Archive for the ‘Blog Talk Radio’ Category

VIDEO Chavez celebrates 11th anniversary by firing tear gas at peaceful demonstrators: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Friday, February 5th, 2010

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern,

jornada04-71

Globovision video report of the demonstration, where Caracas’s Metropolitan Police fired tear gas, water cannon, and rubber bullets at students who were demonstrating for civil rights:

The gutsy woman reporter was in the middle of the whole thing and even continued to report after she and her cameraman donned gas masks.

As I explained in yesterday’s podcast, the students were heading to the National Assembly to demand the right of freedom of speech.

Chavez’s other celebrations included a large rally of his red-shirted followers, and a military parade.

Related reading:
Venezuelan police break up anti-Chavez protest

Venezuelan Engineers’ Association warns against serious energy crisis

Anti-Americanism and the Haiti earthquake: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern, America gets blamed for everything.

Related reading:
U.S. Troops Pour Into Haiti on Aid Mission
Aid to Haiti Speeds Up, but Delays Plague Effort

VIDEO: Haitians Bury Their Dead in Mass Grave

Jake Tapper picks up the scent of Chavez’s sulfur

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Last Friday I translated and posted Hugo Chavez’s video (in Spanish) where he says Obama smells of sulfur, during his speech at the Copenhagen Climate Summit,

Vlad Tepes subtitled the video with my translation and posted it on YouTube.

The media, which made a huge fuss over the times that Chavez said that GW Bush smelled of sulfur, has ignored Chavez’s insult to Obama.

About the only one who hasn’t is Jake Tapper, who posted my subtitled video,
At Copenhagen, Chávez Suggests Obama is the Devil and posted my translation.

I wish Jake would have linked to my post particularly since I specifically request it because this is a professional translation, but looking at the bright side, the subtitled YouTube has had over 11,000 viewings – so I appreciate that he picked up the YouTube.

I’ll be talking about this and other news in today’s podcast at 11AM. The Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean will be up later this afternoon.

Chile’s new prosperity: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern,
Joining the developed countries, In Chile, many are optimistic that prosperity is coming

This week, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a club of rich nations that includes the United States, Japan and several European countries, formally invited Chile to join. Becoming the first South American nation in the 30-member group would be among the tangible signs of Chile’s steady rise since the 1980s, when it was in the grip of dictatorship.

“It’s a recognition of all the good things we’ve done,” Andrés Velasco, Chile’s finance minister, said in an interview last week.

Such a transition from developing to developed country last happened more than a generation ago — think Ireland and South Korea. No one is exactly sure of the timing for Chile. But economists say this country of 17 million will become the first Latin American country to switch categories sometime in the next decade.

Chile has posted Latin America’s fastest economic growth over a generation, and poverty has dropped from 45 percent before the demise of Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s government to a regional low of 14 percent today. But Giugale and other economists say Chile has advanced in areas more difficult to measure, such as strengthening state institutions like the courts and fighting corruption.

Chile also has a stable and robust democracy, ruled since 1990 by a coalition of Socialists and Christian Democrats that unseated Pinochet. The current president, Michelle Bachelet, has a popularity rate hovering at nearly 80 percent.

And though polls show that a conservative opposition businessman, Sebastian Piñera, may win the presidency in a January election, no one expects an overhaul of Chile’s economic system. Piñera, who won a first round of voting Sunday over the ruling coalition candidate, Eduardo Frei, has said he would not reduce government or roll back an extensive social safety net.

Good news from the region, for the region.

Related reading:
Change Chile Can Believe In
With conservative billionaire Sebastian Pinera favored to win the presidency, the South American country is looking forward.

Related posts:
Chile now officially a developed country
Andres Velasco’s plan: Save for a rainy day

The Venezuelan banks takeover: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Monday, December 14th, 2009

In today’s podcast, why is Chavez taking over the banks now?

Related reading:
The Venezuelan banking crisis made simple
Venezuela: Bank Nationalizations
Banking in Venezuela
Fall of the Boligarchs: Hugo Chávez cracks down on allies

Honduran Congress rejects Zelaya’s reinstatement: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern,
The Honduran Congress will not reinstate Mel Zelaya, and what that means to the Obama administration.

Related reading
U.S. `disappointed’ by vote against Zelaya
U.S. officials said they were `disappointed’ with the Honduran congress’ vote against returning former President Manuel Zelaya to office.

