Archive for the ‘Uruguay’ Category

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.

The Nov. 16 Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, November 16th, 2009

LatinAmerWelcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean.

The must-read post of the week: Yoani Sanchez’s Shadow Beings
Update: Related, Cuba’s blogosphere has developed a sharper edge
Cuba’s blogosphere has taken on a decidedly harsher face in recent months, an act of online defiance in the face of government retribution.

ARGENTINA
Las FARC, Chávez, Irán, Bolivia y ¿Argentina?

Argentina-Brazil Trade Spat Threatens Weaker Peso

BRAZIL
Presidential politics in Brazil
Her master’s voice: Dilma Rousseff, Lula’s preferred successor, is a more interesting politician than she appears to be. But would she be different from her boss?

Public morality in Brazil
Hemlines and headlines: Less licentious than it sometimes looks

The Economist’s Special Report on Brazil: Land of promise
Brazil is big, democratic, stable and rich in resources, says Brooke Unger. So why is it not doing a lot better?

COLOMBIA
Venezuela and Colombia
Jaw-jaw war: A hundred years of bombast

Colombia moves to calm tensions with Venezuela

COSTA RICA
Costa Rica Diarist: Democracia

If it’s the weekend, it’s the New York Times

CUBA
Armando Valladares: Castro’s Gulag

Cuba shuts down… Cuba… to save energy.

Fidel Castro’s long goodbye

Scenes from Havana
Money and Cuba policy: cause and effect?

Who Funded the “Public Campaign” Report?


Cuba reporta 63 casos de dengue

Cuba: presos de la Causa de los 75 en estado crítico

Fidel García Roldán, Cuban Political Prisoner of the Week, 11/15/09

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Via Phyllis, Trustee Tries to Cancel The Sugar Babies Screening at the University of Miami

Tonight’s screening of The Sugar Babies at the University of Miami will proceed as scheduled despite enormous pressure from a member of the university’s Board of Trustees. One of the board’s senior trustees is Alfonso Fanjul, who is also the Chairman and CEO of Flo-Sun, Inc., a sugar company featured in the film for its inhumane labor practices, which include employing children to work sugar cane fields in conditions that can best be described as modern-day slavery.

The award-winning, feature-length documentary The Sugar Babies is scheduled to be screened tonight at 7 p.m. as part of the Latin American Film Series organized by the University of Miami Center for Latin American Studies. It will be followed by a question and answer session with filmmaker Amy Serrano. Tomorrow, November 13, Serrano will also lead a round table discussion about the film and the current situation of Haitian laborers in the Dominican Republic.

Dominican diplomats also pressured the university to remove the film from the festival. Edgar Aponte, Dominican Minister Counselor, will be attending the event. Aponte works under Carlos Morales Troncoso, the Dominican Minister of Foreign Affairs, who happens to be the former president and CEO and current shareholder at the Fanjul-owned Central Romana Corporation in the Dominican Republic.

Dominican Republic Makes Major Drug Bust
The president of the National Drug Control agency says the drugs were hidden in a container on a ship bound for Spain. Maj. General Rolando Rosado Mateo says the cocaine had arrived from Venezuela.

ECUADOR
Ecuador’s Amazonians sue Chevron over poison waterways
Tens of thousands of Ecuadoreans living in the Amazon rainforest are suing Chevron, the US oil company, for poisoning their waterways in what is billed as one of the biggest environmental lawsuits in history.


Chevron’s lobbying campaign backfires

EL SALVADOR
Death Toll from El Salvador Floods Rises to 192

HONDURAS
The Cardinal and the Constitution
Cardinal Rodriguez says Manuel Zelaya was removed from power constitutionally.

Honduras shows Latin America’s ’strongman’ is Jim DeMint

DeMint and Honduran Democracy 1 – Obama Administration 0

Investigan lugar desde donde fue lanzado explosivo contra bodegas electorales
No se reportaron daños humanos ni materiales, pero las autoridades trabajan esclarecer el hecho.

Honduras finds alleged drug landing strip

Comment on: “The New Hemispheric Agenda and the Role of Regional and International Organizations”

JAMAICA
Gloomy Jamaica
Unfixable? The burden of debt and crime

MEXICO
Street blockades breed ‘anything-goes’ culture

NICARAGUA
Gobierno de Nicaragua insulta a Holanda, su primer cliente en Europa

Nicaragua Seizes Arms Cache From Mexico Drug Gang

PANAMA
Poor TV Quality this morning

PARAGUAY
Power outages

Venezuelan military presence in Paraguay: Presencia militar secreta de Venezuela en el país ABC

Fuentes castrenses que pidieron el anonimato por razones obvias confirmaron a ABC que el último año ha sido frecuente la llegada sin registro de militares venezolanos, aparentemente para “colaborar” con las Fuerzas Armadas en tareas de inteligencia. La coordinación estaría a cargo del agregado militar de ese país, Oscar Carrizales Pinto, que llamativamente es general, cuando este tipo de puestos habitualmente lo ocupan oficiales de menor rango. Los tripulantes del Hércules que se habrían quedado en el país el jueves no hicieron trámites migratorios.

