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Archive for the ‘Colombia’ Category

FARC Says Hostage Release Must Have International Witnesses

10:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia · Comments Off

8 Jan 2009

farc.pngIn December, I wrote about Colombian president Alvaro Uribe clearly rejecting any outside intervention in the latest offered release of FARC hostages. The problem is that FARC won’t release any hostages unless there are outside witnesses involved.

The Colombian leftist rebel group, FARC, said it is willing to hand over six hostages but it will only do so in the presence of an international representative.

In a statement made public Wednesday, the FARC said it wants someone from either a “brother country” or the international community to be present when it frees the hostages.

Both the FARC and the Colombian government say they will let someone from the International Committee of the Red Cross be on hand for the hostage release. But Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has said he does not want any other international participation

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While I know some readers don’t appreciate the connection I made between U.S. colonialism in Latin America and what is happening in Gaza, in Latin American protests against the continuing massacre of people in Gaza, the connections are being made.

The Colombian blog Equinoxio has some images and audio from a march on Tuesday in the capital city of Bogotá.
3174336081_edfee4c9fb.jpg

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Afro-Colombians being evicted and displaced in Colombia

1:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia · Comments Off

23 Dec 2008

mbiaevictions.jpg The BBC has a devastating story of how Afro-Colombian’s are treated in Colombia–namely massive evictions and displacements to make room for palm oil plantations:

Take Yajaira, a slender 18-year-old, one of four children whose family was displaced from a settlement in the Cacarica river basin just south of Colombia’s border with Panama.

She misses her place of origin deeply.

“My home was surrounded by banana and mango trees, and coconut palms,” she recalls, fingering a bracelet she wears made of seeds and feathers gathered in tropical forests.

“We used to bathe and fish in a nearby stream.”

According to the BBC, many (of not most or all) of the displaced peoples wind up in shanty towns–which of course–are not surrounded by trees and streams that are clean enough to fish and bathe in. Does race have anything to do with the evictions? According to one of the displaced people, “We are displaced, we are black and we are poor.”

So, in other words, when there’s money to be made through a lucrative business–who cares about a few poor black people who have to move into shanty towns, right?

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Christmas in Latin America via Commercials

10:57 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Latin America|Marketing|TV · Comments Off

23 Dec 2008

In such a consumer-oriented time of year, Christmas, what better way to get in touch with Latin American pop culture than through the ads run on television back in the motherland. VL’s been scouring the web to find a few of the best, and I present to you this first installment from Colombia, a Pepsi Christmas commercial with the theme of diversity and acceptance during the holiday season.

Via / YouTube

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46194.jpgColombian president Alvaro Uribe has rejected any help from other countries in negotiating the release of 6 FARC hostages.

“The government will not permit our foreign relations to be put at risk by involving personalities from the international community,”

Specifically Uribe likely meant Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez who was suggested by Colombian senator Piedad Cordoba as possible facilitator.

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farc-2_0.jpgYesterday the FARC announced via a news agency that they were set to release 6 hostages, two politicians and four members of the Colombian military.

The politicians are Alan Jara, governor of Meta province until he was abducted in 2000, and former deputy Sigifredo Lopez, kidnapped in 2002.

No release date has been announced.

The FARC also updated their official website, saying among other things, that U.S. President Elect wouldn’t live up to expectations.

Via/ France 24 y FARC Website

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ingrid-betancourt.jpgOn Al Punto with Jorge Ramos this morning on Univision, there was an interview with former FARC hostage and one time Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt. Five months after her release, Betancourt said the FARC was struggling to survive in Colombia and that there have been orders to recapture her, which is why she lives in Paris, France, where she is also a citizen.

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Colombia’s Victories Against Guerrillas Don’t Add Up

11:29 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia · Comments Off

16 Dec 2008

escudo_colombia.jpgWith 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.

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Ingrid Betancourt Deals with Life after Captivity

2:53 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia · Comments Off

5 Dec 2008

betancourt.jpgFrom the AP we get an update on Ingrid Betancourt, the former Colombian politician, FARC captive and current anti-kidnapping advocate. It’s news that really makes me very sad:

Ingrid Betancourt told The Associated Press that she is constantly revisiting in her mind her fateful February 2002 decision to rush recklessly into rebel-controlled territory unprotected — a move that led to her abduction and six years of captivity in Colombia’s jungle.

Now, she doesn’t appear in public without a detailed security plan. Death threats — which she wouldn’t describe — and safety concerns prevented her from joining in marches held against kidnapping Friday across Colombia.

As a woman, seeing another woman in such pain and fear is really a horrible thing to witness–even worse is seeing how the violence and trauma she’s been subjected to seem to have ‘taught her a lesson’ (aka knocked her down a peg or two, shown her who’s boss, etc). She understands now, what happens to uppity women who have the audacity to think that they have unrestricted free movement. They are raped, almost starved to death and denied access to their family for years.

Don’t get me wrong–I am not saying that Betancourt should ignore her security detail and go running around the country again. I myself would do the same thing she is now doing, and never would’ve gone into the places she insisted on going into. But I would’ve made my choices based on the same fear that’s she’s now dealing with, not because I was ‘smart.’

And it makes me sad to see how women who don’t carry a permanent fear of physical retribution in their souls are punished until they do.

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image-of-cocaine.jpgSince being green is in, the Colombian government is trying to appeal to the environmentalist side of the British cocaine users by telling them how bad the stuff is for the environment.

These people, who have good jobs and drive a hybrid car or cycle to work because they care about the environment, may go to party and do some lines of coke and they are thinking it is no problem,” Francisco Santos told The Associated Press Tuesday. “They are absolutely unaware of the ecological impact of their drug taking and we want to change that.”

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