August 31, 2007

Security & Prosperity Partnership

NAFTA meets the "War on Terror"


Hardly reported on in the US media but much more so in Canada and Mexico, the most recent meetings of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP) took place a little over a week ago in Canada...and, as I mentioned last week, they were met with protests, police provocateurs, and sabotage. The SPP is the agenda that the "Society of Power," as the Zapatistas say, has in store for us here in the North American Union. Oops! I meant to say "Canada, the USA, and Mexico"...or did someone say Turtle Island? Which one will it be?!

Here's a breakdown of the SPP from some allies to the south. Let's read up, cuz it ain't gonna go away just because it's too ugly to look at...


TEN EASY QUESTIONS AND TEN TOUGHER ONES REGARDING THE SPPNA
(Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America)
Miguel Pickard
August 17th, 2007
CIEPAC (Economic and Political Research Center of Communitarian Action)
San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, México

Summary:
This bulletin is intended to be a first introduction to the topic of the SPPNA (hereinafter SPP), initials of a very undemocratic alliance between Canada, Mexico and the United States. On August 201, 2007, the presidents of Mexico and the US and the Canadian prime minister met in Montebello, Quebec, to discuss the SPP. Showing total indifference for democracy, the three governments are reaching crucially important decisions with no prior consultation or consent of civil society. The summit received almost no press coverage in the US, but got reasonably good exposure in Mexico and Canada. We present herein reasons why the citizens of all three countries need to follow SPP developments.

1. What does SPPNA mean?

The initials stand for the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, a fairly new regional integration initiative that dates formally from March 23, 2005 when the presidents of Mexico and the United States, and the Canadian prime minister met in Waco, Texas.

2. Is the SPP related to NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) that Presidents Carlos Salinas and Bill Clinton and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signed in 1993?

Yes, it is related and some analysts even call the SPP "NAFTA plus". But there are important differences.

One crucial difference is that the SPP is not an "agreement" as is NAFTA. If it were, it would be subject to scrutiny by the federal legislative branches in the three countries. But under the SPP, the chief executives are signing so-called regulations, hundreds of them, according to some reports. These are similar to presidential decrees and are therefore exempt from legislative review. Civil society has been given very little information.

3. Why is it important that I know something about the SPP?

Citizens of all three countries are concerned because our democratic rights and sovereignty as nations are being ceded to the US government and large corporations. At the behest, or insistence, of the Bush administration, the governing elites of the other two countries have worked rapidly to "securitize" the region which, at least in Mexico, has translated into increased militarization. The SPP is also part of the growing corporate takeover of activities and functions that used to lie in the public sector. Changes are being made in laws, norms, standards, regulations, practices, to facilitate international trade and so increase the profitability of certain corporations, but which in some cases weaken labor, consumer protection and environmental standards. Finding out about the SPP is a necessary first step in detaining its corrosive effects on democracy and national sovereignty.

4. Doesn't the SPP have to do with trade between our three countries?

Yes, but it goes beyond trade issues. The Canadian citizens' organization Common Frontiers explains it as follows:

The SPP initiative is intended to harmonize many Canadian and Mexican domestic and foreign policies with those of the U.S. Under the guise of protecting citizens from the threat of terrorism and also facilitating trade, this initiative would involve drastic measures such as a deeper integration of North American energy markets, harmonized treatment of immigrants, refugees or tourists from abroad, and the creation of common security policies. (Press Bulletin, Common Frontiers, 27-Mar-06)

5. Why so much emphasis on security?

After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the pretext for many changes is "security concerns" in the face of "world terrorism". In keeping with this mindset, US government strategists are quietly demanding that neighbors Mexico and Canada enact or reform laws and measures to increase security. The elites in both countries have happily and even eagerly acquiesced.

We believe that the SPP is also being implemented in anticipation of several phenomena.

One phenomenon is the global warming crisis and the increasing shortage of water that all Earth's inhabitants will soon face. In response to the planet's increasing thirst, the US is working to control and assure sufficient water from nearby sources, a fact that puts pressure on water supplies in southeast Mexico and throughout Canada. Canada's water in particular has been tabbed a US national security issue by the Bush administration.

A second phenomenon is the US's enormous appetite for energy resources. The access to abundant energy supplies and their control, preferably by US corporate giants, is perhaps the primary motive that explains US activities throughout the world, from wars of extermination to the negotiation of agreements and, now, the signing of regulations. The invasion of Iraq by US armed forces in 2003 is just the most recent example.

Still a third phenomenon has to do with the trade war already being waged between the world's three main economic blocs. One of them is the European Union, the other is the Asian bloc headed by Japan and China, and the third bloc is essentially the United States. Each bloc is closing ranks with neighboring countries in different ways. We believe the US is positioning itself to control the Americas and the Caribbean in its trade wars with the other economic forces. The US wishes to control the continent's strategic natural resources to help guarantee mainly energy supplies (oil, natural gas and electricity), but also access to other resources such as land, minerals and the region's enormous biodiversity (Brazil, Colombia, and Meso-America are extremely species rich).

Furthermore, the Americas are, or will soon be, a preferential market for US goods and services. The 34 countries of the Americas (all except Cuba) have a combined population of 800 million, 500 million of whom live outside the United States, and multinational corporations see the enormous potential of privileged access for their products in this region.

In addition to trade and natural-resource issues, Washington has since 2001 exercised greater control regarding the security and militarization of the Americas. When the military takes on a greater role in the internal affairs of any country, the result is a tendency towards the criminalization of social protest (a fact of life now in Mexico).

6. Who's behind the SPP?

Two main entities are pushing it forward. One is the US government which considers the SPP to be an ideal initial step in a strategy of integrating the American continent in key areas under the pretext of "trade facilitation". It is true that the SPP does have aspects related to trade, but there are others that many times go unreported in the mass media, i.e., the ones mentioned above--access to energy resources, security, militarization. When the mass media report on the SPP they often mention only the trade aspects and gloss over other important topics.

Even the center-left press in the US falls into this trap. The Nation magazine recently reported that the SPP is a "relatively mundane formal bureaucratic dialogue" and accepted at face value Assistant Secretary of Commerce David Bohigian's claim that the SPP has to do with "simple stuff like, for instance, in the US we sell baby food in several different sizes; in Canada, it's just two different sizes". (The Nation, Aug. 27, 2007)

The other actor pushing the SPP is the private sector, especially the large corporations that are eager to take advantage of the expansion of "free trade" and the access to natural resources that the SPP is promoting.

7. How is the control of natural resources to be assured?

One way is through privatization. When a country's strategic resources are sold, corporations have an opportunity to buy and control what was once in the public domain. The corporations best poised to profit are from the US, but Canadian and some Mexican corporations will be winners too. As a general policy, the US government, either directly or though institutions it controls, e.g., the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, has insisted for years in the privatization of state corporations. In Mexico these include the state oil company PEMEX and the Federal Electricity Commission, as well as water companies, health and educational institutions, etc. US "encouragement" led to the privatization during the 80s and 90s of other strategic state sectors (the telephone company, airlines, trains, mass media among others).

Another way is through treaties such as NAFTA and "partnerships" such as the SPP that severely restrict a country's sovereign in matters of natural resource exploitation. For example, as part of its free trade agreement with the United States, Canada lost the right to reduce unilaterally its exports of oil to the US. Although Mexico did not formally agree to similar terms when it signed onto NAFTA, the Salinas, Zedillo, Fox and Calderón administrations have increased exports of oil when the US has so requested, for example, in the run up to the Iraq invasion. Guaranteed access by the US to Mexico's oil at bargain prices may be a matter that has been agreed to in the SPP regulations. Meanwhile Mexico's oil supplies are quickly being depleted with some estimates putting reserves at no greater than 15 years at current rates of extraction.

A more recent example has to do with increased levels of pesticides that Canadians will soon have in their foods, when tolerances for residues are "harmonized" to US standards by SPP regulations.

8. What implications does the SPP have for indigenous or first-nation peoples?

The SPP weakens the rights of first nations to inhabit and work their lands. In the case of Mexico, the country's neoliberal governments (since the times of President Miguel de la Madrid, 1982 - 1988), have tried to weaken any "limitation" on private investment. The right of the indigenous people to establish autonomous areas and decide on the use of natural resources located on their lands, recognized by the ILO's 169 Convention (see Article 15), is an aspect that the corporations would like to curtail. The same goes for laws and norms that have been established to protect the environment. We suspect that corporations are reaching agreements with governments within the SPP framework that first weaken and then eliminate these protections and rights.

9. What is the most egregious aspect of this new Partnership?

Perhaps it is the total contempt that the forces behind the SPP have for ordinary citizens and their right to decide on how a country is run. The SPP is profoundly undemocratic. Citizens' control is being weakened and turned over to a minority, e.g., a few people and corporations who are using greater doses of violence to accumulate capital. Basic principles are under threat: a country's wealth should be used to address and solve problems related to education, health, housing, infrastructure etc. The tendency now, however, as expressed in agreements such as the SPP, is the opposite: wealth is being concentrated in a few hands and the people are experiencing ever-greater poverty and deteriorating services and infrastructure.

10. How does the SPP relate to the recent meeting held between the presidents of Mexico and the United States and the prime minister of Canada?

Since the SPP began in 2005, the three chief executives have gathered several times. The last summit occurred on August 201, 2007, and featured talks between illegitimate presidents Calderón and Bush and Prime Minister Harper (all neo-cons) in the small town of Montebello, province of Québec. Little information on the summit surfaced in the US press (the New York Times dismissed the significance of the summit, see "No Breakthrough at Canada Talks", 22 Aug 2007, and "Bush's Talks with Neighbors Overshadowed by Storm", 21 Aug 2007). In the Mexican and Canadian press, and in activist circles, it was widely expected that the chief executives would sign additional SPP regulations.

11. How are these regulations drafted and approved?

In most cases the enforcement of regulations requires just the chief executives' signatures. It is actually corporate lawyers who draft the language of the regulations, especially those having to do with trade, in consultation with selected government officials and academics. This procedure overturns the traditional roles played by governments and corporations and in essence constitutes the privatization of what had traditionally been considered a public prerogative.

12. Do we have access to the documents signed by the executive branch?

No, SPP documents have not been released for public scrutiny. Civil society is not consulted before the signing ceremony nor is full disclosure practiced once the summits end.

We believe that the executives opted for signing regulations because, almost 14 years after NAFTA began in 1994, civil society throughout the region is better organized, informed, networked and mobilized. Further, first-hand experience with NAFTA has exposed the lies that were touted to sell the "virtues" of the trade agreement. For example, job creation has actually slowed in Mexico and NAFTA-induced job creation in the US and Canada has been modest at best; peoples' living standards have not risen; the gap between Mexico and its more-developed neighbors in terms of salaries and per-capita income has actually widened. Within Mexico differences between the poorer states in the south and better-off states in the North have deepened.

If full disclosure existed, civil society would be ill disposed to accept a "deepening" of NAFTA such as the SPP. There might be large-scale mobilization and protests. Approval in the legislatures might not be forthcoming. The chief executives know this and in anticipation are signing decrees that circumvent watchdog functions by civil society and the legislatures.

13. The "security" aspect of the SPP is intriguing. Do our countries really have a security problem?

No, or at least not to the extent we've been told. We believe that any security concerns that may exist are the result of grossly misguided US foreign policy, particularly in the Middle East. In any event, the US and allied countries took advantage of the events that transpired on Sept. 11, 2001 and created an ambiance of fear in order to increase military budgets and repression.

Under the SPP, the three participating countries have agreed on a security apparatus that includes a greater control on flows of people and goods, response to threats such as terrorism, organized crime, the trafficking of people and the contraband of goods. All this implies greater coordination among intelligence services and greater repression to control "external and internal threats".

Evidently any social protest, for example, grassroots protests last year in Oaxaca or Atenco, Mexico, might be classified by the government as an "internal threat", or even "terrorism". In fact, the Attorney General of the state of Oaxaca declared that the APPO (Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca) is a "violent group" that has committed crimes "called terrorism" under the Federal Penal Code (see La Jornada, November 10, 2006, Political section). Independent observers, such as the International Civil Commission for Human Rights Observation, have said the opposite, by copiously documenting the brutality of state repression against community-based or non-partisan social movements (see here).

Again, is there a security threat? Probably so...for the region's elites, who fear a backlash (or a "blowback" to use Chalmer Johnson's expression) from increasingly disgruntled populations.

14. What does this new Partnership have to do with prosperity?

Nothing. The word has been included for publicity purposes given growing poverty among the majority. The SPP will bring prosperity to the multinational corporations, their major shareholders and those in power who are colluding with the former.

Formally, there is a "prosperity agenda" that covers diverse subjects, such as easing restrictions on business, health measures, phytosanitary measures, financial services, electronic business, complicated rules of origin and many others. Large corporations have detected measures that are missing from NAFTA which would facilitate cross-border business and increase profits. These aspects are now being approved with SPP regulations.

The SPP omits reference to any social measures that might lead to greater prosperity of the population of the three participating countries.

15. Why is Mexico included in this type of partnership with two other countries with much large economies?

The motives have never been strictly economic. Not even with NAFTA. And now the security of the US has become a required reference point. US military strategists have placed increased priority on protecting the US's land borders by including Canada and Mexico as "buffer zones" in the event of "terrorist attacks". Mexico and Canada will be required to take measures, dictated by the US, to become as "secure" as the US itself. In Canada the new orientation is well advanced. In Mexico it will take longer, but the objective is clear. Furthermore, under the SPP Mexico has become a "test-tube" nation, for experimentation in the context of future US plans for the region.

16. Mexico-an experiment? What for?

It seems likely that US plans go beyond integrating Mexico and Canada into its area of control and influence. We believe that the US wishes to control the Americas for the reasons mentioned in the response to question 5. As an example of US intentions, up to 2005 the US sought to extend "free trade" to the entire continent at a single go by means of the FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas). The initiative backfired and was dropped when grassroots protests erupted throughout the Americas and quasi-nationalist governments, opposed to US hegemonic tendencies, were elected in South America.

When the FTAA was derailed in 2005, the US took a slower approach in matters related to trade in the Americas. It continued making strides towards its goal of a "free trade Americas" by signing treaties with individual countries or with blocs of countries. Mexico is just the first step in a much wider project that the US will be pushing forward in the next few decades for the integration of the entire American continent in matters of trade and other important issues that the US would like to see "bundled". In this sense Mexico's participation in the SPP is an experiment in how to integrate an "underdeveloped" country in an alliance with "developed" countries such as the US and Canada.

Let's explain further. The asymmetries separating Mexico and its northern neighbors are many. Mexico's deep and widening poverty and the reduced size of its economy vis-a`-vis the US are obvious asymmetries, but there are other equally important, but less visible, differences that will undoubtedly be conflictive and will require resolution. For example, the difference in legal frameworks: Canada and the US operate under a legal system that derives from Anglo-Saxon common law, while Mexico works with a tradition of Roman law inherited from Spain.

As US strategists ponder how best to integrate the continent, it makes sense to grapple first with one country, and the obvious candidate is Mexico, in order to generate a series of experiences that will prove useful when the rest of the continent and the Caribbean are incorporated. Analyzing the SPP back in 2005, Professor John Saxe-Fernández of Mexico's National Autonomous University wrote, "The goal is to use Mexico as a battering ram to push forward 'vertical integration' of Latin America to the [United States] in trade, finance, monetary and geopolitical aspects" (La Jornada, 28-Mar-05).

In Europe, the better-off countries had to make certain adjustments when poorer countries were integrated into the European Union. A certain standardization of procedures occurred. The better-off countries also disbursed enormous sums of money in an effort to "level the playing field" in education, health, housing, etc., and to solve the inevitable problems that were sure to arise, for example, retraining workers laid off from their jobs.

In contrast, the US wants a different type of integration. It wishes to benefit in terms of control over important aspects, but without disbursements that would need to dwarf the Marshall Plan to have an impact on the major social problems throughout the Americas. There is absolutely no political support in the US for this type of foreign aid now, nor can we foresee a time when there will be. So integration will proceed by accords such as the SPP to be tested initially in Mexico. (Actually it is difficult to talk of "integration" per se, because the US will retain its hegemony in all crucial matters. Absorption might be a more appropriate term).

In a recent development, the US has drafted plans that call for transfers of up to a billion dollars into Mexico. The funds are not for social programs, but for a supposed "war against drugs", in a repeat of a rationale used to channel billions of dollars into Colombia, to increase that country's arsenal in its war against domestic insurgencies. (See "The Lost War", by Misha Glenny, The Washington Post, 19 August 2007).

This is a long-range task. We predict that the US will be pushing forward its corporate and security-led agenda through the SPP and its offshoots for the next several decades.

17. Does the SPP have anything to say about Mexican migration northward?

Except for references to "intelligent borders" that will make it easier and quicker for "low-risk persons" to cross border checkpoints, the SPP apparently overlooks migration issues. This mirrors the "NAFTA credo": goods, services, capital and high-level corporate executives can cross borders with increasing ease. Common folks, on the other hand, those that need to migrate to survive because they cannot find work or a decent salary, are "high-risk persons" for the US government. Therefore they will continue to face difficulties as undocumented migrants, risking their lives by crossing deserts or mountains in search of a livelihood.

The SPP contains no measures that recognize the importance of immigrant labor for the US and Canadian economies. Thus a large and vulnerable labor pool, subject to deportation, will continue to exist, malleable to accepting low wages and negligible labor rights.

18. Is the increased militarization of Mexico's southern border part of these accords?

Undoubtedly, but today there is no region that is exempt from creeping militarization. Currently the south-southeast of Mexico has become a seal, especially for Central Americans, but also for other foreigners and even a few Mexicans. Mexico's ability to control its southern border is a crucial element within the SPP, but crackdowns on foreigners entering from Guatemala or Belice have had a poor record. Gross violations of human rights occur daily. All security forces - the army, the National Migration Institute, the Federal Preventive Police, the Beta Force (established supposedly to "aid" immigrants in need), and the state police - have declared "open season" on Central Americas and treat them as spoils of war. With one hand they strip migrants of their belongings and receive bribes with the other hand from polleros (immigrant traffickers) so that their human cargo can continue their northward journey.

The SPP has, however, authorized a new type of border crossing. The United States now has permission to cross the Mexican or Canadian border with its armed forces virtually at will. Incursions could take place during "red alerts" declared due to "terrorism" or suspicion of terrorism anywhere in the three-country region.

These plans and accords are now quite well advanced between the US and Canada and we can reasonably suspect that similar agreements have been reached with Mexico.

The US and Canada have established a Binational Planning Group that has laid out "military contingency plans" to be enacted on both sides of the US-Canadian border and include "a coordinated response to national requests for military assistance [by civilian authorities we presume] in cases of a threat, attack or civil emergency in the US or Canada. Should a red alert be sounded, these so-called 'requests' could lead to the deployment of US troops or Special Forces in Canadian territory" [information taken from Global Research].

19. Has there been any opposition to the SPP?

Definitely. As people and organizations find out about the SPP, a common reaction is to ask how can we work together with others to expose and oppose it. Fortunately, there are organizations and networks that are undertaking diverse activities, such as information dissemination, mobilization and protest against the SPP. In Mexico, CIEPAC belongs to one such network, the RMALC (Mexican Action Network on Free Trade), which actively disseminates information on the SPP throughout Mexico.

In the United States, RMALC's counterpart is ART (Alliance for Responsible Trade). The Canadian counterparts are Common Frontiers and the RQIC (Quebec Network on Continental Integration).

Other allies in this struggle against the Empire throughout the Americas have created a region-wide network know as the HSA or Hemispheric Social Alliance.

Many organizations, such as the Anti-imperialist Coalition, Block the Empire, the Other Campaign in Canada and the Council of Canadians, mobilized in response to the "amigos' summit" in Canada on August 20-21.

20. What can we do to protest the SPP?

As always, the first step involves finding out what the SPP is about. All social organizations, trade unions, producers' cooperatives, etc. should undertake information dissemination campaigns on the SPP, in order to widen comprehension on what it means, how it will (and is) affecting us and how to work for better alternatives based on peoples' needs.

After finding out more, one option is to demand a binding consultation, referendum, or popular plebiscite on the SPP. Although in Mexico there is little faith in traditional party politics, if the legislative branches in all three counties were to exercise their established powers, at least there would be greater access to information and a possibility of stimulating debate.

Why should these important agreements be taken without complete transparency? Why is it that a small group of elites and large corporations find it necessary to hide SPP proceedings from public view? It is up to us to ensure that our countries represent our interests, the majority's interests.

For further reading, please see:

"Behind Closed Doors: What they're not telling us about the SPPNA" by the Council of Canadians

For a historic overview of the SPP, please see
"NAFTA-plus: the future according to the elites"

Deported Mexican Activist Could Return to U.S. as Envoy

A Mexican immigrant-rights activist deported earlier this month may be headed back to the United States as a Mexican government envoy. Elvira Arellano has asked Mexican President Felipe Calderon to appoint her ‘peace and justice ambassador’ so she may return to be with her U.S.-born, eight-year old son. Arellano was deported earlier this month following a year of refuge inside a Chicago church. She was arrested outside a Los Angeles church after arriving to take part in a rally for immigrant rights.

Oil Minister Calls on Exxon and Conoco to Leave Venezuela

By: Kiraz Janicke – Venezuelanalysis.com

Caracas , August 30, 2007

Rafael Ramirez, Venezuela's Energy Minister and president of the state owned oil company PDVSA, called on US oil companies ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil to leave Venezuela. Ramirez issued the call as he submitted details of proposed contracts relating to the final transition of companies operating in the Orinoco oil belt into joint ventures with PDVSA during a session of the National Assembly’s Energy Commission yesterday.

“We are in negotiations with the companies that don't accept our laws, to finalize their exit from the country,” he said referring to Conoco and to Exxon.

While the US-owned Chevron Corp, the British-owned BP, the French oil company Total, and the Norwegian Statoil accepted the terms imposed by the Venezuelan government in May, which gave a 60% controlling share to PDVSA over all projects operating in the Orinoco oil belt, Conoco and Exxon pulled out.

The president of Venezuela Oil Corp (CVP) and member of the board of directors of PDVSA, Eulogio Del Pino said that compensation negotiations with Conoco and Exxon should be concluded in the next few weeks. However, there would be no compensation, Ramirez said, for Total and Statoil, which have since reduced their participation in Sincor, a joint project with the government.

“We were very clear last year, we are simply not interested in working with companies that don't accept our law, that don't accept our constitution.” he continued.

Ramirez also called for the new contracts, which could give PDVSA up to 80% share in some joint holdings, to be published once they are approved by the National Assembly so that the Venezuelan people could compare them with contracts signed by the previous governments of the Fourth Republic. “Never again will they sign contracts behind the back of our country,” he said.

State participation in the Orinoco oil belt, which produces some 500,000 barrels a day, has increased from 39% to 78% with the nationalizations in May. Total oil production in Venezuela is approximately 3.09 million barrels according to official figures from PDVSA, with nearly half being exported to the United States.

PDVSA has also moved to address a shortage of oil drills which sparked an “operational emergency” in July with the first of 13 oil drills from China arriving in October.

Ramirez confirmed that with the final transition of the companies into joint projects with PDVSA a total of 4,000 workers would be incorporated on the PDVSA. Uncertainty surrounding the incorporation of oil workers from a number of drilling rigs nationalized in May sparked an industrial dispute last month. Negotiations for the collective contract for oil workers are still continuing.

In relation to recent allegations of corruption in PDVSA, Ramirez said that “within a company as complex as PDVSA, that makes many types of transactions every day, there are cases that we are investigating, that we are processing,” and he continued, “it should be recalled that in our country PDVSA is subject to all the mechanisms of control of public administration.”

“We have an organization of General Comptrol within PDVSA, we have a structure and a commissioner within PDVSA and in that manner we are handling a number of cases of possible administrative deviations.

However, he said there were different levels of cases and that PDVSA was asking the National Assembly to investigate an incidence of corruption dating from 2005, which he said caused, “immense damage to the nation, and we have reliable proof of contracts harmful to the nation with massive discounts in the importation of oil through Citgo.”

Ramirez emphasized, “We have reiterated to the National Assembly our petition that the necessary procedures be opened to punish all these deviations.”

He added that the oil industry would collaborate for the clarification of these issues, precisely because PDVSA could not be a company of private interests, "There is no way that we either want to or can evade the mechanisms of public control.”

August 30, 2007

Zapatistas arise for North American Summit

By Brenda Norrell,
Posted on Wed Aug 29th, 2007 at 12:47:39 PM EST
RANCHO EL PENASCO, Sonora, Mexico – Indigenous Peoples from Canada, the United States and Northern Mexico are asked to bring their concerns and issues to the Zapatistas’ North American Summit, Oct. 8 – 9, 2007.

Zapatistas extend a warm welcome to Indigenous Peoples, delegates and commissions. Non-Indian supporters are asked to serve as volunteer workers at the summit.

O’odham in Mexico Lt. Gov. Jose Garcia explained the reasons for the summit, which is hosted by the O’odham in Mexico.

“This meeting is an opportunity for Indian tribes to learn why the Zapatistas rose up, and learn what has happened since that time to bring about the unity of the people,” Garcia said.

Garcia said the Zapatista movement is well-known in southern Mexico, but Indigenous in the north are still learning about the movement.

Still, the racism and bigotry towards Indigenous Peoples knows no boundaries, he said.

“We need to learn to survive in this modern world, as society progresses. Indigenous are affected by these changes in many ways.

“This is why we’re asking non-Indigenous to have courtesy and allow Indigenous this time to come together and voice opinions and concerns.”

Maria Garcia, organizing food for the Zapatistas' North American Summit, said hard-working kitchen helpers are needed for food preparation and cleaning duties. Helpers should arrive at the site on Sunday evening, Oct. 7, for assignments.

Also, large quantities of coffee, pinto beans, rice, cooking oil, heavy paper plates, heavy paper cups for coffee and napkins are needed. (Please contact Maria or Jose Garcia at oodhamj@yahoo.com or La Indita Restaurant in Tucson, to provide supplies before the conference.)

Lt. Gov. Garcia said all attendees must register, either by way of pre-registration or at the site. Media should bring press credentials for registration.

Indigenous organizations may also submit written statements of their concerns and issues to the summit.

The topics of discussion were established by the Intercontinental Indigenous Summit Commission (Comision Organizadora del Encuentro de Pueblos Indigenas de Americas.) The organizing commission includes the traditional authorities of Vicam Pueblo, National Indigenous Congress of Mexico and the Sixth Commission of the EZLN.

The primary topic will be the war of capitalist conquest and its effect on Indigenous Peoples. The second topic is the resistance of Indigenous Peoples to this war of conquest in defense of Mother Earth and Indigenous territories and cultures. The third topic will be a discussion of why Indigenous Peoples are struggling.

Indian tribes’ delegates, representatives or commissions are invited to bring the problems of their regions and discuss these topics at the regional and international summits.

Other attendees will be observers, without a voice or role in the decision-making process at the Indigenous summits.

The North American Continental Summit, Oct. 8 – 9, is one of four regional conferences. There are also Indigenous summits being held in Oaxaca, Oct. 4 --5, Atlapulco in central Mexico, Oct. 6 –7 and Michaocan, Oct. 6 – 7, 2007.

The Intercontinental Indigenous Summit/Encuentro de Pueblos Indígenas de América, Oct. 11 – 14, follows in Vicam Pueblo near Obregon. Attendees must register.

At the North American Summit in Rancho el Penasco, camping, with water on site, is available, beginning Sunday, Oct. 7 through the conclusion of the summit on Oct. 9. For those with cars, motels are within two miles. Rancho el Penasco eco-tourism and biodiversity ranch, is located south of Magdalena on the main highway to Hermosillo. It is less than a two-hour drive from the Nogales, Ariz., border.

Brenda Norrell
brendanorrell@gmail.com

O’odham in Mexico Lt. Gov. Jose Garcia
oodhamj@yahoo.com

Paraguay in a spin about Bush's alleged 100,000 acre hideaway

Tom Phillips in Cuiab
Monday October 23, 2006
The Guardian


Meeting the new couple next door can be an anxious business for even the most relaxed home owner. Will they be international drug traffickers? Have they got noisy kids with a penchant for electronic music? As worries go, however, having the US president move in next door must come fairly low on the list.

Unless of course you are a resident of northern Paraguay and believe reports in the South American press that he has bought up a 100,000 acre (40,500 hectare) ranch in your neck of the woods.

The rumours, as yet unconfirmed but which began with the state-run Cuban news agency Prensa Latina, have triggered an outpouring of conspiracy theories, with speculation rife about what President Bush's supposed interest in the "chaco", a semi-arid lowland in the Paraguay's north, might be.

Some have speculated that he might be trying to wrestle control of the Guarani Aquifer, one of the largest underground water reserves, from the Paraguayans.

Rumours of Mr Bush's supposed forays into South American real estate surfaced during a recent 10-day visit to the country by his daughter Jenna Bush. Little is known about her trip to Paraguay, although officially she travelled with the UN children's agency Unicef to visit social projects. Photographers from the Paraguayan newspaper ABC Color tracked her down to one restaurant in Paraguay's capital Asunción, where she was seen flanked by 10 security guards, and was also reported to have met Paraguay's president, Nicanor Duarte, and the US ambassador to Paraguay, James Cason. Reports in sections of the Paraguayan media suggested she was sent on a family "mission" to tie up the land purchase in the "chaco".

Erasmo Rodríguez Acosta, the governor of the Alto Paraguay region where Mr Bush's new acquisition supposedly lies, told one Paraguayan news agency there were indications that Mr Bush had bought land in Paso de Patria, near the border with Brazil and Bolivia. He was, however, unable to prove this, he added.

Last week the Paraguayan news group Neike suggested that Ms Bush was in Paraguay to "visit the land acquired by her father - relatively close to the Brazilian Pantanal [wetlands] and the Bolivian gas reserves".

The US presence in Paraguay has been under scrutiny since May 2005 when the country's Congress agreed to allow 400 American marines to operate there for 18 months in exchange for financial aid.

At the time many viewed the arrival of troops as a sign that Washington was trying to monitor US business interests in neighbouring Bolivia, after the election of Evo Morales, a leftwing leader who promised to nationalise his country's natural gas industry.

Life in a FARC Camp

[by Garry Leech]

http://www.colombiajournal.org/colombia263.htm

We met two female members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) at the pre-established rendezvous point deep in the Colombian jungle. There we waited in a simple two-room wooden shack, which served as the home of a local peasant family. We sat there talking and drinking coffee while one of the guerrillas stood on the riverbank communicating through a hand-held radio. Finally, having received the all clear, which meant that there were no army patrols on the river, the four of us climbed into a canoe for the next stage of our journey. It had taken Terry Gibbs and myself more than two days to reach that point and we still had a short river trip and a hike through the jungle before we would finally arrive at the FARC camp that was our destination.

After an hour journeying deeper into the lush green rainforest we pulled over to the riverbank, climbed out of the canoe and walked down a narrow path through the jungle to a small clearing. We waited there while our two female guerrilla guides stashed the canoe and its outboard motor. When the two rebels returned to the clearing they were each carrying two planks of wood measuring six foot long, ten inches wide and two inches thick. They insisted on also carrying our backpacks for us. The sun was setting when we all set off along a trail through the jungle on a one-hour hike to the FARC camp.

We stumbled and slid along the muddy path, traversing streams on fallen logs with only the narrow beams of our small flashlights to illuminate the way. Miraculously, I managed to avoid falling into the quagmire that passed as a trail. Almost an hour into the hike I heard the female guerrilla up front mumble something to a shadowy figure in the darkness. A fully uniformed, AK-47-toting male guerrilla then greeted Terry and I as we passed him. I noticed a small white light through the trees up ahead and as we reached the perimeter of the camp saw a uniformed man with a gray beard working on a laptop computer. It was FARC commander Raúl Reyes; a member of the rebel group’s seven-person Central Command. According to many analysts, Reyes is the second-highest ranking member of the FARC.

