March 03, 2007
The Gazette (Montreal)
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| | A Community Built on Coffee
-- The two-room schoolhouse in Los Alpes, a small farming community in northern Nicaragua, is on a grassy hill surrounded by swaying banana trees. On a regular morning, visitors can find about 80 young students seated at the desks inside, their faces turned to the whiteboard at the front of the room as a teacher presents the day's lesson.
Five years ago, there was no school here and Los Alpes coffee farmers say that without the extra earnings they get from selling through a fair-trade co-op, this school wouldn't exist. |
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November 07, 2006
Counterpunch
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| | A New Kind of Oil Diplomacy
-- The Chavez-Ortega Alliance
Events in Nicaragua, however, suggest that it won't be so easy for the Bush administration to roll back Chavez's ambitions. It now seems as if the Sandinista candidate Daniel Ortega will cruise to victory in the country's presidential election and avoid a run off. As of Monday night, preliminary results show Ortega with about 40 percent of the vote, more than enough to avoid a future runoff.
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September 06, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Civil society marches against CAFTA; PLC won't Pressure FSLN for CAFTA passage
-- On September 8, several thousand people representing civil
society groups and other organizations took part in a
protest against the Dominican Republic and Central
American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) in Managua. |
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July 26, 2005
United Students Against Sweatshops
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| | Support Nicaraguan Workers at Chaprich-Mil Colores!
-- Workers in Nicaragua at the Chaprich-Mil Colores plant are struggling for reinstatement, as well as their outstanding salaries, severance, and benefits. The U.S. based owner Craig Miller has already fired 48 members of the independent union, refused to pay into national healthcare and continually denies workers their due salaries and vacation time. |
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July 11, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Let the Rivers Run: A plan for the intelligent management of water and the re-greening of Nicaragua's watersheds
-- In this action alert, please find:
1) Introduction to the deforestation and water crises in
the Global South
2) Outline of the project to address these crises in five
departments in Nicaragua
3) What you and your local committee can do to help!
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July 06, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | CAFTA Opinions across the Board in Nicaragua
-- With the passage of the Dominican Republic-Central America
Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) by the US Senate and an
upcoming vote in the House of Representatives, lobbying
heated up in Nicaragua which also has yet to pass the
trade agreement. Organizations representing the wealthiest
agriculture and business sectors are pressuring the
National Assembly for quick ratification. |
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July 06, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Political Conflicts Continue as OAS Returns
-- Political tensions could diminish this week, as OAS
representative and former Argentine Foreign Minister Dante
Caputo appeared to some observers to be achieving a
modicum of success in his negotiations with the parties in
conflict in Nicaragua's tormented political scene. He
began discussions on Friday, July 1. Meanwhile, Cardinal
Miguel Obando y Bravo reported that he had sent a message
to President Enrique Bolaños containing proposals he had
received from the Constitutional Liberal Party (PLC) and
the Sandinista Front (FSLN). Obando said that PLC and
FSLN leaders had said they were open to making their
positions more flexible in exchange for Bolaños' agreement
to renew the suspended national dialogue.
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June 21, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Child Labor Acknowledged
-- President Enrique Bolaños recognized this past Friday that
253,000 children between the ages of five and seventeen
work in all sectors of the Nicaraguan economy, especially
in agriculture and service. According to a census taken of
child workers in Leon, the majority of child laborers
works at least four hours a day and earns approximately 60
cents a day. It is also noted that the children often
neglect their schoolwork or miss school altogether because
of their jobs. |
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June 21, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | OAS: "Nicaragua has deep divisions"
-- José Miguel Insulza, Secretary General of the Organization
of American States (OAS), stated on June 20 that the
situation in Nicaragua could degenerate into a profound
crisis due to the lack of will to dialogue and compromise
on the part of the government and the opposition. Insulza
had been in Nicaragua for four days attempting to fulfill
an OAS mandate to bring the parties--the administration of
President Enrique Bolaños and the Liberals and the
Sandinistas which dominate the legislature--back to a
serious tri-partite national dialogue. Upon leaving
Nicaragua, Insulza left open the possibility of his
returning in the middle of the week to Managua to continue
his efforts. |
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June 21, 2005
Financial Times
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| | OAS chief fails to end Nicaraguan political impasse
-- A four-day visit from the new head of the Organisation of American States failed to end a political impasse between Nicaragua's embattled president and the political parties seeking to undermine his powers. |
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June 20, 2005
Nicaragua Network
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| | Human Rights Action Alert!
-- Human Rights Action Alert!
For all those concerned about academic freedom and freedom
of thought!
