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- Subject: NicaNet NY Weekly Update#152 12/27/92
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
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-
- Nicaragua Solidarity Network of Greater New York
- 339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 (212) 674-9499
-
- WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE #152, DECEMBER 27, 1992
-
- In This Issue:
-
- 1. Nicaraguan Army Plans Offensive Against Rebel Violence
- 2. Nicaraguan Government and Sandinistas Agree on Truce
- 3. Nicaraguan National Assembly Crisis: End in Sight?
- 4. UN Chief Visits Nicaragua
- 5. Former Nicaraguan Soldiers Still on Hunger Strike
- 6. Central American Presidents Discuss Region's Problems
- 7. Bush's General Pardon Completes Iran-Contra Coverup
- 8. Contragate: A "Damocles Sword" Over Foreign Policy?
- 9. Guatemalan Human Rights Activists Win Prizes
- 10. Zuno Arce Convicted in Camarena Case
- 11. "Machain Doctrine" Lives On
- 12. Mexico Angry at Acquittal of US Border Guard
- 13. Arrested Colombian Rebel Leader Charges Abuse
- 14. Peruvian Governing Coalition Quits Cusco Elections
- 15. Cuba Begins New Electoral Process
- 16. Charges against Pastors for Peace Activists Reduced
- 17. Pilot Flies to Cuba to Bring Family to US
- 18. Brazilian Impeachment Trial Postponed
- 19. Panama Commemorates Third Anniversary of Invasion
- 20. US Violates Haiti Embargo, Canada Wants to Get Tough
-
- 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 accessed through NY Transfer;
- back issues are also available on NY Transfer's OnLine Library.)
- 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 email to nicanet%nyxfer@igc.apc.org.
-
- 1. NICARAGUAN ARMY PLANS OFFENSIVE AGAINST REBEL VIOLENCE
-
- Sandinista Popular Army (EPS) chief Gen. Humberto Ortega
- announced on Dec. 22 that the Nicaraguan army was preparing to
- "neutralize definitively" all rearmed contras (recontras) and
- rearmed Sandinistas. According to official sources, some 400
- armed men are currently operating in Nicaragua, primarily in the
- north. Gen. Ortega made the announcement the day after presumed
- recontras killed a campesino family. The army chief met with
- Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo and with national producers to
- discuss plans for the military operations; he also called on the
- government to develop programs to serve the needs of campesinos,
- many of whom have joined the ranks of the rearmed. Gen. Ortega
- gave no details of the military plans. [El Diario-La Prensa (NY)
- 12/23/92 from AFP]
-
- Just over a week earlier, on Dec. 14, Nicaraguan President
- Violeta Chamorro announced that she would carry out further
- reductions in the EPS. "We will continue reducing the strength of
- the army as much as possible," said Chamorro during a speech at a
- gathering of municipal officials. [Inter Press Service 12/14/92]
- Her statement contradicts earlier assertions she and Gen. Ortega
- both made; on Nov. 5, Chamorro confirmed that the process of
- reduction of the armed forces had concluded, backing up a
- statement made by Ortega in an Oct. 27 speech. [ED-LP 11/6/92
- from Notimex]
-
- Military sources confirmed on Dec. 25 that a group of presumed
- recontras had murdered rancher Domingo Castro and one of his
- nephews, 16-year old Manuel Antonio Espinoza, while they were en
- route to a farm in northern Nicaragua. Their vehicle was ambushed
- on Dec. 23 by the rebels near the town of Paiwas, which lies at
- the junction of the regions of Matagalpa, Boaco and Zelaya.