Reyes greeted us both and after an introductory conversation invited us to join him and several other guerrillas for dinner. Afterwards, Terry and I were shown to our bivouac, which consisted of a bed with wooden planks for a mattress, a mosquito net and a plastic camouflaged canopy that hung above everything to provide protection from the frequent tropical rains. Our bivouac was identical to the ones used by the guerrillas in the camp. For the next three days, Terry and I lived as the guerrillas lived. We bathed with them in a nearby stream. We went to the bathroom in their rainforest latrines, which consisted of trenches dug in the ground. And we all ate ample servings of basic Colombian food.

Terry and I were at the remote FARC camp for different reasons. She was there to interview female guerrillas as part of her research on women engaged in social struggle in Colombia. I was there to interview Reyes. We were given free rein of the camp and access to all the guerrillas, about one third of whom were female. We were also allowed to take photos with the stipulation that we didn’t publish the faces of any of the rebels except Reyes. We also passed many hours engaged in informal conversations with Reyes and other guerrillas.

Living conditions for the guerrillas were austere to say the least. They consisted of the aforementioned bivouac, two uniforms, a pair of rubber boots, an AK-47 assault rifle, extra cartridges of ammunition, a machete and three meals a day. Despite the austerity, the camp’s infrastructure was impressive given its remote location. The bivouacs were interconnected with a network of wooden walkways constructed several inches above the wet, muddy ground. As few trees as possible had been felled to make space for the bivouacs and walkways in order to preserve the rainforest canopy, no doubt to limit the possibility of detection from the air.

In the center of the camp was a large wooden-framed, tent-like structure with sheets of black plastic that served as a roof. Inside were a dozen rows of benches constructed from wooden planks similar to the ones our guerrilla guides had carried to the camp. A television and chalkboard were situated at one end of the structure and each evening the guerrillas watched the news on Caracol and RCN—Colombia’s two major television networks—in order to keep informed about current issues. This activity was particularly interesting given that the country’s television networks generally presented a very negative portrayal of the FARC.

The wooden walkways extended beyond the center of the camp in several directions, becoming wooden steps whenever the path went up or down hills. One walkway disappeared into the rainforest only to terminate at the men’s latrine. The word latrine might be a bit elaborate given that it only consisted of two trenches dug into the ground. One was for urine and the other for feces. A different walkway led to the women’s latrine, which consisted of the same facilities. There were long sticks that were used to shovel the red, clay-like mud back into the trench to cover up the human waste.

A third walkway led to the camp’s kitchen, which was a large, open-sided structure that contained two fires and lots of large pots and pans. The cooks prepared three meals a day of basic Colombian fare such as beef, chicken, rice, potatoes, yucca, vegetables and lots of soup. One afternoon, while Terry was interviewing female guerrillas, I walked down to the kitchen and hung out with the two rebels, one male and the other female, who were on kitchen duty.

“You all seem to eat well here?” I said to them, half as a question and half as a statement.
“You’ve come at a good time,” explained the female guerrilla. “We have plenty of food right now. Sometimes we don’t have much to eat. How often we get supplies depends on the weather and the security situation.”
“Do you two cook everyday?” I asked them.
“No,” replied the male rebel. “Everybody takes a turn. We will cook dinner today and then breakfast and lunch tomorrow. After that someone else will take over and do the same.”
“So everybody cooks?” I inquire. “The men and the women?”
“Of course,” the female guerrilla answered. “Everybody does everything in the camp. It doesn’t matter if you are a man or a woman. You cook, you wash your own clothes, you stand guard, and you go out on patrol. It is the same for men and women.”

I had heard that this sort of equality was part of the FARC’s philosophy, but wasn’t sure to what degree it had actually been implemented. I still wasn’t sure to what degree it applied in other FARC units throughout the country. However, there was little doubt that the guerrillas in that particular camp had achieved an impressive degree of gender equality. It was not just evident in their activities and words but, more importantly, in their way of being.

Surprisingly, for me at least, it was more evident in the behavior of the men than the women. The softness of the energy exhibited by the male rebels towards their female colleagues, their absolute lack of machismo, their acceptance of them as equals, was actually quite astounding. And for the women, they also exhibited many feminine qualities for a group of females living a traditionally male lifestyle. In fact, maintaining their femininity was important to the female guerrillas. During off-duty hours we often observed female rebels getting together to apply make-up or to braid each other’s hair. Evidently, equality in that FARC camp was not about women acting like men.

Everyday in the late afternoon the guerrillas went in groups to bathe. Terry and I would go with a bunch of rebels shortly before dinner each day. The wooden walkway wound its way through the rainforest and down a hill to a small stream. The rebels had built a dam across the stream that allowed the fresh, clear water to flow over the top of the twelve-inch high wooden structure, through the ten foot long bathing area and then over another dam before continuing its course through the rainforest. Wooden floorboards were placed in the bottom of the pool of water created between the two dams to ensure solid, mud-free footing.

The male and female guerrillas stripped down to their underwear and bathed together in the shin-deep pool of water. They also hand washed their clothes on a wooden table constructed along one side of the pool. The guerrillas each had two sets of camouflage uniforms and they washed one each day, which then dried over the following twenty-four hours while they wore the other one. In one of our bathing sessions I attempted to hand wash the pair of trousers that had gotten muddy on the hike to the camp. A female guerrilla who was bathing with us couldn’t help but smile at my ineptitude in the laundering department. A male rebel took pity on me and taught me his washing technique, which was surprisingly effective.

Everyday began at 4:50 am. Some rebels went out on patrol and others stood guard around the camp’s perimeter. Many of those who remained in the camp engaged in education programs that taught basic reading, writing and math. All the guerrillas were peasants, some illiterate. The better-educated rebels would be paired with the less literate ones in order to provide them with a basic education and to teach them the fundamental concepts of Marxism. The pairs would spend a couple of hours each afternoon engaging in lessons. Some days the guerrillas engaged in military training. After dinner, the rebels would watch the news, engage in group discussions about political and cultural issues, watch a movie and be in bed by 9:00 pm.

We were told that the rebel unit frequently moved camp for security reasons. Such an operation involved packing up everything, except the wooden infrastructure, for the journey to another part of the jungle where they would take out their machetes and begin constructing a new camp. Because they were all peasants, the rebels were very adept with that ubiquitous tool of the countryside, the machete. However, other skills that the group required were not always so easy to come by, such as medical care.

I asked one female rebel what happened when a guerrilla became ill, or was injured or wounded.
“There are always several guerrillas who can apply basic medical care,” she explained. “And these guerrillas pass this knowledge on to others so each unit always has medics.”
“But what if the sickness or injury is serious and requires extensive medical care, like surgery?” I inquired.
“Then the person is transported to one of the FARC’s hospitals, which are staffed by doctors. For security reasons, it is preferred that they don’t go on such a journey unless it is absolutely necessary.”
“Where are these hospitals located, in villages or in jungle camps like this?” I asked her.
“In camps like this,” she replied.

Several of the guerrillas referred to their cultural time on Sundays as an important part of guerrilla life. During these sessions they would engage in music, theatre and poetry readings, with most of the art being inspired by their revolutionary ideals. On our final afternoon in the camp the guerrillas put on a cultural show for Terry and I. We all gathered in the large structure for the performance, which consisted of songs and skits that were full of humor and political and social commentary. One skit that several rebels performed was a parody of beauty pageants, which are extremely popular in Colombia. A male and a female guerrilla held imitation microphones and acted as the hosts of the pageant, which sought to crown the new Señorita Colombia.

They first introduced the reigning champion, who was an attractive female rebel dressed in a halter-top and miniskirt with a cardboard crown perched atop her head. She took her place at the front of the room while the hosts introduced the contestants seeking to become her heir. One by one, the four contestants entered the room from behind a curtain. They each paraded around the inside perimeter of the structure in their skimpy outfits as the audience cheered wildly. The interesting and hilarious catch was that all four were male guerrillas dressed in drag and adorned with lipstick and make-up.

The hosts then asked the contestants questions about what they would do if they were to be crowned the new Señorita Colombia. When it was his turn to answer, a short stocky mestizo rebel who was Señorita Cauca replied, “I would bring about the New Colombia in which all Colombians would be equal.” His reference was to the socialist society that the FARC has envisioned and labeled the “New Colombia.” Clearly, in the FARC, culture and politics are integrated.

The funniest moment in the show occurred when Señorita Chocó, a tall thin black guerrilla with a moustache, paraded around the structure exhibiting exaggerated feminine mannerisms while wearing a wig, a red bikini top and a blue makeshift plastic mini-skirt. He had the entire audience of guerrillas, along with Terry and myself, laughing hysterically. The skit ended when the hosts asked Terry and I to select the new Señorita Colombia. We unanimously agreed on Señorita Chocó. The hosts then coaxed several male rebels and me into dancing with the guerrillas in drag. The entire skit was a fascinating parody on the sexist nature of beauty pageants and the objectification of the female body.

There were a few older guerrillas in the camp who had been members of the FARC for decades. Among them were Reyes, who had been in the rebel group for 26 years, and the oldest woman in the FARC, who had been living in the jungle for 32 years. Most of the guerrillas, however, were in their twenties. Some of them were couples whose bivouacs had been constructed with double beds. Any two guerrillas who want to enter into a relationship with each other have to obtain the permission of their commander. This protocol is similar to that in the US military where soldiers posted overseas must obtain the permission of their commanding officer before getting married. FARC guerrillas also need to obtain permission to end a relationship, although that is rarely denied.

The fact that the guerrillas are rotated in and out of field units makes it difficult to maintain long-term relationships. One morning I sat down with a guerrilla couple in their bivouac to discuss engaging in relationships under such conditions.
“It is difficult because you never know when one of you is going to be sent somewhere else,” explained an Afro-Colombian female guerrilla named Carmen.
“The FARC tries to keep couples together whenever it is possible,” added her partner Osvaldo.
“If you are separated is it possible to stay in touch with each other?” I asked.
“No, not really. It is difficult, but that’s just the way it is,” said Osvaldo, acknowledging that commitment to the FARC and their revolutionary cause is every guerrilla’s first priority.

Terry and I also engaged in many informal conversations with Reyes and I conducted one formal two-hour interview with the FARC commander. During the informal conversations we discussed a wide variety of topics related to Colombia and the world in general. Some of the conversations occurred during the meals that we ate with Reyes. Other conversations were held around the table in his bivouac, which was situated at one end of the camp. The only difference between Reyes’ living quarters and those of the other guerrillas was that it contained a table with wooden benches on each side and a laptop computer.

One topic of discussion was the possibility of a prisoner exchange between the FARC and the US government. More precisely, I asked about the possibility of the rebel group exchanging the three US military contractors that it was holding captive for Simón Trinidad and Soñia, the two FARC members imprisoned in the United States.
“We cannot agree to such an exchange because we are engaged in an internal conflict and so any exchange would have to be between us and the Colombian government,” explained Reyes. “We are not at war with the United States and we don’t want to internationalize the conflict. And besides, any humanitarian exchange would have to include the release of all the guerrillas being held in Colombian prisons.”

We also discussed the country’s new center-left political party, the Democratic Pole. At one point I asked Reyes if he thought there was any possibility of the FARC negotiating peace with the Democratic Pole should the party win the presidency in the 2010 elections.
“It would depend on their policies,” he replied.

Back in my bivouac I thought about the accusations made by many analysts that the guerrilla group is nothing more than a criminal organization. These critics often claim that the FARC was ideological many years ago but now is only interested in profiting from its criminal activities, which are primarily related to the coca trade. Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe has repeatedly declared that there is not an armed conflict in Colombia and that the government is simply combating criminals who engage in terrorism. Clearly these are efforts to de-legitimize the FARC as a political entity.

The FARC’s involvement in the coca trade and its human rights abuses against civilians, including kidnapping and the use of landmines and notoriously inaccurate homemade mortars, have made it easy for critics to simply dismiss the rebels as criminals. However, the issue is not so black and white, as I discovered in the FARC camp. In fact, it is difficult to accept such claims given the difficult life that the guerrillas live. After all, unlike Colombian soldiers and paramilitary fighters, the rebels do not get paid and they receive no material benefits other than three meals a day.

And if guerrilla leaders like Reyes are little more than the heads of a criminal organization, then they must be considered miserable failures. After all, other Colombian criminals live in luxury. The leader of the former Medellín cocaine cartel, Pablo Escobar, lived lavishly in magnificent mansions, as have many other Colombian drug traffickers over the past thirty years. Paramilitary leaders have also lived well on their vast cattle ranches in northern Colombia, enjoying the riches wrought from their criminal activities. And now they are demobilizing so they can legally enjoy their ill-gotten wealth.

On the other hand, the FARC’s leaders live as Reyes lives. There appears to be no personal monetary gain despite the guerrilla group’s financial wealth. It is a hard life spent sleeping on wooden planks, bathing in rivers, fighting off tropical diseases, and constantly moving from camp to camp to avoid US intelligence gathering efforts and the Colombian army. Reyes has lived in the jungle in this manner for 26 years and the only comforts that he enjoys are a laptop computer and the camp’s television. It is hardly the lifestyle of a criminal whose principal objective is the attainment of wealth.

After spending three nights in the camp, and with our work completed, Terry and I awoke on our final morning, packed our things and bid farewell to the guerrillas. Along with our rebel guides, we made the return trek through the rainforest to the river and boarded a canoe. As we cruised along the jungle river I thought about Colombia’s future. After almost seven years of Plan Colombia, five years of President Uribe’s security policies and more than five billion dollars in US military aid, there is no evidence that the FARC has been significantly weakened militarily. Consequently, with the FARC being too strong to be defeated on the battlefield and not strong enough to take power by force, a negotiated settlement is the only possible route to achieving peace.

The FARC, however, is not about to simply negotiate its demobilization in return for reduced prison sentences as the paramilitaries have done. Nor is the FARC likely to demobilize in return for a full amnesty under a “peace” agreement that leaves the structures of neoliberalism intact, as did the M-19 in Colombia, the FMLN in El Salvador and the URNG in Guatemala. Any negotiated peace would require a restructuring of Colombia’s political, social and economic system to ensure a much more equitable distribution of the country’s wealth and land. But such a negotiated settlement would require the acquiescence of the country’s political and economic elites as well as of the US government. Consequently, at least for the near future, it appears that the conflict will continue to rage. And, tragically, it will be the civilian population that will continue to bear the brunt of the violence.

To read the entire interview with FARC Commander Raúl Reyes, click here

Armed conflict
30.08.2007

The War on Mexico's Tropical Forests

Dead Forest Defenders

By JOHN ROSS

Mexico City.

Mexico's 56.000.000 hectares of lush forestland covering a quarter of its national territory and comprising 1.3% of the world's forest resources, are increasingly littered with the corpses of dead forest defenders.

With the highest deforestation rate in Meso-America--272,000 hectares of tropical forest disappear a year--Mexican forests are a violent battleground between narco-gangs clearing land for illicit cultivation, guerilla groups encamped under the canopy, heavily-armed wood poachers who steal 2,000,000 board feet of timber each year, and those who seek to defend the trees.

In recent years, Mexico's forests have become a killing floor every bit as lethal as Brazil where such environmental martyrs as Chico Mendez, Sister Dorothy Stang, and young Dionicio Ribieras have been cut down by the pistoleros of ruthless landowners.

The list of the dead is horrific. In the state of Mexico, 30 forest inspectors, a third of the state force, have been murdered since 1991 according to a count kept by Hector Magallanes, Greenpeace Mexico forest action coordinator. Federal forest wardens are equally as vulnerable. With 300 inspectors to cover more than 50,000,000 hectares, each inspector oversees 180,000 hectares. Too often, they find themselves caught up in shoot-outs with organized gangs of wood poachers ("talamontes") who do their dirty work mostly in the dark with an army of gunsills standing watch.

When Wilfredo Alvarez, a Guerrero state forest inspector was ambushed in 2003 near the state capital of Chilpancingo, one of his killers was a fellow inspector who had been corrupted by the talamontes. Miguel Angel Maya, regional coordinator for the National Protected Land Commission, was gunned down in the Chimilapas, one of Mexico's last two great forests, in 2005--his predecessor had been murdered the previous summer.

Poor farmers who seek to defend their forests from the wood poachers are met with homicidal repression. 17 members of the Farmers Organization of the Southern Sierra (OCSS) were massacred at Aguas Blancas Guerrero in June 1995 after they blocked a crony of corrupt governor Ruben Figueroa from logging out their sierra. 28 Zapotec Indians were butchered in 2002 in the southern Oaxaca sierra in a feud over forest ownership.

The most recent killing to shame national attention was that of 21 year-old Aldo Zamora in Ocuitlan Mexico state this past May 15th--Aldo's brother Misael was critically wounded in the attack by wood poachers from the local Encarnacion clan. Aldo and Misael are the sons of legendary forest defender Ildefonso Zamora. "They go to where we hurt when they take our children" Ildefonso, a Tlahuica Indian leader, mourned, vowing to continue his peoples' struggle to defend their forests. Although President Felipe Calderon came to Ocuitlan and pledged that Aldo's killers would not enjoy impunity, arrests have been slow in coming.

When forest defenders are not murdered outright, they are persecuted and jailed on absurd charges on orders from the talamontes. This past June 6th, Jaime Gonzalez who campaigns to halt the wholesale devastation of fragile mountain forests in Motozintla Chiapas was jailed by local police for a traffic offense and disappeared for 15 days during which he says he was relentlessly tortured. Gonzalez remains in state prison.

The Campesino Ecologistas ("Ecological Farmers") of the Petatlan sierra above Guerrero's Costa Grande organized to combat uncontrolled clear-cutting by the U.S. timber giant Boise Cascade --Boise moved to Mexico after having timber permits to log in U.S. national forests cancelled as the result of environmentalist pressures. A Campesino Ecologista blockade of mountain roads eventually cut off Boise's access to its wood supply and the transnational moved its operations to greener pastures in southern Chile. But caciques (rural bosses) who had cut lucrative deals with the transnational to sell off the forests grew disgruntled and at least five villagers were killed by their gunmen.

Rodolfo Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera who had been prominent organizers of the blockade were taken prisoner by the 40th Motorized Infantry Brigade and tortured for days by the soldiers. Later, they were charged with possession of marijuana and automatic weapons and thrown into the Guerrero state prison in Iguala where they languished for two years. Both farmers were designated as prisoners of conscience by Amnesty International and in 2002, while still in prison; they were awarded the Goldman Prize, sometimes described as an environmental Nobel. Released by former president Vicente Fox because of their poor health as the result of the beatings by the military, Montiel and Cabrera, afraid to move their families back to the forests of Petatlan, took up residence at the other end of the country in Yucatan.

They had good reason to be fearful. Their lawyer Digna Ochoa died mysteriously in Mexico City in 2001. Fellow ecologist farmer Felipe Arriaga was framed for the murder of the son of a local cacique and served 10 months in prison in 2004 before justice was done. In 2005, Campesino Ecologista Albertino Penaloza and two of his children were assassinated in an ambush in the Sierra of Petatlan.

The persecution of forest defenders is not confined to southern Mexico. Isidro Baldanegro, a Raramuri Indian defender of the diminishing pine forests of Chihuahua state's Tarahumara sierra from "chabochi" (non-Indian) talamontes, and young Hermenigildo Rivas, were taken into custody on their ejido in 2003 after state police broke into their home without a warrant and charged them with the usual guns and marijuana violations, the same charges lodged against the Campesino Ecologistas.

The two were beaten unmercifully and locked up for 18 months before international environmental groups intervened. Once again, Amnesty International declared the forest defenders prisoners of conscience and they too were awarded the Goldman prize, a prerequisite of which seems to be torture and imprisonment by the Mexican police.

But those who defend Mexican forests from predatory wood poaching are not the only defenders of the environment to be killed or jailed for their efforts. In December 2003, Navy officer Andres Espino was murdered by turtle egg poachers while providing protection for endangered Pacific Coast sea turtles on a Michoacan beach--a second sailor was wounded. The Mexican Navy has been active in defense of these diminishing species. But when the Cucapa Indians in the Baja California desert try to fish the Sea of Cortez for their sacred corvina, they are removed at gunpoint by sailors assigned to this protected area.

Much of Mexico's forestland is titularly owned by 500 mostly-Indian ejidos but indigenous ownership does not guarantee that the forests will be defended and conserved. While many ejidos zealously protect their forests which are held in common and represent the communities' most valued resource, other Indians such as the Lacandon who occupy the forest of the same name lease out their timber rights to millions of meters of precious mahogany and cedar stands to corporate talamontes.

On the other side of the ledger, Zapatista Mayan Indian rebels who share the rain forest with the Lacandones, enforce timber cutting strictures in their communities and set up roadblocks at key chokepoints in the jungle and the surrounding canyons to keep the wood poachers from moving their loads to clandestine sawmills in the municipality of Ocosingo. Clashes at the roadblocks have resulted in casualties on both sides. "The earth is our mother," explained Omar, a Zapatista forest defender on the Ejido Morelia, at the recent Intergalactica forum in the Lacandon jungle, "we are prepared to die to defend her."

John Ross can be reached at: johnross@igc.org

COLOMBIA: New Videos Shed Light on Palace of Justice Massacre

By Constanza Vieira

BOGOTA, Aug 29 (IPS) - Judge Carlos Horacio Urán walked out of Colombia’s Palace of Justice alive after it was seized by guerrillas in 1985. But his body was found inside the building when the 27-hour siege came to an end.

The local TV news station Noticias Uno aired three videos Sunday showing Urán limping out of the courthouse and being met at the door by supposed rescue workers, who carried him away on a stretcher.

On Nov. 6, 1985, the Movimiento 19 de Abril (M-19) guerrillas occupied the Palace of Justice, taking around 300 hostages, including the members of the Supreme Court and the Council of State (the highest court of administrative law).

The army immediately launched an assault, ignoring the order from Supreme Court president Alfonso Reyes to hold their fire. The order was issued by radio from within the building when the insurgents were already giving up in the face of the heavy military response.

According to official figures, between 89 and 115 people were killed that day in the courthouse, including all of the rebels, 11 Supreme Court magistrates, three auxiliary magistrates, 19 judges and 11 people who were working in, or just happened to be passing through, the cafeteria at the time. Some 200 hostages were rescued.

A few hours into the siege, a fire broke out and burned numerous court records, including the files from key cases, as well as evidence of what occurred at that time.

One of the videos broadcast by Noticias Uno shows the exact time that auxiliary magistrate Urán stumbled out of the courthouse: 14:17 on Thursday Nov. 7, the second day of the siege.

But on Friday, Urán’s body showed up inside the Palace of Justice, and was turned over naked to his wife, Uruguayan researcher Ana María Bidegaín.

The forensic exam showed that Urán was shot point-blank in the head with a 9 mm gun.

In May, an Attorney General’s Office search of a records warehouse of the B-2 military intelligence service turned up a list of "M-19 guerrillas, gunned down in combat" that included the names of Urán and another magistrate killed in the courthouse, Manuel Gaona.

Also found in the warehouse was Urán’s billfold, containing his identity card, his driver’s licence and a photo of his family with a bullet hole through the middle, Noticias Uno reported.

Bidegaín said that for 22 years she had believed that her husband died in crossfire between the rebels and the armed forces.

At the time, Urán was investigating the torture case of Dr. Olga López, an M-19 guerrilla fighter. He had also been a member of the National Popular Alliance (ANAPO), a left-wing party, where he met Andrés Almarales, who later became an insurgent -- and years later led the M-19 occupation of the Palace of Justice.

Gaona, the other magistrate on the list, had ruled against a judicial reform implemented by the government of Julio César Turbay (1978-1982) which made it possible for civilians to be tried by military courts.

Both the Supreme Court and the Council of State had been handing down convictions of members of the armed forces in cases like that of López and hundreds of civilians and insurgents tortured and killed by the security forces.

The courts "had issued a sentence in June that year against former defence minister Luis Carlos Camacho Leyva, former president Turbay, and then defence minister Miguel Vega Uribe," Maureen Maya, director of the Fundación Cese al Fuego (Ceasefire Foundation), which is working to clarify the Palace of Justice massacre, pointed out on Monday.

Magistrate Nilson Pinilla, a member of the Truth Commission set up by the Supreme Court in 2005, announced that the videos would be included in the commission’s final report as "an extremely important point of reference."

Urán’s case "was not included" in the commission’s preliminary report last November "because we only had unconfirmed rumours," he told journalists.

Legal experts mentioned different reasons to argue that the statute of limitations had not run out on the case, such as the fact that the security forces had altered or concealed evidence.

René Guarín, whose sister Cristina disappeared after the siege and assault on the Palace of Justice, has received death threats in the last few weeks.

His sister, the cashier in the courthouse cafeteria, left the building uninjured, as seen in another tape seized in July from Colonel Alfonso Plazas, who led the military assault. However, she never reappeared.

Plazas is now under arrest in connection with the case.

For several years after the tragedy, threats were received regularly by the families of the 11 people who disappeared from the cafeteria, most of whom were employees there.

Although the threats stopped after five years, they started up again when Attorney General Mario Iguarán restarted the case, and the Supreme Court Truth Commission began to function in late 2005.

Relatives have received threatening phone calls, and report being followed by a white vehicle that has appeared with two different licence plates.

In addition, thick files were stolen from 87-year-old former judge Enrique Rodríguez, the father of Carlos, the cafeteria manager. In a video recording confiscated from Colonel Plazas, Carlos Rodríguez can be seen leaving the building unhurt. However, he was never heard from again.

Guarín told IPS that he discovered that "both of the licence plates used by the white car are from the DAS (Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad)" intelligence agency.

The security that the Attorney General’s Office’s Witness Protection Programme offers the 44-year-old computer engineer and father of two "consists of me quitting my job and my kids (ages nine and 11) dropping out of school, while they would bring us groceries once a week and pay our utility bills for eight months."

Later, "they would give us four million pesos (some 2,000 dollars) for a ‘productive enterprise’," he added, which, he said, was barely enough to "open a soft-drink stand" in a resort town.

Nine years ago, the prominent human rights lawyer who was assisting the families, Eduardo Umaña Mendoza, was murdered in his office.

Plazas’ arrest has raised some hopes among the families, whose efforts to recover the bodies of their loved ones have run up against "very powerful interests that seek to conceal evidence and testimony," the families say.

For that reason they set up their own Truth Commission in May, with the aim of shoring up the work of the Attorney General’s Office, which, they say, "has dragged on in total inertia for 20 years."

Among other goals, the families hope to get the courts to accept the testimony of former torturer Ricardo Gámez, who is living in exile in Europe, and whose version of events is -- they believe -- the most accurate heard so far.

The former police officer had already given a written deposition to the office of the inspector general (Procuraduría General de la Nación) in 1989. But the official who took it found no grounds for opening an investigation.

Gámez says he is a former member of what he describes as "the intelligence service’s pseudo-personnel" -- a group of 25 civilians working under military orders and paid out of secret expense funds.

Gámez has stated on camera, for example, that a non-commissioned officer kept a baby who was born in an army truck during the assault on the courthouse. The baby’s mother, Rosa Castiblanco, a cook at the cafeteria, was "disappeared."

The families are also demanding explanations from the Attorney General’s Office as to why no army generals have been charged or called on to testify in the case, or subjected to disciplinary or corrective actions.

Gámez said that just a few days before the siege, the Casa del Florero, a historical building in front of the courthouse, was set up as an army operations centre.

During the military assault, the building served as the base of operations used by Plazas, who at the time was the head of the Escuela de Caballería, an army training school.

It was Plazas who decided which of the hostages brought out of the Palace of Justice were to be tortured, and they were then sent to different military and intelligence facilities, said Gámez.

The torturers did not cover their faces or conceal their identities, he said, because it was clear from the very start of the operation that the tortured hostages were to be killed.

But Plazas was not in charge at 14:17 on Thursday, when Urán was taken out of the building.

His superior, General Jesús Armando Arias, commander at the time of the 13th army brigade, had replaced him there with two other officers, one of whom was Carlos Fracica, assistant commander at the Escuela de Artillería (artillery school), one of the places where hostages were tortured. Fracica, now a general, is military attaché in Chile.

In any case, according to Gámez, the Casa del Florero was just "an alternate centre of command, which was in direct contact with the Army Command."

That is why the hostages’ families have their sights set on the higher-ranking officers who planned and coordinated the operation.

Guarín told IPS that the families plan to testify before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which is studying the case of the 11 victims of forced disappearance, to disseminate the new evidence that has emerged.

Chileans take to streets in anger at regime

· Hundreds arrested in clashes with police
· Economic inequality at heart of protest in capital

Jonathan Franklin in Santiago and agencies
Thursday August 30, 2007
The Guardian

Thousands of Chileans took to the streets yesterday in a burgeoning middle class revolt against the 17 years of coalition government that has ruled since the fall of Augusto Pinochet in 1990.

Hundreds of Chileans were arrested as they approached the presidential palace. Squares in and around the palace became a chaotic mix of mounted police, riot troops and teargas. As water cannons blasted protesters, waves of students counterattacked with rocks. Burning barricades almost closed central Santiago.

Television images showed senator Alejandro Navarro, of President Michelle Bachelet's Socialist party, bleeding from the back of his head after apparently being clubbed by a police officer. The deputy interior minister, Felipe Harboe, said the incident would be investigated. Mr Navarro, who was treated in hospital, supported the protest.

"This protest will start to change things. There will be one after another," said Arturo Martinez, of United Workers Central, the trade union that organised the protest. The union is tapping into widespread anger at economic inequality in Chilean society. As riot police and ruling party politicians tried to play down the protests, the capital was filled by protesters demanding higher pensions, better public transport, subsidised housing and a halt to rising food and electricity prices.

President Bachelet initially defended her record as a progressive politician, then conceded and promised "subsidies to all" families in need and a "short-term solution" for economic inequality. "Nobody can say that my government's programmes are not fair and equitable. I will not accept questioning of my work on social justice," she said. "The solutions to these inequalities and the goal of a more equitable Chile are obtained with dialogue, maturity, work and agreements. Through this process there will be discord, but also common understanding."

While government officials tried to ignore the protests, union leaders such as Mr Martinez threatened to lay siege to Santiago by shutting down major avenues and roads leading into the city.

Throughout the day, protesters repeatedly attempted to approach the presidential palace, which late on Tuesday was briefly occupied by low-income housing residents who stormed the building. At least 30 members managed to scale the iron window grates, dangling from the palace screaming anti-government slogans.

Yesterday's protest comes after weeks of labour action, including strikes by poultry workers in southern Chile and copper miners in the north. Union leaders called the demonstrations to protest against the government's "neo-liberal" economic policies and to further the national debate about the country's minimum wage.

Salaries for workers have been at the forefront of public debate after recent statements by Bishop Alejandro Goic calling for "an ethical [minimum] wage" for Chilean workers.

Venezuelan National Oil Company to Create Diversified Branch Companies

By: Chris Carlson - Venezuelanalysis.com

Caracas, August 29, 2007 (venezuelanalysis.com) —The Venezuelan government's Central Planning Committee is proposing the creation of seven new companies as branches of the state oil company to promote growth and development in diverse sectors of the economy.

Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael Ramírez presented the plan to President Chavez on Monday in a meeting with the other major government ministers that make up the committee.

With enormous proven oil reserves, Venezuela is using its oil sector as the catalyst for a wide variety of development programs. This project will create seven companies as branches to PDVSA, which are PDVSA Industry, PDVSA Naval, PDVSA Agriculture, PDVSA Services, PDVSA Popular Gas, PDVSA Urban Development, and PDVSA Engineering and Construction.

The Central Planning Committee, headed up by Vice-President Jorge Rodriguez, was created as a permanent structure of the government last June with the intention of coordinating national economic planning and government management in order to achieve economic development and sovereignty.

The objective of the committee is to carry out the economic policies of the government, coordinating the efforts of different ministries, and taking measures to follow up and evaluate the impact of the polices on the needs of the population, according to government sources.

