Fausta's Blog

American and Latin American Politics, Society, and Culture

March 23, 2016 By Fausta

Argentina: Obama arrives

Pres. Obama arrived yesterday to Argentina. Here’s his schedule, which is the top story in all of Argentina.

As of the writing of this post, he is meeting with Mauricio Macri at the Casa Rosada, where they will hold a joint press conference.

The meeting signals a departure from the downright hostile approach the Kirchner administration held towards the U.S.

————————————————-

In other news, Eamonn MacDonagh has the latest on the Nisman investigation, including some new information on a spate of phone calls from the intelligence service long before the news on Nisman’s death was made public.

The previous 19 tweets on the #Nisman appeal court ruling storified https://t.co/EyrmA02Gnq

— Éamann Mac Donnchada (@EamonnMacDonagh) March 23, 2016

UPDATE
Nisman Case to Be Investigated as Political Murder, Argentine Court Rules

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Filed Under: Argentina, Barack Obama Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, Fausta' blog

February 26, 2016 By Fausta

Argentina: #Nisman case now a murder investigation

Argentinean prosecutor says for first time that Nisman was murdered. Investigator was looking into terrorist-bombing cover-up when he was found dead last year

Ricardo Sáenz, the chief prosecutor at the Argentina federal judicial chamber, said in a writ that Nisman did not commit suicide – the first time that an official authority has clearly identified the death as a possible murder case.

The inquiry had been stalled for more than a year as investigators could not determine a cause of death.

Why Is It So Significant That Sáenz Declared That Nisman Was Murdered?

According to Infobae’s Martín Angulo, the case has more chances of following the “murder” theory Sáenz espouses if it is sent to the Federal Jurisdiction, as several of his colleagues who also organized and promoted February 18th 2015 march in Nisman’s honor work there, thus having a higher influence on its outcome.

It’s worth clarifying this case has nothing to do with Nisman’s accusation against Cristina and co., which was dismissed by Federal Judge Daniel Rafecas last year. Here, Sáenz is trying to establish the reasons that led to Nisman’s death, a completely different case that, of course, goes hand in hand with the first one that kicked off one of the largest clusterfucks in Argentine history.

As Drudge says, developing.



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Filed Under: Argentina, crime, Iran Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, Fausta' blog

January 18, 2016 By Fausta

The MLK Jr Day Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

LatinAmerARGENTINA
Argentina’s President Declassifies Files on Dead Prosecutor Nisman. Federal Intelligence Agency Has 30 Days to Hand Over Documents to a Judge

BELIZE
ABC producer was ‘murdered and sexually assaulted while on vacation in Belize’

  • Producer Anne Swaney, 39, arrived last Saturday to Nabatunich Resort, Benque Viejo in Belize
  • She disappeared on Thursday after doing yoga by the Mopan River
  • Swaney’s half-naked corpse was found floating on the river on Friday

BRAZIL
Brazilian Unemployment Climbs to 9%

Doctors’ union in Rio has warned that Olympic visitors will not get medical attention if they fall sick during 2016 games. Some major hospitals have been forced to close while even the most seriously ill patients cannot be admitted because of a funding shortfall

Brazil fire: Explosion unleashes toxic gas in Santos

CHILE
Thousands of squid wash up on Chilean shore

COLOMBIA
Colombia Cancels Anglo-Australian Consortium’s Oil Contracts

Índice de miseria Colombia: 2013: 18% 2014: 20% 2015: 25% pic.twitter.com/fGktovdYzf

— Álvaro Uribe Vélez (@AlvaroUribeVel) January 16, 2016

CUBA
Report: Cuban Army Gets Lion’s Share of Foreign Investment. NGO Documents Suffocating Network of Military-Run Businesses

EL SALVADOR
US renews El Salvador travel warning due to rampant violence

MEXICO
The Manhunt for the Drug Kingpin El Chapo. Joaquín Guzmán Loera’s meeting with the movie star Sean Penn gave the authorities the break they needed to help recapture him.

Crime in Mexico: From Penn to pen. El Chapo’s recapture heralds closer co-operation with the United States. Maybe.

