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[A-List] HONDURAS NICARAGUA COLOMBIA



(pintura  centro del artes Condega Nicaragua)
 
Tom Baker here with more news
as you can get to it.
 
- NicaNet HOTLINE
President of Honduras Zelaya was 
in Managua; others too, or their
ministers. Folks, HONDURAS is
a happening. All the people paying
attention
 
- COLOMBIA. People's Action.
International people's support urgent.
Lily Obando.
 
- HONDURAS. Funny, kinda, but
there are more grads from Honduras
coming out of the SOA. The coup
did not interrupt classes.
 
 
 
 
 

TO BE DELETED FROM THIS LIST,
PLEASE REPLY TO NSC WORKERS COOP
 
 
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Title: Nicaragua Network Hotline--July 14, 2009

 

 

From: Nicaragua Network [mailto:nicanet@xxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 6:01 PM
To: chuck@xxxxxxxx
Subject: Nicaragua Network Hotline--July 14, 2009

 

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Nicaragua Network Hotline

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www.nicanet.org

 

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July 14, 2009

1. Zelaya issues "Ultimatum" in Managua; Nicaraguans persecuted by coup government
2. Nicaraguan delegation to meet with IMF in Washington on July 13
3. World Court rules in San Juan River case
4. Dock at Bilwi (Puerto Cabezas) completely rebuilt
5. Sandinista Doctors Movement has held 300,000 consultations and done 9,000 surgeries

Topic 1: Zelaya issues "Ultimatum" at Managua press conference


Honduran President Manuel Zelaya said in Managua on July 13 that if the new phase of mediation in San Jose, Costa Rica, makes no progress in restoring constitutional order in his country, he will turn toward "other measures." Zelaya, who was overthrown in a military coup on June 28, was accompanied by his Foreign Minister Patricia Rodas and Carlos Ham, a leader of the Democratic Unification Party. When reporters asked what those other measures might include, Zelaya read an article from the Constitution of Honduras which stated that no one owed obedience to a "usurper government" and that "the people have the right to resort to insurrection in defense of constitutional order."

Zelaya read an ultimatum in which he denounced the violence against the people carried out by the coup government of Roberto Micheletti and thanked Costa Rican President Oscar Arias for his mediation. He said the mediation is taking place on the premise that the coup government "must restore constitutional order and guarantee the immediate, safe and unconditional return of your servant the constitutional President of the Republic." He said that he would not meet personally with Micheletti.

Nine Nicaraguans were expelled from Honduras on July 7, accused by the coup government of working in support of the return of President Zelaya. They had been detained on July 3 without warrants and were interrogated by authorities. Several of the men had been working in Honduras for more than ten years. Others were travelling businessmen. They were told they could not return to Honduras.

Travel between Nicaragua and El Salvador has been affected by the coup. Each bus that makes the trip must now pay US$50 for an official of the Honduran authorities to accompany the vehicle, making sure that no one gets off inside Honduran territory. Control is particularly strict for Nicaraguan travelers who must have their pictures taken at the border as well as provide copies of their identification cards. Sixteen Nicaraguan construction workers who were working on an international bridge in El Salvador were detained by Honduran authorities. Money changers, pedicab drivers, and others who earn their livelihoods at the border all complained of a drastic slowdown in business.

The Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights (CENIDH) released a statement which called on the Organization of American States (OAS) to again take up the efforts to find a non-violent solution to the crisis. CENIDH condemned the repression of Honduran citizens by that country's army saying that July 5 attacks on the airport protesters were carried out "with disproportionate violence causing the deaths of the two young people Isis Obed Murillo and Darwin Antonio Lagos and injuring dozens of demonstrators." The statement demanded that those responsible for the deaths and injuries be brought to justice.

Topic 2: Nicaraguan delegation to meet with IMF in Washington on July 13

Central Bank Antenor Rosales led a delegation including private bankers to Washington on July 11 to prepare for a July 13 meeting with International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss Khan. Nicaragua hopes to gain approval by the IMF of its recent budget reforms in order to gain disbursal of a needed US$35 million loan and also access to special drawing rights to another US$35 million. Rosales said that the delegation will give Strauss Khan a technical document about revisions to the IMF program and added that "We hope that the highest authorities of the IMF will accept a vision of Nicaraguan reality presented by the government and other sectors of society."

