there are enough police in the country to hold back the turn of history that he is provoking from above.


Photo: D.R. 2006 El Universal
Today marks two months since June 14, when 15,000 citizens of Oaxaca beat back and chased 3,000 riot cops from that city’s historic center, revealing the “new math” of Mexican protest movements. They have since taken the state TV station and more than 30 city halls, as well as having shut down the state government in their demand that repressive Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz resign. Yet their numbers are a fraction of the masses that, in Mexico City and elsewhere, are resisting the electoral fraud. And added to the post-electoral conflict, more related to that in Oaxaca, is the unsettled account of 30 political prisoners arrested May 3 and 4 in San Salvador Atenco, the pending arrival there of indigenous comandantes from the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN, in its Spanish initials), and the quiet organizing being done from Mexico City and in other states by its Subcomandante Marcos and thousands of organizations and adherents to the Zapatista Other Campaign, which, outside the glare of the media and the electoral spectacle, organizes toward a national rebellion more ambitious than saving the vote of a single election, but, rather, seeking to topple an economic system. The Trife, if it imposes the fraud, will accelerate the Zapatista calendar as perhaps the greatest consequence.

If the seven electoral justices believed that holding a partial recount would calm passions, the facts unleashed by that partial recount have served, instead, to flame them. What the judges do with those facts will determine whether the institutions will correct the fraud, or whether the institutions will risk, as in Oaxaca, falling from power because of trying to impose an indefensible crime against Mexican society and democracy. What seven judges decide in the next three weeks will mark a crossroads in Mexican history… and that of all América.

Read Part I of this series: In Mexico, 2.5 Million Missing Votes Reappear: López Obrador Reduces Calderón’s Official Margin to 0.6 percent

Read Part II: A Full Recount Would Show that López Obrador Won Mexico’s Presidency by More than One Million Votes

Read Part III: Death by Video: Mexico’s Election Fraud Is Coming Undone

Read Part IV: Mexico’s Electoral Tribunal Orders Partial Recount to Begin on Wednesday

Transcript of Interview with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

[Thanks to Kevin for finding this transcript for me]

AHMADINEJAD: (Translated.)
"Basically, we are not looking for - working for the bomb. The problem that President Bush has that in his mind he wants to solve everything with bombs. The time of the bomb is in the past. It's behind us. Today is the era of thoughts, dialogue, and cultural exchanges."

*

Q: What did you expect to hear back from President Bush?

AHMADINEJAD: (Translated.)
"I was expecting Mr. Bush to give up, or I should say to change his behavior. I was hoping to open a new window for the gentleman. One can certainly look on the world from other perspectives. You can love the people. You can love all people. You can talk with the people of the Middle East using another language, other words. Instead of blind support for an imposed regime they can establish a more appropriate relationship with the people of the region. "
*
Open Letter to Mike Wallace on His Ahmadinejad Interview
by Michael K. Smith

Dear Mr. Wallace,

Your interview with Iranian President Ahmadinejad was a disgrace to the journalistic profession. You began with the condescending manner of a school principal lecturing the class clown for immature behavior and squandered the entire interview on hypocritically accusatory questions. If gall were an Olympic sport, you'd take the Gold Medal.

As the President tried to tell you -- with admirable diplomatic charm -- it is not for Iran to re-establish diplomatic relations with the United States, which voluntarily broke off such relations nearly three decades ago, and has maintained total belligerence towards the Islamic Republic ever since. In case you haven't noticed, the U.S. is currently sponsoring two bloody occupations on Iran's borders, while showering Israel's devastation of Lebanon with U.S. weapons just a stone's throw away. It is in this context that you asked Mr. Ahmadinejad if he desired good relations with the United States. The only thing that might have saved your line of questioning is the CBS laugh track.
...con'td

August 15, 2006

Chavez Opponent Escapes Venezuela Prison


CARACAS, Venezuela

One of President Hugo Chavez's most threatening enemies is on the loose, and many Venezuelans wonder what new plots he has in mind.

Carlos Ortega escaped from a military prison over the weekend, and troops and police were ordered to guard ports, airports and embassies to prevent him from fleeing or seeking asylum. But those who know the 60-year-old Ortega think he might stay in hopes of reviving anti-Chavez protests before presidential elections in December.

"Carlos has always been a fighting man," Edgar Zambrano, an opposition politician who recently visited him in prison, said Monday. "I imagine if he decided to escape from prison, he's doing it to stay in the country and, while in hiding, begin a frontal fight against the regime."

A union leader who led a crippling national strike against Chavez and later became what many consider Venezuela's most prominent political prisoner, Ortega slipped out of the Ramo Verde prison west of Caracas, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for civil rebellion. Three convicted military officers also escaped.

Prison director Gustavo Busnego said 14 guards were being interrogated, and investigators believe some may have helped the men leave the prison. He said guards reported the escape Sunday after checking one bunk and finding only pillows under the sheet, arranged to look like a dozing inmate.

Zambrano's party, Democratic Action, released a typed letter, purportedly written by Ortega from prison a week earlier. In it, he repeated a phrase he has often used: "I know that we will soon see each other again - and free."

However, he also said, "for now I am a political prisoner of a dictator who knows I am dangerous in the streets and, therefore, I prefer to stay behind bars. That is the best way of showing he fears me."

Ortega wrote that voters should boycott the presidential vote and called for street protests to "defend democracy." He signed off saying, "We will see each other soon, friends!"

Chavez has called Ortega a criminal who has conspired against democracy with Venezuela's wealthy elite.

Ortega was convicted last December of civil rebellion and instigation to commit illegal acts for his role in a 2002-2003 general strike that aimed to topple Chavez's government.

The two-month strike virtually shut down oil production in the world's No. 5 oil exporting country and cost Venezuela an estimated $7.5 billion, plunging the economy into recession. Chavez refused to step down and regained control of the oil industry by firing nearly half the work force at the state oil company.

The government also has linked Ortega, the leader of the million-member Venezuelan Workers Confederation, to an April 2002 coup that briefly ousted Chavez before street protests helped restore him to power.

Ortega has eluded authorities before. He fled arrest and sought asylum in Costa Rica, then chose to return to Venezuela in 2004, to "continue fighting this regime by any means necessary."

Ortega spent months in hiding before his arrest in March 2005 inside a Caracas bingo hall.

Some of Ortega's allies, including his lawyer, said his escape was justified because he was wrongly convicted by a biased judicial system.

But pro-Chavez union organizer Pedro Vargas called Ortega's escape "part of the opposition's Plan B" to try to destabilize the government. Attorney General Isaias Rodriguez theorized that the opposition could have "sponsored this escape."

The three military officers who disappeared with Ortega include two brothers, Col. Jesus Faria and Col. Dario Faria, and their nephew, Capt. Rafael Faria.

Jesus and Rafael Faria were serving nine-year terms for military rebellion after being linked to reputed Colombian paramilitaries detained in 2004 for allegedly plotting to assassinate Chavez. Dario Faria was arrested for theft in 2005 after a military assault rifle was found hidden in his car's fender. All three maintained they were innocent.

A daughter of Jesus Faria, 23-year-old Maria Alejandrina, said her father revealed nothing of his plan when she visited him at the prison Saturday. She said she had no idea where her relatives went, but said they'll likely "continue with their mission" - opposing Chavez's government.

----

Associated Press writers Natalie Obiko Pearson and Fabiola Sanchez, in Caracas, contributed to this report.

Mexican police injure five deputies at Congress protest

Mexico's Federal Preventative Police injured five deputies and many other protestors on Monday, at a protest supporting left-wing presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, outside the country's Congress, local media reported.

The police hit deputies -- Dolores Padierna, Emilio Serrano, Miguel Moreno Brizuela, Juan Jose Garcia Ochoa and Susana Manzanares, all from Obrador's Revolutionary Democratic Party -- in the arms and stomach, as they tried to set up a camp outside the legislature, as part of a larger group of protestors, challenging the country's election results.

The police and crowd battled outside the building with the police using truncheons and tear gas, and the protestors using stones and bottles.

The protestors allege widespread fraud in the July 2 elections, whose official result gave right-wing candidate Felipe Calderon of the incumbent National Action Party (PAN) a slender 0.58 percentage point victory over Obrador.

Incumbent president, Vicente Fox, also of the PAN, will give his sixth and final state of the nation report at the Congress on Sep. 1, a day when PRD supporters have planned an intensification of their protests.

PRD supports claim the election was marred by widespread fraud.

August 14, 2006

Mexican electoral fraud wins Round 1 ... Round 2 now begins!

by Stephen Lendman
It was no surprise on Sunday that the Mexican Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) ruled its partial recount of about 9% of the ballots cast in the disputed presidential election held on July 2 showed ruling National Action Party (PAN) candidate still the winner.

In doing so, the IFE ignored the clear evidence of election irregularities and blatant fraud uncovered by losing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

The IFE ignored the need for a total ballot recount Obrador justly demanded and instead relied on a small partial one in areas of known Calderon strength making it unlikely from the start it would find enough of a change in the final tally to change the election result. Lopez Obrador aides justifiably said there was overwhelming evidence of fraud in at least one-third of the polling stations and that any failure to do a recount in all of them would show clear IFE bias toward its announced winner on July 6 and would not be accepted without a concerted fight. Let the battle begin.

The fraud uncovered so far showed the preliminary vote totals were manipulated to show PAN candidate Felipe Calderon to be the winner. In addition, three million votes were never counted at first and only in hindsight were 2.5 million of them added to the totals. Further, 900,000 supposedly void, blank and annulled ballots were declared null, discarded and never included in the official totals, 700,000 additional votes disappeared from missing precincts, thousands of voters were denied their franchise in strong Obrador precincts, there was evidence of ballot stuffing, and in about one-third of the polling stations only winning party PAN observers were present allowing ample opportunity for vote manipulation as has happened routinely in a country known for its history of electoral unfairness and where political dirty tricks and hardball tactics may have been invented.

* It takes no stretch to know it was no different this time, and Lopez Obrador now demands this injustice be addressed and corrected.

Obrador promised he will not go gently "into that good night" and will fight on to be declared the winner of the election it clearly looks like he won but so far has been denied. He now plans to file new charges of widespread fraud found during the recount process. The discoveries include broken seals on some ballot boxes and evidence showing the number of ballots in ballot boxes differed from the number of blank ballots cast.

