1:45 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Spain · Comments Off
20 Mar 2007
He didn’t make it to the Oscars, the Golden Globes or the Goyas, but Spanish superstar director Pedro Almodovar did attend an event of a different kind this past Saturday in Madrid. Almovodar led a group of around half a million of his fellow Spaniards in saying no to the war in Iraq:
Almodovar told the private Europa Press news agency he was protesting “the barbarities they have been committing in Iraq for the past four years.”“We’re here for peace and for the closure of Guantanamo because it is a disgrace for civilization,” he added.
Spain currently has no troops in Iraq, as President Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero pulled all of his men from the region back in 2005, which makes the protest and the fact that Spaniards — famous or not — continue to pressure world governments to pull out of Iraq all the more admirable.
Today, 300 senators and officials from all Spanish political parties except the right-leaning PP (ousted from government after the March 11th, 2004 terrorist attacks) came together on the steps of the Congreso de los Diputados in Madrid to protest the war as well.
Via / Yahoo! Entertainment
10:54 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Justice|New York City · 4 Comments
20 Mar 2007
All to often in the mainstream media, the issue of police brutality is painted as a black and white issue when in reality it is an issue impacting all people of color. The most recent highly publicized police killing of Sean Bell in Queens, NYC last November has long time police brutality activists and communities of color across the city organizing and calling out a pattern and practice of racially based police killings.
The recent indictments against three of the five officers who fired 50 shots at Bell on the eve of his wedding have left some in the Latino community justifiably unsatisfied. Some showed their dissatisfaction by committing and act of civil disobedience by blocking the entrance to the Queens Criminal Court in Kew Gardens.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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