brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

October 22, 2007

As Bangkok slowly sinks, Thailand hunts for solutions

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua,thailand,usa,weather — admin @ 4:35 am

KHUN SAMUT CHIN, Thailand — At Bangkok’s watery gates, Buddhist monks cling to a shrinking spit of land around their temple as they wage war against the relentlessly rising sea.

During the monsoons at high tide, waves hurdle the breakwater of concrete pillars and the inner rock wall around the temple on a promontory in the Gulf of Thailand. Jutting above the water line just ahead are remnants of a village that already has slipped beneath the sea.

Experts say these waters, aided by sinking land, threaten to submerge Thailand’s sprawling capital of more than 10 million people within this century. Bangkok is one of 13 of the world’s largest 20 cities at risk of being swamped as sea levels rise in coming decades, according to warnings at the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change held here.

The city, built on clay rather than bedrock, has been sinking as much as 4 inches annually as its teeming population and factories pump some 2.5 million cubic tons of cheaply priced water, legally and illegally, out of its aquifers. This compacts the layers of clay and causes the land to sink.

Everyone — the government, scientists and environmental groups — agrees Bangkok is headed for trouble, but there is some debate about when.

Once known as the “Venice of the East,” Bangkok was founded 225 years ago on a swampy floodplain along the Chao Phraya River. But beginning in the 1950s, on the advice of international development agencies, most of the canals were filled in to make roads and combat malaria. This fractured the natural drainage system that had helped control Bangkok’s annual monsoon season flooding.

Smith Dharmasaroja, chair of the government’s Committee of National Disaster Warning Administration, urges that work start now on a dike system of more than 60 miles — protective walls about 16 feet high, punctured by water gates and with roads on top, not unlike the dikes long used in low-lying Netherlands to ward off the sea. The dikes would run on both banks of the Chao Phraya River and then fork to the right and left at the mouth of the river.

Oceanographer Anond Snidvongs, a leading scientist in the field, says other options must also be explored, including water-diversion channels, more upcountry dams and the “monkey cheeks” idea of King Bhumibol Adulyadej. The king, among the first to alert Bangkokians about the yearly flooding, has suggested diverting off-flow from the surges into reservoirs, the “cheeks,” for later release into the gulf.

As authorities ponder, communities like Khun Samut Chin, 12 miles from downtown Bangkok, are taking action.

The five monks at the temple and surrounding villagers are building the barriers from locally collected donations and planting mangrove trees to halt shoreline erosion.

The odds are against them. About half a mile of shoreline has already been lost over the past three decades, in large part due to the destruction of once-vast mangrove forests. The abbot, Somnuk Attipanyo, says about one-third of the village’s original population was forced to move.

Endangered cities

Cities around the world are facing the danger of rising seas and other disasters related to climate change. Thirty-three cities are predicted to have at least 8 million people by 2015. According to studies by the United Nations and others, these 18 are among those considered to be highly vulnerable:

City Country

Dhaka Bangladesh
Buenos Aires Argentina
Rio de Janeiro Brazil
Shanghai, Tianjin China
Alexandria, Cairo Egypt
Mumbai, Calcutta India
Jakarta Indonesia
Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe Japan
Lagos Nigeria
Karachi Pakistan
Bangkok Thailand
New York, Los Angeles U.S.

October 21, 2007

Ortega says foreign textile firms `enslaving’ workers

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 6:30 am

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has accused foreign textile companies, mostly Taiwanese, of “enslaving” workers and leaving the country instead of paying higher wages.

Ortega said several industries closed in free zones following the government’s recent decision to increase the minimum wage by 18 percent.

“There is talk that the companies are going to leave the free zones, that people are going to be left unemployed,” the leftist Ortega said in a speech late on Wednesday.

“When they find that they have to pay more, it is no longer worthwhile and they leave,” he said.

The president said the owners of textile industries “enslave” Nicaraguan female workers, forcing them to work long hours in exchange for “the lowest salaries in all of Central America.”

“When they see that they should increase their employees’ wages by 18 percent, they decide to leave for places like … China and Vietnam, although they are Taiwanese,” Ortega said.

The Nicaraguan president said his country needed “long-term investment and not this kind.”