PANAMA
How Panama Canal Expansion Will Affect U.S. Shipping Sector

PUERTO RICO
Congressional Hearings Grapple with Puerto Rico’s Fiscal Train Wreck. Island’s Power Authority Insolvent, US$1 Billion Payment Looms

URUGUAY
Chile, Argentina, Mexico, Uruguay and Peru fined over homophobic chants.
• Fifa takes action over chants during 2018 World Cup qualifying
• Chile’s fine is biggest at £48,000, for incidents at four games

VENEZUELA
“A day late and a dollar short”?
Venezuela decrees economic emergency

Soldier stands guard in a supermarket in San Antonio de Tachira, Venezuela (27 August 2015)

The Venezuelan government announces a 60-day economic emergency to deal with the country’s worsening crisis.

Venezuela: Economy on brink?

Oil row may damage Maduro

wsv-783361Venezuela’s First Lady criticises America for ‘kidnapping’ her relatives and charging them with trafficking. Cilia Flores, wife of President Nicolas Maduro, has spoken for the first time about the arrest of her relatives on charges of plotting to traffic 800kg of cocaine into the United States

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Filed Under: Argentina, Belize, Brazil, Carnival of Latin America, Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador, Latin America, media, Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico, Uruguay, Venezuela Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, Anne Swaney, Fausta's blog, Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman

December 22, 2015 By Fausta

Argentina: Former Argentine FM Admits Iran Behind Massive 1994 Terror Attack

Eamonn MacDonagh, reporting at The Tower:
In Secret Recordings, Former Argentine FM Admits Iran Behind Massive 1994 Terror Attack

Former Argentine Foreign Minister Héctor Timerman knew that Iran was responsible for the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish center in Buenos Aires even as he negotiated with the regime in Tehran, secretly-recorded telephone conversations released on Friday reveal.
. . .
There may be others with secrets to reveal, now that they can do so without harassment from Fernández de Kirchner’s government. The mother of Alberto Nisman, the late federal prosecutor investigating the AMIA bombing, told a journalist in recent days that she has a digital copy of “all” of her son’s formal complaint against Timerman and Fernández de Kirchner over their deal with Iran, along with “all” the evidence he collected to support it.

It’s not clear whether Nisman, who was found dead in January 2015 hours before he was to present his complaint, would have had access to the recordings. As Scaliter pointed out in his conversation with Timerman, Nisman was working for the government and not AMIA, and in any case had access to other sources of information about the negotiations with Iran.

The revelation of these recordings confirms Nisman’s thesis that the Memorandum was a sham, designed to protect those guilty of the AMIA Massacre. The Argentine government, despite knowing that Iran’s responsibility was beyond doubt, agreed to let the murderers “investigate” themselves through an Orwellian “Truth Commission,” and led Iran to believe that simply signing the Memorandum would lead to Interpol dropping the arrest warrants against its citizens, which seems to have been Tehran’s initial if not principal motivation in negotiating the pact. As a result, trade relations between the two countries would flourish, allowing enormous sums to be made by Argentine officials in state-body-to-state-body deals free from market pressures or scrutiny, the preferredkirchnerista business model. Elsewhere on the recordings, Timerman speaks of the negotiations being a “great opportunity for Argentina.” It’s not difficult to imagine what kind of opportunity he had in mind and which Argentines he thought might benefit.

Every word spoken by the former Argentine government and its supporters in defense of the Memorandum has now been proven to be a lie – not that there was ever much doubt about that.

Read the whole thing.

RELATED:
Elsewhere, Iran Nuclear Deal Restricts U.S. More Than Congress Knew

U.S. officials confirmed over the weekend that Secretary of State John Kerry sent his Iranian counterpart, Javad Zarif, a letter promising to use executive powers to waive the new restrictions on those who have visited Iran but are citizens of countries in the Visa Waiver Program. These officials also told us that they have told Iranian diplomats that, because they are not specific to Iran, the new visa waiver provisions do not violate the detailed sequence of steps Iran and other countries committed to taking as part of the agreement. Even so, the State Department is promising to sidestep the new rule.

US could start lifting Iran sanctions in January under nuclear deal

What could possibly go wrong?

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Filed Under: Argentina, Iran, terrorism, terrorism. Latin America Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, AMIA, Fausta' blog

December 18, 2015 By Fausta

Argentina: New prosecutor in Nisman investigation

Argentine prosecutor asks to reopen Nisman case. New government voids deal with Iran on investigating AMIA bombing, reviving suspicions of Kirchner cover-up

A federal prosecutor has asked an Argentine court to reopen the complaint filed by the late special prosecutor Alberto Nisman charging that former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner covered up Iran’s role in the 1994 AMIA Jewish center bombing.