- Police authorities said the attackers, led by supposed recontra
- chief Ricardo Diaz, also wounded another young relative of
- Castro, Harod Espinoza. More than 10 producers from northern and
- central Nicaragua have been murdered this year by presumed
- recontras who refused to give up their arms during the process of
- demobilization sponsored by the government between January and
- May of 1992. [ED-LP 12/27/92 from EFE]
-
- 2. NICARAGUAN GOVERNMENT AND SANDINISTAS AGREE ON TRUCE
-
- The Chamorro government has accepted a "political and economic
- truce" for 1993, proposed by the Sandinista National Liberation
- Front (FSLN) and designed to encourage an increase in production
- and the creation of jobs. The truce was agreed on by Presidency
- Minister Antonio Lacayo and FSLN Secretary General and former
- Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega at the end of a private
- meeting. [ED-LP 12/24/92 from Notimex]
-
- In a year-end message, President Chamorro asked the Nicaraguan
- people to have a "positive attitude" and leave "behind violence,
- lack of understanding and intolerance" so that 1993 will be a
- year of work, progress and well-being. "We must put national
- interests ahead of political and economic interests," said
- Chamorro." [ED-LP 12/25/92 from Notimex]
-
- 3. NICARAGUAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY CRISIS: END IN SIGHT?
-
- Legislators from the ruling UNO coalition bloc in the Nicaraguan
- National Assembly announced on Dec. 14 that they would hold talks
- with FSLN legislators by year-end in an effort to resolve the
- current crisis in the legislature. The UNO bloc--which, under the
- leadership of Assembly president Alfredo Cesar, has been
- antagonistic toward the administration of President Chamorro--has
- been holding illegal parliamentary sessions since Sept. 2, when
- 39 Sandinista legislators and eight from a dissident faction of
- the UNO known as the center group joined together to boycott
- Assembly proceedings in protest of Cesar's attempt to control
- upcoming elections for Assembly leadership positions. The
- executive branch and the Supreme Court have both backed the
- FSLN/center group boycott by declaring all of Cesar's assembly
- proceedings illegal (Cesar has managed to achieve a quorum of
- sorts by calling alternates to the eight UNO deputies and in some
- cases, alternates to the alternates.)
-
- UNO's Luis Humberto Guzman told journalists on Dec. 14 that after
- much debate, reticent UNO legislators finally accepted that
- negotiations were "the only way out" of the crisis. The aim of
- the planned talks is to remove hurdles blocking the Jan. 9
- election for a new Assembly president and other legislative
- officers. Guzman did not specify what points would be discussed
- with Sandinista deputies, and he ruled out the possibility of any
- negotiations with the eight "center group" members. According to
- UNO deputy Eli Altamirano of the Nicaraguan Communist Party,
- "this group is something strange within UNO and has nothing to do
- with the solution."
-
- Former Nicaraguan vice president Sergio Ramirez, current head of
- the Sandinista bloc in the National Assembly, said on Dec. 15
- that any negotiations would hinge on UNO acceptance of the court
- ruling. Ramirez stressed that the center group must participate
- in and receive seats on the new ruling directorate, as they
- represent a new parliamentary force that cannot be marginalized.
- "We would prefer a broad directorate that reflects the true
- composition of the forces in the National Assembly," said
- Ramirez. "It is better to run the risk than to legislate
- illegally." He added that the FSLN "will not tolerate one more
- caprice" in the legislature.
-
- On Dec. 15, Presidency Minister Antonio Lacayo said that only
- through a return to normalcy in the Assembly can Nicaragua begin
- a national dialogue and achieve political stability in 1993.
- "What has happened in the Assembly since last Sept. 2 is a
- shame," said Lacayo. "This [legislative] state power has not been
- functioning legally and that is not good for the country." [IPS
- 12/14/92; 12/16/92]
-
- 4. UN CHIEF VISITS NICARAGUA
-
- On a Dec. 16 visit to Nicaragua, UN Secretary General Butros
- Butros-Ghali called on the international community to continue
- providing the country with economic aid for peace and
- reconstruction. "Nicaragua should not be financially punished
- solely because it happens to be no longer a scene of conflict,"
- the UN chief told journalists at a press conference following his
- meeting with President Chamorro. "The international community
- must not forget Nicaragua."
