Time to address trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, November 03, 2008

© Copyright 2008 Malladi Rama Rao. All rights reserved.
Sunday, November 02, 2008

By Malladi Rama Rao

What a spat it was? It had turned upside down the logic of campaign journalists on either side of the Palk Strait. No surprise, therefore, all those in Colombo who have been painting a doomsday scenario of sorts between Chennai and Delhi have egg on their face and are groping for new theories to brazen out their jingoism that made the mistake of once again pitting the Sinhalese against the Tamils. Post-Basil mission to Delhi, the egg heads must realise that neither righteous indignation which is on display in abundance nor an orchestrated media campaign, for a few brownie points, which shows no let up, is a substitute for good governance, which is the only way to end the years of trust deficit between Colombo and Tamils.

Some commentators have termed India’s Sri Lanka policy as a farce. Some others have branded as tamasha DMK patriarch Muthavel Karunanidhi’s politics of ultimatum. Both schools of thought felt that Delhi and Chennai were trying to have the cake and eat it in their own way. Expecting Karunanidhi to reduce Manmohan Singh government to a minority just five-six months ahead of a general election, these critics had gone to the town declaring that Delhi was caught between the devil and the deep sea. They have obviously failed to understand, much less care to read, the fine print on coalition dharma. And also how adroitly the old Dravidian fox was outmanoeuvring his arch rivals – Jayalalithaa Jayaram of AIADMK and trusted follower turned political foe V Gopalaswamy alias Vaiko.

Karunanidhi had split Vaiko’s MDMK a couple of months ago. Now by regaining the Tamil centre space, he has marginalised the likes of Vaiko who are the ardent campaigners of LTTE. The icing on the cakes, as DMK faithful see it, is the arrest of Vaiko on charges of sedition and anti-national activities. The arrest should have come as a surprise to the India-baiters in Colombo.

Needless to say, these worthies have not understood the dynamics of democracy and the contours of an administration that swears by the Constitution in India. If they have any doubt they should listen to the recording of Pranab-Karunanidhi joint press conference in Chennai last Sunday.

Said Karunanidhi: “This issue (ethnic issue in SL) has been going on for 40-years; we cannot expect it to be resolved in four days”. Pranab Mukherjee, on his part, put the record straight saying India stands for countering terrorism with resolve. Put differently, it means India will do nothing to reduce the momentum of the SLA operations in Kilinochchi. .

Firstly, Pranab rejected the demand voiced by a section of TN politicians for withdrawal of non-lethal military support to the SLA like supply of radars and technical and personnel backup to keep operational these anti-aircraft radars. Secondly, he reasoned that the ‘help’ is in India’s interest. “Because, given the position of the Indian and Sri Lankan coastlines, the radar that was given would cover vital installations in Indian areas as well”, the Indian minister told a questioner, certainly as much to the delight as surprise of his SL friends.

There is substance, therefore, in the contention that the latest low in India-Sri Lanka relations is not because of any misunderstanding between Delhi and Chennai but because of forked tongues in Colombo. Consider these two facts – one about fishermen and the other about humanitarian aid.

The Basil mission to New Delhi has put in place some practical arrangements to deal with bona fide Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL). GOSL will designate sensitive areas along the Lankan coastline. These areas will be out of bounds for Indian fishing vessels. “Further, there will be no firing on Indian vessels. Indian fishing vessels will carry a valid registration or permit and the fishermen will have on person valid identity cards issued by the government of Tamil Nadu,”, a joint statement on fishing arrangements released on Oct 26 at the end of BR talks with the Indian foreign minister, said.

The fishermen issue has been a principal concern of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and most law makers from the state cutting across party-lines. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh took up the issue personally two months back with President Rajapaksa on the sidelines of SAARC summit. These concerns have been met with more firings on the Indian fishermen. Undoubtedly, the latest agreement is the most practical way of dealing with what happens when illiterate fishermen cross the maritime boundary line. On its part the TN government is taking steps to equip fishing vessels with satellite based equipment to indicate their exact location on the high seas.

The Sri Lanka Navy has used the moral right to prevent pro-LTTE Indians from Tamil Nadu from assisting the Tigers with material that could be used in the war against Sri Lanka –batteries that can power improvised explosive devices, ball-bearings to add lethality, petrol, oil and lubricants and small arms and ammunition—to be indiscriminate and vindictive in its actions against the fisher folk. The proposed system of licenses would induce an element of inspection that would give the fishermen an opportunity to explain their presence and thus avoid being killed instantly on being sighted by the Sri Lanka Navy. So, there is room for optimism that there will be no ‘a flare up’ near Katchiativu. It will certainly lead to a cooling of political temperature in the State.

