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Posts Tagged ‘Luis Fortuno

Here’s your chance NYC Ricans and those that love us. Today there will be a rally in front of 26 Federal Plaza, Downtown Manhattan, where the Army Corps of Engineers has an office. The rally will be a show of solidarity and unity against the way the proposed Gasoducto is being pushed on the people of Puerto Rico.

Thursday, June 9 · 12:00pm – 1:30pm
26 Federal Plaza (on Broadway between Worth and Duane Streets)

From the organizers:

On Thursday, June 9, 2011 at 12 pm in front of 26 Federal Plaza, local Puerto Rican leaders, activists and supporters of the Puerto Rican people and the environment, including the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights-NYC Chapter, Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, Union Theological Seminary, Greater NY Labor-Religion Coalition, East Harlem Preservation, and Lafayette Presbyterian Church, will rally and demand that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers deny the permit requested by the PR Electric Power Authority (PREPA) in which they propose to construct a dangerous natural gas pipeline over 92 miles long.

The gathering will take place just days before the National Puerto Rican Parade which has been dedicated to the natural environment of Puerto Rico. Ironically, it’s a natural environment that is threatened by this costly, unnecessary and destructive project.

Public opposition to the project is strong. Polls indicate that 70% of the citizens of Puerto Rico oppose the construction of the pipeline (El Nuevo Día – March 2011). On May 1, 2011, over 30,000 people marched together to protest the ‘Vía Verde’ gas pipeline. Different sectors of Puerto Rican society have manifested their opposition to this project, including Casa Pueblo in Adjuntas (which has been invited to participate in the parade), church groups, cultural organizations, academics, labor unions, community groups, and Puerto Rican citizens in the U.S. mainland

Recently all documentation pertinent to the evaluation of the natural gas pipeline project was transferred to US Army Corps of Engineers Offices in Florida. This disingenuous act represents yet another step to hide from public scrutiny and avoid an open and transparent public discussion of the projects merits and costs.

The Puerto Rico Electric and Power Authority (PREPA) proposes to construct and install a 24-inch diameter steel gas pipeline approximately 92 miles long with a construction right-of way of 150 feet wide. The pipeline will transverse Puerto Rico from the EcoEléctrica Liquid Natural Gas Terminal to the northern thermoelectric power plants that only produces 20% of the total electric energy of the island.

To avoid compliance with basic regulatory standards and ignore procedural safeguards for the construction of such a high-risk project, the governor of Puerto Rico, Luis Fortuño, declared a state of energy emergency designed to maintain secrecy, fast-track the permit process and thwart full public participation in the discussion of the project. The implications of this proposal for the future of Puerto Rico are too detrimental to accept. We need to break the dependency on fossil fuels while promoting economic development of the island with self-sustaining resources.

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Gracias to Andres, my ‘hood vecino of Blabbeando, for tweeting last night information about the latest assault on Latinidad using the wombs of some Latin@s (not all Latinas have wombs not all wombs belong to women). Following in the footsteps of ads targeting African-American and black communities that claimed that abortion access amounted to eugenics, now the Latino Partnership for Conservative Values is getting in on the game, sponsoring a billboard with the above image saying “The Most Dangerous Place for a Latino is in the womb.” in English and Spanish.

The ads, which allegedly are slated to go up around Los Angeles, are part of a wider anti-access campaign claiming that Latin@s get more abortions than others and that this is the big problem because it seeks to erase us On the Board of the org behind the ads are novela actors Eduardo Verastegui and Karyme Lozano, as well as Puerto Rico’s governor Luis Fortuño.

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I have seen alot more coverage of the struggle against the dam in Aysen, Chile than I have about another potentially environmentally devastating project in the Latin America that is the U.S., Puerto Rico.

Via Verde or Via de la Muerte, depending on who you ask, is a gas pipeline being pushed by the government of Luis Fortuño in Puerto Rico. The Gasoducto project would run through delicate ecosystems as well as through sacred Indigenous Taino areas. On May 1st, thousands marched in Puerto Rico to protest the way the project is being pushed through without transparency or input from the people of Puerto Rico.

