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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: NY Nica News Update #146, 11/15/92
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.090633.2843@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 09:06:33 GMT
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-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.0 **/
- ** Topic: Weekly News Update #146, 11/15/92 **
- ** Written 11:17 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- NICARAGUA SOLIDARITY NETWORK OF GREATER NEW YORK
- 339 LAFAYETTE ST., NEW YORK, NY 10012 (212) 674-9499
- WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE #146, NOVEMBER 15, 1992
-
- In This Issue: (articles are posted as responses to this message)
-
- 1. "Traditional Friends" Funding Nicaragua Violence
- 2. Nicaraguan Lottery Workers on Hunger Strike
- 3. Nicaragua: Infant Mortality Rate Up
- 4. Nicaragua Sells Arms to Ecuador
- 5. Ballots Burn in More Mexican Electoral Strife
- 6. Cuba: SELA Helps Nations in Trouble Over Torricelli
- 7. Foreign Businesses take Advantage of Investments in Cuba
- 8. Silence is Golden: Will Bush Pardon Weinberger?
- 9. Guatemala: Rigoberta Menchu Blocked from Peace Talks
- 10. Haitians Expect No Miracles from Clinton
- 11. British Prime Min. Linked to Shady Latin America Deals
- 12. US Pays Millions to Witnesses in Camarena Murder Case
- 13. Anti-Castro Cuban Group Accuses Bush of Repression
- 14. Some Peruvian Rebels Disarm
- 15. Failed "Coup Attempt" in Peru
- 16. Colombian Military Leadership Resigns
- 17. Chilean Doctors Reach Agreement With Government
- 18. In Other News: El Salvador, Panama, Paraguay, Argentina
- 19. Upcoming Events in the New York City Area
-
- These updates are published weekly. A one-year subscription is
- $25. Back issues and source materials are available on request.
- (Many of our source materials are available on Peacenet.) Feel
- free to reproduce these updates or reprint any information from
- them, but please credit us. We welcome your comments and ideas:
- send them via Peacenet to <nicanetny>.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.1 **/
- ** Written 11:17 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 1. "TRADITIONAL FRIENDS" FUNDING NICARAGUA VIOLENCE
- A front-page article in the Washington Post on Nov. 15 focused on
- the increase in armed attacks by former contras who have again
- taken up their weapons. The article describes "scattered bands of
- former guerrillas" in northern Nicaragua which it says are now
- "coalescing into a unified force" against the government.
- According to "combatants and observers," these new contras are
- "drawing increasing popular support."
-
- The new group is the Northern Front-Commander 380, named for
- contra leader Enrique Bermudez, whose code name was "Commander
- 380." Bermudez was assassinated in Managua in February 1991; his
- murder has not yet been solved. The 380 Northern Front [see
- Update #140 for first mention of this group, then called 380
- Command] claims to have some 1,600 armed combatants, though some
- observers put the number closer to 600. According to the Times
- article, "most are highly trained former members of the contra
- special forces." A "Commander Ali" is quoted as saying the group
- has set up supply lines through Honduras and is receiving funds
- from "traditional friends" in the US, Honduras and elsewhere. Ali
- said the Front sent a delegation to Miami to seek support.
-
- "These groups are obviously receiving some support," said
- Presidency Minister Antonio Lacayo, "because often they have new
- clothes, new communications equipment and certain facilities. But
- we believe these groups are the ashes left from a fire that has
- already burned out. They still retain some heat, but as time goes
- on they will become extinguished." At their command center, the
- group carried M-16, AK-47 and sniper rifles and displayed machine
- guns and grenade launchers. Leaders said the group also has SA-7
- and Redeye anti-aircraft missiles that can be used against
- helicopters, the army's primary attack aircraft, though these
- weapons were not shown to reporters. [Washington Post 11/15/92]
-
- In late September army spokesperson Ricardo Wheelock minimized
- the role of the 380 Command, but admitted that the rebels had
- Redeye missiles, which made the army's objective of pursuing them
- more complex. [Central American Historical Institute Memo #246,
- 9/24-30/92 from La Prensa and Barricada]
-
- Santiago Murray, director of CIAV--the International Commission
- of Support and Verification of the Organization of American
- States (OAS)--is seeking to mediate the conflict and has taken a
- list of contra demands to the government. Murray says both sides
- have agreed to halt offensive actions until Nov. 25, while the
- government decides if it will negotiate. Members of the group say
- they are angry that the Sandinistas still retain power over the
- military and that President Violeta Chamorro has compromised with
- the Sandinistas. They are also angry about what they say are
- targeted assassinations of former contras by Sandinistas. They
- are seeking leadership positions in the army and police and
- fulfillment of previous government promises to provide land and
- credit.
