Monday, March 03, 2008

Uribe’s Colombia Destabilizing Latin America

Uribe's Colombia Destabilizing Latin America
Written by James J. Brittain and R. James Sacouman
Monday, 03 March 2008
Raul ReyesA few weeks after the Ecuadorian and Venezuelan state called on the Colombian government to respect the need for peace and negotiation with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia-People's Army (FARC-EP), the administration of Álvaro Uribe Vélez (2002-2010) supported an extensive armed air and land assault against the insurgency movement – not within Colombia's borders but rather on the sovereign territory of Ecuadorian soil.
On 1 March, 2008 the Colombian state, under the leadership of Uribe and Vice-President Francisco Santos Calderón (and his cousin Defence Minister Juan Manuel Santos), illegally deployed a military campaign within Ecuador, which resulted in the deaths of Raúl Reyes, Julian Conrado, and fifteen other combatants associated with the FARC-EP. Such actions are a clear display of the (US-backed) Colombian state's open negation of international codes of conduct, law, and social justice.
The actions of Saturday 1 March took place days before a major international demonstration scheduled for 6 March, 2008. Promoted by The National Movement of Victims of State-Sponsored Crimes (MOVICE), the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), and countless social justice-based organizations, March 6th has been set as an international day of protest against those tortured, murdered, and disappeared by the Colombian state, their allies within the paramilitary United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) and the newly reformed Black Eagles. Recently, President Uribe's top political adviser, José Obdulio Gaviria, proclaimed that the protest and protesters should be criminalized. In addition, paramilitaries in the southwestern department of Nariño (not far from where the illegal incursions were carried out in Ecuador), have threatened to attack any organization or person associated with the activities scheduled for Thursday.
The Uribe and Santos administration is utilizing the slaughter of Comandante Raúl Reyes and others as a method to deter activists and socially conscious peoples within and outside Colombia from participating in the March 6th events. Numerous state-controlled or connected media outlets, such as El Tiempo (which has long-standing ties to the Santos family), have been parading photographs of the bullet ridden and mutilated corpse of Raúl Reyes throughout the country's communications mediums. Such propaganda is clearly a tool to psychologically intimidate those preparing to demonstrate against the atrocities perpetrated by the state over the past seven years.
Over the past two months, numerous researchers, scholars, and lawyers have supported the call to declare the FARC-EP a legitimate force fighting against the corrupt Colombian state. In January 2008, Ecuador's Foreign Minister Maria Isabel Salvador argued that the FARC-EP should no longer be depicted as a terrorist organization. Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez too announced that the FARC-EP are far from a terrorist force but are rather a real army, which occupies Colombian territory and shares in a Bolivarian vision for a new Latin America. Mexican deputy Ricardo Cantu Garza also has promoted the recognition of the FARC-EP as a belligerent force legitimately fighting against a corrupt and unequal sociopolitical system.
As prominent US attorney Paul Wolf argued,
the FARC-EP are a belligerent army of national liberation, as evidenced by their sustained military campaign and sovereignty over a large part of Colombian territory, and their conduct of hostilities by organized troops kept under military discipline and complying with the laws and customs of war, at least to the same extent as other parties to the conflict. Members of the FARC-EP are therefore entitled to the rights of belligerents under international law … there is no rule of international law prohibiting revolution, and, if a revolution succeeds, there is nothing in international law prohibiting the acceptance of the outcome, even though it was achieved by force.
From Copenhagen to Caracas, numerous state officials have denounced the description of the FARC-EP as a terrorist organization. Progressive officials and administrations in Mexico, Ecuador, and Venezuela have rather opted for the status of belligerent or irregular forces to more accurately depict the FARC-EP domestic and geo-political stance. Disturbingly, in the face of this evidence and the FARC-EP's consistent promotion for a humanitarian prisoner exchange and peace negotiations with the state in a demilitarized zone in southwestern Colombia, the Uribe and Santos administration has moved ever farther away from supporting an end to the civil war within Colombia by opting for systemic violence.
