home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: nicanet%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NicaNet NY)
- Subject: NicaNet NY Weekly Update 156 1/24/93
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.073754.14465@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: NY Transfer News Collective
- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 07:37:54 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 663
-
-
- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- NICARAGUA SOLIDARITY NETWORK OF GREATER NEW YORK
- 339 LAFAYETTE ST., NEW YORK NY 10012 (212) 674-9499
- NEWS UPDATE #156, JANUARY 24, 1993
-
- In This Issue:
-
- 1. Nicaraguan Recontras Increase Attacks
- 2. Nicaragua: UNO Seeks Dialogue With FSLN
- 3. Health Workers Strike Ends in Nicaragua
- 4. Nicaraguans Try to Find Work In Costa Rica
- 5. Chamorro Confident That US Aid Will Soon Flow
- 6. FMLN Weak Response to Salvadoran Army Purges Criticized
- 7. Guatemalans Exiled in Mexico Return to Their Country
- 8. Guatemalan President Caught in NYC Topless Restuarant
- 9. Guatemalan President Proposes Peace Plan
- 10. Charges Against Puerto Rican "Machetero" Dropped
- 11. Clinton's New Haiti Policy: "Floating Berlin Wall"
- 12. Cuban-American Nomination Nixed in Clinton Cabinet
- 13. Mayoral Candidate in Peru Withdraws, Another Killed
- 14. Ecuadoran Doctors' Strike Continues
- 15. Uruguayans Protest Presence of IMF Envoy
- 16. Other News: Mexico, Puerto Rico, Arg., Colombia & Peru
- 17. 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 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 would appreciate a copy of
- anything you write. We welcome your comments and ideas. Send
- them via NY Transfer News to: nicanet%nyxfer@igc.apc.org.
-
- 1. NICARAGUAN RECONTRAS INCREASE ATTACKS
-
- Nicaraguan military sources announced on Jan. 19 that re-armed
- ex-contras are no longer confined to northern and central
- Nicaragua but are now operating in northern Leon department,
- carrying out frequent attacks against civilians in rural towns
- including El Jicaral, Santa Rosa del Penon, Achuapa and El Sauce.
- Attacks are also continuing in northern Nicaragua, where there
- are estimated to be some 450 recontras operating: on Jan. 19,
- nine people, including a community leader, died in confrontations
- between recontras and troops of the Sandinista Popular Army
- (EPS); as of Jan. 19, a total of some 50 people had been killed
- so far this year in clashes. According to police and army
- sources, the armed groups have been stopping buses and robbing
- passengers, as well as raiding small villages and burning rural
- agricultural cooperatives and government offices. EPS sources say
- there have been 34 attacks against civilian vehicles, 13 murders
- and 8 civilian kidnappings in the north since the beginning of
- the year. The former contras say they are renewing their attacks
- to force President Violeta Chamorro to fulfill the promises she
- made, guaranteeing them personal security, land, financing and
- social services, in order to get them to disarm in June of 1990.
- [Inter Press Service 1/19/93; Diario La Americas (Miami) 1/22/93
- from EFE; La Jornada (Mexico) 1/17/93 from AFP & DPA]
-
- EPS spokesperson Lt. Col. Ricardo Wheelock said the ex-contras
- are known to have Red-Eye missiles given to them by the US during
- the contra war. According to Wheelock, the missiles remained in
- Honduran territory or were buried in the mountains when the
- contras allegedly disarmed in June of 1990. La Prensa, the daily
- newspaper owned by President Violeta Chamorro's family, published
- in its Jan. 20 edition photos of rearmed ex-contras showing one
- of the missiles, and said they had a least a dozen of them. [El
- Diario-La Prensa (NY) 1/21/93 from AP]
-
- On Jan. 23, Nicaraguan army troops battled recontras for two and
- a half hours near El Zungaro, a town along the Honduran border,
- leaving 40 dead and 30 wounded. The battle was confirmed by an
- official of the International Support and Verification Commission
- (CIAV) of the Organization of American States (OAS), who
- described it as "very serious," having taken place two days
- before talks between the insurgents and the government were to be
- renewed. Talks were interrupted on Dec. 9 when the government
- refused to extend areas designated as "security zones" for the
- former contras to three provinces in the northern part of the
- country. El Zungaro is in a security zone near the Honduran
- border, where ex-contras have been gathering in anticipation of
- the renewed talks. [ED-LP 1/24/93 from AP]
-
- 2. NICARAGUA: UNO SEEKS DIALOGUE WITH FSLN
-
- The National Opposition Union (UNO), now the official Nicaraguan
- opposition, is seeking dialogue with the Sandinista National
- Liberation Front (FSLN). Christian Democratic deputy Luis
- Humberto Guzman said on Jan. 20 that since the UNO has officially
- become the opposition, it has dismissed the possibility of having
- a dialogue with Chamorro's government. However, they do want to
- dialogue with the FSLN, which they consider to be a permanent
- political force.