Free zones, which offer incentives to foreign companies by cutting tariffs and quotas, started to operate in Nicaragua in 1990 and have become an important source of jobs. More than 83,000 people work in 112 firms, most of them from Taiwan, South Korea and the US.

Miguel Ruiz, secretary general of the Sandinista Workers Union, which is close to the government, said on Wednesday that at least five factories have closed this year.

He attributed the fact to “a 30 percent reduction in work orders.”

In related news, Taiwanese Ambassador to Nicaragua Wu Chin-mu (吳進木), who was also present yesterday evening, told a Central News Agency reporter that Huang Ming-wei (黃明偉), general manager of Nien Hsing Textile Co (年興紡織), verified that the company had set up a plant in Vietnam but that it had no plans to leave Nicaragua.

Wu said the policy to increase salaries was put in place after Ortega took over the Nicaraguan presidency, but that labor costs still were the lowest in Central America.

A Nien Hsing official who mentioned some of the problems encountered in Nicaragua’s free zones in an interview with the Miami Herald last week said that pulling out its investments was one of the company’s possible strategies.

State of disaster declared in Nicaragua after torrential downpours

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua,weather — admin @ 6:21 am

Torrential downpours caused “Rio Grande de Matagalpa” river to grow 9 metres and overflow the town damaging infrastructure and ruining crops throughout the area. That forced Pres. Ortega to declare a state of disaster.

President Daniel Ortega declared a state of disaster after days of incessant rains in Nicaragua left at least nine people dead and thousands homeless in the Nicaraguan department of Matagalpa.

“We are declaring a state of disaster and not a state of emergency,” he said, adding “a state of emergency limits the rights of the citizens and here we are not limiting any right to any citizen.”

The torrential downpours caused the “Rio Grande de Matagalpa” river to grow some nine metres and overflow into the town damaging infrastructure and ruining crops throughout the area.

The strong currents have caused vehicles to overturn on the roads and dragged makeshift homes, cars and household appliances into the river.

The situation has still caught many residents off guard, and rescue teams have been working constantly in order to help the local inhabitants.

“Nobody was prepared, some of us were coming back from work and suddenly we realised the river had overflowed and it began creating havoc,” a local resident told Nicaraguan television.

Rio Grande de Matagalpa which borders the city by the same name, has some of the strongest currents in the area.

Ortega meanwhile met in Managua with a Venezuelan delegation in Nicaragua to help assess the damages in Matapalga and other districts of the country affected by the floods which destroyed several neighbourhoods and toppled bridges.

The Nicaraguan president asked his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez for help in dealing with the situation.

Chavez said a team had been sent to Nicaragua to help his delegation assess the overall damages.

Heavy rains meanwhile continued to fall throughout the country, including the capital.

The city’s mayor Dionisio Marenci said that if it continued to rain, floods could force the closing down of the Sandino international airport.

The recent damages caused by the constant rains throughout the region have affected thousands of Nicaraguans who were still trying to recuperate from the damage caused by Hurricane Felix last month.

October 20, 2007

Día de la Resistencia Indígena

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 6:42 am

Managua, Oct 16 — Columbus Day on October 12, marking
the arrival of Spanish colonizers to the Americas 515 years ago, will
no longer be observed in Nicaraguan schools as of this year, an
official source said.

In the opinion of President Daniel Ortega last week on the eve of October
12, the arrival of Spanish colonizers to the “New World” meant the
start of genocide against the indigenous population in the America.

According to Minister of Education Miguel de Castilla, the date will
be celebrated from next year on as “Indigenous Resistance Day,” to highlight the struggle of native peoples against European colonialism.

In remarks made to local media, De Castilla added that from this year
on, every October 30 the Nicaraguans will mark the granting of
autonomy to the mainly ethnic Nicaraguan Caribbean Coast in 1987.

Día de la Resistencia Indígena (Spanish for “Day of Indigenous Resistance”) is the name for an October 12 national holiday in Venezuela. The holiday on this date was known as Día de la Raza (Day of the Race) prior to 2002, a name that is used together with Columbus Day in other countries across the Americas.

