brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

May 20, 2007

The $70 Magazine! Boutique Glossies Rampant in Soho

Filed under: art,General,media — admin @ 1:23 pm

The new issue of aRUDE, an outsized independent style and culture magazine, is offering something new for its cover price of $9.95: empty pages. It’s a “vanity issue dedicated to Paris Hilton,” said its Nigerian-born editor and publisher, Iké Udé. Save for a Mondrian-inspired centerfold collage of the socialite herself, the issue contains only page after page of empty space, punctuated with questions to the reader. “Is she a genius because she works smart and not necessarily hard?” “Aren’t you jealous of her?” “Who should she marry?” Readers are instructed to fill in the blank space with their answers, artwork and any shout-outs to or about Ms. Hilton, then to return this material in the envelopes provided to aRUDE’s headquarters on 17th Street in Chelsea, where the content will be scanned and re-edited into a “real” magazine, to be re-issued in late summer.

“We want to democratize the editorial contribution in a magazine framework, where it’s open to readers to become creators,” said the Nigerian-born Mr. Udé, whose contributors include the professional dandy and partygoer Patrick McDonald, F.I.T. professor Valerie Steele and reedy Russian model Larissa Kulikova. “It’s kind of like”—you know what’s coming—“a blog in print, in a way.”

Just what is the deal with those expensive downtown glossies like aRUDE, euphemistically referred to as the “style press”?

“It’s a term that came out of France, where magazines that were high-end boutique magazines would be called la presse de style,” said David Renard, author of the recently released book The Last Magazine (Universe), in which he argues that the survival of the magazine-publishing industry at large lies in innovations made by the independents. “But instead of just being style as in fashion, style in essence means more design, in a sense, or trendy or cool.”

Lafayette Smoke Shop, located at the corner of Lafayette and Spring, is a hotbed of the pricey publications. “All tourists; many, many tourists” is how the store’s manager described his clientele—along with the moneyed Soho residents who need to fill coffee-table space, of course.

“I bought one called SOON, in Chinese, French and in English—$70 cover price!” said Samir Husni, chair of the journalism department at the University of Mississippi and author of the annual Samir Husni’s Guide to New Magazines, now in its 22nd year. “You can tell that those boutique magazines are done for the people within the industry, rather than the people outside the industry. It’s a celebration of our inner circle. Most of them you can find in New York, but the minute you reach Des Moines, they’re gone!”

But most of the style press is sustained not by newsstand sales but from ads taken out by—and sometimes custom-designed by—high-end fashion houses, retailers and other luxury brands. “There’s no way they can make money without advertising,” Mr. Renard said. “They’d have to be selling at $20, $30 a piece—sometimes that’s impossible! They want to keep the American concept of low prices.”

To get the most desirable advertisers, editors have to woo first-rate style mavens, photographers and graphic designers—usually friends or friends of friends—to contribute work for free. (“Diane”—as in von Furstenberg—“will always take out an ad with us,” Mr. Udé said.) Then they have to get the finished product into the right hands. “In New York, with the right wholesaler for New York City, you can make 500 copies look like you are everywhere. Everywhere!” Mr. Renard said. “To whom? To the advertisers and to the tribe that you’re trying to attract, let’s say the downtown ‘cool set.’ Only 500 copies—that’s 30 stores.”

Most of the magazines are primarily visual, repositories for art photography. One exception is 032c, published by partners Jörg Koch and Sandra von Mayer-Myrtenhain out of Berlin; the latest issue, which will retail for $20.99, arrives in New York at the end of May and contains lengthy essays on contemporary art and politics. “Readers are editors, artists, gallerists, architects, students at Columbia and N.Y.U., and, of course, fashion people—designers, P.R., photographers, stylists,” Mr. Koch said of his shiny export.

Trace ($5.99) is one title that has extended its brand beyond print. In 2003, the magazine started Trace TV, a cable-television channel in France, which is now available in the U.S. on the Dish Network. In Trace’s editorial offices on Broome Street, editors converse in a kind of lingua universale, lapsing from English into French and occasionally Spanish, with intermittent exclamations in other tongues. Editor in chief Claude Grunitzky, 36, the son of a West African diplomat who himself speaks six languages, founded the magazine in 1996 in modest digs in London. Over the next 10 years, he relocated the operation to downtown Manhattan and morphed into a kind of style-press mogul. The magazine is now published in three separate editions—American, British and French—with each distributed to appropriate linguistic markets worldwide. Mr. Grunitzky calls himself a “cross-cultural guru.”

