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Archive for the ‘Colombia’ Category

The trailer for this documentary film about indigenous struggles in Colombia came to my attention earlier this week and I wanted to share it with VL readers as many of you may be interested in coordinating a screening or supporting the documentary. Below is the synopsis from the film website as well as the trailer which is in Spanish with English subtitles.

Colombia has 102 indigenous peoples that are currently caught in the crossfire between Latin America’s oldest guerrilla group and the army. WE WOMEN WARRIORS is a journey inside the war-torn native nations that are surviving Colombia’s internal armed conflict, guided by three valiant female leaders who illuminate salient examples of bravery and nonviolence.

WE WOMEN WARRIORS shares intimate stories of resistance and survival. Doris Puchana, 26, is a young mother who defends the vulnerable Awá population that grows coca leaves (the base for cocaine). Ludis Rodriguez, 34, a spunky Kankuamo widow, tells us from prison how she was framed and captured on false charges of rebellion. Tiny in height but tremendous in spirit, Flor Ilva Trochez, 36, is the first female leader for the Nasa tribal government. She leads peaceful demonstrations to fight for the removal of police barracks set up in the Nasa community that endanger civilians by placing them in the line of fire.

WE WOMEN WARRIORS is both personal and political. Despite her life being threatened after denouncing a massacre in her village, Doris does not abandon her tribal post. Once Ludis is freed she joins other widows in the struggle to move onward, coping and healing after systematic violence swept through her region. Meanwhile, Flor puts Colombia’s constitutional indigenous autonomy into practice and strives toward creating a territory free of armed fighters.

In 2009, Colombia’s Constitutional Court ruled that nearly one-third of its native peoples are in danger of extinction because of the warfare. WE WOMEN WARRIORS bears witness to human rights abuses and offers stories of female empowerment, unshakable courage and faith in the survival of indigenous culture.

 

WE WOMEN WARRIORS from Nicole Karsin on Vimeo.

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It’s National Poetry Month : step outside of what you know and head into Queens where talented poets and artists from Latin America will gather to remember one of their own, recently passed friend Ricardo León Peña-Villa. Ricardo was not only a poet but an activist who played a key role in the struggle for housing in the Lower East Side.

Cuando : Friday, April 8 · 6:00pm – 9:00pm

Donde: Teatro Natives
82-22 NORTHERN BLVD, JACKSON HEIGHTS, NY 11372
Tren #7 hasta la parada 82nd Street

El Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York invita a la comunidad neoyorkina a rendir homenaje y celebrar la vida de Ricardo León Peña-Villa “El Poe”, quien falleciera recientemente en la ciudad. En esta ocasión miembros del Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York se han integrado a la organización del evento para unir esfuerzos en la realización de un homenaje de despedida a una de las figuras más destacadas de la diáspora latina en New York durante los últimos años.

El evento de homenaje tendrá como epicentro el teatro NATIVES ubicado en el 82-22 NORTHERN BLVD, JACKSON HEIGHTS, NY 11372, en donde se harán presentes diferentes agrupaciones musicales de calidad internacional, entre los que se destacan Edy Martínez, Pablo Mayor y Folklore Urbano, Samuel Torres, Gregorio Uribe, Mario Barreiro, Daniel Reyes Llinas, Café Dorado y muchos más, quienes interpretarán composiciones propias y letras de Peña-Villa. Además se contará con la participación de poetas residentes en la ciudad de Nueva York.

Durante el evento que se realizará el 8 de abril de 2011, desde las 6pm, se celebrará la vida, la poesía, la música, el legado, la lucha pacífica y de revolución cultural, de este hombre que falleciera el pasado 11 de Marzo.

Así mismo el Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York, está organizando como apertura del evento una Masa Alegre (manifestación alternativa poética de toma de calles) que se realizará el mismo 8 de abril a las 5pm, y que emulará un carnaval de despedida, que partirá de la calle 83 st y Roosevelt Ave, hasta las instalaciones del teatro Natives. En esta Masa Alegre se cantarán coros de memoria a “El Poe” y se leerá su poesía durante el recorrido.

De antemano agradecemos su colaboración y participación activa en este evento en respaldo de quienes construyen la cultura. Los eventos serán totalmente gratis y abiertos a quienes quieran participar y acompañar a “El Poe” en esta celebración de despedida.

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Update on Wilder Peña Case

11:54 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Immigration · 1 Comment

13 Feb 2011

Thank you to all of you who signed your names to the letters in an attempt to stop the deportation of Wilder Peña, a 31-year-old Afro-Colombian male, I wrote about last week, originally from Jamundi, Department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia who fled to the U.S. to seek asylum in 2001.