During Basil-Pranab talks, India had offered to send humanitarian aid – 800 tonnes of relief material- through the Red Cross as a gesture of goodwill. President Rajapaksa welcomed the Indian decision and also appreciated Tamilnadu’s offer to make an additional contribution to ‘this humanitarian endeavour’.

But his Essential Services Chief S. Divaratne doesn’t appear to share President’s enthusiasm. In fact, he shares the indignation expressed by a section of the Lankan leadership which sees in the Indian food aid a repeat of food air drop in 1987. “Sri Lanka is not an African state in need of food. We can even feed the poor people of India, if need be”, he told the media. His remarks are not contradicted till date. He also went on to add: The government has buffer food stocks in Kilinochchi and Mulaithivu with a surplus of rice in the Wanni. Even anti malaria drugs, medicines are constantly reaching the Wanni”.

Basic thrust of Basil-Pranab agreement and President Rajapaksa’s exclusives to select Indian dailies is that civilians would be spared in the course of Wanni war. But even before the ink on the Delhi agreement dried, three Tamillians – one of them a 50-year –old mother of three, living in the conflict zone were wounded in SLAF strafing of two civilian settlements in Kilinochchi and Paranthan. The victims belong to the ever increasing tribe of internally displaced persons from Mannar and Kilinochchi. A school with some 750 students was just 750 meters from the bombed site. This incident could be one of those hazards in a military operation but doesn’t help improve confidence levels.

At this point in SL history, who pushed whom to war is not material. What is germane is, as some SL commentators have also noted, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while professing full commitment to political package, has allowed the Sinhala extremists to set an agenda that allows only for a military solution. Defeating the Tigers militarily may not be big deal. The war may at the best drag on for a few days or months; the army and air force have to work to a plan jointly and without indulging in their own games. But how is the government to control the large Tamil-speaking areas in the north that have been under LTTE domination for a decade or more. There is no plan in evidence.

Yes, the President promises that he himself will take charge of the political process and see it through politically. But he makes it clear that the current military operations are required to ‘free our own Tamil brothers and sisters from the cruel grip of terror and implement a just and enduring political solution based on the four ‘Ds’ — Demilitarisation, Democratisation, Development, and Devolution’. He also asserts that his first priority is Demilitarisation. “Without demilitarisation first, you won’t be able to achieve anything. No democratisation, no development, no devolution. It is useless to give them devolution when they are not ready to accept it or you can’t implement it”, the President told N Ram of The Hindu.

This assertion puts a fresh question mark on the future course of events promised by President’s emissary, Basil Rajapaksa to his interlocutors in Delhi. More over, the LTTE appears to demonstrate its ability to strike even when it has been hurt very badly. As the Stratfor experts say in their forecast, the Tigers will make a stronger attempt to carry out attacks inside Colombo ‘in an attempt to prove to their constituency that they are still viable’. From a military point, that is bad news. Also from a political point. Because it will give fresh lease to the Sinhala chauvinism and deepen the Faultlines further.

Ethnic SL Tamil diaspora has enormous financial and political clout; it is numerous in crucial Western countries. And they can provide the muscle to the LTTE for decades irrespective of the outcome of today’s military campaign. If the diaspora is to be checkmated and LTTE is to be given a knockout blow, MR, as President Mahinda Rajapaksa is addressed by his close circle, should look into the causes of anger of the Tamils with the Sinhala state with a sense of urgency and commitment. Rhetoric offers no solution. Certainly not banking on State created quislings like TMVP who have neither the reach nor vision.

EGYPT: Ruling Party in Free Fall

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Adam Morrow and Khaled Moussa al-Omrani

CAIRO, Oct 29 (IPS) – A high-ranking member of Egypt’s ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) is facing trial on charges of arranging the murder of a Lebanese pop singer. The case, along with a host of other public grievances, has badly tarnished the NDP’s reputation ahead of an upcoming party conference.

”On the eve of its annual party congress, popular perceptions of the NDP have never been worse,” Amr Hashem Rabie, expert on Egyptian party politics at the semi-official Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies told IPS.