The festival originally commemorated the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus, and was made a holiday in 1921 under President Juan Vicente Gómez. The new Day of the Indigenous Resistance commemorates thus the resistance of the indigenous peoples against the Spanish colonization of the Americas.

On the 2004 Day of Indigenous Resistance, a statue of Columbus was toppled in Caracas, the Venezuelan capital. The pro-Chavez, left-wing website Aporrea wrote: “Just like the statue of Saddam in Baghdad, that of Columbus the tyrant also fell this October 12, 2004 in Caracas”[3]. The famous toppling of Saddam Hussein’s statue had occurred the previous year.

All this revival of the Indian resentment against the white Spanish conquerors (and Columbus) is supported and promoted by Venezuela’s current President, the Bolivarianist Hugo Chávez, himself a mestizo of mixed Amerindian, Afro-Venezuelan, and Spanish descent.

Vernon Bellecourt: a visionary of the Native movement

Filed under: General,global islands,government,military,nicaragua,usa — admin @ 5:26 am

In memory

Vernon Bellecourt, WaBun-Inini, a member of the Anishinabe/Ojibwe Nation and longtime leader in the American Indian Movement, died on Oct. 13 of pneumonia at the age of 75.

Bellecourt, one of 12 children and older brother of AIM co-founder Clyde Bellecourt, was born on the White Earth Chippewa Reservation in Minnesota in 1931. It is estimated that unemployment on the reservation was 95 percent when the Bellecourt children were growing up.

Dennis Banks and Clyde Bellecourt co-founded the American Indian Movement in 1968 in Minneapolis, an organization of and for Native people that was inspired by the Black Panther Party. AIM sought to defend the community against police brutality, racism, poverty and oppression.

Vernon soon joined and was a lifelong activist in the organization. By its militant example and defense of Native peoples trying to stop the theft of their land and resources, AIM helped instill a renewed pride across the Native nations of the United States.

AIM led a 71-day takeover of the town of Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge reservation beginning Feb. 27, 1973, after U.S. marshals laid siege to a community meeting that sought AIM’s assistance against the repressive and corrupt tribal government. More than 300 federal agents surrounded the camp with armored personnel carriers, over 130,000 rounds of ammunition, and constant gunfire. Two AIM activists were murdered by government agents.

For this, the American Indian Movement leaders, including the Bellecourts and Banks, were severely repressed. Over 60 people on the reservation were murdered by police and vigilantes in the next two years, culminating in the June 26, 1975, shoot-out at Pine Ridge, where two FBI agents were killed after raiding the reservation.

The most egregious injustice against AIM activists was the frame-up and persecution of Leonard Peltier. Because two AIM members, Dino Butler and Bob Robideau, were acquitted of the FBI deaths by a federal jury in Iowa by reason of self-defense, the FBI decided the only remaining defendant charged but not yet tried had to pay. Leonard Peltier had sought refuge in Canada and was therefore not tried along with Butler and Robideau, or he also would have been acquitted.

The FBI falsified evidence to get Peltier extradited. Despite a lack of evidence, witness coercion by the FBI, and numerous irregularities, Peltier was convicted and sentenced to two consecutive life terms. To this day, he remains in a U.S. federal prison at Lewisburg, Penn., despite international and national demands for his freedom.

It is in this context of extreme U.S. government repression of the American Indian Movement that the continued resistance of leaders like the Bellecourts, Banks, Bill Means and many other Indigenous leaders is best appreciated.

An internationalist

Bellecourt was an internationalist, supporting the Palestinian, Irish, Venezuelan, Cuban, Libyan, Nicaraguan and many other causes.

When the CIA intensified its counterrevolutionary war in Nicaragua in the mid-1980s by recruiting Indigenous Miskito leaders who had joined the Contra forces, Bellecourt traveled to the country to defend the Nicaraguan revolution.

He prided himself on his uncompromising anti-imperialist stance, and recently returned from Venezuela where he traveled to express appreciation to Hugo Chávez for the Bolivarian revolution’s heating-fuel deliveries to Native communities in Minnesota.

In recent years, Bellecourt was nationally known as a spokesperson in the campaign against racist anti-Indian symbols of sports teams through the National Coalition on Racism in Sports and Media.