Here is Congressman Luis Gutierrez speaking on the issue:

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For those of you who have asked for images from last night’s NYC rally against Puerto Rican Governor Luis Fortuño, Shameel Arafin has a set of images taken last night here on Flickr (thanks Shameel!).

Gracias as well to David Galarza Santa who has a great set of images over on Facebook, Check them out here.

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While students and others in Puerto Rico are being assaulted in Puerto Rico over $800 and really much more, Puerto Rico’s Gov. thought a feast in NYC would be a great idea. Except the large Rican population here has other plans.

This came in my various inboxes and via Facebook:

Time Wednesday, March 23 · 4:30pm – 7:00pm

——————————————————————
Location THE NEW YORK ATHLETIC CLUB
180 CENTRAL PARK SOUTH (59th St. & 7th Ave. – R train to 57th St)
——————————————————————

Long before Wisconsin’s right-wing republican governor, Scott Walker,
there was Luis Fortuño, the right-wing, conservative, republican
governor of the U.S. colony of Puerto Rico where over 50% of its 4
million people live below the poverty line.
Under his reign of terror, Fortuño and his party-controlled
legislature and courts have/are:

• Systematically eliminated collective bargaining rights for workers
• Fired up to 30,000 public sector workers
• Privatized or attempted to privatize numerous public agencies and
services
• Attempted to privatize public education including the University
of Puerto Rico and have outlawed the independent teacher’s union
• Imposed a financial hardship on thousands of students struggling
to gain a higher education
• Militarized public college campuses and have used police and shock
troops to violently end peaceful demonstrations while also sexually
assaulting female students
• Been condemned by the ACLU and amnesty international for
repeatedly violating the human, civil and constitutional rights of
thousands of workers, students and journalists and their supporters
• Privatized huge swaths of valuable and ecologically sensitive
public lands and sold them off to private developers
• In the wake of the Japanese nuclear disaster, are attempting to
build an expensive, unnecessary, and extremely hazardous gas pipeline
through the heart of the island which will destroy thousands of acres
of sensitive woodland and imperil the lives of untold numbers of
residents along the pipeline

Gov. Fortuño has the complete and unequivocal support of the tea
party, the conservative PAC (where he spoke recently) and the racist
John Birch society (where he also spoke). The Wall Street Journal in
an op-ed headlined “Puerto Rico’s governor channels Ronald Reagan:
Move Over, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. You’ve got a tax-cutting,
pro-growth competitor who may be even bolder than you. His name is
Luis Fortuño and he is the governor of Puerto Rico, a place that, if
you can believe it, is in worse shape than the garden state.”

Let’s show Fortuño that we all condemn his administration’s attack on
the good people of Puerto Rico and we stand in solidarity with those
fighting for justice in all its forms!

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I hate to be the mean one, really (ok maybe not) but reading the outrage over the lack of mainstream media coverage over the masive pro-union, pro-worker, pro-gente rally in Wisconsin yesterday again had me thinking about Puerto Rico, also part of the United States. Anti-union, anti-worker, and anti-gente moves by a Governor who would be/could be a “tea party” poster child, and his administration, have been largely ignored in the U.S. media and even in the independent “progressive” media.

One of the latest actions was the firing of the entire leadership (11 people) of the Puerto Rican Teachers Federation (FMPR) from their teaching positions by Puerto Rican Education Secretary Jesús Rivera Sánchez. The union’s president, Rafael Feliciano, together with the ten other dismissed leaders, had their teaching licenses permanently revoked, blocking them from exercising their profession in public and private systems.

The FMPR is an independent democratic social justice justice union that has defied their version of the repressive Taylor Law (Law 45) and have had successful strikes and continuously organizes walk-outs with parents, students and communities against the horrible school conditions.

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The police have officially returned to the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras on the orders of Governor Luis Fortuño. This is the regular police, who according to William Ramirez of the Puerto Rican ACLU, have actually never left the campus.

