1:56 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children · Comments Off
16 Dec 2008
I’m sure everybody remembers the show “America’s Most Wanted.” Remember how the man who hosted the show, John Walsh, was the father of a child who was abducted? And how he basically got his start on America’s Most Wanted through his advocacy done in the name of his son?
Well, there’s been an update in the case:
Police in Hollywood, Florida, said Tuesday that they are closing the investigation into the 1981 abduction and slaying of 6-year-old Adam Walsh.
Adam Walsh 6, disappeared from a mall in August, 1981. His head was found two weeks later, 120 miles away.
The boy’s abduction and slaying 27 years ago put missing children on the national agenda.
Police will name deceased drifter Ottis Toole, a convicted pedophile who died in prison in 1996, as the boy’s suspected killer, a law enforcement source told CNN.
Toole twice confessed to killing the boy — and twice recanted his story, saying he made it up. It could not be learned what, if any, new evidence exists.
It is every parents worst nightmare–and all I can say is I hope that this update will bring peace to Adam Walsh’s parents, family and loved ones.
1:29 pm By Maegan La Mala · Cuba|Movies · 2 Comments
16 Dec 2008
I haven’t seen Steven Soderbergh’s epic, four hour, two part biopic on Ernesto Che Guevara : “El Argentino” and “Guerrilla”. I’ll see it eventually (if anyone wants to watch two kids for day so I can see it, that would rock). Pero, even without seeing it, there’s enough internet reading on it and it seems like even a dead revolutionary can’t escape Latino stereotyping.
12:59 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · france · Comments Off
16 Dec 2008
It looks as if this war against terrorism thing has far reaching implications for more countries than just the U.S. The latest news out of France is that an upper-class mall in Paris was the target of an organization that calls itself the Revolutionary Afghan Front:
Detectives were alerted to the package by a note sent to Agence France-Presse, police spokeswoman Celine Diguignard said by telephone. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the explosives couldn’t be set off as they didn’t have detonators. Sarkozy, speaking at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, told reporters he was “vigilant” and wouldn’t compromise with terrorists.
Responsibility was claimed by a previously unknown group calling itself the Afghan Revolutionary Front which sent the note to AFP. The group is demanding the withdrawal of French troops from Afghanistan before the end of February, according to a copy of the note obtained by Bloomberg.
“Pass this message to your president and tell him to withdraw his troops from our country, otherwise we will take direct action in your capitalist department stores, and this time without warning you first,” the group said in the note.
Although this organization is calling for a withdrawal of troops, the news on CNN this afternoon is that as of April of this year, Sarkozy was actually planning on increasing French troop presence. We’ll see if that actually pans out.
With Colombia being heralded as the model of the Latin American war against drugs (with a “little help” from the United States), some human rights organizations within the South American country are questioning Colombia’s numbers when it comes to just how well they are killing off opposition.
Codhes, a respected Colombian NGO, analysed the statistics of recent successes claimed by the armed forces in the 44-year civil conflict.
About 114,000 members of the warring factions were said to have been dealt with by the army in the last six years.
However, other estimates say there are only 30,000 in the warring factions.
Even allowing for recruiting to replenish depleted ranks, the government figures suggest that eight members of the warring factions are killed every single day in Colombia, something not substantiated by any other sources.
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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