PERU
Peru and Chile in “Spy” Scandal

PUERTO RICO
Puerto Rico Bonds Beat U.S. States as Fortuno Cuts

URUGUAY
Mujica en crudo

VENEZUELA
Venezuela-Mali-Europe: the cocaine connection

Chock full o’ nuts Chavez: Chavez asking Cubans to ‘bomb clouds’ amid drought

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez says he will join a team of Cuban scientists on flights to “bomb clouds” to create rain amid a severe drought that has aroused public anger due to water and electricity rationing.
Chavez, who has asked Venezuelans to take three-minute showers to save water, said the Cubans had arrived in Venezuela and were preparing to fly specially equipped aircraft above the Orinoco river.
“I’m going in a plane; any cloud that crosses me, I’ll zap it so that it rains,” Chavez said at a ceremony late on Saturday with family members of five Cubans convicted of spying in the United States.

In case you think this came from The Onion, here he is saying it in Spanish, announcing that the Cuban technicians arrived and are ready to bomb the clouds:

Chavez helping the opposition? “elections” at the PSUV

‘Chavismo’ Losing Steam in Venezuela

Chávez dice que se manipularon sus palabras del domingo

Venezuela paves the way to expropriate occupied coffee roasters
The Ministry of Food will allocate USD 6.05 billion to the execution of projects in 2010

AMERICAN POLITICS
Obama as Climate Strongman: Taking the Chavez Adoration a Step Too Far


The Sao Paulo Forum expands to USA

IMMIGRATION
Where two contentious issues intersect
Immigration and health House measure omits Senate panel’s legal test

Special thanks to Dan, Dick, Maggie and Phyllis.

The week’s posts and podcasts
Mexico: Amlo’s pretend government
Brazil’s big blackout: 15 Minutes on Latin America
Blackout in Venezuela: 15 Minutes on Latin America
OAS calls emergency meeting on Honduras

At Real Clear World:
Zelaya: No Part of U.S. Brokered Deal
Chavez Sort-of Backtracks on War Statements

The Honduras agreement Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean.

This week’s big news: the new Honduras agreement. Please see this morning’s roundup on the international reaction, and last Friday’s post. More posts on Honduras below.

LATIN AMERICA
Hacia una visa común latinoamericana

ARGENTINA
Argentina’s debt negotiations: Settling up
The government seeks a deal on its remaining defaulted bonds

BOLIVIA
Hugo Chávez pagó a BTR para armar a la policía antimotines de Evo Morales

BRAZIL
Indígenas del Amazonas salvan a sobrevivientes de un accidente aéreo en Brasil

Saturday guitar

CHILE
Chilean President Rides High as Term Ends

Cinco nuevos proyectos de edificios de oficinas en Santiago Centro.

COLOMBIA
Colombia’s paramilitaries: Militias march again
The “justice and peace” process the Colombian government offered to right-wing paramilitaries is at risk of falling apart

CUBA
Sean Penn’s Cuba odyssey

WHO chief says Fidel Castro ‘looks wonderful’

Obama asked Spain to deliver a message to Raúl about ‘changes,’ newspaper says

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Marriage amendment in DR flies under the radar

HONDURAS
Zelaya advierte que no avalará el Gobierno de Unidad si no es restituido

Republican lawmakers seek probe over Honduras coup

Honduras Is An Opportunity. And the United States shouldn’t squander it. Well, they just did.

George Soros and the Illegal Drug Trade Behind Obama’s Honduras Policy?

MEXICO
Mexico’s Debacle—A Teaching Moment

U.S. put Mexican human rights crusader into forced asylum. Lawyer likens episode at El Paso crossing to ‘Twilight Zone’

NICARAGUA
Constitutional Danger in Nicaragua, Ortega Up to His Old Tricks

The Time Of Tyrants

PANAMA
Panama’s financial industry
Shades of grey: The unfinished job of cleaning up the country’s financial reputation

Exit tax up to $40 next year

PERU
Local soccer hooligans kill young woman in Peru

Jaime Bayly talks about the case (in Spanish)

PUERTO RICO
Quick Work: First Lawsuit Hits Over Friday’s Explosion in P.R.