Write Homeland Security, the State Department, and
Congress!
In this action alert please find:
1) Information on the Dora Maria Tellez visa denial
2) Points to include in your letters
3) Names and addresses of public officials |
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June 14, 2005
Nicaragua Resource Network
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| | CAFTA Committee Report to National Assembly Still Not Released
-- Carlos Noguera, chair of the special committee on CAFTA in
Nicaragua's National Assembly, said that CAFTA "should not
be contaminated with political questions." However, the
two main parties in the Assembly, the Liberal and the
Sandinista, have not come to any accord on a committee
report on legislation implementing the agreement. |
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June 14, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Possibilities for Renewable Energy Ignored
-- Last week, at an exposition sponsored by the Konrad
Adenauer Foundation on "Renewable Energy as the
Alternative for Nicaragua," Narciso Mayorga, a renewable
energy specialist, said that the main problem is
Nicaragua's lack of a clear policy for its development.
Mayorga noted that Nicaraguans have been told over and
over that their only opportunity for overcoming the
country's costly dependence on petroleum as a principal
source of electricity is renewable energy, but without
result. Nicaragua, he said, has the greatest potential in
Central America for renewable energy in all its forms,
including hydroelectric, geothermic, wind, solar and
biomass. |
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June 14, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Nicaragua among Countries to Receive Debt Relief
-- After months of negotiations, the G-7 (Germany, Canada,
the United States, France, Italy, Japan and the United
Kingdom), plus Russia, agreed to cancel the debt owed to
the World Bank, the IMF and the African Development Bank
for 18 of the world's poorest countries, including
Nicaragua, Honduras, Bolivia and Guyana in Latin America.
There was no agreement to cancel debt owed to the
Inter-American Development Bank. |
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June 07, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | New coalitions form around controversies
--
A group of political leaders from parties such as Bolanos'
Alliance for the Republic, the Conservative Party, the
Nicaraguan Christian Path, and the Party of Nicaraguan
Resistance have come together to form an anti-pact,
anti-fraud coalition called the "Common Front." |
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June 07, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Mil Colores factory not paying into Social Security
-- According to the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights
(CENIDH), the free trade zone factory Mil Colores, of U.S.
ownership, has not paid into Social Security the
contributions deducted from workers' paychecks for three
months and has not paid its 580 workers for the month of
May. |
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June 01, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Anti-Pact Demonstration Draws Thousands
-- Thousands took to the streets on Thursday morning,
marching down the Avenida Bolivar in Managua in
repudiation of the Sandinista-Liberal Pact of 1999-2000,
which they saw as a root cause of the present crisis.
Marchers carried huge signs declaring "Enough of the
Pact," while protesters dressed as pigs adorned themselves
with pictures of Ortega and Alemán signing the famous
pact. Protest organizers believe that the march was
successful in sending a strong message to the pact
leaders: either suspend the constitutional amendments
passed in January of this year, along with the election of
the directors of the Superintendency of Public Services
(SISEP), or the population will intensify its efforts of
rejection. |
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May 31, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Distrust Undermines National Dialogue
-- The United Nations Development Program's (UNDP)
coordinator in Nicaragua, Jorge Chediek, stated that
distrust is undermining continuation of the national
dialogue. The tripartite negotiation has been suspended
because of the Bolaños government complaint that the
Constitutional Liberals (PLC) and Sandinistas (FSLN) are
failing to comply with the agreements while they accuse
President Enrique Bolaños of the same. The center of the
storm lies in the election of directors for the Institute
of Urban and Rural Reformed Property (INPRUR) and of the
Office of Superintendent of Public Service (SISEP),
besides the constitutional reforms that the executive
branch does not recognize. Each of these new laws
transfers power previously held by the executive branch to
the legislature. |
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May 31, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Farmers Demand Development Bank
-- Hundreds of farmers marched this week to the National
Assembly to demand the creation of an agricultural
development bank to stimulate agricultural production, and
to oppose the passage of the Dominican Republic-Central
America Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA). Also, they
demanded laws that would provide for secure legal
ownership of their property, for improvements in
production infrastructure, and for protection of natural
resources. |
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May 17, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Nemagon Victims Sign Agreement with Government
-- On May 13 members of President Bolaños' cabinet signed an
agreement with leaders of the protesting victims of
pesticide poisoning. The 19-point agreement includes the
promise of free lifetime healthcare for all former banana
and sugarcane workers affected by exposure to the
agrochemicals Nemagon and Fumazone in the 1960s, 70s and
80s. |
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May 17, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | CAFTA Passage in Nicaragua Doubtful
-- While President Bolaños was with the other Central
American and Dominican Republic presidents in the US
licking the boots of their transnational masters by
promoting the Dominican Republic and Central American Free
Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA), passage of the trade agreement
by Nicaragua faded further into the distance. |
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May 17, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | National Assembly Establishes New Property Institute, and U.S. Withdraws Visas from 89 Sandinistas and Liberals
-- On May 16, La Prensa featured a headline reporting "U.S.