In 1997, he drew national attention to this anti-racist fight when he, Juan Reyna and Juanita Helphrey and other coalition members set fire to an effigy of the extremely offensive Cleveland baseball team’s Chief Wahoo, during the baseball World Series at Cleveland’s Jacobs Field. He was arrested but charges were later dropped.

In a 1995 interview with Sinn Fein, Bellecourt stated, “AIM sees the Washington Redskins, the Atlanta Braves basketball team, Kansas City Chiefs and Cleveland Indians baseball teams with their grinning buck-toothed mascot Chief Wahoo as demeaning the beautiful culture of the Indigenous nations of the Americas. We are a living people with a vibrant culture and we refuse to have our identity trivialized and degraded. Indians are people, not mascots for America’s fun and games.”

Bellecourt was a strong opponent of the U.S. genocide and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan, and he spoke at several ANSWER Coalition (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) anti-war rallies since 2003 in Washington, D.C., and San Francisco.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation extends its deepest condolences to his family, comrades and friends. We pledge our continued solidarity with the Native struggle for self-determination and justice.

Vernon Bellecourt, presente!

The Bellecourt family is collecting donations to help pay for medical and burial costs. Donations and cards can be sent to:

Clyde Bellecourt
3953 14th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55407

October 15, 2007

Torrential rains, floods kill 20 in Central America

Filed under: bangladesh,General,global islands,nicaragua,weather — admin @ 4:33 am

Torrential rains, floods kill 20 in Central America
Thousands flee homes as fresh floods hit Bangladesh
Floods kill at least 31 in Haiti
N.Korea floods left 600 people dead or missing
Dozens killed in worst Vietnam floods in decades


SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, Oct 14 – Emergency officials across Central America worked to clean up towns inundated by recent deadly floods and landslides, and braced for more bad weather on Sunday.

At least 20 people were killed and thousands evacuated across Central America after days of torrential rain sparked landslides and flooding.

The same weather system that killed 23 people in a Haitian village on Friday triggered a landslide that buried 14 people under mud and debris in Costa Rica.

Red Cross workers had been digging through the debris since Thursday, when about 2.5 acres (1 hectare) of land on a steep slope gave way and fell on the small town of Atenas, about 20 miles (30 km) west of the Costa Rican capital.

“We found the last body this afternoon,” Red Cross spokesman Federico Castillo said on Sunday.

Heavy rains put emergency services on high alert across the region as rivers burst their banks and sodden hillsides collapsed, blocking roads across the region, which is prone to killer storms and flooding.

Forecasters warned the weather could worsen Sunday evening.

“There is some potential for this system to become a tropical depression later today or tonight,” said the Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center.

In Honduras, three children and their mother drowned on Saturday when an overloaded boat evacuating them capsized in a flooded river, rescue workers said.

Mudslides cut off thousands of villagers in poor rural regions of the coffee exporting nation. No damage to crops was reported.

El Salvador was also hit, with two men swept away by strong currents in two rivers swollen by the rains. Civil protection officials said about 500 people were evacuated because of the risk of rivers overflowing.

In Nicaragua, at least 4,000 people were evacuated when a banana growing region was put on red alert because of the flood risk. At least 10,000 people were considered at risk in Nicaragua.

Emergency service workers rushed villagers from their homes near the Casita volcano, the site of a devastating mudslide that killed close to 2,000 in 1998’s Hurricane Mitch.

Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, was worst hit.

The loss of life in Cabaret, nestled in mountains about 19 miles (30 km) north of capital Port-au-Prince, brought the toll from floods and mudslides across much of Haiti over the last two weeks to at least 31, civil protection officials said.

October 13, 2007

Autonomy Incomplete After 20 Years

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 5:20 am

BLUEFIELDS — From the dark interior lobby of a budget hotel next to the Moravian Church in Bluefields, local activist Gilberto Joseph quietly sells revolutionary T-shirts that demand ‘Autonomy Now for the Nicaraguan Caribbean Coast.’

Two hours north by boat, in the remote fishing outpost of Pearl Lagoon, a local Creole DJ talks about the importance of self-determination to anyone who tunes in to FM 91.1, ‘Radio Caribbean Pearl, The Vanguard of Autonomy.’