“When you look at these ‘style press,’ what they give us is the cornerstone from which we can build the future for print,” Mr. Husni grandly claimed. “Because those magazines cannot exist or have the impact that they have if they existed in any other medium – not online, not on TV.”

At any rate, Mr. Udé eagerly awaits the results of his little editorial experiment. “It’s not easy to do this,” he said. “But thank God it’s not easy! If it would be easy, then every Dick and Harry would be doing it.”

UN Expert Praises Nicaragua Free Ed

Filed under: global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 5:35 am

Managua, May 19 — UN special rapporteur on the Right to Education Vernor Munoz applauded the Sandinista government´s efforts to guarantee free education in Nicaragua.

“Whenever we pay money to enter to schools, we are hindering the human right to education,” stated Munoz.

The UN expert slammed international financial organizations, and particularly the World Bank, for not recognizing education as a human right.

“It is unacceptable that a bank manage the destination of education in the world. That´s like putting a mechanic in charge of the surgery department of a hospital,” he said.

According to the UN rapporteur, nations are obliged to guarantee people the right to education and adapt educational programs to the students´ needs.

May 19, 2007

Filed under: General — admin @ 3:32 pm

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May 18, 2007

A very high tide scared beach front villagers in Phuket.

Filed under: global islands,thailand — admin @ 5:33 am

Restaurants on Haad Sai Kaew beach in Mai Khao of Thalang district in Phuket were damaged by a very high tide which came up to the mangrove area. The big and strong waves forced operators to remove their belongings to higher ground.
Meanwhile, at a sea gypsy village of Laem Tukkae on the east side of Phuket island, the villagers also felt the abnormal high tide but did not panic as they knew that it was during the waning moon which normally has the highest tide. Yesterday was even higher due to the monsoon. The Navy officer at Thab Lamu Naval Base reported that highest tide was read at 11 o’clock yesterday at 2.9 metres and will be the same today. This is a normal phenomenon, but as it is now the monsoon season the waves are higher on to the shore. The Navy however will closely monitor the sea water level and will inform the public of any abnormality. Meanwhile the water also flooded the beach front property of around 10 houses at Ban Nam Kem in Phang-Nga and the beach front road was inundated.

May 17, 2007

Bangladesh on cyclone alert

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 6:28 am

As many as 80,000 people have been evacuated to cyclone shelters in Bangladesh as the tropical storm blew in towards the low-lying South Asian country. About 100 fisherman and up to 20 boats have been reported missing as rain and strong winds swept Bangladesh’s coast. The body of one man had already been washed ashore. Tropical storms and cyclones kill hundreds of Bangladeshis every year. One of the worst cyclones to hit the country killed 138,000 people in 1991.

May 11, 2007

Army Arrests Tasneem Khalil of Human Rights Watch

Filed under: bangladesh,global islands — admin @ 5:35 am

(London, May 11, 2007) – Bangladesh’s military-backed care-taker government should immediately release Tasneem Khalil, an investigative journalist and part-time Human Rights Watch consultant, who was detained by security forces late last night, Human Rights Watch said today.

Khalil, 26, is a journalist for the Dhaka-based Daily Star newspaper who conducts research for Human Rights Watch. According to his wife, four men in plainclothes who identified themselves as from the “joint task force”came to the door after midnight on May 11 in Dhaka, demanding to take Khalil away. They said they were placing Khalil “under arrest” and taking him to the Sangsad Bhavan army camp, outside the parliament building in Dhaka.  
 
“We are extremely concerned about Tasneem Khalil’s safety,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “He has been a prominent voice in Bangladesh for human rights and the rule of law, and has been threatened because of that.”  
 
The men did not offer a warrant or any charges, Khalil’s wife said. Using threatening language, they searched the house and confiscated Khalil’s passport, two computers, documents, and two mobile phones.  
 
“It is an emergency; we can arrest anyone,” one of the men said. Another asked if Khalil suffered from any particular physical ailments. They drove Khalil off in a Pajero jeep.  
 
Khalil is a noted investigative journalist who has published several controversial exposes of official corruption and abuse, particularly by security forces. He assisted Human Rights Watch in research for a 2006 report about torture and extrajudicial killings by Bangladesh security forces.  
 