The Nicaraguan government won National Assembly approval of budget cuts to reflect lower revenues as a result of the world financial crisis. However, it did not include changes in tax law and Social Security benefits demanded by the IMF. As a result the IMF did not send a mission to Nicaragua, but rather the Nicaraguans are travelling to Washington. Rosales said that eliminating the tax free status of the communication media, churches, and non-profit organizations along with a reduction in monthly pensions for seniors under Social Security would have a serious negative impact on Nicaragua.

Presidential economic advisor Bayardo Arce said that the churches and the NGOs bring donations to the country that help to alleviate poverty. He noted that the Nicaraguan American Foundation alone sends more than US$100 million in food, medicine, and medical equipment while helping 1,000 schools with meal programs. Elimination of the foundation's tax exempt status would require them to pay 20% in taxes on that assistance. He said that these tax changes along with reducing pensions were unacceptable.

Meanwhile, economist Adolfo Acevedo said that the government has more than made up for the withdrawal of budget support funds by the European Union for this year, receiving a total of US$131.6 million as compared to the US$109.1 million that had been programmed earlier. However, Acevedo noted, US$86 million in loans from the World Bank and Inter- American Development Bank have been substituted for the lost US$64.1 million in donations from the E.U.

Topic 3: Nicaragua wins World Court ruling in San Juan River case

The International Court of Justice at The Hague (the World Court) ruled on July 13 that, while Costa Rica has the right of free navigation on the river for purposes of commerce, including transportation of passengers and tourists, it does not have the right to have police boats on the river. The Cañas-Jerez Treaty of 1858 gave the river to Nicaragua and the southern bank to Costa Rica along with navigation rights. In 2005, Costa Rica entered a demand before the Court alleging that Nicaragua had violated the Treaty when it impeded armed Costa Rican police from patrolling the river. The court also ruled that fishing by the inhabitants of the Costa Rican bank of the river for subsistence purposes should be respected by Nicaragua.

But the Court said that Costa Rica did not have the right to navigate the river with vessels to carry out police functions nor did it have the right to navigate the river for the purposes of the exchange of personnel of the police border posts along the southern bank of the river and of the re-supply of these posts. The Court said that Nicaragua acted in accord with the law when it placed controls on river travel, asking boat passengers to show identification documents, and when it imposed timetables on navigation of the river. However, Nicaragua does not have the right, according to the Court, to demand that travelers obtain Nicaraguan tourist visas. Nicaragua can require Costa Rican vessels fitted with masts or turrets to display the Nicaraguan flag.

Nicaragua's representative before the Court, Carlos Argüello, said at The Hague that the ruling was a "complete success" for Nicaragua. "The Court made clear," he said, "that the sovereignty over the River belongs to Nicaragua and that Managua has the right to inspect any vessel that might enter the River." "It's significant," he added, that vessels "have the obligation to report [to Nicaraguan authorities] at the entrance as well as exit ports" of the river. Vice- Minister of Foreign Affairs Valdrack Jaenstke said that the verdict was important because it allows Nicaragua to protect the River and its environmental sustainability. "The environmental issue was clearly in favor of Nicaragua," he said.

Topic 4: Dock at Bilwi (Puerto Cabezas) completely rebuilt

President of the National Port Authority Virgilio Silva and Bilwi Mayor Guillermo Espinoza inaugurated the new Bilwi dock, which has been completely rebuilt with funds from the Port Authority. According to Silva, "The dock was severely damaged on Sept. 4, 2007, by Hurricane Felix and after that we began to work toward a rehabilitation project for the dock." He added that, "We were able to work with the indigenous communities so that they would provide the lumber from trees downed by the Hurricane [which indigenous communities were given the right to extract from the forests] and we rebuilt the parts damaged by the hurricane and by the passage of time." Most of the lumber came from the community of Tasba Pri, 95 kilometers west of Bilwi. Silva showed those present the new barrier that has been built to protect against fuel spills on the dock.

The inauguration of the new dock was accompanied by the traditional May Pole dance and even the songs of Michael Jackson. Membership cards in the Sandinista Party were given out to many of the workers of the Port Authority. Silva said that construction on another dock made of concrete for ships of 10,000 tons and larger, financed by funding from the Bolivarian Alliance for Our Americas (ALBA), will begin in 2010.

