September 30, 2007

Government intends to dismantle Zapatista autonomous municipalities

In an offensive of a ferocity unprecedented in the last 9 years – since the government of Roberto Albores Aguillen and Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León ordered the dismantling of the Zapatista autonomous municipalities – the autonomous Zapatista communities are suffering a brutal attack on the part of the Mexican State
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Originally published in Spanish by the Center for Political Analysis and Social and Economic Investigations A.C. (CAPISE).
http://www.capise.org.mx/?q=node/47

September 25, 2007.


The government intends to dismantle Zapatista autonomous municipalities

In an offensive of a ferocity unprecedented in the last 9 years – since the government of Roberto Albores Aguillen and Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León ordered the dismantling of the Zapatista autonomous municipalities – the autonomous Zapatista communities are suffering a brutal attack on the part of the Mexican State through their agrarian institutions, “Public Security” instances, the Mexican Federal Army and the formation of paramilitary groups. The increase of aggressions and the intents of land seizures and forced evictions are getting alarmingly worse.


The SEDENA

The documental and field investigation carried out by CAPISE on the permanent military positions presents us with the following military distribution in each military zone of the state of Chiapas.

29 Military camps in the 39th Military zone. (Selva and North Zone)

23 Military camps in the 31st Military zone. (High and North Zone)

14 Military camps in the 36th Military zone. (Coast Zone)

13 Military camps in the 38th Military zone. (North Zone and border region)

In total 79 permanent military camps are noted in the state of Chiapas, 56 of them in the indigenous territory of Chiapas.

9 (nine) Infantry battalions (BI). (The 20th – 101st – 13th – 91st – 31st – 18th – 21st – 38th – 73rd BI)

3 (three) Motorized Cavalry Regiments (RCM). (The 4th – 18th – 15th RCM)

6 (six) Light Infantry Companies (CINE). (The 4th — 15th — 8th — 11th — 12th — 1st)

1 (one) Artillery Regiment (RA). (The 3rd RA)

1 (one) Combat Engineer battalion (BIC). (The 2nd BIC)

1 (one) Military Training Center (CAR)

1 (one) Special Communications battalion (The 1st BCE)

4 (four) Special Forces Units (The 91st BI GAFE, the 101st BI, the 13th BI and the 1st BCE) these four units are practically dispatched throughout the Selva and Los Altos zone of Chiapas.

Each military Unit is distributed over several permanent military camps within the indigenous territory of Chiapas.

Although at national level the government of Felipe Calderón has practically militarized all “Public Security” institutions and yielded control of the country to the military, in the state of Chiapas the re-composition of the SEDENA on indigenous territory is particularly alarming. Troop quantity has been reduced to be replaced with "quality" military forces, effecting the disbanding of conventional military units on indigenous territory and substituting them with high level Elite Special Forces.

The control of the territory and the administration of the natural and biologic resources of the region are a fundamental part of the dispute. The Zapatista project and independent government in free self determination as indigenous communities continue to be regarded by the Mexican State as internal enemy.

The strategy in the most defined formation of the antizapatist Contra is clearly endorsed and concealed by federal institutions such as: the Agrarian Prosecutor's Office (PA); the Secretariat for Agrarian Reform (SRA); the National Defense Ministry (SEDENA), and the Public Security institutions on Federal, State and Municipal level, as well as the Congress of Union, all closely interlinked.


The Agrarian Prosecutor's Office (PA) and the Secretariat for Agrarian Reform (SRA)

The part currently played by the agrarian institutions in the framework of the counterinsurgency war has become relevant, strategic, and guarantees the concretization of the land seizures against Zapatista communities. "Legalizing" the seizures of thousands of hectares land and territories has carried the conflicts between official indigenous organizations and paramilitary organizations against Zapatista communities and authorities to the outmost limit.

The Agrarian Prosecutor's Office (PA) endorses alleged communitarian Assemblies where it authorizes and certifies the Ejido conversion of land recuperated by the EZLN in 1994, subsequently enrolling these new ejidos in the PROCEDE, and assigning them to members of official indigenous groups and paramilitary organizations.

Hundreds of families and dozens of Zapatista communities are in serious danger of being robbed of and violently displaced from their lands and territories, among them:

Community: Ejido Mukulum Bachajón
Official municipality: Chilón
Autnomous municipality: Olga Isabel
Number of hectares threatened by eviction: 1.580 hectares (concretized expropriation)
Caracol: Morelia

Region: Second Trust Package (the Ejido Mukulum Bachajón was package One).
Official municipality: Chilón
Autonomous municipality: Olga Isabel
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 1.420 hectares
Caracol: Morelia

Community: Ranchería el Nance
Official municipality: Altamirano
Autonomous municipality: Vicente Guerrero
Number of hectares threatened by eviction: 1.569 hectares
Caracol: Morelia

Community: 24 de Diciembre
Official municipality: Margaritas
Autonomous municipality: San Pedro de Michoacán
Number of hectares threatened by eviction: 525 hectares. (concretized eviction)
Caracol: La Realidad

Community: San Juan del Río
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: San Manuel
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 380 hectares.
Caracol: La Garrucha

Community: San Alfredo
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomy municipality: San Manuel
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 140 hectares.
Caracol: La Garrucha

Community: Casa Blanca
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: San Manuel
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 160 hectares.
Caracol: La Garrucha

Community: Miguel Hidalgo
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: San Manuel
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 180 hectares.
Caracol: La Garrucha

Communities: Crucero Agua Azul, San Miguel Agua Azul, Ignacio Allende, Primer Progreso, Segundo Progreso, Embarcadero, Parte Majas, Salto del Trige and Bolon Ajaw
Official municipalities: Chilón and Tumbalá
Autonomous municipality: Olga Isabel
Number of hectares threatened by eviction: 2.580 hectares
Caracol: Morelia and Roberto Barrios

Community: 20 de Febrero
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: San Manuel
Number of hectares threatened by forced eviction: 230 hectares. (concretized eviction)
Caracol: La Garrucha

Community: Nuevo Rosario
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: Francisco Gómez
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 180 hectares.
Caracol: La Garrucha

Community: Nueva Revolución
Official municipality: Roberto Barrios
Autonomous municipality: Akabalná
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 1.200 hectares.
Caracol: Roberto Barrios

Community: San Patricio
Official municipality: Ocosingo
Autonomous municipality: Francisco Gómez
Number of hectares threatened by seizure and forced eviction: 400 hectares.
Caracol: Roberto Barrios

Subtotal of hectares designed for seizures and evictions: 10.544 hectares.

The present list of populations subjected to and threatened by being robbed and violently displaced from their lands and territories totals less than a half of the threatened communities; this enumeration is only partial.

The threats of seizures and evictions are accompanied by daily aggressions against Zapatista support bases of the types: threats, arbitrary detentions, damages of private property, lesions, injuries under the use of prohibited arms, robberies, abuses of office, etc. In a particularly shameful and selective form, federal and state authorities adopt political prisoners to use them in illegal and illegitimate negotiations, attempting to trade releases for evictions.


Today, in clear and open form and actions, the Mexican State has unleashed an open and frontal war against the Zapatista indigenous communities.

The Center for Political Analysis and Social and Economic Investigations demands:

I. The immediate cessation of all types of aggressions against the Zapatista communities.

II. The immediate withdrawal of all permanent military camps from the indigenous territory of Chiapas.

III. The immediate release of all political prisoners.

IV. The definitive cancellation of any new intention of forced evictions within the indigenous territory of Chiapas.

V. The immediate opening of an investigation against authorities of the Agrarian Prosecutor's Office and the Secretariat of Agrarian Reform, to assess and determine responsibilities with regard to the abuses of office and the corruption of government officials.

VI. The opening of an investigation to determine responsibilities regarding the performance of the Mexican Federal Army with regard to its links to paramilitary groups in the indigenous territory of Chiapas.