With the creation of new branches of PDVSA, the state oil company would extend its influence beyond the oil industry and into other important sectors of the economy by contributing to agricultural production or the construction of housing, among other activities.

The recuperation of the state oil company by the Chavez government as well as preventing its privatization has allowed PDVSA to play a fundamental role in the government's plans for economic development. President Chavez's recent proposal for constitutional reform seeks to strengthen the state's role in the exploitation of the nation's resources.

At the meeting, President Chavez reflected on the national economy and emphasized the importance of building a new economic model based on socialist principles.

Venezuelan Minister of Agriculture Elías Jaua also presented to the Central Planning Committee the plan to increase national agricultural production. The plan, known as the Battle for Food Sovereignty, is the continuation of the Agricultural Ministry's efforts to build a new agricultural model in the country by the year 2015.

According to government sources, the objective of the plan is "to promote a new model of agricultural production based on the principles of agrarian socialism, to guarantee agricultural sovereignty and the conditions of decent living for the Venezuelan population."

The program is a continuation of the government's National Agricultural Project and seeks to battle against the food shortages that the Venezuelan government has been dealing with since early this year, as well as increasing national production. The Minister of Agriculture predicted a 16 percent increase in agricultural production for 2007.

Mercosur received 300 billion in foreign direct investment

Mercosur member countries received 300 billion US dollars in foreign direct investments between 1990 and 2004, reported the United Nationd Economic Commission for Latinamerica and the Caribbean, Cepal.

The strong influx of foreign capital had different macroeconomic impact in the regional economies with Brazil benefiting the most, in merit to its financial innovation policies.

In the second half of the nineties foreign investment was ten times higher than in the seventies in constant US dollars, revealed the paper titled: “Direct foreign investment and development: Mercosur experience”.

However it was mostly Argentina and Brazil that benefited at that time.

Actually while direct foreign investments in Paraguay and Uruguay never managed to cross the 450 million US dollars annually threshold, in 2000, Brazil was receiving 32 billion US dollars.

At macroeconomic level the strong influx of capital helped the establishment of transnational corporations affiliates in the region, boosting the average productivity index of the block, underlines Cepal.

Although the paper points out that this kind of investment does not necessarily guarantee more growth, it rejects the negative perception that is currently predominant in several countries of the region.

Foreign direct investment is also closely linked to the globalization process that the world has been undergoing since 1990, when the end of the Cold War.

In 1990 there were 37.000 transnational corporations with 170.000 affiliates, but by 2004 those numbers had jumped to 70.000 and 690.000, with almost half of them in the developing countries.

August 29, 2007

Bolivia accuses U.S. of funding Morales opponents

By Eduardo Garcia

LA PAZ, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Bolivia's leftist government accused the Bush administration on Wednesday of funneling U.S. aid to groups linked to opponents of President Evo Morales, a charge Washington denied.

Government Minister Juan Ramon Quintana claimed the United States was "meddling" in Bolivian politics by channeling millions of dollars in aid to conservative opposition leaders and think-tanks critical of Morales, a fierce U.S. critic.

It was the latest accusation against Washington by Bolivian officials in recent days.

"If aid from the United States does not comply with Bolivian policies, the door is open for it (to end). We are not going to allow this sort of aid ... to conspire against our country's right to freedom," Quintana told reporters.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Tom Casey strongly rejected the charges.

"There is absolutely no truth to any allegation that the U.S. is using its aid funds to try and influence the political process, or in any way undermine the government there," Casey said.

Since taking office in January 2006, Morales, the country's first Indian leader, has aligned himself with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuban leader Fidel Castro, two vocal critics of Washington.

Bolivian officials have accused the rightist opposition of orchestrating a campaign of protests to derail some of Morales' key reforms, including an assembly to rewrite the constitution to empower the Andean country's Indian majority.

Quintana said the government had discovered internal documents from the United States Agency for International Development, known as USAID, that referred to the need to fund programs to "reestablish a democratic government in the country."

American aid to Bolivia last year totaled $134 million, Quintana said. But more than 70 percent went to projects that are not administered by the Bolivian government, he said.

On Monday, Morales, in a veiled threat against the U.S. ambassador in La Paz, said his government will not hesitate at taking "radical actions" against ambassadors who interfere in the South American country's affairs.

Morales spoke days after U.S. Ambassador Philip Goldberg publicly criticized Bolivia's drug-fighting efforts.

"I regret that some ambassadors are getting involved in politics and criticizing the country," Morales said without directly naming the ambassador.

(Additional reporting by Sue Pleming in Washington)

MAS to Mobilize for Constitutional Change

The government of president Evo Morales ordered the social organisations linked to the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) to mobilise at least 100,000 campesinos and indigenous peoples to the city of Sucre on September 10 with the aim of "retaking the reigns" of the constituent assembly, today grid locked by the debate over the capital.

Moreover, they denounced the involvement of the Embassy of the United States in conspiratorial plans and the financing of advisors for the opposition group, Podemos, in order to destabilise the socialism administration.

This program of action was adopted on Friday, August 24, during a closed meeting held between president Morales, vice president Alvaro Garcia Linera and the vast majority of the leadership of MAS, together with the representatives of more than 20 entities.

With this decision, the MAS leaders explained that the government has decided to play its strongest card to try and unlock the constituent process and confront the offensive of the opposition regions headed by Santa Cruz and followed by Tarija, Beni, Pando, Cochabamba, Chuquisaca and the opposition parties led by Podemos.

The meeting, carried out in the building of the Vice Presidency, counted with the participation of the Federation of Cocaleros of the Tropic of Cochabamba, the United Union Confederation of Campesino Workers of Bolivia (CSUTCB), the Union Confederation of Colonizers (CSCB), the Federation of Women Campesinos Bartolina Sisa, the Federation of Campesinos Tupac Katari, the Indigenous Confederation of the Bolivian East (CIDOB), Federation of Unionists, and the federation of neighbourhood committees of La Paz and El Alto.

A source high up in MAS, who was in the meeting, relayed to La Prensa some of the details of the meeting held by Morales and Garcia Linera with the social movements aligned with MAS.

According to this source, the vice president, during his intervention, warned that the civic sectors linked to the "right" are violently mobilizing with protests in Sucre and stoppages in six departments, with the aim of interrupting the current process of change being carried out by president Morales.

The vice president pointed out that the leader of Podemos, Jorge "Tuto" Quiroga, had asked people to not recognize the law.

Garcia Linera affirmed that the most painful part of this current process was that the assembly delegates, authorities and militants of MAS are being attacked by civics from Chuquisaca. He signaled that, in this context, walking down the streets of Sucre with a poncho or pollera [indigenous dress], speaking Aymara or with dark skin was a crime. He recalled that the president of the assembly, Silvia Lazarte, had been called an "ignorant chola". In this sense, he questioned why, when faced with these racist and violent attitudes, the social movements have remained quiet, leading to a situation where MAS has had to declare itself clandestine. The vice president signaled that not even during the dictatorship were such abuses seen.

He also denounced that the civics that were mobilizing with protests and stoppages, were seeking to weaken the government of president Morales and destroy the program of change by creating instability. The aim of the right, according to Garcia Linera, is to destroy the government and return to power.

Within this framework, Garcia Linera announced that the only way for the organizations aligned with MAS to respond to this attack by the conservative sectors is through social mobilization. He said that MAS was not going to respond with bullets nor with police repression, but rather with the social organizations.

Garcia Linera assured the social sectors that they are the life and blood of the government of president Morales. In this sense, he indicated that the time had come for the organizations to call upon all their militants, with a loud and dignified voice, to defend the MAS administration. Moreover, he appealed to the social movements to defend the constituent assembly via a grand mobilization that said enough to the right.

The vice president affirmed that the current process of revolution must defend itself through struggle and mobilization, given that without it, they would be leaving the government all on its own and helpless. Due to this, the only form of modifying the state structures to take away the money and land from the oligarchs and transnationals is through street mobilizations.

Faced with the offensive from the civics of the "half moon", Chuquisaca and Cochabamba, Garcia Linera - according to the MAS source - appealed for the mobilization of the social sectors.

The vice president signaled that the mobilization had to be strong, for which it was necessary to mobilise 100,000 people to go to Sucre. He announced that 10,000 would be of no use. He pointed out the necessity to send 10,000 "red ponchos", 10,000 cocaleros, 10,000 from El Alto, 10,000 colonizers, 10,000 indigenous people from the lowlands, 10,000 originarios, 10,000 bartolinas [women campesinos], 10,000 unionists, 10,000 campesinos and 10,000 workers. There needs to be 100,000 peoples said Garcia Linera, so that not even a single fly would dare to insult the assembly delegates and indigenous representatives.

For this he ordered them to mobilize with the whipala flag out front, without insulting anyone, but to point out that this is the majority of Bolivia, and this majority will be respected.

In this sense, he said that the social movements had to fill Sucre in order to convert it into an indigenous, popular, worker and campesino city. The functionary highlighted that this was the only way that the opposition civics would respect the campesinos and indigenous peoples. He signaled that the opposition had to apologies to Silvia Lazarte for having insulted her in a derogatory way and for having burnt the whipala.

He recommended that the mobilization be peaceful and democratic, but also firm, in order to defend the rights of the originarios.

He highlighted that no white person could denigrate the indigenous representatives. They had to go in a huge multitude, affirmed Garcia Linera, thousands and thousands, like never seen before in the history of Sucre. He assured that only if the indigenous peoples and campesinos are many would there not be confrontations. If they were few it would be like Cochabamba, during the social explosion of January, but if it is 10 versus 1, nothing will occur.

The vice president assured that, in this way, MAS was going to put back on track the constituent assembly. He warned that the mobilization was the last salvation for the constituent process and mentioned that if it was not strong, then the constituent assembly would be left agonising. On September 10, Garcia Linera expressed, the city of Sucre had to be filled with whipalas, to give a clear signal that the indigenous, campesino and popular movement will not allow itself to be insulted.

Evo warned that the issue of the capital was seeking to destroy the assembly.

According to the source from MAS consulted by La Prensa, following the speech by Alvaro Garcia Linera, president Evo Morales announced to the social movements aligned with MAS that the demand by Chuquisaca to move the powers to Sucre was part of a strategy by conservative sectors to stall and destroy the constituent assembly.

The head of state spoke for more than 30 minutes about the current crisis affecting the constituent process and backed the decision to mobilise the social movements to Sucre so as to stop the attacks by the sectors considered by MAS to be conservative and oligarchs. Morales signaled that the popular movement found itself in a moment of ideologic, popular and cultural struggle against the people who did not want the change proposed by MAS.

The head of state said that the sectors of the right are not only worried by the recuperation of natural resources by the state; they would not forgive the aid from the government of Venezuela to the mayoral offices and the small farm producers which is affecting the interests of the Farmers Confederation of the East (CAO) and the Chamber of Industry and Commerce of Santa Cruz (CAINCO). Morales affirmed that the conservative sectors would not forgive MAS for the fact that a woman of the pollera, alluding to Silvia Lazarte, was the president of the constituent assembly.

With the issue of the two-thirds, signaled the president, the right attempted to derail the constituent assembly, the same occurred with the issue of autonomies and is now occurring over the demand over the capital.

Defense of the charges against the tribunal

During his speech in front of the social movements, president Evo Morales backed the MAS decision in the chamber of deputies to support the opening of a trial of responsibility against four magistrates of the Constitutional Tribunal.

He said that there was nothing better than one power of the state, in this case the executive, making demands of another power, with the aim of guaranteeing the independence of the powers and attacking the corruption of the judicial system.

President Morales indicated that he could not understand how the Tribunal had declared the decree he signed to designate the four ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice as constitutional, but then suspended those that had been appointed for an interim period.

The president says that the United States is advising Podemos

President Evo Morales announced that the opposition prefects, such as Manfred Reyes Villa in Cochabamba, have been found working on a conspiracy against the government, revealed the MAS source.

But not only this. The president assured that the process of political destabilisation against the executive power counted with the participation of the US embassy.

The ambassadors, said Morales, are accompanying this conspiratorial process. In regards to this, he recalled that the US ambassador, Philip Goldberg, came out in defense of the ministers of the Supreme Court of Justice when the government resolved to name their interim replacements in December 2006.

The president pointed out, according to the MAS source, that it was incomprehensible how a person tied to the US embassy could end up being involved in the transportation of arms. He cited the case of the 500 bullets brought into the country illegally for a US functionary.

He also highlighted that there was the case of the transportation of arms in diplomatic luggage from the US.

Morales used Cuba as an example in their struggle against what he considered to be the US empire. He highlighted that the Cuban people had defended their revolutionary process with dignity, even through moments of great economic necessities caused by the blockade organised by the US.

He also recalled that in Venezuela, the petroleum business owners had paralyzed the country for three months with the objective of overthrowing president Hugo Chavez.

He said that in Bolivia, his government is constructing a liberating democracy which was not subjugated to anyone, as the US would like it to be.

Morales assured that the US embassy is putting in track all types of instruments. He said that some militant from MAS had make contact with the diplomatic delegation.

He president highlighted that the US government is offering money to some leaders of MAS to attempt to stall the current process of transformation.

He affirmed that the strategy of the opposition includes putting in train community radios in Santa Cruz to break up the network recently started by the government.

Morales announced that the ideological, programmatic and cultural war continues against the popular movement in Bolivia, where, he signaled, deep down, the east, the civics and agribusiness sector would not accept the redistribution of their land.

He recognized that the revolutionary process was not easy in Cuba or Venezuela, for which no one should find it strange that they were encountering difficulties in the country.

He affirmed that the funds for cooperation that the US was handing over to mayors had no type of control and that the majority of these resources were remaining in hands of the embassy in order to buy off leaders.

On this point, Morales assured that the advisors of Podemos and other opposition leaders are paid by the US.

Due to this, he expressed that international cooperation would be welcomed only if it was managed by national authorities and in the function of development projects.

In regards to this he mentioned that the work being done jointly between the municipalities that receive donations from Venezuela for infrastructure, health and education projects.

The fight

The government and the social movements aligned with MAS have resolved to pressure in the streets in defense of the constituent assembly and the project of a plurinational state.Those from MAS recognize that the negotiation is in its worst moment, which is why the regions, like the indigenous peoples and campesinos are wagering on the use of social pressure in the city of Sucre.

The executive power pointed out that the mobilization of 100,000 people in the capital should be carried out in a peaceful way and without responding to provocations. Nevertheless, they expressed their fear that the mobilizations could end up with acts of violence like was the case in Cochabamba in January.

The government signaled that the issue of the capital is the last card of the conservative sectors to derail the constituent process, given that they are trying to stall the policies of change and social redistribution.

The principal organizations that will come out in defense of MAS' project are the Federation of Cocaleros of the Tropics of Cochabamba, the United Union Confederation of Campesino Workers of Bolivia (CSUTCB), and the Union Confederation of Colonizers (CSCB).

The "bartolinas" and others will also join them.

Translated from La Prensa

Making waves about water

by Erin Simpson
August 29, 2007

Susan Howatt never quite knows what to say when she gets the inevitable questions about activism. As the national water campaigner for the Council of Canadians, she's often called on to speak to crowds. “About half of the questions I get are about water. The other half are about how I got my start as an activist.”

That reaction from a crowd isn't surprising: Susan's energy and passion are palpable. She's talking about the corporate take-over of our water, and instead of ranting and gritting her teeth, she's smiling her huge, trademark smile.

“It's not like I woke up one day and decided, 'I'm going to be an activist!'” Instead, this PEI-native joined a peace group in high school, studied international relations and political science at Acadia University, and when she was 20 years old and her friends were going backpacking in Europe, she traveled to South America. The experience gave her the sense of commitment that doesn't go away. It was that commitment that brought her back to South America, and eventually, to the Council of Canadians. Still, she insists, “the activist title feels like a barrier. Really it's just concerned citizens.”

After returning from South America, Susan moved to Vancouver and got a job teaching English as a second language. Her activist work was done in all the hours between sleeping and earning a living. She worked on fair trade issues, urban poverty issues, and even went to Mexico to teach English.

Returning to Vancouver, she couldn't forget the Mexican government's ongoing repression of the Zapatista uprising. She began working with human rights accompaniment groups in Vancouver who shared her concerned about the military build-up in Mexico. Eventually, her work with these groups took her back to Mexico to accompany human rights protectors in Chiapas.

“I wasn't at Quebec City,” she confesses, referring to the legendary Canadian protests against the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) held in Quebec City in 2001. “I was doing human rights accompaniment work in Southern Mexico when it all happened. Maude [Barlow, National Chairperson of the Council of Canadians] says that's no excuse,” she jokes.

Luckily, Susan didn't need the Quebec City protests to convince her that global trade and investment rules had to be taken on. After her time in Mexico—where the link between NAFTA and the Zapatista uprising was clear—her next stop was Indonesia, where she was sent as a CUSO co-operant to work with an organization concerned about foreign investment in mining. The organization, JATAM—an ally and partner of MiningWatch Canada—is a coalition of Indonesian community groups working to ensure high social and environmental standards for the numerous mining companies operating in Indonesia.

The group took a courageous stand while Susan was working with them, calling for a moratorium on mining until appropriate environmental and social regulations could be enforced. As the lone Canadian in their shop—and with Canadian mining giant INCO as one of the key targets—Susan came under fire from the Canadian embassy in Indonesia. “It was such a demoralizing lesson to learn about Canada,” she says. “Our country can do so much great stuff in the world—from democracy promotion, to development, to human rights—but trade will always trump.”

She relied on her colleagues at MiningWatch Canada and JATAM to keep her morale up. “These are the real heroes,” she says. “Joan Kuyek and Catherine Coumans [of MiningWatch Canada] are incredible activists.” While the Canadian embassy was rapping Susan's knuckles for threatening mining company interests, her MiningWatch colleagues were working late, supporting their Indonesian colleagues and standing up for human rights and the environment. They knew that some Canadian companies were (and still are) taking advantage of lax environmental regulation and poor human rights records in Indonesia to grow their profit margins. “Joan and Catherine really inspired me. They aren't looking for the spotlight. They are really excellent partners.”

When it was time to return to Canada, Susan jumped at the chance to campaign on water issues for the Council of Canadians—Canada's largest citizen advocacy organization. For her, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to continue her human rights work, back on Canadian soil.

She spends her time working with the Council's chapters to mobilize the public around a range of water issues. The issue of the day in her office? The secretive Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) between the US, Canada and Mexico. “The deal,” she says, “threatens to sell off our water resources and weaken Canadian regulations. To top it off, the deal is being negotiated in secret. The guys are negotiating our futures in secret backrooms. It's an insult to democracy,” she says. This conviction drove Susan and other activists to take to the streets in Montebello in August, to protest meetings between Presidents Bush, Calderón and Prime Minister Harper.

Back in Ottawa after a busy summer—including a trip to Yellowknife for a human rights conference, and helping organize a major demonstration against the SPP—Susan is happy just to be able go home at the end of her long days. Having burned the candle at both ends to do her activist work in the evenings, Susan knows what a privilege it is to work full-time as a campaigner. “I love being able to go home, guilt-free, and watch a terrible movie. Last week, I read a whole Entertainment Weekly magazine cover-to-cover,” she laughs.

I welcome the confession. If Entertainment Weekly is all it takes to keep this activist going, I'll buy her a subscription.

Erin Simpson is an Ottawa-based activist. She works for the Nobel Women's Initiative, and is a committed to a range of feminist projects in Ottawa, including a second-stage women's shelter.

The Border’s Summer of Discontent

by Frontera Norte Sur


It's as if all the contradictions of the U.S. War on Terror, immigration reform, U.S.-Mexico relations, free trade, and sagging economies on both sides of the border have burst at the seams, and at the same time. As the record hot summer of 2007 crawls to a close, the political barometer on the U.S.-Mexico border is tipping red. Barely a day goes by without hunger strikes, human chains, border crossing demonstrations, marches, and calls for economic boycotts.

In a press conference this week, Carlos Marentes, director of the El Paso-based Border Agricultural Workers Project, said "neo-liberal" economic policies exemplified by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) are sparking a growing crisis in the borderlands and beyond. He contended that U.S. immigration laws and policies are shrouded in a veil of "hypocrisy" that views immigrant workers as an indispensable, cheap labor pool but then turns them into convenient political scapegoats. "We want to stop them, but we also need them," Marentes said.

While border protests are hardly new, what's striking about the latest manifestations of discontent is how they are cutting across the political spectrum and even incorporating centrist and conservative forces that are increasingly frustrated by a status quo dictated in Washington and Mexico City.

In the wake of the U.S. Congress' failure to pass comprehensive immigration reform legislation this year, several developments are rekindling citizen activism. Among the most important are the construction of new border walls, long waits at border crossings, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) crackdown on undocumented workers, the deaths of detained immigrants while in U.S. custody, Border Patrol shootings, and the Aug. 19 deportation of activist Elvira Arellano.

The Aug. 8 shooting of Jose Alejandro Ortiz by the U.S. Border Patrol in El Paso unleashed a wave of indignation on the border and in Mexico. Ortiz, who reportedly had a criminal record in both the U.S. and Mexico, was allegedly involved in an attempt to smuggle immigrants when he was fatally shot.

According to the Border Patrol's account, Ortiz threatened to throw a rock at a still-unidentified agent, who was forced to fire in self-defense at the young man. At least one witness contradicted the official version, and the local U.S. attorney's office is investigating the killing. Since Ortiz supposedly died south of the border, Mexico's Office of the Federal Attorney General has also opened an investigation. The Ortiz shooting was the fifth time El Paso Border Patrol agents have shot an undocumented person this year, but the first fatal incident of 2007.

Ortiz's killing was condemned in strong language by Ciudad Juarez Bishop Renato Ascensio Leon, Chihuahua Governor Jose Reyes Baeza, Chihuahua State Attorney General Patricia Gonzalez and members of the federal Mexican Congress. On Saturday, Aug. 25, several federal congressmen from President Calderon's center-right National Action Party leafleted motorists crossing the Bridge of Americas between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso. Two days earlier, Ortiz family members and supporters burned a Border Patrol pinata at another bridge linking the two cities.

El Paso Democratic Congressman Silvestre Reyes, who headed the El Paso Border Patrol office during the 1990s, said an investigation of the Ortiz killing was necessary but challenged critics he said downplayed the seriousness of rock-throwing against agents. "Anybody who thinks you can't get killed by a rock is a fool," Congressman Reyes said at an El Paso border security conference.

The construction of new U.S. border walls is another issue stoking anger in the region. While proponents of physical barriers insist the walls will guard against terrorists, deter illegal immigrants and curb drug traffickers, opponents, including most Texas border city mayors, contend the million-dollar structures will divide sister cities, intrude on private lands, create flood hazards, threaten ecosystems and wildlife like rare jaguars, and funnel undocumented immigrants to deadlier, isolated desert crossings.

Isabel Garcia of the Tucson-based Human Rights Coalition, said more than 200 migrants have died trying to cross the border in the Arizona-Sonora corridor alone since October of last year. The Arizona-Sonora border is "the epicenter of the war on immigrants," Garcia charged.

In opposition to border walls, a Texas-based group called Border Ambassadors kicked off a 16-day campaign Aug. 25 in El Paso. Led by Jay J. Johnson-Castro, the group organized a small human chain across the Santa Fe Bridge between El Paso and Ciudad Juarez.

The demonstration was supported by the League for United Latin American Citizens, Miss Latina Texas beauty contest queens and the mayors of El Paso and Ciudad Juarez. El Paso Mayor Cook said that people outside the region don't understand the "symbiotic relationship" between border communities dependent on mutual economic, academic and social exchanges.
Border Ambassadors plans human chains in the coming days in other Texas-Mexico border cities.

A separate anti-wall mobilization is planned for Oct. 11-13. Endorsed by 37 Western Hemisphere non-governmental groups, the action grows out of last year's Border Social Forum held in Ciudad Juarez. Protest organizers include San Antonio's Southwest Workers Union, the Border Agricultural Workers Union, Southwest Organizing Project, and many others.

Economic grievances remain are the core of many border-area protests.

Former Bracero Program guestworkers, for instance, are renewing demands that the Mexican government compensate all the eligible braceros who had money deducted from their paychecks decades ago for savings accounts that never materialized.

On Monday, Aug. 27, nine women initiated a week-long hunger strike in El Paso against the North American Free Trade Agreement, the conditions of women workers and treatment of immigrants in the U.S. Organized by La Mujer Obrera, a longtime group of former garment industry workers, the hunger strikers demand investment in women-centered economic development enterprises.

In Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez, meanwhile, thousands of teachers are expected to hold a border demonstration Aug. 31 to protest the Mexican government's passage of a new social security law that lengthens retirement age eligibility requirements and sets the stage for the privatization of pension accounts.

Building on a trend that's developed over the past few years, the latest round of border activism is connected to issues affecting communities across North America. In Prince William County, Virginia, the Sin Fronteras organization launched an economic boycott this week to protest a new county law that gives local police immigration law enforcement responsibilities.

In an Aug. 27 telephone press conference, representatives of several U.S.-based human rights and Latino and Asian community organizations criticized the expansion of law enforcement measures once confined to the border region to the interior of the United States. Activist leaders condemned house-to-house ICE raids, alleged detention center abuses, employer verification letters, the use of local police forces to enforce immigration laws, and the appearance of high-tech aircraft monitoring communities far from the border.

Immigrant communities are in a "state of siege," charged Christian Ramirez of the American Friends Service Committee. Activists are "now calling for our communities to come together and say enough to these governmental initiatives," Ramirez added.

Veronica Carmona, an organizer for the New Mexico-based Colonias Development Council, told Frontera NorteSur that pro-immigrant groups are backing a national day of action for Sept. 12. Carmona said the character of the protest is still being debated.

If cross-border activism needed a media face, Elvira Arellano certainly provided it. The undocumented Mexican worker's long fight to remain with her child, a U.S. citizen, was abruptly interrupted when ICE agents arrested Arellano as she was leaving a Los Angeles press conference this month.

Arellano's rapid deportation to Mexico drew the protest of the Mexican government.

Arellano's arrest injected new life into the immigrant rights movement, and thousands of people streamed into the streets of Los Angeles on Aug. 25 chanting "We are all Elvira," a slogan evocative of the 1994 cry in Mexico, "We are all Marcos," in allusion to the Zapatista subcomandante.

The Arellano case received ample coverage and touched off sharp commentary in the Mexican media, with some outlets proclaiming the young woman as the “symbol” of the Mexican immigrant in the US.

Bolivia's Morales warns of 'radical' moves against alleged US support for opposition

LA PAZ, Bolivia

President Evo Morales warned Monday he would take "radical decisions" against foreign diplomats who become involved in Bolivian politics, a day after his vice president accused the United States of funding the conservative opposition.

"I cannot understand how some ambassadors dedicate themselves to politics, and not diplomacy, in our country," Morales told a gathering of Bolivia's diplomatic corps in the capital of La Paz. "That is not called cooperation. That is called conspiracy."

He added that while his government would be patient with foreign governments, "at any time we will make radical decisions against those ambassadors who are always provoking us."

On Sunday, Vice President Alvaro Garcia accused the U.S Embassy of financing "publications, trips, and seminars" to help Morales' opposition develop "ideological and political resistance" to the administration. He did not provide details.

U.S. Embassy spokesman Eric Watnik denied the allegations Monday, saying "cooperation from the U.S. is apolitical."

The United States has used its Bolivian aid to oppose Morales and his Movement Toward Socialism party, or MAS, in the past.

A declassified 2002 cable from the U.S. Embassy in La Paz described a U.S. Aid-sponsored "political party reform project" to "help build moderate, pro-democracy political parties that can serve as a counterweight to the radical MAS or its successors."

Embassy officials declined to comment Monday on the memo.

At the time, the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, or NDI, a Washington-based organization funded by U.S. Aid, was working with a variety of Bolivian political parties.

NDI Regional Director Jim Swigert said he was "not aware of anything that suggests a certain goal" to the programs.

He said NDI has worked with MAS delegates rewriting Bolivia's constitution and this year paid for two MAS politicians, as well as delegates from opposition parties, to attend a leadership conference in Mexico.

Despite their differences, the U.S. and Bolivian governments continue to collaborate on anti-drug enforcement, health, and economic development projects. The United States has announced a US$120 million (€88 million) aid package for Bolivia next year.

August 28, 2007

The Trial (And Errors) of Hugo Chavez

By Steve EllnerAugust 27, 2007

In April 2006, after a failed attempt to demolish the structurally unsafe bridge on the highway connecting Caracas with the Port of La Guaira, the Chávez opposition expressed outrage at government incompetence. Manuel Rosales, the opposition candidate in the December 2006 presidential elections, accused President Hugo Chávez of "allowing the Caracas-La Guaira bridge to collapse" and "having inaugurated scores of public works projects without completing them."

However, on June 21, 2007, President Chávez inaugurated a new bridge that is 180 feet high and half a mile long--longer than the original one. The construction was on schedule and in time for the kickoff of the America Soccer Cup. In a jab at the opposition, the main state-controlled TV channel declared, "You can't cover up the accomplishment with a finger." In another plus for Chávez, nine modern, well-designed stadiums were constructed or remodeled for the games, which Venezuela hosted for the first time in the Cup's 90-year history.

Although the government won this round, the issues raised by the opposition resist easy answers. Oil prices are at record highs. And the nationalist Chávez has driven a hard bargain with the oil companies. They now pay 33 percent in royalties for the massive deposits of the Orinoco River region, up from 1 percent paid during the neoliberal years of the '90s. Chávez not only counts on increased oil income to finance his experimental programs, but vigorous enforcement of the income tax system.

But Venezuelans are debating whether Chávez is putting this windfall revenue to good use or squandering it through disorganization, corruption and misplaced priorities.

The debate over government performance is significant because much of the country's oil wealth is being invested in novel social programs to help the poor. Indeed, Chávez calls the model he aspires to create "21st century socialism," which stresses solidarity and democracy from below and prioritizes social over economic goals.

In some ways, the current debate over government programs replays a conflict Venezuela faced during the oil boom of the '70s. Neoliberals have bashed the '70s and particularly the first government of Carlos Andrés Pérez for using the increased revenue to expand the role of the state in the economy without producing concrete results. Stanford political science professor Terry Karl refers to the experience of the '70s as the "Paradox of Plenty." Rather than foment development, she says the spike in oil revenue led to greater handouts, aggravating both dependence on the state and a climate of paternalism. Ironically, Pérez, who nationalized the oil and iron industries during those years, returned to power in 1989 to impose neoliberal formulas that were a fiasco and resulted in his ouster.

In the case of Chávez, both sides have overstated their case in regard to government spending. The Chávez government has made mistakes in administering social programs that cost huge sums and involved many people. Nevertheless, the programs that are working have begun to transform the lives of Venezuela's poor, who were previously all but ignored by politicians.

Some of the opposition attribute alleged government ineptness to the lower-class makeup of the Chavista movement and the modest participation of educated middle-class professionals. In what could be interpreted as a slur on poor people who are viewed as dependent on handouts, Rosales referred to Chavistas as "parasites," a remark that one of his allies, Leopoldo Puchi, considered inappropriate. Chávez, however, has inadvertently strengthened this charge by making disparaging remarks about government "bureaucrats," and appointing ministers who lack professional experience.

State-nurtured cooperatives

More than any other program under Chávez, the balance sheet for the government's new worker cooperatives is mixed.

In 2004, the government created the Ministry of the Popular Economy to organize training programs and facilitate loans to encourage those enrolled to form cooperatives. By 2005, Chávez traveled through the country to authorize loans for cooperatives in televised "Regional Cabinet Meetings," where beneficiaries discussed their plans and answered questions. A large majority of the cooperatives consist of not many more than five members (the minimum number required by law) and engage in maintenance work for local governments and state companies such as the oil industry. Most of these cooperatives are made up of members of an extended family, a setup that generally functions well due to mutual trust among associates. Government spokesmen have hailed some cooperatives, such as those of fishermen, for challenging the control of monopoly companies.