Topic 5: Sandinista Doctors Movement has held 300,000 consultations and done 9,000 surgeries

Two and a half years after its birth, the Sandinista Doctors Movement (MMS) has developed a profile as one of the professional organizations that has had the most impact on the poor of Nicaragua.

In this year alone, the MMS has held more than 4,000 consultations and performed over 1,000 operations, which has significantly reduced the surgery waiting list at public hospitals in the country. The goal for this year is 100,000 consultations and 4,000 operations. From March 2007 to date, MMS has provided more than 300,000 consultations and performed more than 9,000 surgeries.

According to Dr. Enrique Beteta, national coordinator of the group, the work is an effort to fulfill the promise made by President Daniel Ortega that, during this first period of his administration, we would restore the right to health care to the entire Nicaraguan population.

Beteta emphasized that, although Managua is covered, the places that have the most need for the MMS are in the northern portion of the country. "We are going to the most remote parts of the country, because it is there that the people need the attention most," he said.

The MMS brings together approximately 800 physicians; however, Dr. Beteta says that all the work done by them would not be possible if it was not for the support of the workers of FETSALUD [Sandinista health workers union], who assist the MMS doctors when they visit different places around the country.

This hotline is prepared from the Nicaragua News Service and other sources. To receive a more extensive weekly summary of the news from Nicaragua by e-mail or postal service, send a check for $60.00 to Nicaragua Network, 1247 E St., SE, Washington, DC 20003. We can be reached by phone at 202-544-9355. Our web site is: www.nicanet.org. To subscribe to the Hotline, send an e-mail to nicanet@xxxxxxxx

 

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AFGJ logo

Quick Links

READ AND ENDORSE THE RESOLUTION FOR LILIANY OBANDO'S FREEDOM  Send your group's endorsement to:  james@xxxxxxxx

CONTRIBUTE TO THE CARE OF LILY'S CHILDREN AND THE CHILDREN OF OTHER WOMEN COLOMBIAN POLITICAL PRISONERS:  http://nicanet.org/?page_id=341  Scroll down and mark the "Other:  Enter Name" option and, in the space provided, put "Lily Obando Fund"

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July 15, 2009

UPDATE ON LILIANY OBANDO

 

FREE LILIANY OBANDO, COLOMBIAN HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST AND POLITICAL PRISONER!

Liliany

 

IN THIS ALERT YOU WILL FIND...


*  LILIANY GOES TO TRIAL AUGUST 27TH--NEEDS OUR INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY NOW!

*  TWO THINGS YOU CAN DO FOR LILIANY

*  CONTRIBUTE TO THE CARE OF THE CHILDREN OF LILIANY AND OTHER WOMEN POLITICAL PRISONERS IN COLOMBIA

 

LILIANY GOES TO TRIAL AUGUST 27TH--NEEDS OUR INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY NOW!

In August of last year, Liliany Obando was arrested on trumped up charges by the Colombian authorities for:  1)  Managing money for a terrorist organization, and, 2)  Rebellion.  She was arrested on the basis of emails allegedly found in a computer belonging to FARC Commander Raul Reyes when the Colombian military bombed a FARC camp in Ecuador that was working out details for a prisoner release.  This evidence has been widely discredited.  The Colombian Police Captain, Ronald Hayden Coy Ortiz, who oversaw the initial investigation of the computers has said under oath that they contained no emails, only Word Documents.  Word Documents are easily manipulated.  The international police agency, INTERPOL, said the evidence could not be authenticated and "did not conform to internationally recognized principles".  Liliany was arrested the same week that a report was released that she authored detailing the murders of more than 1,500 members of the FENSUAGRO rural farm workers union by the Colombian military and paramilitaries.

Liliany goes to trial on August 27th.  Her defense team feels confident that it can show that the money she raised was legitimate and traceable and went to the rural workers union, rather than to guerrillas.

However, the second charge, the one of rebellion, is particularly worrisome.  As Carlos Cuevas, speaking for the International Network in Solidarity with Colombian Political Prisoners has noted, "Trade unionists get charged with Rebellion.  Community organizers get charged with Rebellion.  So it's a very difficult situation when the government creates legislation that criminalizes dissent." And as Liliany's lawyer, Eduardo Matyas noted, the charge of "...Rebellion is very difficult to defend.  The charge is highly political--not really a legal matter." It is clear that the best defense to such a political charge is a political defense--the mobilization of international opinion denouncing these sham charges and demanding Liliany's freedom!