VII. The immediate halt of the counterinsurgency war carried out against the indigenous Zapatista communities.


To the national and international communication media.
To all reporters.

First and only. Another war exists, a mediatic war. The strategy: silence. We respectfully appeal to you and invite you to break the silence. In the Mexican Southeast exists repression, imprisonment, impunity and media silence against the Zapatista indigenous communities. We are inviting you to break silence, only that, inviting you.

Center for Political Analysis and Social and Economic Investigations A.C. (CAPISE)

A Revolution is Just Below the Surface

Prof. Noam Chomsky leafs through the book Don Quijote, which the Chavez government distributed for free to Venezuelans (Credit: Juan Carlos Yegres)

On September 21, 2007, I had the extraordinary opportunity to interview Noam Chomsky in his office at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The interview will be aired on Venezuelan and Latin American television as part of the promotion for the III International Book Fair in Venezuela, which this year focuses on the theme: "United States: Is Revolution Possible?" The transcription of the interview follows.

EVA: I read a quote of yours which said power is always illegitimate unless it proves itself to be legitimate. So in Venezuela right now we are in the process of Constitutional reform. And within that reform the People's Power is going to gain Constitutional rank, above in fact all the other state powers, the executive, legislative and judicial powers, and in Venezuela we also have the electoral and the citizen's power. Would this be an example of power becoming legitimate? A people’s power? And could this change the way power is viewed? And change the face of Latin America considering that the Bolivarian Revolution is having such an influence over other countries in the region?

CHOMSKY: Your word, the word "could", is the right word. Yes it "could" , but it depends how it is implemented. In principle it seems to be a very powerful and persuasive conception, but everything always depends on implementation. If there is really authentic popular participation in the decision-making and the free association of communities, yeah, that could be tremendously important. In fact that's essentially the traditional anarchist ideal. That's what was realized the only time for about a year in Spain in 1936 before it was crushed by outside forces, in fact all outside forces, Stalinst Russia, Hitler in Germany, Mussilini's fascism and the Western democracies cooperated in crushing it. They were all afraid of it. But that was something like what you are describing, and if it can function and survive and really disperse power down to participants and their communities, it could be extremely important.

EVA: Do you think it's just an idealist illusion or can it really be manifested?

CHOMSKY: I think it can. It's usually crushed by outside force because it's considered so dangerous...

EVA: But in this case when it's the government who's promoting it? The state who's promoting it?

CHOMSKY: That's what going to be the crucial question. Is it coming from the State or is it coming from the people? Now, maybe it can be initiated from the State, but unless the energy is really coming from the population itself, it's very likely to fall into some sort of top-down directed pattern, and that's the real question. In Spain in 1936, the reason for the very substantial success is because it was popular - it's a quite different situation from Venezuela. In Spain, the anarchist tradition was very deeply rooted. There had been 50 years of education, experiments, efforts which were crushed, I mean it was in people's minds. So when the opportunity came they were developing what was already in their minds, what they had tried to do many times, it wasn't spontaneous, it was the result of decades of education, organizing and activism on the ground. Now Venezuela is a different situation, it's being initiated from above, and the question is can that lead to direct popular participation and innovative and energy and so on. That's a real historical experiment, I don't know the answer.

EVA: I think it's a combination because the reason that the coup against Chávez was overthrown was because of the people's power...

CHOMSKY: That's right

EVA: It's just been unstructured and very spontaneous, so the idea behind this is to somehow structure that, and I question from that same anarchist perspective, if you structure that power will it....

CHOMSKY: Take off...

EVA: or become corrupted or illegitimate? Or will it Take off?

CHOMSKY: Take off...That's why the comparison with Spain is so interesting because there it was coming from below, nothing coming from above and it was there because people had been committed to it for decades and had tried it out, organized and so on. There was a live anarchist tradition, actually there is a live anarchist tradition in Latin America but it's been repeatedly crushed, in Mexico, Argentina, Chile, all over, actually I have a book right over there on the desk on the history of Anarchism in Chile which is not very well known, so it's been there, it's hidden, but I don't think these ideas are very far below consciousness almost anywhere, including the United States. If you talk to working class people they understand the notions. If fact it's not too well known but in the United States, there was never a powerful organized left, but in many ways it's one of the most leftist societies in the world. In the mid-19th century for example, right in the beginning of the industrialist revolution right around here in Boston, there was a rich literature of working class people, what were called factory girls, young women coming from the farms to work in the mills, or Irish artesians, immigrants in Boston, very rich literature, it was the period of the freest press ever in the country and it was very radical. They had no connection with European radicalism, they had never heard of Marx or anything else, and it was simply taken for granted that wage labor is not much different from slavery, and if you rent yourself to somebody that's not different from selling yourself. Actually in the Civil War in the United States, a lot of the northern workers actually fought under that banner, were against chattel slavery and they were against wage slavery. And the standard slogan of the people was "the people who work in the mills ought to own them and run them". It took a long time to drive that out of people's heads. In the 1890s there were cities, like Homestead, Pennsylvania, that were taken over by working class people with these ideas, and they're still there. You know it's kind of suppressed by lots of propaganda and repression and so on, but it's just below the surface and I would imagine that may be the same in Venezuela. These are natural beliefs and there's a possibility they might spring into fruition given the right circumstances.

EVA: That's actually included in the constitutional reform as well, the concept of creating communal cities, communes, that are worker-run, and including the companies. It will be very interesting to see how it develops.

CHOMSKY: It's very interesting

EVA: And how it then would change the force of power in the region

CHOMSKY: If it can carry out. In the past it has happened but it's been crushed by force and even here in the United States it was crushed by State violence.

EVA: On the notion of "crushed by force and state violence", thinking of Latin America and the changes occurring, the influences of Venezuela, right now President Chávez is mediating the peace process in Colombia. One, how do you view his role as the mediator? And two, do you think that the US is really going to allow for peace in Colombia when there has been an expansion of Plan Colombia and Colombia remains the stronghold of the United States and its military force in South America? Would they react in a more sort of aggressive way?

CHOMSKY: I think the US will do what it can to make sure Colombia remains more or less a client state. But I don't think the US has a commitment to the internal war in Colombia. They do want to see FARC destroyed. The US does not really want paramilitaries running the country and the drug trade, I mean that's not optimal from the point of view of an imperial power, you don't want to have para-powers carrying out State activities. They were useful, and the US not only supported them but in fact, they initiated them. If you go back to the early sixties in Venezuela, in fact in 1962, President Kennedy sent a military mission to Colombia, headed by a Special Forces General, General Yarborough, to advise Colombia on how to deal with its internal problems and they recommended paramilitary terror. That was their phrase: they recommend "paramilitary power against known communist adherents." Well, in the Latin American context, "known communist adherents" means human rights activists, labor organizers, priests working with peasants, I don't have to explain to you, and yeah, they recommended paramilitary terror. You can look back and say that Colombia has a violent history, but that changed it, that's really the initiation of the massive state and paramilitary terror that turned into a total monstrosity in the last couple of decades. But although the United States did implement it and support it right through Plan Colombia, it's not really in US interests and the interests of US power systems for that to continue. They'd rather have an orderly, obedient society, exporting raw materials, a place where US manufacturers can have cheap labor and so on and so forth, but without the internal violence. So I think there might be toleration at least of mediation efforts that could curb the level of internal violence and control the paramilitaries who will be and are in fact being absorbed into the state.

EVA: But Chávez doing it?