One of the few large cooperatives is the Fabricio Ojeda, which consists of the 150 workers (all but one of whom are women) at the Venezuela Advances textile plant and 75 shoe-factory workers. The co-op's health and educational facilities serve the residents of the surrounding lower-class community in the western part of Caracas.

Alida Bastida, one of the textile workers elected supervisor, gave a tour and proudly pointed to the eight sewing machines recently purchased by her cooperative, as opposed to other machinery donated by the state oil company. Asked about worker absenteeism, she says, "If the worker has a legitimate health problem, they can get time off and receive the same salary as everyone else. But at the end of the year our cooperative's 'surplus' [profits] are divided up and distributed to each worker on the basis of the number of days worked." Bastida says that last year the surplus that workers received almost equaled their annual salary.

But the failure of many state financed cooperatives--due to improvisation or misuse of government funds--has resulted in the loss of tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars. On the other hand, those cooperatives that have withstood the test of time may contribute to the transformation of society, particularly because so many of their members come from the non-privileged sectors of the population.

The cooperatives are heavily dependent on the state. Government incentives include generous credit, lenient terms of payment and exemption from all taxes. One sign of independence is when the cooperative pays off its original loan and purchases its own equipment. At a conference sponsored by the University of Carabobo, one co-op member said: "It gave us great satisfaction to have paid off our loan in seven months. Now it is they [the state bank] who are behind us, urging us to apply for new credit."

Experience has shown how difficult it is to decree such experimental changes in people's lives from above. The government placed the number of cooperatives at 140,000 in 2006, but this year the Ministry of the Popular Economy announced that it counted only 74,000. Worse yet, a more recent census indicated only 48,000. Many cooperatives never got off the ground, and in other cases, cooperative members pocketed the money they received from loans or the down payments for contracts. One pro-Chávez congressman admitted, "Up until now, no one can say the cooperative program has been successful. In fact, there is little to show considering all the money that has been spent."

In response, the Ministry has tried to exercise greater control over the cooperatives, but in doing so may have gone to an opposite extreme. The cooperatives are now required every three months to solicit a Certificate of Fulfillment of Responsibilities issued by the Ministry's main office in Caracas. The paperwork, which includes a balance sheet signed by a certified accountant, is extremely time-consuming. The cooperative also needs to demonstrate solvency with regard to financial obligations to government agencies such as the social security system, the housing authority and the job-training institute.

Chávez and his followers generally attribute the problems facing cooperatives to their members' lack of social consciousness. As a corrective, they call for a cultural transformation along the lines of what Che Guevara called the "New Socialist Man." However, in its promotion of cooperatives and other social programs, the government faces a more practical problem that Chávez movement leaders haven't recognized. Mechanisms have been created to monitor cooperatives, but to date there no cooperative member has been penalized for failing to comply with their legal obligations. Although Minister of the Popular Economy Pedro Morejón announced late last year that he had taken 300 cases of cooperatives to court, it is unclear whether Chávez, who claims to be the president of the underprivileged, will be willing to jail, or seize the property of, poor people who have misspent public money.

On the plus side, many cooperative members have learned administrative skills while at the same time changing their attitude toward cooperation and solidarity. By law, co-op members must work in their communities, carrying out maintenance service in schools, distributing Christmas presents to children or other tasks. Furthermore, the experience of sharing the profits of the enterprise breaks with the tradition of wage labor and is bound to influence the cooperativist's way of thinking.

The "massification" of education at all levels

The education "Mission" programs, which also involve hundreds of thousands of underprivileged Venezuelans, have been more successful than the cooperatives. The Missions, which provide primary, high school and university education mostly to adults, use Cuban-prepared video cassettes in the classrooms and "facilitators" who answer questions posed by the students.

In October 2005, Chávez announced that the program "Robinson Mission" had achieved its objective of teaching reading and writing skills to 1.5 million Venezuelans, thereby eliminating illiteracy in the nation. Some of the participants in the program, however, have only learned to sign their names. The "Ribas Mission" works with nearly 1 million Venezuelans, about 200,000 of whom receive stipends of about $100 a month. The program reaches out to the most excluded members of society, such as the indigenous, the disabled, delinquents and prisoners.

Videocassettes have been used in school classrooms in other countries but never on such a massive scale. Héctor Navarro, who has headed the Ribas Mission in the state of Bolívar over the last three years, explains the experimental nature of the program: "We wanted our facilitators to have a university education, but the vast majority are merely high school graduates. They learn as they go along. Training consists of problem-solving sessions among the facilitators with feedback from the school coordinator who typically has some university education."

Many Mission university students fear schools and professional associations that object to the unconventional nature of the program will not recognize their degrees. To avoid discrimination, the government has reached agreements with the universities controlled by the Ministry of Education whereby they help supervise the missions and issue the diplomas in their own name. The nation's larger universities, however, have refused to cooperate.

Members of the opposition claim that by lowering the quality of education, the Mission program is depreciating the value of existing degrees. According to them, rather than awarding grade school, high school and college degrees, the Missions should issue special diplomas to their students so as not to undermine the established educational system.

The need to assimilate errors

This combination of advances and missed opportunities characterizes not only social programs but all types of government activity. Chávez's revolutionary rhetoric and actions have created great public expectations that in turn account for his resounding electoral successes. Yet his government faces a host of practical problems.

For instance, to its credit, the Chávez government has greatly expanded public transportation. Venezuela is one of the few countries in the world building out its rail system. In June, a trolleybus service was inaugurated in Mérida in the Andean mountains, making it the smallest city in Latin America to have such a system. Last year, subway systems began functioning in the cities of Valencia and Maracaibo, a new line was added to the metro in downtown Caracas, and two rail lines now connect that system with neighboring towns. The metro fare in Caracas is less than 25 cents and free for passengers over 60.

At the same time, oil-induced prosperity has exacerbated automobile traffic and its attendant problems. The first half of this year saw car sales increase by 52 percent over the same period last year; 65 percent of the purchases were imported vehicles. While Chávez has railed against SUVs, he has not placed a special tax on them or on cars in general. Indeed, the government has encouraged poor Venezuelans to purchase cars by exempting non-luxury from the value added tax.

But if Venezuela is to learn from the errors that are being committed on this untrodden path, discussion within the movement is essential. The private media is alive and well and continues to criticize the government, sometimes aggressively, notwithstanding the non-renewal of the TV channel "Radio Caracas." Opposition criticism is no substitute, however, for constructive criticism from those who support the "revolutionary" project.

But during the eight-and-a-half years in power, the pro-Chávez parties have failed to establish internal mechanisms of discussion. Chávez's recent creation of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), which he claims will be the most "democratic party in Venezuelan history," is designed to overcome this shortcoming by holding internal elections and calling an ideological congress. With such considerable resources at its disposal, the government cannot expect to avoid mistakes, which in any case are inevitable in this trial-and-error road to change. Rather its main challenge is to figure out a way to encourage constructive debate in order to parlay frustrating experiences into new, effective programs.

Venezuela Offers Billions to Countries in Latin America

By: Natalie Obiko Pearson and Ian James - AP

CARACAS, Venezuela -- Laid-off Brazilian factory workers have their jobs back, Nicaraguan farmers are getting low-interest loans and Bolivian mayors can afford new health clinics, all thanks to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Bolstered by windfall oil profits, Chavez's government is now offering more direct state funding to Latin America and the Caribbean than the United States. A tally by The Associated Press shows Venezuela has pledged more than $8.8 billion in aid, financing and energy funding so far this year.

While the most recent figures available from Washington show $3 billion in U.S. grants and loans reached the region in 2005, it isn't known how much of the Venezuelan money has actually been delivered. And Chavez's spending abroad doesn't come close to the overall volume of U.S. private investment and trade in Latin America.

But in terms of direct government funding, the scale of Venezuela's commitments is unprecedented for a Latin American country.

Chavez's largesse tends to benefit left-leaning nations that support his vision of a Latin America with greater independence from the United States. But he denies the two countries are in a competition.

"We don't want to compete with anyone. I wish the United States were 100 times above us," Chavez told the AP in a recent interview. "But no, the U.S. government views the region in a marginal way. What they offer is a pittance sometimes, and with unacceptable pressures that at times countries can't accept."

U.S. aid tends to be low-profile, constrained by strict guidelines and often distributed through other institutions so that recipients may not know it's from the U.S. government. Venezuela offers money with few strings attached and a personal Chavez touch that aid experts say generates more good will dollar for dollar.

Clay Lowery, the U.S. Treasury Department's acting undersecretary for international affairs, argues that the U.S. plays a larger role than reflected in its aid figures. The United States, for instance, drove Inter-American Development Bank and World Bank debt relief deals totaling $7.5 billion over the past three years in Latin America, he said.

"Who is the biggest financier of the IDB? The United States. Who is the biggest financier of the World Bank? The United States is. We don't count those," Lowery said. "We're basically engaged on a multilevel, multi-prong approach."

Still, as the Chavez effect gains ground, there are signs the U.S. is responding to the challenge.

The U.S. Navy medical ship Comfort is on a four-month, 12-country voyage to Latin American ports, and has already treated more than 80,000 patients with free vaccinations, eye care, dental checkups and surgeries aboard the converted oil tanker.

U.S. officials are taking their cue from the free eye surgeries and medical training that Chavez offers, says Adam Isacson of the Washington-based Center for International Policy, which tracks American aid and advocates international cooperation.

"They're trying to do things that are aimed in a small way at countering what Chavez is doing _ Chavez's much larger aid programs," he said.

His group calculates that nearly half of U.S. aid to the region goes to military and police programs. However, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson also has pointed to the U.S. government's work with the IDB to mobilize up to $200 million through private lenders to support small business loans.

Chavez's aid isn't limited to his region. Low-income Americans get cheap heating oil, while the former Soviet republic of Belarus is counting on Chavez to help pay off a $460 million gas bill to Russia. But most of the funding goes to Latin America.

When a Brazilian plastics factory was shuttered in 2003 by its indebted owners, hundreds of workers formed a cooperative. They appealed for help in a private meeting with Chavez, who offered subsidized raw materials in exchange for the technology to produce plastic homes in Venezuela. The factory soon hummed back to life.

"I know there are people out there criticizing Chavez for helping us. They say he is interfering with the internal affairs of Brazil," said Salviano Jose da Silva, a security guard at the Flasko factory near Sao Paulo. "But all he's doing is helping to guarantee our livelihood _ something the government should be doing but isn't."

When floods hit Bolivia this year, the U.S. provided $1.5 million in a planeload of supplies and cash. Chavez promised 10 times more and sent in teams that helped victims for weeks. In all, Chavez's pledges to Bolivia total over $800 million, more than six times the U.S. commitment this year.

He also offered money for new garbage trucks in Haiti and an Argentine dairy cooperative.

Opponents say Chavez is spending haphazardly on "giveaways" abroad at a time when more than a quarter of Venezuelans still live on less than $3 a day. They question how long he can sustain it since government revenues are highly dependent on fluctuating oil prices.

While Venezuelan asphalt paves streets in Bolivia's capital, a sign recently protruded from one of Caracas' potholes reading: "Why for Bolivia yes and for me no?"

Chavez argues much of the funding brings benefits back to Venezuela, including oil-related investments and other cooperative exchanges. He says billions more are being spent within Venezuela, and cites social programs credited with helping to reduce poverty.

His recent commitments in the region exceed those of the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank. Each lent nearly $6 billion in 2006, but their influence has declined as nations repay their outstanding loans. Regional International Monetary Fund debts dropped from $49 billion in 2003 to just $694 million this year, largely due to early repayments, some of them financed by Chavez.

Chavez offers funds in unconventional, sometimes spontaneous ways. Summing it up is difficult due to a lack of transparent accounting, so the AP tally is based on public pledges rather than what has actually been spent. Some of the money is expected to be paid over multiple years. The tally also cannot cover undisclosed spending, such as aid to Cuba or Venezuela's share in building a $5 billion oil refinery in Ecuador.

Venezuela's funding differs from U.S. aid because it includes investments that in the U.S. would come from the private sector and purchases of bonds that are later resold.

Most of the funding _ $6.3 billion _ involves energy projects, some of which directly benefit Venezuela's oil industry, such as a $3.5 billion refinery to be built in Nicaragua. That also includes funding for electricity plants in Haiti and Bolivia, and an estimated $1.6 billion in fuel financing to at least 17 nations.

Venezuela has pledged $772 million in development aid, including AIDS treatment in Nicaragua, housing in Dominica and Cuban doctors in Haiti.

In Bolivia, $20 million went directly to mayors selected by leftist President Evo Morales for projects including health clinics and schools. Mayor Miguel Avila gratefully accepted a $427,000 check for his town of San Lorenzo to build a new farmers' market.

Critics warn that scant oversight leads to waste and corruption.

"You don't do things well by just giving money away," said Liliana Rojas-Suarez, a former IMF economist at the Washington-based Center for Global Development. "If you give money without any conditions attached, without any expectations, without anything, what are the incentives?"

But Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic Policy Research says Chavez has succeeded in providing more financing options and breaking up a "creditors' cartel" of Washington-based lenders whose economic prescriptions failed to improve the lives of the poor.

Chavez helped Argentina pay off its IMF debt by buying some $5.1 billion in Argentine bonds in recent years, and now proposes a "Bank of the South" that would use billions from Venezuela's international reserves as seed money.

Meanwhile, Venezuela's state development bank, Bandes, is expanding into Bolivia, Uruguay, Honduras, Guatemala and Haiti. In Nicaragua, it is offering loans at just 5 percent interest, compared to 35 percent by some private banks.

Nicaraguan farmer Juan Vicente Castillo, whose cooperative plans to grow black beans to pay off part of a $750,000 Bandes loan, says: "We are very grateful to President Chavez's government for this loan that the commercial banks wouldn't give."

___

Contributing to this report were AP correspondents Stan Lehman and Alan Clendenning in Sao Paulo, Brazil; Dan Keane in San Lorenzo, Bolivia; Filadelfo Aleman in Managua, Nicaragua; Nestor Ikeda in Washington, D.C.; and Diego Mendez and Luis Romero on board the USNS Comfort.

Indigenous march in Sucre in defense of the Bolivian Constitution

SUCRE, Bolivia, August 27 (PL).—Campesinos and indigenous peoples from the central department of Chuquisaca are to march through the streets of this capital city in defense of the Constituent Assembly, whose work has been indefinitely detained.

According to Juan Picha, general secretary of the Original Peoples Single Federation of Workers, the march will be peaceful and will advocate national unity.

The leader explained that one of the demonstrators’ demands is that the transfer of executive and legislative powers to Sucre is dealt with in a high-level commission, without affecting the forum’s deliberations.

He likewise affirmed that they would demand a fourth power of social control to be exercised by original peoples’ organizations.

Delegates from Chuquisaca and members of the Inter-Institutional Committee who have called for a strike for tomorrow, Tuesday, said that the campesino and indigenous peoples march will be welcome and they will avoid provocative acts.

Last night Alvaro García, vice president of the Republic, affirmed that the Assembly is being threatened by right-wing violent groups associated to old politicians.

Speaking on the Radio Patria Nueva state radio station, he stated that the government cannot allow opposition interests to be imposed on the majorities, the original peoples, to whose struggles “we owe the Assembly itself as a scenario of change.”

The Constituent Assembly has the challenge of presenting a new draft constitution by December 14, he added.

In that context, García noted, the real sons and daughters of Bolivia have to guarantee the process of national re-foundation in the face of the excesses being organized by the followers of the Hugo Banzer and Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada dictatorships.

García lashed out at the authorities of the central department of Chuquisaca who are using the genuine demands of the territory to make that forum fail.

He likewise welcomed the social movements’ initiative to hold a Cultural and Social Summit in Sucre on September 10 in defense of the Constituent Assembly.

Translated by Granma International

August 27, 2007

The Three Amigos Meet in Ottawa: Their Globalization or Ours?

by Susan Rosenthal
August 27, 2007

Last week, U.S. President George W. Bush, Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Mexico’s President Felipe Calderón met to plan further integration of their three economies. Thousands of people protest these summit meetings, not because they oppose international cooperation but because they reject policies that benefit the rich and powerful at the expense of everyone else.

Globalization could benefit us all. Telerad is a Singapore-based corporation that analyzes X-rays and medical scans for hospitals around the world. Currently, it can take weeks to get results from a CAT scan or an MRI. Telerad promises that an image from New York can be analyzed and a report returned in less than half an hour.

This looks like a win-win situation — improving the ability to provide timely treatment at a lower cost — until you consider that higher-priced American labor is being exchanged for lower-priced Asian labor.

Globalization is being structured like automation was, to make the rich richer. By 2000, U.S. workers took half the time to produce all the goods and services they produced in 1973. If the benefits of this rise in productivity had been shared, most Americans could be enjoying a four-hour work day, or a six-month work year, or they could be taking off every other year from work with no loss of pay.

Needless to say, this is not the case. All the benefits of automation went to the capitalist class. By 2000, the average American worker was putting in 199 more hours on the job, five weeks more than in 1973.

Ordinary folks are working harder and longer so the capitalist class can haul in the dough. In the mid-1970’s, average executive compensation was 35 times the average wage. By 1999, the average CEO of a major US corporation was taking home 330 times the average wage and 476 times the average blue-collar wage. By 2004, the portion of the economy going home with workers dropped to the lowest level ever recorded.

Governments and corporations are shaping globalization the same way they shaped automation, to boost profits at workers’ expense.

Divide and profit

Cathleen Wedlake has worked in the newspaper trade for 38 years. She and 30 of her co-workers were laid off when the San Jose Mercury News outsourced their jobs to Asia via Express KCS, an India-based corporation that provides production services for more than 40 newspapers in northern California.

National borders exist to maximize profits. Jobs are allowed to migrate to cheaper locations, while the people who work those jobs are blocked from moving to higher-paying locations.

The same year that the U.S. and Mexico launched their free-trade agreement (NAFTA), the Clinton administration launched Operation Gatekeeper to block Mexican workers from entering the U.S. Both moves served the interests of capitalists on both sides of the border. American goods entering Mexico put small Mexican producers out of business, creating a more desperate (and therefore cheaper) workforce for larger Mexican employers and an illegal (and therefore desperate and cheaper) workforce for American employers.

The solution to these problems is generally posed as a choice between free trade and protectionism. However, both of these policies benefit the capitalist class. Protectionist polices shield weaker industries from global competition, while free-trade policies enable stronger industries to penetrate foreign markets.

The American union movement has traditionally sided with the protectionist wing of capitalism. This strategy has failed to save jobs, as thousands of laid-off steel and autoworkers can attest. Furthermore, it has hamstrung the labor movement by pitting American workers against their counter-parts in other lands.

A more effective strategy would be to demand an end to national borders and for workers to defend their jobs as if these borders did not exist.

Wedlake and her co-workers at the San Jose Mercury News face the same challenge as any workforce threatened with replacement by lower-paid workers. The low-paid workers must be incorporated into the union and paid exactly the same. This is not a free-trade stance, but a pro-worker antidote to the divide-and-profit polices of employers.

While they promote free trade, not a single head of state supports opening borders to workers. On the contrary, capitalists go berserk at the thought of abolishing national boundaries because their system can function only by dividing workers and trapping them in low-waged areas. Of course, they would never admit to such selfish motives. Instead, they warn that open borders would cause a flood of impoverished people to drown America. This is absurd.

If the benefits of global integration were shared, people would have no economic reason to move.

Globalization has deepened the conflict over which class will shape the future. The capitalist class is planning more miseries for the majority. The alternative is for workers in North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa to come together as one workforce to demand equal pay for equal work. We would then have the collective power to dispense with the master class and run the world for ourselves and each other, raising living standards for everyone.

Susan Rosenthal is a practicing physician and author of Market Madness and Mental Illness (1998) and POWER and Powerlessness (2006). She belongs to the National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981. She can be reached through her web site: www.powerandpowerlessness.com or by email author@powerandpowerlessness.com

Castro Signs Essay Amid Rumors

(Havana) — Fidel Castro signed a lengthy essay published Sunday saluting a Cuban political figure but giving no hint of how he is feeling, even amid rampant rumors of his death.

The 81-year-old Castro has not been seen in public in over a year and has not even appeared in official photographs or video footage since taping an interview with Cuban state television June 5.

The lack of images has fueled speculation among the Cuban exile community in Miami and elsewhere that Castro might have died. He announced on July 31, 2006, that he had undergone emergency intestinal surgery and was temporarily ceding power to his younger brother Raul.

Officials in Havana have refused to speak about Castro's condition, but foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told reporters in Brazil last week that "Fidel is doing very well and is disciplined in his recovery process." He insisted the gray-bearded leader maintains "permanent" contact with top government officials.

Castro's essay, the latest in dozens of "Reflections of the Commander in Chief" columns he has published several times a week since late March, was signed Saturday evening and appeared in the Communist Youth newspaper Juventud Rebelde on Sunday.

Verbose but clearly stated and easy to follow, Castro's essay spoke of of Eduardo Chibas, the president of Cuba's Orthodox Party, who was born 100 years ago this month. Chibas campaigned against corruption that plagued Cuba's government before Castro and his band of rebels toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista in January 1959.

Castro listed political events that linked his younger years with Chibas, who shot himself during a radio broadcast in 1951, a year before Batista seized power in a coup. At Chibas' funeral, a young Castro jumped atop the grave to denounce the government.

"With Chibas alive there would have been no way for [Batista] to carry out a coup," Castro wrote, "because the founder of the Cuban People [Orthodox] Party watched him closely and methodically put him up for public scrutiny."

There was no hint of trouble over the weekend in Havana, where the streets have been calm and Cuban flags remained at full-mast. Official media was dominated by stories of Cuban officials' preparation for the new school year and news from Venezuela and Iraq.

Rumors of Castro's death are a staple in Miami. But their frequency has intensified in recent days, after his 81st birthday came and went Aug. 13 with neither pictures, letters nor recordings from him released by the government.

Speculation went into overdrive Friday when Miami officials met to go over their plans for when Castro dies. Even celebrity blogger Perez Hilton, a Cuban-American who normally deals with Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton, jumped into the fray, writing that sources were saying the Miami police were poised to announce Castro's death.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez addressed speculation about the health of his close friend and ally on Saturday, saying "I'm not going to be clearing up rumors and more rumors every day. Every little while they say Fidel died."

Article by Castro appears amid death rumors

An article signed by Cuban leader Fidel Castro was published on Sunday, appearing to belie an avalanche of rumors that the ailing president was dead or dying, but giving no hints at his state of health.

Writing in the first person in the piece published in the official newspaper Juventud Rebelde, Castro recalled the revolutionary events of the 1950s that took him to power and referred to a history book he had been reading.

"It brought back many memories of heroic comrades fallen" in the years leading up to the 1959 revolution which drove out former dictator Fulgencio Batista and brought the lawyer-turned-guerilla Castro to power, said the article dated August 25.

Castro underwent intestinal surgery in July 2006 and handed power over temporarily to his brother Raul.

Fidel has not been seen in public since before the operation, though he has appeared in photographs and eight videos, the last of which aired on June 5. He turned 81 on August 13 with little celebration in Cuba.

The article recalled Batista's armed coup in 1952 which prompted an unsuccessful uprising headed by Castro the following year.

"There were rumors then that I was a communist," it read. "To talk then of Leninist-Marxism, even in the early years of the Revolution, would have been foolish and dumb."

The historical musings were the second publication attributed to Castro in three days, and came amid swirling rumors among Cuban exiles and echoed by websites and foreign news outlets, especially in Florida, that he was dead.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, Castro's close ally and one of the few to have visited him at his sickbed, on Saturday denied the rumors. "Those who want him to die will be frustrated, because Fidel Castro will never die," he said.

Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque on Thursday said that Fidel Castro "is steady, on track with his recovery, showing discipline, a lot of dedication and a lot of activity, writing, reading and working."

Speculation was rife on the streets of Havana, meanwhile.

"Some say that he is very ill and that it's not him writing down his thoughts," one woman, a retired nurse, told AFP.

Para Alberto, a faithful Fidel supporter who sells newspapers, was convinced the article was a sign the leader was alive. "When he dies, we Cubans will be the first to know," he said.

August 26, 2007

Evo Morales arrived to Peru with 19 tons of medicines

Bolivia's President Evo Morales arrived in Pisco today to distribute 19 tons of medicines, blankets and drinking water, the second visit by a Latin American leader to the disaster area. Colombia's Alvaro Uribe traveled to the area last weekend.
Donor nations and relief agencies have pledged a total of $40 million to date.

Peru, where half the population of 27 million lives on $1 a day, has suffered three destructive earthquakes in the past decade. It's Latin America's seventh-largest economy.

Meantime Peru's government appointed businessman Julio Favre to head a $200 million reconstruction effort after the country's worst earthquake in more than 30 years.

Favre, former head of Peru's largest business association Confiep and chief executive officer of the Andean country's largest poultry producer Redondos SA, will also manage the auction of a concession to operate the southern port of Pisco, which was damaged by the quake, Peru's President Alan Garcia said today.

About 80,000 people were left without shelter by the magnitude-8 quake on Aug. 15, killing at least 510 people and injuring 1,600 on the southern coast. The government has established a 300 million soles ($95 million) fund to date to finance the rebuilding of homes, schools and roads, which will employ an estimated 8,000 townspeople.

``He will be the pilot, promoter and engine of reconstruction,'' Garcia told reporters in Lima. ``This will also involve mayors and top-level businessmen who can articulate works with the help of big companies and their technicians.''

The board of the reconstruction fund will include central bank director and exporter Jose Chlimper and Jaime Caceres, chief executive officer of AFP Integra, Peru's largest pension fund, Favre said. None of them will be paid a salary, he said.

Deciphering Venezuela's enigmatic Hugo Chávez

Hugo Chávez: The Definitive Biography of Venezuela's Controversial President
By Cristina Marcano and Alberto Barrera Tyszka
RANDOM HOUSE; 327 PAGES; $27.95

Ezequiel Zamora became something of an icon of the Venezuelan left when he spearheaded a peasant revolt in 1846, demanding "Free land and free men." After a brief exile, he returned to lead the Federal War and founded the Venezuelan state of Barinas, where Hugo Chávez was born about 100 years later.

Venezuela's president since 1999, Chávez is a polarizing figure not only in his own country but also throughout Latin America and around the world. A charismatic leader with an uncanny ability to inspire, he is also a paranoid narcissist who believes he is fulfilling an almost messianic destiny. In fact, some of Chávez's closest companions claim that he believes himself to be the reincarnation of Ezequiel Zamora.

Chávez is also adept at self-aggrandizing political theatrics, as when his colorful references to President Bush as the devil at the U.N. General Assembly last year earned him front-page media coverage across the world. "He loves to be defiant," write Cristina Marcano and Alberto Barrera Tyszka in their new biography of the Venezuelan president. "He loves to be newsworthy, and he does whatever he can to be at the center of controversy and confuse everyone." But to dismiss Chávez the man as a crackpot - as some U.S. foreign policymakers have foolishly done - is to overlook the enormous influence and appeal of Chávez the politician.

Reconciling Chávez the man and Chávez the politician, however, is no easy task, made all the more difficult by the chavista propaganda machine. Marcano and Tyszka, both prominent Venezuelan journalists, do just that. The authors explore some of the important questions about Chávez, from the origins of his leftist, at times socialist political leanings to the development of his disillusionment with Venezuela's political establishment.

Marcano and Tyszka have thus produced an exemplary biography of a man still defining and redefining himself. They use a range of sources, from newspapers to interviews to personal diaries, telling a multilayered story even if a single, finite truth remains indiscernible. Given that every observer of Venezuela today surely holds a strong opinion of Chávez and his government, the authors should also be commended for diligently presenting varying views, not to mention doing so without hampering their well-written narrative.

Chávez was born in 1954 in the small town of Sabaneta, the second of six brothers, and spent most of his childhood living with his grandmother. He lived through the country's transition to democracy in 1958 and the heyday of its oil-export boom years. Although he initially dreamed of becoming a famous baseball player, he began a career in the military in 1971.

The '80s were a turning point, both for Chávez and for Venezuela. Beginning with the currency devaluation of 1983, the economy fell into a series of crises, and government after government faced corruption scandals. Chávez began seriously thinking about a coup to bring down the broken political system, and started to form, over the following years, a military group called the Bolivarian Revolutionary Army.

It was not until 1992, though, that Chávez and his co-conspirators actually staged a coup. Though unsuccessful in bringing down the government of President Carlos Andrés Pérez, it was enormously successful in launching Chávez's image as defender of the people. In fact, it was from prison that Chávez began presenting himself as the spiritual descendant of Simon Bolívar, the Venezuelan-born liberator of half of Latin America. For many Venezuelans, these were the years in which Chávez became a household name, and Marcano and Tyszka might have dwelled longer on this period. Indeed, as the authors note, even today, "the root of Chávez's power resides in the religious and emotional bond he has forged with the popular sectors of the country."

By the time Chávez was elected in 1998, more than half of Venezuela's population - more than 13 million people - was living in poverty. Corruption had so tainted the presidency and the political parties that an outsider candidate like Chávez presented new hope.

The record since has been mixed. While lambasting neoliberal economic policies and U.S. imperialism, Chávez opened telecommunications and utilities sectors to foreign investors and paid Venezuela's debts punctually. Record oil prices allowed him to spend enormous sums on improving education, public provision of health care and reducing poverty. At the same time, recent reports calculate his own expenses at between $6,000 and $7,000 a day. And his penchant for Rolex and Brioni leads Marcano and Tyszka to call him "possibly the best-dressed president in the history of Venezuela."

The Hugo Chávez that emerges from Marcano and Tyszka's biography is at once a master of propaganda and a political pragmatist, both extraordinarily affable and fiercely antagonistic. Which version we choose to see often says more about us than about him. In Venezuela today, it is not uncommon to find single families split between chavistas and anti-chavistas.

Just before he took office in 1999, Chávez traveled with Nobel laureate Gabriel García Márquez to Cuba. "I was overwhelmed by the feeling that I had just been traveling and chatting pleasantly with two opposing men," Márquez later wrote of the two faces of Chavez. "One to whom the caprices of fate had given an opportunity to save his country. The other, an illusionist, who could pass into the history books as just another despot." With Chávez's legacy still unfolding, we are left to choose the face we prefer to see.

Noam Lupu is a doctoral student of political science at Princeton University.

Immigrants, Supporters Plan Business Boycott In Prince William Co.

WOODBRIDGE, Va. -- Starting on Monday, immigrants and their supporters said they will begin a big boycott in Virginia.

They said they are angry at Prince William County and they will use their money to demand respect.

At the Woodbridge Laundromat, business dropped 40 percent when Prince William County supervisors passed resolutions aimed at cutting services to undocumented immigrants.

The poster on Ginger Trust's front window said she disapproved of the decision. It was also a sign for her Latino customer base.

On Monday, when there's a countywide boycott of businesses, that one will still be patronized by backers.

"It lets people know that we, as a family, as our business here in Woodbridge, we do not support the resolution," Trust said. "We, as a family, feel that it's a discrimination."

The economic boycott will target nearly every type and size of business in Prince William County for one week. From grocery stores to tire shops, organizations, like Mexicans Without Borders, ask all citizens to stay out.

It is a response to the county's aggressive stance against undocumented immigrants. One state lawmaker called the boycott a joke.

"I think, at the end of the day, you're going to see people say, 'Boycott? What boycott?'" state delegate Jeffrey Frederick said.

"I think that it will have a huge impact," John Steinbach of Mexicans Without Borders said. "I think the lawmakers, the board of supervisors, need to wake up."

Designed to show economic muscle, people supporting the boycott will only shop at businesses owned by immigrants or those that have rallied against the ordinances and have a green sign.

Frank Conigliaio said he doesn't have a sign and he didn't even know of the boycott. He said he was worried the boycott will cost him money.

"It's going to hurt a little bit, the business, but hopefully they come back," he said.

Mexicans Without Borders said it plans on hanging out about 500 green cards to businesses that can still be patronized. They asked citizens who can't find those businesses to shop outside of the county for one week.