-
- Butros-Ghali suggested social measures to fight poverty, and said
- that while the United Nations had only limited resources, it
- could act as an "intermediary" for international financing
- agencies that were able to provide economic aid to Nicaragua and
- El Salvador. The UN leader stopped in Nicaragua briefly after
- attending the ceremonies marking the end of the 12-year war in
- neighboring El Salvador. Butros-Ghali praised Nicaragua's advance
- from "military confrontation to full democracy," but said that
- "it is now necessary to reconstruct the country." Losses to
- Nicaragua's economy from the war have been estimated by UN
- agencies at $15 billion. Chamorro invited Butros-Ghali to visit
- Nicaragua again. [IPS 12/16/92]
-
- 5. FORMER NICARAGUAN SOLDIERS STILL ON HUNGER STRIKE
-
- A hunger strike by 37 former EPS soldiers was continuing as of
- Dec. 18 after seven weeks, with four of the protesters in
- "dangerous" condition according to doctors. The hunger strikers
- are demanding layoff compensation in the amount of $1000,
- equivalent to three months' salary. On Dec. 17, EPS head of
- public and international relations Ricardo Wheelock Roman said
- the protesters had no right to claim compensation because they
- "do not meet the legal requirements," adding that "those who make
- claims to the contrary are misleading them." Wheelock said the
- army could not be held responsible "if any of them die"; he
- argued that only soldiers who "did not abandon the ranks after
- the Sandinista Front lost the elections and did not have pending
- court cases" qualified for retirement benefits.
-
- Vilma Nunez de Escorcia, director of the Nicaraguan Center for
- Human Rights (CENIDH), called the army high command's attitude
- toward the hunger strikers "inhuman, insensitive and worrying."
- Nunez, who also chairs the Central American Human Rights
- Commission (CODEHUCA) explained that "today they do not meet the
- conditions, but when they were recruited for war, they fit the
- bill. They were good soldiers, now they swim in misery." She
- added, "I do not see how the high command can go on vacation to
- celebrate Christmas, leaving their former comrades on the brink
- of death." [IPS 12/18/92]
-
- 6. CENTRAL AMERICAN PRESIDENTS DISCUSS REGION'S PROBLEMS
-
- The presidents of the Central American countries held their 13th
- summit in Panama City from Dec. 9 through Dec. 11. The main
- topics discussed were the region's economic and agricultural
- integration. The group telephoned Mexican President Carlos
- Salinas de Gortari to register their objection to Mexico's
- imposition of import taxes on sugar and meat, two of Central
- America's main export products. The summit also resulted in an
- Agricultural Declaration put together by the countries'
- respective agriculture ministers.
-
- Regarding the region's economic integration, Costa Rican
- president Rafael Calderon said, "we must insert ourselves into
- the international market...we have to move toward an opening
- where we can also protect ourselves from the excessive subsidies
- of other nations." He also stated, in regard to international
- economic assistance, "It is a barbarity that while they
- [governments and international financial organizations] demand
- peace and more open economies of us, they don't give us the
- [financial] assistance we are expecting." President Jorge Serrano
- of Guatemala pointed out that the agriculture ministers must take
- into account the GATT (General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs)
- agreement in regard to banana exportation. The Central American
- countries are asking the the European Community not to put quotas
- on the importation of bananas. Another topic discussed by the
- presidents was the possibility of using only one currency for the
- region. [ED-LP 12/09/92 from AFP, 12/11/92 from AP]
-
- 7. BUSH'S GENERAL PARDON COMPLETES IRAN-CONTRA COVERUP
-
- On Dec. 24 US President George Bush granted presidential pardons
- to six figures in the Iran-contra affair. Two still faced charges
- of lying to or misleading Congress: former defense secretary
- Caspar Weinberger, whose trial was to begin Jan. 5, and former
- CIA official Duane "Dewey" Clarridge, whose trial was set for
- March. Three more had already entered guilty pleas: former
- Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams, former CIA official
- Alan Fiers, and former national security adviser Robert "Bud"