CHOMSKY: Well, that's going to be interesting. In fact, it's rarely discussed here. In fact right now there are also negotiations and discussions going on between Brazil and Venezuela about joint projects, the Orinoco River project, a gas pipeline, and so on. Try to find some report about that here. People are afraid of it. The conception, or if you like "party line" on Latin America, has had to shift. Latin America has changed a lot, it's not what it was in the 1960s. For the first time since the Spanish invasion the countries are beginning to face some of the internal problems in Latin America. One of the problems is just disintegration. The countries have very little relationship to one another. They typically were related to the outside imperial power not to each other. You can even see it in the transportation systems. But there is also internal disintegration, tremendous inequality, the worst in the world; small elites and huge massive impoverished people, and the elites were Europe-oriented or US-oriented later - that's where their second homes were, that's where their capital went to, that's where their children went to school. They didn't have anything to do with the population. The elites in Latin America had very little responsibility for the countries. And these two forms of disintegration and slowly being overcome. So there is more integration among the societies, and there are several countries taking steps to deal with the horrible problem of elite domination, which has a racial component to it also of course, there is a pretty close correlation between wealth and whiteness all over the continent. It's one of the reasons for the antagonism to Chávez, it's because he doesn't look white. But steps are being taken towards that, and that is significant. The US doctrinal system, and I don't mean the government, I mean the press, the intellectuals and so on, have shifted their description of Latin America. It's no longer the democrats versus the communists - Pinochet the democrat versus.... It's shifted, now it's conceded that there is a move to the left, but there are the good leftists and the bad leftists. The bad leftists are Chávez and Morales, maybe Kirchner, maybe Ecuador - they haven't decided yet, but those are the bad leftists. The good ones are Brazil, maybe Chile and so on. In order to maintain that picture it's been necessary to do some pretty careful control of historical facts. For example, when Lula the good leftist was reelected his first act was to go to Caracas where he and Chávez built a joint bridge over the Orinoco...it wasn't even reported here, because you can't report things like that, it contradicts the party line - the good guys and the bad guys. And the same is true in this very moment with the Brazil-Venezuela negotiations. I think they are very important. Colombia is significant. If Chávez can carry it off that's great for Colombia, but these other things are much broader in significance. If Brazil and Venezuela can cooperate on major projects, joint projects, maybe ultimately the gas pipeline through Latin America. That's a step towards regional integration, which is a real prerequisite for defense against outside intervention. You can't have defense against intervention if the countries are separated from one another and if they are separated internally from elites and general populations, so I think these are extremely important developments. Colombia as well, if it can be done, fine, reduce the level of violence, maybe take some steps forward for the people of Colombia, but I think these other negotiations and discussions proceeding at the same time have a deeper and longer term significance.

EVA: Right now Chávez is in Manaus, just yesterday and today...

CHOMSKY: Right

EVA: Well, one of the tactics of US aggression against Venezuela and against the rise of a new leftism or socialism in Latin America is precisely to divide and counteract what Venezuela under Chávez has been leading throughout the region which is now resulting in sovereignty and Latin American integration. I guess to focus that question on a media angle, one of the other tactics of aggression against Venezuela and other countries in the region is obviously psychological warfare, on an internal level in Venezuela, but also internationally to prevent the people around the world from knowing really what's happening. Within Venezuela under Chávez hundreds of new community media outlets have been created. This has helped us internally to combat media manipulation from corporate media in Venezuela, but on an international level, we haven't had much advance fighting the war against the media empire. How can we do that?

CHOMSKY: Well, the history of media in the west is interesting. I mentioned that the period of the freest press in the US and England was the mid-19th century, and it was rather like what you were describing. There were hundreds of newspapers of all kinds, working class, ethnic, communities of all kinds, with direct active participation, real participation. People read in those days, working people. Like a blacksmith in Boston would pay a 16 year old kid to read to him while he was working. These factory girls coming from the farms had a high culture, they were reading contemporary literature. And part of their bitter condemnation of the industrial system was because it was taking their culture away from them. They did run extremely interesting newspapers and it was lively, exciting and a period of a really very free vibrant press, and it was overcome slowly, most true in England and the United States, which were then the freest countries in the world. In England they tried censorship, it didn't work, there were too many ways around it. They tried repressive taxation, again it didn't work very well, similarly in the US. What did work finally was two things: concentration of capital and advertiser reliance. First the concentration of capital is obvious then you can do all kinds of things that smaller newspapers can't do. But advertiser reliance means really the newspapers are being run by the advertisers. If the source of income is advertising, the main source, well that's of course going to have an inordenent influence. And by now it's close to 100%. If you turn on television, CBS doesn't make any money from the fact that you turned on the television set, they make money from the advertisers. The advertisers are in effect, the corporation that owns it is selling audiences to advertisers, so of course the news product reflects overwhelming the interests of the corporation and the buyers and the market, which is advertisers. So yeah, and that over time, along with concentration of capital, has essentially eliminated or sharply reduced the diverse, lively and independent locally based media. And that's pretty serious. In the United States, which has had no really organized socialist movement, nevertheless, as recently as the 1950s, there were about 800 labor newspapers which probably reached maybe 30 million people a week, which by our standards were pretty radical, condemning corporate power, condemning what they called the bought priesthood, mainly those who run the media - the priesthood that was bought by the corporate system offering a different picture to the world. In England, it lasted into the 1960s. In the 1960s the tabloids - which are now hideous if you look at them - they were labor-based newspapers in the 1960s, pretty leftist in their orientation. The major newspaper in England that had the largest circulation, more than any other, was The Daily Herald, which was a kind of social-democratic labor-based paper giving a very different picture of the world. It collapsed, not because of lack of reader interest, in fact it had probably the largest reader interest of any, but because it couldn't get advertisers and couldn't bring in capital. So what you're describing today is part of the history of the west, which has been overcome slowly by the standard processes of concentration of capital and of course advertiser reliance is another form of it. But it's beginning to revive in the west as well through the Internet and through cheap publishing techniques. Computers, desktop publishing is now much cheaper than big publishing, and of course the internet. So the new technologies are giving opportunities to overcome the effects of capital concentration, which has a severe impact on the nature of media and the nature of schools and everything else. So, there's revival, and actually the major battle that's going on right now is crucial, as to who is going to control the Internet. The Internet was developed in places like this, MIT, that's the state sector of the economy, most of the new economy comes out of the state sector, it's not a free market economy. The Internet is a case in point; it was developed in the state sector like here, actually with Pentagon funding, and it was in the state sector for about 30 years before it was handed over to private corporations in 1995 under Clinton. And right now there's a struggle going on as to whether it will be free or not. So there's a major effort being made by the major corporate centers to figure out some ways to control it, to prevent the wrong kinds of things from their point of view from being accessible, and there are now grassroots movements, significant ones struggling against it, so these are ongoing live battles. There is nothing inherent in capitalist democracy to the idea that the media have to be run by corporations. It would have shocked the founding fathers of the United States. They believed that the media had to be publicly run. If you go back to the...it’s hard to believe now…

EVA: Well, that's why the airwaves are public

CHOMSKY: That's right, that's why the airwaves are kept public and it's a gift to the corporations to allow them to be used. But if you go back to Jefferson, even Hamilton, Madison and the rest of them, they were in favor of public subsidies to newspapers to enable them to survive as independent sources of information. Postal rates were set by the government in such a way as to give advantages to the newspapers so that the public would be able to have access to the widest possible range of diverse information and so on. The Bill of Rights, which technically established freedom of press, we can talk about whether that works, but technically said nothing about whether the government could intervene to support the media. In fact, it's not only a possibility but it's what the framers of the Constitution had in mind. Over the years, attitudes, the dominant culture, the hegemonic culture as Gramsci would have called it, has changed so that the idea of the corporatization of the media is sort of assumed kind of like the air you breathe, but it's not, it's a creation of capitalist concentration and the doctrinal system that goes with it...…It doesn’t have to exist

EVA: So, in that sense a couple of months ago the Venezuelan government decided not to renew the concession of one of the corporate media outlets for many reasons, tax violations, not paying social security for workers as well as being involved in the coup. Do you think that is a demonstration of the State assuring that those airwaves remain in the public sphere? And that is something that could be replicated in other countries or even in the United States, they didn't revoke the concession, they just didn't renew it.