Supporters set up a Facebook page on Wilder’s behalf and are calling for people, in an act of love for human rights, make calls tomorrow, Valentine’s Day, so that Wilder can stay with his familia in the U.S.

· If you are a Washington, DC resident or a member of a Colombia, human rights or solidarity organization please contact the office of Honorable Eleanor Holmes Norton at phone number:   (202) 225-8050  and urge the Congresswoman to intervene on Wilder’s behalf.  On Friday, the Congresswoman received a letter from U.S. activists, NGOs and constituents earlier today calling upon her to act. When you call say that you are greatly concerned about Wilder Peña’s safety and hope that she will intervene to protect Wilder’s life. If you are a Washington, DC resident you can also send your own letter to the Congresswoman via email through her site :  https://forms.house.gov/norton/webforms/issue_subscribe.htm

You can also contact the following persons and ask them to take action:

· Contact Vincent Cochetel, Regional Representative for the U.S. and the Caribbean of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees at (202)296- 5191.

· Contact Eric Schwartz, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Population, Migration and Refugees, U.S. State Department by calling the State Department switchboard at            202-647-4000       and asking to be connected to his office.

· Contact Maria Isabel Castro, Consul, Colombian Consulate in New York, at (212) 798-9055 or maria.castro@cancilleria.gov.co

· Contact , Libia Mosquera Viveros, Consul, Colombian Consulate in Washington, DC, herself Afro-Colombian, at (202) 332-7476/(202) 332-7573 or consuladowash@gmail.com

For more information about Wilder and his case please keep reading.

Thank you/Mil Gracias

Read more…

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Late last night I received an urgent appeal asking for help to prevent the deportation of Wilder Peña.

Wilder Peña is currently detained in an immigration detention facility in Batavia, NY and scheduled for deportation to Colombia on February 28. His life was threatened following a massacre of ten persons and the assassination of three members of his family and several of his friends at the hands of illegal armed groups. Unfortunately, due to poor legal representation he was denied asylum. Two appeals, made by the same lawyer, were also denied. Pending deportation to a country where he could potentially be killed, Wilder fled to Canada, leaving his partner and their infant son behind. He was detained at the border and has been in detention ever since.

The Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) is collecting names for letters to the United Nations High Committee on Refugees in DC and the local DC congresswoman.

Clicking below will show you the text of the letters.

LettertoHolmesNorton
LettertoUNHCR

If you would like to sign the letters in order to help keep Wilder alive and with his familia, please send your name and organizational affiliation (if any) to GSanchez@wola.org

Gracias

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Ingrid Betencourt : Malagradecida?

12:02 pm By Maegan La Mala · Colombia · 8 Comments

11 Jul 2010

Edited to add on July 15, 2010: On Tuesday, July 13 of this week, Betancourt retracted the claim discussed below.

Remember Ingrid Betancourt? The once presidential candidate in Colombia turned FARC prisoner, turned rescued mujer?

Two years after her liberation from the jungles of Colombia, there are some who are calling Betancourt malagradecida, ungrateful, for going after the Colombian government for monetary damages to compensate for emotional distress and income lost while she was a FARC hostage. Her attorneys say that the Colombian government failed to provide Betancourt

The then President of Colombia, Pastrana, could have airlifted the then presidential candidate in 2002 to the FARC territory, but he chose not to, allegedly because of recently canceled peace talks and National troop movement.

“The defence ministry is surprised and upset by the request, all the more due to the effort and zeal with which our public forces planned and executed the rescue,” the ministry said in a statement on Friday.

“Men and women of the armed forces risked their lives while seeking the liberty of the hostages in an operation that Ingrid Betancourt herself called ‘perfect’.”

Read more…

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It seems more than strange on the 4th of July to write about accused spy Vicky Peláez, a reporter/writer for the NYC based Spanish language daily El Diario/la Prensa. ,

In case you have not been following the story,Peláez, a U.S. citizen Peruana, was arrested and is being accused of being a spy for Russia along with her husband, Juan Lazaro.

It us unclear what proof exists that Peláez, her husband, and others are spies and to what end they would be spying for Russia. Peláez and her husband’s home in Yonkers has been bugged by the Feds and upon their arrest, documents and computers were taken from the home.