-
- The Post article has no dateline, but is at least several days
- old since it says the issue of supplies crossing the Honduran
- border "will be raised this week in meetings between Honduran
- military leaders and Gen. Humberto Ortega." An AP article from no
- later than Nov. 13, published in the El Diario-La Prensa Nov. 15
- edition, describes Ortega's arrival in Honduras in the past
- tense. [Washington Post 11/15/92]
-
- Gen. Ortega arrived on an official two-day visit to Honduras,
- where he met with Honduran Armed Forces chief Luis Alonso Discua
- Elvir, President Rafael Leonardo Callejas and other important
- officials. Gen. Ortega warned that "political polarization is
- increasing in some Nicaraguan sectors... and that is serious for
- the country. For this reason it is indispensable to seek
- practical solutions to the country's economic and political
- problems."
-
- "In Nicaragua there is a cult of war and arms," said Gen. Ortega,
- "and if there is no way out of the serious political-social
- situation, it could lead to a new violent and anarchic outbreak,
- increasingly dangerous for the nation's stability." Ortega
- mentioned that during the 1980s, there were around 70,000 armed
- citizens in Nicaragua, but that so far in 1992, some 40,000 had
- given up their weapons to the army, which destroyed them. [El
- Diario-La Prensa (NY) 11/15/92 from AP]
-
- Meanwhile, a tri-partite commission made up of the Nicaraguan
- government, the Catholic church and the Organization of American
- States (OAS) visited different regions of Nicaragua to
- investigate sites where former contras and Sandinistas have been
- assassinated. Deputy Foreign Minister Jose Pallais said the
- government was committed to clarifying all of these violent
- deaths. [La Jornada (Mexico) 11/8/92 from AP]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.2 **/
- ** Written 11:17 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 2. NICARAGUAN LOTTERY WORKERS ON HUNGER STRIKE
- The Commission for the Defense of Human Rights in Central America
- (CODEHUCA) is calling for urgent action on the case of seven
- women who work for the Nicaraguan Social Security and Welfare
- Institute (INSSBI) selling national lottery tickets. The women--
- five of whom are over 50 years old (one is 81)--are on a hunger
- strike because INSSBI manager Simeon Rizo has not agreed to
- ratify the collective agreement which recognizes their labor
- rights and which has been extended yearly for the past 12 years.
- All seven of the women have been working selling lottery tickets
- for at least 15 years.
-
- According to information from Dr. Vilma Nunez, president of the
- Nicaraguan Human Rights Center (CENIDH), as of Nov. 10, after 10
- days on hunger strike, the strikers' health condition was
- serious. Red Cross doctor Fernando Gutierrez said the women were
- vomiting blood and suffered from dizziness, gastritis, severe
- headaches, blood-pressure problems and arthritic pains. On the
- night of Nov. 9, one of the hunger strikers, Yadira Garcia
- Aleman, was hospitalized for ulcer complications. She returned to
- the strike the next day, turning down the petitions of her
- colleagues to put an end to her actions. The latest news from
- CENIDH is that she is in a coma. CODEHUCA and CENIDH consider
- this case to be extremely urgent.