CHOMSKY: You're talking about the RCTV case. Well, my own view of that is kind of mixed. Formally I think it was a tactical mistake, and for another I think you need a heavy burden of proof to close down any form of media so in that sense my attitude is critical...

EVA: But should corporations have a stronghold on the concessions?

CHOMSKY: Yeah, I know, that's the other side. The question is what replaces it. However, let me say that I agree with the western criticism in one crucial respect. When they say nothing like that could ever happen here, that's correct. But the reason, which is not stated, is that if there had been anything like RCTV in the United States or England or Western Europe the owners and the managers would have been brought to trial and executed – In the United States executed, in Europe sent to prison permanently, right away, in 2002. You can't imagine the New York Times or CBS News supporting a military coup that overthrew the government even for a day. The reaction would be "send them to a firing squad" . So yeah, it wouldn't have happened in the west because it would never have gotten this far. It seems to me that there should be more focus on that. But as to the removal of the license I think you just have to ask what's replacing it. In Venezuela, you know better than I, my impression is that it was not a popular move. And the population should have a voice in this, big voice, major voice, so I think there are many sides to it. But it kind of depends how it works itself out. Are you really going to get popular media, for example?

EVA: Should the concessions be in the hands of the people to decide?

CHOMSKY: I think they should, yes, in fact in a technical sense they are, even in the United States. Take the airwaves again, that's public property. Corporations have no right to it, It's given to them as a gift by the taxpayer and the taxpayer doesn't know it. The culture has reached the point where the people assume that's the natural order of things. It's not, it's a major gift from the public. In fact if you look at the history of telecommunications, radio and television, it's quite interesting. Radio came along in the 1920s and in most of the world, it just became public. The United States is an interesting case, it's almost the only major case in which radio was privatized. And there was a struggle about it. The labor unions, the educational institutions, the churches, they wanted it to be public, the corporations wanted it to be privatized. There was a big battle, and the United States is very much a business-run society, and uniquely, business won, and it was privatized. When television came along, in most of the world it was public, without question. In the United states it wasn't even an issue, it was just private because the business-dominated culture by then had achieved a level of dominance so that people didn't think of what was obvious, that this was public space that we're giving away to them. Finally, public radio and public television were permitted in the United States in a very small corner, because there had been public pressure to compel the corporate media to meet some level or public responsibility, like to run a few educational programs for children and things like that. And the corporations didn't like it, they didn't want to have any commitment to public responsibility, so they were willing to allow a small public, side operation, so they could then claim, well, we don't have to have any responsibility anymore because they can do it, and they don't do much of, they are also corporate-funded, but that's a striking difference between the United States and even other similar societies. It's a very free country, the United States, maybe the freest in the world, but it's also uniquely business-run, and that has enormous effects on everything.

EVA: On that note, the theme of the Book Fair in Venezuela this year is "United States: Is a Revolution Possible?" Is it?

CHOMSKY: I think it's just below the surface. I mean there is tremendous discontent. A large majority of the population for years has felt that the government doesn't represent them, that it represents special interests. In the Reagan years this went up to about 80% of the population. If you look at public attitudes and public policy, there is a huge gulf between them. Both political parties are far to the right of the population on a host of major issues. Just to take some examples; Read in this morning's New York Times, September 21st, there's a column by Paul Krugmann, who's sort of far left of the media, sort of a left, liberal commentator, a very good economist, who's been talking for some time about the horrible health system in the United States, it's a disaster, twice the per capita expenses of any other country and some of the industrial companies and some of the worst outcomes in the industrial world. And he has a column this morning that starts out by saying, hopefully, well now it turns out that maybe universal health care is becoming politically possible. Now that's a very interesting comment, particularly when it's coming from the left end of the media. What does it mean for it to become politically possible? For decades it's been supported by an overwhelming majority of the population but it was never politically possible. Now it's becoming politically possible. Why? He doesn't say why, but the reason is that manufacturing corporations are being severely harmed by the hopelessly inefficient and costly healthcare system in the United States. It's like how it costs a lot more to produce a car in Detroit than a couple of miles north in Windsor Canada because they have an efficient, functioning healthcare system. So by now there is corporate pressure from the manufacturing sector to do something to fix up the outrageous healthcare system. So it's becoming politically possible. When it's just the large majority of the population, it's not politically possible. The assumptions behind that should be obvious, but they're interesting. Politically possible does not mean the population supports it. What politically possible means is that some sectors of concentrated capital support it. So if the pharmeceutical industries and the financial institutions are against it, it's not politically possible. But if manufacturing industries come out in favor of it, well then maybe it begins to become politically possible. Those are the general assumptions, we're not talking about the left liberal commentary. I'm not talking about the editorials in the Wall Street Journal, that's the spectrum of opinion. Something is politically possible if it's support by major concentrations of capital. It doesn't matter what the public thinks, and you see this on international issues too. Like take what may be the major international issue right now: Is the United States going to invade Iran? That could be an utter monstrosity. Every viable presidential candidate - not Dennis Kucinich, but the ones that are really viable, has come out and said yeah, we have the right to invade Iran. The way they say it is, "all options are on the table", meaning, "we want to attack them, we can attack them." That's almost the entire political spectrum, but what does the population think? Well, about 75% of the population is opposed to any threats against Iran and wants to enter into diplomatic relations with them. But that's off the spectrum, in fact, it isn't even reported. But it's not part of the discussion. It's the same way with Cuba. Every since polls began in the 1970s, a considerable amount of the population wants to enter into normal diplomatic relations with Cuba and end the economic strangulation and the terror, which they don't know about, but they would be against that too. It's not an option, because state interests won't allow it. And that's separate from the population, and it's not discussed. Do a search of media and journals, including left journals and you just don't find it. Well, it's a very free country but also very much business controlled.

EVA: But how could that change come about?

CHOMSKY: It can come about by the kind of organization that will take public opinion - that will take the public and turn it into an organized force. Which has happened...

EVA: So in the end you need media control?

CHOMSKY: Well, that's part of it, but media control is in part a consequence of popular organization. So the media, take the Vietnam era, the media did turn into moderate critics of the war, but that was the result of popular mass movements. I could tell you explicit cases, one case I know very well was one of the major newspapers in the country, the editor happened to be a personal friend who was pretty conservative and became the first newspaper in the United States to call for withdrawal. It was largely under the influence of his son who was in the resistance, who I knew through the resistance activities, and who influenced his father. That's an individual case, but it was happening all over. The shift in the popular movements and popular attitudes led to a shift in the media, not a major shift, but a significant one. For one reason because the journalists are human beings and they live in the culture, and if they're coming out of a culture of criticism and questioning and challenging and so on, well, that's going to affect them. So there has been a change in many respects. Take say aggression. There is a lot of comparison now of the reaction to the Iraq war with the reaction to the Vietnam war - it's almost all wrong, there was almost no opposition to the Vietnam war. When the Vietnam war was at the level of the Iraq war today there was almost no opposition. Public protest of the Iraq war is far beyond that of the Vietnam war at any comparable stage. People have just forgotten. There was protest against the Vietnam war by 1968, lets say, but by that time there were half a million troops in Vietnam. The US had invaded...and it was seven, six or seven years after they had invaded South Vietnam and it had been practically wiped out and the word spread to the rest of Indochina. It was way beyond Iraq today - then there was protest. The first call for withdrawal from Vietnam in the major media was fall of 1969. That's seven years after the war began. Now you get it in the New York Times, they don't mean it, but at least you get it. These are changes, and the same changes have taken place in many other domains. Take say women's rights, it's pretty important, it's half the population. Well, the circumstances are very different now than the 1960s. You can see it right at this institution. Take a walk down the halls and you'll see about half women, about a third minorities, casual dress, easy interchanges among the people and so on. When I got here 50 years ago it was totally different. White males, well dressed, obedient - do your work and don't ask any questions. And it's indicative of changes throughout the whole society. Well, those are...the solidarity movements are the same. When you have popular movements, they change the society. If they reach a sufficient scale I think they can challenge fundamental matters of class domination and economic control.

