Year: 2014
Honduras: New Colonel for Operation Xatruch, More of the Same for Lower Aguan?
Palms. Sea. Palms. Guns. Palms. Heat. More palms…and then a tense calm. This is how it feels from Ceiba to Tocoa and its surroundings, on the only paved road and in the many small shops, a place where people may see something, but say nothing. This is where the dead lived and suffered from the conflict that has gone on for more than 15 years in the Lower Aguán region of Honduras.
The Truth about Venezuela: A Revolt of the Well-off, Not a ‘Terror Campaign’
John Kerry’s rhetoric is divorced from the reality on the ground, where life goes on – even at the barricades Source: The Guardian Images forge reality, granting a power to television and video and even […]
Mexico’s Oil Belongs to Its Citizens, Not the Global 1%
On the anniversary of Mexico’s 1938 oil nationalization, artist Yoshua Okón argues that the “energy reform” currently underway in his country will deprive citizens of income directed toward education, health care and anti-poverty programs.
Honduras: Who Should Really Be On Trial For the Rio Blanco Dam?
María Santos was walking home on March 5th, 2014, when seven people suddenly jumped out of hiding, surrounded her, and then attacked her with machetes, striking her head and chest. María has been a vocal leader in the struggle against the Agua Zarca Hydroelectric Dam, defending the Lenca territory of Rio Blanco and the Gualcarque River for her children and grandchildren to come. She is a tireless fighter in the struggle of the Lenca people of Rio Blanco to prevent DESA, a private dam company, from privatizing and building a dam on their river.
Resurgent Chilean Social Movements Advance Cross-Border Solidarity
Source: NACLA On March 11, newly elected President Michelle Bachelet began her inaugural speech by acknowledged her debt to the social movements that propelled her center-left New Majority coalition to victory, on a radical platform […]
Lula Sends Letter of Support to Maduro
Source: The Americas Blog Lula da Silva, the former president of Brazil, released a statement in support of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro on the occasion of the one year anniversary of the death of Hugo […]
Fashion Faux Pas? Free Trade and Sweatshop Labor in Guatemala
Free trade agreements have not delivered promised protections to workers, as the case of Guatemalan sweatshop labor illustrates.
Repsol Sells Oil Stake in ‘Isolated’ Indigenous Peoples’ Territory in Peruvian Amazon
Oil and gas company Repsol is selling its stake in controversial oil operations in a remote part of the Peruvian Amazon inhabited by indigenous people in ‘voluntary isolation’ (IPVI), just across the border from the ITT oil fields in Ecuador.