-
- Guzman claims that Chamorro is becoming less and less interested
- in finding a way out of the country's crisis because, according
- to him, she is about to leave, although her term does not end
- until 1996. The 11 remaining parties of the UNO coalition
- [originally there were 14], which carried Chamorro to the
- presidency, are now promoting a plebiscite to ask the Nicaraguan
- people whether Chamorro should leave office immediately or stay
- for her full term. However, a plebiscite is unlikely, since it
- would require the approval of two-thirds of the parliament, and
- the UNO no longer has a majority in that body. Guzman warned that
- the conflictive situation in Nicaragua and the people's growing
- economic deterioration cannot continue indefinitely. He said that
- after three years in power, Chamorro's government has already had
- its chance. [ED-LP 1/21/93 from Notimex]
-
- 3. HEALTH WORKERS STRIKE ENDS IN NICARAGUA
-
- The two-month long doctors' strike in Nicaragua ended on Jan. 16
- after the Health Workers Union (FETSALUD) agreed to accept a
- government offer that met most of the demands put forth by the
- striking workers. The agreement, which came after a week of tense
- negotiations with new health minister Martha Palacios, provides
- for a monthly bonus equivalent to about $21 on top of the regular
- salary. The government guaranteed job stability for 20,000 health
- sector employees and committed to respecting the collective
- bargaining agreement. FETSALUD leader Gustavo Porras said the
- salary bonus will translate into raises of 20-60% for health
- workers. The union had demanded an across-the-board 100% raise.
- [Latin America Data Base 1/22/93 from AFP; LJ 1/17/93 from AFP &
- DPA]
-
- 4. NICARAGUANS TRY TO FIND WORK IN COSTA RICA
-
- An accord signed between Costa Rica and Nicaragua will allow
- about 5,000 Nicaraguan agricultural workers to enter Costa Rica
- as temporary contract laborers on coffee, banana and sugar cane
- plantations. The workers will receive four-month contracts and
- will be entitled to all the public and workplace benefits
- provided by Costa Rican law. In the past an estimated 20,000
- Nicaraguans have been illegally employed during the peak season
- in Costa Rica, receiving less than minimum wage, few or no
- benefits, and subject to arbitrary firing and deportation.
-
- After the agreement was signed, some 4,000 unemployed workers
- immediately flocked to the Labor Ministry offices in Managua to
- apply for admission to the program. By Jan. 21, some 10,000
- unemployed Nicaraguans had signed up, though Costa Rica says it
- can only hire a total of 6,000 temporary agricultural workers.
- The Labor Ministry says about 1,800 people come into the office
- daily to apply; the applicants include not only experienced farm
- workers but also unemployed professionals and highly skilled
- technicians. Conservative estimates put the unemployment rate in
- Nicaragua at 50% of its workforce of 1.4 million. [LADB 1/15/93
- from AFP; Cubanews from Radio Havana Cuba 1/21/93]
-
- 5. CHAMORRO CONFIDENT THAT US AID WILL SOON FLOW
-
- On Jan. 18 President Violeta Chamorro expressed her confidence
- that new US president Bill Clinton would release the $50 million
- in Nicaragua aid promised for 1992 which still remains frozen.
- The statement was made during a press conference held for the
- presentation of 20 new boats to fisherpeople whose property was
- destroyed in the September seaquake and resulting tidal wave.