- McFarlane. Clair George, another former CIA official, was
- convicted by a federal jury on Dec. 9. [New York Times 12/25/92]
-
- "The Iran-contra coverup, which has continued for more than six
- years, has now been completed," the independent counsel (special
- prosecutor) in the affair, Lawrence Walsh, said in a statement on
- Dec. 24. The pardon "undermines the principle that no man is
- above the law. It demonstrates that powerful people with powerful
- allies can commit serious crimes in high office..." Weinberger's
- role in the coverup "possibly forestalled timely impeachment
- proceedings against President Reagan and other officials,"
- according to Walsh, who also revealed what he called "President
- Bush's own misconduct"--waiting until Dec. 11 of this year to
- produce his notes on the affair. [NYT 12/15/92 from Reuters]
-
- Walsh says that Bush is now a "subject of the investigation,"
- while Democrats in Congress may hold hearings on the presidential
- pardon. But Walsh says that the pardon "has a devastating effect
- on the development of further facets of the inquiry," while
- Congressional Democrats admit that they "botched" and "bungled"
- (in the words of the New York Times) the 1987 Congressional
- inquiry and wouldn't like to try another one. [NYT 12/26/92] (One
- important question is whether blackmail from the executive branch
- may have influenced the ability of Congress to investigate the
- White House. The "botched" and "bungled" 1987 inquiry was chaired
- by Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-IN) and Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI), who
- has also been a vocal supporter of Weinberger against the special
- prosecutor's office (see Update #126). Now it turns out that
- Inouye's hairdresser accuses him of forcing her into what the
- Times calls "nonconsensual intercourse" 17 years ago; the
- hairdresser says she has experienced frequent sexual harassment
- from Inouye since then, and nine other women are said to have
- similar stories.) [NYT 12/14/92]
-
- 8. CONTRAGATE: A "DAMOCLES SWORD" OVER FOREIGN POLICY?
-
- In the text of the Iran-contra pardon, Bush wrote that he was
- acting in order to counter "a profoundly troubling development in
- the political and legal climate of our country: the
- criminalization of policy differences. These differences should
- be addressed in the political arena, without the Damocles sword
- of criminality [that is, the possibility of prosecution for
- crimes] hanging over the heads of some of the combatants... It is
- my hope that the action I am taking today will begin to restore
- these disputes to the battleground where they properly belong."
- [NYT 12/25/92 from AP]
-
- In fact, the pardon completes a long process of putting US
- foreign policy entirely above the law--above any law,
- international or domestic. In 1986 the US defied a World Court
- ruling by continuing the US war against Nicaragua. In 1989 the US
- defied the UN and the OAS (Organization of American States)
- charters by invading Panama. In diplomatic maneuvers leading up
- to the 1991 Gulf War, the US turned the UN Security Council into
- a rubber stamp for US military actions. Earlier this year, the US
- Supreme Court ruled in the Alvarez Machain case that the US may
- simply ignore its own treaties as it crosses borders and kidnaps
- foreign nationals. With the Bush pardon, the US executive branch
- now declares itself free to lie to Congress with complete
- impunity. Ceasars, Kaisers and tsars would have every reason to
- envy the present absolute power of the US president.
-
- At the same time that the presidency sets itself above the law,
- much of the potential domestic opposition has endorsed the
- doctrine of "humanitarian intervention"--the idea that US-led
- invasions are justified whenever the White House and the mass
- media certify that the intentions are good. "Intervention is in,"
- writes conservative columnist William Safire. "[T]he former
- liberal doves and conservative hawks are now human-rights
- bedfellows." The only opposition comes from "isolationists of the
- resentful right, Perot protectionists, diplomatic
- accommodationists, and the old New Left peaceniks now lying
- quietly in the weeds." [NYT 12/24/92] If there is a "Damocles
- sword" hanging over US foreign policy, it is clearly the power of
- an imperial US presidency backed by history's largest and
- deadliest military machine and unrestrained by laws or political
- opposition.