'Black List' Filters Out." The article revealed a list,
the existence of which had been rumored for days, of
prominent Nicaraguans, members of both the Constitutional
Liberal Party (PLC) and the Sandinista Party, who have had
their visas to enter the United States revoked. It appeared that the withdrawal of many of the visas was
connected to the May 10 passage, by a large majority of
the National Assembly, of a law setting up the Reformed
Rural and Urban Property Institute (INPRUR). |
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May 10, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Still No Assembly Decision on DR-CAFTA
-- Despite President Bolaños' promises to his sponsor, George
W. Bush, to pass the Dominican Republic - Central America
Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA), the National Assembly has
not voted on the agreement or even set a date to debate
it. The FSLN has indicated it will vote against the unfair
agreement and the Constitutional Liberal Party is
perfectly happy to embarrass Bolaños by waiting until the
US Congress acts on it. |
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May 10, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | US State Department: Radical Populism is as Dangerous as Terrorism
-- On May 8 El Nuevo Diario published a special report,
written by Roberto Collado in Washington, about the US
government's position on what are referred to as "radical
populist" governments and political organizations in Latin
America. It quoted a US military official of the Southern
Command of the US army who classified "movements that
undermine democracy in Latin America" as one more link in
the chain of evil that the Bush administration is willing
to destroy in the hemisphere. |
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May 10, 2005
IN THESE TIMES
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| | Chiquita's Children
--
In the '70s and '80s, the banana companies Dole, Del Monte
and Chiquita used a carcinogenic pesticide, Nemagon, to
protect their crops in Nicaragua. Today, the men and women
who worked on those plantations suffer from incurable
illnesses. Their children are deformed. The companies
feign innocence. |
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May 03, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Rural Women Speak Out Against DR-CAFTA
-- A forum organized by the Foundation Among Women (Fundacion
Entre Mujeres) with the aim of allowing rural women to
express their opinions about the Dominican Republican and
Central American Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA) was held
in Esteli on Apr. 21. Delegates from cooperatives and
associations of female agricultural workers from all over
Nicaragua participated. The organizers of the event
explained that it was the first of several forums called
?For a Globalization Based on Justice and Equality?
planned for the coming months. |
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May 03, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Nemagon Case Taken up in Venezuela
-- Lawyers for former banana workers poisoned by the
US-banned insecticide Nemagon announced that Venezuelan
Supreme Court has accepted their case to collect millions
in compensation for former banana workers awarded by a
Nicaraguan court in 2002. Plaintiffs have attempted to
collect on their judgment against Shell Chemical Company,
Dow Chemical Company, and Standard Fruit Company (Dole) in
Ecuador, Colombia, Paraguay, and the US without success.
Nemagon causes sterility, pain, cancer and birth defects.
Banana and sugar cane workers have been camped at the
National Assembly for weeks demanding justice, but both
the Bolaños government and the National Assembly have
ignored their pleas. |
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May 03, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | IMF Cuts Off Loans to Nicaragua
-- Arbulu Neira, representative of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in Nicaragua, reported that the IMF had
suspended a US$17 million loan for budget support, the
World Bank had done the same with US$35 million loan, and
that the Inter American Development Bank (IDB) had
withheld US$15 million from their international reserves,
due to the lack of an economic program agreement for 2005
between the government and the IMF. Neira explained that
time is running short and the Nicaraguan government has
not yet presented its proposal. |
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May 03, 2005
Nicaragua Network Hotline
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| | Subsidy for Managua Buses Ends Week of Extreme Violence
-- A mid-week agreement by the government to subsidize bus
fares finally ended more than a week of increasing violent
protests caused by soaring oil prices. The violence
peaked on April 25 when police repressed demonstrations at
14 sites in Managua. |
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April 07, 2005
Agencia de Información Fray Tito para América Latina
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| | Campaña permanente contra TLC con EE.UU.
-- Los nicaragüenses están en alerta permanente contra el Tratado
de Libre Comercio (TLC) de su país con Estados Unidos. Varias
organizaciones sociales anunciaron el inicio de una campaña de
movilización permanente en todo el país. |
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