Additional evidence will seek to annul the results from thousands of polling stations Felipe Calderon won by a margin great enough to indicate significant manipulation of the count was likely. Lawyers for Mr. Obrador now claim these irregularities alone warrant a full ballot recount, and Mexico City Mayor-elect Marcelo Ebrard said: "There is now so much evidence of fraud that the court will have to act."

Part of that evidence is the illegal campaigning ruling PAN President Vincente Fox did for Mr. Calderon and the fact that Felipe Calderon exceeded his legally allowed campaign spending limits. He did it to run vicious negative advertising through the business-friendly Mexican corporate media calling Obrador an evil twin of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, falsely accusing him of accepting campaign funds from the Venezuelan President, claiming Obrador was guilty of corruption as mayor of Mexico City with no evidence to prove it, and of being a "danger" for Mexico.

It was also learned early on that Felipe Calderon's brother-in-law Diego Hildebrando Zavala wrote the vote-counting software, and it was hacked during the electoral process. This discovery of a close family member having control of the computer systems is evidence enough of grossly improper activity that could easily have resulted in vote count manipulation to give the electoral victory to the candidate he obviously favored. Again, it takes no stretch to imagine Mr. Zavala took full advantage of his ability to decide the outcome.

It should be duly noted and stressed that in Latin America no greater contrast can be drawn in how elections are run than to compare the scrupulously honest and democratic process under Hugo Chavez in Venezuela to the hopelessly corrupted one in Mexico.

It wasn't always that way in Venezuela, but once Hugo Chavez was elected he established constitutionally by national referendum a system of real participatory democracy where the Venezuelan people actually have a say in how the government is run including being the ones to decide in fair, open and honest elections who will be elected including the President.

In Mexico, it's long been just the opposite. There the interests of wealth and power control the process and see to it their chosen candidates run the country for their benefit.

Now Begins Round Two As Lopez Obrador Intends To Fight On

Lopez Obrador made it clear after the July 6 announced results that he intended to continue fighting for electoral justice and has asked his supporters to rally in the streets around the country to demand it. Already major demonstrations have been held in Mexico City's huge Zocalo Plaza.

At a recent one as many as a record near-two million turned out to show their support for their candidate.

* Lopez Obrador now promises this will continue, and in a speech Sunday to many thousands assembled in the Zocalo to hear him he said his campaign for an honest recount will continue indefinitely in the courts and in the streets.

With the many millions of Mexicans fed up with politics as usual, it now remains to be seen if their mass-people power can overcome a Mexican tradition of service in all ways to wealth and power and the people be damned.

It will be an uphill battle, but don't count the people out yet.

August 13, 2006

Revolution of Hope

We hadn’t been in Venezuela for more than three hours and we were already traversing the brilliantly spotless subway system in hope of catching a Sunday Presidential celebration. Earlier, we caught a red-eye flight from Atlanta to Caracas and hadn’t had a wink of sleep. That, and a few beers, will make even the most intrepid of travelers a bit weary.

Fortunately, we managed to pull it together and make it in time to see Hugo Chavez’s entourage and the rally that led up to one of his long-winded speeches. But no matter how long Chavez stands at the pulpit and talks about his political philosophy, his followers always seem to be asking for more.


The event itself was an eye opener for us. Pictures of Chavez and Che were everywhere. From t-shirts to posters, the icons of revolution were ever present. Hope with a “red” flare filled the damp air that day, as did a new brand of socialism. It would be hard for one to walk away from such an experience, where the poor and less fortunate had gathered to hail their leader, and not feel something profound. It was something extraordinary. The only thing that compared to this, for most of us, were the antiwar protests leading up to the second Iraq invasion and the anti-WTO actions in Seattle. No matter what you may think about Chavez or his policies, there is no doubt that Venezuelans adore him.

We were fast waking up to something we hadn’t felt before as we battled Bush day in and day out in North America: revolutionary hope, Bolivarian style. And we hadn’t even had our first sips of Venezuelan coffee yet.


From there we traveled southwest by subway and bus to Caricuao with baseball aficionado Cesar Rengel, an activist and organizer with the Bolivarian Revolutionary group Frente Francisco de Miranda. Rengel was our guide and translator to the Missions, the hugely popular anti-poverty and social welfare programs instituted throughout the country by the Chavez government.

We proceeded first to a modern full-service medical clinic, Clinica Popular Caricuao. The lines were long and doctors were extremely busy when we arrived, so we spoke to a patient waiting for service. Zulay, a raven-haired, middle-aged woman, dressed in a tank top with track pants and baby blue sneakers attested to the improvements in medical care under the administration of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. She said that the clinic was staffed with 60-70 doctors and provided medical care without charge for Venezuelans.


To alleviate the waiting times, a new clinic is being erected nearby which will be staffed by Venezuelan and Cuban physicians. The Cuban doctors, we were told, are a temporary measure until Venezuela has enough of their own to staff the clinics.


Close by the medical clinic under construction is a government mercal (store), Mercado de Alimentos. Lisbeth l. Pineda is the administrative assistant at the mercal with 13 employees. Pineda, sporting in a comfortable gray sweatshirt and jeans, is also pursuing a college degree at one of the Bolivarian universities, created by the Chavez government to do away with illiteracy and make education available for all, something people of impoverished background were previously unable to do. She proudly showed us her university ID card, all the while glowing with a smile that could melt steel. To us, that proud smile neatly symbolizes the sentiment of the Venezuelan masses: a sense of pride that comes in benefiting from and contributing to something revolutionary and life-affirming.


The mercal opened two years ago to provide durable foodstuffs such as rice, beans, dried vegetables and cooking oils. Other mercals also have fresh vegetables and fruits. The products here were often labeled with revolutionary messages. Meat featured Argentinean beef and Brazilian chicken, at 15 percent of the retail cost to Venezuelans. Pineda mentioned that the retail capacity had recently been doubled due to the popularity of the store. The Chavez administration does not want Venezuela’s food needs to be dependent on outside sources, so a concerted effort has been made to produce all foods locally.


Many such missions were dispersed throughout the region. Pineda averred, however, that the mercals, although in competition with local shops, had not affected small business appreciably.


Pineda led us downstairs to where low-cost pharmaceuticals were also sold. Dayana Rosario runs the pharmacy in this Mercal where she showed a variety of Venezuelan and imported drugs for assorted maladies, including contraception.


While strolling outside, Rengel said that the changes in Caricuao have been substantial: "In two years everything has changed." He pointed out how the low-cost housing has been and is being upgraded. The new coats of paint that have been applied to the high-rise complexes, which appear to have never been painted before, were very apparent.


Rengel brought us to an unassuming building where we ascended to the fifteenth floor apartment of a vivacious revolutionary matriarch, Nancy de Ramon. Her passion for the revolution and Chavez were readily apparent. She beamed as she displayed a Chavez photo set in a heart-shaped frame. She also showed a Christmas card adorning Chavez.


Like so many other Venezuelans we met, Nancy said the people were happier under Chavez government because significant changes were being made to their daily lives. She extolled the country's president. Chortled de Ramona, "Chavez has four balls. He has the balls of [turn-of-the-eighteenth-century revolutionary leader] Simón Bolívar's horse and his own balls."


Cesar Rengel and Nancy de Ramon: "we will crush Bush's balls"

When asked what she thought of George Bush's nut sack, she indicated clearly by the downward crushing motion of a clenched fist into the flat palm of the other hand.

On March 16 we visited the Casa de la Alimentación, a mission soup kitchen in Valencia, a town located 115 kilometers (71 miles) west of Caracas. The mission is housed in a modest brick structure with corrugated tin roof, the structure like its patrons, was weathered. It has been open since October 17, 2004 and is looked after by a stout woman with a red revolutionary ball-cap, Corina Torres. Torres explains how the mission, supported by the Ministry of Agriculture, provides two meals a day for homeless and needy people who cannot afford their own food. There is a weekly menu to ensure nutrition and variety for the clientele, which grows as the word of the mission spreads, according to Torres. The mission has a five person staff to run from 6am to 2pm every day. According to records shown to us by Torres, the soup kitchen provides about 85% of the basic daily caloric needs of the people it serves.


Torres sees Chávez as key to the entrenchment and expansion of the missions. "If Chavez is removed from power, the social improvements might end" fears Torres.


A man selling frozen treats in front of the mission was interested to share his thoughts in broken English. Gustavo Gottberg, who describes himself as a writer of mixed German-indigenous descent, is more optimistic about the social changes happening: "If Chávez [is] dead, there are too many people who have learned [about the revolution for it to end]."

"People will want [the social progress] to continue no matter who's in power," says Gottberg.

Noting the enmity between the Venezuelan and US leadership, Gottberg states that Americans are "very good people." Leadership is a different matter, however. Venezuelans likely view George W. Bush similar to how Americans view Hugo Chávez, he says diplomatically.

"Bush is a killer"

The missions are prioritized to providing essential social services to Venezuelans. The clear impression from us all is that the missions are tangible evidence of the Chavez government's commitment to improve the lot of the Venezuelan masses. The missions do something more than look after the educational, medical, and nutritional needs of ordinary Venezuelans. The missions give the people hope for a better tomorrow.

Hope is what threatens US power. Hope is what drives the revolution forward.


* More photos of our visit to Venezuela this past March can be viewed at Brickburner.org.

Joshua Frank, author of Left Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush (Common Courage Press, 2005) edits www.BrickBurner.org. He can be reached at: BrickBurner@gmail.com.

Kim Petersen, Co-Editor of Dissident Voice, lives in the traditional Mi’kmaq homeland colonially designated Nova Scotia, Canada. He can be reached at: kim@dissidentvoice.org.

Sunil K. Sharma is the Editor and Publisher of Dissident Voice, based in Santa Rosa, California. He can be reached at: editor@dissidentvoice.org.

August 12, 2006

Chavez Puts Forth Candidacy

Caracas
The official presentation of President Hugo Chavez s candidacy on Saturday marked the beginning of the final stage of a campaign that shows the Venezuelan statesman as the favorite candidate to win the elections in December.

After seven years in power, Chavez, who continues to be very popular, has structured a political front that has the ambitious goal of winning 10 million votes from 16.3 million registered voters.

Although achieving that quantitative goal will be very difficult, his followers have taken it as a challenge to defeat Chavez s strongest rival: abstentionism.

Chavez is supported by his Movimiento V Republica and the Patria Para Todos, Podemos and Communist parties, among other lesser groups and social organizations totalling three million members.