-
- 9. GUATEMALAN HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS WIN PRIZES
-
- On Dec. 9 in Stockholm, Hellen Mack--sister of Guatemalan
- anthropologist Mirna Mack, murdered in September 1990--received
- the 1992 Right Livelihood Award, also known as the alternative
- Nobel prize, for her "efforts in the struggle against political
- violence throughout Central America." Mack, one of three people
- receiving the award, has been trying to have her sister's
- assassins brought to justice; she says that so far a total of 12
- different judges have declined to become involved in the case
- "out of fear of reprisals." Mack says she will use the $185,000
- given to her as part of the award to establish a new Mirna Mack
- Foundation, which will provide legal assistance and other forms
- of aid to victims of human rights abuses. [LADB 12/11/92 from
- AFP]
-
- Meanwhile, this year's Nobel Peace Prize winner, Guatemalan human
- rights activist Rigoberta Menchu, deposited her prize medal in
- the Templo Mayor Museum in Mexico City on Dec. 18. Menchu was
- accompanied in the ceremony by Mexican President Carlos Salinas
- de Gortari, his wife, and the Spanish ambassador to Mexico. [ED-
- LP 12/20/92 from EFE] Menchu invited Ruben Berrios and Fernando
- Martin, president and vice president (respectively) of the Puerto
- Rican Independence Party (PIP) to join her in the ceremony, but
- they were unable to get a flight on short notice. [ED-LP
- 12/18/92]
-
- 10. ZUNO ARCE CONVICTED IN CAMARENA CASE
-
- On Dec. 21 a federal jury in Los Angeles convicted Mexican
- businessperson Ruben Zuno Arce of conspiracy in the 1985 torture
- and murder of Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) official
- Enrique "Kiki" Camarena Salazar in Guadalajara. The jury, which
- deliberated for almost three days, was never told that one week
- earlier presiding Judge Edward Rafeedie had dismissed charges
- against codefendant Humberto Alvarez Machain for lack of
- evidence. Zuno Arce's conviction was the eighth so far in the
- Camarena murder, but this latest trial aroused special interest
- because of Alvarez Machain, a Guadalajara gynecologist who was
- kidnapped and brought to the US in 1990, setting off an
- international furor. Zuno Arce is to be sentenced Feb. 8. [El
- Diario-La Prensa (NY) 12/22/92 from AP] (Zuno Arce's brother-in-
- law is Luis Echeverria Alvarez, president of Mexico 1970-76.
- Echeverria was Interior Minister 1963-1970, and many consider him
- responsible for the October, 1968, massacre of several hundred
- students and their supporters in Mexico City.)
-
- 11. "MACHAIN DOCTRINE" LIVES ON
-
- Tensions are reportedly continuing between Mexico and the US over
- the Alvarez Machain case. The US government is now demanding that
- Mexico investigate DEA claims about a "killing field" in
- Guadalajara that allegedly contains the bodies of at least four
- US citizens murdered by drug lords in 1984. (These were Jehovah's
- Witnesses the drug traffickers are supposed to have mistaken for
- DEA agents.) The US claims Mexico is refusing to excavate the
- graves and repatriate the remains. [Washington Post 12/18/92]
- Meanwhile, the Mexican government issued a communique on Dec. 19
- calling on the US government to "explicitly acknowledge that the
- kidnapping of Alvarez Machain constituted a violation of
- international law and that jurisdiction rests exclusively with
- the Mexican authorities." The communique stresses that Mexico is
- interested in strengthening cooperation with the US in the fight
- against drug trafficking, "but on the basis of strict adherence
- to international law and with mutual trust and respect." [IPS
- 12/19/92] And Alvarez Machain himself is now saying he'll file
- suit against the US district attorneys and the hired witnesses
- used at his trial. The doctor told a Guadalajara press conference
- that he would demand several million dollars in compensation. He
- was kidnapped and abused, he charged, his family was badly
- treated, and his reputation damaged. [Cubanews from Radio Havana
- Cuba 12/18/92]
-
- Things may not change much after Bill Clinton's inauguration.