The prosecutor, Raul Plee, filed a request Monday to reopen the case with the Federal Criminal Cassation Court.

On Monday, just after the new government voided the Argentine pact with Iran to jointly investigate the AMIA attack, Plee asked the justices to analyze new information collected during the case about the unconstitutionality of the Iran memorandum with an eye toward reviving Nisman’s theory that the pact was a bid to cover up Iran’s role in the bombing.

According to the state-run news agency Telam, Plee wrote in his request that during hearings about the unconstitutionality of the pact, the Foreign Ministry presented “secret and confidential” documents that could be considered useful to reactivate Nisman’s accusation against Kirchner, her Jewish former foreign minister Hector Timerman, and others.

The prosecutor asked that the secret and confidential files be sent to prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita and to the judge, Daniel Rafecas. Pollicita was the prosecutor who took over Nisman’s accusation after his death and presented it to the court in February. Rafecas dismissed the accusation, saying it could not be sustained by the evidence.

More in Spanish, here.

The prior prosecutor, Viviana Fein, has treated the case as a possible suicide, not a possible murder.

Getting rid of Fein has taken far too long. Evidence and crime scene destroyed. 11 months wasted https://t.co/Ku6Nu6eQWD

— Éamann Mac Donnchada (@EamonnMacDonagh) December 17, 2015



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Filed Under: Argentina, crime, Iran Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, Fausta's blog, Raul Plee, Viviana Fein

December 12, 2015 By Fausta

Argentina: Scenes from an inauguration

Ungracious to the end, spouting propaganda, and plastered in inches of make-up,

Don’t cry for her, Argentina!

Cristina Kirchner holds massive farewell party as Falkland islanders look forward to better days. Thousands took to the streets of Buenos Aires to thank Cristina Kirchner for her presidency, or celebrate her departure. Falkland islanders simply breathed a sigh of relief

White lace dresses must be a thing in Argentina right now. Mrs. Macri wore one the following day. Macy‘s has Cristina’s dress on sale for $85.

She moaned, “At midnight they are turning me into a pumpkin,” when a judge issued an order that ended her presidency at midnight on Wednesday, and did not leave her car when confronted by protestors in front of her house after the rally,

(“Chorra” means thief.)

In keeping with her character, Cristina ransacked the Casa Rosada of telephones, TVs, computers, and bed linens. Sound familiar?

The water heater‘s not working, either.

As mentioned earlier, Cristina didn’t show up for Macri’s inauguration. Macri showed up on time, catching the media (which had grown used to hours-long waits for prima donna assoluta Cristina) by surprise, gave a brief speech, and did a little dance when urged by the crowd.

Evo Morales, Juan Manuel Santos and Michelle Bachelet were on their best behavior. Former king of Spain Juan Carlos did not bring any ivory souvenirs.

Rafael Correa, on the other hand, tripped on the red carpet at Macri’s inauguration on Thursday and had to grab on to him to avoid falling

“I nearly brought down the government”, quipped Correa at a reception for foreign heads of state after Macri’s swearing-in, which ended 12 years of leftist populism in Argentina.

“Not so quickly,” Macri shot back, to the laughter of onlookers in the elegant San Martín Palace.

During the lunch, security removed Correa from the premises when he loudly protested that they were being served crappy wine,”It’s the limit when we’re served wine that’s not even worth $100 a bottle.”

Correa insisted that he does not inflict cheap hooch upon his guests, serving instead wine worth $300 a bottle.

Bonus question:
Guess which of all the above items is from a humor/satire website. (Macy’s dress still available on most sizes)

—————————————

In more serious news, the new Minister of Justice announced the creation of a department for the investigation of Alberto Nisman’s death.

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Filed Under: Argentina, Rafael Correa Tagged With: Alberto Nisman, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, Fausta' blog, Mauricio Macri

December 11, 2015 By Fausta

Latin America: Packrat malware targeted #Nisman

Huge, years-long, malware attack on the political opposition and the independent press in the ALBA countries,

Revealed: Mystery 7-year cyberspy campaign in Latin America. Bogus propaganda websites punt malware to likely marks (emphasis added)

Security researchers have uncovered a seven year-long malware campaign against Latin America.