EVA: Do you think the revolution in Venezuela serves as an example for people in the United States? That change is possible from the ground up?

CHOMSKY: It will if two things happen: One, if it's successful and two, if you can break through the media distortion of what's happening. Two things have to happen, ok? So, I mentioned that I was in Chile last October. The picture of Venezuela that is presented by the media, say in El Mercurio is about the same as it would have been in the old El Mercurio under Pinochet. So as long as that's the picture, that's the prism through which events are perceived, you can't have much of an effect. But if you can change the prism so that things are reported more or less accurately, and if what's happening in fact does constitute a possible model, if those two achievements can be reached, then yes, it could be.

EVA: Would you give a message to the people of Venezuela? Anything?

CHOMSKY: Yeah, make it succeed. The task for the people of Venezuela or for Latin America all together is to carry forth the programs of integration, of overcoming repression, inequality, poverty. lack of democracy, which is happening in various ways in different countries. Carry it through to success, and in collaboration and solidarity with people of the rich powers. Make it reach the point where it is understood there as well, that requires both sides, and they interact. Take liberation theology, it was mostly Latin America, and it had an influence in the United States, a big influence in the church and in the society, and the same can be true of other developments. There is a lot of interaction possible. More so now than before because of the existence of intercommunications and solidarity movements and so on.

September 29, 2007

Bogotá Connection ’Informant’ Baruch Vega Sues U.S. Government

By Bill Conroy,
Posted on Mon Sep 24th, 2007 at 12:06:27 AM EST
A key figure in exposing alleged U.S. law enforcement corruption in Colombia has just filed a multi-million dollar lawsuit that promises to be quite embarrassing for the U.S. government — and revealing to those of us who don’t quite buy our aloof leadership’s Plan Colombia vision.

In that lawsuit, filed in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington, D.C., Baruch Vega claims that the U.S. government owes him $28.5 million for services he provided in an operation that helped the U.S. government net 114 Colombian narco-trafficking targets.

From Vega’s lawsuit, filed on Sept. 21:

In or about 1996 and 1997, [Vega] became a documented confidential informant for the United States of America, specifically, two federal law enforcement agencies, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) and later, for the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”). … Mr. Vega was not a traditional informant and his methodology was anything but parochial. Mr. Vega engineered a plan/program that proved to be innovative and very successful.

Mr. Vega would play and later, in fact did play, the role of an intermediary (or broker) between Colombian drug traffickers, some then unknown (and thus, unidentified) to U.S. law enforcement, others already identified (by their real names or nicknames as “suspects”) by U.S. law enforcement and, others already indicted, for drug trafficking and/or money laundering charges in various federal districts across the United States of America.

Vega’s plan, as explained in his pleadings, involved what might best be described as an elaborate, U.S. government-sanctioned extortion scheme. Vega, “at great danger to himself,” approached Colombian narco-traffickers and convinced them to “negotiate their criminal exposure” with the U.S. government rather than waiting to be indicted, arrested and extradited,” Vega claims in his litigation.

More from Vega’s lawsuit:

Once Mr. Vega introduced … American lawyers to the Colombian targets [the narco-traffickers], the lawyers would then get retained and then take over as legal representatives for the Colombian targets and further deal with a group of United States law enforcement agents and prosecutors, hand-picked to work out deals for the Colombian targets. A particular United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida became the coordinator of this “recruiting effort.”

Vega claims in the litigation that as part of this extortion scheme, FBI and DEA agents would initially meet with the Colombian narco-trafficking targets in Panama for introductions, eventual debriefings and finally to work out the details of proposed plea agreements.

“There were many of these types of meetings in Panama over a period of several years,” Vega alleges in the lawsuit. “… The plan/program was extremely successful. All in all, Mr. Vega convinced and successfully recruited about 114 Colombian targets to enter this plan/program, about 25 of which were fugitives at the time of negotiating the deals.

”Within the past seven years alone, there were 35 such Colombian targets who reached deals with the United States.” [A list of names can be found at the end of this story.]

Big Picture

Vega’s remarkable claims in his litigation must be set against the larger context of corruption allegations that have been exposed in Narco News’ prior reporting about U.S. law enforcement operations in Colombia.

This Bogotá Connection was revealed in a series of government documents uncovered by Narco News, including an internal U.S. Justice Department document known as the Kent memo, which advances detailed allegations of a criminal conspiracy involving corrupt U.S. law enforcers who operated in league with key Colombian narco-traffickers.

Vega was very involved with some of the U.S. law enforcement operations referenced in the Kent memo. Those particular operations played out between 1997 and 2000 and sought to snare narco-traffickers with Colombia’s infamous North Valley Cartel.

Vega claims that corrupt U.S. agents that are part of the Bogotá Connection seriously compromised his role as a government asset and that a number of his informants within Colombia’s narco-trafficking underworld were assassinated as a result.

Vega also contends that he has intimate knowledge of the alleged corruption outlined in the Kent memo.

Justice Department attorney Thomas M. Kent wrote the memo in late 2004 in an effort to draw attention to alleged serious corruption within the U.S. Embassy in Colombia. In the memo, Kent alleges that DEA agents in Bogotá assisted narco-traffickers, engaged in money laundering, and conspired to murder informants.

The first of the major allegations in Kent’s memo centers on a DEA undercover operation launched in Colombia in 1997 called Cali-Man, which made use of Vega as an asset. The operation was overseen by David Tinsley, a DEA group supervisor in Miami.

As part of that operation, Tinsley and the agents working under him uncovered evidence that DEA agents in Bogotá appeared to be assisting narco-traffickers in Colombia.

But in late January 2000, Bogotá DEA chief Leo Arreguin shot off a memo to DEA headquarters. The charges raised in that memo led to Tinsley’s operations being shut down that same year, including Cali-Man and another investigation called Rainmaker — which was zeroing in on the alleged DEA corruption in Bogotá.

Arreguin’s memo, which was addressed to the DEA’s chief of international operations, questioned the integrity of Vega and his so-called “extortion scheme.”

The Arreguin memo prompted an internal agency investigation targeting Tinsley and one of the agents under his watch (Lawrence Castillo) who was Vega’s in-the-field handler.

As a result of the investigation prompted by Arreguin’s memo, Tinsley was suspended and eventual dismissed from his job.

The DEA Bogota chief’s memo also put into motion a major criminal investigation targeting Vega, Tinsley and Castillo. The investigation was undertaken by two green FBI agents initially in coordination with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami. The agents, according to sources, thought they were onto something big, but had no idea that their own agency was operating Vega as an asset and had authorized the extortion scheme — without making Tinsley and the Cali-man undercover operation aware of that fact.

Vega was never criminally prosecuted for engaging in the extortion scheme, however. Instead, he was convicted on a misdemeanor charge for not paying taxes on some of the money he allegedly earned from the scheme (which he claims was conducted with the approval of and in coordination with the U.S. government) and received a four-month jail sentence.

In addition, Tinsley and Castillo were cleared of all criminal charges with respect to Vega’s use of the so-called extortion scheme. Tinsley also brought a claim of wrongful termination before a U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) judge, who, in April 2004, ruled in his favor and ordered the DEA to reinstate him — with back pay, plus interest.

Sources tell Narco News those facts demonstrate that the extortion scheme was sanctioned by the government, which Vega also now asserts in his litigation.