-
- Please send messages demanding immediate ratification of these
- workers' collective agreement to: President Chamorro (fax
- #627911); INSSBI Manager Rizo (fax: #40418); and Daniel Fonseca,
- Secretary General of the Carlos Tenorio Union (fax #668405). (Fax
- numbers are preceded by 011-505 when calling from the US.)
- [CODEHUCA Alert 11/10/92 posted on NY Transfer]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.3 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 3. NICARAGUA: INFANT MORTALITY RATE UP
- Infant mortality in Nicaragua is currently 71 per 1,000 live
- births, as opposed to 51 during the Sandinista administration,
- says Health Workers Union (FETSALUD) leader Gustavo Porras.
- Porras says his union is worried about the lack of equipment and
- medicines in Nicaraguan hospitals, as well as the low morale of
- doctors and other health personnel. Diseases like cholera,
- dengue, malaria and diarrhea are on the rise and the health
- system is not prepared to deal with them effectively, added
- Porras. [World Perspectives from Radio Havana Cuba 11/5/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.4 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 4. NICARAGUA SELLS ARMS TO ECUADOR
- Ecuadoran Defense Minister Jose Gallardo confirmed that Ecuador
- has purchased $2.5 million worth of weapons from Nicaragua to use
- in its fight against drug trafficking. Gallardo said that
- Ecuador's economic crisis had prevented increasing its military
- budget; he said the deal presented "an opportunity," since the
- weapons were purchased at a quarter or a third of market prices.
- He did not specify what type of weapons were purchased or whether
- they were of US or Soviet origin.
-
- The arms sale was revealed after Nicaraguan legislator Adolfo
- Jarquin, president of the National Assembly's Foreign Affairs
- committee, demanded on Nov. 11 a special investigation of eight
- flights by an Ecuadoran military plane into Managua's Sandino
- airport. In his announcement, Gallardo stressed that the military
- flights were not only to pick up the weapons, but also to bring
- visitors and supplies to a group of Ecuadoran officials who are
- part of the UN mission in Nicaragua.
-
- For his part, Nicaraguan army chief Humberto Ortega explained
- that with the reduction of the Popular Sandinista Army (EPS), a
- large inventory of arms was left that could not be allowed to
- depreciate in value. He said profits from the arms deal would
- finance a pension fund for former soldiers, due to the lack of
- foreign aid available for this purpose. Ortega stressed that this
- sale--as well as the recent sale of a dozen helicopters to Peru
- for $25 million--were legal sales authorized by the Nicaraguan
- Presidency. [ED-LP 11/15/92 from AFP]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.5 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 5. BALLOTS BURN IN MORE MEXICAN ELECTORAL STRIFE
- According to official figures, the Institutional Revolutionary
- Party (PRI), which has ruled Mexico since 1929, was generally
- victorious in state and local elections held Nov. 8 in Puebla,
- Sinaloa and Tamaulipas. Preliminary figures showed only 30% of
- registered voters casting ballots in Puebla, 40% in Tamaulipas,
- and a similarly low figure in Sinaloa. The opposition parties
- charged irregularities in all three states, but didn't dispute
- the PRI victory in Puebla. [Inter Press Service 11/9/92]
-
- In Tamaulipas, however, Jorge Cardenas Gonzales, gubernatorial
- candidate for a coalition of the conservative National Action
- Party (PAN) and the center-left Democratic Revolution Party
- (PRD), said that the PRI had committed "the worst fraud" in
- Mexico's history in declaring victory for its candidate, Manuel
- Cavazos Lerma. Angry demonstrators attacked electoral council
- offices in several towns and cities on Nov. 11, burning ballots
- in some cases and occupying the offices in others. PRD
- spokespeople denied that their militants had been involved, and
- some observers suggest that the violence came from PRI supporters
- angered by internal party disputes. [ED-LP 11/10/92, 11/13/92
- from AP, 11/15/92 from AFP] A Gallup poll had given the PRI
- candidate a wide lead in Tamaulipas before the vote, but PAN and
- PRD activists had charged that the official rolls excluded 20% of
- elegible voters. [La Jornada (Mexico) 11/8/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.6 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 6. CUBA: SELA HELPS NATIONS IN TROUBLE OVER TORRICELLI
- On Nov. 3, the Latin American Economic System (SELA), announced
- that it is ready to help any member-state which may run into
- trouble with the US over the Torricelli law, which extends the US
- embargo against Havana to impose sanctions on countries that
- trade with Cuba. SELA, which is based in Venezuela, has
- established mechanisms of collective response to coercive
- economic measures imposed by industrialized countries.
