Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Bolivia: Morales ends hunger strike + Comment

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2009/04/2009414133825634593.html

Morales ends hunger strike

Morales and supporters spend days sleeping
on mattresses in the presidential palace
 [EPA]

Evo Morales, the Bolivian president, has ended his five-day hunger strike after Bolivia's congress approved a new election law.


The law permits Morales to stand again for election on December 6, reserves 14 congressional seats for indigenous candidates and permits expatriates to vote.


The Bolivian president spent several nights on a mattress on the floor of Bolivia's presidential palace, surrounded by banners and supporters and chewing coca leaves to ward off hunger after beginning the strike.


Recent polls suggest that Morales, the Andean nation's first indigenous president and a critic of the United States who has yet to announce his candidacy, will most likely win re-election.

Vote concerns

Morales has championed the rights of Bolivia's
indigenous peoples since entering office [AFP]

Morales's Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS party, had enough votes to ratify the bill in the lower house and senate, but the opposition had refused to grant the quorum needed for a vote.


MAS controls the lower chamber, but opposition parties have used their slim majority in the senate to block dozens of government-proposed reforms.


Morales's opponents said the law would give him political advantage because it assigns more seats to the poor, indigenous parts of the country whose rights he has championed since he took office in 2006.

However, a deal was reached after Morales ordered officials to compile a new electoral register, following opposition leaders' claims that he could exploit "flaws" in the existing census to rig the vote.


'Racist' opposition


Morales had earlier condemned the opposition for being "racist, fascist, selfish" in refusing to ratify the law.


He also said that he had received supportive phone calls from Hugo Chavez, the Venezuela president, and Fidel Castro, the former president of Cuba.


Morales, a former coca farmer, has said he once went without food for 18 days in 1998 to protest against the then-government's policy on coca, the raw material for cocaine revered by Bolivian Indians for its medicinal and nutritional properties, Reuters reported.

 Source: Agencies

Comment: Naturally this hunger strike reminds me for the famous one by Cesar Chavez back in the day and before that of Gandhi. Sometimes a situation compels a peace-loving man no other alternative that to just go hungry in the hopes that it catch attention and will drive the hunger in people for truth, for justice, for what is natural, and for righteousness.

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta

Sacramento, California, Aztlan
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/


http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/


http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/


http://www.zarcrom.com/users/yeartorem/serenityprayer.html




Castro welcomes US Cuba moves: AlJazeera

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2009/04/200941419443024230.html

Castro welcomes US Cuba moves

Cuban-Americans will now be able to bring
more goods to Cuba [Reuters]

Fidel Castro, the former Cuban president, has described the move by the US to ease restrictions on travel to the island as "positive although minimal".


But Castro, 82, also criticised the administration of Barack Obama, the US president, for leaving the 47-year US trade embargo against Cuba in place.


"The measure of easing the restrictions on trips is positive although minimal. Many others are needed," Castro wrote in a column published on a Cuban government website on Tuesday.


On Monday, the US said it would ease restrictions on travel and money transfers to Cuba, and allow US telecommunications firms to operate there.

Castro had written in the first of two online columns that the US had announced the repeal of "several hateful restrictions," but had stopped short of real change.


"Of the blockade, which is the cruellest of measures, not a word was uttered," the former president wrote.


The former leader stepped down from the presidency in February last year, leaving Raul Castro, his brother, installed as Cuban president.


Strained relations


Previously, Cubans living in the US could travel to the isolated Caribbean nation only once a year and only send $1,200 per person in cash to family members there.

In depth


Obama eases up on Cuba

In Video: US eases travel restrictions to Cuba

In Video: Cuban exiles plan home trip 


And under rules enacted in 2004 by the administration of George Bush, Obama's predecessor, Cuban-Americans could travel to the island just once every three years and could send only $300 to their relatives.


The two nations have not had diplomatic ties since 1960, when the US severed them following the revolution under Fidel Castro.


But Castro said that Obama would not do the damage believed to have been done by his predecessor.


"We do not have the slightest desire to harm Obama," Castro added.


