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Posts Tagged ‘Colombia

safeworkerssafejobs.jpgRemember how we all felt so good that Obama recognized that Colombian union leaders were getting murdered by corporations and stated as such during the debates? Remember how the Colombian organization, Association of Indigenous Couincils, wrote their letter to Obama detailing their lives and what they’d like to see happen under an Obama presidency?

Well, now we have President Bush’s response to their reality:

Bush said he would back demands for an auto industry bailout if Democrats support the stalled “free trade” deal with Colombia. Congressional Democrats have held up the deal over human rights concerns. Obama cited the repeated killings of Colombian union leaders during his final debate with John McCain last month. Democrats want to use some of the $700 billion in bailout money for major car companies like General Motors.

Basically, what this boils down to is if people in my community wants jobs, we must sign on to the murder of fellow workers down in Colombia. I vote an emphatic no on that choice. I hope that the unions in my area stick to their pre-election guns and recognize the blatant violent racism they will be participating in if they too, do not reject such a compromise.

via Democracy Now!

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art_piendamo_ap.jpgOne of areas of concern with the Obama presidency (and any presidency really) is policy towards Latin America. During a pre-election debate, Barack Obama made a clear point about one of the reasons he did not support the Colombian Free Trade agreement, the violence against workers. The Association of Indigenous Councils of Northern Cauca, ACIN, were appreciative of Obama’s position, but wanted to shed light on their specific struggle and the struggles of other Native peoples in Colombia. So they, like so many others are doing, sent a letter to the President-Elect. From the letter released yesterday:

First, please accept our sincerest congratulations. We congratulate you for having won because of the noblest aspirations of your people. We believe your election expresses the deep desire for change felt by the majority of the American people: change in the economy and society, change in international relations, and from there, we hope, a change in the relation between the United States of America and the indigenous peoples of the world.

During your historic campaign, you publicly noted some of what Colombians currently face: you acknowledged the murders of trade unionists by the regime and stated your reservations about a Free Trade Agreement with Colombia, which our people have decided against through a democratic referendum, about which we have written before. We thank you for this, and now want you to know about the specific situation facing Colombia’s indigenous peoples.

In the past six years we have lost 1,200 people to assassinations by armed groups, both legal and illegal: right-wing paramilitaries, guerrillas, police, and members of the Armed Forces. These murders have created insecurity, and this insecurity has been used to strip us of our rights with what we call the ‘Laws of Disposession’, legislation and other institutional norms that legalize the loss of our lands, our fundamental freedoms, and our rights. These ‘Laws of Disposession’ dispose of Colombia’s mines, hydrocarbons, water resources, intellectual property, and national parks – all of these are brought under the ultimate rule of the Free Trade Agreement with the US. The FTA will mean that if Colombia tries to change the laws to allow its people to share in its resources, or take any independent action, then we will be obliged to compensate investors. We will have to submit our laws to international arbitration outside our own legal jurisdiction.

Read the entire letter after the jump. Hopefully Obama and his team will read it as well.

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Last night’s debate had more talk about Latin America than I can remember coming from the candidates in a long time, or ever really. It takes alot to impress me, pero I was extremely impressed when in response to John McCain’s praise of U.S. relations and free trade agreements with Colombia, Obama mentioned the execution of labor activists.

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Martes Musica : Direct from Colombia Monareta

2:03 pm By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|Music · Comments Off

7 Oct 2008

DSC_0287Today, directo de Bogota, Colombia, Monareta drops their latest, Picotero, on planeta earth via Nacional Records.

The duo, made up of composer, producer and vocalist Andres Martinez and keyboardist Camilo Sanabria, bring cumbia and dub beats together with an electroshock treatment to make you wanna shake your culo and everything else while you’re at it.

Picotero is Monareta’s debut physical album, having already released two digital releases under the same label.

Si quieres un sneak listen before you buy (and yes you will wanna buy this album) visit their page at Nacional’s site

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ingrid_betancourt.jpgDuring Ingrid Betancourt’s 4 day visit in Rome, she met with the pope, and she made what some would call stunning statements as to the role her once captors, the FARC, should play in Colombia.