-
- SELA Secretary-General Salvador Arriola said the Torricelli
- restrictions are proof of Washington's "growing tendency to
- ignore the basic principles of international law." As another
- example, Mexican-born Arriola noted that Washington's subsidized
- sale of almost 30 million tons of wheat in the world market
- "seriously distorts international trade and the General Agreement
- on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) as the sale seriously affected wheat-
- producing countries in the south, including Mexico and
- Argentina." [IPS 11/3/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.7 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 7. FOREIGN BUSINESSES TAKE ADVANTAGE OF INVESTMENTS IN CUBA
- "Cuba has begun opening to foreign investment which, in fact,
- orients this country towards capitalism," according to Mexican
- businessman Mauricio Fernandez. Fernandez and his partner, Danny
- Tafich, recently concluded an agreement with the Cuban government
- to create a joint textile company from 15 factories already
- existing in Cuba. The factories employ 35,000 workers and are
- worth $500 million; they will produce for both the Cuban and
- export market, mainly in North and South America.
-
- The Cuban state will have a 45% share in the new company; the
- remaining 55% of the firm's capital will come from the Mexican
- business partners. Once the business is established, the Mexican
- partners, who expect to invest $6ll million, will have total
- independence to select staff, fix prices, sign contracts with
- national and foreign entities and define its accounting system
- and financial policy.
-
- According to Fernandez, "the economic reform is headed by Carlos
- Lage, the number three man in the Cuban hierarchy and is complete
- and irreversible." Lage, who directs the economy of Cuba and was
- recently appointed the Secretary of the Council of Ministers, is
- one of the main promoters of mixed business enterprises. [IPS,
- Nov. (date missing) posted on NY Transfer 11/9/92, EDLP 11/4/92
- from EFE, posted on NY Transfer]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.8 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 8. SILENCE IS GOLDEN: WILL BUSH PARDON WEINBERGER?
- The White House is reportedly considering a presidential pardon
- for Reagan Administration Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
- who is to go on trial Jan. 5 on charges of lying to Congress
- about his role in the Iran-contra scandal. Iran-contra special
- prosecutor Lawrence Walsh indicted Weinberger earlier this year
- when the former official refused to testify against other Reagan
- administration officials--possibly George Bush and Ronald Reagan.
- A presidential pardon would be widely viewed as a payoff for
- Weinberger's silence. Two former CIA officials, Clair George and
- Duane Clarridge, are also under indictment for Iran-contra
- activities. Upon entering office, Bush resisted proposals to
- pardon Lt. Col. Oliver North, Admiral John Poindexter and former
- CIA station head Joe Fernandez. [WP 11/7/92; NYT 11/7/92,
- 11/8/92]
-
- Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole (R-KS) got into the act on
- Nov. 8 when he charged that the special prosecutor's office had
- purposely aided the Democratic campaign by releasing damaging
- information about George Bush five days before the elections.
- (See Update #144) Four Republican senators are now asking for a
- special prosecutor to investigate special prosecutor Walsh, who
- is a Republican himself. [NYT 11/9/92, 11/10/92, 11/12/92; WP
- 11/11/92] Meanwhile, former Assistant Secretary of State Elliott
- Abrams has written a book justifying his repeated lies to
- Congress about the contra affair. Abrams, who was convicted of
- lying to Congress through the efforts of Walsh's office, attacks
- the whole special prosecutor system, which is due to expire Dec.