On Oct. 18, construction magnate Hisham Talaat Moustafa, a member of the NDP’s powerful Policies Committee, pleaded not guilty to accusations that he financed the killing of Lebanese pop singer Suzanne Tamim, found brutally murdered in her Dubai apartment three months ago. Fellow defendant Mohsen Al-Sukkary — a former police officer charged with carrying out the crime in return for a two-million dollar payoff — also pleaded not guilty.
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POLITICS-US: Plumbing the Depths of Spin

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by Peter Costantini

LOS ANGELES, Oct 27 (IPS) – In the waning days of an interminable United States presidential campaign, a plumber and would-be small businessman bestrides the narrow race like a colossus with a tool belt.

Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher was wrenched into the limelight on Oct. 15 during the third presidential debate by Senator John McCain, who dubbed him ”Joe the Plumber”. McCain repeatedly touted him as an exemplar of the hard-working, plain-spoken Middle American who would be helped by his tax plan — but hurt by Democratic candidate Barack Obama’s.

Morphing overnight from ordinary Joe into American idol, Wurzelbacher has galvanised the Republican presidential campaign of McCain and Governor Sarah Palin. The idea of the working-class hero as Republican vice-presidential candidate in 2012 would strain credibility only slightly more than Palin did this year.
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ECONOMY: Civil Society Has Something to Say

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Gustavo Capdevila

GENEVA, Oct 27 (IPS) – Governments cannot deal with the current financial crisis on their own, and need the support of the people they govern, which is ”best translated by the opinions of the civil society movement,” said Werner H. Schleiffer, executive coordinator of CONGO, the global umbrella of NGOs with consultative status with the United Nations.

The responsibility of striving for solutions lies with governments ”because the market forces have demonstrated that they cannot solve the issues,” said Schleiffer. ”But governments do not have sufficient strength on their own, and must take into account ”the thinking of their own people as translated by civil society movements,” he argued.

CONGO, which is made up of national, regional and international non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), is ”a bridge, a two-way stream vis-a-vis civil society and vis-a-vis the U.N.,” he explained.

On Monday and Tuesday, CONGO is debating the global financial meltdown and its effects on the real economy in Geneva at the Civil Society Development Forum (CSDF) 2008. The meeting is also discussing other critical questions facing the international community, like the global food crisis and the questions of food sovereignty and sustainability, as well as the links between human rights and development.

At a previous CSDF, held Jun. 27-29 in New York, CONGO already discussed the incipient financial crisis.

The final statement adopted in New York referred to the ”global financial turmoil and uncertainty,” but only after highlighting the threats posed by the food crisis and environmental risks.

However, in its analysis of the food crisis, the New York CSDF document states that ”We note the pervasive role of international financial institutions in influencing national development strategies. We urge these institutions to redesign their strategies with a view to assisting countries in defining their priorities at home by using home-grown expertise and products of these countries.”

The document also says the World Trade Organisation’s ”role in negotiations on agricultural matters should be re-examined.”

But ”since June, the food crisis, the energy crisis and the financial crisis have taken on such great proportions, that couldn’t be anticipated in June,” Schleiffer told IPS.

The first policy level discussion at the U.N. General Assembly in September also ”indicated very clearly that these topics are very high on the agenda of the General Assembly,” he added.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon himself ”even spoke about an emergency development,” indicating that these topics deserve very careful discussion in the future, said Schleiffer.

”These crises will not go away overnight. But they cannot be attacked without having civil society on board. The U.N. and the member governments cannot handle it on their own,” said the head of CONGO in Geneva. ”They need strong and determined input by civil society.”

To that end, ”our members of the board, in consultation with our organisations, agreed that we should continue these discussions on these topics and come up with further concrete recommendations” at the two-day meeting in Geneva, said Schleiffer.

The questions of the food crisis, food sustainability and sovereignty are being discussed in-depth, he said, adding that the latter issue ”is very important to our member organisations.”

”The other issue, the nexus between human rights and development, will also come up further, especially when we look at the issue of speculative movements that distort market mechanisms and are very much against the people, particularly people living in the (developing) South,” said Schleiffer.

”We are much inclined to see the consequences of these crises on our daily lives in the North, but the ones that really suffer, and suffer enormously, are (the people) of the South. Much more than we do,” he added.

Delegates from key civil society movements from Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Asia were thus invited to participate in the two-day meeting in Geneva, which was made possible by financial support from the Swiss government, he said.

CONGO officials were encouraged by the results of their participation in the High Level Segment, an annual ECOSOC session held alternatively in New York and Geneva that is like a kind of ”parliamentary” session of the U.N. system for dealing with economic and social issues, said Schleiffer.