The Venezuelan president has said that the "Bolivarian Revolution", as he has defined the process he is leading, will enter a new phase after 2007 and demands the consolidation of unity between the people, the nation and power.

According to his own words, the candidacy responds to the current political situation and to the socio-cultural, economic and social transformation of the nation, in which the people and the institutions play a major role.

Chavez, who proposes a socialist model of development to eradicate poverty and injustice, assures that during his new mandate, he will further boost his project, which is characterized by a highly-social content and fair distribution of the country s oil revenues.
*
Unity Candidate to Run Against Chavez
n Venezuela this week, the opposition selected Manuel Rosales, governor of the state of Zulia, as its multi-party unity candidate to run against President Hugo Chavez in December.

Rosales will ask the National Electoral Counsel for transparent electronic voting conditions to avoid fraud. Rosales must face voter abstention (35 percent) and political "dirty war" tactics -- the insults he will surely receive from the present government, headed by Chavez, who wants to remain in power.

In brief, Rosales will have to compete in an environment that will not be good for him. His strength may lie in mobilizing those who would not vote for Chavez (70 percent of the electorate). The danger is that they may be dispersed by teargas and even gunfire -- a strategy utilized by the dictatorial government.

What is the difference between Chavez and Rosales?

Chavez is a political autocrat and myth maniac. He promised a revolution to diminish poverty, but poverty over the last seven years has only increased. Much of the money made through the exploitation of petroleum has paid for his visits to countries like Russia, Iraq, Iran, and Vietnam.

Chavez plans to press society and compress the political system -- a la neofascism. The poor must hide themselves, in red clothes, and demonstrate their loyalty to receive aid. Under Chavez, Venezuela has ceased to be a real democracy.

Oil output from the state oil company (PDVSA) has declined by about 60 percent, a trend analysts say accelerated in the past year because of poor technical management.

Chavez's push to extend his influence throughout Latin America and the Caribbean with promises of cheap oil for friends and allies may be overstretching PDVSA's finances. Venezuela currently supplies about 300,000 barrels per day to Cuba, Nicaragua, and others under favorable long-term financing arrangements. This week, Venezuela signed a deal to send oil to town mayors in Nicaragua who are aligned with the left-wing Sandinista party.

Rosales, 53, has 27 year of experience in politics. He is one of only two opposition governors (out of 24). He governs the most populous state, Zulia, which has 3.2 million inhabitants. Rosales was re-elected in 2004. He is a successful regional politician. One need only compare the abandoned historic center of Caracas to the pleasant life available in Maracaibo, the capital of Zulia, for evidence of his success.

The decision to select Rosales as the opposition's unity candidate will serve to put politics above the anti-politics that has ruled the country for the last seven years.
*
Is Chavez's Opposition For Real? - TIME Magazine
With a presidential election only four months away, Venezuela's virtually unchallenged leader may finally face a unified front...
...

Bolivia: The policy of "Gas for Sea" will continue to be a lever

Joaquín Lavin interviewed by
Andrés Pérez González
August 10, 2006
Argenpress

In an exclusive interview, Bolivia's powerful Hydrocarbons Minister contends that the recent visit of Joaquín Lavin (2) to La Paz "takes place in the context of constantly more frequent pronouncements in favour of a Bolivian route to the sea. He firmly asserts that his country "can indeed talk of having suffered decades of hostility" from Chile.

It is not easy to get to Evo Morales' point man in the strategic area of energy. Not because he avoids journalists, since he worked as one for years, complementing that, certainly, with legal work and, in the 1990s, with his duties as a deputy for the Patriotic Conscience Party, a now defunct group of the nationalist Left.

He is hard to interview because he is responsible for setting in motion the first steps of the hydrocarbons nationalization plan, unexpectedkly decreed on May 1st by Morales, the former coca growers leader, now head of government in our neighbouring altiplano country. His diary is full of meetings but Andres Solis Rada (b. 1939) made time to answer our questions.

ERCILLA: Do you feel more comfortable in your post following the recent support President Evo Morales gave you after rumours that you might resign?

Solis Rada: I feel comfortable not just for the support you mention but also from the way way I identify with President Evo Morales across the board on national policy. The starting point of that policy has been the nationalization of gas and oil, which has reopened the process of the Bolivian national revolution, but this time with the leading participation of social movements and indigenous peoples led by Evo Morales, now become the catalyst of the nation of the oppressed.

ERCILLA: How would you describe his relationship with the current Bolivian government? What kind of leadership does he offer, as President?

Solis Rada: President Morales has built his leadership in the Rural Workers Federations of the Cochabamba Valley (in the centre of the country) characterized by collective, open, democratic decision making. These antecedents explain why his policy is summed up in two simple, profound slogans: "Zero corruption and zero nepotism". If either of these scourges is discovered the dismissal of any official, however high-ranking he may be, is instant. This has created a climate of trust, mutual respect and friendly relations between myself and the President which makes me feel privileged.

ERCILLA: Do you foresee success for the legal demand, recently presented, apparently in the context of an audit, against controversial former President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada (exiled in the US after his resignation in 2003) for alleged irregular contracts with the Enron oil company?

Solis Rada: The legal proceedings we have just started with the Bolivians responsible for signing contracts that handed the corrupt Enron 40% of the shares of the gas pipeline from Bolivia to Brazil have a legal basis and are also based on national dignity. It was no longer tolerable for my country , being one of those most affected by the US oil company, not to take a measure already put into practice by more than 40 countries around the world. The Public Ministry will undertake the necessary legal action which ought to culminate in convictions of those at fault.

Thermally generated electricity

ERCILLA: Does Bolivia still maintain its policy of "Gas for Sea" vis-a-vis Chile?

Soils Rada: The policy of "Gas for Sea" is a response to the referendum of July 18th 2004 when the Bolivian people supported it on a vote. That same referendum has provided the basis for the nationalization of hydrocarbon resources and so that YPFB (Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos) (3) might recover the shares of the oil businesses that were in the hands of two pension fund administrators. For that reason one cannot take just one part of the referendum in isolation. However, the government has not taken up the formula "Gas for Sea" dogmatically, since it has modified it by offering to sell Chile thermally generated electricity, which would be a beneficial commercial transaction for Chile to the extent that it would meet the energy needs of its big mining companies , while benefiting Bolivia because it would sell gas with value added, which would boost income wihtout setting aside its policy of natural gas for sea which will continue to be used as leverage for an end to the country's unjust geographic enclosure.

ERCILLA: Do you think this policy you mention of selling thermally generated electricity to Chile while keeping natural gas to negotiate a route to the sea is viable?

Solis Rada: The answer to that question is in the hands of the governmnet in Santiago.

ERCILLA: Do you not think the big mining companies in northern Chile might well junk any eventual agreement with Bolivia on account of a perceived high "geopolitical" risk?

Solis Rada: That is a brittle argument. The governments of Evo Morales and Michelle Bachelet are characterized by stability and seriousness. Right now enormous oil transactions are being carried out with countries like Nigeria and Iran, beside which those with Bolivia are models of solidity and confidence.

ERCILLA: Do you also think that following the gas agreement between La Paz and Buenos Aires, Chile ought to pay a "more than reasonable" price as the Argentine Planning Minister Julio de Vido put it?

Solis Rada: It has been remarked to the point of exhaustion that the most expensive energy is the one you don't have. Mexico has just offered to buy gas from Bolivia at international prices, namely those current between Mexico and the United States. Bolivia likewise offers to sell Chile thermally generated electricity at "reasonable prices".

ERCILLA: Why should one not regard the agreement signed between Argentina and Bolivia as a "hostile" act against Chilean interests?

Solis Rada: The dominant privileged sectors in Chile have no right to talk about alleged Bolivian hostility. We have said before and we repeat. What's really hostile is to lock up a neighbouring country for 127 years. Hostility is signing with Peru the Complementary Protocol to the Treaty of 1929 by which Lima and Santiago agreed jointly to take over Bolivia's maritime coast. Hostility is to freely use for over 102 years the waters of the springs of the Silala (4) (misnamed an "international river"). Hostility means to preach a policy of commercial openness but to close it off for really important economic products like beef, sugar or soya. Hostility is to sow military mines along the frontier for no good reason. Bolivia can certainly talk about hostility that it has suffered for decades.

ERCILLA: From your point of view, is the announcement by the Bolivian and Chilean sub-Secretaries Mauricio Dorfler y Alberto Van Klaveren regarding the inclusion of access to the sea in the bilateral agenda really a step forward when earlier governments were already talking about a dialogue "excluding nothing" and the Chilean side has made clear that there's no talk of ceding sovereignty?

Solis Rada: I think that on Mauricio Dorfler's part there was good faith, goodwill and a sincere hope of resolving our common problems. I hope that the actions of the Chilean government demonstrate similar purpose to those of Bolivia

ERCILLA: What opinion or importance do you give the recent visit to La Paz of Joaquin Lavin when he declared "for me it's obvious that the matter of access to the sea has to be on the agenda of Bolivia and Chile"?


Solis Rada: What's going on is that the world changes, despite those who try to deny it. Sr. Lavin's position is in the context of constantly more frequent pronouncements in favour of Bolivia's right to a route to the sea, from those made by a highranking head of the Navy (ERCILLA: this probably refers to statements by Jorge Arnacibia UDI senator and former Navy chief) to the statements by social movments that met in Chile's national stadium to show solidarity with Evo Morales and Bolivia's access to the sea the day Sra. Bachelet asumed her country's presidency). On this point I cannot refrain from expressing my admiration and respect for people like Pedro Godoy and Leonardo Jeffs, who, in the tradition of Gabriela Mistral and Oscar Pinochet de la Barra, advocate a route to the sea for Bolivia via the Centre of Chilean Studies (Cedech).


Axes

ERCILLA: Will Bolivia participate in the Southern Gas Pipeline project ( the initiative of the Venezuelan President to build a gas pipeline carrying gas over 6000 kilometres from Venezuela via Brazil to Argetina, Paraguay and Uruguay)?

Solis Rada: Bolivia will participate on three conditions: that an important part of Bolivian gas is processed inside Bolivia; secondly that the business is run under the leadership of the State oil companies of the countries you mention and thirdly that the producer country receives a share in the profit of the gas sold in the destination countries.

ERCILLA: Do you still maintain your assertion that, on your country's request to increase the gas price, Brazil took a hard negotiating line because President Luiz Inacio Lula Da Silva "doesn't want to lose votes" faced with his campaign for re-election? How do you see the progress of these negotiations given that in order to avoid international arbitration an agreement needs to be reached by mid-August?