- 15. He complains that Walsh "didn't give a goddamn about people,
- about families" when he prosecuted officials involved in arming
- the contras and Iranian militants. [NYT 11/15/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.9 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 9. GUATEMALA: RIGOBERTA MENCHU BLOCKED FROM PEACE TALKS
- Discussions continue in Guatemala over the issue of including
- civilian participants in the peace talks under way between the
- government and the country's rebel coalition. While negotiator
- Bishop Rodolfo Quezada has suggested that recent Nobel Peace
- Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu's participation in the peace talks
- would be helpful, chief government negotiator Manuel Conde said
- Oct. 21 that Menchu is not under consideration as one of the
- civilians who may participate. Conde said that Menchu may work
- for peace in Guatemala only if she puts aside her ideology;
- Menchu responded that "my ideology is to defend people's rights
- and lives. It would be impossible to renounce this." [Cerigua
- Weekly Briefs 10/18-24/92]
-
- Meanwhile, Menchu's relatives told Guatemalan daily Prensa Libre
- on Nov. 7 that they are being threatened and accused in relation
- to her supposed links to the guerrillas and have had to take
- refuge in the mountains of El Quiche. [La Jornada 11/8/92 from
- Cerigua, Enfoprensa, IPS]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.10 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 10. HAITIANS EXPECT NO MIRACLES FROM CLINTON
- US president-elect Bill Clinton used his first post-election news
- conference to repeat his campaign pledge to reverse Bush
- administration policies that force virtually all Haitian refugees
- to return to their island without adequate opportunity to apply
- for political asylum. "I'm not in a position now to tell you
- exactly how we're going to do it," Clinton said, "or what the
- specifics will be, but I can tell you I'm going to change the
- policy." At the same time, he expressed agreement with the
- current administration's insistence that "there is a legitimate
- distinction between political and economic refugees." [WP
- 11/13/92]
-
- Many observers both in the US and in Haiti remain unsure what the
- new administration's policy will be in practice. Although most
- Haitians on the island reportedly followed the US elections on
- the radio and strongly favored Clinton, the consensus among
- political forces in Port-au-Prince is that--in the words of
- Arnold Antonin from the centrist Nationalist Progressive
- Revolutionary Party (PANPRA)--"the election of Clinton will not
- have a miraculous effect on the Haitian situation" brought on by
- last year's military coup. Rightist Hubert de Ronceray of the
- Mobilization for National Development (MDN) agrees: "Clinton is
- not alone. He will have to obey certain restraints to which a
- statesman has to submit. There are institutions." [Inter Press
- Service 11/6/92]
-
- But unnamed "specialists" in Washington feel Haiti may give
- Clinton his first major foreign policy test. They profess concern
- that a new refugee policy might bring a flood of 200,000 to
- 500,000 Haitian boat people to Florida, many more than the
- 125,000 Cubans in the 1980 Mariel boatlift, which many feel
- caused then President Jimmy Carter serious political harm. The
- specialists suggest that Clinton must produce a quick solution
- inside Haiti itself, possibly with a naval blockade or even with
- a military intervention. [WP 11/12/92]
-
- A food distribution scandal on the small Haitian island of La
- Gonave gives some indication of what motivates Haitian refugees--
- whether they are "political" or "economic." The local director of
- Operation Lifeline, a US-sponsored project to feed 25,000
- children, was caught selling the food to local merchants. The
- local advisory board sent a member to the national office to
- report the problem, but in the office he was met by a group of
- ten men who threatened to cut off his head. The project's second-
- in-command turns out to be a well-known Duvalierist, Joseph
- Senat, who apparently had been directing the illegal sales. The
- advisory board has in effect given up, saying: "It's the thieves
- who have the food now, not the people." [Haiti Information
- Bulletin #6 11/9/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.11 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 11. BRITISH PRIME MINISTER LINKED TO SHADY LATIN AMERICA DEALS
- The Oct. 25 London Observer charged that Conservative British
- Prime Minister John Major made a secret deal with Colombia last
- June to keep the European Community from barring the importation