Liliany's case is especially important because she was the first person arrested and is the first person to go to trial in what is called the "farc-politica" process.  This process is being used to investigate, intimidate and marginalize a variety of unionists, journalists, academics, and opposition political figures.  Liliany's case will set an important precedent:  if she wins, then the whole farc-politica house of cards will come falling down.  But if she loses, then her loss will represent a whole new level of repression against dissent in Colombia.

 

TWO THINGS YOU CAN DO FOR LILIANY


1)  GET YOUR ORGANIZATION TO ENDORSE THE RESOLUTION TO FREE LILIANY OBANDO.  Get your union, your church, your bowling club, your rock and roll band...get any group you're a part of to sign on to this statement.  Send your endorsements to
james@xxxxxxxx .  You can read the resolution at:

http://www.clrlabor.org/wordpress/wp-content/lilianyresolution.pdf

2)  We need handwritten letters protesting the political nature of this case and calling for Liliany's freedom.  We will turn these letters over to Liliany's lawyer.  These should be letters written in your own words--not the repetition of a sample letter.  The letters don't need to be long--just a paragraph or two.  These are some points you could emphasize:

*  The discredited evidence, recovered from alleged emails found on the computers belonging to Raul Reyes, has been declared by the international police agency, INTERPOL, to be outside the norms for handling such evidence and its sources can not be authenticated.

*  The Police Captain who originally accessed the computers, Ronald Hayden Coy Ortiz, has said there were no emails on the computers, only Word Documents--and these are easily manipulated.

*  The political nature of this case is nothing less than a thinly veiled attempt to widen the repression of dissent in Colombia.

*  The whole "farc-politica" process is an attempt to divert attention away from "para-politica" which has seen some 40% of the Colombian Congress linked to paramilitaries and narco-traffickers--most being allies of Colombian Pres. Álvaro Uribe--and from the "false-positive" scandal, wherein the Colombian military has been exposed for killing hundreds of civilians, afterwards dressing them up as guerrillas and falsely claiming them as combatants killed in action.

We do not know yet who the presiding judge for the case will be.  PLEASE ADDRESS YOUR LETTERS TO "TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN" and send them to:

Liliany Defense Letters
c/o  Campaign for Labor Rights
1247 E Street SE
Washington, DC  20003

LETTERS MUST BE RECEIVED BY JULY 23, 2009

 

CONTRIBUTE TO THE CARE OF THE CHILDREN OF LILIANY AND OTHER WOMEN POLITICAL PRISONERS IN COLOMBIA


Liliany is a single mother with two children, a 5 year old girl and a 15 year old boy.  They are surviving on contributions from solidarity activists and supporters like you and me.  Also, there are some 90 women political prisoners being held with Liliany, many of them in the same condition, with children struggling to get by. 

If you'll make a contribution to Lily Obando and the Women Political Prisoners of Buen Pastor, for the care of their children who are in need, we'll send you a FREE LILY OBANDO bumper sticker and color poster (legal paper size).

You can make an online contribution by going to:

http://nicanet.org/?page_id=341

Be sure to scroll down and mark the option that says "Other:  Enter Name" and in the space provided, put "Lily Obando".  Then send a note to james@xxxxxxxx so we can send you your bumper sticker and poster.

For check or money order contributions, make them out to the Alliance for Global Justice and send to:

AFGJ/Lily Obando Fund
1247 E Street SE
Washington, DC  20003

 

This Alert was prepared by the Campaign for Labor Rights. 

 We can be reached by phone at 202-544-9355 or 520-243-0381.  You can also email james@xxxxxxxx for more information.

Visit our website at:  http://www.clrlabor.org/wordpress/

 

 

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U.S. continues to train Honduran soldiers

Military coup that ousted president, didn't stop U.S. engagement in Honduras

U.S. Training of Honduran ForcesA controversial facility at Fort Benning, Georgia -- formerly known as the U.S. Army's School of the Americas -- is still training Honduran officers despite claims by the Obama administration that it cut military ties to Honduras after its president was overthrown June 28, NCR has learned.

A day after an SOA-trained army general ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya at gunpoint, President Barack Obama stated that "the coup was not legal" and that Zelaya remained "the democratically elected president."

The Foreign Operations Appropriations Act requires that U.S. military aid and training be suspended when a country undergoes a military coup, and the Obama administration has indicated those steps have been taken.