At that session, ”we had the opportunity to speak more than ever before. It was unprecedented, between our CONGO statements on behalf of civil society and statements by organisationsàunder our umbrella, all together we had something like half an hour of speaking time, which is unique when you think that depending on the sessions, you only have one or two minutes to speak. That was quite an accomplishment.”

Another encouraging factor was the level of approval from the U.N. Secretariat and government representatives received by CONGO’s outcome document, which was circulated to the member governments as an official ECOSOC document, he said.

The declaration that came out of the ECOSOC High Level Segment, which will go into its report to the General Assembly, showed a ”really amazingàcongruence in wording” with the CONGO outcome document, said Schleiffer.

The two-day CSDF meeting was opened Monday by the president of CONGO, Liberato Bautista, of the United States, and will be closed Tuesday by the body’s first vice president, Italian trade unionist Anna Biondi, who represents the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).

DEVELOPMENT: Poor Hit by Recession and Tax Havens

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

David Cronin

BRUSSELS, Oct 27 (IPS) – With signs of a recession preoccupying policy-makers in industrialised countries, prospects for the success of an international conference on providing finance to the world’s poor do not appear high.

The United Nations sponsored event, beginning next month in the Qatari capital Doha, comes at a time when many governments, particularly in Europe, are reassessing commitments they have made to improve the lot of the most vulnerable.

Some of the European Union’s largest member states have recently deemed the EU’s plans to combat climate change, a phenomenon that affects poor countries disproportionately, too costly given the changing economic circumstances. Foreign aid budgets, already shrinking, are likely to suffer because of the same rationale.

Although the EU has been credited by many anti-poverty activists with playing a constructive role during a related conference on improving the effectiveness of development aid in Accra, Ghana, in September, the same campaigners feel that the bloc’s preparations for Doha leave much to be desired.
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AFRICA: Financial Crisis May Increase Pressure for Debt Repayment

Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Analyst Online / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Stanley Kwenda*

MANZINI (Swaziland), Oct 25 (IPS) – The collapse of the financial markets may force the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to come down hard on African countries to repay their debts because the huge rescue packages for collapsing banks will need to be recuperated.

This is the view of Munyaradzi Gwisai of the International Socialist Organisation (ISO) of Zimbabwe. He spoke at the recently held seventh Southern Africa Social Forum in Manzini, Swaziland. The ISO is concerned with justice and liberation and working towards a ‘‘future socialist society”.

The demand for repayment ‘‘will result in further cuts on education, health and social services budgets, which will result in severe and savage cuts on the standards of living of the people in Africa and will leave the attainment of the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals in danger,” said
Gwisai.
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SOUTHERN AFRICA: More Debt But Still No Development

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Stanley Kwenda*

MANZINI (Swaziland), Oct 25 (IPS) – Shupikai Machinya, a Zimbabwean cross-border trader who attended the recent Southern Africa Social Forum in Manzini, Swaziland, is one of the many delegates who wanted to understand just how a country ends up in debt.

Machinya frequently travels to South Africa where she acquires basic goods for resale in Zimbabwe. In Zimbabwe basic commodities such as salt, sugar, rice, cooking oil, bathing soap and maize-meal are rarities as a result of the devastating economic problems that the country is facing.

Although she belongs to the fledging Cross-Border Traders Association of Zimbabwe, debt and development remain distant issues for her. ‘‘I only know that debt is money borrowed by the government from outside but how it’s used and for what reason nobody knows,” Machinya told IPS.

‘‘We have heard that our government has borrowed lots of money since independence to build roads but no new roads were built after 1980 (the year Zimbabwe achieved independence). They even lied that they wanted to make the road from Harare to Beitbridge dual carriage as nothing has happened.” Beitbridge is a border post between Zimbabwe and South Africa.

The just ended social forum meeting in Manzini discussed debt among Southern African countries and how it can be effectively managed for the benefit of communities.

The three-day meeting, attended by several civil society organisations from the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region, resolved to initiate debt audits to force governments to account for monies borrowed.

But why the fuss about debt?

‘‘The problem of debt is central, it’s a social problem. The United Nations Development Programme estimates that poor countries pay four times more than they borrow, yet they ought to be spending more on health and education,” argued Dakarayi Matanga, executive director at the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development (ZIMCODD).