- What New York's El Diario-La Prensa calls the "Machain Doctrine"-
- -"the imperialistic principle" that "the kidnapping of citizens
- of other countries on foreign soil by American agents [is]
- perfectly legal and acceptable" [12/22/92]--got a limited
- endorsement from the president-elect on Dec. 15. Clinton said the
- US Supreme Court "goes too far" in its June 15 decision upholding
- the abduction. But he noted that he didn't feel the US should
- renounce all rights to enter foreign territory: "[I] would say
- that we shouldn't even think about this unless the other
- government has deliberately refused to honor extradition requests
- and tried to undermine what we were doing or wouldn't lift a
- finger to try to comply with the law." [ED-LP 12/16/92 from AP;
- quotations retranslated from Spanish]
-
- 12. MEXICO ANGRY AT ACQUITTAL OF US BORDER GUARD
-
- The Mexican Foreign Ministry says it is "profoundly concerned"
- about an Arizona court's decision to acquit a US border guard who
- shot Mexican undocumented immigrant Dario Miranda to death last
- June. The Mexican government says there was sufficient evidence
- to prove that agent Michael Elmer shot Miranda in the back,
- though Elmer says he fired in self-defense. Elmer faces 11 other
- charges of aggravated assault against Mexican nationals. Mexico
- says it will ask the US government for Elmer to be retried on
- charges of violating Miranda's human rights and will file a civil
- suit against US immigration authorities on behalf of Miranda's
- family. [Cubanews from Radio Havana Cuba 12/18/92]
-
- 13. ARRESTED COLOMBIAN REBEL LEADER CHARGES ABUSE
-
- National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrilla leader Francisco Galan,
- who was arrested on Dec. 3, has charged that he was drugged and
- raped by army interrogators after refusing to give information on
- other guerrilla leaders. Army officers denied the accusations and
- added that a member of the attorney general's office was present
- at all times during Galan's arrest. Attorney General Gustavo Leon
- de Greiff confirmed the presence of a member of his staff in the
- process and assured that everything was done legally. Days
- earlier, the government had presented the media with a medical
- report which said that when he was arrested, Galan showed signs
- of "drug addiction and sexual assult." [ED-LP 12/24/92 from
- Notimex]
-
- In other news, the Colombian government has increased the
- country's minimum salary by 25%. Starting Jan. 1 the minimum
- monthly salary will be 81,510 pesos ($116)--the amount suggested
- by the business sector. Labor unions had suggested a 29%
- increase. [ED-LP 12/24/92 from AP]
-
- 14. PERUVIAN GOVERNING COALITION QUITS CUSCO ELECTIONS
-
- Peru's ruling New Majority-Change 90 coalition has decided to
- pull its candidates for mayor from the elections in the Andean
- region of El Cusco. Coalition representative Juan Heysen Acosta
- presented a written petition to pull out of the race. Secretary
- of the electoral jury Felipe Perez Ceballos said that the
- decision on this highly unusual occurrence would be made public
- on Dec. 25. According to polls, current Cusco mayor Daniel
- Estrada will receive 70% of the vote to win a third term of
- office. Estrada, a member of the United Alliance of the Left, is
- running as a candidate of the United Front (FU), a coalition
- formed from the fragmented Peruvian left. The candidates of the
- FU have their biggest backing in Cusco's 13 provinces and 106
- districts. In other election news, the electoral jury of Lima
- province approved 100 lists of candidates for 43 districts for
- the capital. There are 42 candidates running for mayor of Lima.
- [ED-LP 12/24/92 from Notimex]
-
- Meanwhile, rebels of the Maoist Peruvian Communist Party (PCP,
- also known as Sendero Luminoso, or Shining Path) exploded car
- bombs on Dec. 26 near the Chinese, Costa Rican and Austrian
- embassies in Lima, causing damage but no injuries, according to
- police and embassy officials. [NYT 12/27/92 from Reuters]
-
- 15. CUBA BEGINS NEW ELECTORAL PROCESS
-
- On Dec. 20, over 97.2% of Cuba's registered voters (75% of the
- seven million Cubans eligible to vote) went to the polls to elect
- 13,865 delegates to sit on 169 municipal assemblies. Of the
- delegates elected, tentative results indicate that 1,811 are
- women and 2,199 are under 30 years old; 8,200 incumbents were
- returned to office. President Fidel Castro said this demonstrated
- the people's confidence in the government and that Cuba will
- survive the worst economic difficulties the island has
- experienced in over thirty years.