Over the past several years, different aspects of the FARC-EP's real social, political, and cultural activities for progressive social change have been censored or marginalized by the private press or governments in support of the Colombian state. Nevertheless, after researching the FARC-EP and the country of Colombia for years, Garry Leech argued that "while there is little doubt regarding the global reach of terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda, there is no evidence that the FARC is anything but one of the armed actors in Colombia's long and tragic domestic conflict."
In actuality, the FARC-EP are actors within the strategic confines of Colombian society that aim their directives at domestic social change. In light of such realities, how can this insurgency be a terrorist threat to external nation-states?
Coletta A. Youngers responds to this question by describing the way in which
. . . the U.S. government now views the Latin American region almost exclusively through the counterterrorist lens, though the region poses no serious national security threat to the United States … little evidence has been put forward to substantiate such claims, and whatever activity is taking place there appears to be minimal.
While Youngers does not trivialize its revolutionary tactics, she clearly argues that the FARC-EP cannot be correctly framed within the concept and rhetoric of global terrorism. Youngers argues that the insurgency is not a direct political threat to administrations within the United States, Canada, the European Union and any other foreign nation-state in the fact that the FARC-EP activities "are targeted inward, not outward," hence, "applying the terrorism concept to these groups negates their political projects."
Characterizing the FARC-EP as a foreign terrorist organization dramatically alters the dynamics of the peace process in favour of a killer state. Stipulating that the FARC-EP is terrorist results in the inability for legal peace negotiations to take place between the FARC-EP and any government that subscribes to the categorization. Promoting the FARC-EP (and their supporters) as terrorists "puts them on the list of targets to be assaulted by the US military machine" and "thus subject to total war," according to James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer. The terminology of terrorism is perfect for imperialist ideology and expansionism. It is a very open-ended reference that "allows maximum intervention in all regions against any opposition" and "that any group engaged in opposing militarism, imperialism (so-called "globalization") or local authoritarian regimes could be labelled "terrorist" and targeted", thus legitimizing external invasion or attack.
Internal and external condemnation of the Colombian state has fallen upon the deaf ears of the Uribe and Santos administration. After years of increased violations of civilian human rights, the ongoing suppression of trade-unionism, assassinations of left-of-centre activists and politicians, and a political reality that has witnessed 75 governors, mayors, and Congressional politicians alleged or found guilty of having direct links to the paramilitary – including Vice-President Francisco Santos Calderón and his cousin Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos and President Uribe's brother Santiago and their cousin Senator Mario Uribe – now the Colombian state has deemed it necessary to illegally encroach upon those nations that deviate from their ideological model of political and economic centralization. Not only has the Uribe administration criticized their neighbours but after the actions realized on 1 March, 2008 it is clear that the Colombian state, with the full backing of the United States, will impose its own ideological goals and values, through force, regardless of the democratic rights and privileges of conventional electoral law and procedure.
While the neighbouring states of Ecuador and Venezuela struggle for peace and try to assist the people of Colombia in the quest for an end to the civil war, the Uribe and Santos administration has bypassed judicial realities and governance to impose its own objectives. Careful analysts of the Colombian situation continue to debate whether the Colombian state is pre-fascist or actually fascist. It is certainly neither humane nor actually democratic. The current Colombian state must be transformed, sooner rather than later. Those fighting for peace must condemn the action of this regime. In solidarity, we must protest the policies of the Colombian state and raise our voices in support for a New Colombia which stands for Peace with Social Justice.
James J. Brittain (Assistant Professor) and Jim Sacouman (Professor) are Canadian sociologists at Acadia University in Nova Scotia who have been researching the Colombian civil war and political economy over the past decade.