Solis Rada: It is difficult to negotiate with Brazil before, during and after its elections. Bolivia will do everything possible to sort out the pricing problem without going to arbitration. We hope Brasilia will do the same.

ERCILLA: How do you think the alleged axis configured between Havana- Caracas-La Paz might facilitate closer relations between Bolivia and Chile, taking into account that La Moneda (5) has legitimate differences with the model of that axis?

Solis Rada: Bolivia and Chile have the legitimate right to maintain their own visions on the economy and their international alliances, which should not stop them from finding their own points of agreement.

ERCILLA: From your point of view, what paths should Palacio Quemado and La Moneda and their respective peoples follow?

Solis Rada: President Evo Morales has repeated the fraternal nature of the Chilean and Bolivian peoples. It has been the oligarchies and centres of world power that have involved them in conflicts that set us against each other and weaken us. I am a supporter of the Bolivarian ideals and of the Latin American Homeland which I consider a socialist, pacifist, humanist and democratic ideal capable of showing new directions to a world that is disintegrating with ecocide, war and the arms race engaged in by the centres of world power who think they are the owners of truth, rationality and common sense.

Translated from Spanish into English by toni solo, a member of Tlaxcala (www.tlaxcala.es), the network of translators for linguistic diversity. This translation is Copyleft.

Translator's notes
1. A Chilean review.
2. Leader of the Chilean right wing opposition.
3. Bolivia's State energy resources company.
4. Silala, the Silala is a water source composed of around 90 springs and other water sources on Bolivian territory that has been a source of conflict between Chile and Bolivia as a result of water needs in northern Chile, especially for big mining operations there.
4. La Moneda, the residence of the President of Chile.
5. Palacio Quemado, residence of the President of Bolivia

Attorney General of Oaxaca Issues Arrest Warrants For Fifty Movement Leaders

by Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca
Three Indigenous Triquis Shot Dead On The Road In Putla; Protest March Attacked Leaving One Dead, Two Wounded

OAXACA CITY, August 10, 2006: The government of Oaxaca has advised the public that it will arrest all the leaders of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) to “guarantee the safety” of the state, the Secretary of Public Security Lino Celaya Luria said yesterday.

This clarifies the sudden rash of plainclothes operators snatching men off the streets. That’s what they mean by “arrests.”


The August 10 march in which one demonstrator was killed and two others injured by unknown shooters.
Photo: D.R. 2006 Rochelle Gause
Celaya indicated that the government has identified sixteen leaders of social organizations who, along with leaders of Section 22 of the teachers’ union, have directed the complete blockade of government buildings and the taking of highways and public offices of the state of Oaxaca.

State Attorney General Lizbeth Caña Cadeza has begun to implement the ruling by issuing fifty previous warrants based on past crimes. Caña Cadeza said that the “leaders” of APPO are among those fifty names. The charges are based on both actual “crimes” and the intellectual authoring of those crimes, both common and federal.

One hour after this statement, state police intercepted the founder of the Union of Poor Campesinos, Germán Mendoza Nube, who is a member of the directing committee of APPO. Along with him, they picked up Eliel Vásquez and Leobardo López who were assisting Mendoza to leave his car because he uses a wheel chair and is unable to walk.

APPO immediately called for a blockade on every road out of town, to prevent the transportation Mendoza out of the state. The three snatched men have not yet been found. In addition, three others disappeared. They are teachers who set out looking for German Mendoza, and never returned. They have been identified by name, and the people asked to keep a lookout.

The wife of Leobardo López reported on Channel 9 Wednesday night, August 9, that she was shoved to the ground with her baby in her arms when the police carried out the “arrest”. She said that her husband was not affiliated with APPO but just happened to be helping Mendoza at that moment. The police were in civilian clothes and did not offer any reason or warrant when they hefted Mendoza into their vehicle and drove away.

In all these kidnappings the vehicles have been without license plates.

August 8, presumably before the warrants were issued, Catarino Torres Pereda, a leader of the indigenous rights group CODECI was “arrested” in Tuxtepec and secretly driven to the state of Mexico and imprisoned there, in the maximum-security prison La Palma. The charges against Torres Pereda were common crimes, leaving unexplained why he had to be transported out of state to a maximum-security prison.

The national daily newspaper Reforma reported on August 10 that seven other state governors from Oaxaca governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz’ Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) back Ruiz Ortiz in his efforts to recapture control of the state, although it was not explained what the nature of their backing might be. The governors issued a statement reported as, “We can not permit that the state of law be damaged with impunity and that a person democratically elected, by processes validated by the electoral authorities and public opinion, be subject to unreasonable pressure or intolerance.”

The PRI-ruled states named in the report are Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Colima, Oaxaca, Mexico, Durango, Chihuahua, and Hidalgo. Their statement was endorsed by the secretary general of the PRI, Rosario Green.

Meanwhile, members of APPO detained three of the five presumed thugs who infiltrated the movement to gain access to Radio Universidad, the student-occupied university radio station which had been broadcasting on behalf of APPO. Speaking for APPO, Rosendo Ramirez Sánchez identified by name the three who were captured and turned over to the Red Cross. One was wounded on the head.

The rector of the Benito Juarez Autonomous University of Oaxaca, Francisco Martinez Neri, said that the university has no connection to APPO, that the radio station was captured by students, and he has lodged a complaint with the Secretary of Communication and Transport. The radio station was damaged when the accused, (Carlos Alberto Paz Vazquez, Salvador Jimenez Baltasar and Rene Vazquez Castillejos), along with two accomplices who set afire a bus outside the station as a diversionary tactic, entered the station and threw corrosive acid on the equipment.

At 7:15 in the morning of August 8, two individuals, one of them reportedly armed with an Uzi, assaulted the offices of the local newspaper Las Noticias, which has supported the APPO. The assailants shot at the ceiling. Some 60 people were present in the offices on Independencia Street, where Noticias relocated after an attack on their previous building two years ago by the former PRI governor Murat. The attackers stole a laptop and a registration notebook, but they didn’t take the money from the cash box.

Six people were injured by falling pieces of ceiling and lights.

On this same day, an instructor of dentistry at the university was shot and killed in his car.

The Las Noticias headline from August 9 proclaims, “[Governor] Operating Undercover Terrorist Plan.”

No shit, guys.

APPO, for its part, called on the federal government to “stop the wave of terror against civil leaders, and not permit their transport to the maximum security prison.” APPO directly accuses Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz; the Secretary of Government, Heliodoro Díaz Escárraga; his predecessor, Jorge Franco Vargas, and the Secretary of Public Security, Lino Celaya Luría. APPO calls them “intellectual authors of this attack on constitutional rights.”

Then, Radio Cacerolas (the new name for the relocated Radio Universidad) reported early today, August 10, that three indigenous Triqui members of MULTI (Independent Unifying Movement of the Triqui Struggle) were shot near Putla last night. The radio reported that the Triquis, who belong to both MULTI and APPO were on their way to a meeting. They were killed by unknown shooters in an ambush on the highway 125 Putla de Guerrero-Santiago Juxtlahuaca, in the Mixteca region. Andrés Santiago Cruz, one of the victims, was a municipal agent of the community of Paraje Pérez, part of Santiago Juxtlahuaca, and a member of the commission for vigilance and safety of the APPO in the zoccalo encampment. The two other victims were Pedro Martínez Martínez, 70, a MULTI leader in Paraje Pérez, and a boy with them, Octavio Martínez Martínez, 12.

Jorge Albino Ortiz, director of MULTI and a member of the provisional committee of APPO, said that his companions were traveling on route to Paraje Pérez, when at about 1:00 they were attacked. Brothers Ignacio and Agustín Martínez Velásquez were wounded and taken to the Hospital for Women and Children, in Putla de Guerrero, where they were treated.

Thursday, a march of about 20,000 (this number consisted mainly of members the general public because many teachers remaining in the blockades) set out at 4:00 PM in repudiation of the governor’s actions. In the neighborhood of Ex-Marquesado three people were shot by unknown persons along the way. The victims were taken to the nearby Santa Maria Clinic. One of the three died of his wounds.

An APPO spokesperson on Radio Cacerolas at 9:00 PM said in part, “The march was to reply to Ruiz and the media and Fox and all the branches of government with a show of strength in the face of the detention of German Mendoza and his companions, and also to the detention of Catarino Torres, and to reply to the assassination of three MULTI companions including one twelve years old… The face of Ruiz was the face of these events and the stupid declarations of Secretary Celaya Luria regarding the leaders of the movement. This movement does not have leaders; it is built on the bases…Today the mobilization showed the strength of the people. APPO has ability to mobilize because it has lifted the hopes of the people. What produces rage in Ulises is that we are now building the bases, and transmitting the voice of the people… The solidarity of the people is the way to save this movement. Nobody else will do it for us… Repression and fascism cannot continue. Strengthen the encampments, everybody from all the neighborhoods come…”

The whereabouts of 500 agents of the Federal Preventive Police (PFP) is unknown.

Leftists protest at Mexico tax office and TV station

by Frank Jack Daniel
MEXICO CITY
Leftist demonstrators claiming electoral fraud blocked access to Mexico's main tax office on Friday, hitting the government in the pocket for backing conservative presidential vote winner Felipe Calderon.

Several thousand protesters waving banners in support of leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador surrounded the building, run by the Finance Ministry, and prevented employees from entering.

Leftists have targeted banks and highway toll booths this week in protests to demand a total recount of the election, narrowly won by pro-business candidate Calderon.

Lopez Obrador's Party of the Democratic Revolution said the ministry was in league with business groups that financed Calderon's campaign.

"The Finance Ministry is one of the key points in the financing of the electoral fraud," said Marti Batres, head of the party in the capital.

Several hundred Lopez Obrador followers protested outside the news studios of Televisa network, and pasted a poster reading "No To Lies" over an entrance.

Protests were stepped up after a court last weekend ordered a recount of votes from only 9 percent of polling stations, rather than the full recount sought by Lopez Obrador.

A former mayor of Mexico City, Lopez Obrador called on foreigners on Friday to pressure the court to order a recount of all 40 million or so votes.

"GANDHI, LUTHER KING"

"We need the goodwill and support of those in the international community with a personal, philosophical or commercial interest in Mexico to encourage it to do the right thing and allow a full recount," he said in an editorial article in The New York Times.