The lights of Xanica, Oaxaca

by

...
Private property and the market

According to Abel, many of today’s problems can be traced back to the 19th century. He says that communal property, “which is the most important thing for indigenous people,” was fenced off before 1900. Many people who only spoke the Zapotec language didn’t find out about the laws setting up the new private property regime, and consequently, their lands were stolen from them. They were left with only a small patch of land or no land at all.

Abel explained that around 1930, many farmers began to grow coffee, and by the 40s and 50s they had stopped growing corn, beans, and chili—just coffee. There were two big plantations near Xanica: Alemania and San Pablo, both of which had company stores that kept the laborers permanently indebted.

Since then, jobs in the area have mainly depended on the international price of coffee. When the price went down from 1980 to 1990, a lot of plantations were abandoned, which was a heavy blow for people who didn’t have land of their own for growing coffee: they had nowhere to work. Some started growing corn, bean, and chili again. When prices rise, there’s a lot of work in the coffee picking season from November to January, but it’s badly paid. Maybe they’ll pay a farm worker 300 pesos (≈ $27 USD) to work 15 days cleaning the coffee field.

In other cases, they may pay as much as 80 pesos (≈ $7.20 USD) a day, from 7:00 in the morning until 5:00 or 6:00 in the afternoon, depending on the boss. It takes the farm workers two hours to walk to work and two hours to get home and then they have to carry wood. They don’t even have a burro (donkey); they carry it on their backs.

Since the Free Trade Agreement was signed, coffee prices have gone down even more. Now there’s hardly any work. Ever since the 1990s the emigration from Xanica has been heavy.

Rebellion in Xanica in the 50s

In keeping with the rebelliousness of the Zapotecos against the lords of Monte Albán, their battles under the command of José María Morelos and Vicente Guerrero, their resistance against the French, their enlistment in the ranks of Emiliano Zapata’s army, the town of Xanica rose up in the 1950s.

Abel tells us that “there were problems much like the ones we have now.” People came from Miahuatlán to sell clothing and bread, and they also set up big butcher shops. They wanted the people of Xanica to work for them, and they also wanted to establish their own local authorities. They refused to respect the community assembly, the council of elders, and the traditional practices and customs for choosing public servants.

The people of Xanica, unwilling to accept this domination, rose up in arms. The army soon came in and there were deaths on both sides. “Some of the local people went to jail because they killed a soldier. The army was in the area for three months looking for the rebels, who hid in the mountains. The army finally left and people either returned or kept on hiding out.”
...

August 25, 2007

Venezuela Congress OKs Chavez's Reforms

Wednesday August 22, 2007 4:16 AM

By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER

Associated Press Writer

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Venezuela's National Assembly, dominated by allies of President Hugo Chavez, gave unanimous initial approval Tuesday to constitutional reforms that would allow him to run for re-election and possibly govern for decades to come.

Assembly President Cilia Flores said Chavez's proposed changes to the constitution, including the lifting of presidential term limits, were approved by all 167 lawmakers after about six hours of debate.

Final approval is expected within two or three months, and voters will then decide whether to approve the changes in a referendum.

The assembly has been solidly pro-Chavez since the opposition boycotted a 2005 vote and had been expected to sign off on the changes proposed by Chavez in Tuesday's first reading. The reforms, if approved, would extend presidential terms from six to seven years and allow Chavez to run again in 2013.

Government opponents have attacked the reforms, saying they will weaken democracy by permitting Chavez to become a lifelong leader like his ally Fidel Castro of Cuba.

Chavez, a former paratroop commander who was re-elected by a wide margin in December on promises to steer the country toward socialism, says the changes will give Venezuelans greater decision-making power and aid the transfer of billions of dollars from Venezuela's foreign reserves into social programs.

Ismael Garcia, one of the assembly's few dissenting voices, criticized pro-Chavez lawmakers for excluding opposition groups from the discussion, arguing that Venezuelans of all political leanings must be included in the debate before the proposed reforms are put to a national vote.

Garcia, who voted for the initial approval despite his criticism, said issues ``such as the economic path of a new society'' must be discussed.

``This isn't just any debate,'' he said.

Other reforms would create new types of property to be managed by cooperatives, give neighborhood-based ``communal councils'' administrative responsibilities usually reserved for elected officials and create ``a popular militia'' that would form part of the military. The workday would also be reduced to six hours.

Flores said government-friendly lawmakers have the right to approve the reforms without changing the proposal that Chavez presented last week.

``We are not imposing anything,'' she told state television.

Earlier Tuesday, former Chavez mentor Luis Miquilena urged Venezuelans to reject the proposed constitutional changes.

Miquilena, who headed a popularly elected, pro-Chavez assembly that drafted Venezuela's existing constitution, called his former ally's new reform proposal ``a constitutional fraud'' aimed at giving him ``perpetual power.''

Miquilena, an 88-year-old former labor leader, once was commonly referred to as Chavez's closest adviser. But he quit his Cabinet in 2002 and has periodically criticized the president since then.

Rumors on Castro's health swirl in Miami

By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ, Associated Press Writer Fri Aug 24, 6:54 PM ET

MIAMI - The official word in Cuba is that Fidel Castro is still very much alive — but you'd never know that on the streets of Miami.

Premature rumors of Castro's death are a staple in this heavily Cuban-exile city. But their frequency has intensified in recent days after his 81st birthday came and went Aug. 13 with neither pictures, letters nor recordings from him.

Friday, the rumors were pushed into overdrive by a meeting of local officials to go over their plans for when Castro really dies and a road closure in the Florida Keys that was actually due to a police standoff.

A circular game ensued with radio stations reporting the rumors, citing TV stations, which cited the rumors on the street.

Sandra Avila, an executive at a design firm in Miami's Coconut Grove neighborhood, said clients and vendors called all day asking about the rumors.

"I've heard the rumors before, but there's a different feeling this time, like this time it's real," she said.

The rumor mill took off a year ago when the Cuban leader announced he would turn power over to his brother Raul because of an intestinal illness. Since then, Castro, who has ruled Cuba for nearly 48 years, has not been seen in public.

Even celebrity blogger Perez Hilton, a Cuban-American who normally deals with Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton, jumped into the fray Friday, writing that sources were saying the Miami police were poised to announce Castro's death.

Never mind the question of why the Miami police department and not the Havana government or, at least, the U.S. State Department would let the world know.

In Cuba, officials remained tightlipped about Castro's condition.

"Fidel is doing very well and is disciplined in his recovery process," Cuban foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told reporters in Brazil on Thursday. Perez Roque insisted Castro maintains "permanent" contact with members of the government party in Cuba.

On official Cuban television, there was no hint of trouble Friday. A rerun of the hit NBC series "Friends" played late in the afternoon.

To steal a title from Nobel prize-winning Colombian author and Castro friend, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the last two weeks have been a nonstop "Chronicle of a Death Foretold."

"For us it's not so much the waiting for the death of a person," said Joanna Burgos, spokeswoman for the Miami-based Raices of Esperanza, a nonpartisan youth group that advocates for a free and democratic Cuba.

"It's much more the waiting for the opportunity for young people on the island to have a chance to live freely, and hopefully that might give them an open door to do so."

Noriega fails to stop extradition



A US judge has refused to block the extradition of ex-Panama leader Manuel Noriega to France, where he faces 10 years in prison for money laundering.

A federal judge rejected arguments by Noriega's lawyers that his status as a US prisoner of war negated the request.

Noriega, 72, is due in September to end a 1992 prison term for drug-trafficking and racketeering in Miami.

His lawyer Frank Rubino said Noriega was "very disappointed, very displeased" about the verdict.

Mr Rubino said: "He was hoping that the judge would have done the right thing and sent him back to Panama, his home country, and he's completely disappointed."

Noriega was made a US prisoner-of-war after his arrest during the US invasion of Panama more than 17 years ago.

He is due to appear before US magistrate William Turnoff on Tuesday when the French request for extradition is expected to progress.

In a 12-page decision, Judge William Hoeveler said Noriega's status was not meant "to shield him from all future prosecutions for serious crimes he is alleged to have committed".

The French authorities want his extradition so that he can serve out a sentence on a 1999 money-laundering conviction obtained in absentia.

But Panamanian President Martin Torrijos has said he would like the former military leader returned to Panama to serve a sentence for the murder of a government opponent.

Stalwart supporter

Manuel Noriega was once one of Washington's top allies in Latin America, with close ties to former presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush Senior.

The Panamanian military ruler was seen as a stalwart supporter in the fight against communism and drug-trafficking in the region.

However, in 1988 a Florida court charged Noriega with helping Colombian drug-traffickers smuggle tons of cocaine into the US, and the White House went on to accuse the Panamanian leader of election-rigging and violating human rights.

In 1989, more than 20,000 US troops invaded Panama, ousting and detaining Noriega, who was replaced by Guillermo Endara.

Among arguments used by President Bush to justify the invasion were alleged threats to the lives of US citizens in Panama and the neutrality of the Panama Canal, as well as need to combat the drugs trade.

At least 200 Panamanian civilians were killed as US troops battled Noriega's security forces in an invasion condemned by the Organization of American States. Some researchers have said the overall number of Panamanian deaths numbered several thousand.

Oaxaca Declines to be “Governed”

The Struggle Shifts from the City to Land and Water Issues

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca

August 24, 2007

Last year in 2006 the state of Oaxaca was clearly ungovernable, although neither the state nor federal authorities would formally so declare, because they could not throw out the governor – the state because the governor’s PRI rules all three branches of power; the feds because the weak president Calderón requires the assistance of the PRI. But ungovernability was no secret; unions were on strike, roads were blockaded, government offices were blocked for business, the governor and legislatures went hiding, and the citizens took the streets, while dirty-war arrests, murder and torture shadowed daily life.

Flash forward one year and here is the scene: the state of Oaxaca, despite a Federal Preventive Police unit on every corner, is ungovernable. Arrests and violations of human rights, in the same dirty war, continue.


Photos: D.R. 2007 Nancy Davies
—The teachers union Section 22, mover of the Movement, was split by the governor so that a new small sector called Section 59 supported him and the PRI. Now two union sectors oppose URO’s failing government. Section 59 is banging down the doors of the education building to protest the governor’s failure to fulfill his promises to these teachers. What a surprise.

About two hundred schools remain in the control of Section 59; in others the two contentious sections work in the same building, causing significant stress. Section 22 refuses to accept the existence of Section 59, and now, since 59 has figured out that they backed a governor who ignores them, Section 22 is going about the delicate business of wooing 59 back into the fold. The power of 70,000 united teachers was and would be overwhelming.

The strength of the secretary general of Section 22 , like his predecessor Enrique Rueda Pacheco, is wobbly, to say the least. According to a teacher who spoke about the situation, Rueda Pacheco was simultaneously wooed and threatened by the governor. His family were threatened with death if Rueda did not accept the government pay-off. Rueda has left Mexico – nobody knows to which country – and according to this teacher, once he was gone the government cut off the money they had promised him.

The possibility now is that Ezekial Rosales has fallen under the same threats. It seems to be standard procedure to threaten to murder children of activists (as we know from Dr. Bertha Muñoz). However, according to many others, such as APPO counselor Marcelino Coache Verano, the all-out call by Section 22 and/or the APPO has not been issued; if the teachers were summoned to the streets or encampments, Coache claims, they would all respond regardless of the plight of their secretary, along with the APPO.

–Several other unions are, have been, or are about to go on strike. The unions which are government unions, that is, work for the state, and receive their salaries from the state, are unhappy. In addition to teachers, the university education workers, health care workers, even local police and firefighters protest. On August 22 Las Noticias’ headline reads STEUABJO BLOCKADES THE HIGHWAY. These are the staff of the main university of Oaxaca. Also on page one, the police in Xoxocotlan protested the removal of their chief.

–In the past two months the taxi drivers have blocked roads to protest the incompetence and criminal actions of the government in distributing cab licenses for bribe money –what a surprise– so that there are now thousands of taxis on the roads, with no resolution to the license scandal in sight. The bus drivers have blocked the highways with buses, complaining about their work conditions and the dreadful condition of aging buses, which occasionally fall of the mountain roads due to the crumbling condition of the roads themselves.

–The citizens have taken to the streets. Not the APPO – it’s the PRI-supporting merchants. Another surprise! They protested the government intention to close further streets around the central zócalo, to repave and repair them, to turn them into pedestrian streets. This was after the merchants complained of near-bankruptcy during the teacher encampment when few cars drove into the center. Once again the people – only the label has changed– are tearing out the parking meters (allegedly owned by private persons) and on the streets scheduled for construction, they forcefully removed the orange cones and blocked the workers.

The city of Tlaxiaco protests the August 8 transfer of seventy-three persons to another prison, six hours journey for their families, with no advance warning nor discussion of the violation of prisoner rights. Also in the streets are protesters for a town where access to the trash dumps is blockaded, another where a bridge fell down in the rain, and yet another where paved streets have dissolved. Entire communities, like San Pablo Huixtepec, claim they have been abandoned by the government; photos of falling down buildings and half-constructed schools, roads in ruins and black water running where there is no drainage system, are published daily. Poverty continues unabated (according to official reports, 104 Oaxaca communities live at the level of African poverty), and despite daily news items about human rights violations, these also continue and nobody is indicted. The savage beating of a electrician on July 16 has slipped into the official territory of “yes, we will look into it” smoke and mirrors.

On August 22, in the Oaxaca streets, marchers observed the first year anniversary of the death of Lorenzo San Pablo at the hands of the government paramilitaries with a “March for Justice”. A small but fervent group walked with candles, wooden crosses (saying “misery”, and “injustice”), and banners which read “A person who dies for the people never dies.” Moving from the Siete Regiones fountain to the Catedrál on the Alameda in the center city, they stopped en route in the rain to offer a memorial at the spot where San Pablo was shot. Then, many with their faces painted white to depict the ghosts of the dead who walk among us, they continued to the cathedral where a chorus sheltering beneath their umbrellas in the rain sang hymns with political pro-APPO lyrics. On the pavement in front of the Catedrál the traditional sand carpet in memory of a deceased person portrayed the bird of peace and the APPO clenched red fist. A truckload of state troopers armed to riot level patrolled the adjoining streets.

During the week of August 5 four visitors from Catalonia were arrested and abused before being deported. But perhaps it was only the rain which kept people from attending the memorial march; many others arrived in time for the mass.

The APPO as an organized body seems virtually invisible as they struggle to plan ways to confront the government. Some say internal disputes have enervated them. Therefore, with an ongoing and visible lack of governability in Oaxaca, one might indeed agree that the APPO is everything and everybody. Or that ungovernability is due to other causes – perhaps you might say the people do not submit; perhaps you might say it’s the ineptitude of the governor and his cronies. Last week URO went to the United States where he was confronted with protests in several cities, including New York. Protesters in the street threw tomatoes at the restaurant where URO and other governors were said to be dining. Oaxaca human rights violations are so widely known that even in Finland Oaxaca is regarded as an example, according to a man just returned from there, of the struggle for human dignity; information about Oaxaca has reached global levels.

However, within Mexico the best that has been done was a call on the part of the Human Rights Commission sub-procurator, Juan de Dios Castro Lozano, for Ulises Ruiz to resign, for his human rights violations and for the good of the people. Then Castro, a PAN member, the very next day, retracted his statement saying, “My feelings ran away with me, and I shouldn’t have mentioned either the governor or his institutions, although he may have an ideology contrary to that of this (PAN) government,” according to an on-line article in La Jornada. When Castro issued his retraction he claimed, nonetheless, that he agrees with the verdict of the National Commission on Human Rights — there were excesses committed. Yet another surprise.

And speaking of human rights, the attorney for El Comité de Liberacion de Noviembre, the November Committee of Freedom of Oaxaca, was picked up by the police on Wednesday August 22. According to the committee, Alejandro Noyola was driving in his car with his wife when police from Santa Lucía del Camino intercepted him. They dragged him out of his car and took him to the Santa Lucia del Camino prison, claiming a driving infraction. He was later released. Noyola says he has been persecuted since July 19 when he filed for court protection for the lives of five lawyers, including himself, defending human rights cases.

The year of the uprising has not yet come to an end.

Meanwhile, in other parts of the state, the transnational projects continue and a meeting has been called for the ”Defense of the Land and National Sovereignty and for the Right of the Indian Peoples to be Consulted“ (see below for the formal convocation). The struggle at the base has overtly shifted to the indigenous populations who demand control over their land and water. Although it was reported as long ago as last year that residents of the indigenous communities were organizing, too many actions were going on in the big cities for the rural areas to receive much attention. Then we were regaled with stories of ”throw the rascals out“ in many rural towns. Now struggles over mining, forests, land, and water have come to the fore.

For the actors, this the sequence of focus on the various Movement players: the teachers in Section 22, then the APPO, then civil society and non-governmental organizations, and now the indigenous and rural populations. The Popular Movement doesn’t die. It changes form and location. The demands for justice continue.


CONVOCATION

MEXICAN MEETING FOR THE DEFENSE OF THE LAND AND NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY

AND FOR THE RIGHT OF THE INDIAN PEOPLES TO BE CONSULTED

In these last years, with the imposition of mega-projects like the Plan Puebla-Panama damage and violence to the indigenous and rural populations has been intensifying. The grand programs of investment in energy projects which the federal government is promoting are oriented to benefit the transnational corporations. They don’t take into account the rights of the communities affected nor the high environmental and economic costs which the carrying out of these projects entails. Furthermore, the Mexican government violates international accords and treaties like national legislation, since in the execution of these programs the affected indigenous communities have been neither informed nor consulted.

With these mega-projects the federal government also is promoting the privatization of the energy industry, which is a national patrimony, to benefit mainly North American and Spanish corporations The Federal Electric Commission in spite of being a public business is acting as if it were the property of a group of politicians and technocrats, offering bad service with high costs and constructing works which mean the dislocation of entire populations as recently occurred with the indigenous communities of the zone El Cajón in Nayarit.

At this very moment the second phase of a gigantic eo-electric park is opening operations, without consultation and as an overt pilfering of socially owned land, to build in the Istmo de Tehuantepec. This mega-project has now meant the ruin of more than 1,000 hectares which are the property of ejidos and communities, all in benefit of the transnational Iberdrola; the operation of 98 air generators in the zone of La Venta has already caused great mortality among birds along with draining the lagoon of Tolistoque, since the environmental impact studies were approved in spite of the great irregularities which they present. Nevertheless, throughout the whole country, entire communities have raised their voices, along with unions, groups of citizens and environmentalists with the goal of stopping the policies which affect the population. Principally in the southeast of our country a movement of civil resistance is growing against the high electric costs. The Guerrero campesinos have managed until now to halt the construction of La Parota dam, converting themselves thereby into a national example of resistance. And in the Istmo de Tehuantepec an important struggle exists against the eolic (wind generator) mega-projects. Nevertheless many of these efforts are carried out in isolation and with small results. The struggles which the peoples and organizations bring forth are unknown by the majority of Mexicans and that prevents a greater solidarity and backing, which is necessary to confront the interests of politicians and transnational corporations.

For all these reasons we communities, ejidos, indigenous and rural organizations, social groups and people listed below sign this call to participate in the Encuentro Mexicano por la Defensa de la Tierra y la Soberanía Nacional y por el Derecho a la Consulta de los Pueblos Indios which will take place between the 22nd and 23rd of September of 2007 in the Zapotec community of La Ventosa, of the municipality of Juchitán, State of Oaxaca. In this meeting we will discuss in worktables as well as in plenaries the struggles of resistance taking place in various parts of the country; we will seek to coordinate actions to confront the great transnational corporations and the hand-over policies of the Mexican State; and we will denounce the grave social and environmental damage which they have caused.

COLOMBIA: Campaign Seeks to Make Water a Constitutional Right

By Helda Martínez

BOGOTA, Aug 24 (IPS) - Sixty environmental, indigenous, labour and social organisations in Colombia are carrying out a campaign for a constitutional amendment that would make access to clean water a fundamental right.

The proponents of the initiative have already fulfilled the first legal requirement by collecting some 135,000 signatures, equivalent to five out of every 1,000 registered voters.

But they now face a bigger challenge.

Once the signatures are certified as valid by the Registraduría Nacional del Estado Civil (national registry), the organisations will have to gain the support of 1.5 million Colombians in order for Congress to call a referendum in which voters would decide in favour of or against the proposed constitutional amendment.

The initiative included an awareness-raising caravan along the Magdalena river, which ended Friday when it reached the port of Girardot, 133 km southwest of the capital.

In this country of 42 million, nearly 12 million people have no access to clean water and four million have limited access, i.e. to a public faucet, according to the Defensoría del Pueblo (ombudsman’s office).

Ironically, Colombia is the second country in Latin America in terms of average annual renewable freshwater resources, and seventh in the world, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

But despite the abundance, the governmental Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental Studies (IDEAM) predicts that 69 percent of the Colombian population will suffer from a lack of clean water in 2025.

The non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and trade unions promoting the constitutional amendment point to the privatisation of water utilities, which was authorised by law in 1993, as one of the causes of the problem.

"Of the country’s 349 water companies, 141 are private and 24 are mixed," reports the CENSAT Agua Viva/Friends of the Earth Colombia.

One of the NGO’s researchers, Danilo Urrea, told IPS that "privatisation has significantly driven up the cost of water services, and the granting of concessions to private operators has also given rise to scandals and corruption."

In addition, there has been an attempt to charge a toll for navigating the Magdalena river along the stretch where it flows into the Barranquilla port on the Caribbean coast.

The Magdalena river emerges in southwestern Colombia and runs through 18 of the country’s 22 departments (provinces) for over 1,500 kilometres before reaching the Caribbean.

In the 1970s, 70,000 tons of fish were caught in the river annually, an amount that shrunk to 40,000 in the 1980s, 20,000 in the 1990s and just 8,000 today.

That problem is also on the agenda of the groups carrying out the campaign. "You can't just put an end to public utilities arguing that the state is corrupt. What must be achieved is management of water for the benefit of the population as a whole," said Urrea.

The petition drive to collect signatures in favour of the constitutional amendment was launched on May 1, International Workers’ Day, in several cities around Colombia.

Various actions were carried out in the following two months, mainly organised by young people. This month, during the first forum for water and life in the Caribbean, held in the city of Barranquilla, the caravan set out on the Magdalena river, reaching Girardot on Friday.

One of the country’s most heavily polluted rivers, the Bogotá river, flows into the Magdalena at the port of Girardot. The Bogotá is a dumping ground for chemical residues from the cut-flower industry and tanneries.

This first stage of the campaign is coming to a close with "a positive evaluation," said Urrea. "Even if we are not successful in our attempt to hold a referendum, we have carried out awareness-raising efforts in cities and towns along the river, which was part of our overall objective. And of course we will continue working."

Minister of the environment, development and housing Juan Lozano recently stated in a televised debate that he will put a priority on recuperating the country’s water resources, and that maintaining a public water service and preserving the environment were aims that he shared.

If a referendum is held and voters come out in favour of a constitutional amendment, Colombia will be following Uruguay's lead.

In late 2004, that small South American country became the first nation in the world to introduce a constitutional amendment declaring water resources a public good and prohibiting the privatisation of water and sewage services.

Cuba proposes broad cooperation to eradicate illiteracy

BRASILIA.— At the Forum for Latin American and East Asian Cooperation (FEALAC) Cuba proposed an extensive process of cooperation expected to substantially contribute to the eradication of illiteracy.


The “I Can Do It” method is used in many countries.

The proposal was presented by Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque in his speech to the 3rd FEALAC meeting of foreign ministers which ended here on Thursday.

He said that as a result of limited access to culture, science and education, 800 million adults are illiterate and 80 million children do not attend school in the world of today.

This is unforgivable, he pointed out, since there can be no development without human capital and no freedom without culture.

While advocating cooperation among FEALAC member countries in the effort to eradicate illiteracy, the Cuban minister highlighted the well-known success of the “I Can Do It” method developed by Cuban specialists and endorsed by UNESCO.

August 24, 2007

Protests Against Mexican Governors in Chicago, New York and Dallas

by el enemigo común ( solidarity [at] elenemigocomun.net )
Monday Aug 20th, 2007 7:08 PM
On August 16th, email alerts were circulating that Oaxaca governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) and other governors from Mexico were visiting Mexican Consulates in Chicago on August 17th, New York City on the 18th and Dallas on the 19th to discuss migratory reform. Activists quickly organized demonstrations in solidarity with the people of Oaxaca, and all of Mexico, as well as the millions of Mexican migrants living on the northern side of the US/Mexico border.

A flyer passed out in New York City labeled Ruiz Ortiz, “a co-conspirator with the US government and multinational corporations in the imposition of a political economy, which forces entire communities from his state to migrate north in search of better lives.” The flyer, composed by the Ulises Ruiz Welcoming Committee, also explains that, “Ruiz has attempted to quell social unrest through the criminalization of dissent, the militarization of communities, and the direct support of paramilitary groups in his state.”

To those familiar with the cowardliness of Ruiz Ortiz, it was not a big surprise that he failed to show up with the delegation. Even though he was the focus of the demonstrations, his absence did not prevent activists from protesting the rest of the Mexican Governors and representatives of URO who were with the CONAGO (National Conference of Mexican Governors) delegation.

Calls to Action | Chicago Protest Against Repression in Mexico | Ulises Ruiz Ortiz Unwelcome in Nueva York | Protest of Mexican Governors’ Meeting in Dallas
bienvenidos-uro.jpg
bienvenidos-uro.jpg

Protests Against Mexican Governors in Chicago, New York and Dallas
http://elenemigocomun.net/1220

Text from a flyer distributed in New York by the Ulises Ruiz Welcoming Committee:

ULISES RUIZ ORTIZ: ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE

Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz of Oaxaca is here as part of the CONAGO delegation of Mexican governors to discuss issues affecting immigrant communities in the USA. We agree that comprehensive immigration reform is an absolute and immediate need for all immigrants in this country. However, it is clear to us that Ulises Ruiz Ortiz is nothing less than a co-conspirator with the US government and multinational corporations in the imposition of a political economy, which forces entire communities from his state to migrate north in search of better lives. Ruiz’s track record has shown that the only thing, which he has offered his constituents is the corporate privatization of their lands and resources. Furthermore, the world has now beared witness to Governor Ruiz’s violent response to the Oaxacan people’s peaceful resistance for survival. It is clear that Ruiz’s solution to Oaxaca’s social problems, is the brutal repression of the Oaxacan People. Ruiz has attempted to quell social unrest through the criminalization of dissent, the militarization of communities, and the direct support of paramilitary groups in his state.

On October 27th, 2006 US journalist Bradley Roland Will (Brad Will) was murdered by plain cloths police officers, who shot him while he videotaped them shoot multiple high caliber rounds at protesters in a crowd. Mexican national and international journalists captured incriminating images of the attack as well. The murderers are free today. Brad’s murder is one of over 30 in a 6 month period, which continue to grow in silence. We are aware that the violence and corruption, which this tyrant executes in the state of Oaxaca, is at the very least influenced if not motivated by the violence and corruption imposed on Mexico by the USA. The United States’ government must also be held accountable for its role in pushing the Oaxacan people, as it pushes all immigrants into the desperate decision, to migrate. The US is complacent with the fruits and benefits of the Mexican people’s land and labor. The militarization of the US border, the condoned violence of racist border vigilante groups, and the illegal ICE raids against immigrants throughout the USA, are just a few examples of crimes committed against all Mexicans.

Today the official lines on terrorism, security and free trade are a challenging contradiction. How does one secure borders from the people, while forcing them open to resources and merchandise? Inside of those resources are immigrants: the number one resource exported from the rest of the Americas to the USA. Fortunately for us, here today another thing we import, is history, and tradition, and along with it resistance. Today we want Ulises Ruiz Ortiz to know, that in New York we know that he is a criminal, and that the Oaxacan People’s Popular Assembly (APPO) is alive and well. For the US government to allow this man, of all Mexicans, into this country is a crime itself. Those of us here today, and the so many others who couldn’t make it are here to demand justice for the people of Oaxaca.

ULISES RUIZ WELCOMING COMMITTEE

--------------

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Desde NY: protesta conta Ulises Ruiz
by el Comité de Bienvenida de Ulises Ruiz Friday Aug 24th, 2007 4:11 PM
Copy the following to embed the movie into another web page:
download video:

nyc-ruiz.mp4 (56.9 MB)

Ulises Ruiz Ortiz Unwelcome in Nueva York

lower resolution version can be had at:
* http://autonomousmedia.org/media/RuizNYC.mp4

Oaxaca: “A Sign of What May Be to Come for the Rest of Mexico”

A Book Review of “The People Decide: Oaxaca’s Popular Assembly” by Nancy Davies

By Paul Bocking

The Industrial Worker (newspaper of the IWW)

August 23, 2007

The popular uprising in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca was one of this country’s biggest untold stories from 2006, a precipitous year full of protests, strikes and repression across the nation. The People Decide is a diary-like compilation by Nancy Davies of day to day first-person news stories chronicling the movement led by the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO) and the state local of the national teacher’s union, for the ousting of an authoritarian governor and the creation of a truly democratic society led by the poor Indigenous majority. Davies is an American retiree who has lived in Oaxaca for the past eight years. These reports on the struggle unfolding around her were published online at narconews.com in English, and subsequently translated into Spanish and other languages.

The whole event began as a fairly routine teacher’s strike, but when state police violently attacked an encampment of striking teachers on June 14, 2006, killing at least three teachers and children, a popular uprising broke out in their support. The teacher’s bread and butter demands for higher wages and more funding for dilapidated schools were joined to a growing mass movement broadly united under the APPO, that had one non-negotiable imperative: state governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz must leave office.

Police and other authorities were driven out, and government offices occupied or blockaded, in cities, towns and villages across Oaxaca. Commercial and government-run radio stations were taken over by teachers and other activists to serve as the movement’s primary form of communications. Following months of paramilitary violence and harassment conducted against teachers and the APPO, resulting in dozens of disappearances, arrests and deaths, Mexican federal police forcibly reoccupied the state capital of Oaxaca City in November 2006, at which point the entries of the book conclude.

The story of the popular rebellion in Oaxaca, which continues to unfold past the conclusion here, is one which all IWW members should familiarize themselves with, as a contemporary example of a revolutionary movement of organized workers and their community that are transforming their society. It exists despite the best efforts of a violent government, its business allies and the capitalist media in Mexico and abroad that prefers to ignore or sensationalize it. Narconews.com is the best independent online news source in English (and one of the best in Spanish) on Mexico’s social movements. Their publication last April of this collection of articles is certainly timely, considering the events it depicts occurred only several months earlier.

As with other contemporary major social movements like Argentina’s worker-run factories and Mexico’s Zapatistas, over the next few years, volumes of books and articles will likely be published on the “Oaxaca Commune”. They will be able to offer more analysis and different perspectives. The APPO itself is a hotly contested political organization involving several factions, creating difficulties for an author seeking to accurately characterize it. Some activists in Oaxaca claim this is Davies’ oversight. Aside from these limitations, The People Decide has a sense of immediacy one can feel while reading the entries of this book that few future publications will likely be able to replicate.

Wobblies have participated in solidarity protests against state violence in Oaxaca, wrote and distributed articles in both the Industrial Worker and the IWW’s Spanish-language newsletter Solidaridad, and spent time there, building direct links between the IWW and local grassroots organizations. I hope that IWW members continue to support the popular movements of Oaxaca, and draw inspiration from their struggles. For an excellent account of the first six months of the Oaxaca uprising, and a sign of what may be to come for the rest of Mexico, The People Decide is a great read.

Published in the August edition of the Industrial Worker

The Deportation of Elvira Arellano

by Dan La Botz
August 24, 2007
MR Zine

The deportation of immigrant rights activist Elvira Arellano by federal authorities on August 20 was a blow aimed at the immigrant rights movement. Arellano, a 32-year old single mother who had spent a year living in a Chicago church in defiance of a deportation order, had become a spokesperson for the New Sanctuary Movement, which focuses on how immigration law and immigration authorities have separated families, and a symbol of resistance for the broader immigrant rights movement.