Descartan terrorismo en incendio de P.Rico
El FBI concluyó que la explosión en Capeco no fue un acto de sabotaje, sino que fue provocado por gases que emanaron de un tanque en el almacén de combustibles de la empresa

URUGUAY
Uruguay: el Frente Amplio conserva la mayoría parlamentaria

VENEZUELA
dollar_toilet-from-chuck-penzi
Reader question, interesting comparisons on the US and Venezuela’s money printing

Venezuela as a narco-state

Interview with Daniel Duquenal of Venezuela News and Views

They all knew about electrical woes for at least 7 years

High Level U.S. Diplomat Meets With Chavez

Socialism in action in Venezuela

AMERICAN POLITICS
Justifying the Prize

This week’s posts
Please note there were no podcasts last week since I had laryngitis.
Trick or treat: The Zelaya costume
Lifestyles of the rich and famous Communists
To hell in a handbasket
Argentina: The war against the media.

Update, 3 November
Welcome, Dodgeblogium readers!

The Olympic Rio Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean. The week’s big story: Rio de Janeiro gets the 2016 Olympics.

In Honduras, a US Senate delegation and a House delegation have visited the country since Friday. The New Republic’s James Kirchick writes on Ousting Zelaya
Is Obama on the wrong side of the Honduran constitutional crisis?

The events of the past several months reveal a lack of consistency in Obama’s approach to various foreign conflicts. How does this administration justify its recognition of results of elections in Pakistan, Iraq, and other countries mired in constitutional disputes, but now refuse to recognize an election in Honduras, even if it is conducted in a free and fair manner? And why give greater diplomatic dignity to the representatives of Iran–who have no legitimacy whatsoever–and not those of democratic Honduras? Even after blatantly stealing the presidential election, the White House referred to Ahmadinejad as the “the elected leader” of Iran (which White House spokesman Robert Gibbs later had to retract).

In the immediate wake of Honduras’s constitutional crisis, it was understandable that the administration, caught by surprise, might jump the gun in its denunciation of the military action as a “coup.” Now, three months later and with legal repudiation from within its own government, U.S. policy has become a mistake in search of a rationale.

ED-AK275_amcol0_D_20091004111149LATIN AMERICA:
Don’t miss Mary O’Grady’s excellent article in today’s WSJ: Revolutionary Anti-Semitism
Chávez imports Ahmadinejad’s ideology to Latin America.

The Honduras debate is not really about Honduras. It is about whether it is possible to stop the spread of chavismo and all it implies, including nuclear proliferation and terrorism in Latin America. Most troubling is the unflinching support for Mr. Zelaya from President Barack Obama and Democratic Sen. John Kerry—despite the Law Library of Congress review that shows that Mr. Zelaya’s removal from office was legal, and the clear evidence that he is Mr. Chávez’s man in Tegucigalpa. On Thursday, Mr. Kerry took the unprecedented step of trying to block a fact-finding mission to Honduras by Republican Sen. Jim DeMint, who is resisting Mr. Obama’s efforts to restore Mr. Zelaya to power.

Otto Reich talking about Honduras, Venezuela and Obama:

ANTIGUA
Did lawyers’ legal advice aid Allen Stanford’s banking empire?

BOLIVIA
Elecciones para consolidar el autoritarismo

BRAZIL
BRICs Insist on Greater Voice at IMF, Brazil’s Mantega Says

CUBA
Reclaiming History

Agustin Cervantes, Cuban Political Prisoner of the Week, 10/4/09

Some details emerge of 2 foiled concerts

ECUADOR
Ecuador’s president: Correa and the golden ponchos
A popular leader faces mounting opposition on both left and right

Funding Evil

GUATEMALA
Guatemala: A Source of Weapons for Mexican Criminals

HONDURAS
For the latest updates with in-country blogging, check out La Gringa. Her latest today: Sorry no refund policy for Zelaya

Kerry’s Banana Politics
Congress: Banana republic politics aren’t just confined to Honduras these days. On Thursday, Sen. John Kerry tried to halt Sen. Jim DeMint’s trip there in a tit-for-tat slap. And he thinks it’s Hondurans who need dialogue?

Zelaya’s Chief Propagandist Endorses Hitler and the Holocaust

Honduras’s power struggle: Cracks within and without
Micheletti overplays his hand

Jim DeMint Criticized for Fact Finding Mission to Honduras by History Revisionist

Is Obama’s Handling of Honduras a View of Our Future?

Eye-Rubbing Hypocrisy of Delahunt & Co.