According to Bangladeshi human rights groups, the army has detained tens of thousands of people since a state of emergency was declared on January 11, 2007. A number of those detained are picked up in the middle of the night, as Khalil was, and then tortured.  
 
In Bangladesh, security forces have long been implicated in torture and extrajudicial killings. The killings have been attributed to members of the army, the police, and the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), an elite anti-crime and anti-terrorism force. The Human Rights Watch report Khalil worked on, “Judge, Jury, and Executioner: Torture and Extrajudicial Killings by Bangladesh’s Elite Security Force,” focused on abuses by the RAB.  
 
Killings in custody remain a persistent problem in Bangladesh. To date, no military personnel are known to have been held criminally responsible for any of the deaths.  
 
Khalil was called in for questioning by military intelligence last week, apparently as part of the military’s campaign to intimidate independent journalists ahead of May 10, 2007, when the army’s three-month legal mandate for ruling under a state of emergency came to an end.  
 
“The Bangladeshi military should be on notice that its actions are being closely watched by the outside world,” Adams said. “Any harm to Tasneem Khalil will seriously undermine the army’s claims to legitimacy and upholding the rule of law.”

May 10, 2007

A City of 2 Million Without a Map

Filed under: global islands,nicaragua — admin @ 6:20 am

Somewhere in this lakeside Central American town, there’s a woman who lives beside a yellow car. But it’s not her car. It’s her address. If you were to write to her, this is where you would send the letter: “From where the Chinese restaurant used to be, two blocks down, half a block toward the lake, next door to the house where the yellow car is parked, Managua, Nicaragua.”

Try squeezing that onto the back of a postcard. Come to that, try putting yourself in the place of the letter carriers who have to deliver such unruly epistles. How, for example, would they know where the Chinese restaurant used to be if it isn’t there anymore? How would they know which way is “down,” considering that “down,” as employed by people in these parts, could as easily mean “up”?

How would they know which way the lake lies, when most of the time—in this topsy-turvy capital, punctured by the tall green craters of half a dozen ancient volcanoes—they cannot even see the lake? Finally, how would they know where the yellow car is parked, if its owner happens to be out for a spin?

Somewhere in this lakeside Central American town, there’s a woman who lives beside a yellow car. But it’s not her car. It’s her address. If you were to write to her, this is where you would send the letter: “From where the Chinese restaurant used to be, two blocks down, half a block toward the lake, next door to the house where the yellow car is parked, Managua, Nicaragua.”

Try squeezing that onto the back of a postcard. Come to that, try putting yourself in the place of the letter carriers who have to deliver such unruly epistles. How, for example, would they know where the Chinese restaurant used to be if it isn’t there anymore? How would they know which way is “down,” considering that “down,” as employed by people in these parts, could as easily mean “up”?

How would they know which way the lake lies, when most of the time—in this topsy-turvy capital, punctured by the tall green craters of half a dozen ancient volcanoes—they cannot even see the lake? Finally, how would they know where the yellow car is parked, if its owner happens to be out for a spin?

Somehow, the people who live here have figured these things out. Granted, they’ve had practice. After all, most Managua street addresses take this cumbersome and inscrutable form. “We don’t have a real street map,” concedes Manuel Estrada Borge, vice president of the Nicaragua Chamber of Commerce, “so we have an amusing little system that no one from anywhere else can understand.”

Welcome to Managua, quite possibly the only place on Earth where upward of 2 million people manage to live, work, and play—not to mention find their way around—in a city where the streets have no names.

No numbers, either. Well, that isn’t quite true. A few Managua streets do indeed have conventional names. Some houses even have numbers. But no one hereabouts ever uses them. Why bother? Managuans have their own amusing little system to sort these matters out, a system that has the amusing little side-effect of driving most visitors crazy.

“For people who’ve just come here,” says a long-time Canadian resident of the city, “there’s no way on God’s Earth that they’d know what you’re talking about.”

What Managuans are talking about, when all is said and done, is an earthquake that shattered this city three decades ago. Before that time, Managua was an urban conglomeration much like any other, at least in the sense that it had a recognizable center. It also had streets that ran east and west or north and south, and those streets not infrequently bore names. And numbers.