And in the northern indigenous communities that hug the regional capital of Bilwi, Miskito indigenous leaders meet to organize against the central government’s Logging Moratorium Law, which they call the latest offense of the ‘Pacific coast government.’

The Caribbean coast of Nicaragua is home to roughly 15% of the country’s population, but represents 46% of the national territory, divided into the North and South Atlantic Autonomous Regions, RAAN and RAAS, respectively. This section of the country has long been removed geographically, linguistically and culturally from the rest of Nicaragua, and many of the people here still refer to Pacific-coast Nicaraguans as the ‘Spanish.’

In recent years, however, the ethnic make-up of the coast has changed, as an increasing number of Spanish-speaking mestizos migrate to the Caribbean side. Mestizos now represent the majority of the population on the Caribbean coast, further complicating the meaning and implementation of the Law of Autonomy for the Atlantic Coast (Law 28), which became law 20 years ago this month.

From the Creole, Rama and Garifuna communities in the RAAS, to the Miskitos and Sumo-Mayangas of the RAAN, autonomy has taken different forms, and has done so at different speeds.

While Miskito groups, molded by years of violent oppression, have been bold in organizing armed, political and social movements to fight for autonomy, the Creole population has been slower to organize, but has nonetheless asserted its identity strongly though culture, cuisine and music.

‘Not all of the peoples of the Caribbean coast fought for autonomy rights, so in the mid-1980s different communities had diverging expectations of what autonomy would be,’ said Miguel González, co-author of the new book on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast, ‘Ethnicity and Nation.’ He added, ‘After 1990, however, indigenous peoples, mestizos and afro-descendants found out the critical importance of autonomy as a platform for rights.’

In recent years, the concept of autonomy has become a buzzword for all the peoples of the Caribbean coast.

And with this year’s anniversary of the autonomy law, coupled with the Sandinistas’ return to power, many have given pause for reflection on what has been achieved and what remains to be done.

Many people claim that the previous three conservative governments viewed the Law of Autonomy as a ‘Sandinista invention,’ and now that the Sandinistas are back in office they hope the law will be given teeth.

‘The FSLN (Sandinista Front) government has shown its genuine interest in promoting the consolidation of the autonomy regime,’ González told said.

He said the proof of this commitment is the Sandinistas’ alliance with the regional Miskito movement YATAMA, the appointment of Caribbean representatives to key government posts related to the sectors of fisheries and forestry, and the government’s commitment to the long-term reconstruction efforts following Hurricane Felix.

On the coast, some local leaders agree that the return of the Sandinista government represents their best chance to give substance to the autonomy law.

‘Violeta, Arnoldo, Bolaños ‘ none of these other governments took into account the Caribbean region,’ said Michael Campbell, a black youth organizer from Bluefields, referring to the previous three Presidents. ‘But the current government is making a heart-felt effort toward the coast. A framework is being built for a new reality between the central government and the Caribbean.’

Yet some indigenous leaders, especially those in the north, are suspicious of the new government’s intentions.

‘The Sandinistas never had the Law of Autonomy in their hearts; they only did it because they were pressured to do so and needed to calm the situation on the coast,’ said former Miskito combatant Osorno ‘Comandante Blas’ Coleman, referring to the Sandinistas forced relocation of Miskito communities and the subsequent indigenous uprising of the early 1980s.

Coleman, who helped lead the Miskitos’ insurgency, said there is already resistance brewing in the indigenous communities to the new government’s efforts to impose ‘direct democracy’ through the creation of the Councils of Citizen Power (CCPs), which many view as an infiltration of Sandinista party apparatus.

‘These councils are an outside imposition that disrespect our traditional structures  the councils of elders and the regional councils, Coleman toid

The preamble to the 1987 Law of Autonomy states: The process of autonomy enriches our national culture, recognizes and strengthens ethnic identity, respects the specific cultures and communities of the Atlantic coast, rescues their histories, recognizes the right to property on communal lands, rejects any type of discrimination, recognizes religious freedom and recognizes different identities that together form national unity.

The law, therefore, officially recognizes that Nicaragua is a multiethnic nation and that the inhabitants of the Caribbean coast have a right to live according to their traditions and with domain over their natural resources.