He said his street protests, which have paralyzed the city center for almost two weeks, were part of a long tradition of peaceful civil resistance.

"In the spirit of Gandhi and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., we seek to make our voices heard. We lack millions for advertising to make our case," the leftist wrote.
...

August 11, 2006

Violence flares in south Mexico

Gunmen have fired on striking teachers marching through the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca, killing one man.

Protesters responded by setting fire to a house where the gunmen fled. They blamed Governor Ulises Ruiz for the attack, a charge his office rejected.

Tens of thousands of teachers have been on strike for weeks, demanding higher pay and the governor's resignation.

Mr Ruiz is accused of rigging the 2004 election to gain office and of using force to suppress dissent.

Barricades

The killing of a teacher on Thursday came after months of mounting violence in the city.

The dead man was identified as 50-year-old Jose Jimenez.

A house where the bullets where believed to have come from was set on fire by the protesters.

A spokesman for the Oaxaca People's Assembly, which organised the march, said protesters had captured four suspected gunmen, the Associated Press news agency reports.

The city has seen continuing protests since June, after police attacked a teachers' rally.

About 2,000 people have been camping out in the centre of the city, where they have set up barricades and smashed windows.

A radio station and a newspaper which have expressed support for the protests have been attacked by gunmen - two reporters have been injured and equipment damaged and stolen.

On Wednesday, a group of Triqui Indians driving to the city to join the protests was ambushed and three people, including a 12-year-old boy, were killed. It is not clear whether their deaths were linked to the protests.

Latin America rebellion against US-backed globalization gathering steam

by John Rapley
Outside observers have been fascinated by the populist bandwagon rolling through Latin America. With leftist governments coming to power in one election after another, and with these governments speaking out against what they see as undue US influence, it seems that the rebellion against globalization is gathering steam.

Some have even discerned the hand of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, stage-managing events as he builds an anti-American alliance across the Americas.

There is little question that neoliberal globalization has been encountering increasing resistance in Latin America, as elsewhere, over the last decade. Some of this account for the rise of left-wing governments. But careful observers have also been detecting that the populist tide is splitting into two currents.

The first, associated with Hugo Chavez, sees authoritarian populists reverting to Latin American traditions of strong states, anti-Americanism, and a radical but patronage-based politics. Countries which are said to have been swept in this tide include Venezuela, Argentina and Bolivia. The second current comprises left-wing governments, like those of Brazil and Chile, which are progressive and relatively liberal. In short, not all left-wing governments back Mr. Chavez' vision.

Now, furthermore, its popularity is also finding its limits. Firstly, of course, Fidel Castro's health issues put a question-mark over one of Chavez' allies. Secondly, recent presidential elections in Peru and Mexico have revealed some of the limits of authoritarian populism.

In Peru, Chavez ally Ollanta Humala was defeated in June elections. Some Peruvian analysts believe his alliance with Chavez whose importance was probably exaggerated by the latter man anyhow -- did him no good. Mr. Humala did not lose to a conservative, mind you. The eventual victor was Alan Garcia, himself a populist and gifted orator who last ran Peru in the 1980s and left it awash in corruption and inflation.

Lesson learnt

Mr. Garcia says he has learned form his past mistakes. His former enemies in the country's privileged classes united behind him to withstand Humala, and he made an explicit point of repudiating Chavez and his vision for the region.

Mexico's case is somewhat different. There, a leftist candidate, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, apparently lost by a slender margin to the conservative Felipe Calderon. Convinced that Calderon's supporters stole the election, Lopez Obrador has taken his struggle to the streets of Mexico City, of which he was once the mayor. Huge crowds have attended rallies, blocked roads and engaged in a campaign of civil disobedience to try and provoke a recount.

So far, the electoral authorities are not yielding to his demands. But the drama of the left-right split in this presidential election obscures the disappointing results for anyone looking for another brick in an anti-US wall. Firstly, the conservatives appeared headed to certain victory just a few months ago. Mr. Calderon's surge, and his party's strong showing in Congressional elections, indicate that even if Lopez Obrador were able to snatch a victory, his government would probably have to govern cautiously.

* Besides, despite Lopez Obrador's verbal warmth to Chavez, his radicalism might be overstated. He essentially favors the continuation of neoliberal policies, and does not oppose the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Not that long ago, Latin America's pendulum appeared to be swinging decisively against the US and neoliberal globalization. But recent events have begun to complicate this picture.

A new political dispensation appears to be taking hold across the continent, but it also appears to be moderating somewhat.

Despite disenchantment with many elements of neoliberalism, voters in many countries seem to like their liberty and democracy more than the siren calls of a bold new era.

For now, the populist bandwagon seems to have slowed.

Benicio del Toro calls for respect for Cuban sovereignty

Hollywood actor, Benicio del Toro, winner of an Oscar for best supporting actor in Traffic, by Steven Soderbergh, has called for respect for Cuban sovereignty.

Del Toro, an actor of Puerto Rican nationality, added his voice to the 3,780-plus intellectuals and artists from more than 50 countries who are condemning the aggressive and interventionist tone of the George W. Bush government toward Cuba.

The movie star, a man dedicated to bringing art to the masses, through which he came to identify with Cuba, visited Havana a few years ago with director Soderbergh and the producers of Traffic to premiere that film on the island.

In this way he joins a prestigious gathering of actors and artists who are defending Cuba’s sovereignty in the face of the powerful forces that are threatening it.

Danny Glover, Harry Belafonte, Leticia Spiller, María Rojo, Gael García Bernal, Rodrigo de la Serna and Santiago García can also be found in this sizeable group.

Other signatories are Nobel Prize winners Nadine Gordimer, José Saramago, Wole Soyinka, Darío Fo, Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Rigoberta Menchú, Desmond Tutu and Zhores Alfiorov.

In addition Brazilian musician Egberto Gismonti, for many the new Heitor Villa Lobos due to his vast experimental work, has spoken out in favor of Cuba’s defense in the face of threats from the United States.

Gismonti, just before leaving Havana where he offered an unforgettable recital with the Camerata Romeu, expressed his sentiments of solidarity on this issue in a letter.

The renowned director of Reed: Insurgent Mexico, currently retired, added his name to the document which calls on the U.S. to respect of Cuba’s sovereignty.

In other news, Catalan writer Rosa Regás, 2001 Planeta Award winner for the “Dorothy’s Song” yesterday alerted the world regarding about a possible U.S. aggression against Cuba.

United States has attempted to create fifth columnist element in Venezuela

by Kenneth T. Tellis
So, those people who style themselves Cuban exiles in Miami want Cuba to return to the old ways of capitalism? Remember capitalism has never been democracy, but a form of rule by corruption and not law. What are these exiles really asking for is the question?

Cuba will all its lack or the daily necessities of people, does not have problems like the US where people suffer from every known disease, including overweight. Why is that so?

Because in its need for so-called daily necessities, there are no McDonald's, Burger Kings, Kentucky Fried Chicken and a host of other Fast-Food Joints, which load up children and adults, with sugars, starches and cholesterol galore.

Which in turn create the need for drugs to cure the the problems of heart, diabetes and a host of other diseases.

Who gets the money from this opulent overweight society, if not the drug companies?

I doubt if Cuba, with its lack of these killer foods has a problem of people being overweight, having heart complaints, diabetes, and the many diseases that plague the US or societies that over indulge in unhealthy practices.

Venezuela too, does not have so many people with the above problems. Why? Because, only societies where the Fast-Buck and Fast-Food rule has these problems. There is very little that a healthy society needs in the area of drugs ... because there aren't these problems which need them.

In the capitalist societies of today, nowhere does democracy exist.

For capitalists to claim that they further democracy, is like Adolf Hitler claiming to support human rights.

We know that it is just not possible, because the fuel that runs the capitalist system is money and corruption. It is corporate corruption that feeds and nurtures the capitalist system, where democracy is either non-existent or under wraps, but never in practice.

* The word democracy has been bandied around by capitalists, not just in the US but all over the world.

Note how that word democracy has been used by the Bush capitalist regime. When the elected government of Pakistan was overthrown by a military dictatorship, the US denounced it. Yet, when that Pakistani military dictatorship cosies-up to the Bush regime in support of its Afghan invasion, the Pakistani military junta suddenly became a democracy in US eyes...

* In other words if a dictatorship colludes with the Bush regime it suddenly becomes a democracy.

The second factor is, the moment India cosies-up to the Bush regime, it suddenly became the world's largest democracy. But is India in fact really a democracy? That can be answered immediately. What kind of democracy has a caste system based on religion, that has endured for thousands of years? Only a sham democracy would claim that a system which creates indentured slaves of millions of people, could make such a claim false claim. No where on earth has there been such human degradation and bondage by a religious group than in India. It continues unabated and is promoted by the US in subtle ways.

The outsourcing of jobs to India by various US corporations, does not reach the masses of those who belong to lower caste. Is that not the promotion of slavery? Why is the US itself a sham democracy claiming to fight for and further democracy, when the opposite is true?

In order to make new allies, the US is cultivating friendship with India. India swallowing the bait, is becoming a dupe of US imperialism. What are the real US intentions towards India? To use that country as a buffer against China's might. China on the other hand is making trade and other alliances in Asia and around the world. Militarily, China could beat India hands down. India's nuclear, missile and space programs are all backed by the US. But India could in the long run pay the piper for the US, which is using her, if a war with the Sleeping Dragon ever took place. India, also borders China and lost badly to China in 1962, when it assumed that China was weak. In reality, it is not China that is weak, but India is.

To say that China is not a democracy, and India is, is to lie through one's teeth.

In fact neither India nor China are democracies ... but US spin-doctors keep pushing their propaganda that India is a democracy and China is not!

Of recent in order to push China, the US has used India to muck-rake on Tibet. The Indian government and people have made an industry of the Chinese occupation of Tibet, and are milking it for all its worth. But, it is quite clear that India's attempts to bring up the Tibet issue, are based on their own agenda, and not does not really have the interests of Tibetans at heart. For all its claims to care about Tibet and the Dalai Lama, where was India when the Chinese People's Army invaded Tibet? Nowhere on the scene is the answer. But today, all and sundry in India, create movements which use Tibet as thumping ground against China.

These at the very least are fronts used by the Indian government to gain world attention upon itself as a great liberator and a country that cares for human rights, when nothing could be further from that fact. No one denies that the Tibet is under Chinese occupation ... but why does the pot (India) call the kettle (China) black? India has no more interest in Tibet than it has in removing the embedded caste system that has plagued it for centuries.