But then, on Dec. 23, 1972, the seismological fault lines that zigzag beneath Managua shifted and buckled, with horrific results. Upward of 20,000 people were killed in the quake, and the city was pretty much reduced to rubble. The catastrophe thoroughly disrupted the old grid pattern of Managua’s streets, so the city’s surviving residents were obliged to devise a new way of locating things. They started with a landmark—a certain tree, for example, or a pharmacy or a plaza or a soft-drink bottling plant—and they went from there.

Nowadays, for example, if you wished to visit the small Canadian Consulate in Managua, you would present yourself at the following address: De Los Pipitos, dos cuadras abajo. In English, this means: From Los Pipitos, two blocks down.

Any self-respecting inhabitant of Managua knows that “Los Pipitos” refers to a child-welfare agency whose headquarters are located a little south of the Tiscapa Lagoon. Managuans also know that abajo, in this context, does not mean “down” in a topographical sense. It means “west,” because the sun goes down in the west. (By the same token, in Managua street talk, “arriba,” or “up,” means “east.” Al lago, which literally means “to the lake,” is how Managuans say “to the north.” For some inexplicable reason, when they want to say “to the south,” Managuans say “al sur,” which means “to the south.”)

Just to make a complicated process even more perplexing, Managuans, who normally use the metric system, will often give directions by employing an ancient Spanish unit of measurement called the vara. They will say, “From the little tree, two blocks to the south, 50 varas to the east.” Visitors will therefore need to know how long a vara is (0.847 meters). They will also need to know that the “little tree” is no longer little. It is actually quite tall.

A few years ago, the Nicaraguan postal agency considered scrapping the jerry-rigged system of street addresses. But nothing came of the project. Besides, the scheme actually does seem to work. Nedelka Aguilar, for example, has learned that you merely have to have a little faith. Born in Nicaragua, she left as a young girl and spent most of her youth in southern Ontario. Now she lives in Managua once more.

Shortly after her return four years ago, she arranged to visit a woman who dwelled at that outlandish address—“From where the Chinese restaurant used to be, two blocks down, half a block toward the lake, next door to the house where the yellow car is parked.” By this time, Aguilar spoke the Managua dialect of street addresses well enough to take in the gist of this information. But what about that yellow car?

“I said to the woman, ‘How will I find you if the yellow car isn’t there?’ ” Aguilar smiles and shakes her head at the memory. “The woman laughed. She said, ‘The yellow car is always there.’ ”

May 8, 2007

10 Tourists Robbed at Xunantunich

Filed under: belize,global islands — admin @ 6:29 am

10 tourists were robbed this morning at the Xunantunich Mayan Site outside of San Jose Succotz. It happened at 9:30 as tour guide Hector Bol were leading his guests down from the main temple.

A lone gunman with a shotgun was waiting for them and forced them at gunpoint to another area of the site where three more bandits all armed with machetes were waiting. They then robbed the tourists of jewelry, cash and cameras.

In response, Police and BDF have beefed up patrols in the area and are seeking the assistance of Guatemalan police.

May 7, 2007

For workers in Nicaragua, deadly mysteries

LA ISLA, Nicaragua — Ursula Tobal knows the names of almost all the 20 widows who live on this tiny islet between two narrow streams, and almost all the orphaned children who play in the dusty fields.

The 40-year-old Tobal became a widow herself in late 2005 when her husband, Luis Abraham Martínez, a cane cutter at the nearby San Antonio sugar mill, died of the same disease that has earned this islet the nickname of Island of the Widows.

”My life has been very hard,” said Tobal, who was left with 10 children and a social security payment of $74 a month. ‘There have been times when I’ve had to put my children to bed telling them, `If you sleep, you won’t feel hungry.’ ”

The widows are just part of the human tragedy being wreaked in the Chichigalpa region of northwestern Nicaragua by chronic renal insufficiency (CRI), an illness whose cause remains a mystery.

Nearly 2,000 current and former employees of two nearby sugar mills in the surrounding Chichigalpa region now suffer from CRI, according to Nicaraguan government figures. A workers group puts the death toll at more than 560 employees of one of the mills alone over about 30 years.

There is broad agreement that the region has an unusually high number of reported CRI cases. But both the government and the mills acknowledge that no study has ever pointed to the reasons behind the high incidence of CRI in the region. Maybe it’s in the genes, one mill doctor says, or in the heavy metals spewed by the nearby San Cristóbal volcano.