- Chamorro said she would request a meeting with Clinton after he
- takes office. [ED-LP 1/19/93 from AFP]
-
- Correction: In Update #155 we said the cordoba was devalued from
- 5.25 to the dollar to 5.35. In fact, the cordoba was devalued by
- 20% to 6 cordobas per $1. Monthly mini-devaluations will be
- implemented to keep the exchange rate adjusted for inflation, but
- these devaluations are not supposed to exceed 5% over the course
- of the present year, according to central bank president Evenor
- Taboada. [LADB 1/22/93 from EFE & AFP]
-
- 6. FMLN WEAK RESPONSE TO SALVADORAN ARMY PURGES CRITICIZED
-
- With Salvadoran president Alfredo Cristiani still delaying major
- purges in the military high command, the Farabundo Marti National
- Liberation Front (FMLN) issued a communique on Jan. 12 announcing
- support for UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali's demand
- that Cristiani comply with the purges of the military leadership.
- The purges were to be completed by Dec 31, 1992. Cristiani
- requested a delay until 1994. The FMLN is now requesting that the
- purges be completed "as soon as possible."
-
- The same day, the University of Central America (UCA) ran a two
- page paid ad criticizing the FMLN for its lack of conviction
- regarding the purges which, it said, aligned the FMLN "closer to
- the position of ARENA and senior military officers than to the
- rest of the social and political forces." The UCA charged that
- two member groups of the FMLN "are willing to accept...the
- Cristiani proposal in exchange for highly productive lands, state
- protection for its leaders, a considerable increase in funds for
- the re-insertion of its members into civilian life and access to
- broadcast stations." The UCA noted that the bilateral
- negotiations between the FMLN and the government "are not
- faithful to the peace accords" and open the door to the worst
- political vices--bribery, corruption and manipulation behind the
- people's backs." Popular organizations, including the National
- Union of Salvadoran Workers (UNTS) and opposition political
- parties also marched to demand the immediate implementation of
- the army purge recommendations of the Ad Hoc Commission. The FMLN
- did not participate.
-
- FMLN General Coordinator Shafick Handal admitted that there was
- conflict over how to handle the purges. FMLN leaders Joaquin
- Villalobos and Ferman Cienfuegos accepted Cristiani's demand for
- more time to comply with the purges. Villalobos said a sector of
- the FMLN is willing to discuss the exoneration of some officers
- cited by the Ad-Hoc Commission with the UN and the government.
- Villalobos admitted that he has held discussions with US Embassy
- officials, but only in relation to reinsertion programs for ex-
- combatants.
-
- Handal, Leonel Gonzalez and Francisco Jovel insist on strict
- compliance with the peace accord timetable. Handal insisted that
- the FMLN will not discuss the "preferential treatment" of any
- military officers cited by the Ad-Hoc Commission's report. The
- FMLN cannot accept the exoneration of officers just because "they
- are threatening the peace process." However, the FMLN would be
- willing to allow a "small group of officers... between five and
- seven" to stay for a short period of time, "no more than five
- months."
-
- Handal also noted that the officers not discharged might appear
- in the Truth Commission report, which will be presented to the UN
- Secretary General, the FMLN and the Salvadoran government on Feb.
- 11 in New York. "President Cristiani is running this risk", said
- Handal, "It would be better to resolve this process
- beforehand."[El Rescate Human Rights Department Weekly Report
- from El Salvador 1/16/93]
-
- 7. GUATEMALANS EXILED IN MEXICO RETURN TO THEIR COUNTRY
-
- On Jan. 20 some 2,500 Guatemalan refugees who had been living in
- exile in Mexico for over 10 years returned to their homeland.
- After much negotiation with Mexican and Guatemalan authorities
- and international organizations, they crossed the Mexico-
- Guatemala border along the Pan American Highway at the town of La
- Mesilla. Although they were accompanied by about 240 volunteers
- from non-governmental organizations and members of the Red Cross,
- the Guatemalan military did not allow their buses to stop for
- celebrations which had been prepared along the route to
- Huehuetenango.
-
- They have been housed in what some say looks like a concentration
- camp set up by the Guatemalan government's Special Commission for
- Attention to the Repatriates (CEAR) in Huehuetenango. Only a wall
- separates the camp from a military base, and the refugees have
- not been allowed to leave the camp to visit family members
- waiting outside. They spent their first night with insufficient
- food, blankets and tents, said their representative, Miguel
- Ordonez. He also said the government had allowed soldiers into
- the camp. The government representative, Alvaro Colom, denied
- that the refugees' movements were restricted or that soldiers had
- entered the camp. The conditions in the refugee camps had been
- criticized as a violation of human rights by the non-governmental
- Permanent Commission for Attention to Refugees (CCPP), which has
- asked the Mediation Group to intervene. The Mediation Group for
- the refugees, which determined the conditions for their return,
- is made up of Bishop Jorge Mario Avila, Human Rights Ombudsman
- Ramiro de Leon Carpio, a human rights attorney, the leader of the
- UNHCR (UN High Commissioner for Refugees) mission, and Michel
- Gabaudan and Antonia Reyes, from the non-governmental Guatemalan
- Human Rights Commission.