The judge’s ruling in Tinsley’s MSPB case includes some very specific details about the activities of Vega, who in his other life was a high-profile fashion photographer. Those details confirm that the DEA, FBI as well as the CIA all were utilizing Vega in operations targeting narco-traffickers in Colombia.

From the MSPB judge’s ruling:

… The appellant [Tinsley] testified that, at the request of the FBI, he wanted the bare minimum of a paper trail for Mr. Vega. Both the DEA and FBI used Vega as a confidential source. The FBI specified that Vega would be a "non-testifier.” That is, he would never be used to testify in criminal trials. This status was necessary because Vega was called a “FCI-CI” or Foreign Counterintelligence Service Confidential Informant, who had been brought in by the CIA. As the appellant [Tinsley] put it, “I'm having my agents cut him out every chance they can. I don't want him documented. I don't want him in our Case File any more than we have to."

The trips to Panama at issue here were confidential source recruiting trips. The plan was for Mr. Vega to “introduce” SA Castillo [a DEA agent working under Tinsley] to drug traffickers and then to get out of there, so he would be in no position to have to testify regarding what conversations, if any, took place. For that reason, it was the appellant's [Tinsley's] judgment that few DEA-6s [reports] were required regarding Mr. Vega because Vega was a non-testifier, and, moreover, his activities did not yield investigative leads. And, as stated previously, at least one classified DEA-6 was prepared and was kept under lock and key in the Miami SAC's [special agent in charge’s] safe in order to safeguard the information contained therein….

The Cover-up

After Narco News exposed the Kent memo in a story published on Jan. 9, 2006, DEA reacted by describing the corruption allegations in that memo as “extremely serious.”

However, some nine days later, after Semana, a popular weekly magazine in Colombia, published a story about the Kent memo, DEA issued another public statement describing the corruption allegations as “unfounded.”

The U.S. mainstream media has been silent about the Kent memo, and the Bogotá Connection, since that time.

But Vega now appears to be forcing both the government and the compliant agenda-setting media to confront the Bogotá Connection through the U.S. court system.

From Vega’s lawsuit:

The economic (and non-economic) benefits to the United States in bringing all of the Colombian targets to justice is mind boggling. The United States obtained over a hundred federal drug convictions. Much of the cooperation of the Colombian targets itself resulted in other investigations, prosecutions and convictions — something akin to a “domino effect.” In varying degrees, these targets forfeited cash, real estate, jewelry and art in an estimated total amount somewhere between $250 million and $500 million.

… Accordingly, Mr. Vega seeks a $250,000 payment for each of the 114 cases he made for the United States and therefore, seeks a total sum of $28,500,000.

That’s a lot of money on the line for the U.S. government — in reality, the U.S. taxpayers’ money collected via the so-called war on drugs.

U.S. government attorneys can always choose to duke it out in court with Vega and prove that his allegations are “unfounded.”

However, by engaging Vega in that legal battle, the U.S. government also takes the risk that his “extremely serious” allegations are, in fact, true and that even more of the Bogotá Connection will be exposed to the sanitizing heat of sunlight.

The government has until Nov. 23 to file an answer to Vega’s legal complaint.

Vega, for his part, appears quite ready to play this game of roulette with the U.S. government. As he told Narco News previously: “It’s all a wheel … eventually my side will be up.”

Oh, and here’s that promised list — filed as an exhibit in Vega’s lawsuit, which can be found at this link:

List of Drug traffickers surrendered and cooperating sources recruited between 1997 to 2000

FBI

1. Arturo Piza
2. Oscar Grisales
3. Julio Fierro
4. John Castro (Jimmy Aloja “Mijares”)
5. Jairo
6. Luz Stella Ossa
7. Armando Ballestas

DEA

1. Herman Arboleda
2. Gustavo Gallego
3. Nelly Gallego
4. Attorney Enrique Mancera
5. Jose Guillermo Gallon
6. Pedro Gallon
7. Nicolas Bergonzoli
8. Orlando Sanchez-Christancho
9. Milton Perlaza aka “Javier Valencia” aka “Pele” — for Jorge Eliecer Asprilla Perea
10. Carlos Ramon-Zapata
11. Oscar Campuzano
12. Gustavo Usuga
13. Juan Gabriel Usuga
14. Bernardo Sanchez-Norena
15. Maria Elena Londono for Hector Mario Londono-Vasquez “Negro Yuca”
16. Jorge Orrego for Yvonne Maria Scaff de Saldarriaga
17. The Tascon sisters for Alfredo Tascon-Aguirre
18. Bernal’s wife for Alejandro Bernal-Madrigal “Juvenal”
19. Attorney Roberto Uribe

Stay tuned….

September 28, 2007

Mexican court orders release of Oaxaca "disappeared"

A Mexican federal court in Oaxaca has ordered President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, Gov. Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, the National Defense Secretariat (SEDENA), the Prosecutor General of the Republic (PGR) and other government entities to present alive Edmundo Reyes Amaya, one of the apparent followers of the Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR) who have been "disappeared" since May 25. The order came in a case brought by the Mexican League for the Defense of Human Rights (LIMEDDH) on behalf of Reyes Amaya's family. (La Jornada, Sept. 25)

A group of Mexican NGOs including the Miguel Agustín Pro-Juárez Human Rights Center has released a statement in support of the declared position of the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) that "it is the obligation of the state to present the two disappeared," Reyes Amaya and Gabriel Cruz. Mexican national security expert Erubiel Tirado said the EZLN should exercise "much caution" with expressions of support for the EPR's demands, because these could be interpreted as expressions of support for armed struggle and the EPR's methods. He said this could cause the government to identify the EZLN among the "radical" armed groups it is combatting. (La Jornada, Sept. 26)

Latin America’s Process of Economic and Social Stabilization: A Stagnant Experiment or a Force to be Reckoned With?

Few critics would deny that in 2006 the economy of Latin America and the Caribbean reported growth performance at the highest rate since the 1970s. The present acceleration began in 2004 with a GDP increase of 5.9 percent. The region then continued in its fourth successive year of economic growth, averaging a steady and well-distributed rate of 5 percent. This growth obviously had positive effects on the overall economic situation of the region, but these figures may not necessarily tell the whole story. Some critics blame “neoliberal” structural reforms for the seemingly enduring income inequalities existing throughout Latin America.

Exports and National Debt Reduction
The 2006 external current account surplus, with its 1.75 percent of GPD, was at its highest level in decades. High profits from exports, a range of soaring income from tourism, and sustained capital influx in the form of direct and portfolio investment led to a vigorous surge in total reserves. A common problem for Latin American countries in the past was their inability to repay loans. They had weaker currencies, higher debt costs, faster inflation and punitive interest rates. Reflective of better times, in 2006 exports grew for the fourth year in a row, reaching a figure of $780 billion. Recently, revenues flowing to most Latin American governments are growing at a faster rate than public spending. Unlike in past decades, high state revenues have not led to uncontrolled government expenditure, and despite old habits, the present phase of growth as well as encouraging export revenues have generated a primary surplus and reduced national debt, to the benefit of much of the region. According to the IMF, further progress has also been made in debt relief for low-income countries in the region, covering Bolivia, Haiti, Guyana, Honduras and Nicaragua where the Inter-American Development Bank approved full debt relief totalling $4.4 billion in 2007. Increased economic stability, infrastructure growth, and financial strength have toughened up the region’s traditionally weak economic fundamentals so that emerging markets are better prepared to endure external shocks.