Arellano had traveled with her eight-year old son Saul to Los Angeles to promote the immigrant rights movement and raise its visibility. Federal authorities arrested and deported her; her son, born in the U.S. and therefore a citizen, was not deported.

The federal authorities claim that they deported Arellano for entering the country illegally in 1997, because of a 2002 conviction for a felony (the use of a false Social Security card), and because she was a fugitive. While those are the pretexts, the motive behind Arellano's deportation was surely to break the immigrant movement's spirit and thereby keep immigrants from standing up for their rights.

Setback or Catalyst?

The question facing the immigration rights movement is: Will her arrest become another setback, or will it revitalize the movement? The answer lies with both immigrants and their allies, but it will depend upon a strategic vision of the way forward for the movement.

Since the massive immigrant demonstrations of 2006, which became virtual general strikes in some cities, the movement has been in retreat. The defeat of all attempts at immigration reform in Congress and Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff's announcement that there would be a new round of repression, raids, and deportations have put the movement on the defensive.

The New Sanctuary Movement, based in Catholic and Protestant churches and some Jewish temples, has called on all the Americans to "accompany and protect immigrant families who are facing the violation of their human rights in the form of hatred, workplace discrimination, and unjust deportation."

The heart of the immigrant rights movement, however, must be found in immigrants themselves. The immigrant movement must be rebuilt locally, at the grassroots level. Joined by allies from the churches and the labor movement, immigrants and their allies will have to retake the terrain lost to conservatives during the debate over immigration reform last year.

That terrain was lost over the last few years largely because immigrant rights advocates allowed the debate to be confined to federal legislation. Today, in the era of the globalization of both economics and politics, an ideological debate can never be won solely on the basis of national policy.

Immigration has its roots in foreign policy, in trade agreements, and military intervention. While recognizing the importance of immigrant rights here in the U.S., activists must work against the trade agreements and foreign policies that have displaced millions of people and led to massive immigration to the U.S.

A Question for Unions

Within the U.S., it will be critical to shift the debate to one about building social solidarity among working people. Not immigrants, but corporations and the government are responsible for economic policies that have cost American workers jobs, wages, and benefits. American-born workers need to join with immigrants to defeat those policies.

For the labor movement, the defense of Elvira Arellano becomes a question of its survival and its future. If the labor movement wants to grow in power it has to rally to the defense of immigrants here while it forms alliances with foreign unions and workers abroad.

To get involved, see www.newsanctuarymovement.org and www.nalacc.org.

Dan La Botz teaches history and Latin American studies at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. He is the author of Rank-and-File Rebellion: Teamsters for a Democratic Union (1990), Mask of Democracy: Labor Suppression in Mexico Today (1992), and Democracy in Mexico: Peasant Rebellion and Political Reform (1995), Made in Indonesia: Indonesian Workers Since Suharto (2001) and the editor of Mexican Labor News & Analysis, a monthly collaboration of the Mexico City-based Authentic Labor Front (FAT), the Pittsburgh-based United Electrical Workers (UE), and the Resource Center of the Americas. His writing has also appeared in Against the Current, Labor Notes, and Monthly Review among other publications. This article was first published in Mexican Labor News & Analysis 11.8 (August 2006), republished here with the author's permission.

Venezuela buys more arms from Russia, upsets U.S.

Q: What do you do if you’re the leader of a country seeking to buy arms but one of the world’s biggest arms dealers doesn’t want to sell to you?

A: Simple; look elsewhere for business.

That is precisely what Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez has done with Russia becoming a major supplier of arms and equipment to the South American country instead of the U.S.

The latest development has been the purchase of 98 Ilyushin civilian planes from Russia today according to media reports. Previous Russian arms sales to Venezuela include submarines and Kalashnikov rifles.

U.S. arms dealers have been banned from selling arms to Venezuela despite being allowed to sell to countries with “very poor” human rights records, according to this report. Hence, Pentagon officials have denounced Venezuelan arms purchases:

"It seems as if a build up of this character doesn't really respond to the reality on the ground there," U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Western Hemisphere Affairs Stephen Johnson told reporters during a visit Bogota.

"It has an effect of intimidating neighbors ... and democracies in the region need to be able to respond to this in a way that will help reduce this kind of threat," he said.”

Sources- El Universal, Voice of America, The Latin Americanist, World Security Institute, Reuters

Image- Pravda (Hugo Chavez and Vladimir Putin meeting in 2006)

Prita Lal on the 2nd Encuentro (Reportback 2)


photo: Jennifer Whitney

"Visiting the Zapatistas reinforced to me the strength of women and the vital role they play in the community."
-Prita Lal, 26, Organizer and Student in NYC

Earlier this summer, Prita and I traveled together with over 70 other people as part of the Another Politics is Possible delegation from New York City to the US Social Forum in Atlanta...Here is an interview with her, just back from attending the Second Encounter of the Zapatista Peoples with the Peoples of the World:

RJ Maccani: Before we get into discussing the Zapatista encuentro you attended, I want to ask some questions about you. For starters, what do you do in your daily life?

Prita Lal: I live in NYC and am part of two community organizations: Center for Immigrant Families (CIF), which is a community organization of low-income immigrant women of color that uses popular education to organize for personal and social transformation in upper Manhattan; and Casa Atabex Aché (Casa), which means House of Womyn’s Power, and is a natural health and wellness center for womyn of color in the South Bronx that organizes for personal, spiritual, and collective transformation through earth-based, holistic and alternative healing techniques. I am also a graduate student in history and anthropology.

RJ: Have you always lived in NYC? How did you find yourself working with CIF and Casa?

PL: My parents migrated to the U.S. from India in the early 1970s. I was born in Queens, NY but then (after over a decade of living in the NYC area), my family moved to Louisiana when I was 3 years old. I grew up in small towns between Louisiana and Georgia until I was 17. Having been raised in the Deep South as a child of South Asian immigrants really helped politicize me at an early age because of injustices I experienced and witnessed both because of race and class.

I went to college in New Orleans and developed my political analysis through living there and experiencing the gross disparities between the mostly white and wealthy college campus that was located in a predominately black and very poor community. I moved back to NYC four years ago and had been working with immigrant worker rights groups (specifically with grocery delivery and domestic workers in the West African and South Asian communities) before I began working at CIF and Casa.

RJ: Could you tell us a bit more about the history of Center for Immigrant Families and what the day-to-day work looks like?

PL: Center for Immigrant Families (CIF) is a collectively-run organization of low-income immigrant women of color and community members in Manhattan Valley (Uptown NYC). Committed to a holistic vision of organizing, our stories and lived experiences are central to building a community that works towards social transformation and promotes justice, mutuality, love, trust, and dignity.

CIF was founded in 1997 in response to the increased forms of institutionalized oppression facing immigrant families and communities. Assaults have consistently mounted in recent years, from the passage of the 1996 immigration and welfare "reform" laws, which gratuitously attacked and unfairly targeted immigrant communities, particularly women and children of color, to attacks on bilingual education, the push for English-only laws, and the further criminalization of undocumented immigrants.

CIF's founding program, the Escuela Popular de Mujeres/Women's Popular Education Program, is driven by a deep understanding of and faith in the transformational and healing power – for individuals and communities – of sharing our stories. At CIF, this is where we begin, with our migration stories; for us, these stories are not mere reminders of when we arrived or of our cultural heritage, but they are also about why we came, who and what we left behind, our expectations for life here, and what we found when we arrived. Our stories become the foundation for developing a collective analysis of why we are here as well as of the realities and challenges we face in the U.S. and what we can do collectively to address them. Integrated into our work is also leadership development and skills building to organize for justice.

From the Escuela program (since many of our members have identified public education as one reason we continue to live in this country in spite of the hardships), our Project to Challenge Segregation in OUR Public School System arose—in which we are fighting to take back our schools and make them accountable to our community. We're addressing public ed within a broader context of community displacement, as the schools have become a gateway for exclusion, displacement, and segregation in all the neighborhoods that comprise our school district. As part of the Escuela, we also have an English Literacy Project--we offer English classes that challenge the traditional ESL model thereby making English language learning a tool of resistance. To support the work of the Escuela, we developed the Women's Circles program, which provides a space for healing from the ways in which the system affects us internally. Lastly, we have developed a Resource Center library, in the face of dwindling community services, that complements CIF's work and shares information about advocacy and other organizing on a wide array of issues, including but not limited to violence against women, immigrants' rights, housing, and health.

RJ: …and what about Casa Atabex Aché?

PL: Casa began to take form since the 1960s; the founders were part of the Black Panthers and Young Lords Parties. They saw that community members were constantly being given drugs to treat illnesses caused by all the injustices happening in their communities, but that this did nothing to challenge the systems causing the oppressions—namely capitalism, white supremacy, and patriarchy. The founding womyn sought to develop a space to heal from the violence that people internalize as a result of living in this society—we heal through our tears, experiences, and knowledge of our ancestors.

We organize monthly healing circles in which women of color come together to break the silence around issues affecting our community and heal from various kinds of trauma and violence we experience. Casa has developed an emotional release model that integrates different indigenous healing modalities such as herbology, aromatherapy, yoga, the seven chakras, and seasonal nutrition to move toxic energy out of our bodies so that they do not develop into diseases. We use earth-based spirituality to create sacred space to align ourselves with the healing elements of the season for the healing of our mind, body and spirit.

The monthly healing circles are part of ACHE, which is the first alternative Womyn’s Health & Wellness Cooperative in the South Bronx. Through ACHE, we are creating our model for sustainable and accessible healthcare for community members, activists & organizers. The cooperative will support the health and wellness needs of womyn while being a respite to integrate self-care into our daily practice and heal from internalized oppression. We also have a Young Womyn’s Fuerza/Power program and a “Healing the Rainbow” program that is geared towards the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Two-Spirit, and Queer community.

RJ: When and how did you first learn of the Zapatista struggle?

PL: I came to know about the Zapatista struggle through these past few years of work within immigrant communities of color in NYC. Casa went to visit the Zapatistas over a year ago. Inspiration from that visit led to the creation of “ACHE” (Alternative Cooperative for Healing and Empowerment), our autonomous alternative health and wellness initiative in the South Bronx.

Similarly, CIF has learned from and draws inspiration from the Zapatistas, among many other movements. Recently, we had a series of workshops that lead up to our participation in the US Social Forum. Some of the intentions of the workshops were to build the leadership skills of members and develop our political analysis. For one of the workshops, we read a recent essay by Subcomandante Marcos entitled “Qué tan grande es el mundo?” (How big is the world?). To me, this piece speaks about the scope of injustices happening in the world and the importance of relating our struggles to those happening everywhere else. I think this piece relates to CIF’s work because it helps us to think beyond our organizing work locally and put our struggle in a larger context of movement building in solidarity with oppressed people all over the world.

RJ: Could you give us a general outline of what you participated in and experienced in this trip to Mexico and to the Zapatista Caracoles?

PL: We went to 3 Zapatista Caracoles (Caracoles literally means ‘snails’ and they are the centers of Zapatista autonomous government): Oventik for the first 2 days, Morelia for the next 4, and then La Realidad for the last 2 days. Oventik is located close to San Cristobal, so traveling there was pretty easy, while La Realidad was deep in the jungle close to the Guatemalan border, so we spent a good bit of time traveling there via truck. It was really a special opportunity to have the chance to go so far into the jungle and experience the natural beauty of this area. We basically camped out in all 3 caracoles. During the day, in each caracol, there would be ‘mesas’ that we would participate in—which were basically plenaries about various themes like health, education, struggles of women, the juntas de buen gobierno (“councils of good government”), autonomy, and collective work done by different municipals within the caracoles. The plenaries were 45 minutes each and then there would be 15 minutes at the end for questions (hand written).

There was also a delegation of farmers and representatives from farmer’s organizations who are part of an international network called Vía Campesina. Delegates came from South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, India, Brazil, U.S., Canada, and Mexico. During one day in Morelia, Vía Campesina held a program in which delegates spoke about the injustices and oppression experienced by farmers in their native countries.

There were also cultural performances during the evening after the plenaries finished, such as Zapatista youth performing theater pieces, and the evenings would usually finish with a band playing and a ‘baile popular.’ There were also kitchens and stores set up to provide for our nourishment. There were also collectives from different parts of Mexico that would have tables or share info about the work they are doing—such as artists or indy media collectives. I also had plenty of opportunity to talk with and get to know folks doing interesting work—I mainly met people from the global north and Mexico City.

RJ: Having never visited the Zapatistas before, why did you decide to attend this Encuentro?

PL: My friend told me about the Encuentro and said it would be an amazing opportunity to visit the Zapatistas. Since Casa is located in the South Bronx (with a large Latina community) and CIF’s membership is primarily Latina, I was already traveling to Guatemala to study Spanish in order to make my work in NYC more effective. So I was already close to Chiapas, and since I am a part of two organizations that are working to build autonomous communities, and since building autonomous and collective leadership is a struggle in our capitalist society, I was hoping to draw inspiration that would inform the work we’re doing and learn any lessons from the Zapatista struggle.

RJ: And were there lessons you were able to learn from the Zapatista struggle?

PL: I’m still discovering the lessons I learned from the Zapatistas during this Encuentro as I continue to reflect on this experience. Some of the things I have learned from the Zapatistas deals with their courage and commitment. The fact that they are in a low-intensity war against the mal gobierno ["bad government"] means to me that they have developed a mastery (if you will) of fear such that they are ready to literally fight for their values and autonomy.

I also feel like lessons can be drawn from their courage to rise up against the oppressors and stand firm in their beliefs to the point that they resist efforts to be bribed into complying with the system by refusing to receive benefits or privileges from it. For instance, the Zapatistas would mention the attempts made by the mal gobierno to provide funds for community development projects, but that they would remain solid and not accept these funds so that they can retain their autonomy. I feel like they can see through these attempts to receive benefits from the mal gobierno as attempts to co-opt their movement and find it to be admirable and something to learn from. I also really appreciated their veneration for their ancestors and their knowledge as central in their work.

In regards to their ancestral knowledge and practices, they seemed to be at the same time very deliberate and careful about how much and what knowledge they would share with outsiders. I seemed to get the strong impression (based on the plenaries and discussions with other people at the Encuentro) that the Zapatistas are not interested in having outsiders come in and join their community. For instance, they seem to place limits on how long outsiders can stay within their communities and they seem to have a deliberate and careful process of sharing information about their work with outsiders. It seems to me that these are efforts to protect their knowledge and hence their autonomy.

I also feel like movements in the U.S. can draw lessons from the Zapatistas going beyond the demanding rights from the state model and actually creating alternatives. The Zapatistas said that they refused to continue waiting to get rights from the state, because they would actually only get lies. To me, this shows their commitment and belief in their people and in their community—that they don’t need to rely on a state to regulate their relations, but that they can do it themselves. I also felt like it was powerful to see their commitment to collective work as critical to their communities. This is especially an important lesson because in the U.S., we get so trained to operate in hierarchies and we internalize assumptions that hierarchies are the most ‘efficient’ and effective way of organizing our relations, so its really important to see entire communities thriving through collective organization as a source of inspiration.

Also, visiting the Zapatistas reinforced to me the strength of women and the vital role they play in the community. Their firm commitment to prioritizing the leadership of women is also an important lesson.

RJ: What were the most powerful aspects of the Encuentro for you?

PL: It was a very powerful experience to stay in the caracoles—I felt a connection to mother nature that I haven’t felt before. Living so one with nature is an experience hard to describe, but there was this feeling in the air, the spirit and energy present, its like I could feel the spirit of the ancestors in the area and the efforts to hold on to indigenous knowledge. The Vía Campesina program was very powerful as well. They began their program with a theater performance in which the stage was set up with crops and different fabrics to represent the earth. Some delegates were pretending to farm and cultivate the earth until they got forced off their land from people representing the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Trade Organization, etc. One of the people from the delegation was singing a powerful song during this reenactment about the plight of farmers. I was so moved I was brought to tears! It was also very powerful to see thousands of people from so many countries gather in solidarity with Zapatismo.

RJ: Was there anything you were hoping to experience, share, learn or connect with at the Encuentro that either did not happen or -if you had a question- that you still feel unclear about?

PL: I did expect the Encuentro to be more participatory, and to have more space to talk directly with the Zapatistas. I can understand for security reasons why the Zapatistas would be weary of sharing too deeply about their work given the large number of attendees (perhaps to protect their autonomy), however, I did leave feeling like I would have appreciated the opportunity to dialogue more directly with them. I also hoped to have seen more people from the Global South represented. Although the Vía Campesina delegation was very powerful, it was disappointing that the farmers from the U.S. and Canada were white. I wonder why there couldn’t have been indigenous or African-American farmers represented in the delegation.

It was also disappointing that there was supposed to be a Vía Campesina delegate from Africa participating in the Encuentro, but their visa was denied. I was also expecting to meet more people from other Latin American countries, but felt like most of the folks I met were from Mexico and mainly from the capital city. I actually was talking to folks in Guatemala about this and learned that even to travel to Mexico as a Guatemalan, for instance, is difficult because the authorities would assume that they would be trying to cross the border into the U.S., or stay and work ‘illegally’ in Mexico. So, I was surprised to realize that even traveling to Mexico is a privilege not accorded to many.

RJ: What questions do you bring from the Encuentro back to your life, work, and communities in the USA?

PL: How do we challenge neoliberalism and capitalism in our daily work? Attending the Encuentro reinforced the idea for me that there is no such thing as a utopia—so long as capitalism exists, we are all implicated in it. I did notice some contradictions within the Zapatista struggle such as a gendered division of labor in which women were predominantly responsible for preparing food while men collected money—in spite of an explicit attempt to prioritize the leadership of women and challenge machismo in their communities; the selling of corporate products like Coca-Cola in the stores; and the attendees of this ‘Encuentro de los Pueblos Zapatistas con los Pueblos del Mundo’, not exactly reflective of the people of the world (i.e., large number of attendees were white and from the Global North—and in my perception—very sparse representation of working-class folks from the global South)). I also think that although the Zapatistas are firmly committed to living autonomously from the mal gobierno, they are nonetheless connected and perhaps I could even say beholden to the state system in some ways. For instance, I noticed in the Junta de Buen Gobierno’s office that attendees were expressing interest in donating funds or other resources to the Zapatistas. The Zapatistas indeed repeated during the Encuentro that support from the national and international community has afforded them the opportunity to develop their projects better, and I got the impression that one of their intentions for the Encuentro was to continue building this support so that they could raise more resources for their projects in the future. Thus, national and international support has played some kind of role in the Zapatista’s movement, yet the attendees of the Encuentro (as well as other folks who visit Zapatista territory) had to pass through state controlled immigration officials in order to get to the autonomous liberated zone, and indeed state authorities play a role in determining who is able to enter the country (and hence Zapatista land). All this to say that the Zapatistas are still connected to state systems and, I may even say, rely on them to some degree in their struggle for autonomy. I don’t bring up these contradictions to judge the Zapatistas in any way, just to point out that to me, social transformation is really a process and not an end result and so the importance of constantly reflecting on how we are challenging these systems of oppression in our daily lives and work.

RJ: Were you able to attend the plenary in San Cristobal that preceded the Encuentro; the one where Marcos discussed different forms of anti-capitalism and the use of Coca-Cola as a replacement for alcohol in the communities?

PL: No, I was not able to attend this plenary. I certainly would have appreciated attending it since I am only beginning the process of thinking through the relationship between the Zapatistas and Coca-Cola, so I am sure there are complexities and nuances that I have yet to discover or understand. However, just to share some of my initial reactions: I understand that Marcos has made speeches in which he criticized people for critiquing their selling of coke products, etc, and to them, it’s more important to seize the means of production than simply change consumption patterns. I also think we need to do much more than simply change consumption patterns—especially since no matter what, so long as global capitalism exists, we are all perpetuating its systems regardless of how hard we try to avoid patronizing certain oppressive corporations. So, I agree with this discourse, but I guess I am just wondering why the Zapatistas would sell products produced by a company that is responsible for the murder of folks in Latin America and campesinos in other parts of the third world. I just find it to be a bit of a shock, to be committed to taking over the means of production in an anti-capitalist way, but at the same time help support a capitalist enterprise that is causing their injustices and the injustices experienced by compas in the global south.

I don’t think the two are mutually exclusive, meaning that we don’t have to do either one or the other. I think it’s important that the two go together; because otherwise it’s kind of like we're stabbing ourselves in the back (creating autonomous alternatives/taking over the means of production, but at the same time, supporting the very institutions that are causing the oppression our communities experience in the first place...).

RJ: What else do you bring back with you?

PL: An increased respect for the earth and nature. A firmer commitment to the importance of reclaiming our indigenous knowledge. One of the Zapatista health promoters talked about how their community lost the knowledge of their ancestors in regards to health and healing because of the Spanish invaders who said the knowledge of their grandmothers was savagery, and how they have been working hard since their revolt to reclaim indigenous healing modalities. I can really relate to these sentiments just from my own community, so really take this to heart and find inspiration in it.

And by “my community” I am referring to my upbringing in the South Asian diaspora—always feeling like I was living in exile—never really at home in the U.S. or in India. It was difficult growing up in the Bible belt south while being raised by devote Hindu parents. I felt the pressure to assimilate at a young age—by feeling ashamed of my family’s language, culture, and habits.

Also, my schooling was very euro-centric and we were not taught the value of the histories of people of color. It was very enlightening (for lack of a better word…) for me to have the opportunity to take ethnic studies classes in college. Indeed, my last trip to India was very different than ones I had taken before that. After having studied the history of India intensively in grad school, I felt much more connected and comfortable in the country in a way I had not before (although I still do recognize the tensions within this given the oppressive role the academy plays and/or can play as well…).

One of the challenges growing up in the diaspora is having to deal with the ways in which Western culture exoticizes my native culture—it’s offensive because white people try to have it both ways: to retain their white privilege while taking the culture of brown people. After experiencing how protective the Zapatistas were with their knowledge and community, it seems to me that this is important to retain the autonomy of one’s community and to resist efforts at co-optation and the stealing of knowledge. For instance, by being open and allowing outsiders to join your community and soak up the knowledge, it helps facilitate the theft and co-optation of this knowledge.

Before, I had always felt like something was wrong with me because I did not retain elements of my ancestral practices and knowledge and felt like there was so much I didn’t know. But after visiting the Zapatistas, I realized (since they also expressed that their indigenous knowledge got lost through colonialism, assimilation, etc,) that this loss of knowledge is something shared by all colonized peoples. It was inspiring to hear that this process of recuperating lost knowledge is not something I am alone in doing, but that it is shared by other communities as well.

RJ: Do you have any plans to stay connected to the Zapatistas, the Other Campaign, and/or the Zezta Internazional? If so, what are some next steps?

PL: Definitely feel renewed inspiration and commitment to the work I am doing with CIF and Casa. I do feel like our work is strongly connected to the ideas of Zapatismo so, yes, I am feeling a stronger commitment.

August 23, 2007

Chávez deal to aid low-income Londoners

Lee Glendinning
Tuesday August 21, 2007
The Guardian


Up to a million people on income support will be eligible for half fares on London's buses under Ken Livingstone's oil deal with Hugo Chávez, Venezuela's president.

Single parents, carers, the long-term sick and disabled people will benefit from the plan, first mooted during Mr Chávez's visit to the UK last year, paying 50p for a single journey if they use an Oystercard.

In exchange for a 20% oil discount to fuel London buses, an office will be set up in Caracas, Venezuela's capital, where London officials will offer expertise in town planning, tourism, public transport and environmental protection.



Under the scheme applicants must take proof of their income support status to a post office to get a special photocard for a discounted Oystercard.

Mr Livingstone, London's mayor, said London and Venezuela had exchanged "those things in which they are rich to the mutual benefit of both".

"This will make it cheaper and easier for people to go about their lives and get the most out of London," he said. "The agreement which makes this possible will also benefit the people of Venezuela, by providing expertise in areas of city management in which London is a world leader."

Angie Bray, the Conservative leader in the London assembly, said Mr Livingstone should rather have appealed to the Treasury if he needed financial support. "The spectacle of our mayor ... going cap in hand to a dictator ... is morally indefensible," she added.

From September 30, a 10% a fare cut will also be introduced, meaning a single bus journey will be reduced to 45p for those on income support.

America and Venezuela: Constitutional Worlds Apart - by Stephen Lendman

Although imperfect, no country anywhere is closer to a model democracy than Venezuela under President Hugo Rafael Chavez Frias. In contrast, none is a more shameless failure than America, but it was true long before the age of George W. Bush. The difference under his regime is that the mask is off revealing a repressive state masquerading as a democratic republic. This article compares the constitutional laws of each country and how they're implemented. The result shows world's apart differences between these two nominally democratic states - one that's real, impressive and improving and the other that's mostly pretense and under George Bush lawless, corrupted, in tatters, and morally depraved.

US Constitutional Law from the Beginning

Before they're old enough to understand its meaning, young US children are taught to "pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands," and, by inference, its bedrock supreme constitutional law of the land. At that early age, they likely haven't yet heard of it, but soon will with plenty of misinformation about a document far less glorious than it's made out to be.

This article draws on Ferdinand Lundberg's powerfully important 1980 book, "Cracks in the Constitution," that's every bit as relevant today as then. In it, he deconstructs the nation's foundational legal document, separating myth from reality about what he called "the great totempole of American society." He analyzed it, piece by piece, revealing its intentionally crafted flaws. It's not at all the "Rock of Ages" it's cracked up to be, but students at all levels don't learn that in classrooms from teachers going along with the deception or who simply don't know the truth about their subject matter.

The Constitution falls far short of a "masterpiece of political architecture," but it's even worse than that. It was the product of very ordinary scheming politicians (not the Mt. Rushmore types they're portrayed as in history books) and their friends crafting the law of the land to serve themselves while leaving out the greater public that was nowhere in sight in 1787 Philadelphia. Unlike the Venezuelan Constitution, discussed below, "The People" were never consulted or even considered, and nothing in the end was put to a vote beyond the state legislative bodies that had to ratify it. In contrast to popular myth, the framers crafted a Constitution that didn't constrain or fetter the federal government nor did they create a government of limited powers.

They devised a government of men, not laws, that was composed of self-serving devious officials who lied, connived, used or abused the law at their whim, and pretty much operated ad libitum to discharge their duties as they wished. In that respect, things weren't much different then from now except the times were simpler, the nation smaller, and the ambitions of those in charge much less far-reaching than today.

The Constitution can easily be read in 30 minutes or less and just as easily be misunderstood. The opening Preamble contains its sole myth referring to "We the people of the United States of America." The only people who mattered were white male property owners. All others nowhere entered the picture, then or mostly since, proving democracy operatively is little more than a fantasy. But try explaining that to people today thinking otherwise because that's all they were taught from the beginning to believe.

They were never told the American revolution was nothing more than a minority of the colonists seceding from the British empire planning essentially the same type government repackaged under new management. Using high-minded language in Article I, Section 8 of the supreme law of the land, the founders and their successors ignored the minimum objective all governments are, or should be, entrusted to do - "provide for....(the) general welfare" of their people under a system of constitutional law serving everyone. But that's not its only flaw build in by design.

Our revered document is called "The Living Constitution," and Article VI, Section 2 defines it as the supreme law of the land. In fact, it's loosely structured for governments to do as they wish or not wish with the notion of a "government of the people, by the people, for the people" a nonstarter. "The People" don't govern either directly or through representatives, in spite of commonly held myths. "The People" are governed, like it or not, the way sitting governments choose to do it. As a consequence, "The Living Constitution" was a "huge flop" and still is.

Setting the Record Straight on the Framers

Popular myth aside, the 55 delegates who met in Philadelphia from May to September, 1787 were very ordinary self-serving, privileged, property-owning white men. They weren't extraordinarily learned, profound in their thinking or in any way special. Only 25 attended college (that was pretty rudimentary at the time), and Washington never got beyond the fifth grade.

Lundberg described them as a devious bunch of wheeler-dealers likely meeting in smoke-filled rooms (literally or figuratively) cutting deals the way things work today. He called them no "all-star political team" (except for George Washington) compared to more distinguished figures who weren't there like Jefferson, Adams (the most noted constitutional theorist of his day), John Jay (the first Supreme Court Chief Justice), Thomas Paine, Patrick Henry and others. Madison and Alexander Hamilton, who did attend, were virtual unknowns at the time, yet ever since Madison has been mischaracterized as the Constitution's father. In fact, he only played a modest role.

The delegates came to Philadelphia in May, 1887, assembled, did their work, sent it to the states, and left in a despondent mood. They disliked the final product, some could barely tolerate it, yet 39 of the 55 attendees knowingly signed a document they believed flawed while we today extoll it like it came down from Mt. Sinai. The whole process we call a first-class historical event was, in fact, an entirely routine uninspiring political caucus producing no "prodigies of statecraft, no wonders of political (judgment), no vaulting philosophies, no Promethean vistas." Contradicting everything we've been "indoctrinated from ears to toes" to believe, the notion that the Constitution is "a document of salvation....a magic talisman," or a gift to the common man is pure fantasy.

The central achievement of the convention, and a big one (until the Civil War changed things), was the cobbling together of disparate and squabbling states into a union. It held together, tenuously at best, for over seven decades but not actually until Appomattox "at bayonet point." The convention succeeded in gaining formal approval for what the leading power figures wanted and then got it rammed through the state ratification process to become the law of the land.

After much wheeling and dealing, they achieved mightily but not without considerable effort. Enough states balked to thwart the whole process and had to be won over with concessions like legitimizing slavery for southern interests and more. Then consider the Bill of Rights, why they were added, for whom, and why adopting them made the difference. It came down to no Bill of Rights, no Constitution, but they weren't for "The People" who were out of sight and mind.

These "glorified" first 10 Amendments were first rejected twice, then only added to assure enough state delegates voted to ratify the final document with them included. Many in smaller states were displeased enough to want a second convention that might have derailed the whole process had it happened. To prevent it, concessions were made including adding the Bill of Rights because they addressed key state delegate concerns like the following:

-- prohibitions against quartering troops in their property,

-- unreasonable searches and seizures there as well,

-- the right to have state militias,

-- the right of people to bear arms, but not as the 2nd Amendment today is interpreted,

-- the rights of free speech, the press, religion, assembly and petition, all to serve monied and propertied interests alone - not "The People,"

-- due process of law with speedy public trials for the privileged, and

-- various other provisions worked out through compromise to become our acclaimed Bill of Rights. Two additional amendments were proposed but rejected by the majority. They would have banned monopolies and standing armies, matters of great future import that might have made a huge difference thereafter. We'll never know for sure.

In the end and in spite of its defects, the framers felt it was the best they could do at the time and kept their fingers crossed it would work to their advantage. None of them suggested or wanted "a sheltered haven....for the innumerable heavily laden, bedraggled, scrofulous and oppressed of the earth." On the contrary, they intended to keep them that way meaning things weren't much different then than now, and the founders weren't the noble characters they're made out to be.

There were no populists or civil libertarians among them with men like Washington and Jefferson (who was abroad and didn't attend) being slave-owners. In fact, they were little more than crass opportunists who willfully acted against the will of "The People" they ignored and disdained. In spite of it, they're practically deified and ranked with the Apostles, and one of them (Washington) sits in the most prominent spot atop Mt. Rushmore.

The constitutional convention ended September 17, 1787 "in an atmosphere verging on glumness." Of the 55 attending delegates, 39 signed as a pro forma exercise before sending it to the states with power to accept or reject it. Again, "The People" were nowhere in sight in Philadelphia or at the state level where the real tussle began before the founders could declare victory.

What Was Achieved and What Wasn't

Contrary to popular myth, the new government wasn't constrained by constitutional checks and balances of the three branches created within it. In fact, then and since, sitting governments have acted expediently, with or without popular approval, and within or outside the law. In this respect, our system functions no differently than most others operating as we do. It's accomplished through "the narrowest possible interpretations of the Constitution," but it's free to go "further afield under broader or fanciful official interpretations." History records many examples under noted Presidents like Lincoln, T. and F. Roosevelt and Wilson along with less distinguished ones like Reagan, Clinton, Nixon, GHW Bush and his bad seed son, the worst ever of a bad lot.