While there is disagreement over the Sandinistas’ original motives for creating the law, there is almost universal agreement that the legislation  as it is written  is a major achievement for the peoples of the coast. But not everyone thinks the central government is interested in implementing the law as it was intended.

Miskitos who have tried to turn a profit from logging their forests claim the government’s 2006 logging moratorium violates their autonomy and sovereign right to their natural resources. The reinforcement of the logging ban in the wake of the Sept. 4 Hurricane Felix, which destroyed 477,000 hectares of forest and damaged an additional 1 million hectares, has some indigenous communities complaining the government regulation will keep them from getting back on their feet.

President Daniel Ortega and First Lady Rosario Murillo have promised to revitalize and reconstruct the hurricane affected zones with absolute respect for autonomy, the authorities, the cultures, traditions and cosmovisions of the indigenous communities of Nicaragua.

But many in the indigenous communities are already grumbling that relief efforts have been inefficient, uncoordinated and  in the case of the ban on the sale of fallen timber  in grave violation of their rights to the forest.

RAAN vs. RAAS

The expressions of autonomy that have developed in the RAAN and the RAAS are quite different.

In the north, Miskito communities formed themselves into movements of armed resistance that later evolved into a political group known today as Yabti Tasba Masraka Nanih Asla Takanka (The Children of Mother Earth), or YATAMA.

The former anti-Sandinista resistance fighters, under the military leadership of Comandante Blas and the political leadership of Brooklyn Rivera, battled the Sandinistas for years.

Other indigenous leaders, such as Steadman Fagoth, allied with the U.S.-backed Contras in Honduras.

Twenty years later, in an era of alleged national reconciliation, Rivera is a national lawmaker representing YATAMA and Fagoth has been named director of the National Fisheries Institute (INPESCA).

Rivera, one of the fiercest defenders of Miskito autonomy in the 1980s, has been criticized recently for siding with his former enemy. However, he defends his alliance with the Sandinistas as one of pragmatic politics. While admitting that he still doesn’t entirely trust the Sandinistas, he says his political post in Managua will help to bring the Caribbean agenda to the national level.

Rivera recently told The Nica Times that he thinks the Caribbean coast is better represented in government than it ever has been in the past, and that now more than ever the Law of Autonomy has a chance to be improved and implemented profoundly.

Critics such as Coleman, however, think that Rivera, Fagoth and other Caribbean coast natives who make it into Pacific-coast politics do so by being sellouts.

They are just government officials who obey the executive power, Coleman charged.

The RAAS, meanwhile, is represented in the National Assembly by three lawmakers, but only one, Conservative Party congressman Stanford Cash, is Creole.

Cash says he thinks the Miskitos to the north have done a much better job organizing than the Creoles in the south.

We can’t get serious; every meeting is a fight, he said, referring to the Regional Council of the RAAS. The Indians are more determined; the Creole, they are more I don’t know. There is something we have to inject into the Creoles to get them to be more like the north.

On a national level, Cash  like Rivera  says he is going to use his seat in the National Assembly to try to reform the Law of Autonomy to limit Caribbean regional elections to regional political parties  YATAMA, the Indigenous Multiethnic Party (PIM) and an emerging black party known as Coast Power.

Cash also wants to change the economic relationship between the Caribbean and Pacific coasts, which he claims is based on sucking money and resources out of the Caribbean and sending back very little government funding in exchange.

Though slower to organize politically, the Creole population has long asserted itself through music and dance.

Philip Montalban, a famed Bluefields reggae singer whose lyrics stress the need for liberation, was recently awarded the government’s top cultural award  the first black man to ever receive such honors. Still, Montalban says he has been frustrated that the recognition has not translated into more support for Caribbean culture and arts.

When we have problems, our people turn to music, Montalban says, while strumming a guitar, occasionally breaking into song, which seems to help his flow of thought. The message brings joy to your heart, makes you forget your problems. Music transcends, it keeps the people going.

The black population has also traditionally turned to religion to help them through tough times.

But for some, religion has become a crutch that has kept the black community from standing up straight.

In the past, our people were too pacified by religion and a leave-it-to-God attitude, said Joseph, the vendor of revolutionary T-shirts in Bluefields.