If China was such a vicious country as made out by the US, why is it the biggest producer of goods for the US market? Surely, one does not trade with despots. Unless of course there is much to be gained. The reality is, that in US policy, the ends justify the means.

The US invasion of Iraq, is pretty clear, it never was to promote democracy, but get control of its OIL FIELDS. This just another case on annexation by military force, which is no different to China's invasion of Tibet. Note: India has never denounced the US for its occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. Why is the question? Is India afraid that to do so, might anger the US, which it does not want to do.

The direct intervention into elections in Latin America, by US agencies that donate money to candidates that are in effect US puppets and are fronts for US-owned corporations. The US has openly violated the laws of many Latin American states by contributing to political parties that it favors. It attempted this and failed miserably in Venezuela. Failing that, it threatened to invade the country.

Why would the US want to invade a country that has democratically elected its leader?

The reasons are the same as in Iraq. Venezuela, like Iraq has OIL, and the US believes that it must control the oil resources of the world, by whatever mean necessary. It has attempted to create a fifth columnist element in Venezuela, funded through different so-called programs for the promotion of democracy, which are actually, US government agencies dedicated to the overthrow of the legally elected government of Venezuela.

In Bolivia, the US got a black-eye, when the candidate that it favored and funded, lost the election to a peoples candidate there is still unrest in Bolivia, as the US is not satisfied with what happened there. Now, we come to the recent Mexican election, where US money was powered in, and a pro-US candidate seemingly won the election. The question is, was the election rigged the same way the US election in 2004 was rigged?

* We are now coming to the Middle East. The US has roiled up the conflict in the Middle East, but it could be a case of smoke and mirrors. The real aim of the US is to seize the OIL FIELDS in Iran.

But, just how does it aim to achieve this? Why of course, by dragging Iran into the conflicts in Palestine and Lebanon. Towards year's end the US will, without doubt, invade Iran and seize its OIL FIELDS in a blitzkrieg war. But, then there are other powers watching the US today that might intervene.

These two, are Russia and People's China ... for the US, the invasion of Iran is a gamble. But a gamble, that might cost the US dearly.

Does it have the capacity to fight a war on many different fronts?

What happened to the Germans that were fighting on the western front in Europe, and then got themselves into a war on the eastern front in the Soviet Union?

Why, of course, STALINGRAD?

Perhaps that is how the US dreams of a WORLD EMPIRE will end! They will be faced with a war on all fronts, with nowhere to retreat.

Venezuela will deliver more than 20 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Lebanon

Venezuela will deliver more than 20 tonnes of humanitarian aid to Lebanon, coordinated by the country's Foreign Ministry and the Disasters and Civil Protection Administration (DCPA).

DCPA national director, Antonio Rivero said food, drinking water and medicines would be sent using the same Boeing 707 and Conviasa 737-300 of the Air Force, which repatriated more than 500 Venezuelans fleeing Israel's bombardment of Lebanon.

Doctors and paramedics will travel with the aid.

"This is the aid that we have been requested due to the armed conflict in the Middle East," Rivero told reporters at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, just outside the capital Caracas.

More than 920 people have died since July 12, when Israel started a campaign of air strikes after the Lebanon-based guerilla group, Hezbollah, kidnapped two Israeli soldiers and killed eight others.

Sao Paolo: Gangs attack the state on all fronts

by Collin Sick
The violence that terrorised Sao Paolo, Brazil's most populous state, has returned, with powerful criminal gangs torching courthouses, incinerating buses, attacking banks and throwing homemade bombs at police stations.

In three nights of uproar that have set large areas of the financial capital, Sao Paolo city, ablaze, police have killed at least a dozen suspects while gang members have targeted hundreds of sites throughout the state.

It is the third time in four months that urban unrest has rocked Brazil, orchestrated by a crime organisation called Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) who operate out of Sao Paolo's chaotic and overcrowded prison system.
...
In July, they unleashed more than 120 attacks over a three-day span that ended with seven deaths and 60 arrests.

Arthur Ituassu, a professor of international relations in Rio, said: "The only good news about what happened in Sao Paulo is that it will ensure that public security will become one of the main issues of the presidential elections in October."

Gun crime in Brazil has spiralled out of control in recent years, making the country among the most dangerous in the world.

Murder is now the prime cause of death among young adults, who now make up a majority of the population.

Nearly half of those murders are taking place in Sao Paolo and Rio De Janeiro and from 1985-2005, the number of Brazilians murdered has grown by 237 per cent.

Against this violent backdrop there is also serious social deprivation.

Three-quarters of the country's municipalities have no cultural or leisure facilities; 96 per cent have no cinemas; 86 per cent have no theatre; 25 per cent have no library.

The latest surge in violence comes in election year in Brazil and critics of left-leaning President Lula da Silva have accused him of using the unrest for political gain.

Most observers feel the violence will hurt the chances of Geraldo Alckmin, one of Lula's main rivals in the October election.
...

August 10, 2006

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says Fidel Castro is in 'great battle for life'

by NATALIE OBIKO PEARSON
MUNICIPIO INDEPENDENCIA, Venezuela
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Thursday that Fidel Castro is in a "great battle for life," but said the Cuban leader himself gave him reason to be optimistic about a quick recovery.

Chavez's statement appears to be the most dire wording yet from a close Castro ally in describing what ails the 79-year-old Castro - perhaps the first by someone close to him that characterizes his condition as life-threatening.

"From here, let's pray to God for Fidel and his recovery, and he's fighting a great battle," Chavez said in a televised speech from the eastern state of Anzoategui.

Chavez said a messenger brought him word from Castro himself on Wednesday - "a message that filled me with more optimism, with more faith."

"Among other things Fidel told me... 'I keep saying Chavez, God help Chavez and his friends,'" Chavez said.

"I wrote to him in my own handwriting last night, in the early morning, to send it with the messenger who was returning immediately: 'You are fighting a great battle every day, all these nights," Chavez continued.

"I told him, 'Here we're with you every second, every minute, every hour, every day, every night of that great battle for life that you are fighting from your heart, from your soul, from your innards, from your greatness," Chavez said. "It's a battle, and I know, Fidel, that we're going to win it, too. We are prevailing and we will prevail."

Chavez described Castro's health troubles as an "ambush," coming so soon after Castro gave a three-hour speech in Cordoba, Argentina, and visited the childhood home of his fellow revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara.

Chavez said he and Castro hugged at the door of the plane, promised to see each other again soon, "and then suddenly the surprise, but that's life."

"It's life, biology," Chavez said. "And it's also 80 years that you've lived, Fidel Castro, and what an 80 years Fidel has lived."

Castro said July 31 he was stepping aside temporarily, granting his powers to his brother Raul as head of the government and the Communist Party so he could recover from intestinal surgery.

Neither brother has been seen in public since then. Details of Castro's condition, his ailment and the surgical procedure he underwent are being treated as a "state secret."

Nothing Justifies Keeping the Cuban Five in Prison

by Bernarda Romero
One year has passed since the 11th Court of Appeals of Atlanta issued its ruling on he Cuban Five. A three-judge panel unanimously decided to annul the trial held in Miami against the five anti-terrorist fighters imprisoned in US jails and revoke their sentences. Despite this well-deserved and long-coming justice in the case of the Cuban Five, they remain in prison to this day.

For lawyer Roberto Gonzalez, brother of Rene Gonzalez, one of the Cuban Five, this lack of action by US authorities "has no explanation." Nonetheless, he recognizes that such injustice is a result of the hostile policy against the island that has been in place for more than 45 years.

Roberto Gonzalez told how the US District Attorney's Office resorted to a rarely
used recourse permissible only under exceptional circumstances when it requested that the August 9, 2005 ruling in favour of the Cuban Five be reviewed by the full panel of appeal court judges.

On February 14, 2006, an oral hearing before the court's 12 judges was held in connection with the August 9 ruling. Roberto Gonzalez, however, argues that there were no grounds to reconsider that ruling and that, "from a legal point of view, the District Attorney's Office has no sound arguments."

Is there a reason for delaying the new ruling?

From a legal stand point, no. Essentially, the 12 judges are simply discussing whether a person should be tried in a biased atmosphere. Certainly not. Would five Cubans working for the Cuban government experience any prejudice if tried in Miami? The answer seems evident.

This is what is being discussed, a question of form, not content. For they are not even analyzing the case in depth, that is, the charges against the Five for conspiracy to commit murder and conspiracy to conduct espionage, nor are they investigating the poor application of the Classified Information Procedure Act. None of these essential elements of the case have been touched by the Atlanta Court of Appeals. In their first decision, a panel of three judges simply ruled on a question of form; that is, that Miami was not the appropriate venue for an impartial trial for the Five.

What happens if the full Court of Appeals overturns the August 9 ruling?

Then we would return to the three original judges and ask that they review the
aforementioned issues, which were not included in their debate.

What if the August 9 ruling is upheld by the full court?

That would be a favorable decision for us. Then we would have to wait and see if,
represented by the Attorney General's Office, the US government would resort to an appeal before the Supreme Court.

And the process could be extended indefinitely?

Exactly. We are witnessing a judicial mechanism working to perpetuate an incarceration that is clearly for political reasons. All the legal procedures brought against the Five since September 12, 1998, are expressions of hatred, pressure and blackmail by individuals who see the Cuban Five as the embodiment of the courage and rebelliousness of the Cuban people -whose spirit they have been unable to break.

At this point, is there any indication regarding a new verdict?

No. This will be a surprise just as happened last year. It will come whenever they want. There are no signs or indications whatsoever. None. In the meantime, 12 more months have passed of unfair incarceration for the Five.

The appropriate thing would be for the full court to ratify the August 9 ruling. This is why it is so important to strengthen the international movement of solidarity with the Five; to see it grow and diversify, especially in the United States.

e-mail:: ns@ain.cu

Mexico to Sell $7 Billion of Bonds to Pay World Bank, IDB Debt

Mexico plans to sell $7 billion of local-currency bonds today to pay half the debt it owes to the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank ahead of schedule.

The government will use the pesos raised in the sale to buy central bank reserves that have soared to a record because of rising oil export revenue. The central bank will publish the results of the transaction at 2 p.m. New York time.