-
- The group is to move on the week-end of Jan. 23 toward the
- capital city. The first group of some 1,200 will settle in
- Polygon 14, in Ixcan, a zone of conflict between the Guatemalan
- government and the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Union (UNRG)
- in Quiche province. The remaining 1,300 will be going to Nenton,
- Huehuetenango, when land has been prepared for them. The
- Guatemalan government signed an agreement on Oct. 8 which
- guaranteed the refugees land, including returning to them the
- land they lived on before they fled. However, much of that land
- is now privately owned, and it is yet to be seen if the
- government will be able to fulfill its promise. [ED-LP 1/21/93
- from AFP; 1/22/93 from EFE; Cerigua Radio Bulletin 1/21/93; New
- York Times 1/22/93 from Reuters]
-
- 8. GUATEMALAN PRESIDENT CAUGHT IN NEW YORK TOPLESS RESTUARANT
-
- While the refugees were struggling with their return from over
- ten years in exile, Guatemalan President Jorge Serrano was
- struggling to get out of the embarrassing situation of having
- been caught by the press coming out of a topless restaurant in
- New York City. It appears that after an arduous session at the UN
- and other diplomatic tasks on Jan. 21, Serrano found
- Stringfellow's Pure Platinum, a restuarant which specializes in
- topless entertainment, to be the only place in town open where he
- could find some onion soup. He was surprised upon leaving by
- members of the press corps and his departure from Stringfellow's
- was broadcast on the national Spanish-language television network
- "Univision." Serrano's reaction: "This is no way to win a war,"
- laying the blame for the scandal directly on the Guatemalan rebel
- group URNG. He did not offer any details. [ED-LP 1/22/93 from
- AFP]
-
- 9. GUATEMALAN PRESIDENT PROPOSES PEACE PLAN
-
- President Serrano said on Jan. 19 that his government was willing
- to sign a peace accord with the Guatemalan National Revolutionary
- Union (UNRG), and asked the UN to observe the demobilization of
- the rebel group if they accept the peace agreement. "This is the
- biggest opening ever shown," he said in a speech before the UN
- General Assembly. Previous peace talks, initiated in January of
- 1991, came to a halt in August of that year over the issue of
- human rights violations. Some 120,000 people have been killed and
- some 100,000 have fled Guatemala since the beginning of the civil
- war 30 years ago.
-
- Serrano said his government was willing to immediately sign a
- human rights agreement and cooperate with the repatriation of
- 45,000 exiles. He did not offer any concessions to the UNRG, nor
- did he enumerate what the conditions would be for a ceasefire,
- but said his government was willing to call a truce even if the
- rebels hadn't signed an agreement within a 90-day period.[ED-LP
- 1/20/93 from AP]
-
- The president of the non-governmental Guatemalan Human Rights
- Commission, Osvaldo Rodriguez, called the government's peace plan
- announcement part of a publicity campaign to undercut accusations
- of human rights violations in that country. [ED-LP 1/19/93 from
- Notimex] A statement issued on Jan. 23 by the UNRG from their
- offices in Mexico said they accepted the peace plan as "partial,
- contradictory and incomplete." Although they felt the offer was
- "a positive gesture," they consider it incomplete because "an
- ultimatum is not a constructive proposal." Spokesperson Miguel
- Angel Sandoval said the proposal was one which the UNRG felt
- "could be discussed." [ED-LP 1/24/93 from AP]
-
- 10. CHARGES AGAINST PUERTO RICAN "MACHETERO" DROPPED
-
- The US government has dropped its principal charges against Luis
- Colon Osorio, self-proclaimed leader of the Puerto Rican pro-
- independence organization the "Macheteros," accused in connection
- with the 1983 robbery of $7.1 million from Wells Fargo in
- Connecticut. Federal prosecutor in Connecticut Albert Dabrowski
- dropped the charge of conspiracy to distribute toys supposedly
- bought with the stolen money. "Discretion of the prosecution in
- limiting the complexity and duration of trials" was a reason
- given by the government to explain the dismissal of the charges.