Brazil to reconsider stance of not recognizing Honduras’ elections
Honduran Parliament to Obama: Pound sand

Honduras: Porfirio Lobo elected new president

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Porfirio-Lobo-001

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern,
Honduras elects Porfirio Lobo as new president
Rival Elvin Santos concedes defeat as ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, declares vote illegitimate

Profile of Porfirio Lobo (in Spanish).

Electoral map results at El Heraldo.

La Gringa’s election day post.

In other presidential elections in the hemisphere, Uruguay elected a former Tupamaro:
“Pepe” Mujica es el nuevo presidente de Uruguay
Mujica, dirigente histórico de la guerrilla Movimiento de Liberación Nacional-Tupamaros (MLN-T), recibió nueve balazos, estuvo preso en 1970 y participó en una masiva fuga en setiembre de 1971.

UPDATE
Mary O’Grady at the Wall Street Journal:
In Elections, Honduras Defeats Chávez
The tiny country beats back the colonial aspirations of its neighbors.

Mr. Zelaya had already showed his hand when he organized a mob to try to carry out a June 28 popular referendum so that he could cancel the elections and remain in office. That was unlawful, and he was arrested by order of the Supreme Court and later removed from power by Congress for violating the constitution.

It is less well-known that as president, according to an electoral-council official I interviewed in Tegucigalpa two weeks ago, Mr. Zelaya had refused to transfer the budgeted funds—as required by law—to the council for its preparatory work. In other words, he didn’t want a free election.

Mr. Chávez didn’t want one either. During the Zelaya government the country had become a member of Mr. Chávez’s Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA), which includes Cuba, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua. If power changed hands, Honduran membership would be at risk.

Last week a government official told me that Honduran intelligence has learned that Mr. Zelaya had made preparations to welcome all the ALBA presidents to the country the night of his planned June referendum. Food for a 10,000-strong blowout celebration, the official added, was on order.

ALBA has quite a bit of clout at the Organization of American States (OAS) these days, and it hasn’t been hard for Mr. Chávez to control Secretary General José Miguel Insulza. The Chilean socialist desperately wants to be re-elected to his OAS post in 2010. Only a month before Mr. Zelaya was deposed, Mr. Insulza led the effort to lift the OAS membership ban on Cuba. When Mr. Zelaya was deposed, Mr. Insulza dutifully took up his instructions sent from Caracas to quash Honduran sovereignty.

Unfortunately for him, the leftist claims that Honduras could not hold fair elections flew in the face of the facts. First, the candidates were chosen in November 2008 primaries with observers from the OAS, which judged the process to be “transparent and participative.” Second, all the presidential candidates—save one from a small party on the extreme left—wanted the elections to go forward. Third, though Mr. Insulza insisted on calling the removal of Mr. Zelaya a “military coup,” the military had never taken charge of the government. And finally, the independent electoral tribunal, chosen by congress before Mr. Zelaya was removed, was continuing with the steps required to fulfill its constitutional mandate to conduct the vote. In the aftermath of the elections Mr. Insulza, who insisted that the group would not recognize the results, presides over a discredited OAS.

Additionally,

Almost 400 foreign observers from Japan, Europe, Latin America and the U.S. traveled to Honduras for yesterday’s elections. Peru, Costa Rica, Panama, the German parliament and Japan will also recognize the vote. The outpouring of international support demonstrates that Hondurans were never as alone these past five months as they thought. A good part of the world backs their desire to save their democracy from chavismo and to live in liberty.

Ahmadinejad visits Evo and Hugo: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

AjadEvo

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern, Ahmadinejad and his entourage of 200 businessmen visit Bolivia and Venezuela.

Related reading:
Iran’s leader gets backing in friendly Bolivia
Iran, Bolivia agree to cooperate on study of Lithium
Iran’s Ahmadinejad arrives in Venezuela
Venezuela opposition and Jews protest Iran visit

Americans jailed in Cuba while visiting family: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

In today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern,
The curious cases of Americans jailed in Cuba while visiting relatives.

To the bathroom with a flashlight in Caracas: 15 Minutes on Latin America

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Today’s podcast at 11AM Eastern, Plunging the country into rationing water and electricity, Hugo Chavez dishes out advice to the suffering public.

Use the flashlight:

Be a good Communist, take a short shower:

Related reading:
Water Rationing Begins in Caracas, Other Major Venezuelan Cities
Venezuela Rations Water As Power Cuts Loom
Venezuela’s Electricity and Water supply: Not a pretty picture
Chavez busy solving the electricty problem
Chávez sugiere que, para ir al baño de noche, se use linterna y no se prenda la luz