The move is part of a push by developing nations --including Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Russia and Venezuela --to use soaring receipts from commodities such as oil, sugar and soybeans to reduce foreign debt. Mexico's foreign reserves have more than doubled in the past five years to $78 billion as the price of oil, the country's biggest export, has surged.

``Mexico's central bank has been accumulating very large amounts of reserves and is now putting them to good use,'' said Alberto Ramos, senior Latin America economist with Goldman Sachs Group Inc., in an Aug. 7 telephone interview from New York. ``This is one of many indicators saying the macroeconomic picture is pretty strong in Mexico.''

Mexico stands to save about 1.6 billion pesos ($147 million) as a result of the early payment, the government said when the bond sale was announced in June.

The government will save about 600 million pesos because the domestic debt it's selling is cheaper than the foreign debt it plans to retire.

The central bank will save 1 billion pesos because the amount of reserves will drop, reducing the cost of keeping them, according to the government. The bonds the central bank sells to adjust money supply yield more than the return obtained from investing reserves in assets such as U.S. Treasuries.

The Finance Ministry is selling floating-rate peso bonds and will accept similar securities sold by the central bank, known as Brems, as payment.

Reducing the Debt

The transaction will more than halve Mexico's $13.4 billion debt with the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank.

``Prepaying $7 billion seemed the most appropriate at this time and the future capacity to prepay the remainder will depend on the evolution of local and external interest rates,'' Gerardo Rodriguez, Mexico's public credit director, said in a telephone interview on Aug. 8. ``This just seemed like a good opportunity.''

The transaction will reduce the federal government's foreign debt to 6.4 percent of gross domestic product from 7.3 percent of GDP. The government's domestic debt will rise to 16 percent of GDP from 15 percent, according to the Finance Ministry.

`Reduces the Exposure'

``This reduces the exposure to movements in the exchange rate, which in the past has been a source of vulnerability,'' Goldman Sachs Group's Ramos said.

The Mexican peso has lost 2 percent so far this year, the third-worst performance against the U.S. dollar of 16 primary currencies tracked by Bloomberg.

Mexico's central bank stopped issuing Brem bonds last week. These securities will be gradually replaced by floating-rate bonds sold by the Finance Ministry. Outstanding Brems before the transaction totaled about $26 billion.

``We expect there to be more than enough demand for these new bonds,'' said Arnulfo Rodriguez, head of fixed-income research at Citigroup Inc.'s Banamex unit in Mexico, in a telephone interview from Mexico City on Aug. 7. ``The investor only gains by letting go of a bond that will start to lose liquidity as it's being phased out.''

Bonds Gaining Since Calderon's Victory

Peso-denominated bonds have gained since the July 2 presidential election as tallies showed governing party candidate Felipe Calderon as the winner of the vote by 0.6 percentage points. Calderon, the former energy minister under President Vicente Fox, pledged to maintain the spending restraint that slashed inflation and cut interest rates.

The yield on the government's benchmark 8 percent bond due in December 2015 has fallen 84.2 basis points to 8.27 percent. The price, which moves inversely to the yield, increased 5.24 centavos to 98.23 centavos, according to Santander Central Hispano SA.

``This is really a question of well-chosen timing,'' said Banamex's Rodriguez. ``It's being done just as rates are falling here and increasing in international markets.''

Minor shifts reported in Mexico recount

by Laurence Iliff
MEXICO CITY
Electoral authorities began a partial recount Wednesday in the disputed July 2 presidential election as supporters of leftist candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador protested outside bank buildings, including U.S.-owned Banamex.

Ballots are being recounted in electoral districts around the nation under the watchful eye of Federal Electoral Tribunal judges and party observers. Media reports said that in early counting there were minor shifts in the vote tally, which has López Obrador trailing by 244,000 votes.

Official numbers will not be disclosed until the recount is completed, by Sunday at the latest.

López Obrador, a self-styled champion of the poor, has said fraud and mathematical errors warrant a complete recount of the 133,000 polling stations. But the tribunal ruled Saturday that only about 12,000 had significant discrepancies. That represents about 9 percent of voting stations.

Ricardo Monreal, a top aide to López Obrador, said Wednesday the early recount was unearthing serious problems in the July 2 balloting.

"There is no perfect crime, and there are fingerprints everywhere of fraud," said Monreal, the former governor of Zacatecas for the Party of the Democratic Revolution, or PRD.

But German Martinez, a spokesman for candidate Felipe Calderon of the ruling National Action Party, or PAN, said minor math errors would not change the outcome.

As part of daily protests that have strangled traffic in the capital and damaged tourism, demonstrators circled three downtown bank buildings Wednesday, impeding many workers and clients from entering. One of the affected banks was Banamex, a subsidiary of New York-based Citigroup.

The protesters demanded a vote-by-vote recount of all 41 million ballots.

Some clients were livid, as were motorists whose commute times have doubled because of the protest camp down the middle of the city.

"It's terrible because it seems to be more of a whim by this man (López Obrador) to get his way rather than something that helps the people," said Fernando Monrroy, 29, who was waiting to carry out bank transactions for his employer.

PRD spokesman Gerardo Fernandez, who took part in the seizure of tollbooths on the outskirts of Mexico City on Tuesday, said the protests would grow daily and include some "surprising" measures.

Movement in Oaxaca Faces Threats and Gunfire as 300 Federal Police Arrive in the State Capital

by Nancy Davies

A blockade of the Oaxaca City Hall was carried out at 10:00 AM on August 7. In the name of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO in its Spanish initials), 500 teachers from Ocotlán prepared en encampment in the recently “renovated” Plaza de la Danza which abuts the entrance to the municipal building of the capital city of Oaxaca state. Ocotlán has a total enrollment of 1,000 in Section 22 of the national teachers’ union (SNTE).

In the effort by APPO to totally block all the state government functions, up until Monday the city government was ignored. Although Mayor Jesús Ángel Díaz Ortega is heartily disliked and disparagingly referred to as “Chuchubolas,” he has generally been regarded as a puppet of Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (“URO”). Therefore, when various parts of the city were violated to obtain the renovation funds diverted to Madrazo’s doomed campaign, people were quick to blame Ruiz and never mentioned Chuchubolas.

All efforts were focused on the state government functions which were halted, and when citizens spot the “ex-governor” with any of his cabinet trying to meet in a restaurant or hotel there’s an immediate crowd to block the doors.

While the movement maintained for the tenth consecutive day the blockade to the state Government House, the State Congress and the Oaxaca Superior Tribunal of Justice, as well as the Department of Finances, the General Attorney’s office, the penal tribunals, and other facilities, 300 officers of the Federal Preventive Police arrived in the city on Monday night.

By my own informal count, 40 municipalities and towns around the state have decided to make changes (sufficiently important to be mentioned in newspapers and/or on the radio), including the occupation of 20 municipal town halls, seven with physical aid from the teachers of Section 22 of the SNTE. Nineteen municipalities have affiliated formally with APPO, meaning they will send people as aids to the struggle.

The movement has also captured 60 buses and 18 official vehicles, among them two patrol cars. Rogelio Pensamiento Mesinas, member of the Provisional Coordination of APPO, said that in the collection of vehicles they prioritized those belonging to mobile brigades of the government under the state Department of Traffic and the municipal police, as well as of the Preventive Police. The vehicles are white, and highly visible.

They only passed over vehicles of the Municipal Police, the Fire Department and aid ambulances.

He explained that the vehicles will be concentrated in the Historical Center or in the parking areas of captured public buildings. The movement will try to harm the vehicles as little as possible, “because they belong to the people whose taxes paid for them.” Two small Volkswagens are now being used to block access to the zocalo.

Monday, the morning of these events, blockades of the main state highways were also carried out, in accordance with the conditions of each municipality, intermittently or continuously.

So it was on to the next goal: further cripple the area with ungovernability by taking the Oaxaca City Hall, or Municipal Palace. In all the action, few noticed what was happening.

Two days before, some agents of the Oaxaca Municipal Police abandoned their general barracks and were quartered in the barracks located in the municipality of Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán, (now also in rebellion). That’s apparently where they were to be met by the Federal Preventive Police (PFP).

On Monday morning a red alert was broadcast. Both the teachers’ station, Radio Plantón using 96.8 FM, and the students’ station Radio Universidad 1400 AM went on the air to broadcast the alarm.

The previous night, August 6, about 300 Federal Preventative Police (PFP) arrived in Oaxaca. Monday at 10:00 AM an attack by about thirty police who arrived in five pickup cars, some in civilian clothes and some wearing ski masks, took place in the Colonia Reforma neighborhood, where APPO people were blocking the office of the Department of Finance.

Radio Universidad reported as shots were fired and tear gas was used. After the APPO people fought back with stones and sticks the police were repelled, leaving several APPO members injured by blows but only one woman by gunfire, in the leg. This woman may have been hit by the Coordinator of Public Security, Aristeo López Martinez, the Oaxaca head of special police operations, who was using an AR-15 rifle, according to La Jornada. The newspaper reported that when the APPO men gave chase, López Martinez began to shoot for the body, not in the air. The pursuers hit the ground, and all the police escaped, López Martinez on a black BMW motorcycle.

The wounded woman later went to the radio station to speak, so I assume she was not badly hurt. In the attack three municipal policemen were wounded in the head by stones and a teacher was injured on his spine by a sharp blow.

It is not legal for police to be dressed in plain clothes, nor for them to be arriving in private cars, nor for them to attack a peaceful civil protest.

And that was just the morning.

All day various alarms were sounded, but none of them proved to be an attack by the 300 PFP. However, it was broadcast that a man identified as Catarino Torres Pineda was picked up by three men in a car and vanished. Eventually, after much time lapsed while APPO assumed he was “disappeared,” the Secretary of Civil Protection revealed that Torres Pineda, director of the Citizen Defence Committee (Codeci) had been arrested in Tuxtepec, and was jailed in the city of Matías Romero before being transported to the state of Mexico. His name is added to the list of political prisoners.

When the morning attack at the Finance Building interrupted normal broadcast I was passing a vendor’s radio, and I also happened to be passing the Plaza de la Danza. Surprise! I could see the usual outline of an encampment –blue and yellow tarpaulins strung with ropes from high points against the rain. Women settling in the shade, men on the stadium seats lounging while one sharpened his machete on the stone. The entrance was blocked by teachers sitting on the new smooth cement, beneath an Ocotlán banner strung up on the municipal building. The teachers looked to me like their main weapons of defense would be the yellow plastic chairs arriving at that precise moment.