- Osorio was found guilty of violating bail, and his sentencing was
- postponed from Jan. 22 to Jan. 29. [Osorio was originally
- arrested in 1985 along with another Macheteros leader, Filiberto
- Ojeda Rios. The two escaped FBI surveillance and jumped bail in
- September 1990. Osorio was rearrested on Mar. 17, 1992; Ojeda
- Rios, who remains a fugitive, was convicted in absentia of
- masterminding the theft and sentenced to 55 years in prison and a
- $600,000 fine.]
-
- Linda Backiel, Osorio's lawyer, said the prosecution has asked
- for a sentence of 14 months in prison for Osorio; he has already
- served 10 months in the federal prison at Otisville. She said the
- decision to drop the conspiracy charge represented a change in
- policy toward Puerto Rican independence activists. "I believe the
- government has seen that it cannot continue punishing the
- independence struggle, that that line no longer has a place in
- today's world, that now under a new administration there will be
- a change in the way they fight with Puerto Rican independence
- activists." [ED-LP 1/24/93]
-
- 11. CLINTON'S NEW HAITI POLICY: "FLOATING BERLIN WALL"
-
- On Jan. 15 Coast Guard Adm. J. William Kime announced that a
- fleet of at least 22 US ships and patrol boats was moving to
- surround Haiti to keep Haitian refugees from fleeing their
- country by boat. The naval action--which Kime insisted was "not a
- blockade"--was to be in place in time for Bill Clinton's
- inauguration on Jan. 20; outgoing Bush administration officials
- were said to be "in close contact" with the new Clinton team
- around the plan. [Washington Post 1/16/93] The Coast Guard
- justified the naval maneuver by alluding to the possibility of a
- mass exodus of hundreds of thousands of boat people. But people
- who know the shipping industry in Haiti say that up to half the
- boats being built currently are for normal commercial purposes
- and that the number of boat people probably wouldn't exceed
- 40,000. [WP 1/1/93]
-
- Clinton "has put up a white picket fence, a floating Berlin Wall,
- around those seeking freedom," said Rev. Antoine Adrien, a
- representative of deposed Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
- Aristide. [WP 1/21/93] Others noted that while capturing little
- sailboats filled with refugees, the Coast Guard was doing nothing
- to stop huge oil tankers that routinely break the international
- economic embargo imposed on Haiti after a military coup in 1991.
- "The new team has already lost a lot of credit here," according
- to a wealthy Haitian business person. "[P]eople will not be
- listening to what they say so much as watching what they do." A
- young Haitian worker simply called Clinton "a macoute just like
- the rest of our tormentors." [New York Times 1/17/93] (The
- Tontons Macoute were the paramilitary force employed by the
- brutal Duvalier family dictatorship.)
-
- Meanwhile, former Argentine foreign minister Dante Caputo, now a
- special envoy to Haiti from the UN and the OAS (Organization of
- American States) reports further progress in negotiations aimed
- at restoring democratic rule to the country. He says the military
- has accepted the UN's demand to put in place a force of 400 human
- rights observers, possibly by the end of this month. [NYT
- 1/18/93, 1/22/93; WP 1/22/93] But there is still some question
- whether the US government actually intends to return Haiti's
- elected president to office. The State Department's 1992
- international human rights report, released Jan. 19, cited a
- claim by a Haitian military commander that Aristide had ordered
- him to kill a political opponent. There was reportedly
- disagreement in the State Department over whether to include the
- story, which is unsubstantiated and refers to an incident from
- 1991, but the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs insisted on
- printing the allegation. [NYT 1/20/93] Nixon's secretary of
- state, Henry Kissinger, was less ambiguous. In a television
- interview with John McLaughlin, Kissinger called Aristide a
- "murderer" and "confirmed psychopath." "I understand that what's
- wanted is to bring him in as a symbolic figure but the power will
- be in other people's hands... In any case, it's very hard for me
- to shed a single tear for Aristide." [El Diario-La Prensa 1/19/93
- from AP; quotations retranslated from Spanish]
-
- 12. CUBAN-AMERICAN NOMINATION NIXED IN CLINTON CABINET
-
- Through an intense lobbying campaign over the weekend of Jan. 16-
- 17, the extreme rightwing Cuban-American National Foundation
- (CANF), headed by Jorge Mas Canosa, managed to thwart Clinton's
- intended nomination of a Cuban-American lawyer for a high-level
- administration post. The nominee, 41-year old Mario Leon Baeza,
- was born in New Jersey, where he still lives, to Cuban emigre
- parents; he is a senior partner at a prestigious Manhattan law