Citizen Lab found that journalists, activists, politicians, and public figures in Argentina, Ecuador, Brazil and Venezuela have been targeted by a large-scale hacking campaign since 2008.

The campaign, dubbed Packrat, uses bogus websites and social media accounts for fake opposition groups and news organisations in order to distribute malware and conduct phishing attacks.

The attackers, whom we have named Packrat, have shown a keen and systematic interest in the political opposition and the independent press in so-called ALBA countries (Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas), and their recently allied regimes. These countries are linked by a trade agreement as well as a cooperation on a range of non-financial matters.

Security tools firm AlienVault uploaded Citizen Lab’s findings on Packrat to its threat-sharing platform OTX in order to warm the general community of the emerging threat and its indicators of compromise. Citizen Lab is an interdisciplinary lab focused on global security.

Not only Nisman was hacked, but also Lanata,

The security researchers caught the scent of the Packrat attackers in Ecuador this year before tracing their nefarious activities back to attempts to compromise the devices of Alberto Nisman, an Argentine prosecutor known for doggedly probing a 1994 Buenos Aires bombing, and investigative journalist Jorge Lanata in Argentina last year. Further work revealed a pattern of systematic electronic spying dating back to 2007.

Hacked has more,

A Sophisticated Hacker Operation
John Scott-Railton, the lead Citizen Lab researcher at the University of Toronto’s Munk School for Global Affairs, said the operation is highly targeted. He said Packrat carefully chooses and relentlessly pursues its targets.hacker

The hackers used the same Internet domains for years even though there was some exposure in doing this, a technical convenience. Cybercriminals normally do not do this for fear of being caught by law enforcement.

The researchers found 35 types of booby-trapped files and used domains hosted by companies in the U.S., Uruguay, Sweden, Spain, France, Brazil and Argentina.

About two dozen “seeding” sites resided on servers owned by GoDaddy.com LLC, a U.S.-based web hosting company, for much of the past two years. GoDaddy-hosted domain names included login-office365.com, mgoogle.us, update-outlook.com and soporte-yahoo.com.

Researchers alerted most of the providers Friday and asked that they shutter Packrat’s known infrastructure. Nick Fuller, a GoDaddy spokesperson, said GoDaddy acts immediately after identifying a problem website.

Packrat Targeted Nisman
The researchers started the investigation after determining that Packrat had targeted Nisman, who died mysteriously of a gunshot wound in January while attempting to bring charges against Argentina’s president.

Researchers said Packrat sent Jorge Lanata, an Argentine journalist, the same virus Nisman received a month prior to his death.

The virus was designed to communicate with the same Internet domains used to spy on Ecuadorean opposition figures who found Packrat malware in their emails using search scripts the researchers wrote.

Not that it’ll make any difference on the Nisman murder investigation – that’s not going anywhere.

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Filed Under: Argentina Tagged With: ALBA, Alberto Nisman, Fausta' blog, Jorge Lanata, Pack Rat

November 2, 2015 By Fausta

The clock change Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean

Twice a year we endure the change from standard to daylight saving time; I wish it would stop. Here’s the first Carnival of the month.

ARGENTINA
Argentine Kingmaker Sergio Massa Spurns Kirchner Ally in Presidential Runoff. Dissident Peronist politician who ran third in first round withholds support for Daniel Scioli. Has not yet directly endorsed Macri.

Argentina notebook: Passion and politics in the Paris of the South. Bohemian Buenos Aires is buzzing with election fever, writes Harriet Alexander. And in this most intriguing of cities, things can change in an instant – and nothing is quite what it seems. I’ve to Paris, and I’ve been to Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires is no Paris.

More Forget it Jake, it’s Chinatown: On the Nisman case, InSight Crime links to a report,

imprisoned Colombian drug trafficker Henry de Jesus Lopez, alias “Mi Sangre,” has come forward claiming to have information on the case. With only a month until the run-off, any new information linking the Kirchner administration to Nisman’s death could hurt Scioli by association.

Mi Sangre (My Blood) is trying to avoid deportation to the US by claiming that then-Intelligence chief Stiusso took over the cartel’s surveillance equipment, and gave it to Nisman, who used it for wiretapping members of the government.

So on the one hand the government alleges that Nisman had American and Israeli backers that made him rich; now this Mi Sangre guy tries to avoid deportation by saying that Stiusso stole surveillance equipment because Nisman couldn’t afford it.