Key to understanding the American system is that "government is completely autonomous, detached, (and) in a realm of its own" with its "main interest (being) economic (for the privileged) at all times." Constitutional shackles and constraining barriers are pure fantasy. Regardless of law, custom or anything else, sitting US governments have always been freelancing and able to operate as they please. They've also consistently been unresponsive to the public interest, uncaring and disinterested in the will and needs of the majority, and generally able to get around or remake the law to suit their purpose. George W. Bush is only the latest and most extreme example of a tradition begun under Washington, who when elected unanimously (by virtual coronation) was one of the two richest men in the country.

The Legislative Branch

The Constitution then and since confers unlimited powers on the government constituted under its three branches of the Congress, Executive and Judiciary. Article I (with seven in all plus 27 Amendments) deals with the legislative branch. Section 8, Sub-section 18 states Congress has power "to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution....or in any department or officer thereof." It's for government then to decide what's "necessary" and "proper" meaning the sky's the limit under the concept of sovereignty.

The Executive and Judiciary branches are dealt with below with the three branches comprising a labyrinthine system the framers devised under the Roman notion of "divide and rule" as follows:

-- a powerful (and at times omnipotent) chief executive at the top,

-- a bicameral legislature with a single member in the upper chamber able to subvert all others in it through the power of the filibuster (meaning pirate in Spanish),

-- a committee system controlled mostly by seniority or a political powerbroker,

-- delay and circumlocution deliberately built into the system,

-- a separate judiciary able to overrule the Congress and Executive, but too often is a partner, not an adversary,

-- staggered elections to assure continuity by preventing too many officials being voted out together,

-- a two-party system with multiple constituencies, especially vulnerable to corruption and the influence of big (corporate) money that runs everything today making the whole system farcical, dishonest and a democracy only in the minds of the deceived and delusional.

The Judiciary

Article III of the Constitution establishes the Supreme Court saying only: "The judicial power shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish." Congress is explicitly empowered to regulate the Court, but, in fact, the opposite often happens or, at times, it cuts both ways. The function of Congress is to make laws with the Court in place to interpret them and decide their constitutionality if challenged and it decides to adjudicate.

As for the common notion of "judicial review," it's nowhere mentioned in the Constitution nor did the framers authorize it. Nonetheless, courts use it to judge the constitutionality of laws in place and public sector body actions. They derive their power to do it by deduction from two separate parts of the Constitution: Article VI, Section 2 saying the Constitution, laws and treaties are the supreme law of the land and judges are bound by them; then in Article III, Section 1 saying judicial power applies to all cases, implying judicial review is allowed. Under this interpretation of the law, appointed judges, in theory, "have a power unprecedented in history - to annul acts of the Congress and President."

With or without this power, Lundberg makes a powerful case overall that the constitutional story comes down to a question of money and money arrangement - who gets it, how, why, when, where, what for, and under what conditions. Also addressed is who the law leaves out. The story has nothing whatever to do with guaranteeing life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (Jefferson's Orwellian language meaning property); establishing justice; upholding the rule of law equitably for everyone; promoting the general welfare; or securing the blessings of freedom for "The People" unconsidered, unimportant and ignored by the three branches of government serving monied and property interests only, of which they are a part.

The Executive Branch

Lundberg's theme is clear and unequivocal. Under US constitutional law, the President is the most powerful political official on earth, bar none under any other system of government. "The office he holds is inherently imperial," regardless of the occupant or how he governs, and the Constitution confers this on him. Unlike the British model, with the executive as a collectivity, the US system "is absolutely unique, and dangerously vulnerable" with one man in charge fully able to exploit his position. "The American President (stands) midway between a collective executive and an absolute dictator (and in times of war like now) becomes, in fact, quite constitutionally, a full-fledged dictator." Disturbingly, the public hasn't a clue about what's going on.

A single sentence, easily passed over or misunderstood, constitutes the essence of presidential power. It effectively grants the Executive a near-limitless source, only constrained to the degree he chooses. It's from Article II, Section 1 reading: "The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. Article II, Section 3 then almost nonchalantly adds: "The President shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed" without saying Presidents are virtually empowered to make laws as well as execute them even though nothing in the Constitution specifically permits this practice. More on that below.

To understand how the US government works, it's essential to know what executive power is, in fact, knowing it's concentrated in the hands of one man for good or ill. Also crucial is how Presidents are elected - "literally (by) electoral (unelected by the public) dummies" in an Electoral College. The scheme is a long-acknowledged constitutional anomaly as these state bodies are able to subvert the popular vote, never meet or consult like the College of Cardinals electing a Pope, and, in effect, reduce and corrupt the process into a shameless farce.

Once elected, it only gets worse because the power of the presidency is awesome and frightening. The nation's chief executive:

-- is commander-in-chief of the military functioning as a virtual dictator in times of war; although Article I, Section 8 grants only Congress that right, the President, in fact, can do it any time he wishes "without consulting anyone" and, of course, has done it many times;

-- can grant commutations or pardons except in cases of impeachment;

-- can make treaties that become the law of the land, with the advice and consent of two-thirds of the Senate (not ratification as commonly believed); can also terminate treaties with a mere announcement as George Bush did renouncing the important ABM Treaty with the former Soviet Union; in addition, and with no constitutional sanction, he can rule by decree through executive agreements with foreign governments that in some cases are momentous ones like those made at Yalta and Potsdam near the end of WW II. While short of treaties, they then become the law of the land.

-- can appoint administration officials, diplomats, federal judges with Senate approval, that's usually routine, or can fill any vacancy through (Senate) recess appointments; can also discharge any appointed executive official other than judges and statutory administrative officials;

-- can veto congressional legislation, and history shows through the book's publication they're sustained 96% of the time;

-- while Congress alone has appropriating authority, only the President has the power to release funds for spending by the executive branch or not release them;

-- Presidents also have a huge bureaucracy at their disposal, including powerful officials like the Secretaries of Defense, State, Treasury, and Homeland Security and the Attorney General in charge of the Justice Department;

-- Presidents also command center stage any time they wish. They can request and get national prime time television for any purpose with guaranteed extensive post-appearance coverage promoting his message with nary a disagreement with it on any issue;

-- throughout history, going back to George Washington, Presidents have issued Executive Orders (EOs) although the Constitution "nowhere implicitly or explicitly gives a President (the) power (to make) new law" by issuing "one-man, often far-reaching" EOs. However, Presidents have so much power they can do as they wish, only constrained by their own discretion.

-- George Bush also usurped "Unitary Executive" power to brazenly and openly declare what this section highlights - that the law is what he says it is. He proved it in six and a half years of subverting congressional legislation through a record-breaking number of unconstitutional "signing statements." - They rewrote over 1132 law provisions through 147 separate "statements," more than all previous Presidents combined. Through this practice, George Bush expanded presidential power well beyond the usual practices recounted above.

-- Presidents are, in fact, empowered to do almost anything not expressively forbidden in the Constitution, and very little is; more importantly, with a little ingenuity and lots of creative chutzpah, the President "can make almost any (constitutional) text mean whatever (he) wants it to mean" so, in fact, his authority is practically absolute or plenary. And the Supreme Court supports this notion as an "inherent power of sovereignty." If the US has sovereignty, it has all powers therein, and the President, as the sole executive, can exercise them freely without constitutional authorization or restraint.

In effect, "the President....is virtually a sovereign in his own person." Compared to the power of the President, Congress is mostly "a paper tiger, easily soothed or repulsed." The courts, as well, can be gotten around with a little creative exercise of presidential power, and in the case of George Bush, at times just ignoring their decisions when they disagree with his. As Lundberg put it: "One should never under-estimate the power of the President....nor over-estimate that of the Supreme Court. The supposed system of equitable checks and balances does not exist, in fact, (because Congress and the courts don't effectively use their constitutional authority)....the separation in the Constitution between legislative and the executive is wholly artificial."

Further, it's pure myth that the government is constrained by limited powers. Quite the opposite is true "which at the point of execution (resides in) one man," the President. In addition, "Until the American electorate creates effective political parties (which it never has done), Congress....will always be pretty much under (Presidents') thumb(s)." Under the "American constitutional system (the President) is very much a de facto king," and under George Bush a corrupted, devious, criminal and dangerous one.

As for impeaching and convicting a President for malfeasance, Article II, Section 4 states it can only be for "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors." Based on the historical record, it's near-impossible to do with no President ever having been removed from office this way, and only two were impeached, both unjustly. John Adams, the most distinguished constitutional theorist of his day, said it would take a national convulsion to remove a President by impeachment, which is not to say it won't ever happen and very likely one day will with no time better than the present to prove it.

In sum from the above, the US system of constitutional law is full of flaws and faults. "The People" were deliberately and willfully left out of the process proving the Constitution doesn't recognize democracy in America in spite of the commonly held view it does. In addition, the President, at his own discretion, can usurp dictatorial powers and end republican government by a stroke of his pen. That should awaken everyone to the clear and present danger that any time, for any reason, the President of the United States can declare a state of emergency, suspend the law of the land and rule by decree.

Constitutional Government in Venezuela

How does America's system of government contrast with rule under the 1999 Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela? Hugo Chavez was first elected president in December, 1998 and took office in February, 1999. He then held a national referendum so his people could decide whether to convene a National Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution to embody his visionary agenda. It passed overwhelmingly followed three months later by elections to the National Assembly to which members of Chavez's MVR party and those allied with it won 95% of the seats. They then drafted the revolutionary Constitucion de la Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela. It was put to a nationwide vote in December, 1999 and overwhelmingly approved changing everything for the Venezuelan people.

It established a model humanistic participatory social democracy, unimaginable in the US, providing real (not imagined) checks and balances in the nation's five branches of government. They comprise the executive, legislative and judicial ones plus two others. One is the independent national electoral council that regulates and handles state and civil society organization electoral procedures to assure they conform to the law requiring free, fair and open elections. The other is a citizen or public power branch functioning as a unique institution. It lets ordinary people serve as ombudsmen to assure the other government branches comply with constitutionally-mandated requirements. This branch includes the attorney general, the defender of the people, and the comptroller general.

The Legislative Branch

Venezuela is governed under a unicameral legislative system called the National Assembly. It's composed of 167 members (compared to 535 in the two US Houses) elected to serve for five years and allowed to run two more times. It differs from the bicameral system in the US but is broadly similar to governments like in the UK. Although it's bicameral, it's governed solely by publicly elected members of the House of Commons that includes the Prime Minister and his cabinet as members of Parliament. The upper House of Lords is merely token and advisory, there by tradition like the Queen, with no power to overrule the lower House that runs everything.

The Office of the President

The President is elected with a plurality of universally guaranteed suffrage. Article 56 of the Bolivarian Constitution states: "All persons have the right to be registered free of charge with the Civil Registry Office after birth, and to obtain public documents constituting evidence of the biological identity, in accordance with law." In addition, all Venezuelans are enfranchised to vote under one national standard and are encouraged to do it under a model democratic system with the vast majority in it actively participating.

In contrast, the US system is quite different. Precise voting rights qualifications are for the states to decide with no constitutionally mandated suffrage standard applying across the board for everyone. The result is many US citizens are denied their franchise right. They're unable to participate in the electoral process for a variety of reasons no democratic state should tolerate, but America built it into the system by design.

The Judicial System

Under Article 2 in The Bolivarian Constitution, the judicial system shares equal importance to the law of the land. But it wasn't always that way earlier when the Venezuelan judiciary had an odious reputation before Chavez was elected. It had a long history of corruption, a disturbing record of being beholden to political benefactors, and a tradition of failing to provide an adequate system of justice for most Venezuelans. Chavez vowed to change things and undertook a major restructuring effort after taking office. He put this government branch under the Supreme Tribunal of Justice and made it independent of the others. The law now requires those serving be elected by a two-thirds legislative majority (not the previous simple one), and tighter requirements are in place regarding eligible candidates along with public hearings to vet them.

In addition, to root out long-standing corrupt practices, Chavez created a Judicial Restructuring Commission to review existing judgeships and replace those not fit to serve. Henceforth, all sitting judges with eight or more corruption charges pending are disqualified. It effectively eliminated 80% of those on the bench in short order and showed the extent of malfeasance in the national judicial culture. It also suggested the huge amount throughout the government from generations of institutionalized privilege. Those in power were licensed to steal the country blind and enrich themselves and foreign investors at the expense of the vast majority.

Reform in all areas of government is still a work in progress, including in the judiciary needing much of it. The process hasn't been perfect because of the enormity of the task. By the end of 2000, about 70% of sitting judges in the so-called capital region of Caracas, Miranda and Vargas states were replaced by provisional ones with charges of old judges removed for equally beholden new ones. It may be true and points to how hard the going is to change the long-standing culture of privilege and institute real democratic reforms throughout the government.

Nonetheless, the Constitution established Chavez's vision for a foundation and legal framework for revolutionary structural change. He's been working since to transform the nation incrementally into a model participatory social democracy serving all Venezuelans instead of for the privileged few alone the way it traditionally was in the past and how US framers designed American constitutional law. The differences between the two nations couldn't be more stark.

The spirit of the Venezuelan Bolivarian Constitution is stated straightaway in its Preamble:...."to establish a democratic, participatory and self-reliant, multiethnic and multicultural society in a just, federal and decentralized State that embodies the values of freedom, independence, peace, solidarity, the common good, the nation's territorial integrity, comity and the rule of law for this and future generations;"

It further "guarantees the right to life, work, learning, education, social justice and equality, without discrimination or subordination of any kind; promotes peaceful cooperation among nations and further strengthens Latin American integration in accordance with the principle of nonintervention and national self-determination of the people, the universal and indivisible guarantee of human rights, the democratization of imitational society, nuclear disarmament, ecological balance and environmental resources as the common and inalienable heritage of humanity;......"

This language would be unimaginable in the US Constitution, and, unlike our federal law, they're more than words. This is Hugo Chavez's commitment to all Venezuelans ordained under nine Title headings, 350 Articles, and 18 Temporary Provisions. It's a first class democratic document, little known in the West, that greatly outclasses and shames what US framers' enacted for themselves and privileged friends alone. Democracy was nowhere in sight then nor has it shown up since. In Venezuela under Hugo Chavez, it's resplendent, glorious, still imperfect and a work in progress, but heading in the right direction with newly proposed changes discussed below.

The contrast with America today couldn't be greater. The nation under George Bush is ruled by Patriot and Military Commissions Act justice under an institutionalized imperial system of militarized savage capitalism empowering the rich to exploit all others. A state of permanent war exists; civil liberties are disappearing and human rights are a nonstarter; dissent is a crime; social decay is growing; a culture of secrecy and growing fear prevail; torture is practically sanctified; injustice is tolerated; the dominant media function as virtual national thought-control police gatekeepers; and the law is what a boy-emperor president says it is. Aside from the privileged it serves, democracy in America is only in the minds of the bewildered and last of the true-believers who sooner or later will discover the truth.

Consider Venezuela's Bolivarian spirit in contrast. The people freely and openly choose their leaders in honest, independently monitored elections. They're unemcumbered by a farcical electoral college voting scheme (for Presidents) and a system of rigged electronic voting machine and other electoral engineered fraud corrupting the entire process sub rosa. They also have unimaginable benefits like free quality health and dental care (mandated in Articles 83 - 85) as a "fundamental social right and....responsibility of the state....to guarantee....to improve the quality of life and common welfare." It's administered through a national public health system proscribed from being privatized. That's how health delivery in America gets corrupted for profit. The result is 47 million and counting are uninsured, many millions more have too little coverage, and the cost of care is unaffordable for all but the well-off or those on Medicare, Medicaid (if qualify) or under disappearing company-paid plans.

The Constitution also enacted the principle of participatory democracy from the grassroots for everyone. It's mandated in Articles 166 and 192 establishing citizen assemblies as a constitutional right for ordinary people to be empowered to participate in governing along with their elected officials. Constitutionally guaranteed rights also ban discrimination; promote gender equity; and insure free speech; a free press; free, fair, and open elections; equal rights for indigenous people (assured a minimum three National Assembly legislative seats); and mandates government make quality free education available for all to the highest levels, as well as housing and an improved social security pension system for seniors, and much more.

Hugo Chavez brought permanent change, and most Venezuelans won't tolerate returning to the ugly past. Why should they? They never got these essential social services before. Under a leader who cares, they do now, and their lives improved enormously.

Other Venezuelan Constitutionally Guaranteed Rights

The Bolivarian Constitution is a glorious document, fundamentally different in spirit and letter from its US counterpart it shames by comparison. Before Chavez took office in February, 1999, Venezuela only paid lip service to civil liberties, human rights and needs. They're now mandated by law. It encompasses an impressive array of basic rights and essential services like government-paid health care, education, housing, employment and human dignity enforced and funded by a caring government as the law requires.

Article 58 in the Constitution also guarantees the right to "timely, true, and impartial" information "without censorship, in accordance with the principles of this constitution." The opposite is true in America where major media are state propaganda instruments for the privileged.

Articles 71 - 74 establish four types of popular national referenda never imagined or held in America outside the local or state level where they're often non-binding. The US is one of only five major democracies never to have permitted this type citizen participation. In Venezuela under Hugo Chavez, the practice is mandated by law and institutionalized to give people at the grass roots a say in running their government. Four types of referenda are allowed:

--consultative - for a popular, non-binding vote on "national transcendent" issues like trade agreements;

-- recall - applied to all elected officials up to the President;

-- approving - a binding vote to approve laws, constitutional amendments, and treaties relating to national sovereignty; and

-- rescinding - to rescind or change existing laws.

Referenda can be initiated by the National Assembly, the President, or by petition from 10 - 20% of registered voters, with different procedural requirements applying for each.

Social, family, cultural, educational and economic rights are guaranteed under Chapters V - VII with the government backing them financially.

Indigenous Native Peoples' rights are covered in Chapter VIII. Even environmental rights are addressed with Article 127 stating "It is the right and duty of each generation to protect and maintain the environment for its own benefit and that of the world of the future....The State shall protect the environment, biological and genetic diversity, ecological processes....and other areas of ecological importance." Try imagining any US federal law with teeth containing this type language let alone the Constitution that includes nothing in its Articles or Amendments.

Citizen Power gets considerable attention under Articles 273 - 291. It's exercised by "the Republican Ethics Council, consisting of the People Defender, the General Prosecutor and the General Comptroller of the Republic....Citizen Power is independent and its organs enjoy operating, financial and administrative autonomy." Citizen Power organs are legally charged with "preventing, investigating and punishing actions that undermine public ethics and administrative morals, to assure lawful sound management of public property....(to help) create citizenship, together with solidarity, freedom, democracy, social responsibility, work" and more.

Venezuela's Constitution covers much more as well under each of its nine Titles from:

-- stating its fundamental Bolivarian principles in Title I, to

-- National Security in Title VII,

-- Protection of the Constitution in Title VIII to assure its continuity in the event of "acts of force" or unlawful repeal with each citizen having a duty to reinstate it if that need arises; and finally

-- Constitutional Reforms in Title IX in the form of amendments, other reforms to revise or replace any of its provisions, and the National Constituent Assembly with power "resting with the people of Venezuela." They're empowered to call an Assembly to transform the State, create a new "juridical order" and draft a new Constitution to be submitted to a national referendum for the people to accept or reject. That's how democracy is supposed to work. In Venezuela it does. In the US, it doesn't, never did, and was never conceived or intended to from the nation's founding to the present.

This happens because Americans know painfully little about their law of the land hidden from them in plain view. They're taught misinformation about it and the framers who drafted it. Few ever read it beyond a quoted line or two and even fewer ever think about it. In contrast, in Venezuela, the Bolivarian Constitution is sold in pocket-sized form almost everywhere. People buy, read and study it. Why? Because it's a vital unifying part of their lives codifying core democratic values and principles Venezuelan people cherish and wish to keep.

Prospective Venezuelan Constitutional Reforms

In July, President Chavez announced he'd be sending the National Assembly a proposal of suggested constitutional reforms to debate and consider. He stressed Venezuelans would then get to vote on them in a national referendum so that "the majority will decide if they approve....constitutional reform."

Chavez submitted his proposal in an August 15 address to the National Assembly that will debate and rule on them in three extraordinary sessions over the next 60 to 90 days. Included are amendments to 33 of the Constitution's 350 articles to "complete the death of the old, hegemonic oligarchy and the old, exploitative capitalist system, and complete the birth of the new state." Chavez stressed the need to update the 1999 Constitution because it's "ambiguous (and) a product of that moment. The world (today) is very different from (then). (Reforms now are) essential for continuing the process of revolutionary transition." They include:

-- extending presidential terms from six to seven years;

-- unlimited reelections (that countries like England, France, Germany and others now allow); Chavez wants the reelection option to be "the sovereign decision of the constituent people of Venezuela;"

-- guaranteeing the right to work and establishing policies to develop and generate productive employment;

-- creation of a Social Stability Fund for "non-dependent" or self-employed workers so they have the same rights as other workers including pensions, paid vacations and prenatal and postnatal leave entitlements;

-- reducing the workday to six hours so businesses would have to employ more workers and hold unemployment down;

-- ending the autonomy of Venezuela's Central Bank;

-- recognition of different kinds of property defined as social, collective, mixed and private;

-- redefining the role of the military so henceforth "The Bolivarian Armed Forces (will) constitute an essential patriotic, popular and anti-imperialist body organized by the state to guarantee the independence and sovereignty of the nation...;" and

-- guaranteeing state control over the nation's oil industry to prevent any future privatization of this vital resource;

Chavez also wants other changes to strengthen the nation's participatory democracy at the grassroots. He stresses "one of the central ideas is my proposal to open, at the constitutional level, the roads to accelerate the transfer of power to the people" in an "Explosion of Communal (or popular) Power." It's already there in more than 26,000 democratically functioning grassroots communal councils. They're government-sanctioned, funded, operating throughout the country, and may double in number and be strengthened further under proposed constitutional changes.

Chavez wants "Popular (people) Power" to be a "State Power" along with the Legislature, Executive, Judicial, Citizen and Electoral ones and considers this constitutional change the most important one of all. If it happens, various sovereign powers and duties now handled at the federal, state and municipal levels will be transfered to local communal, worker, campesino, student and other councils. This will strengthen Venezuela's bedrock participatory democracy making it even more unique and impressive than it already is.

In America, it's unimaginable a President or other government officials would recommend "People Power" become our fourth government branch, co-equal with the others, with citizens empowered to vote in national referenda on crucial proposed changes in law.

Chavez also proposed a "new geometry of power" by amending article 16 that now states "the territory of the nation is divided into those of the States, the Capital District, federal dependencies and federal territories. The territory is organized into Municipalities." Chavez wants this amended so popular referenda can create "federal districts" in specific areas to serve as states. He called this idea "profoundly revolutionary (and needed) to remove the old oligarchic, exploiter hegemony, the old society, and (quoting Gramsci weaken the former) historic block. If we don't change the (old) superstructure (it) will defeat us."

Chavez also stressed this new structure is needed to be in place when "Venezuela (grows to) 40 - 50 million people." His plan includes "restructur(ing) Caracas" into a Federal District with more local autonomy, as it was at an earlier time.

These proposals and other initiatives are part of his overall socialism for the 21st century plan that's also very business-friendly. Chavez opposes savage capitalism, not private enterprise, and under his stewardship domestic and foreign businesses have thrived. They're a dominant force powering the economy to accelerated growth since 2003 with latest Central Bank 2nd quarter, 2007 figures coming in at 8.9%. With oil prices high and world economies prospering, this trend is likely to continue. That's good news for business and households sharing in the benefits through greater purchasing power.

Chavez wants his new United Socialist Party (PSUV) to drive the revolutionary process and continue his agenda of reform for all Venezuelans. He wants everyone to enjoy the benefits, not just a privileged few like in the past and in the US today. Under his leadership, their future is bright while in America poverty is growing, the middle class is dying, and the darkness of tyranny threatens everyone under George Bush with his agenda likely continuing under a new president in 2009.

Governance differences exist between these two nations because their constitutional laws are mirror opposite, and America has no one like Hugo Chavez. He's a rare leader who cares and backs his rhetoric with progressive people-friendly policies. In the US, there's George Bush, and that pretty much explains the problem. Knowing that, which leader would you choose and under which system of government would you prefer to live?

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Steve Lendman News and Information Hour on TheMicroEffect.com Saturdays at noon US central time. posted by Steve Lendman @ 4:42 AM

August 22, 2007

Campesinos of the World (Reportback 1)

Peasant Representatives from Korea, Brazil, the USA and Mexico speaking together in Chiapas prior to the Second Encuentro of the Zapatista Peoples with the Peoples of the World

I'm excited to present this first of several reportbacks from the Second Encuentro, and related events, such as this plenary. Also check out these new reports from Movement for Justice in El Barrio on their continued organizing against repression of the Other Campaign and their upcoming activities in NYC and beyond. For their part, the Zapatistas have just released a new communiqué regarding the upcoming Indigenous Encuentro, even as they face new paramilitary hostilities against bases of support and women. Also of note this week, the North American heads of state (of which at least 2 of 3 can hardly say they were elected!) are meeting in Canada right now to further solidify with the "Security and Prosperity Partnership" an anti-democratic, NAFTA meets the War on Terror, agenda. And as Naomi Klein recently reminded us, "...we never lost the battle of ideas...we only lost a series of dirty wars..." And so, with that in mind, here's our first reportback:

Facing Capitalist Disposession, the Defense of Land and Territory
a reportback by Jennifer Whitney
from the July 19th Plenary featuring members of Via Campesina and the Zapatistas at the University of the Land in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, México

We arrived at the Round Table Among the Campesinos of the World nearly an hour late, which is to say, before anything had begun. Representatives from Vía Campesina, a global organization of farmers and fisherfolk with members in over 50 countries, were there to share their experiences of struggle, and to attend the entire encuentro.

We were greeted warmly at the entrance to the The University of the Land, which, when it is not the site of an international plenary, offers three- and six-month programs to indigenous people, covering a wide range of trades, including carpentry, sewing, mechanics, computer skills, and more. The campus is beautiful – it sits far back from the outlying neighborhood, down a rough muddy road from which it climbs up the forested hillside. It is full of new landscaping, white gravel pathways lined by saplings, canna lilies exploding with red blossoms around the dormitories. Its focal point, at least for tonight, is a beautiful octagonal building, with windows on all sides.

The octagon was far too small for the 2,500 or so of us that wanted to attend the discussion; and clearly this was not unpredicted – sloping down the hill from the octagon was a long narrow strip of bench seating, covered by a bit of roof. Approaching it from below reminded me a bit of the arduously climbing infinite staircases leading to the churches to the east and west of San Cristóbal – the likes of which can be found in most towns I’ve seen in southern México.

Dotting the rest of the campus were other wooden buildings – classrooms, dormitories, a communal kitchen, a library. I followed the signs that pointed the way to the registration and credentialing office, bumping into a few old friends from San Cristóbal and Mexico City along the way.

Despite the fact that I had registered online about five hours prior, my credential had already been handwritten, laminated, and filed neatly away with stacks and stacks of others. I gave the requested two peso donation to cover the costs of the pass, and was on my way in five minutes – surely the most efficient registration system of up to three thousand people I’ve ever encountered.

When I returned to the hall, the evening’s host had just introduced Dong Uk Min from the Campesino League of Korea, who started off by speaking of his movement’s participation in the WTO protests in Hong Kong. He then spoke of their desire for a united Korea, and of the difficulty they have had, uniting the farmers with the workers of the cities – how a large part of their work is to demonstrate the common interests of both groups, and to this end, the campesinos have begun attending the demonstrations of the urban workers and unemployed:
We’re building a large national alliance now. We promise that within the next ten years, we campesinos will create a new country where we will be the caretakers of the land, and through it all we will remain in solidarity with the Mexican campesinos’ struggle.

Soraia Soriano of the Movimento Sem Terra (MST) of Brasil then spoke of the confusion that the election of the supposedly leftist president Lula wrought on her organization, and the left in general, with some people wanting to be patient and give him time to enact reforms that would bring about substantive change, and others quick to recognize that all the so-called public works projects that his government invested in were to develop the export economy rather than to invest in internal and social development. She spoke most about the land crisis, which is, among Latin American countries, worse in Brazil than anywhere else. In particular, she focused on the disaster that ethanol production was already creating in the countryside, and with Brazil poised to become the hemisphere’s main producer and refiner of agro-fuels, that things could only get worse. Yet, in the face of so much bad news, she managed to bring some hope into plenary:
Compas, as we have seen, we have many reasons to be pessimistic, but in our hearts we have a lot of optimism. We face a challenge – to build a new cycle of the left, with new forms of politics. We know that the enemy is big capital, and that we have to develop our politics at the same time as we fight capitalism. As we say, no one person has the answer; we have to think strategically, and find the first, second, and third answers.

George Naylor, a corn and soy farmer from Iowa, who is the out-going director of the National Family Farm Coalition of the US followed up with an overview of how, since the worship of the market (that he identified as coming with the Cold War), US farming has been suffering under systematical destruction. He began by mentioning that the family farm only ever existed because of the theft of indigenous land by his (our) European ancestors, and also spoke admiringly of indigenous food security plans he was learning about. Offering sobering statistics on the concentration of food cultivation in so few hands, and the possible impacts of a further-increased specialization, with the boom market of ethanol cultivation threatening to take over even more land with monocultural industrial crops, he made it clear that this system is far from isolated to the US: “I’ve been privileged to be able to travel the world and I tell the people everywhere that farmers in the US have lived the future of the market and we know that it is going to destroy you.” With that, he planted the question in all of our minds – who will feed us in ten years, and from what land?

Wrapping all of this up was Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos, Delegado Zero of the Sixth Commission of the EZLN. He began by holding up a soft drink can, and recounting a story of how, during the last encuentro, when the Zapatistas asked for comments and discussion, someone brought up several transnational products that were for sale in the stores at Oventik, dumped them on the table with a “dramatic gesture,” and criticized and condemned the Zapatistas for selling such products. “We remained silent during this judgment and condemnation, as a matter of courtesy, not because we were in agreement with what he said. And now I am going to explain what that silence meant,” said el Sub. He carried on saying that there were many ways of attacking capitalism:
You could choose to consume in an anticapitalist way, like he who judged us suggested, by picking one product over another, or you could try to influence the flow of commodities by boycotting big stores and corporations, and only buying from small businesses, both of which are “respectable” ways of struggling. But, the Zapatistas, in developing the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandón Jungle, said, ‘Well, of course, the problem with capitalism is that very few are the owners of everything, and very many own nothing, and this must change, must be turned on its head, subverted turned around.’ That is to say, the Zapatistas decided to become anticapitalist and attack the means of production, and he who judged and condemned us, and those who applauded him – they thought that our anticapitalism was not attainable, and that theirs is better, more visible, more immediate….We say that our anticapitalism is more unassuming – it’s aimed at the very heart of the system, because you can change your consumption habits, or the ways and means of circulating commodities, but if you don’t change the means of production or the exploitation, capitalism carries on, alive and operational.

He carried on, sharpening his critique, and his tongue, adding that,
Years ago, before our revolutionary laws were in existence and before we began our war…people used to make booze, from sugar cane, or corn, or fermented banana…. And so, with out any transnational consumption, without exploiting labor (because the workers made it in their own milpas…), and without enriching the bank accounts of the CEOs, people got drunk, beat and raped women, mistreated children. It was an anticapitalist alcoholism, but it was and is a crime. And since the uprising, the Zapatista women reject alcoholism, whether it be capitalist or anticapitalist.