Democrats and Honduras

Jewish Leaders Outraged Over Obama’s Pal Zelaya’s Anti-Semitic Remarks

MEXICO
Mexico’s troubled oil industry: How many Mexicans does it take to drill an oil well?
More than 140,000, and even then they’re not very good at it. For this, now acute, problem, blame the politicians

PANAMA
Mosto Bistro Again

URUGUAY
Education in Uruguay: Laptops for all
A pioneering project’s chequered start

VENEZUELA
Politics and Prison in Venezuela
Student Protester’s Saga Shines New Light on Chávez’s Approach to Dissent

Only in Venezuela, part 58,271,943

Eva Golinger: US Will Attack Venezuela

VenEconomy: Victory for the Leader…

A surreal holiday

XXIst Century Socialism Union Leaders, race horses included

AMERICAN POLITICS
You can play a great game and still not win,”

IMMIGRATION
Sharp rise in Chinese arrests at U.S. border
At least 261 have been arrested this year trying to cross near Tucson. Illegal Chinese immigrants can be big money for smugglers.

Sophisticated Asian mafias organize intricate journeys to the U.S. A typical route leads from Beijing to Rome to Caracas, Venezuela, to Mexico City to the border, according to Matthew Allen, chief agent of the Phoenix office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Special thanks to the Baron, Dick, El Marco, Eneas, Larwyn, Maggie and Maria.

This week’s posts and podcasts
Rio and the crime problem
DeMint’s trip to Honduras is on; UPDATE: photo from the visit
Kerry’s political blackmail
Lula, Arias, Honduras, and the US: 15 Minutes on Latin America
Newt on Honduras
Is it time to confront Hugo Chavez? 15 Minutes on Latin America
Honduras suspends civil liberties: 15 Minutes on Latin America UPDATE: Micheletti will restore civil liberties
U.S. blasts Zelaya for “foolish” return

And
Welcome, Dodgeblogium readers. Please visit often!

The Guatemalan revolution Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean. If you would like your links included in the next Carnival, please email me.

The top story: The murder of Guatemalan lawyer Rodrigo Rosenberg. Check out the links below, particularly Mary O’Grady’s excellent article on the ProReforma project.

(For posts on Padre Alberto click here)

LATIN AMERICA
Via Dymphna, The growing Afghanization of Latin America

ANTIGUA
Stanford Bank’s Antigua receivers can seek bankruptcy in US

ARGENTINA
¿El principio del fin de la “era K”?

Argentina: Shiny, Happy Jews Brutally Beaten at Street Fair

Argentina’s legislative election
Double or quits: The Kirchners’ electoral gambit

BOLIVIA
Standoff between Evo Morales and media outlets escalates

Bolivian Court Orders Arrest of Fugitive Officials

BRAZIL
Brazil and China eye plan to axe dollar

CARIBBEAN
BBC Caribbean report (audio)

COLOMBIA
Will Uribe change the constitution and run again? The Economist says “yes,” while a member of his cabinet says “no:”
Presidential re-election in Colombia: Uribe edges towards autocracy
A popular president seems to be heading towards a third term, despite the damage this would do to democracy

Tiene la “intuición” de que Uribe no buscará una segunda reelección

CUBA
Wanted: Cambio We Can Believe In

Things are getting better in Cuba

U.S.-Cuba Sanctions: Bitter Pill, Good Medicine

Careful with the spontaneity

ECUADOR
Is the Obama administration condoning Ecuador’s default?

In Ecuador, Resentment of an Oil Company Oozes

Correa and U.S. Democrats Must Quit Claim its Specious Lawsuit, Correctly Called an Extortion Racket, against Chevron Texaco

GUATEMALA
Guatemala murder scandal deepens

President, Murderer, or Both?

Ni familiar, ni amiga, ni complotista… ni apatrida

Finally, a Real Revolution
A civil-society movement emerges in Central America.

HAITI
Bill’s new gig: Clinton to be named UN special envoy on Haiti

MEXICO
Mexican Bank Pays $355,340 Above Cost in Dollar Sale

Mexicans fear America is becoming the land of unemployment not opportunity
In good years, the US runs on Mexicans but the American Dream is losing some of its most devoted fans, says Tom Leonard

PERU
No gay police in Peru

Bolivia estudia demandar a Perú ante La Haya

URUGUAY
Mario Benedetti: Retrato Critico

VENEZUELA
The Chavez bubble: The increasing probability of the country’s default

Chavez Seizes Oil Infrastructure

Pro-Chavez Web site Features Anti-Semitism

Unintelligent Design: Chavez and PDVSA

No more separation of Church and State in Venezuela

Venezuela’s oil industry
Skint: Expropriating accounts payable

Vargas Llosa: “Desde luego que en Venezuela expondré mis ideas”

Radical OPEC members cheat the most

Así, así, así es que se gobierna…

The week’s posts and podcasts
Brazil and China eye plan to axe dollar
Benedetti and the south
Guatemala: The Twitter arrest and the Rosenberg murder
“The rich are not human” and Globovision’s troubles: 15 Minutes on Latin America
Guatemala and the Rosenberg tape
Guatemala: The Rosenberg video
“No progress” at EU-Cuba meeting

At Real Clear World:
Guatemala: The strange case of Rodrigo Rosenberg

Where’s the beef?