- of subsidized Colombian coal. The United Kingdom itself may
- import 2.5 million tons of Colombian coal next year, at a time
- when the country is dramatically cutting back its own coal
- industry. A spokesperson for the prime minister denied the
- allegations. [ED-LP 10/26/92 from EFE]
-
- Another problem for John Major has been the revelation that in
- the late 1980s the Conservative government approved the sale of
- British machine tools to Iraqi weapons programs--specifically to
- a project for the manufacture of proximity fuses by Chilean arms
- manufacturer Carlos Cardoen, who built and maintained the
- Najrawan site just south of Baghdad. [The Independent (UK)
- 11/13/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.12 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 12. US PAYS MILLIONS TO WITNESSES IN CAMARENA MURDER CASE
- The US government has paid more than $2.7 million to witnesses in
- its case against two Mexicans charged in the 1985 torture and
- killing of US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent Enrique
- Camarena Salazar, the Los Angeles Times reported Nov. 8. Citing
- government documents, the Times says some witnesses with criminal
- records were also promised US residency or work permits in
- exchange for testifying. One of the defendents, Dr. Humberto
- Alvarez Machain, was abducted by the US government to face trial
- here; when an appeals court ruled that his abduction was illegal
- and his trial could not proceed, the case went to the Supreme
- Court, which ruled on June 15 that the US could kidnap foreign
- citizens from foreign soil to be tried in the US (see Update
- #125). No trial date has been set for Alvarez and his co-
- defendant, Ruben Zuno Arce. One of the witnesses, Rene Lopez
- Romero, is being paid $3,000 a month, even though the US
- government admits he was involved in the 1984 kidnapping and
- murder of four US missionaries in Guadalajara. [New York Times
- 11/9/92 from Reuters]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.13 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 13. ANTI-CASTRO CUBAN GROUP ACCUSES BUSH OF REPRESSION
- Commando L, a militant group of anti-Castro Cuban exiles based in
- Miami, has accused George Bush's administration of repressing the
- group's incursions into Cuba since Bush's defeat in the November
- 3 US elections. Tony Cuesta, the group's leader, accused Bush of
- waiting until after the elections to bring charges against the
- Cuban exile leaders. "As soon as the elections were over our best
- men were arrested," said Cuesta.
-
- On Nov. 11, Commando L made a public appeal for $100,000 in
- financial assistance to pay bail and a defense attorney for Tony
- Bryant, described by AP as a former Black Panther Party member
- who joined the Cuban exile group after having spent 11 years in a
- Cuban prison. Bryant was arrested in the US on Nov. 9 for
- allegedly illegally carrying arms during an incursion into Cuba
- this past July. A federal investigator is also considering
- filing charges of violation of the Neutrality Law against others
- involved in the same incursion. Bryant's lawyer, Ellis Rubin,
- said he could not explain why the Bush administration was
- cooperating with Fidel Castro, but said Cuba has handed over to
- the US testimony from witnesses, photos and ballistic evidence
- concerning an Oct. 7 attack against the Varadero beach hotel in
- Cuba perpetrated by Commando L. (See Update #142) [ED-LP 11/12/92
- from AP, posted on NY Transfer]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.14 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 14. SOME PERUVIAN REBELS DISARM
- Although Peru's guerrilla groups are for the most part reacting
- violently to government pressure, about 1400 rebels of the Tupac
- Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) and the Communist Party of
- Peru (known as Sendero Luminoso or Shining Path) have given up
- their weapons, taking advantage of a law which benefits those who
- disarm and inform on their former comrades. President Alberto
- Fujimori also announced that benefits to those who surrender now
- include reduced penalties, and that the referendum to approve the
- death penalty for terrorists will be postponed to February. The
- referendum had originally been scheduled to coincide with the
- November elections for representatives to the constituent
- assembly. The majority of political parties had rejected the idea
- of having the referendum done with the elections because they
- thought it was a government move to favor its candidates. [LJ
- 11/8/92 from Notimex, AFP, EFE, IPS, DPA, AP, Reuter]
-
- On Nov. 9, the Peruvian army used helicopters to bomb what they
- said was a major guerrilla camp of the MRTA in the Amazon jungle,