Joseph, despite his advanced age of 73, would rather take a more combative approach to demanding autonomy, as his T-shirt’s message implies. He reads off the back of his shirt:

Autonomy, for our people, is freedom and self-determination. For the government, that’s a no-no and so they try to break us up, take the pieces and try to RAAN it up our RAAS. That is provoking. People Fite Fu les than Dat!

October 10, 2007

Cocaine galore! Villagers live it up on profits from ‘white lobster’

Filed under: General,global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 5:59 am

Washed-up bales of drugs bring millions of dollars to poor fishing communities

Centuries of troubles have bobbed on the waves off the Mosquito Coast: Christopher Columbus, the Spanish conquest, pirates, slave ships. For the fishing villages scattered across these remote central American shores there was seldom reason to welcome visits from the outside world.

But that was before the “white lobster”, and before everything changed. Now the villagers rise at first light to scan the horizon in hope of seeing a very different type of intruder.

What they are looking for, and what they have coyly euphemised, are big, bulging bags of Colombian cocaine. A combination of law enforcement, geography and ocean currents has washed tonnes of the drug, and millions of dollars, into what was one of the Caribbean’s most desolate and isolated regions. Villages that once eked an existence on shrimp and red-tinged lobster have been transformed. In place of thatched wooden huts there are brick houses, mansions and satellite dishes.

“They consider it a blessing from God. You see people all day just walking up and down the beaches keeping a lookout to sea,” said Louis Perez, the police chief in Bluefields, the main port on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast.

Colombian speedboats hug the coastline so closely that this narco-route to the US is known as the “country road”. With 800-horsepower outboard motors, the so-called “go fasts” can usually outrun US and Nicaraguan patrols. But on occasion they are intercepted, not least when US snipers hit their engines. “Then they throw the coke overboard to get rid of the evidence,” said a European drug enforcement official based in the region. “Other times it’s because they run out of fuel or have an accident.”

Currents carry the bales towards the shore. A decade ago many of the indigenous Miskito people had not even heard of cocaine. Some 15 people in the village of Karpwala are said to have died after mistaking the contents of a bale for baking powder.

That innocence is long gone. Colombian traffickers and Nicaraguan middlemen trawl villages offering finders $4,000 (£1,960) a kilo, said Major Perez – seven times less than the US street value but a fortune to a fisherman.

Tasbapauni, a sleepy hamlet a three-hour motorboat ride from Bluefields, is a cocaine version of Whisky Galore!, the 1940s tale of a Hebridean island which salvages a shipwrecked cargo of booze and plays cat-and-mouse with the authorities to keep it.

Posh hotels

Some locals who used to be in rags live it up at posh hotels in Bluefields and Managua, others stock up on wide-screen TVs and expensive beer. With its creole English and African slave descendants, the community feels more Jamaican than Nicaraguan. Its high-rolling reputation has earned Tasbapauni the nickname Little Miami. That’s an exaggeration. There is still plenty of poverty and barefoot children and there are no roads or vehicles and little to break the silence except lapping surf, clucking chickens and the occasional thud of a falling coconut. But things are different. “Today the toiling is easier. Life is plenty better than before,” said Percival Hebbert, 84, a Moravian Church pastor and village leader. “The community is like this: you find drugs, this one find drugs, the next one find drugs – that money is stirring right here in the community, going round and round.”

The white lobster was a blessing, he said, as long as the bonanza was spent wisely. “Almost all you see with a good home, a good cement home, those are the ones who find them things.”

The church had just installed a shiny white floor thanks to a donation from a fisherman, Ted Hayman, who reputedly hauled in 220kg (485lb). Mr Hayman chose the colours and tiles himself. “He’s a kind man,” said Mr Hebbert.

He was grateful but lamented the church’s cut was not greater. “God says that 10% of whatever you earn is his. But no one do that here.” Villages further north oblige finders to give a tenth of the proceeds to the church and at least another tenth to neighbours.

Mr Hayman, 37, Tasbapauni’s most “blessed” fisherman, has converted his shack into a three-storey mansion with iron gates, a satellite dish and architecture best described as narc-deco. A sign identifies the residence as Hayman Hi.