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Or perhaps I should ask, Where’s the beef coming from?

My latest post, Of Beef and Money in Uruguay is up at Real Clear World.

UPDATE, Monday 9 February Podcast at 11AM Eastern, and archived for your convenience.

For Sunday carnival goodness, don’t miss Shiny happy dhimmi - #12

The “smells like Bush” day Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, January 19th, 2009

It’s the day before inauguration day, and contrary to some overly optimistic expectations, t Hugo Chavez said on Saturday Barack Obama had the “stench” of his predecessor as U.S. president. While here in the USA “To trash Bush was to belong,” the trend continues with Chavez and his minions. The carnival goes on!

In today’s podcast I’ll be talking about Pres. Bush’s legacy in Colombia. Chat’s open at 10:45AM.

LATIN AMERICA
“Lula marcó distancia ante la posición de Chávez” Lula distances himself from Chavez’s position; Hillary and Obama aren’t happy about Chavez’s anti-Americanism, and other brief news today at Noticias24.

ARGENTINA
Argentine President Urges Consumers to Keep Spending while Cristina Fernandez visits Cuba

A U.S. Court’s Threatening Ruling

Enrique Dumas, Who Took Tango to Television in Argentina, Dies

BOLIVIA
Oliver Stone entrevista a Evo Morales en La Paz

Book Review: “Los planes A y B de Evo Morales” de Paul Coca – Juventud y Analisis

BRAZIL
Brazilian church roof collapses

Iran wants Brazil’s support for trying Israeli leaders as war criminals

Ex- terrorist gets asylum in Brazil

Italy’s Foreign Min Blasts Brazilian Decision On Fugitive

Brazil’s army: But what is it for? A philosopher redesigns an army

COLOMBIA
Uribe’s Voice: Transcript of a Call

CUBA
Another flare-up of Castro’s death rumors Signs keep adding up, while Fidel still active, Chávez now says yet Report: Fidel Castro in a coma

Come and live it

“Che” Director Has an Eerie Feeling. Wonder Why?

Medvedev hails renewed ties with Cuba

ECUADOR
Ecuador vows partial bond buy-back

GUYANA
Libya to establish People’s Bureau in Guyana

MEXICO
Thick-billed Parrot: Mexico and beyond…?

They Kidnap Americans Don’t They?

What If Mexico Loses Its Drug War?

Anarchy in Mexico

NICARAGUA
Bad news out of Managua, the Pacto lives on

PANAMA
Cocaine plane trail is open challenge for Obama administration

PARAGUAY
Fundacion Libertad contra el monopolio de internet

PUERTO RICO
University of Puerto Rico begins new environmental education programme

Separatist? PBS Can’t Call a Terrorist a Terrorist

URUGUAY
Uruguay Minister Posts Photos of Her Taking Shower on FaceBook

VENEZUELA
Chavez to swipe US$ 12 billion in international reserves for his personal use

Chavez dysfunctional reality

Venezuela’s Chavez takes stock

Chavez turns into Palestinian hero

Kuwaiti MP calls to move Arab League to Caracas
Waleed al-Tabtabai says Venezuelan President has proved he is more Arab than some Arabs.

Chavez – a worse threat than bin Laden?

Hugo Crawls Back

Chavez ‘part of evil side of politics’

Chavez Chagrined: Will Oil Companies Return to Venezuela?

Hey, what’s one little Order of Magnitude between friends?

Venezuela’s indigenous people: A promise unkept. Indigenous Venezuelans get welfare but, so far, not much land

ENTERTAINMENT
Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse

US POLITICS
Did Barack Obama promise Mexico’s president he would open the borders?

Chavez to Assess Obama’s Policies Before Reaching Out

Obama’s Hispanic Agenda

Special thanks to Ada, the Baron, Eneas, Larwyn and Maggie.

The week’s posts and podcasts:
Eeet steeenks…
Today’s 15 Minutes on Latin America, at 11AM Eastern: Chavez wants the oil companies back
A name from the past: Noriega
Begging after biting the hand that feeds him
Today at 11AM Eastern: That military report on Mexico
“U.S. military report warns ’sudden collapse’ of Mexico is possible”
Pres. Bush honors Tony Blair, John Howard and Alvaro Uribe
Today’s 15 Minutes on Latin America: Venezuela’s back-door currency devaluation

At Real Clear World Blog:
Venezuela: Can’t Take “No” for an Answer
Venezuela: Currency Depreciation Through Back Door

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The third Monday in November Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean, the weekly roundup of news items and blog posts on the region. If you would like your posts included, please email me: faustaw2 “at” gmail “dot” com.