By the time I arrived home, various reports were flying. Then there were periods of calm, and then more alarms. A roller-coaster day, reaching a climax of anxiety when APPO broadcast a summons for everybody to come who could. People poured in from the Central Valley in which Oaxaca City is situated. At 9:30 at night Channel 9, the captured state TV station, introduced by name and town twelve good men who represent the people’s force, one of them by his looks a boy of about eleven, one a senior citizen.

Rumors flew that the big attack would be at 11:00 PM. López Martínez confirmed that the state and municipal governments were preparing to dislodge people from the APPO encampment in the Historic Center of Oaxaca. That should have been a clue that no such thing was going to happen.

This morning – no big attack having taken place– we learned that one man was murdered. He was a teacher at the Benito Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca,

Identified as 35–year-old Marcos García Tapia from the Dental School. The reports say he was killed by two men on a motorcycle, driving at night outside the zocalo’s guarded perimeter.

I went down to Plaza de la Danza, and from there to the zocalo. Both places were calm. The newly arrived campesinos in the zocalo were armed with sticks and iron rods, and were accompanied by women and children.

So, in my opinion (as always, a subjective view), what we have now is a low-intensity dirty war. Several opportunities to kill people have been bypassed. I believe the game plan is to exhaust people by fear and high tension levels, supplemented by a few deaths in which there is no risk that URO can be accused of anything – indeed, today there are denials that he ordered the police to attack at the Finance Building. He can deny he even asked for the PFP to be sent here, or that once sent, they had been involved, since they seem to be doing much of their dirty work in civilian clothing.

But the movement is also capable of psychologically exhausting URO, who is followed everywhere. In the style of a good revolution, he is continuously mocked and called bad names, along with his former secretary of civil protection José Franco Vargas (currently carrying on in an unofficial capacity) who is now referred to as “Chuckie II,” in honor of the American horror movie. Furthermore, the people most stalwart in their denial must now, as Channel 9 repeatedly says, open their eyes. The television station not only shows every march and every instance of repression, but videos of other repressions, including one the 1968 attack on students in Mexico City’s Tlatelolco Square, and another on the oppression in Palestine by the Israelis. It’s an educational project which is playing on radio, television broadcasts, and public screens in the zocalo. The entire state is involved in open warfare where the goal is throwing out the remaining Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) bosses, and establishing a more just order.

A “mano dura” (“hard hand”) policy now would involve military invasion, the setting up of a Oaxaca counterpart to the militarized state of Chiapas.

August 09, 2006

Venezuelan presidential candidate Manuel Rosales emerges as opposition choice to face Chavez

by FABIOLA SANCHEZ
CARACAS, Venezuela
Several opposition candidates threw their support behind a popular state governor as their top choice to challenge Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in December, calling off their primary election.

The pullout of eight candidates Wednesday prompted the cancellation of Sunday's vote and cleared the way for Zulia state Gov. Manuel Rosales to face Chavez, who was first elected in 1998 and is seeking a third term that would keep him in office through 2012.

"I will be the president of all Venezuelans regardless of their differences," Rosales told a cheering crowd, referring to complaints that Chavez has polarized society, stoking divisions between his poor supporters and wealthier opponents.

Rosales, 54, accused Chavez of overspending on a military buildup and pledged that if elected on Dec. 3, he would use Venezuela's oil wealth to help the poor and improve education and health care.

"We will exchange warplanes for hospitals, tanks for schools and universities, missiles for preschools," he said.

The opposition has called Chavez's spending on Russian warplanes and other weapons a waste. Chavez, who regularly clashes with the United States, has said Venezuela must be prepared to defend itself against the U.S. and has built close ties with Iran and North Korea.

Rosales ridiculed Chavez's claims of a possible war with the U.S. and said Venezuela's real war should be against rampant street crime.

"We aren't going to have fantasy wars," he told reporters. "Our only war will be against crime ... against drug traffickers, against (Colombian) guerrillas."

Rosales appeared to echo criticisms by the U.S. government, which has accused Chavez's government of being uncooperative against drug smuggling and having an "ideological affinity" with leftist Colombian rebels. Chavez has called those false claims with political motivations.

Rosales spoke after Julio Borges, a conservative lawyer who leads the party Justice First, announced that he and other leading opposition candidates had decided to back Rosales.

"For all who love this country, today is the day to put aside personal ambitions and think about the unity of Venezuela," Borges said. "Mr. Manuel Rosales, count on all of us. I offer my support, the support of my party and that of my generation to you."

On Friday, another leading opposition candidate, newspaper editor Teodoro Petkoff, also dropped out in favor of a single candidate.

Rosales said nine rival candidates had officially decided to back him, including Petkoff. He made the announcement a day after the elections council ruled that he must temporarily step down from his post as governor to continue in the race, but could return to that position if he loses.

Sumate, a U.S.-backed non-governmental organization that had planned to administer Sunday's opposition primary, confirmed that the vote was off.

"Unity was achieved by another method," Sumate leader Alejandro Plaz said.

But not all opposition candidates have fallen in behind Rosales. Benjamin Rausseo, a highly popular standup comedian, announced his candidacy on Sunday, and while opinion polls have yet to measure Rausseo's support, analysts say his colorful candidacy could make him a serious contender. Rausseo has said he could step aside later if another candidate turns out to have the best shot at defeating Chavez.

Rosales began his political career in the 1970s as a councilman in his hometown of Santa Barbara del Zulia in the cattle-ranching plains of western Venezuela.

Rosales, who leads his own small party, A New Time, is one of the few anti-Chavez politicians to head a state government. A former mayor of Maracaibo, he was elected governor of the western state in both 2000 and 2004, even as allies of Chavez swept state governorships and National Assembly seats.

He remains widely popular in Zulia, which has the second-largest concentration of voters after Caracas, the capital.

Recent polls had shown Rosales leading Borges. However both had lagged far behind Chavez, who according to recent surveys has the support of a clear majority of Venezuelans.

Mexico leftists target foreign banks in protest

by Kieran Murray
MEXICO CITY
Thousands of Mexican leftists blockaded the offices of three major foreign-owned banks on Wednesday in a new protest to force a full recount in a July 2 presidential election they claim was rigged.

Protesters surrounded Mexico City offices of U.S.-based Citigroup's Mexican unit Banamex, the Bancomer bank owned by Spain's BBVA and the British giant HSBC They sat on the ground around the buildings and vowed to block access for several hours.

The leftists are backing Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who narrowly lost the presidential vote to conservative ruling party candidate Felipe Calderon and claims it was rigged.

Election officials were to begin a recount of votes from 9 percent of polling stations on Wednesday in a bid to clear up the allegations and calm a crisis that has split the country.

But Lopez Obrador is demanding a full recount of all 41 million votes. His protesters have crippled Mexico City for the last 10 days by setting up tents in its Zocalo square and on the main boulevard running through the business district.

They have vowed to extend the civil disobedience campaign with surprise protests across the country this week.

All but one of Mexico's major banks are in the hands of foreign companies and the industry's sell-off has been a symbol of free market reforms in Mexico, so there was little surprise over the election protesters' new choice of target.

"Now it is the banks' turn," said Gerardo Fernandez, a spokesman for the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution.

BAILOUT

During the election campaign, Lopez Obrador had promised to reopen the books on a controversial $100 billion bailout of struggling private banks by the government during an economic crisis in the mid-1990s.

Most of the big banks that survived the crisis were later sold off to foreign financial giants.

"Banamex is really Citigroup, a foreign bank that ransacks the country," Fernandez said on Wednesday. "It took more than 10 percent of the bank rescue."

Starting on Wednesday morning, judges, election officials and party representatives will spend up to five days checking the tallies at 11,839 voting stations to see if there is truth to Lopez Obrador's claims that he was the victim of fraud.

If the partial recounts show Lopez Obrador closing the gap on Calderon, they could force the electoral court to open more ballot boxes. But if there is no change in the numbers, Lopez Obrador will come under heavy pressure to give up his fight.

Many fear the power struggle could turn violent, posing the biggest challenge to Mexican democracy since President Vicente Fox won power in 2000 and ended seven decades of one-party rule infamous for corruption and fraud-tainted elections.

Mexico's government has tightened Fox's personal security this week and also sent federal police to protect oil installations and the capital's international airport.

Calderon's margin of victory was about 244,000 votes, or just 0.58 percentage points, but he insists it was clean.

His team accuses Lopez Obrador and his Party of the Democratic Revolution, or PRD, of using Mexico's class divide to try to win on the streets what they lost at the polls.

Cesar Nava, a senior Calderon aide, warned on Tuesday that a long battle could undermine Mexico's hard-won stability.

"It will be at risk if the PRD persists with this attitude, with its violent discourse and its attempt to divide the country, split it between rich and poor, right and left, oppressors and oppressed," he said.

Despite fiery rhetoric on both sides and growing tension, there has so far been no violence at any of the protests, and Lopez Obrador insists his campaign will remain peaceful.

Castro the Conservationist? By Default or Design, Cuba Largely Pristine

Stefan Lovgren
for National Geographic News
August 4, 2006

Will Cuban President Fidel Castro be remembered primarily as a man of the people, an authoritarian tyrant—or a conservationist?

Castro handed power to his brother last week to undergo emergency intestinal surgery. His health remains uncertain, fueling rampant speculation about his legacy.

(See a photo gallery of life inside Castro's Cuba.)

Some experts say his environmental policies may be among his greatest achievements.

Though Cuba is economically destitute, it has the richest biodiversity in the Caribbean. Resorts blanket many of its neighbors, but Cuba remains largely undeveloped, with large tracts of untouched rain forest and unspoiled reefs (map of Cuba).

The country has signed numerous international conservation treaties and set aside vast areas of land for government protection.

But others say Cuba's economic underdevelopment has played just as large a role.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union—its main financial benefactor—Cuba has had to rely mostly on its own limited resources. It has embraced organic farming and low-energy agriculture because it can't afford to do anything else.

And once Castro is gone, the experts say, a boom in tourism and foreign investment could destroy Cuba's pristine landscapes.

Eco-Legacy

"I think the Cuban government can take a substantial amount of credit for landscape, flora, and fauna preservation," said Jennifer Gebelein, a professor at Florida International University in Miami who studies environmental issues in Cuba.

More than 20 percent of Cuba's land is under some form of government protection. The island's wetlands have been largely shielded from pesticide runoff that has destroyed similar areas in other countries.
...