Regional Consumption and Demand for Goods
Unlike in preceding years, factors encouraging economic development in the region have not only been export dynamics and rising fuel prices, but also the visible stimulation of domestic demand for investment and consumable goods, which was encouraged by the reduction of interest rates. Latin America’s income per capita has increased for the third year in a row by more than 3 percent. For the first time in many years, no country in the region has registered decreasing income per citizen. As the 2004 economic growth rate figure of 5.9 percent shows, the situation of Latin American labor markets has improved throughout the current economic boom. Rising employment in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico has led to the lowest registered level of unemployment since 2002, averaging about 10 percent. In Brazil, the strengthened job market produced an increase of households with an annual income of $5,900 to $22,000 from 14.5 million to 22.3 million. Income distribution appears to be less unequal and the middle class’ purchasing power is becoming stronger. Sales of new cars, computers and consumer electronics are at record levels. This boost in regional consumption reflects the crucial tempo of economic development in Latin America and mirrors the transformative change in the region’s financial structure.

Economic and Social Achievements in Mexico and Chile

Besides the overall economic progress in the region, especially in Mexico and Chile, financial stability and faster economic growth have resulted in the reduction of some inequalities in wealth distribution. Although the recent class-based riots in downtown Santiago against what the poor perceive as society’s indifference to them, Chile has seen the greatest economic growth in the region since 2003. According to the World Bank, extreme poverty has fallen faster in Chile than anywhere else in Latin America, afflicting 1.5 million in 2003, with some saying it was as low as 500,000 in 2006.

Social policies, increasingly implemented by democratic governments in Latin America, are now responding to clamorous demands by lowering the gross total number of those living in poverty. In the case of Mexico, US economic growth has helped to encourage financial development. The number of people earning an income that is insufficient to even feed a family a minimal diet in Mexico fell from 37 percent to 14 percent over the decade through 2006. The fact that the number of Mexicans in the $400-1000 income bracket is rising faster than those in higher income bracket, shows that a “new lower middle-class” may be emerging from poverty, especially in Mexico.

Social Development
As several more leftist leaders have been elected or re-elected in Latin America in recent years, more social programs, such as health and education initiatives, are being put in place. The central objective is to lift people out of poverty and raise living standards. Innovative social networks and incentives are among the major contributors to the achievements that have been made in the social sector. One example of these initiatives can be found in countries like Argentina, Brazil and Venezuela, where stipends are provided to poor families in order to keep their children healthy and in school. Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez announced that during this present economic revival, steps should be taken to ensure facilitated access to producers that will result in meeting basic human needs, including stable job markets and a quality education. The combination of strong economic growth stimulants and social assistance programs were instrumental in the process of lowering the unemployment levels and poverty rates. According to IMF Survey Magazine’s April edition, the rate of Latin Americans living in extreme poverty fell from 44 percent in 2002 to about 40 percent in 2005, and has since fallen to 38 percent in 2006. Lowering barriers to access consumer goods and services has made it possible for people to start up their own small businesses. Some low-income communities have become involved in production processes and are contributing now to the region’s upgraded economic stability.

Forecast For Economic Development
Continually improving investment markets and success in diversifying and expanding trade patterns provides grounds for an optimistic forecast. Steadily increasing revenues are reducing income inequality and it is estimated that by 2012, 15 million out of 27 million households could have attained middle-class level incomes. According to the IMF’s director Rodrigo De Rato, turbulences in global financial markets will still hit Latin America, but the damage is likely to be less than it would have been in previous years. Unfortunately, growth is expected to slow down in 2008 to 4.25 percent; nevertheless, economists expect net debt to drop to 44 percent of GDP in 2008, compared to an estimated 46.6 percent in 2007. The IMF stressed that Latin America must take “advantage of good times to tackle the daunting task of entrenching stronger growth, reducing still high levels of poverty, and decreasing vulnerabilities against adverse shocks.”

Gains Remain Fragile

Despite the recent economic success and newly fortified foundations regarding growth, poverty and economic issues, are still matters that persist on Latin America’s agenda. Income inequalities may be at their least extreme in a generation, but they still remain high compared with other economies in the world. Although several countries have succeeded in expanding their economies and the social benefits which they provide to their citizens, income disparity is still one of the most serious issues in Latin America, particularly when one looks at the fact that while the wealthiest 20 percent of the population is receiving 60 percent of all income, the poorest 20 percent account for only 3 percent.

Enduring Rural and Urban Poverty

Poverty trends have been relatively affected by the lack of improvements in the living standards of the poor. The World Resources Institute (WRI) has estimated that there are 360 million people “living at the base of the socio-economic pyramid, defined as living on the purchasing power equivalent of $300 per month or less.” The massive increase in class and national conflicts at a variety of socio-economic points has not been negligibly influenced by the Latin American variant of capitalism. Critics blame the current process of globalization for the region’s limited possibilities for change or the efflorescence of home-grown efforts at improving the responsiveness their economic structure.

The Relationship between Neoliberal Reforms and Poverty

Since the 1980s, Latin American economies have focussed on strengthening the financial stability of markets by means of a specific code of policies that came to be known as the “Washington Consensus”, which is mostly the U.S. government’s version of neoliberalism. Economic neoliberalism promotes privatization of public industries, decreasing governmental social spending and the deregulation of the financial sectors. Such measures have had little positive significance for underprivileged citizens. Market-opening reforms had surfeited Latin American countries with cheap imports, forcing area farmers to compete in local markets against reduced-priced of overseas goods. Neglecting the importance of improving domestic markets and factoring in the traditionally close economic links with the U.S. has made the region more vulnerable to exogenous factors, demonstrated by the effects of turbulences in the global economy.
Worldwide, economists would agree that generally speaking, neoliberal reforms could be a powerful engine for development. But they would also agree to the fact that whatever its positive impact on improving the situation of the poor is more dependent on political interests and sharp-shooter instincts for a particular cause, rarely resulting social justice. Politics which give market efficiency precedence over the redistribution of social benefits do not redress the situation of wealth inequalities; rather, they contribute to increasing rural and urban poverty. According to the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), “The voices of the poor and their organizations are still waiting to be heard with the regard to the design and implementation of economic policies” in favor of the marginalized.

Free Trade Agreements and Dependency on Washington

Free trade agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) were implemented in the last decade in order to “facilitate trade among separate sovereign societies.” Latin America’s increasing economic openness and trade liberalization, followed upon by trade agreements, were implemented alongside a weak institutional development strategy. Today, Latin America has to face the consequences, such as a dependence on the U.S. economy and the region’s unfair disadvantages within a number of trade agreements. Obviously, open markets and foreign investments do contain a huge potential for improvement in Latin America’s economy, but the region’s actual history tells another story. An article in an issue of the International Herald Tribune, noted that “unregulated open markets, rapid import liberalisation and the absence of essential government regulation and public services is bad for growth, bad for stability and disastrous for poverty reduction.” The barriers of today’s labor markets and the competitiveness of imported goods cause high rates of unemployment, driving millions of people into the already overcrowded and only marginally rewarded members of the informal sector.

Political Change
One of the new characteristics of Latin American politics is the increasing collaboration among the countries of the region, in order to break the dependence on the North and its liegemen among the international lending community. In 2004, Chávez introduced The Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America (ALBA), a regional trade plan in order “to counter the Bush-favored free trade areas of the Americas, which aims to benefit the poor and the environment.” Latin American scholars have showed that in past elections the electorate has strongly rejected political programs which act in accordance with the Washington-favored neoliberal policies. They voted for leaders who were seriously willing to invest in human and social capital and in pro-poor economic policies, which respect society as opposed to having a dismissive attitude toward it. This new course, could lead to an improved habitat and to the end of adverse macroeconomic policies. Ironically, neoliberals and their critics all agree with IMF deputy-managing director Murilo Portugal, who in a recent speech, observed that “it is in the sunny days that we should fix the roof of the house.”