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Come Together and Create!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka:Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Email: sacranative@yahoo.com

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C/S



Friday, February 29, 2008

Obama, Clinton wooing Hispanic voters with Spanish ads

Houston & Texas News
Feb. 29, 2008, 10:37PM
Obama, Clinton wooing Hispanic voters with Spanish ads
Candidates focus on themes that appeal to Latinos
By JAMES PINKERTON
It's not just a battle of speeches and campaign stops, but of mariachi bands, heartfelt corridos and slogans set to a rousing Reggaeton beat.
Hispanic voters are critical to a Texas Democratic primary victory for Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, and both campaigns have launched an unprecedented series of TV and radio ads that speak to Latinos in their own language.
The Spanish ads are part of a Texas primary media blitz that one national campaign finance expert estimates will end up dumping $20 million in Texas for the March 4 contest.
Hispanic voters were key in the California primary, where 67 percent supported Clinton and helped her win big. According to the Pew Hispanic Center, they could play an even bigger role in Texas, where they comprise an estimated 25 percent of eligible voters.
In the ads, the two candidates are courting Texas Hispanics by invoking themes important to Latinos.
Both campaigns employ Spanish ads that emphasize family and call for funding for higher education and wider access to health care.
Hispanics are known for maintaining close-knit relationships among their large family groups, but they also face daunting challenges. Hispanics have a dramatically lower educational rate than white residents — only 11 percent earn college degrees — and their high school dropout rate is triple that of whites. Nationally, 34 percent of Hispanics lack health insurance, greater than the combined percentage of whites and blacks who are uninsured.
However, both campaigns' ads infrequently mention immigration reform, a core issue for Hispanics.
Professor Lorenzo Cano, associate director of the Center for Mexican-American Studies at the University of Houston, said the Spanish ad campaign by Obama — and his local appearances — are cutting into Clinton's strong connection with Hispanic voters.
''They both seem to be putting some significant resources in Houston now, and I get the impression that Obama is catching up," Cano said. Recent polls show Obama ahead of Clinton in the Texas primary race.
Evan Tracey, chief operating officer at TNS/Campaign Media Analysis Group, a nonpartisan media research firm in Arlington, Va., said Obama's campaign has a significant lead in the number of advertising spots being aired in Texas. For example, he noted that Obama ran 1,100 ads while Clinton aired 750 last Tuesday, and a greater number of Obama's ads ran in expensive prime-time slots.
Increased enthusiasm
Obama is appealing to Hispanics with ads featuring ''strengthen the family" themes, along with his message of change and hope, Tracey said. He estimates that Obama will spend $10 million in Texas, Clinton $7 million or $8 million, and other groups will boost the state's take to $20 million.
Longtime Hispanic activists say the Spanish ads have increased enthusiasm and participation by Latinos in both presidential campaigns.
''Both candidates are doing an extraordinary job of trying to reach the Hispanic electorate through their ads and on the ground with phone banks," said Lydia Camarillo, vice president of the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project in San Antonio. ''It's getting so tight people you wouldn't think about are getting involved."
Clinton campaign spokesman Angel Urena said their strategy is to remind Hispanics about the senator's Texas connections. One TV ad talks about Clinton's work in 1972 to register Hispanics to vote in the Rio Grande Valley.
Clinton is running four Spanish radio spots statewide. On Thursday, the campaign began a television ad exhorting supporters to go to the polls twice — once to vote and later to attend caucuses to elect convention delegates.
Clinton's Texas roots and her experience are stressed in a corrido, a Mexican ballad played at campaign events. The song's introduction is made by renowned South Texas music promoter Johnny Canales.
Meanwhile, Obama has a dueling corrido, called Viva Obama, or Long Live Obama, and evokes the senator's birth into humble circumstances and his community work in Chicago.
An introduction to Obama
Obama campaign spokesman Mark Shapiro said the Spanish ad blitz is designed to introduce Obama to Texas Hispanics unfamiliar with the one-term Illinois senator. Currently, six radio and TV ads are running in Houston, including one each in Spanish.
In one Obama ad, a black-and-white photo of Obama and his family appears on the screen. A woman's voice, speaking Spanish, discusses how Obama will work to provide health insurance, financial assistance for a university education and pass laws to prevent families from losing their homes.
While campaign officials would not discuss the amount of money being spent in advertising, observers say Obama is also pouring money into Clinton strongholds along the Texas border, which is predominantly Hispanic.
"I mean, they are beating the bushes," said Bill Jorn, general manager of NBC television affiliate KVEO (Channel 23) in Brownsville.
Jorn said Obama is outspending Clinton 8-to-1 at his station and says the ratio is the same at other news outlets in the Rio Grande Valley.
''What it looks like to me is clearly he has more money. He's trying not so much to win the Hispanic vote, but neutralize it some," Jorn said. ''Everyone is drawing lines and taking sides."
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Come Together and Create!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka:Peta
Sacramento, California, Aztlan
Email: sacranative@yahoo.com

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Monday, February 25, 2008

Ernie +>Re: [NetworkAztlan_Action] Re:Tribute to Corky Gonzalez

2-25-08 @4:49 PM
What Chicano Movement? How many youth consider themselves as Chicanos these days. Where is our organizational infrastructure and political machine?
We need to expand our revolutionary consciousness and warmly embrace all of La Raza, Mexicanos, Puerto Ricans, Cubanos, Mexican-Americans, indigenous natives and all with whom we can unite and work together towards humane liberation for all, including our African-American brothers and sisters! REGISTER AND VOTE FOR OBAMA!
In particular we should stragetize in terms of a Latino Liberation Movement, then globally in general terms of a worldwide socialsit oriented revolutionary movement.