- killing 30 people. With a speaker from a helicopter the army
- asked the guerrillas to surrender or the bombing would be
- resumed. The guerrilla camp had a school, a firing range, an
- armory, and even a small jail. They also had planted food and
- coca plants. The camp was found thanks to information from 17
- MRTA guerrillas who had surrendered under the new government
- program. [ED-LP 11/11/92 from AFP]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.15 **/
- ** Written 11:18 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 15. FAILED "COUP ATTEMPT" IN PERU
- On Nov. 13, Peruvian President Fujimori put down a coup attempt
- with about 2000 troops and a dozen tanks and affirmed that
- "everything is calm." The government said the insurgents were led
- by retired generals Jaime Salinas, Jose Pastor Rivera, Luis
- Palomino Rodrigues, and Marcos Zarate Rota, all of whom were
- arrested and will be put on trial inmediately. Zarate Rota was
- under investigation for links to drug trafficking. There was no
- information on the number of soldiers involved. Official reports
- said the rebels' goal was to take control of the army and kill
- the president. Fujimori spent the night at army headquarters. The
- coup attempt coincided with the publication of a decree which
- allows the president to retire officers early for "renovations."
- According to the government the coup was an effort to stop the
- election of the constituent assembly and install a regime similar
- to that that existed before Fujimori assumed total power and
- dissolved the congress last spring. [ED-LP 11/15/92 from AP]
-
- The military's second-in-command, Gen. Jose Valdivia, has been
- put under house arrest and 20 to 25 officers--retired or active--
- have been captured. A New York Times article expressed skepticism
- over how a handful of officers with no troops could have tried to
- kill Fujimori and take over the army. [NYT 11/15/91 from Reuters]
-
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- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.16 **/
- ** Written 11:19 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 16. COLOMBIAN MILITARY LEADERSHIP RESIGNS
- A state of emergency was declared in Colombia on Nov. 8 after
- long meetings between the national security council and council
- of ministers, headed by President Cesar Gaviria. The state of
- emergency will exist for 90 days during which time the government
- will assume legislative powers and will dictate laws to stop the
- country's ongoing violence. The special emergency state has
- limits dictated by the constitution. Civil rights and human
- rights cannot be suspended, military courts cannot try civilians
- and the fight against the guerrillas and common criminals must
- respect the international rules of human rights. [ED-LP 11/9/92
- from AP]
-
- On Nov. 12, President Gaviria accepted the resignation of the
- commanders of all three branches of the military forces: army,
- navy and air force. The officers did not explain their motives
- for resigning. Gaviria assigned new officers to their posts. The
- Defense Ministry said that the personnel changes are in line with
- the dynamics of the armed forces and usually occur at the end of
- the year. Some officers that resigned had been questioned
- regarding the escape of drug lord Pablo Escobar, but the official
- press release made no reference to the subject. [ED-LP 11/13/92
- from AP]
-
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- ** Written 11:19 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 17. CHILEAN DOCTORS REACH AGREEMENT WITH GOVERNMENT
- On Nov. 1, after 35 days of confrontation that forced the Health
- Minister to resign, a negotiation committee of some 900 Chilean
- doctors who had threatened mass resignation reached a
- "satisfactory and definitive" agreement with government
- authorities. New Health Minister Julio Montt announced that
- government funds will be designated for improving hospital
- infrastructure, equipment, and working conditions. A final
- agreement on a formula for salary increases is still pending.
- Doctors had threatened to resign on Nov. 8 if an agreement was
- not reached. [Chile Information Project (CHIP) News 11/2/92; ED-
- LP 11/6/92 from Notimex]
-
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- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.18 **/
- ** Written 11:19 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 18. In Other News
- El Salvador's Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) decided that the
- Farabundo Marti Front for National Liberation (FMLN) would not be
- legalized as a political party until it disarms all its forces.