Afterwards, during the standing ovation that followed, the Sub added, “PS. PS, that tells an anti-gender tale,” and the room filled with gasps and then silences. The tale was great, and invoked the unfazeable character Elias Contreras, of the Zapatista Investigation Commission, who, to my knowledge, first appeared in Marcos’ detective story, Muertos Incomodos: falta lo que falta, co-written two years ago with Paco Ignacio Taibo II. In the PS, Elias tells a story to a person called Magdalena, who is “transsexual, that is to say, neither man nor woman, but both.” Elias addresses Magdalena as “compañeroa,” (no @, no slash between that “o” and “a” but rather, both are pronounced in this five syllable word, for those of you who know a little Spanish). The story concluded like this:
Magdalena asked, ‘But why do you use the word “ellos” when you know that they are male and female at the same time?’ Elias got very serious, with a far away look, and said, ‘Well, it’s because we Zapatistas know that there are things for which there are no words, and we have to use the words we have, but we know well that even though we don’t know how to name them very well, they still exist…And one day…one day we will have words in order to understand that which we now do not understand, because there are many worlds that exist, even though they don’t have names.’… Long live that which still remains nameless!

And with that high-velocity journey through “ethical” consumption, taking over means of production, alcoholism, and genderqueer linguistic debates, the event was over, and as people streamed down from the building, a tumultuous melee of enthusiastic greetings and chattering ensued. The enthusiasm burned from people’s eyes, glittering in the streetlights. This thing had finally begun, and what a beginning!

Jennifer Whitney is co-author of We Are Everywhere: the irresistible rise to global anticapitalism, (Verso, 2003) and co-founder of the Seattle marching band, the Infernal Noise Brigade. After hurricane Katrina hit her home state of Louisiana, she moved back to New Orleans where she coordinates a free mobile health clinic for day laborers, and where carnival gloriously erupts in the streets more frequently than in most places she's ever seen. She currently is trying to figure out how best to support solidarity work between hurricane-affected peoples of the US Gulf Coast and of México and Central America.

Luis Echeverría Alvarez


context : Mexico Search
judgement place : Mexico Search
status : Investigations underway
particulars : Charges of genocide and forced disappearances dismissed by a Mexican federal court on 12 July 2007
position : Minister of interior, then President of Mexico
factslegal procedure
Luis Echeverría joined the faculty of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in 1947 and taught political theory. He rose through the ranks of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and eventually became the Private Secretary of the party President, General Rodolfo Sánchez Taboada. Echeverría was the Mexican Interior Secretary under President Gustavo Díaz Ordaz between 1954 et 1970.

He maintained a hard line against student protesters throughout all of 1968, at the time the Olympics were being held in Mexico City. He ordered the transfer of 15% of the Mexican military to the state of Guerrero to counter guerrilla groups operating there, and under Echeverría's ministry, the air force allegedly used napalm against rural communities in Guerrero. Clashes between the government and the protesters culminated in the Tlatelolco massacre in October 1968. In 1970 he was elected President, a position he held until 1976. It was during his presidency that the Corpus Christi massacre occurred.

Tlatelolco Massacre:
The Tlatelolco massacre took place on the night of October 2, 1968 in the Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolco, Mexico City. The death toll remains uncertain but most sources report 200-300 deaths. Many more were wounded, and several thousand arrests were made. The massacre was preceded by months of political unrest in the Mexican capital, echoing student demonstrations and riots all over the world during 1968. The Mexican students wanted to exploit the attention focused on Mexico City during the 1968 Olympic Games. President Gustavo Díaz Ordaz however, was determined to stop the demonstrations and, in September, he ordered the army to occupy the campus of the National Autonomous University of Mexico the largest university in Latin America. Students were beaten and arrested indiscriminately.

However, the student demonstrators were not to be deterred. The demonstrations grew in size, until, on October 2, after student strikes lasting nine weeks, 15,000 students from various universities marched through the streets of Mexico City. By nightfall, 5,000 students and workers, many of them with their wives and children, had congregated in the Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolco.

The massacre began at sunset when army and police forces — equipped with armoured cars and tanks — surrounded the square and began firing live rounds into the crowd, hitting not only the protestors, but also other people, including children, who were there by chance for reasons unrelated to the demonstration. The killing continued through the night.

The official government explanation of the incident was that armed provocateurs among the demonstrators, had positioned themselves in buildings overlooking the crowd, and had been first to open fire by taking aim at the security forces who had no other choice but to return fire in self defence.

Corpus Christi Massacre:
On June 10, 1971, under the presidency of Echeverría, 42 student demonstrators were killed and dozens more wounded while demonstrating in Mexico City over education funding. This incident is known as the Corpus Christi Massacre after the feast day on which it took place. It is also known by the name of Halconazo - Falcon Strike - since the special forces involved were called The Falcons. Though dressed as civilians, the perpetrators were known to be members of the state security forces.

What is more, various studies indicate that during the Mexican government's ”dirty war” against leftists in the late 1960s and 1970s, a total of 532 people were forcibly "disappeared”, and that the majority of them were eventually murdered.

In October 1997, the Mexican Congress set up a committee to investigate the Tlatelolco massacre. Echeverría conceded at that time that the students had been unarmed, and that the military action was planned in advance, with the goal being destroy the student movement.

Before he began his presidency at the end of 2000, Vincente Fox promised to set up an inquiry into the acts of repression committed during the Dirty War era and to bring its authors to justice by means of a Truth Commission, which was to include members of Civil Society.

Finally, in November 2001, Fox decided to appoint a Special Prosecutor –under the title of Office of the Special Prosecutor for Past Social and Political Movements.

According to a High Court Resolution of November 2003, there would be no prescription for crimes of kidnapping and forced disappearances since such cases are still considered to be under review so long as the victim has not been found.

On July 23, 2004 the Special Prosecutor issued a bill of indictment against Echeverría for genocide and demanded that he be arrested for the murder of 25 students as well as for the severe beatings given to dozens of others during the Corpus Christi Massacre of June 10, 1971.

The evidence against Echeverría was based on documents which would show that he was in charge of the special forces which committed the massacre and that he had received regular reports on the incident and its aftermath from the Chief of the Secret Police. At the time the Government claimed that the police forces as well as the demonstrators had been attacked by armed civilians who had been arrested and convicted but then subsequently released as a result of a general amnesty.

On July 24, 2004, the judge in office refused to issue an arrest warrant against Echeverría due to problems related to prescription for the crimes detailed in the bill of indictment and rejected the arguments of the Special Prosecutor with regard to special circumstances with respect to acts of genocide.

On February 24, 2005, the High Court, decided on appeal, by 4 votes to one, that the Prescription Act (30 years) had expired at the time proceedings had been opened up and that the ratification by the Mexican Congress in 2002 of the 1968 UN Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to war crimes and crimes against humanity (signed by the President on July 3, 1969, but ratified only on December 10, 2001), could not be applied retroactively, retroactivity being unconstitutional.

On June 22, 2005 however, the High Court further reviewed its decision and concluded that there was no prescription with regard to the crimes concerned, thereby quashing its own decision taken in February. A lower jurisdiction will therefore have to decide whether or not a case exists to take up proceedings against Echeverria.

An appeals court then delivered a surprise ruling that there was enough evidence to support genocide charges. On 30 June 2006, a house arrest was thus ordered against Echeverria.

But on July 8, 2006, a federal judge in Mexico set aside the charges of genocide against Echeverria for his alleged involvement in a massacre of students in 1968 ruling that the statute of limitations had been exceeded.

On 29 November 2006, however, this ruling was reversed and an arrest warrant for Echeverria was issued. Echeverria, who suffers from health problems, was placed under house arrest in November 2006.

On 12 July 2007 a Mexican federal tribunal found that the massacre of 2 October 1968 did in fact amount to genocide, since the governmental authorities had taken a premeditated and coordinated action with the intent to exterminate a national group of students from different universities.

However, the tribunal rejected the charges against Echeverria. According to the judge, the State Prosecutor had not been able to produce evidence linking Echeverria to the preparation, conception or execution of the genocide.
As a consequence, the tribunal ordered his release from house arrest.

The State Prosecutor has 10 days to appeal against the ruling

August 21, 2007

New boss..same as the old boss...

...
Accordingly, I will use aggressive and principled diplomacy to send an important message: If a post-Fidel government begins opening Cuba to democratic change, the United States (the president working with Congress) is prepared to take steps to normalize relations and ease the embargo that has governed relations between our countries for the last five decades. That message coming from my administration in bilateral talks would be the best means of promoting Cuban freedom. To refuse to do so would substitute posturing for serious policy -- and we have seen too much of that in other areas over the past six years. -Obama
...

President Chavez Defends Proposal to Reform Venezuela’s Constitution

By: Chris Carlson - Venezuelanalysis.com

Caracas, August 20, 2007 (venezuelanalysis.com)— Accompanied by ex-soccer star and supporter Diego Maradona, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he was prepared for an "intense debate" about the proposed changes to the Venezuelan constitution and defended some of the changes against the criticisms of the opposition. Chavez also announced the purchase of additional arms from Russia as well as a future trip to Colombia to help negotiate between the government and guerrilla groups during his Sunday TV program Aló Presidente (Hello President).

"Let's get prepared for a week where there will be an intense debate," said Chavez on his show yesterday. "We will be confronted with threats from the empire and their pawns here [in Venezuela] trying to take advantage of the moment," he warned.

Chavez said that military detachments in the country have already received messages from opposition groups trying to incite them to rebellion against the government. He assured that the CIA was behind these conspiracies.

But Chavez discounted any possible rebellion, assuring that the armed forces would be "at the service of the Venezuelan people and in defense of their sacred interests, and in no case at the service of the oligarchy or foreign imperial power."

Chavez defended his proposed changes to the Venezuelan Armed Forces, arguing that the military should not only be involved in national defense but it should also have permanent participation in communities and at the service of what he calls "popular war of resistance," in which the military and the general population would be mobilized together for national defense.

Chavez defended the reform proposal against criticisms of other elements, reminding the audience that the topic of constitutional reform is nothing new since he had announced it before last year's presidential elections. Chavez also reiterated that he was only using his constitutional right to propose changes to the national constitution.

In response to criticisms from the opposition about the elimination of limits on running for reelection as president, where some have claimed that there would be no alternation of power, Chavez insisted that they misunderstand his proposal and prefer to distort it. Chavez gave examples of other countries where there are no limits on reelection, such as England, France, or Australia.

"The same thing here, each six or seven years, if the people approve the proposal, the 'small fries' from the opposition will have alternatives, and not only them. We will all have alternatives," he said.

Chavez also responded to criticisms about the use of the term 'socialist' in the constitution, assuring that this will not affect political pluralism in the country.

"That is nothing new. I have been talking about that since three years ago and in the electoral campaign I repeated it an infinite number of times. Therefore, it is absolutely logical and ethical to say that everyone who voted for me, voted for socialism, because I made the proposal of socialism," he explained.

Visit to Colombia

The Venezuelan president announced an official visit to Colombia by request of the families of hostages held by guerrilla forces of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The families have requested the aid of the Venezuelan president in negotiating a resolution to the armed conflict in the country and an exchange of prisoners.

"We have always said that we are at the service of Colombia, above all in working for peace in that country," he said. Chavez said that Colombian President Alvaro Uribe had shown some "interesting signs" lately in their efforts to dialog with the FARC guerrillas.

"It looks interesting," he said. "I hope we can help convince the FARC and the Colombian government to move forward in the liberation of hostages in the hands of the guerrilla organization and the rebels that are being held in the state's jails."

Chavez has said that Venezuela could serve as a neutral place in which guerrilla hostages, or state prisoners could be released and received by their families.

Russian Arms

The president also announced the purchase of 5,000 Russian sniper rifles to defend the nation against any attack from the United States. The arms would be destined for "guerrilla warfare," as a way to defend against an outside invader, according to Chavez.

"But don't be scared, this is not to attack anyone. It is to defend ourselves," he said, insisting that strengthening the nation's defense capabilities would be "the only way that the empire won't threaten our democracy."

August 20, 2007

Today While the Press in the U.S. and Mexico Yawns, Harper Hosts Bush and Calderón in Quebec

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Kathleen Dugan
...
Today’s meeting of Mexican President Felipe Calderón, Bush, and Harper in Montebello, is not so much to discuss ways in which to improve the many problems that NAFTA has generated, but to discuss and adopt new measures, agreed upon at an August 14 meeting in Vancouver, on how to tilt the pact in an even more pro-business direction than as of now, without any input from the average citizen or other concerned sectors. In other words, Montebello has been fixed to deliver a new track of pro-business benefits and not to take an inventory of how NAFTA has performed for each nation.
...

Searching for the Oaxacan Governor in NYC

posted: 11:03 AM, August 20, 2007 by Sarah Ferguson

protest3.jpg
Protesters were waiting for Ulises Ruiz, the governor of Oaxaca, to make an appearance, except he never did.
Photos by Sarah Ferguson

It felt a little like an Elvis sighting.

On Saturday, about 100 jeering demonstrators gathered outside the Mexican consulate in hopes of confronting the much-reviled governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz. If only they could find him.

Last summer, Ruiz was the object of the protests that transformed Oaxaca into an urban war zone after protesters barricaded streets and took over radio stations to try and force him from power. Many accuse Ruiz of launching a violent campaign to repress the uprising, resulting in the shooting deaths of more than 20 activists—including New York Indymedia journalist Brad Will.

Will was gunned down on October 27 as he filmed a clash between protesters and plainclothes police on the outskirts of Oaxaca City. Despite ample evidence—including Will’s own videotape—implicating local police and state officials in the shooting—Will’s killers remain free.

So when the Mexican media reported that Ruiz would be part of a delegation of Mexican governors visiting New York and several other cities to address immigration reform, activists began mobilizing.

protest2.jpg
Waiting for Ruiz.

“We have a murderer among us!” someone shouted outside the Mexican consulate in midtown on Saturday as protesters blanketed the cast-iron fence with placards and signs denouncing Ruiz as a killer.

A few tomatoes were lobbed at the upper floors. But aside from the security guards, the place seemed empty.
Then someone spotted the Mexican delegation dining up the block at Salute, an upscale Italian restaurant on the corner of Madison and 39th Street.

Could that guy with the black mustache and open-collar shirt sitting at a table of well-dressed Mexican officials really be Ruiz? The protesters peering through the restaurant’s plate glass windows weren’t sure. He looked thinner than the cartoon mug shots of Ruiz plastered all over Oaxaca and the Net, and he wasn’t wearing specs like Ruiz usually does.

But when a member of the wait staff told a reporter that Ruiz was there and wouldn’t be giving any comment to the press, that seemed confirmation enough.

"Ya cayo! Ya cayo! Ulises ya cayo!" the demonstrators chanted, echoing the familiar refrain of the protesters in Oaxaca. ("He has fallen, he has fallen. Ulises has already fallen!")

Activists papered the front windows with flyers denouncing Ruiz as a “terrorist” along with big placards demanding that he resign.

"Ruiz is the Pinochet of Oaxaca," said Victor Toro, a Chilean exile who braved the protest even though he's now facing deportation charges after 24 years in the U.S. "We feel he has no right to talk about immigration when his policies of violence and economic hardships have made it impossible for people to live in Oaxaca."

When the manager came out to rip down the signs, one of Will’s friends jammed his foot in the door, then bolted inside. He was quickly forced out by the wait staff and manager, who appeared ready to slug the interloper in the street. Moments later, the same activist ran up and toppled all the sidewalk tables.

The startled Mexican delegates retreated to the back of the restaurant, where they were held virtually hostage by the protesters for more than two hours, until police set up a gauntlet to escort them out of the restaurant.

“Asesinos!” [“Murderers!”], the crowd shrieked as the delegates scurried into several waiting cabs and SUVs. “You’ve got blood on your hands!”

Although one Mexican woman insisted she’d seen Ruiz, the press officer for the consulate told the Voice that Ruiz was not in the restaurant. In fact, he didn't come to New York at all.

Apparently, either the advance reports about the governors' tour were wrong, or Ruiz ducked out at the first sign of controversy. One Mexican daily reported that Ruiz went to Los Angeles on Thursday. But there’s no mention of him at subsequent stops in Chicago and Dallas, let alone New York. According to an account in Sunday’s La Jornada, the delegation in New York included the governors from three other states—Guanajuato, Colima, and Zacatecas—as well as “representatives” from Oaxaca. No Ruiz.

Some Mexican immigrants who were invited to meet with their governors were upset that the afternoon press conference and meeting at the consulate were canceled due to the ruckus at the restaurant. "We were going to talk to the governors about the exploitation of the immigrants here and we couldn't. It's not right. The people from the consulate were very upset," remarked one woman who asked not to be named.

Yet for Will’s friends and supporters, the opportunity to express their rage to Ruiz’s appointees and the other Mexican officials was worth it—even if Ruiz himself didn't show. “They need to know that Ruiz is a problem and he has to go,” said Chelsea Mozen.

Will’s friends aren’t the only ones looking to turn up the heat on Ruiz. On July 31, Amnesty International released a scathing report on Oaxaca’s human rights crisis that calls on Ruiz to address the use of “torture,” arbitrary arrests, and “excessive force” by both state and federal security forces to suppress the popular rebellion. The report also faults the Ruiz government for failing to hold anyone accountable for the deaths and the "unlawful killings" of at least 18 people, including Brad Will.

Beyond Ruiz, the report condemns federal authorities in Mexico for failing to open a new investigation into the murder of Will after state prosecutors botched the case by presenting bogus evidence purporting to show that protesters had shot Will at close range.

“The clearest avenue of investigation—that is to locate the weapons used by [police] officials identified in photographs and to carry out thorough ballistics cross-checks with the bullets recovered in the autopsy—was never pursued effectively, as only two official revolvers in the police station were checked, even though photo evidence indicated that at least one official was using a semi-automatic rifle."

Ruiz has dismissed the report as “one-sided” and accused Amnesty officials of being “advisors” to APPO (the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca), the coalition of labor, student and indigenous groups that banded together to demand his resignation.

On August 7, Amnesty’s Secretary General Irene Khan met with Mexican President Felipe Calderon to urge him to intervene: "Given the palpable failure of the state government to properly investigate abuses, ending impunity in Oaxaca would be a clear demonstration to Mexican society and to the international community that the government of President Felipe Calderón is committed to protecting, ensuring and fulfilling human rights," Khan said.

Similarly, last month, Illinois Senator and Majority Whip Dick Durbin wrote to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice demanding that she pressure the Mexican government to investigate the murder of Will (who grew up on Chicago’s North Shore) and several others killed in Oaxaca the same day.

“I understand that murder is a state crime in Mexico. However, since sufficient action has not been taken on the state level, I urge you to press the Mexican federal government to swiftly complete a thorough investigation of the killing of Bradley Will and the Oaxaca protestors,” Durbin wrote.

Several Congress members have also urged Rice to seek justice in Will’s case—among them New York reps Carolyn Maloney and Jose Serrano of the South Bronx, who noted that Will had been active with community groups in his district.

In a May 14 letter to Rice, Serrano wrote:

“The murder of Mr. Will raises a larger issue about the role of the Mexican government in aggressively pursuing a cessation of murder, beatings, and torture carried out by police and paramilitary groups in Oaxaca, Guadalajara, San Salvador, and Atenco. Some of my newest constituents hail from these regions and have fled their former homes in the face of escalating violence and intimidation by these groups. I am hopeful that you will urge President Calderon to fully investigate and pursue all allegations of such abuses.”

State Department officials have expressed “concerns” over Will’s death and say they are following the investigations by both state and federal authorities in Mexico.

But with federal prosecutors in Mexico still relying on the state’s evidence—or lack thereof—rather than opening up a whole new investigation into Will’s shooting, his case appears to have hit a dead end.

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Brad Will remembered.

Eyes Wide Shut: The International Media Looks at Venezuela

I By: Mark Weisbrot - International Business Times

Most consumers of the international media will be surprised to find that the controversy over Venezuela's oldest TV station, RCTV, is still raging. We were repeatedly informed that President Hugo Chavez "shut down" the station on May 27th. But in fact the station was never "shut down" - since there is no censorship in Venezuela. Rather, the Venezuelan government decided not to renew the broadcast license that granted RCTV a monopoly over a section of the publicly-owned frequencies.

This is a big distinction, although the U.S. and international press blurred it considerably. Jose Miguel Insulza, the head of the Organization of American States, noted last month that the "Venezuelan government is empowered to do what it did (non-renewal of the license)" and cited Brazilian President Lula Da Silva's statement that not renewing RCTV's broadcast license was as democratic an act as granting it. Insulza added that "democracy is very much in force in Venezuela."

These comments were not reported in the U.S. or other major media. Nor was Lula's original statement of the same argument. Nor was the statement of Lula's top foreign policy advisor, Marco Aurelio Garcia, who said "there are few countries in the world with as much freedom of the press as in Venezuela."

RCTV has not laid off any of its 3000 employees, and may reach as much as half the population through its cable and satellite operations. But the station is now battling the government again, claiming that it should not be subject to government regulation - including the law, which pre-dates Chavez, that domestic stations carry the president's speeches -- because it is an international station. The government argues that RCTV is a domestic outlet because almost all of its production and audience are in Venezuela.

This month Venezuela's Supreme Court blocked the government from enforcing its order against RCTV on the grounds that the definition of "national audiovisual producer" was not clear enough.

RCTV's owner, Marcel Granier, is an opposition leader who seeks to de-legitimize the Venezuelan government. He has had some success in this effort, most importantly in April 2002 when his station faked film footage to make it look like pro-Chavez gunmen were shooting down demonstrators on the streets of Caracas. This and other manipulations by the Venezuelan media helped provoke a military coup against the elected government. This is one of several reasons that the government of Venezuela declined to renew RCTV's broadcast license.

Granier's most recent international organizing effort this year was also very successful. The international press glossed over RCTV's various attempts to help overthrow the government, reporting the dispute as an issue of "press freedom," and seemed unaware that such a TV station would not get a broadcast license in the U.S. or any other democratic country.

Granier is betting that the international media and other U.S.-dominated institutions will also frame his current battle as a "free speech" issue, rather than a legal dispute over whether his station is a national channel and hence subject to the same regulations as other Venezuelan cable stations. This is a good bet.

But then there is the Venezuelan reality, which is what Chavez and his government really care about. While most Americans and Europeans can be swayed by their one-sided media, Venezuelans get to hear both sides of this story. Venezuelans can turn on their TV and see extremely harsh criticism of their government every day. They can turn on their radio and find the airwaves actually dominated by anti-government "news" broadcasting. They can walk to a newsstand and find that most of the biggest newspapers are also dominated by anti-government reporting.

So Venezuelans know that there is no "free speech" problem in their country. While there are problems with the rule of law, including street crime - as throughout most of the region - Venezuelans have not suffered a loss of civil liberties under the Chavez government, as we have for example in the United States since 2001. That is one reason why Hugo Chavez was re-elected in December by the largest margin of the 12 most recent Latin American presidential elections, despite facing an opposition-dominated media. Democracy is indeed "very much in force in Venezuela."

Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. (www.cepr.net).

The Washington Post’s Bias Against Democracy in Latin America

In the 1980s the Washington Post honed an editorial page style to attack the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua that involved complex and convoluted editorials weaving half truths, total lies, innuendo, and unsupported speculation. These editorials were impossible to respond to with letters to the editor limited to 200 words. The “big lie” strategy is effective because to respond with the truth takes even more words than the original lie.

The Washington Post is now using the “big lie” strategy against the Bolivarian process in Venezuela and its democratically elected president Hugo Chavez. An editorial on August 17, 2007 is a textbook example of this strategy. It is entitled “Cash-and-Carry Rule” with a sub heading “Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez cements his autocracy with petrodollars and another push for ‘reform.’”

The US Venezuela Solidarity Network offers this sentence by sentence deconstruction of the Washington Post editorial as a public service to educate serious readers on important issues of US-Venezuela relations and the campaign to derail the process in Venezuela to use its oil wealth for the benefit of its poor majority.

WASHINGTON POST: The Venezuelan businessman told inspectors there was nothing but books and papers in his suitcase. So imagine everyone’s surprise when Argentine customs officers opened the suitcase – and found $800,000 in cash. The origin and destination of this money, which was being taken to Buenos Aires on Aug. 4, shortly before a state visit by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, is now the hottest mystery in South America.

FACTS: The Washington Post took a single fact – a Venezuelan born resident of Key Biscayne, Florida businessman was caught with $790,550 in undeclared cash entering Argentina on August 4 – and used innuendo to tie it to President Chavez. In the first place this Venezuelan businessman was described in the first stories about the incident as being US-based. In the second place there has been not one shred of evidence presented tying him to Chavez or the Venezuela government. Chavez officially visited Argentina on August 7, as he has on several occasions this year. The Post editorial commits a post hoc, ergo propter hoc logic fallacy, Latin for "after this, therefore because of this." There is nothing which ties the two incidents to each other.

WASHINGTON POST: But what is clear is that the cash-filled suitcase is an apt metaphor for the way Mr. Chavez has been using petrodollars to build an anti-American network that includes the leaders of Cuba, Bolivia and perhaps Nicaragua.

FACTS: Leaving aside that the Washington Post hasn’t even made an effort to develop a factual case that the “cash-filled suitcase” is tied to Chavez, it is interesting that Venezuela’s use of petro-dollars to pursue Simon Bolivar’s dream of Latin American integration and to produce health, education, food security and family income is determined to be anti-American. Does that mean disease, ignorance, hunger and poverty are pro-American?

WASHINGTON POST: Mr. Chavez seized the moment to unveil a long-awaited package of constitutional “reforms.” As you might expect, they are self-aggrandizing and threatening to what is left of democracy in Venezuela.

FACTS: It is unclear which “moment” Chavez is supposed to have “seized.” Is it the “cash-filled suitcase” moment or the “build an anti-American network” moment? This is simply a rhetorical device to strengthen the preceding unsupported arguments, especially when it is tied to the implication that Venezuelan democracy is threatened. In addition, reform is put in quotes. The Post surely knows that the Spanish word is reformar which means to amend. Common usage of the English word reform implies a “good” change so by using the word reform and putting it in quotes, the Post editorial intends the reader to think the opposite.

WASHINGTON POST: They would extend the presidential term and abolish term limits so that Mr. Chavez could get himself reelected every seven years, starting when his current six-year term expires in 2012.

FACTS: This is factually true, but the phrase “could get himself reelected every seven years” should more accurately be worded, “could run for reelection every seven years.” President Chavez won the December 2006 election with 63% of the vote and a 75% voter participation, a far higher percentage of total voter support than any U.S. president has won since 1964. If Venezuelans decide in a free and fair referendum to eliminate presidential term limits, that is completely an internal issue. Who they will vote for in any succeeding election is something that no one can know this far in advance. And if the majority of Venezuelan voters feel that President Chavez is doing a good job and they vote to keep him, then that is also their democratic right.

WASHINGTON POST: His last opponent for the presidency was a state governor; the proposed changes would weaken governors and mayors.”

FACTS: This is the Non Sequitur logic fallacy and forces the reader, rather than the author to make the error since the logical fallacy is unstated. It goes: If Chavez’ opponent Manuel Rosales was a governor, and if the constitutional amendment weakens governors, then Chavez will have even weaker opponents in the future.

WASHINGTON POST: Most menacing, Mr. Chavez wants to establish a “popular militia” alongside the regular armed forces. Perhaps this new force is the intended recipient of the 5,000 sniper rifles Mr. Chavez has just purchased from Russia.

FACTS: Menacing to whom? Dozens of peasants have been killed in rural areas where big landowners are resisting land reform efforts. Armed Colombians from both sides of the civil war violate Venezuela’s border with that country. The US embassy was caught red handed bringing in military aircraft parts as part of its “diplomatic pouch.” A US Navy attaché was expelled for attempting to buy Venezuelan military secrets. A plot to use Colombian paramilitary forces to foment a coup was foiled when a large arms cache was discovered. And the U.S. doctrine of “low intensity warfare” to overthrow progressive Latin American governments and to defeat liberation struggles is well understood in Venezuela. Additionally, the Post fails to mention that, because of a Bush regime arms embargo on Venezuela, Venezuela has had to completely rebuild its military armaments from non-US sources, which include Russia. Despite this unexpected expense, Venezuela’s military spending is significantly less than that of its neighbors.

WASHINGTON POST: This latest power grab is of a piece with other measures taken by Mr. Chavez since his reelection to a third term in December. He has been undermining existing governmental structures by channeling public works and welfare funds through “communal councils” under his control, a process he promises to accelerate under the revised constitution.

FACTS: Somehow the words “power grab” aren’t too convincing in a sentence that includes the fact that President Chavez has been reelected three times. In addition, he won approval of the 1999 constitution written by a constituent assembly during his first year in office – which is what necessitated his running again before his first term had expired under the old constitution – and that he won the constitutionally permitted 2004 recall election midway through his last term. The words autocrat, dictator, and anti-democratic were never intended to be used to describe someone who has won five internationally certified elections, each by around 60%. One of the tenants of the “big lie” strategy is that if you repeat the lie often enough people will believe it.

It is also simply untrue to say that “communal councils are under his control.” Community councils, in which neighborhoods and small communities, play an important role in determining the needs of their communities and administering the public funds to address those needs, are one of the most important and encouraging trends of our time to extend and expand the exercise of democracy beyond simply holding a vote every x number of years. Because the “Bolivarian revolution” was a peaceful one through the ballot box, the discredited elites from previous governments remained in their positions in government ministries and thwarted the popular initiatives of the Chavez government. Community councils have bypassed obstructionist career civil servants and are an exciting experiment in participatory democracy.

WASHINGTON POST: He has nationalized telecommunications, electricity and oil enterprises and established a new socialist political party. He has forced an independent television channel off the air while plastering the public spaces of Venezuela with his own smiling portrait.

FACTS: Here’s the crux of the Washington Post hostility to the Bolivarian process in Venezuela. The Washington Post is one of the strongest voices in support of the “Washington Consensus” of free trade and other neoliberal policies aimed at taking governments out of economic policy making and leaving corporation profit unrestrained. These policies have been an absolute disaster for the vast majority of Latin Americans who have seen their standard of living in free fall since the 1980s. Venezuela, thanks to its abundant natural resources, has the economic means to power alternatives to neoliberalism such as the Bolivarian Alternative for Our America (ALBA) in which trade among equals is based on need and solidarity. This is anathema to the Post and its corporate sponsors.

It is surprising that the Washington Post didn’t milk the decision to not renew the public airwaves broadcast license of the right-wing television station RCTV. Every developed country licenses use of the public airwaves and requires that stations follow certain “public good” regulations. Non-renewal of a license for a station that actively supported the 2002 coup and systematically violated broadcast regulations should have been a non-issue. The fact that RCTV continues to broadcast on satellite and cable to a Venezuelan audience required the Post to use the phrase “off the air” to leave the implication that the station had been shut down.

WASHINGTON POST: In short, Mr. Chavez’s “21st-century socialism” looks depressingly line the 20th-century version: a bloated, repressive state headed by a hectoring strongman. Mr. Chavez has adjusted the model by adding certain methods of Middle Eastern petro-states, such as the use of cash to purchase popular support, or quiescence, at home – and to buy allies abroad. Mr. Chavez’s mentor, Fidel Castro, stumbled on the road to socialism for want of hard currency; Mr. Chavez can pump dollars out of the ground.

FACTS: How many emotionally laden words can be packed into one paragraph? Let’s see: socialism, bloated, repressive, hectoring strongman, Middle East, purchase popular support, quiescence, buy allies, Fidel Castro. It is intended to leave the reader with a distasteful impression without having to actually present any evidence. And, it’s mostly lies. Not even those working toward it know what “21st century socialism” is going to look like. But, based upon actual changes in Venezuela so far it looks likely that it will have a far stronger component of capitalism than committed socialists will be happy with. To call Venezuela a “bloated, repressive state headed by a hectoring strongman” is to be reduce the writer to the level of shouting school yard insults that have no basis in reality. The majority of the Venezuelan population that is rising out of poverty, thanks to a more equitable distribution of the oil wealth, might not agree with the Post that their “quiescence” is being purchased; they might think it is their natural due as Venezuelan citizens. Now there’s a revolutionary thought! As far as buying allies abroad, isn’t the