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The eyes of the world are rightfully on the U.S. Gulf Coast and the massive damage being done by the BP oil spill and according to some, the U.S. government’s handling of it. BP, like so many multi-national organizations, has spread it’s oily tentacles across the globe and as people and wildlife struggle in the Gulf Coast region, in Colombia, workers have been fighting BP as well for at least five months. According to reports, workers at the Tauramena Central Processing Facility in Casanare have been fighting to have a recognized union with collective bargaining power, something BP is resisting.

On June 2, last week, a branch of the Colombian Army attacked the striking workers, who have escalated their strike to include blocking roads and other acts of civil disobedience.

Read more…

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Stop the Deportation of the Perez Siblings

8:50 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Colombia|Immigration|youth · Comments Off

14 Apr 2010

In the absence of Comprehensive Immigration Reform and the DREAM Act, we are reduced to fighting on a one by one basis to stop deportations. The latest request comes from our amigos at DREAM Activist:

Although Laura, Camilo, and Natalia citizens of Colombia, they came to the U. S. as children. Laura was 15; Natalia was 13; and Camilo was 11. The three siblings came to the U. S. with their family in 2000, after receiving repeated death threats from a guerrilla group in Colombia.

These three siblings have been outstanding students. Laura was a pre-med student at Broward Community College; Camilo was studying engineering on a full scholarship at Florida Atlantic University; and Natalia was studying interior-design at Broward Community College. But for her detention, Natalia would have graduated with her bachelor’s this May. Despite their best efforts, these three DREAM Act students are awaiting deportation from the only country they call home.

I wonder how changing the U.S. policy with Colombia could also impact the lives of young people coming from there to the U.S.?

Sign the petition and take action here here.

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Martes Morning Musica : El Baile del las FARC

8:48 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Music · Comments Off

2 Mar 2010

The story that the FARC had released a merengue as a way to attract and recruit younger members came out last week.

I suppose the song is no worse than other songs used to promote political parties or candidates. I mean how many different Obama songs were there? Except of course Obama isn’t labeled a terrorist the way the FARC is. Que crees?

Via / The Latin Americanist

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Land Displacement, Resistance
and Territory Rights in Colombia:
A Discussion with Afro-Colombian Activist, Francia Elena Marquez

this FRIDAY, February 26, 2010
at 2 p.m.
Room 758, Schermerhorn Extension Conference Room
at the Institute for Research in African American Studies, Columbia University

Since October 2009, the Afro-Colombian organization, the Black Communities’ Process (PCN) and other human rights, labor, and Indigenous organizations have been declared “military targets” by the paramilitary group, “Aguilas Negras-Nueva Generación.” The PCN has been targeted for defending their territorial, cultural, and economic rights. These rights have been violated by the imposition of large-scale mineral exploitation, and infrastructure projects.

Francia Elena Marquez is one of these community leaders who is facing imminent risks in defending her community as they resist internal displacement, expropriation, and harassment by economic and political forces interested in their ancestral lands.

Francia’s strong roots in the land and the community, which was built by her ancestors in 1636, has made of her a courageous and strong community leader. Francia is the vice-president of the Community Council of La Toma, in the municipality of Suarez, department of Norte del Cauca. She is the coordinator of the youth activities within the Community Council, founder of the Association of Afro-Colombian women of the Yolombó village, representative before the Inter-Ethnic Commission, and member of PCN. As member of the Community Council, Francia is responsible for monitoring the formulation process of the hydroelectric project Salvajina, and the “Rio Ovejas project” (which consists of deviating the river to increase the Salvajina dam’s volume). Francia also monitors mining projects and concessions in the municipalities of Suarez and Buenos Aires. Thirty mining concessions to the multinational Anglo Gold Ashanti and some of its contractors have been granted by Colombian government in the municipalities of Suarez and Buenos Aires, in violation of the right to previous consultation of the communities affected. 1500 families face expropriation and displacement from their ancestral lands. The position of the community and leaders in defense of their rights has made them target of paramilitary persecution.

At this workshop, Francia will talk about how the PCN is taking bold steps to denounce the plight of the communities, state their determination to continue struggling, and mobilize effective solidarity actions across the international community to raise the issue and make Colombian government accountable for Afro-Colombian rights violations.

*Event hosted by the Workshop on Critical Approaches to Race and Ethnicity at Columbia University.

Directions for the event:

*The event is located in Room 758 in the Schermerhorn Extension.
*This map below shows you where the Schermerhorn Extension is located…please enter from the Schermerhorn Building, take the stairs or elevator to the 7th floor, and the room will be at the end of the hallway!

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