Addressing her kidnappers directly, she said: “After almost seven years, I can say I know you, I know your organisation, your ideas, your objectives.” The world, she said, is inviting them to open their hearts “to something more than political and military calculations,” and to “make room for peace in your minds.”

And peace can come only “through the way of democracy, mutual respect and law,” she said. She asked the Colombian government to recognise the political role of the FARC, “knowing that we are different, and have different ideas.”

Via / IPS and Reader Patrick Mac Manus

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wg-colombia-748-400x300.gifEarly this morning, a car bomb exploded in the Colombian city of Cali, killing four people. The explosion took place near local courts according to news reports.

While no one has claimed credit for the attacks, the Colombian government was quick to point the finger at the FARC and the mainstream U.S. media is quick to remind everyone that Cali has a reputation for drug related violence.

Via / Reuters

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We hear a lot of talk about big countries like the U.S. offering aid to neighbors and other countries of interest, but I always raise an eyebrow when I hear these reports. We are supposedly “helping” Irag, remember? But when a small, poor country extends a helping hand to neighbors there is something significant in the act. Ecuador, a nation which has seen its share of hard times and has in turn seen a large exodus of its citizens, has announced that it will now return that favor to Colombian refugees living on the border of the two South American countries. Reports Venezuela’s El Universal:

The government will initiate in September a program to grant formal refugee status to some 50,000 Colombians living in the border zone, nearly three times the number currently registered, announced Chancellor María Isabel Salvador on Wednesday.

The “Colombian refugees registered are currently 18,000 but we will extend refugee status to at least 50,000 more.”

The Chancellor told reporters that “Ecuador is a country that looks to help everyone”, and from the statistics it looks like that’s a philosophy they are actually living by. El Universal reports that Ecuador has taken in more Colombian refugees fleeing the armed conflict than any other in the hemisphere.

Via / El Universal

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Shakira and Colombia’s President Uribe Toast to Peace con Refajo

9:58 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|history · Comments Off

21 Jul 2008

Ok so no one saw the two actually drinking Colombiana with beer. I was drinking refajo as the President of Colombia and Shakira celebrated Colombian independence and called for an end to the cycle of violence in their country.

Shakira and Uribe are joined by Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva and Peruvian President Alan Garcia. Eleven of the hostages that were rescued together with Ingrid Betancourt were also present in Leticia.

The Colombian pop idol called on guerrillas, who still are involved in a war against the government to demobilize and work with the government towards peace.

Later she performed together with fellow Colombian singer Carlos Vives. Hundreds of thousands of people were visiting the border concert.

Via / Colombia Reports

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ALeqM5j9uTJRsm-28MXcmUoL2G4N_QYt3Q.jpgThe headline is an understatement. Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Colombian cities (video after the jump) and towns — as well as in other countries– on Sunday to protest the continuing captivity of FARC hostages.

Recently freed FARC hostage Ingrid Betancourt — the causa célebre‘s celebrity — was on hand for the protest in Paris along with a bunch of other celebrities of the Latino farándula:

In Paris, Betancourt led chants of “No more hostages!” as she addressed a crowd of several thousand people who came to watch artists perform in a square across the river Seine from the Eiffel Tower.

Colombian star Juanes, Spain’s Miguel Bose, and French artists Renan Luce and Michel Delpech were among the singers playing at the concert.

At Betancourt’s side was the socialist Bertrand Delanoe, who told the crowd: “Our duty is to continue fighting for the liberation of all hostages in Colombia.”

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Is Newly Liberated Ingrid Betancourt Getting Ready for Politics Again?

10:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|Politics · Comments Off

3 Jul 2008

Newly liberated former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt describes the Colombian military operation that freed her. But also note her politician side coming out. She throws flowers at the Colombian military saying that they will lead Colombia to peace (an army leading a country to peace?) and also how she praises the Israeli military.

Other news reports show Betancourt thanking President Alvaro Uribe (who was once her rival and whom she linked to paramilitaries during her own campaign). She also thanks Latin American Presidents like Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Ecuador’s Rafael Correa, but said that they need to respect Colombian democracy.

Later today, Betancourt will be reunited with her children.

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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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