BOLIVIA
Bolivia’s New Mega Airport Renews Narco-State Suspicions. Senate President Condemns “Unjustifiable Expense”

BRAZIL
Brazil’s Federal Police to Question Son of Former President. Brazil’s Federal Police will question Luis Claudio Lula da Silva, one of the sons of the country’s former president, as part of an investigation into whether companies bribed Brazilian tax officials.

Amazon fires: Brazil indigenous reserve blazes contained

CHILE
Chilean Desert, One Of The Driest Places On Earth, Is Awash In Flowers

Oopsie, Chile seizes erotic book from schools. The Chilean government begins seizing copies of an erotic version of the classic fairytale that was mistakenly distributed to 283 primary schools. Little Red Riding Hood Eats the Wolf?

COLOMBIA
Ending a war: Lessons from Colombia. Outsiders should not unpick a hard-won compromise between peace, truth and justice

There are still many loose ends. The ELN, a smaller guerrilla group, is not making peace. Many FARC leaders seem far from becoming democrats. The government must act fast to organise international monitoring of the FARC’s disarmament, to provide security in areas where the conflict has been most intense and to promote rural development so that ex-guerrillas can find jobs. Cutting the flow of drug money that funds the FARC is also important—though, as long as cocaine is illegal around the world, the trade will remain so profitable that this will be hard. Colombia must avoid what happened after civil wars in Central America in the 1980s and 1990s, where peace led to an explosion of violent crime. In all this it will need the understanding and support of the outside world.

Poll Finds Colombians Fear Return of FARC Terrorists.

A new poll shows that, despite public support for a peace deal with the FARC terrorist group, a significant portion of the population of Colombia remains uncomfortable with the idea of FARC terrorists abandoning the guerrilla lifestyle and settling into civilian life.

Video: El Nueve, the life and work of a Colombian combat photographer

CUBA
40 days later, Cuban activists arrested at Papal Mass remain in jail

A Look at How Cuba’s Working Class Lives

ECUADOR
Censorship Cloud Hangs Over 300 Ecuadorian TV, Radio Stations. Correa to Clear Airwaves of Independent Voices on Technicality, Warns NGO

EL SALVADOR
Why are There No Gangs in Berlin, El Salvador?

MEXICO
Mexican army makes new arrests in Iguala massacre investigation. Among those detained is the mayor of Cocula, where the bodies were reportedly incinerated

Mexico deploys its navy to face its latest threat: Monster seaweed. Sargassum seaweed has washed up on beaches in the Caribbean in record amounts, causing a crisis.

PANAMA
Leaky Locks May Further Delay $5.3 Billion Panama Canal Widening

PARAGUAY
Ruins of Jesuit missions draw tourists in Paraguay

PERU
Archaeologists Make New Discoveries at Site in Peru

A complex of ancient Inca platforms, a storeroom and a ceremonial court were unearthed while maintenance and preservation works were underway at Ollantaytambo archaeological park in the southern Peruvian region of Cuzco, officials said.

PUERTO RICO
U.S. to clean one of Puerto Rico’s worst polluted waterways. Let’s hope the locals stop using it as a dump.

URUGUAY
Is Uruguay on the Path to Venezuelan Totalitarianism?Marcel Granier of Radio Caracas Television Warns of Incremental Tyranny

VENEZUELA
Venezuelan President Says He Will Sue U.S. Nicolás Maduro said he would file suit against the Obama administration in a bid to lift an executive order declaring the South American country an extraordinary threat to U.S. national security.

Venezuelan Siblings Spend 67 Days in Jail for “Heckling” Tourism Minister. Prison Nightmare Comes to an End as Johan and Joselyn Prato Await Trial

Get Ready For A Venezuelan Mariel

Venezuela is running out of cash and selling its gold. It looks like Putin’s not taking charge cards for payment of those 12 Sukhoi-30s.



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Filed Under: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Carnival of Latin America, Carnival of Latin America and the Caribbean, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Jamaica, Latin America, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Uruguay, Venezuela Tagged With: Adán "El Tomate" Zenen Casrrubias, Alberto Nisman, Antonio Stiusso, Eric Ulieses Ramírez, Henry de Jesus Lopez aka Mi Sangre, Iguala, Luis Claudio Lula da Silva, Nicolas Maduro

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