Garrison

Mr Hayman’s sister, Maria, 40, said cocaine was the source of the wealth – and philanthropy. “Him always try to help the people. Him help the sick, the widows, the church, anybody.”

A short stroll from Hayman Hi is a 30-strong army garrison tasked with combating drug trafficking. It is as laid back as the rest of Tasbapauni. You could not prosecute someone for becoming rich, said the commander, Edwin Salmeron. “If we don’t capture them with the drugs there’s nothing we can do.”

Given the poverty and decades of government neglect it was “understandable but not justified” that the cocaine was sold on, said Moises Arana, a former Bluefields mayor. “There is no shame. It’s almost an innocence – they don’t understand the consequences.”

Increasingly, however, a dark side is emerging. Not all the cocaine is shipped north. Some is turned into crack and sold locally, producing the skinny, ragged youths who haunt Bluefields’ slums. The town jail is crammed with alleged addicts and pushers awaiting trial.

“With crack you lose your pride, you lose your money, everything,” said Randolph Carter, 50, a former addict. In 2004 traffickers shot off his arm while looking for another addict who had reneged on a promise to fuel their boat. “Cocaine is not a blessing. It can destroy you,” said Mr Carter.

Corruption allows traffickers to buy their way out of trouble. In 2004 a gang took over Bluefields’ police station and cut the throats of four officers. No one has been charged for what is assumed to be a drug-related atrocity.

To many, however, cocaine promises deliverance from poverty. Marvin Hoxton, 37, a lobster diver, once discovered a 72kg bale. Thieves forced him to hand over 70kg at gunpoint but he sold the remainder for $5,000. It lasted two months. “Drinking, dancing, women, the dollars fly,” he rued.

Now broke and back living with his mother, Mr Hoxton had a plan: to fill his wooden skiff with supplies and camp out on a remote beach for six months. He will string a hammock between two coconut trees, listen to his transistor radio and keep his eyes on the ocean.

“You can’t know when you might get it,” he said, staring at his beer, as if mini-bales were floating inside the bottle. “You have to wait. Wait for it to come.”

October 6, 2007

Filed under: General,global islands,government,nicaragua — admin @ 1:35 pm

Reggaeton (also spelled Reggaetón, and known as Reguetón and Reggaetón in Spanish) is a form of urban music which became popular with Latin American (or Latino) youth during the early 1990s and spread over the course of 10 years to North American, European, Asian, and Australian audiences. Reggaeton blends Jamaican music influences of reggae and dancehall with those of Latin America, such as bomba, plena, merengue, and bachata as well as that of hip hop and Electronica. The music is also combined with rapping or singing in Spanish, English or ‘Spanglish’. Reggaeton has given the Hispanic youth, starting with those from Puerto Rico, a musical genre that they can consider their own. The influence of this genre has spread to the wider Latino communities in the United States, as well as the Latin American audience. While it takes influences from hip hop and Jamaican dancehall, it would be wrong to define reggaeton as the Hispanic or Latino version of either of these genres; Reggaeton has its own specific beat and rhythm, whereas Latino hip hop is simply hip hop recorded by artists of Latino descent. The specific rhythm that characterizes reggaeton is referred to as “Dem Bow.” The name is a reference to the title of the dancehall song by Shabba Ranks that first popularized the beat in the early 1990s.

Reggaeton’s origins represents a hybrid of many different musical genres and influences from various countries in the Caribbean, Latin America and the United States. The genre of reggaeton however is most closely associated with Puerto Rico, as this is where the musical style later popularized and became most famous, and where the vast majority of its current stars originate from.

Reggaeton lyrics tend to be more derived from hip hop than dancehall. Like hip hop, reggaeton has caused some controversy, albeit much less, due to a few of the songs’ explicit lyrics and alleged exploitation of women. Further controversy surrounds perreo, a dance with explicit sexual overtones which is associated with reggaeton music.

Filed under: Film,General,global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 6:53 am

A comparsa (conga de comparsa) is the band which plays a conga during a Cuban Carnival celebration. It consists of a large group of dancers dancing and traveling on the streets, followed by a Carrosa (carriage) where the musicians play. The Comparsa is a development of African processions where groups of devotees followed a given saint or deity during a particular religious celebration.

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