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Concetta Kim Martens

September 27, 2007

Amy on Evo - Evo at the UN

One of those leaders who came to address the U.N. General Assembly was Evo Morales, the first indigenous president of Bolivia. While the U.S. rarely looks south for leadership, Morales’ example is worth considering. He has restored diplomatic relations with Iran. Against tremendous internal opposition, he nationalized Bolivia’s natural gas fields, transforming the country’s economic stability, and, interestingly, enriching the very elite that originally criticized the move. (Contrast this with the U.S. pressuring the Iraqi parliament to pass an oil law that would virtually hand over control of Iraq’s oil to the major U.S. oil corporations.) President Morales told me: “Neither mother earth nor life are commodities. We are talking about a profound change of models and systems.”

The twin crises of war and climate change, inexorably linked by our thirst for oil, need a concerted global solution—one that won’t be obtained by cowboy diplomacy. The United States must pursue global consensus, not global conquest—before it is too late.

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26 September, 2007 --
Letter from President Evo Morales to the member representatives of the United Nations on the issue of the environment.

Sister and brother Presidents and Heads of States of the United Nations: The world is suffering from a fever due to climate change, and the disease is the capitalist development model. Whilst over 10,000 years the variation in carbon dioxide (CO2) levels on the planet was approximately 10%, during the last 200 years of industrial development, carbon emissions have increased by 30%. Since 1860, Europe and North America have contributed 70% of the emissions of CO2. 2005 was the hottest year in the last one thousand years on this planet.

Different investigations have demonstrated that out of the 40,170 living species that have been studied, 16,119 are in danger of extinction. One out of eight birds could disappear forever. One out of four mammals is under threat. One out of every three reptiles could cease to exist. Eight out of ten crustaceans and three out of four insects are at risk of extinction. We are living through the sixth crisis of the extinction of living species in the history of the planet and, on this occasion, the rate of extinction is 100 times more accelerated than in geological times.

Faced with this bleak future, transnational interests are proposing to continue as before, and paint the machine green, which is to say, continue with growth and irrational consumerism and inequality, generating more and more profits, without realising that we are currently consuming in one year what the planet produces in one year and three months. Faced with this reality, the solution can not be an environmental make over.

I read in the World Bank report that in order to mitigate the impacts of climate change we need to end subsidies on hydrocarbons, put a price on water and promote private investment in the clean energy sector. Once again they want to apply market recipes and privatisation in order to carry out business as usual, and with it, the same illnesses that these policies produce. The same occurs in the case of biofuels, given that to produce one litre of ethanol you require 12 litres of water. In the same way, to process one ton of agrifuels you need, on average, one hectare of land.

Faced with this situation, we – the indigenous peoples and humble and honest inhabitants of this planet – believe that the time has come to put a stop to this, in order to rediscover our roots, with respect for Mother Earth; with the Pachamama as we call it in the Andes. Today, the indigenous peoples of Latin America and the world have been called upon by history to convert ourselves into the vanguard of the struggle to defend nature and life.

I am convinced that the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, recently approved after so many years of struggle, needs to pass from paper to reality so that our knowledge and our participation can help to construct a new future of hope for all. Who else but the indigenous people, can point out the path for humanity in order to preserve nature, natural resources and the territories that we have inhabited from ancient times.

We need a profound change of direction, at the world wide level, so as to stop being the condemned of the earth. The countries of the north need to reduce their carbon emissions by between 60% and 80% if we want to avoid a temperature rise of more than 2º in what is left of this century, which would provoke global warming of catastrophic proportions for life and nature.

We need to create a World Environment Organisation which is binding, and which can discipline the World Trade Organisation, which is propelling as towards barbarism. We can no longer continue to talk of growth in Gross National Product without taking into consideration the destruction and wastage of natural resources. We need to adopt an indicator that allows us to consider, in a combined way, the Human Development Index and the Ecological Footprint in order to measure our environmental situation.

We need to apply harsh taxes on the super concentration of wealth, and adopt effective mechanisms for its equitable redistribution. It is not possible that three families can have an income superior to the combined GDP of the 48 poorest countries. We can not talk of equity and social justice whilst this situation continues.

The United States and Europe consume, on average, 8.4 times more that the world average. It is necessary for them to reduce their level of consumption and recognise that all of us are guests on this same land; of the same Pachamama.

I know that change is not easy when an extremely powerful sector has to renounce their extraordinary profits for the planet to survive. In my own country I suffer, with my head held high, this permanent sabotage because we are ending privileges so that everyone can "Live Well" and not better than our counterparts. I know that change in the world is much more difficult than in my country, but I have absolute confidence in human beings, in their capacity to reason, to learn from mistakes, to recuperate their roots, and to change in order to forge a just, diverse, inclusive, equilibrated world in harmony with nature

Evo Morales Ayma
President of the Republic de Bolivia


Chiapas requests army presence for elections; EZLN suspend national tour

State authorities in Chiapas have requested that federal army troops be deployed to assure security in the upcoming elections in the conflicted southern Mexican state. Elections are to be held in two weeks for local authorities in 118 municipalities and for 40 state deputies. The state government says ten municipalities are "zones of alert" due to a "climate of tension." (Mirada Sur, Chiapas, Sept. 24) In response, the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) issued a communique Sept. 22 charging that the state government, under the control of the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), is "attacking the poor and needy, and courting and benefiting the rich and powerful." (Mirada Sur, Sept. 25) The EZLN denied rumors that it is supporting candidates from any party in the elections. (Heraldo de Chiapas, Sept. 19) However, the rebels pledged not to interfere with the elections in their zones of control. (Cuarto Poder, Chiapas, Sept. 23)

Fear continues to grow of a planned mass eviction of Zapatista communities from contested lands in the Chiapas rainforest by followers of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). The EZLN Good Government Junta "Hacia La Esperanza" at "Autonomous Municipality" San Pedro de Michoacán told reporter Hermann Bellinghausen of the national daily La Jornada that followers of the Union of Ejidos of the Selva (UES), a PRI-aligned group, in nearby Nuevo Gracias a Dios are "buying high powered weapons" in preparation for an assault against the Zapatistas. "It looks like some have even sold lands to buy their weapons. And they pass them right in front of the soldiers there at the crossroads," to bring into their settlement. (La Jornada. Sept. 21 via Narco News)

The EZLN's Sixth Commission has announced it will suspend the planned second phase of the "Other Campaign," a national tour by Zapatista leaders, in light of the local threat. "In its place, we will carry out civil and peaceful actions in defense of the Zapatista communities," the statement read. (EZLN communique, Sept. 22)

In a statement of their own, the Maya pacifist organization Las Abejas—targeted in the Acteal massacre of 1997—said that paramilitary activity in Chiapas has actually seen a resurgence since the PRD government took power last year. "The well-known Low-Intensity War against the pueblos that struggle against the neoliberal system has not gone away with the PRIista ex-governors," the statement said. (Mirada Sur, Sept. 24 via Chiapas IMC)

Bishop Emeritus of the Chiapas Highlands, Don Samuel Ruiz García, who won acclaim for brokering the peace dialogue with the EZLN in the '90s, said "In Chiapas, repression is being offered, not dialogue... A massacre like that at Acteal could be repeated at any moment." (Mirada Sur, Sept. 27)

Meanwhile, Zapatista supporters joined with followers of the PRD and even PRI to denounce PRD municipal authorities at Pantelhó, who are building a drainage system they charge pollutes local water sources. (CDN, Sept. 21; La Jornada, Sept. 20) Infrastructure issues are particularly critical following Hurricane Felix. Mexican federal authorities declared an emergency in 118 Chiapas municipalities in the wake of the disaster. (El Universal, Sept. 4)

On Sept. 20, André Aubry, a former priest and anthropologist of French origin who had been an official advisor to the EZLN and local leader of the Other Campaign, was killed in a car accident at the age of 80. He was traveling on the raod between Tuxtla Gutiérrez and San Cristóbal de las Casas. (El Universal, Sept. 21)