-
- This was the first election under the new electoral law passed in
- October, and it sets the stage for the elections for state and
- national assemblies scheduled for February 1993. According to
- local sources, the decision to call general elections is a
- response to external pressure. Although Cubans have chosen
- representatives on the local level since 1975 when the "popular
- power" system was inaugurated, this is the first time in Cuban
- history that people will elect their state and national
- representatives directly by secret ballot. Direct elections have
- been a long-standing demand among members of the international
- community and opponents of Castro's government.
-
- While the nomination of candidates for the state and national
- elections will remain indirect and subject to control by the
- Communist Party, the secret ballot will present the possibility
- of Cubans expressing displeasure with the current government by
- simply casting a blank ballot or by voting for newer lesser known
- figures instead of party stalwarts. In the municipal elections,
- figures on the number of blank or mutilated ballots were not
- expected to be available until March. In one voting station
- visited by journalists, it was estimated that 15% to 20% of the
- ballots were blank or mutilated. According to the President of
- the Election Commission, Carlos Amat, this figure cannot be taken
- as indicative since it is only a small unscientific sample.
-
- The municipal elections were the first nationwide elections since
- the breakup of the former Soviet bloc, combined with the
- pressures of the increased US embargo, plunged Cuba into economic
- crisis. Juan Escalona, President of Cuba's National Assembly,
- said the government was aware that frustration over social and
- economic problems would be reflected at the polls, but he was
- confident the government would recieve majority support. "This is
- a very great expression of the courage of the revolution and of
- confidence in the people," said Castro. "These are the worst
- conditions for an election." [ED-LP 12/21/92 from Notimex & EFE,
- 12/22/92 from AP; NYT 12/21/92; NY Newsday 12/21/92; IPS 11/3/92]
-
- 16. CHARGES AGAINST PASTORS FOR PEACE ACTIVISTS REDUCED
-
- Charges against three of the four Pastors for Peace caravan
- participants arrested during a confrontation with US officials at
- the US/Mexico border on Nov. 20 are expected to be dropped. The
- Pastors for Peace caravan brought shipments of medicine, bibles
- and other supplies from the US to Cuba via Mexico in violation of
- the US embargo against Cuba. The charges against Ajumoke Tokunbo,
- an African-American woman from Oakland, California are being
- reduced to two counts of misdemeanor assault on a federal
- officer. Federal prosecutors had threatened to charge her with
- felonious assault and violating the Trading with the Enemy Act.
- The Friendshipment's legal team is also working to win the
- release of medicines federal officials had seized during the
- November caravan. [Workers World Service posted on NY Transfer
- 12/24/92]
-
- 17. PILOT FLIES TO CUBA TO BRING FAMILY TO US
-
- Former Cuban Air Force commander Orestes Lorenzo Perez, who fled
- Cuba on Mar. 20, 1991 in a Mig-23 fighter jet, returned secretly
- to Cuba on Dec. 19 on a successful mission to bring his wife and
- children to his home in Virginia. His family had been granted US
- visas but were not allowed to leave by the Cuban government;
- Lorenzo tried diplomatic means and even a hunger strike before
- resorting to the daredevil stunt. The pilot avoided Cuban radar
- by flying some 10 feet above the water on the 90-mile journey
- from Florida in a Cessna 310 lent to him by the Valladares
- Foundation, a Cuban exile group. After their arrival, US
- President Bush received Lorenzo and his wife and older son in the
- White House to hear their story. [ED-LP 12/21/92 from AFP, EFE;
- 12/22/92; 12/23/92 from AP, EFE; WP 12/21/92]
-
- 18. BRAZILIAN IMPEACHMENT TRIAL POSTPONED
-
- The impeachment trial of Brazilian President Fernando Collor de
- Mello was postponed on Dec. 21--the eve of the Senate
- proceedings--until Dec. 29. Collor's move to delay the trial by
- dismissing his lawyers was denounced as a cynical move to buy