However, Lee Rials, public affairs officer for the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, the successor of SOA, confirmed Monday that Honduran officers are still being trained at the school.

Click here to read the full article by James Hodge and Linda Cooper from the National Catholic Reporter


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                           VISIT NICARAGUA
                  ALL DAY SPANISH TUTORING
                     TWO WEEK DELEGATIONS
                          ?NOVEMBER 15-29
                      ?NOVEMBER 22 DECEMBER 6
                      ?NOVEMBER 29 DECEMBER 13
                          ?DECEMBER 6-20 2009
Tom Baker here inviting you to join me in Nicaragua during the month of Nov-15 to Dec-20.
Spanish tutoring is structured and flowing, integrated into the learning of Nicaraguan culture and
history, the revolution and what?s going on now.
 
I know my way around, will function as guide leader, help you find your own way, and together we
discover the many secrets, not hiding nor hidden, that Nicaragua and the people wish to share.
 
The experience of Nicaragua is important. That is, many of us come from Old World Europe
Judeo-Christian Imperialism culture and know no other world. The experience of Nicaragua ,
the people, their culture,opens ways to see that Another World Is Possible.
 
People of Nicaragua are among the many of the Americas whose first identity is
their indigenous root. They never lost their indigenous identity while coping with 500 years of
Old World Imperialism, Spain, Britain, and the USA.
 
If any one of you has interest in revolutionary Nicaragua, to learn more about People as Power,
or just want immersion in a Spanish speaking culture, SIGN UP NOW.
 
The delegation fee is $600 for 14, days lodging and full day immersion in Spanish with tutor.
You cover your airfare to Nicaragua.
 
EMAIL your name and contact information, delegation date to nscchicago@xxxxxxx
SNAIL MAIL your check of $100 to hold your space to
    Nicaragua Solidarity Fair Trade Resource
    1221 W Lunt - 1A
    Chicago IL 60626
 
 

Visiting again Nicaragua, OBJECTIVES AND ITINERARY. There are people and places where I need to touch base, in particular, the union of small farmers, UCA, San Ramon and Miraflor the coffee coop communities of the cloud forests, and the artesano community of Masaya.

We also have invitation to visit Solentiname, a famous archipelago artist fishing community as old as Nicaragua at the south end of the huge Lago Cocibolca (Lago de Nicaragua).

NATURAL DISASTER. Nicaragua has had days of heavy rains, hurricanes and tropical storms. We must be attentive to how the people are coping. For instance, the Managua barrio La Primavera are people who lost their farms and homes from the raging rains of Hurricane Mitch across a great swath of northern Nicaragua.. We, the Nicaragua Network, have long relationship with the people of La Primavera; we should visit and be able to report back.

THE POLITICS are quite historic. We will see for ourselves how revolutionary projects move forward in Nicaragua and throughout the Americas. We need to come home with a sense of that.

SANDINO AND THE PEOPLE?S WAR 1925-33. The US Marines were occupying Nicaragua then with the similar regard shown the Vietnamese and Iraqis, and so on. That war against the people took place there, in the cloud forests, Nuevo Segovio, they call it. Much of the 10-year US Contra War was fought there, 1981-90. Sandinismo is the People of Nicaragua. There the people whipped the Marines (and the Contras) at great cost. I would like to walk and talk those places of people?s heroic struggle.

We headquarter in MASAYA, from where we travel to other places and return. Mi profesores en espanol live there. Monimbo is there, and the whole area is rich with indigenous artesano and struggle against Somoza and the Guardia Nacional and for dignity. Sandino was born there.

Mi profesores have taught me much more than Spanish. Bismark or Danilo have traveled with me on my different photo doc and video projects. One of them or someone they know will accompany us and Learning of Spanish will be all day exercise.

Friends, there is so much happening in Nicaragua. Environmental restoration, sustainable agriculture, cooperative development, revolutionary project and indigenous community with deep historical consciousness. I can make an itinerary to suit any of your interests. JUST LET ME KNOW.

People have said, Nicaragua is a prism through which to see the rest. You find one prism, you?ll find others. I expect this experience in Nicaragua to be quite enlightening, and strengthening.

Visit www.vianica.com www.miraflor.org www.cecocafen.com

Contact nscchicago@xxxxxxx Phone 773 973 6529

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