According to El Nuevo Dia, the riot police have not been called to campus but remain on alert and nearby in case, according to Fortuño, “A violent group tries to bring violence and intolerance to the University”.

There were incidents of violence on campus yesterday due to some students blocking at least one entrance to the campus as part of a a strike action. The incident that I witnessed via video was a professor physically attacking students blocking the entrance and students responding in self-defense. The governor has called the student strike a “dictatorship”.

The violence of the police against the student protesters is the focus of close scrutiny of the Puerto Rican ACLU which released a report calling the situation a human rights crisis (PDF file).

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NYC Rally for Puerto Rico: Tues 12/14

8:17 am By Maegan La Mala · Education|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off

13 Dec 2010

Last week, we told you about the student strike in Puerto Rico. Things have gotten more tense with the police taking over campuses in the name of “order”.

Across the United States, Puerto Ricans have expressed their concern over the treatment of the students and over the lack of English language coverage. In Puerto Rico, this past weekend, there was a march in rally in support of the UPR, demanding that talks over the increase in fees, between the University Administration and the students, resume.

Tomorrow, Tuesday, there will be a rally in NYC in support of the people of the island and against the actions of the Puerto Rican colonial government.

The people of Puerto Rico are under siege by the Colonial Administration headed by governor Luis Fortuno. Join us in supporting the people as they struggle to safeguard the right of our youth to education in the University of Puerto Rico, protect public sector jobs and the services they provide. Join us in supporting those on the island who are standing up to defend their democratic and human rights and our culture. Join the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights (NCPRR) N.Y.C. Chapter and support the people in struggle in Puerto Rico.

Support the People of Puerto Rico: Rally
Tuesday, December 14, 2010 – 5:30pm
Location:
Office of Puerto Rican Affairs, 135 W 50th St New York City
Contact:
panama.alba@gmail.com [2], 917 626 5847
TUESDAY DEC. 14th 5:30 p.m.
RALLY AT THE OFFICE OF PUERTO RICAN AFFAIRS
135 W 50th St New York City
#1 train to 50 St. (at Broadway); B, D, F, M to 47-50 St./Rockefeller Ctr.; N, R, Q to 49 St. (at 7th Av.); B, D, E to 7 Ave. (at 53rd St.); C (not A) to 50 St.(at 8th Av.);
map http://is.gd/iCV6M-/

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On Friday, I was live on Mega TV News , discussing some of the problems with having an investigation led by people hand picked by Gov. Luis Fortuño as to what went down against student protesters and the media outside the Puerto Rican Capital on June 30th. I believe my exact quote was:

” If Fortuño wants Puerto Rico to be a state so badly then he should have no problem with the Federal government investigating his police force”

Indeed this weekend, testimony began to come out from the students and others who were outside the Capitolio on June 30th. An ad-hoc commission at the Puerto Rican Bar Association heard testimony that pointed to the brutality of the island police force, brutality that can be seen as a continuation of the actions against students in Puerto Rico during their two month long strike.

From the Puerto Rico Daily Sun:

Elvin Reyes Meléndez, a 21-year old student at the University of Puerto Rico in Humacao was affected by pepper spray used by the riot squad to break up the demonstrators. “After 20 minutes, I saw wounded people stretched out on the ground, covered in blood and breathing with difficulty,” said the student who participated in the demonstrations convened by the National Confederation of University Campuses.
“What was not captured on film was how tear gas was shot from a helicopter and how more than 25 police, gestured for us to approach them so they could yell obscenities at us,” he said.

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While the student strikes on Puerto Rico may be officially over, the budget problems that brought on the strike continue and student demands to be included in a legislative process that impacts their future have been met by state sponsored violence.

Last Wednesday, June 30th, students went to el Capitolio, Puerto Rico’s legislative building to observe and be a part of budget hearings, a right guaranteed by the island’s constitution. Instead of being welcomed to take part in the democratic process, island police attacked the students using batons, pepper spray, mace and tear gas. Some journalists were also attacked as they covered the story.

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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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