- firm and is said to be an expert on foreign trade. He was
- recommended by transition chairman Vernon Jordan and new Commerce
- Secretary Ron Brown. Though his crossed-out name was visible on
- the list of nominees Clinton sent to Congress on Jan. 18,
- transition officials insisted on Jan. 22 that a decision to
- nominate Baeza had never been made. [WP 1/23/93]
-
- CANF wanted Baeza dropped, charging that he would be too soft on
- Castro's government. [WP 1/23/93] Rep. Robert Torricelli (D-NJ),
- author of a recent bill strengthening the US embargo against
- Cuba, also expressed concern to Clinton aides that Baeza's views
- on Cuba were too divergent from those professed by Clinton,
- according to a Torricelli spokesperson. Baeza's office quickly
- disputed those claims, saying through an aide that he supports
- the embargo, and that he would enforce it. [The Record (NJ)
- 1/21/93, posted on NY Transfer] According to Baeza's law firm
- associate Dr. Jimmy Morales, "the opinions that have been
- expressed about Dr. Baeza are incorrect and must be corrected,
- since he is openly in favor of the Torricelli Law and opposes any
- reestablishment of relations with the Fidel Castro regime."
- [Diario Las Americas (Miami) 1/22/93]
-
- Last June, Baeza attended a trade conference in Havana where--
- according to Inter Press Service--he shook hands with Cuban
- president Fidel Castro. [IPS 1/19/93] Baeza said through an aide
- that the trip lasted six hours and that its main purpose was to
- visit family members who still live in Cuba. [Jersey Journal
- 1/21/93? from AP, posted on NY Transfer]
-
- The Congressional Black Caucus jumped to Baeza's support,
- claiming that opposition to his nomination stemmed from racism
- (Baeza is black). [WP 1/23/93] The Interreligious Foundation
- (IFCO), protesting the "red-baiting" of Baeza by the CANF, urged
- activists to call the Clinton transition team to express support
- for Baeza and condemn the undue influence of the CANF on US
- foreign policy. [IFCO Action Alert posted on NY Transfer 1/23/93]
- Baeza's offices subsequently requested that any communication to
- the State Department or transition team not include criticisms of
- the CANF or its policy positions, as that would merely reinforce
- the arguments of Baeza's detractors. ["Regarding Previous Action
- Alert," posted on NY Transfer 1/23/93]
-
- According to the Washington Post, even Cuban-Americans who do not
- support the far rightwing views espoused by the CANF are opposed
- to Baeza's nomination, since he is virtually unknown in the large
- Cuban exile community of Florida. The Post cites unnamed sources
- as saying that administration officials have proposed Baeza take
- an alternative senior post, such as an assistant secretary or
- general counsel at either the Commerce or Treasury departments.
- [WP 1/23/93] In the meantime, Bernard Aronson will remain in the
- post of assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs
- until a solution to the Haitian crisis is solved and Senate
- confirmation is concluded for whomever Clinton eventually
- nominates to replace him. [IPS 1/19/93]
-
- The CANF has proposed its own candidate for the post: Dr. Simon
- Ferro, a solid opponent of Castro and until very recently
- president of the Democratic Party in Florida. Several other names
- have been mentioned as possibilities, including former ambassador
- to Barbados Sally Shelton Colby (wife of ex-CIA director William
- Colby), former Miami mayor Maurice Ferre, University of Miami
- professor Jaime Suchliki, and former under-secretary general of
- the OAS Ronald Scheman. [DLA 1/22/93]
-
- Anonymous sources in Washington consulted by Spanish news agency
- EFE said the nomination of Baeza had been a badly calculated
- political ploy with which Clinton hoped to appease both the black
- and Cuban communities. The sources said that naming someone of
- Hispanic origin to the post is unwise generally, since it
- provokes rivalries between countries, as they said happened in
- the 70s when President Kennedy named Hispanics for Latin America-
- related posts. [ED-LP 1/24/93 from EFE]
-
- 13. MAYORAL CANDIDATE IN PERU WITHDRAWS, ANOTHER KILLED
-
- Pablo Gutierrez, the government-backed candidate for mayor of
- Lima, has dropped out of the municipal elections, scheduled to
- take place on Jan. 29. Announcing his withdrawal on Jan. 21, the
- candidate of President Fujimori's New Majority-Change 90 alliance
- said there was not enough time to carry out his campaign to its
- full extent. He added that his eventual defeat could be used for
- political ends which he thought it best to avoid. Private opinion
- polls showed Gutierrez's popularity dropping from 18.8% to 13% by
- mid-January, while that of independent candidate Luis Caceres,
- currently the mayor of Arequipa, increased from 18% to 25.4%.