The old Chicano cultural nationalist nostalgia for the old days will not suffice in the
post-911 new millenium. I was once a Brown Beret bodyguard with others for Corky once on a West Coast Tour he did when he crashed over his pretty cousin's place and I sat in an old chair in the front room all night and rapped with other Berets. At the time, Corky was promoting La Raza Unida Party. He talked about the concept of common denominators among La Raza and other pertinent matters.
Vanguard leadership must unite with all repressed peoples of all lands in our common struggle against the forces of evil worldiwde. At the same time, all of us must shed like dead skin any remnants of divisive racism and narrow cultural nationalism. We must play the hand we got with the cards we are holding, we must see the whole board in the chess game of life and not focus on only a part of the whole big picture.
Any independent third party right now will impact more on the local level than on the national level. Are we registering people to vote? Are we promoting community literacy? Are we addressing our many medical issues? Are we creating new cadres?
We must comprehend the existing environmental conditions in our connected reality. No one has the corner on truth, but not all opinions are of equal value. Nostalgia and memories will not feed the stomachs of our hungry people!!!
"The revolutionary's role is to libereate, and be liberated, with the people---not to win them over... The starting point for organizing the program content of education or political action must be the present existentail, concrete sitaution, reflecting the aspirations of the people." ~Paulo Freire, PEDAGOGY OF THE OPPRESSED, Pg 95
Yes, we have much to learn from the history of the Chicano Movement and now dead leaders have helped to pave the way, but we must seize the time with fresh resolve and work from the HERE NOW of our present situation. Learn from the past, but do not stay stuck on it!
We must never tire in learning about the strategy and tactics of total combat, that is, all angles, all lines, all approaches, all trajectories.
Do what works best in your own particular situation and I will do what I can in mine. Venceremos Unidos! +Peta-de-Aztlan+
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
calabresina999 <calabresina999@yahoo.com> wrote:
Ernie:
I agree completely with your statement. The reason I joined this
yahoo group is because I want to help out the Chicano leaders of
yesterday and of today, and it does get distracting when we focus on
topics not related to the Chicano Movement. If this is a Chicana/o
group, it should be about Chicana/o issues and concerns not
presidential campaigning.

Calabresina

--- In NetworkAztlan_Action@yahoogroups.com, Ernesto Nevarez
<portofaztlan@...> wrote:
>
> These were the leaders that have inspired our entire movement.
Neither the Borats nor the Billarys are in the same league. I wish
everyone in this yahoogroup that wants to promote their
institutional candidate do so in the proper venue. I'm not the
moderator but would suggest that any political promotion be in
context of the Chicano Movement. Otherwise, it is just spam to me.

But "Los Grandes" will guide us foverer.......

Solidarity,

ernie

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Peter S. Lopez ~aka:Peta
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Obama targets NAFTA but says supports free trade: 2-25-08

http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN2414727720080225?sp=true

Obama-Collage
Mon Feb 25, 2008 8:18am EST

LORAIN, Ohio (Reuters) - Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama assured U.S. trading partners on Sunday that he did not oppose free trade despite making increasingly critical comments about multilateral deals such as NAFTA.

Obama, an Illinois senator, has turned trade into a centerpiece of his campaign in Ohio, where trade agreements are particularly unpopular as domestic manufacturing jobs disappear.

Texas and Ohio hold nominating contests on March 4, and Obama has criticized the North American Free Trade Agreement at campaign stops in both states.

He has pounded rival Hillary Clinton, a New York senator, for switching positions on NAFTA and said repeatedly that he would revisit that pact to instill environmental and labor standards.

But Obama, who would enter the White House with only four years of experience as a U.S. senator in addition to several years in the Illinois legislature, said his misgivings about NAFTA did not mean he was opposed to such accords in general.

Asked how other countries should interpret his position, Obama responded that he supported free trade but wanted it to be fair.

"What the world should interpret is my consistent position, which is I believe in trade," he said after meeting with workers at a manufacturing plant in Ohio.

"I just want to make sure that the rules of the road apply to everybody and they are fair and that they reflect the interests of workers and not just corporate profits."

NAFTA went into force in 1994 while former President Bill Clinton held office.

Hillary Clinton, who called the pact a success in her memoir, says she has a plan to review and fix it and accuses Obama of complaining but not having a proposal to alter it.

Obama said he opposed NAFTA from the start and U.S. workers were not the only ones to suffer from its effects. Wages and benefits in Mexico had not been improved by the treaty, he said.

Looking forward, Obama said the World Trade Organization's Doha round of trade talks should have provisions that reject child labor and poor environmental standards while creating opportunities for developing nations to sell their goods to wealthy countries.

"When we think about the Doha round of trade agreements, for instance, I think it is perfectly appropriate for us to say that very poor countries should be able to export into wealthier countries on a basis that allows them to lift their standard of living," he said.

"We've got to have some minimal standards and we've got to have enforcement around things like safety standards."

Obama said ignoring the effect that trade agreements were having on workers would only lead to more protectionist tendencies in both the Republican and Democratic parties, which, in turn, would hurt the economy.

The economy has become the major issue in the U.S. presidential campaign with voters worried about a possible recession taking hold before the general election in November.

(Additional reporting by Claudia Parsons, editing by Chris Wilson)

History of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/40/index-b.html

NAFTA, Free Trade, Liberal Hegemony
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/40/007.html

Democracy and Human Rights in Mexico: May 1995
http://www.ciaonet.org/wps/rea02/
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