"He doesn't have responsibility for what occurred and I'm sure he won't commit the atrocities of Bush."


Mixed reaction


Analysts believe the change in US policy could usher in a new era of openness between the two countries.


But among Cubans there was a mixed reaction to the news.


Many saw the changes as a welcome humanitarian gesture.


"You can imagine what it is like to have a marriage by telephone," Berta Maria Mayor told the Associated Press as she waited for the charter plane carrying her husband back to Cuba for the first time in three years.


"I'm in love with someone I barely get to see," the 45-year-old added.


However, Jose Pilar Ramos, who was looking for work in Havana said his cousin in Miami did not have enough money to visit Cuba, regardless of what US law now allows.


"Obama can do what he wants, but the problem is here. People don't want to work for $4 a week, even if they get more money from family members over there," he said.

 Source: Agencies

ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez ~aka: Peta

Sacramento, California, Aztlan
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/


http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/


http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CASA-12-Steps-Program/


http://www.zarcrom.com/users/yeartorem/serenityprayer.html


Monday, April 13, 2009

Obama eases Cuba travel, but embargo remains + Comment

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0413/p90s01-usfp.html

People walk along Varadero beach in Matanzas, Cuba, on April 9. The Obama administration announced Monday it will loosen some restrictions on Americans' dealings with Cuba.
Enrique De La Osa/Reuters

Obama eases Cuba travel, but embargo remains

His reforms make it easier for Cuban-Americans to visit and financially support family on the island. But some Latin leaders say the changes don't go far enough..

The Obama administration announced Monday that it will loosen some restrictions on Americans' contact and dealings with Cuba – a first step in what is seen as a gradual revision of US policy toward the communist island country.


The forthcoming changes include a repeal of limits on how many times Cuban-Americans can visit family in their Caribbean homeland and how much money they can send to relatives there. The reforms are timed to send President Obama off on his first trip to Latin America later this week armed with evidence of a new direction in US policy towards the region.


But administration officials say the measures will stop well short of a full repeal of the nearly 50-year-old trade embargo of Cuba. That in-between position has both Latin leaders and some members of Congress suggesting that the planned measures are inadequate half-steps. They are calling for a full US-Cuba dialogue.


Mr. Obama's refusal to fully engage with Cuba "is a double standard," says Ricardo Lagos, a former president of Chile and an eminence grise of Latin diplomacy. Under the new administration, the US is "willing to talk to countries that were in the 'axis of evil,' " he notes, "[so] it is difficult to understand why [the US] is not going to talk to Cuba."


Obama's repeal of the tighter restrictions implemented under President Bush reflect the position he laid out during the presidential campaign: "Cuban-American connections to family in Cuba are not only a basic right in humanitarian terms, but also our best tool for helping to foster the beginnings of grass-roots democracy on the island," candidate Obama wrote in an opinion piece in the Miami Herald in August.


Foreshadowing Monday's decision, he added that, if elected, "I will grant Cuban-Americans unrestricted rights to visit family and send remittances to the island."

The changes were announced by presidential press secretary Robert Gibbs in a press briefing Monday afternoon. They include a broadened list of items that families can send to relatives in Cuba, such as humanitarian goods like clothes, fishing equipment, and personal-hygiene products. Moreover, some US telecommunications companies will now be permitted to apply for licenses to do business in Cuba.


If the Cuban government allows it, they could bring improved radio, TV, mobile phone, and Internet service to the country – part of the Obama administration's effort to link Cubans to the outside world.


The White House says US-Cuba policy is under a full review. But the expectation that Obama would announce his new policy reform before attending the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago beginning Friday has spawned a raft of letters and recommendations – from Congress, from Cuba policy groups on the left and right, and from Cuban-American organizations.


Perhaps the most prominent of those calls came from US Sen. Richard Lugar (R) of Indiana, the ranking Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, who urged Obama in a March 30 letter to open a dialogue with Cuba's Communist regime and to welcome the island nation into the Washington-based Organization of American States.

But Senator Lugar did not call for ending the 1962 economic embargo, nor did he call for establishing full diplomatic relations. Instead, he recommended naming a special envoy who could begin a dialogue on issues such as democratic reform, migration, and drug-trafficking.