But to many people in this area, the cause is in the chemicals used in sugar-cane fields at the San Antonio and Monte Rosa mills, which produce most of Nicaragua’s sugar exported to the United States. The mills flatly deny that they are responsible, and workers who have sued the mills have presented no scientific evidence.

Whatever the cause or causes of the CRI, Chichigalpa, a town of about 62,000 people some 75 miles northwest of Managua, and neighboring villages like La Isla, had the air of a doomed region during a visit last month by El Nuevo Herald.

La Isla, a hamlet of about 80 mud and sometimes brick houses, has 20 widows, said resident and widow Marta Yesca. The district that encompasses La Isla, Guanacastal Sur, has 63 widows and about 300 houses.

MOBILITY LOST

Former mill and sugar-cane-field workers, dismissed when their kidneys showed signs of failing, now walk the streets aimlessly or sit on stools outside their homes. They cannot work, because they become exhausted within minutes.

”His agony was awful,” Tobal said of her husband. “He couldn’t walk. That sickness takes away people’s strength, affects their eyesight, bursts their innards, mouths and skin, and they vomit blood.”

All the victims can do is take calcium tablets to compensate for the loss of that element as a result of the kidney malfunction, and slow their deterioration.

But in the end, they can no longer stand, and they just lie in bed. Their bodies are swollen, their breathing labored. They sip Gatorade to keep hydrated. And they wait for death.

The figure of 2,000 people afflicted with CRI comes from Dr. Edwin Reyes, a kidney specialist with the Nicaraguan Ministry of Health and an authority on CRI who has been watching the Chichigalpa situation for the last 10 years. When he began to count CRI cases in Chichigalpa in 2004, he said, there were 800.

The national government now runs a special CRI unit at the Julio Durán Zamora Health Center, a government clinic in the town of Chichigalpa.

But Reyes conceded that neither the government nor the mills have carried out any studies on the causes of CRI. Asked why, he simply said, “I don’t understand why not.”

The number of victims is so high that three years ago, local residents pressured Nicaragua’s national legislature to pass a law defining CRI as an ”occupational disease” — allowing its victims to collect government disability payments.

Many of the affected people worked for San Antonio, a 117-year-old mill that produces 80 percent of Nicaragua’s sugar exports to the United States. It is owned by the Pellas family, the country’s richest. The family also owns BAC Credomatic Network, a financial network that includes the BAC Florida Bank in Coral Gables.

Alvaro Bermúdez, managing director of the San Antonio mill, said the company has done everything possible to investigate the causes of CRI. It offered to cooperate with the Nicaraguan government over the past decade to investigate the causes, but ”nothing came out of it,” he said.

AN ISSUE OF FAULT

San Antonio also contacted foreign universities to help with the scientific research, Bermúdez said. But the universities require Nicaraguan government support for such studies, and authorities in Managua have not cooperated because of what Bermúdez called official bureaucracy.

”There is a real problem, there is a real epidemic, there is a disease that is very sad and very difficult, and there is a company that wants to help,” Bermúdez said. “But it turns out that . . . now people say the company may be at fault. Then we won’t solve this, because the company is not at fault.”

San Antonio nevertheless should have some responsibilities, said Juan Salgado, who worked for the mill for 31 years, now suffers from CRI, and heads the Chichigalpa Pro-life Association, a group of former mill employees who have sued for indemnification. He said San Antonio began required testing of its workers in the late 1990s and dismisses any who show signs of kidney malfunction.

”We worked for them our whole lives, and they threw us out on the street when they discovered we were sick — the way the Romans did with their slaves after they were no longer useful,” Salgado said.

But the problem is not just unemployment. It’s the possibility of death.

At least 563 people who worked at San Antonio have died of kidney disease since 1978, according to María Eugenia Cantillano of the Global Nica Foundation, a group created to defend workers’ rights throughout Nicaragua. Her records included dozens of death certificates listing the cause of death as “chronic renal insufficiency.”

Dr. Alejandro Marín, director of a hospital run by San Antonio for workers and relatives, told El Nuevo Herald that 200 current employees have been found to have abnormally high levels of creatinine in their blood — a substance that signals kidney malfunction. He acknowledged that the company dismisses workers who come down with CRI, saying they are no longer strong enough to work. The company does not pay them for disability, he said, but they qualify for government aid.