- Incumbent mayor Ricardo Belmont, who does not belong to any
- political party and is seeking reelection, enjoyed an increase in
- popularity from 16% to 22.4%. Sources close to Gutierrez said
- Fujimori had been distancing himself from the candidate recently.
- [ED-LP 1/22/93 from AFP; 1/24/93 from AP]
-
- Meanwhile, presumed members of the Sendero Luminoso killed Felix
- Santiago, another mayoral candidate, and his campaign manager,
- Antiaco Aquino, on Jan. 19 outside of Lima. According to family
- members the two were taken from their homes to a beach where they
- were tortured and their throats were cut. [ED-LP 1/22/93 from AP]
-
- 14. ECUADORAN DOCTORS' STRIKE CONTINUES
-
- State-employed doctors in Ecuador continue their two-week old
- indefinite strike and are threatening to extend it, while the
- government refuses to work out the details of the Medical
- Salaries Law which would permit an increase in doctors' wages.
- Doctors suggest the increase in their wages (currently about $8
- million per year in total) could be financed by a projected $750
- million reduction in the payment of the national debt in 1993.
- Some 25,000 doctors are attending only emergency cases. President
- Sixto Duran Ballen refused on Jan. 6 to regulate the law, saying
- the Finance Minister had acted unconstitutionally, while the
- Constitutional Court determined that the law is legal and
- constitutional. The government announced that military hospitals
- will attend the public during the strike. The Catholic church has
- asked the doctors to end their strike and the government to cede
- to the doctors' wage demands. [DLA 1/16/93 from AFP, 1/22/93 from
- AFP; La Jornada (Mexico) 1/10/93 from AP and AFP; 1/17/93 from
- AFP; ED-LP 1/21/93 from AFP]
-
- 15. URUGUAYANS PROTEST PRESENCE OF IMF ENVOY
-
- Uruguay's 9-member Permanent Commision of Legislative Power,
- which replaces the congress during recess, declared that the
- presence in Uruguay of International Monetary Fund (IMF)
- representative Andrew Wolfe, a US citizen, was "inconvenient" and
- accused him of interfering in Uruguayan internal policies. Wolfe
- told a local newspaper that there would be problems with the
- trustworthiness of the government if the president of the Central
- Bank, Ramon Diaz, was removed from his post. He also said that he
- had never seen a better economic team than that of president Luis
- Alberto Lacalle. "One cannot accept everything a government wants
- to do," he said. Diaz has encountered strong opposition from
- different political sectors due to his economic positions. The
- Permanent Commission issued a statement asking for Wolfe to be
- replaced and saying that his continued presence threatened the
- good relations between Uruguay and the IMF. [DLA 1/22/93 from
- AFP; ED-LP 1/21/93 from AP]
-
- 16. In Other News...
-
- Martin Ramon Miguel Lopez, arrested last Nov. 22 for the murder
- of five gay men in Chiapas state, Mexico, has recanted his
- confession, saying it was extracted under death threats. Miguel
- Lopez says he had signed his confession statement--in which he
- accused former deputy German Jimenez Gomez of the ruling
- Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI) of being the intellectual
- author and paying 10 million pesos for the crimes--because he was
- subjected to torture. [La Jornada 1/17/93].
-
- Domingo Arroyo, the first US soldier killed in the US military
- intervention in Somalia, was buried with full military honors in
- the Bayamon National Cemetary in his native Puerto Rico on Jan.
- 21. Arroyo, a veteran of the 1991 Gulf War, was sent to Somalia on
- Dec. 29 and was killed Jan. 12 during a confrontation with
- sharpshooters. [ED-LP 1/19/93, 1/22/93].