This week’s big story: The G20 weekend meeting in Washington DC. While Washington commuters had to put up with the traffic jams, and the leaders pledged to work together to restore global growth, that pledge is probably worth the paper it was signed on (since it wasn’t signed on paper), and nothing much else happened. On the bright side, oil is trading in the $56 range.

I’ll be talking about the G-20 in today’s 15 Minutes on Latin America podcast.

LATIN AMERICA
The Latinobarómetro poll
Democracy and the downturn
Latin Americans are standing up for their rights

ARGENTINA
Menem faces court over bomb probe

Decálogo del asaltado

BRAZIL
The Forest Jihad

COLOMBIA
Pelosi Serves Up Colombia To Europe

Last Chance for a Colombia Pact

UPDATE:UAW Won’t Support Colombia Trade Pact For Big-3 Aid

FARC se infiltra en universidades para entrenar a milicianos

Rooting out cocaine production in Colombia

CUBA
To save the ants

Ángel Antonio Blanco Rodríguez, Cuban Political Prisoner of the Week, 11/16/08

From the official Communist party organ, Castro writes a book about Colombia

Via Beltway Blips, Obama faces renewed Russian/Cuban alliance

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominicans charged with organizing fatal journey

ECUADOR
Correa amenaza con incursionar y bombardear territorio de Colombia

Soros’s Narcostate Promotional Team Does Ecuador

JAMAICA
“Driven Life” and others in a dynamic conversation about faith and its impact on the world.
Spurning Europe, Caribbean pushes death penalty

MEXICO
Mexico’s War: The Iraq Next Door

Mexico stock exchange says drug war scaring off IPOs

Criminal insurgency strikes Mexican media

NICARAGUA
How to steal an election
Daniel Ortega sets an ugly precedent

Preliminary thoughts on Nicaragua

U.S. Should Cut Foreign Assistance to Nicaragua

PARAGUAY
Landing on our airstrip

Meeting with other Paraguay bloggers in Paraguay

PERU
The Re-Emergence of the Shining Path: The Criminal-Terrorist Nexus

PUERTO RICO
Puerto Rico to eliminate Electoral Fund in 2009

URUGUAY
Uruguay head vetoes abortion bill

VENEZUELA
On Sunday, Venezuelans will be voting for 23 governors across the country. Mary O’Grady writes about Chávez’s threat to bring out the tanks if people don’t vote for his candidates: Dodd’s ‘Democrat’ Tightens His Grip

Venezuela News and Views has been posting on the elections. Here’s the latest: The Venezuelan 2008 election: update 16 – Holding Margarita

Chavez says Venezuela is moving toward developing nuclear power

The clueless and strange tale of the expelled Venezuelan Diplomats

US POLITICS
The only way is up
After eight years of neglect by Bush, relations between the US and Latin America can only improve under Barack Obama

The NYT has a lame article about how Obama’s athletic abilities make him qualified to discuss foreign policy with the likes of cigar-yielding tyrant Castro (I wonder when was the last time Fidel even saw a baseball) and coca leaf growers’ union leader Evo Morales, For Obama, a Scouting Report on Athletic Heads of State. James Joyner aims, shoots, and scores in his comment on the puff piece.

SCIENCE and EDUCATIONAL
The ‘Secret Jews’ of San Luis Valley

An introduction to Spanish nouns and genders

This week’s posts and podcasts
Today’s 15 Minutes on Latin America: The G-20.

Listen to Faustas blog on internet talk radio

Huge weapons cache on Mexican border drug wars
“What Obama Might Do?”, on Latin America
Postcards from the edge: Sandalistas {heart} Hugo


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The Monday-after-election-day Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean. If you would like your posts included, please email me: faustaw2 “at” gmail “dot” com.

While we were watching the election and its outcome, there were several big stories in the hemisphere:
The most dramatic, by far, was the airplane crash in downtown Mexico City last Tuesday at 7PM during rush hour. The airplane, which was carrying Interior Minister Juan Camilo Mourino, burst into flames. Amazingly, only fourteen people died. While Mexican authorities insist there was no foul play involved, many Mexicans are suspicious, since among the passengers was the country’s former top anti-drug prosecutor Jose Luis Santiago Vasconcelos. Additionally,

The burst of conspiracy-theorizing came from more than the crash alone: Many Mexicans feel their leaders have lied so many times about so many things over the years that it’s hard to believe them, even when they might be telling the truth.

Some of the most significant events in Mexico’s modern history — from the 1968 massacre of demonstrators in Mexico City to the 1994 assassination of presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio — are synonymous with cover-up or farfetched official conclusions.

The long reach of drug gangs has heightened the public’s sense of dark and powerful forces at work beneath the surface, usually in league with crooked police or government officials.

As readers of this blog know, Mexico has been fighting a drug war which has reached a crisis stage at this point.