- time, though Collor claimed it was to prevent senators from
- acting under "tremendous political pressure" and because he is
- seeking a "fair and impartial trial in a climate free from
- emotions and conflicts of interest." Collor said he "was victim
- of a defamatory campaign without precedent in the history of the
- country." [NYT 12/22/92 from AP; ED-LP 12/22/92 from AFP]
-
- The president of Brazil's Supreme Federal Court, Sidney Sanchez,
- has expressed his opposition to Collor's petition to delay the
- trial for another month; he said he will make his formal decision
- on the request on Dec. 28 after consulting with the prosecuting
- attorneys. "If it depends on me, the date of Tuesday the 29th
- will be maintained," said Sanchez; prosecutor Evandro Lins y
- Silva said he will not allow a further delay of the trial, due to
- the total absence of good faith on Collor's part. Sanchez also
- warned that Collor's new defense lawyer, appointed by the state,
- must take up the process at the phase it is currently in. [ED-LP
- 12/27/92 from EFE]
-
- 19. PANAMA COMMEMORATES THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF INVASION
-
- While some Panamanians commemorated the third anniversary of the
- Dec. 20, 1989 US invasion of Panama with a mass at the common
- grave of 108 soldiers and civilians killed during the invasion,
- hundreds of others who were made homeless when the US bombed
- their Panama City neighborhood, El Chorrillo, attended a Sunday
- mass at the Fatima church, preceded by a candlelight vigil and
- procession on the night of Dec. 19. [ED-LP 12/21/92 from AP]
-
- The president of an ad hoc commission of Panama's legislative
- assembly, Arturo Vallarino, said Dec. 23 that some 50 supporters
- of deposed general Manuel Antonio Noriega may be amnestied before
- the end of the year. He warned that only those who committed
- political crimes and not common crimes could benefit from an
- amnesty. Among those arrested since Dec. 20, 1989 are Noriega's
- former joint chiefs of staff Col. Marco Justine, former chief of
- the political police Col. Guillermo Wong, and head of the
- paramilitary "Dignity Battalions" Benjamin Colamarco. [ED-LP
- 12/24/92 from AP]
-
- 20. US VIOLATES HAITI EMBARGO, CANADA WANTS TO GET TOUGH
-
- Despite the unilateral embargo imposed last year on Haiti,
- commercial trade between the US and Haiti surpassed $140 million
- in the first seven months of 1992, according to statistics from
- the US Trade Department released in Miami on Dec. 22. In this
- period of time, the US sent some $96 million in exports to Haiti
- and received $43 million in imports. "The failure of the embargo
- is a shame for the White House, but it didn't work because there
- was no support from the United Nations," said Robert Geldberg, an
- official from the State Department's office for Inter-American
- Affairs. In a press conference in southern Florida, Geldberg
- explained that the embargo isn't supported by industrialized
- nations like France, and that it was violated by some members of
- the Organization of American States (OAS). [ED-LP 12/23/92 from
- Notimex]
-
- Canada's Prime Minister Brian Mulroney has called for an
- international naval blockade around Haiti to bring down the
- military dictatorship that overthrew the democratically-elected
- government of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on Sept. 30, 1991.
- "There should be a naval blockade, by Canada, the United States,
- France and Venezuela to name but four to bring that Government
- down," said Mulroney in a CTV television network interview
- scheduled for broadcast on Dec. 27, the transcripts of which were
- released Dec. 24. Mulroney spokesperson Mark Entwistle said
- Mulroney has become increasingly frustrated with a lack of effort
- to help restore a democratic government in Haiti, and with the
- failure of a limited economic blockade to be effective. "If you
- really want to shut these guys down, you have to put a
- stranglehold on them, said Entwistle. Mulroney plans to try to
- persuade US President-elect Bill Clinton to support a more
- effective blockade. [NYT 12/25/92 from Reuters]
-
- -30-
-
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