-
- On Jan. 12 in Argentina, official sources announced the arrest of
- Hector Rima, accused of being the leader of a group that stole $30
- million from a regional treasury of the Central Bank on Dec. 23.
- His wife Eleonora Garbagnoli was arrested as well, bringing to
- seven the number of people arrested in connection with the crime.
- [ED-LP 1/13/93 from AFP].
-
- On Jan. 20, Colombian guerrilla leader Jose Humberto Lopez (also
- known as Evert Ortiz, Uriel or William) was captured by the
- police. Lopez is the commander of the 45th front of the
- Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). He was captured due
- to a tip the police recived by phone. [DLA 1/22/93 from AFP].
-
- The Colombian Foreign Ministry is considering the extradition of
- Peruvian ex-president Alan Garcia, who received political asylum
- last year in Colombia. Three Peruvian government spokespeople
- request the extradition in Bogota. A spokesperson for the
- Colombian government said the extradition would only be granted if
- it is proven that the alleged crimes Garcia committed were common
- crimes and not political. [DLA 1/22/93 from AFP]
-
- 17. 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.
-
- CENAC PROGRAM - ESTELI, NICARAGUA. Spanish instruction, family
- living, grassroots community experience. For information, call or
- write CENAC, Frente Parque Infantil, Barrio Wilfredo Valenzuela,
- Apartado 29, Esteli, Nicaragua, or Steve Levitsky, U.S.
- representative, 128 Simsbury Drive, Ithaca, N.Y. 14850. (607)
- 257-2659.
-
- EVERY THU, 6-8 PM - Vigil for Freedom for Puerto Rican Political
- Prisoners and POWs. In front of the UN, 1st Ave. bet. 42 & 43rd.
- Call 212-538-0988.
-
- EVERY WEEK-END in Feb. - Films, Videos, Discussions on Cuba. Casa
- de Las Americas. 140 W. 14th St. 3rd Fl. NYC. Call (212) 675-
- 2584.
-
- 1/28-2/17 - Exhibition of paintings by Corzo de Palenzuela,
- commemorating 140th anniversary of Jose Marti's birth. Opening,
- Jan. 28, 6:00 - 10:00 PM. Galeria Wifredo Lam, Casa de Las
- Americas, 104 W. 14th St., 3rd Fl., NYC.
-
- 1/30 SAT, 9 PM - CISPES/MASPS dance to benefit February caravan
- to El Salvador. 235 W. 23rd St. between 7th and 8th Avenue. $10.
- Call (212) 645-5230.
-
- 2/7-2/13 SUN - SAT. - Haiti Solidarity Week. Call Clergy and
- Laity Concerned (404) 377-1983 or (508) 248-5697; Americans for
- Aristide (212) 346-1257 or (212) 932-2935; Coalition for
- Democracy in Haiti (312) 663-4398; Haiti Communications Project
- (617) 868-2900; Pax Christi USA (814) 453-4955; Quixote Center
- (301) 699-0042; Washington Office on Haiti (202) 543-7095.
-
- 2/13 SAT. 7:00 - First Book Fair, Casa de Las Americas, 104 W.
- 14th St., New York, NY. Presentation of book of Pedro Albizu
- Campos.
-
- 2/19-2/28; 3/19-3/28; 4/23-5/2 - "Dateline Havana" Trips to Cuba,
- breaking the information blockade, sponsored by Cuba Information
- Project, 121 West 27th Street, Room 1202A, New York, NY 10001.
- Call (212) 366-6703
-
- 2/27-2/28 SAT - SUN. - Organizing for Social Change - Fighting
- Racism & the Politics of Division, conference sponsored by North
- Star Fund. For information call (212) 460-551 or write to 666
- Broadway, New York, NY 10012.
-
- 4/9-4/11 FRI - SUN. - Socialist Scholars Conference. Borough of
- Manhattan Community College, 199 Chambers Street (Near World
- Trade Center), NYC. Pre-registration $15 students & low income,
- $25 all others. At door $20 students & low income, $40 all
- others. Checks to "Socialist Scholars Conference" CUNY Democratic
- Socialists Club, Rm. 800, 33 W. 42nd St., NYC, NY 10036. Fax
- (212) 642-2419.
-
-
- + Join Us! Support The NY Transfer News Collective +
- + We deliver uncensored information to your mailbox! +
- + Modem: 718-448-2358 FAX: 718-448-3423 e-mail: nyxfer@panix.com +
-
-