Two other big stories in the Caribbean: A 3-story school building collapsed in Haiti last Friday, killing 92 people. The BBC has a Slideshow.
Hurricane Paloma, the fifth one this year, hit Cuba. Photos at Noticias24

Another big story that went underreported here in the US: the G-20 meeting in Sao Paolo, which will convene in Washington on Friday

In lighter news, narcissist-Lenninist Hugo Chavez claims that Obama’s victory was gestated in South America. Meanwhile, Hugo took from the Canadians and gave to Russia (see below).

LATIN AMERICA
Iran’s Growing Penetration of the Americas, Courtesy of Latin American Leftist Leaders and Interests

Religion in Latin America
Hola Luther: A holiday that is a cultural milestone

New resource on Latin America: Centroamerica21

Don’t miss also HACER’s excellent roundup of Latin American news, in Spanish.

CARIBBEAN
Caribbean hotel bookings plunge as economy sags

ARGENTINA
A must-read, by Mary O’Grady: Hugo Chávez Spreads the Loot

The exposure of this thuggish behavior of the Venezuelan government is embarrassing enough. What is worse for Mr. Chávez is Mr. Antonini’s testimony that he was told by a PdVSA executive that there was another $4.2 million on the same plane and that there had been other operations to smuggle cash into Argentina for political purposes. Kauffman further testified that the Venezuelan ambassador to Bolivia had told him he had “$100 million to spend on Bolivia.” Kauffman said he had been negotiating the sale of $12 million of antiriot equipment to Bolivia, to be paid for by Venezuela.

CK viaja a EE.UU para participar en la cumbre del G20 Cristina Kirchner travels to the US for the G-20, but will also make stops in Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.

BOLIVIA
Non grata: A tit-for-tat tiff

Evo Morales demands a model against capitalism in Latin America

BRAZIL
Brazil’s Lula calls for shake-up of global finance, which the WaPo phrased a little more delicately: Brazil’s Lula Urges ‘Global Solutions’
G-20 Session Stresses Developing Nations’ Role in Solving Crisis

The credit crunch reaches Brazil, Inc. A big bank merger points to a tougher outlook for the private sector, but at least this time the public finances are not the problem

CHILE
Amnesty Int’l leader criticizes Chile

COLOMBIA
The Paradox of Colombia

CUBA
Via Drudge, HURRICANE PALOMA BECOMES ‘EXTREMELY DANGEROUS’ CATEGORY 4 STORM

Osvaldo Ricardo Díaz Sánchez, Cuban Political Prisoner of the Week, 11/9/08

ECUADOR
Correa’s Ecuador Bars Accountability, Transparency and Demands Dishonest Cartels

FALKLANDS ISLANDS
New Falklands constitution agreed
A new constitution for the Falklands has been agreed which the UK government says will “enhance local democracy” for the south Atlantic islands’ residents.

GUATEMALA
PNC liga a narcos con muerte de 15

HAITI
Death toll climbs to 82 in Haitian school collapse

MEXICO
Video of the airplane crash site here Data found from Mexico crash jet

The ministry plane – a Learjet – came down during rush-hour in the financial district at about 1900 local time (0000 GMT), and burst into flames.

Zeta arsenal in Reynosa seized by Mexico

Via LGF linkreader, an article from last September, Murder in Mexico: the police who are no better than the criminals

NICARAGUA
“Elecciones y perspectiva de la democracia”

From Centroamerica21, Elecciones en Nicaragua, on the municipal elections.

Nicaraguan pilots, soldiers to train in Russia

PUERTO RICO
My post on the election results: Fortuño’s fortune: A Republican’s resounding victory in Puerto Rico

EL SALVADOR
Keeping priests out of politics

THOMSON: A November surprise in El Salvador?

URUGUAY
Uruguayan microbrew

Uruguay’s Zonamerica, massive corporate park, growing despite economic crisis

VENEZUELA
Venezuela’s Houston consulate ordered closed

Venezuela to offer Russians Crystallex gold project

Venezuela said it will offer a joint venture to Russian-owned miner Rusoro (RML.V: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) to operate the Las Cristinas and Brisas gold projects, currently under contract to two Canadian companies, Mining minister Rodolfo Sanz on Thursday.

He told a Russian delegation that a memorandum of understanding would soon be signed with Rusoro.

It appeared that Sanz intends to replace the Canadian companies who operate the projects that contain some of Latin America’s largest gold deposits, with Rusoro, but he did not mention their names.

Obama owes to Chavez?

Russian the Ruffian tops himself in sucking up to Hugo Chavez

AMERICAN POLITICS
Via IBD Blog, How Obama should handle Colombia

Via Instapundit, A Chavista at the EPA? Follow the links.