About 1,100 workers filed three lawsuits over the last two years against the two mills, alleging negligent use of chemicals in the cane fields. Those lawsuits have not reached the stage where evidence has to be submitted.

In another lawsuit filed earlier by about 1,100 workers, the San Antonio mill agreed to an out-of-court settlement in which the company denied any responsibility for CRI but agreed to make ”humanitarian payments” totaling more than $2 million to victims.

Adrián Mesa, the lawyer who represented the plaintiffs in the earlier cases, said the lawsuits reached a point where the plaintiffs could not prove that the chemicals were the cause of the disease, and the mills could not prove the opposite.

”We said, let’s not talk about who is guilty. Let’s look at this as a humanitarian issue, because what our clients need is money to cope with their disease,” Mesa said.

Sacarías Chávez, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers in the more recent lawsuits, alleged in court papers that CRI is caused ”by being in contact — directly or indirectly and without any protection — with chemical agents” used in the cane fields. But the lawsuit cites no scientific evidence for that link.

A list of eight chemicals identified by a San Antonio legal advisor and workers was sent by El Nuevo Herald to Chen-sheng Lu, a professor at the Environmental and Occupational Health Department of the Public Health School at Emory University in Atlanta.

”None of the herbicides that are being used by the sugar-cane farmers would raise any red flag for health effects that the farmers are experiencing,” Lu wrote in an e-mailed reply. He speculated, however, that perhaps CRI might be the result of the “interaction of different herbicides.”

Bermúdez, the San Antonio director, noted that while it’s easy to assume a link between CRI and the mill because most of the workers affected worked for the mill, in fact most of the region’s residents work or worked for the mills — one of the few sources of jobs in this region.

”Everyone who gets sick has in some way been linked to the San Antonio mill, not because we are the causers of the illness but because we’re in the area where the problem exists,” Bermúdez said.

Felix Celaya Rivas, a physician who works at San Antonio’s hospital, argued that while both men and women work at the mill and the cane fields, few women have been stricken with CRI.

Celaya also said CRI has been reported in other parts of Nicaragua not related to sugar-cane fields.

Reyes, the government’s kidney specialist, said high incidences of CRI have also been found in three other sugar mills around Nicaragua, as well as some nonsugar agricultural areas. He added that smaller outbreaks of CRI have been reported among sugar-industry workers in neighboring El Salvador.

Celaya, in an interview with El Nuevo Herald, raised several other possibilities for the cause of CRI.

The indigenous people of Central America — most Central Americans are descended from a mix of indigenous people and Europeans — might have a genetic vulnerability to kidney disease, Reyes said.

The metals that spew from the volcanoes, homemade alcohol or malnutrition also could cause CRI, he added.

While the cause of CRI remains a mystery, its impact on the people around Chichigalpa has been harsh.

In the town of Chichigalpa, Hermógenes Martínez — father of eight, evangelical pastor and San Antonio employee for decades — died last month of CRI.

He had been one of the CRI victims who received humanitarian aid from San Antonio — about $850, the equivalent of 16 months of the minimum monthly salary as set by the government at the time of the payment. Cane cutters make an average of about $1.80 a day.

Martínez’s widow, Cándida Reyes, said two of their children now have CRI: Henry, 34, and Liliana, 35. Her younger brother, who also worked for the mill, died of CRI, and another brother is in a wheelchair with CRI. Four other half-siblings also have the disease, she added.

The situation is pretty much the same at the Monte Rosa mill, where about 300 former workers who claim they were fired after company-required blood tests showed that their kidneys were failing have been protesting near the mill’s main gate for months to demand indemnification.

The mill was bought in 2000 by Pantaleón, a powerful Guatemalan business group.

When Verónica Medrano, one of the women who hope to get compensation, became a widow four years ago, she was left with a shack and 11 children. Her husband, Juan Senón Bartodano, a cane cutter at Monte Rosa, was felled by kidney disease and received no indemnification, she said.

In La Isla, Ursula Tobal’s son Nelson Moisés Martínez said that he began to cut cane at 14, and started to feel sick at 20. Now 24, he says his last checkup showed a creatinine level nearly eight times higher than normal.

He would like to work to help his widowed mother, he says, but he can’t. He cracked a morbid joke about the guanacaste trees that cover the Chichigalpa cemetery.

