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
8:58 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Immigration · 3 Comments
11 Feb 2011Late 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
12:02 pm By Maegan La Mala · Colombia · 8 Comments
11 Jul 2010Edited 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’.”
3:05 pm By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Controversia|holidays|Media|Russia · 5 Comments
4 Jul 2010It 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.
8:16 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Energy|Environment|Labor · 2 Comments
8 Jun 2010The 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.
8:48 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Music · Comments Off
2 Mar 2010The 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
10:04 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Venezuela · 14 Comments
30 Dec 2009There has been much attention paid to the President Obama’s foreign policy with the Middle East and parts of Asia which makes sense given that the U.S. in involved in two wars there. Pero, I think that the mainstream media has been sleeping on what is going on in Latin America. The focus on Latin America in the media has been usually limited to the immigration issue (which regular readers know is an extremely important issue to me). What is being ignored is the continuance of Bush policies when it comes to Colombia and Venezuela.
It should be no secret that Colombia’s President Alvaro Uribe is a friend of the U.S while Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez is considered crazy at best and dangerous at worse. Plan Colombia has allowed the U.S nearly unfettered access in Colombia all in the name of the war on drugs and now the war on terror.
Two weeks ago, President Chavez reported on his weekly radio and television show that unmanned U.S. aircrafts, drones, illegally entered Venezuela’s airspace. Not surprisingly, these entries occurred in parts of the country that border with Colombia.
Simple accident?
Read more…
6:27 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina|Colombia|crime|Drugs|Latin America|mexico|military|Politics|Violence · 2 Comments
28 Aug 2009
Two Latin American countries recently have made moves to decriminalize the possession of certain drugs for personal use, a move that some are touting as a positive new direction in the “war on drugs”.
Argentina’s Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that it is unconstitutional to prosecute cases involving personal marijuana use as long as it does not harm others. It did not, however, set a weight limit for what it considers personal use.
The judges’ decision urges the Argentine government to “create policies against illegal drug trafficking and adopt preventive health measures, with information and education against drug consumption directed at the most vulnerable groups.
And in Mexico:
Under the new law, a police search that turns up a half-gram of cocaine, the equivalent of about four lines, will not bring any jail time. The same applies for 5 grams of marijuana (about four cigarettes), 50 milligrams of heroin, 40 milligrams of methamphetamine or 0.015 milligrams of LSD.
7:51 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Immigration|Latin America|mexico|military|military interventions · 1 Comment
17 Aug 2009I am working on an in depth post on how the issue of immigration was flowing through the Netroots Nation conference, pero it’s important to recognize that the way the United States chooses to “deal”/interact with Latin American countries is related to how the U.S. chooses to “deal”/interact with those who come from Latin America and their descendents.
This past weekend, the Colombian government announced that it had reached an agreement with the U.S. that allows the US military to move inside the country to tackle drug-trafficking and terrorism. Seven Colombian military bases will now become de facto U.S. military bases. Understandably, other countries in Latin America are none too pleased to have the grand gringo army within close shooting distance, and I’m not just talking about countries who are painted as far-left like Venezuela. I’m talking Argentina and Brazil as well.
We have already seen in Colombia and closer in Mexico, that U.S. intervention and support and presence in countries whose armed forces are already abusing their populations, creates (surprise!) more abuse. Then when gente trying to survive, attempt to escape that abuse, they are denied asylum/protection. For those that do make it through outside the “accepted” model, they have to live in fear either as shadows in first world countries like the U.S. and Canada, or inside detention centers.
The U.S. government, as usual, wants to have it both ways. They want to name something a war and bring war’s violence on populations, pero they are unwilling to deal with the casualties of war. The U.S. is pumping billions of dollars into Mexico on down through Central and South America. Perhaps a better way to look at this war in drugs is as an extension of the Bush war on (of) terror. You know, that whole fighting them there so we don’t have to fight them here, except it seems that the targets, are potential brown migrants.
8:51 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Politics|Venezuela · 1 Comment
29 Jul 2009
President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela announced on Venezuelan TV that Venezuela is withdrawing its ambassador from neighboring Colombia, freezing relations including halting trade deals with Colombia.
The announcement came a day after the Colombia government said weapons bought by Venezuela from Sweden in the 1980s had ended up with Colombian guerrillas.
Mr Chavez denied this and accused Colombia of acting “irresponsibly”.
What’s the U.S. got to do with it? According to Chavez (and many others), plenty.
Read more…
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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