Other members of Congress oppose such a plan. Sen. Robert Menendez (D) of New Jersey – a Cuban-American – rejects any opening to Cuba as a gift to a regime that continues to jail dissidents and prodemocracy advocates.


By skirting the emotional issue of the embargo – the repeal of which would require congressional action – Obama may be signaling a desire to start with reforms that won't ruffle too many feathers.


But some Cuba experts say the embargo issue is a red herring: It does not stand in the way of meaningful change. "The embargo is nothing; we shouldn't let it stand in the way of so many things we can do," says Wayne Smith, director of the Cuba program at the Center for International Policy in Washington.


Mr. Smith says Obama needs to make a clean break from the Bush administration – both in personnel and policy. One good-faith step, he says, would be to reestablish the academic exchanges and intergovernment dialogue that existed before the Bush administration.


The Obama administration also should make clear that it is no longer official US policy to bring down the Cuban government, says Smith, a former head of the US Interests Section in Havana – a sort of quasi embassy. "We can talk while still having our disagreements. Then maybe we can get to the embargo in a few years."


Related Stories
Cuba under Raúl: Creeping toward capitalism? 07/24/2008

Plus other Links to Stories:

End the US-Cuba embargo: It's a win-win 10/09/2008
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1009/p09s02-coop.html

Momentum Grows for Relaxing Cuba Policy 3/30/2009 ~ See Video!

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/29/AR2009032902460.html
 

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Comment: Maybe this is a thaw in the long standing 'cold war' between the U.S. and Cuba since the Bay of Pigs disaster under the Kennedy Administration when JFK stated that "... defeat is an orphan". Was it related to his eventual assassination under some strange related circumstances?!?


Maybe ~ just maybe ~ President Obama will start building real bridges between peoples of other cultures ~ including an economy and what kind of economy as a cultural indicator.


The old days of state nationalism are over. A true nation should be able to command its own territory without having torture chambers on it such as the U.S. fascists have done and still are doing to a degree with the U.S. military installation at Guantanamo.


The U.S. government under the Obama Regime ~ and make no mistake it is still a reactionary regime ~ should completely lift the embargo with Cuba and establish normal diplomatic relations, allow people to come and go as they please and build up good relations with Cuba and its people. Besides that... I could go for a good Cuban cigar right now myself!!!


Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta

Sacramento, California, Aztlan
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/



FYI: Google Alert - immigrants: April 13, 2009

<><><><><><><><><><><>
Education for Liberation!
Peter S. Lopez aka: Peta

Sacramento, California, Aztlan
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/THIRD-WORLD-NEWS/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/


----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Google Alerts <googlealerts-noreply@google.com>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Monday, April 13, 2009 1:58:20 AM
Subject: Google Alert - immigrants

Google News Alert for: immigrants

Census concern: Immigrants may avoid the count
Arizona Republic - Phoenix,AZ,USA
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By Antonio Olivo | Tribune reporter Buoyed by recent promises from the Obama administration to push forward on federal Immigration reforms, i
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Tucson Citizen - Tucson,AZ,USA
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AFP
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Houston Chronicle
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She has an immigration hearing scheduled in June. Like the estimated 65000 unauthorized immigrants who graduate from US high schools each year, ...
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Immigration activists hope to pressure Obama to act
Contra Costa Times - Walnut Creek,CA,USA
As President Obama prepares for his first trip to Mexico, activists are intensifying the campaign for comprehensive immigration reform that they fear has ...
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Obama should give Ariz. the hard sell on immigration
Arizona Republic - Phoenix,AZ,USA
President Barack Obama's intention to pursue comprehensive immigration reform is critically important to Arizona and the nation. ...
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Profiles of citizens detained or deported
Washington Post - United States
Many who lived in the apartments were immigrants, but Alvarado was born in Bakersville, Calif. It was 9 pm when the immigration officers arrived, ...
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Illegal immigrants detained at Malaysia-Thai border -- Intellasia.Net
Current news from East Asia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Japan, Korea, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong,
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