”If I work, I die more quickly,” he said, laughing a bit. “I’ll go faster to the guanacastes .”

•••

Finding Plaintiffs Lawyers Committed Fraud, Judge Dismisses Tort Cases Against Dole and Dow Chemical

At the hearing Thursday, Judge Chaney dismissed from the bench two tort cases against Dole and Dow Chemical, ruling that Los Angeles plaintiffs lawyer Juan Dominguez and co-counsel in Nicaragua committed a “fraud on the court” and a “blatant extortion” of the defendants. In the hottest water is Dominguez, counsel to thousands of Nicaraguan men who won judgments against Dole Foods in Nicaraguan courts after claiming they were made sterile by the chemical DBCP, which is used on banana plantations.

After several days of testimony on defense allegations of Dominguez’s misconduct, Chaney tossed the tort cases before her. “I find that there is and was a pervasive conspiracy to defraud American and Nicaraguan courts, to defraud the defendants, to extort money from not just these defendants — but all manufacturers of DBCP and all growers or operators of plantations in Nicaragua between 1970 and 1980,” she said from the bench. Her ruling puts in doubt $2 billion in pending judgments Dominguez won in dozens of similar suits. Chaney also said she would refer the matter to state bar associations and to prosecutorial agencies. (Chaney specifically exonerated the Sacramento firm of Miller, Axline & Sawyer, which is also plaintiffs counsel on the case, saying she did not suspect its lawyers of participating in the fraud scheme.) Dominguez couldn’t be reached for comment.

Dole’s lead lawyer, said that in 25 years of practicing law, he’d never seen anything like the conduct of Dominguez and the other plaintiffs lawyers. They offered a $20,000 bounty in Nicaragua for information about witnesses, and saw to it that Dole investigators were subject to intimidation by police and other officials. The court testimony that led to Chaney’s ruling detailed how a group of Nicaraguan lawyers, in apparent collusion with local officials, judges and lab technicians, rounded up 10,000 men whom they coached to claim sterility — and to blame that sterility on Dole’s chemicals. In fact, many of the men had never worked for Dole, and many weren’t sterile. Some even had multiple children. “There [are] massive amounts of evidence demonstrating the recruiting and training of fraudulent plaintiffs to bring cases in both the Nicaraguan and U.S. courts,” Chaney wrote.

•••

Dole has already lost similar lawsuits and been ordered to pay millions of dollars to DBCP victims, but the latest move could help the company on appeal, as well as thwarting lawsuits that are still pending. “We think this is critical evidence that should have a devastating effect on any efforts to enforce any Nicaraguan judgments in the United States,” Dole attorney Scott Edelman said.

Some background on the case:

DBCP was banned in the United States in 1977 after workers in California started getting sick, but Standard Fruit (which later became Dole) continued using the product in Latin America and the Caribbean, where no such laws existed.

This worried Dow Chemical, which tried to stop selling it, but Standard Fruit threatened to sue for breach of contract. Dow agreed to continue shipments only after Standard Fruit agreed to indemnify Dow in the case of any lawsuits. When the lawsuits came up in the 1990’s, however, it seems Dow jumped back to arguing that there was no proof DBCP was dangerous.

The original round of lawsuits were possibly brought by actual former banana workers who actually suffered from sterility and other problems, or whose children actually had birth defects. Dole, Dow and Shell blocked those suits on grounds that the United States was not the proper place to try them, since the alleged crimes occurred in Nicaragua and other countries. Conveniently, none of these countries had the legal infrastructure to try foreign corporations.

Until Nicaragua passed Law 364 in 2001, specifically designed for those affected by DBCP. Then when a group of alleged victims there won a $490 million settlement, Dole, Dow and Shell changed their tune and argued that Nicaragua had an inadequate legal system so the case needed to be tried in the United States.

By that time, word had gotten around Nicaragua that this could be a lucrative deal for those without ethics, and the number of former banana workers in the country mysteriously started to grow.

In the end, that may work out quite nicely for Dole. The cases recently thrown out represented only a small portion of the thousands of claims against Dole, all of which could now be in jeopardy. “This court questions the authenticity and reliability of any documents that come from Nicaragua,” Chaney said. “I can’t believe in lab reports, work certificates, medical reports — what is there for me to believe? Nothing.”

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