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Anti-CAFTA Protests Rock El Salvador

March 1, 2006 Cyril Mychalejko 0

Thousands of trade unionists, farmers, students and workers are protesting in El Salvador against their government’s decision to commence CAFTA with the U.S. El Salvador is the only Central American country thus far to officially […]

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Mexico’s “Dirty” Past

March 1, 2006 Cyril Mychalejko 0

The Mexican government committed genocide and crimes against humanity that included rape, murder, kidnapping and a scorched earth campaign during the Mexico’s "dirty war", a government campaign against suspected leftist guerrillas, activists and in reality, […]

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Indigenous Want Autonomy in Chile

March 1, 2006 Cyril Mychalejko 0

The Mapuche, Chile’s largest indigenous population, is forming a political party in an effort gain autonomy and self-government. The Wallmapuwen (party) hopes to be legally recognized later this year so that it has the time […]

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Guatemalan Community’s Search for Justice Continues

March 1, 2006 Ellen Moore 0

In July of 1982, Guatemalan government forces marched into the small community of Plan de Sánchez, forced community members into a house, and tossed a grenade in after them. They raped young women and girls, destroyed crops, and looted and burned homes with the inhabitants inside, leaving the charred remains of the victims behind.

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In the Name of the War on Terror: Bolivian Human Rights Leader Barred from Entering the U.S.

February 27, 2006 Benjamin Dangl 0

Leonida Zurita Vargas, a Bolivian coca farmer organizer and alternate Senator, was planning to be in the US right now as part of a three week speaking tour on Bolivian social movements and human rights. This tour would take her to Vermont, Harvard, Stanford and Washington DC. However, upon checking in at the airport in Santa Cruz, Bolivia on February 20th to fly to the US, she was informed her ten year visa had been revoked because of alleged links to terrorist activity.

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Foreign Policy and the Party Line: Chavismo and Its Discontents

February 27, 2006 Max Ajl 0

Ideologues construct arguments by arranging selective constellations of facts and half-truths to support preconceived conclusions. Scholars construct arguments by assaying and weighing facts to determine conclusions and approximate truth. Javier Corrales seems to have adopted the former approach in his January/February contribution to Foreign Policy, "Hugo Boss."

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La Guerra del Papel: Argentina-Uruguay

February 27, 2006 Raúl Zibechi 0

La escalada de cortes de los puentes internacionales entre Argentina y Uruguay, protagonizada por el movimiento ambientalista en reclamo por la instalación de dos grandes fábricas de celulosa, muestra los límites sociales del modelo neoliberal y ha hecho entrar en crisis la alianza regional entre gobiernos que fueron jaqueados por las protestas. Por qué las papeleras y la contaminación ambiental son apenas la parte más visible de un modelo que ya diseñó el destino del sur del continente.

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Guatemala Seeks Military Aid

February 22, 2006 Cyril Mychalejko 0

The Guatemalan government wants U.S. helicopters, radar equipment and U.S. agents to help expand its anti-narcotic operations. Colombian president Alvaro Uribe expressed support for Guatemala’s request for "anti-drug" aid during a one-day visit. The two […]

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Ecuador Declares State of Emergency

February 22, 2006 Cyril Mychalejko 0

Ecuador declared a state of emergency on Tuesday after soldiers opened fire on protesters who occupied and shut down one of the country’s largest oil pipelines. Local television showed pictures of troops firing their rifles […]

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Private Rivers: Will Transnational Water Companies Swallow El Salvador’s Water Supply?

February 22, 2006 Jason Wallach 0

The office of SETA, El Salvador’s water workers union, sits like a mouse at the elephant’s feet. The union’s plain, two room office sits next door to the huge, block-long two story building which is the headquarters for El Salvador’s national water company, ANDA (National Water and Sewage Administration). Inside the SETA office, union reps equipped with an old computer and chairs with broken rollers are bracing for a fight against government attempts to privatize their industry. Representatives for SETA say losing the fight could mean the "extinction" of their union and limits on Salvadoran’s access to clean water.

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