Obama se convierte en el 4to presidente negro de los Estados Unidos, translated by Miguel here

More on Cuban-American Voting Patterns

Venezuela News and Views writes to president elect Barack Obama

To Mr. Obama: Great opportunities await in Latin America

This week’s posts and podcasts
Mark Groubert saw Che so you won’t have to
Pray for Cuba
Iran’s Latin America push
World newspapers’ reaction to the Obama victory

TODAY AT 10AM EASTERN:
Today’s podcast at 10AM Eastern will be on last week’s top stories in Latin America. Chat’s open at 9:45AM and the call in number is 646 652-2639. Join me!

You can listen to the podcast here

Listen to Faustas blog on internet talk radio

UPDATE
El socialismo del siglo XXI: Eneas Biglione, guest speaker:

Special thanks to Eneas, Larwyn, Maggie and Maria

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The “flying from Caracas” Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Welcome to the Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean. If you would like your posts included, please email me: faustaw2 “at” gmail “dot” com.

This week’s big story: The Russian fighter jets leave Venezuela, Chavez expells the HRW director, and Chavez decides to make a last-minute stop in Russia on his way to China.

I’ll talk about this in today’s podcast at 10AM Eastern. Chat’s open by 9:45AM and the call-in number is 646 652-2639. Join us!

Listen to Faustas blog on internet talk radio

ARGENTINA
Argentine rallies for missing man

Suitcase full of cash adds to Chavez corruption claims
Rights activists kicked out amid Washington accusations that Venezuela illegally gave funds to Kirchner

BELIZE
Taiwan, Belize to sign oil exploration deal

BOLIVIA
Possible deal in Bolivia

Now put it back together
A political standoff turns deadly, but bloodshed may bring both sides to their senses. At least they have agreed to start talks

Bolivia on the Brink

BRAZIL
The Islamization of Brazil

Brazil Wants to Build 50 Nuclear Power Plants, Nuclear Submarines, More?

New fleet may mean U.S. covets Brazil’s oil: Lula

CARIBBEAN
BBC Caribbean report (audio)

COLOMBIA
Uribe asks Hill to OK trade pact
Held up over rights concerns

Detienen a supuesto jefe de FARC cuando intentaba comprar armas a venezolanos

CUBA
The Cuban “Katrina”

Bloodied, but unbowed
Desperate for international aid, hurricane-torn Cuba turns down any relief from its old foe, the United States

Secretary Gutierrez Statement on Announcement of a FOURTH Offer to Cuba for Humanitarian Assistance

Castro Looks for a U.S. Lifeline

Fidel Castro: It’s good to be dictator

Castro brothers reject US hurricane aid while manipulating essentials for sale

The Real Cuba has lots more on the hurricanes’ damage

Music video (language warning in Spanish):

ECUADOR
A Superb Reason to Stay this Madness and VOTE NO!

Secretary of the Bishops’ Conference asks that Bishops and priests be respected in voicing their opinion, even if they are not shared by others

HAITI
Haiti ‘overwhelmed’ after storms

JAMAICA
Jamaica News Bulletin Partners With Brewer Investment Group, LLC

MEXICO
Delegitimization of Mexico through lower oil prices

7 killed in Mexican Independence Day attack

Mother suspects Juárez police in son’s slaying

PDF file Mexico’s Drug Cartels:
Congressional Research Service, Foreign Affairs, Defense and Trade Division

Mexico plans anti-kidnap police

NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
Denny’s blogging his vacation: Bonaire 2008 Day 1

PARAGUAY
Lino Oviedo acusa a Lugo de estar muy supeditado a Hugo Chavez

PERU
Perú espera respuesta a presunta presencia de sicarios peruanos en Bolivia

Alan García bate records de impopularidad: sólo 19 %

PUERTO RICO
Caribbean officials working to lure visitors back

URUGUAY
Uruguay: Bills, Bidets, and Boundaries

VENEZUELA
Missile cruiser “Peter the Great” heading for Venezuela

El 80% de los militares rechaza el proyecto de Hugo Chavez

The Chavez bagman trial

Back on his old hobby-horse
But there are limits even to Hugo Chávez’s anti-Americanism

Talking to Chavez

The Venezuelan 2008 election: update 7. Still these many homeless?

Chavez unstable by the truth about Human Rights Watch report

Dog meat for USAF

Sobre Chávez pende la espada de la justicia globalizada”/”The sword of the international justice hangs over Chávez”

US POLITICS
Who’ll back Monroe Doctrine?

McCain rules out negotiations with the Venezuelan government

Una vision desde Argentina de las elecciones 2008

Special thanks to Eneas, GoV, Maria and Maggie.

This week’s podcasts and posts:
Russian jets leave Venezuela 3 weeks ahead of time; Chavez heads to Cuba for the weekend

Obama es un descarado

Bolivia: 15 Minutes on Latin America

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