- In a brief note, the TSE said the FMLN will gain political party
- status 24 hours after it concludes total demobilization of the
- 40% of its forces which is still armed; the final disarmament is
- scheduled for Dec. 15. [ED-LP 11/15/92 from AFP]... The trial in
- a Federal damages suit against the US government and Colombia's
- Avianca airline began in Brooklyn on Nov. 9. The suit has been
- brought by survivors and relatives of victims of the crash of
- Flight 052 near New York City on Jan. 25, 1990, when the plane
- ran out of fuel. Avianca admits liability for negligence by the
- crew, who were among the 73 to die in the crash, but the US
- rejects any blame for federal air controllers, who kept Flight
- 052 jet in a holding pattern even after they knew about the fuel
- emergency. [ED-LP 11/10/92]... US District Judge William Hoeveler
- said on Nov. 13 that he will have to issue a ruling on whether
- former Panamanian strongperson Manuel Antonio Noriega can be
- forced to serve his 40-year drug trafficking sentence in a
- federal penitentiary. Noriega argues that as a prisoner of war he
- is subject to the Geneva Convention and must be confined to a US
- military facility. Hoeveler indicated that he agreed, adding:
- "This is a strange case. He may be the only POW the US has." [WP
- 11/14/92]... US residents in southern Arizona are reportedly
- turning to Mexico's health care system because they can't afford
- doctors and medicine in the US. A doctor in Nogales, Sonora,
- reports that two out of ten of his patients are US residents,
- while a study of one US border town shows 66% of the inhabitants
- going to Mexico for health care. [National Public Radio, "All
- Things Considered," 11/7/92]... In Paraguay, Gen. Emilio Bernal
- has been named as the new Defense Minister, replacing Gen. Emilio
- Souto, who will soon be designated ambassador to Spain, according
- to government sources. [ED-LP 11/6/92]... In Argentina, the first
- general strike since 1988 ended in what French News Agency AFP
- called "a virtual draw, without winners or losers." The 24-hour
- action on Nov. 9 was called by the country's main labor
- federation, the CGT, to protest the Argentine government's harsh
- economic plan but was "not against the government," says the CGT.
- The union called the strike "very important," while President
- Carlos Menem referred to it as "a total failure." [ED-LP 11/10/92
- from AFP]
-
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- /** reg.nicaragua: 90.19 **/
- ** Written 11:19 pm Nov 15, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 19. UPCOMING EVENTS IN THE NEW YORK CITY AREA
- For more information, call NSN at 212-674-9499. Events listed and
- flyers enclosed are not necessarily endorsed by the Nicaragua
- Solidarity Network.
-
- WORK BRIGADE TO NICARAGUA, January 1993. Hard work, simple food,
- rich rewards. Work side by side with Nicaraguan farmers on their
- cooperative. Live with a family for three weeks, assist with
- conservation, planting, and reforestation and experience the
- beauty of Nicaragua. for information, call or write NICCA
- (Nicaragua Center for Community Action), 2140 Shattuck Ave. Box
- 2063, Berkeley, CA 94704. (510) 428-2146.
-
- 11/17 TUE, 7 PM - Committee for Welcoming Rigoberta to New York,
- presentation with Rigoberta Menchu Tum. Riverside Church,
- Manhattan. For info call 212-682-3633.
-
- 11/19 THU, 10 AM - All out to the city council vote, amnesty for
- the Puerto Rican political prisoners and prisoners of war. City
- Hall. Rally sponsored by Commitee for Puerto Rican Affirmation.
- For info call 212-538-0988.
-
- 11/21 SAT, 7 PM - Tribute to Andres Figueroa Cordero. Speaker:
- Prof. Fernando Ponce Laspina, Hostos College (Dept. of Latin
- American History). Political and cultural presentations,
- including videos. Casa de las Americas, 104 West 14 Street. For
- info call 718-328-9281.
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
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