ZIMCODD is a civil society organisation interested in developing Zimbabwean people’s capacity to redress the debt burden and unjust trade practices and building and promoting alternatives to the neoliberal economic and social agenda.

Matanga regards debt audits as necessary to understand how debts are incurred and repaid and whether citizens are involved in the whole process of incurring them. Matanga urged SADC countries to initiate debt audits, saying regional countries have a common history of debt and how it affects citizens.

He gave a comprehensive synopsis of the different kinds of debt that countries accrue. He said debt is a situation where a person, country or organisation owes some money or possessions to another person, country or organisation.

He said there are several kinds of debts. Bilateral debt is owed by one government to another. Commercial debt is to private sector creditors and commercial banks. Domestic debt is owed to creditors resident in the same country and is denominated in local currency. External debt is owed to foreign creditors and denominated in foreign currency.

Multilateral debt is owed to a consortium of lenders, like the World Bank or regional development banks such as the African Development Bank. Official debt, he said, is owed to public sector lenders. Publically guaranteed debt originates from loans made to state-owned enterprises
or private companies where the payment is guaranteed by the government of the debtor country.

‘‘We should be concerned about the issue of a country’s indebtedness because debt is an obstacle to human development. Debt results in the use of scarce resources for servicing debt instead of investing in people’s wellbeing,” said Matanga.

According to ZIMCODD, Zimbabwe is one of the countries with a high and unsustainable level of indebtedness. Zimbabwe’s total external debt stood at 4,9 billion dollars in 2007, an amount as big as the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

Matanga further stressed that for ordinary citizens like Machinya to benefit from debt, a host of things have to be put in place. He recommended that SADC civil society organisations keep an eye on government borrowing; institute legal reforms through advocacy to parliaments to force governments to be accountable to citizens; and launch mass public education on debt issues.

*This is the first of two articles. Follow the link below to read the second.

Q&A: ”We Are not Subversives, and We Demand Respect”

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Judith Henríquez Acuña interviews indigenous leader DANIEL PIÑACUÉ

VILLA RICA, Colombia, Oct 24 (IPS) – Colombian President Álvaro Uribe admitted that the security forces opened fire on indigenous protesters in the southwestern province of Cauca, but denies that they were responsible for the deaths of three demonstrators, said Daniel Piñacué, a leader of the Nasa community.

Piñacué, head of the governing council of Calderas, an indigenous reservation in the mountains of Cauca, and a prominent member of the powerful Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca (CRIC), was interviewed by IPS in the small town of Villa Rica.

The CRIC organised the ”minga” (a traditional indigenous meeting for the collective good), the name given to the march that set out from the La María Indian reservation, declared a ”territory of peace and co-existence” in the midst of Colombia’s civil war.

The 35,000 indigenous marchers, who belong to a number of different ethnic groups and come from 20 of Colombia’s 32 provinces (known as departments), expect to reach the city of Cali, the capital of the southwestern province of Valle del Cauca, on Saturday.

Piñacué, one of the leading spokespersons for the indigenous protest, told the media that the security forces had used live ammunition against the demonstrators, before the U.S. cable news network CNN broadcast a video this week taped by participants in the march that showed a uniformed man wearing a mask shooting in the direction of the protesters.

On Wednesday, Uribe acknowledged that the police had fired at the demonstrators.

But previously, the rightwing president had publicly called for Piñacué’s arrest.

On Thursday, Uribe gave in to the indigenous demonstrators’ demands for talks, and personally called Piñacué’s cell-phone to announce that he would meet with the leaders of the march on Sunday in Cali.

The protesters are demanding fulfillment of agreements signed with various governments since 1971. ”We want the president to set deadlines and timeframes for compliance with these commitments, and we want national and international observers to be present,” Piñacué told IPS late Thursday in Villa Rica, a small town along the Pan-American highway on the way from the La María reservation to Cali.

IPS: Uribe admitted that firearms were used against the protest. What is the indigenous movement’s view?

DANIEL PIÑACUÉ: The president finally recognised — because of a video, not because he believed it when we publicly told him — that the security forces have used violence against the peaceful indigenous march.

What he should also acknowledge is that three Indians were killed and more than 100 injured in the clashes with the army in La María. The wounded are being treated in hospitals in the towns of Popayán and Santander.

IPS: Uribe also agreed to talks. What will you demand in the dialogue?

DP: In first place, since we have been accused of being criminals and of inciting violence, we want our names cleared. We also don’t want to be treated as second-class citizens, and we want respect for our languages and our ancestral customs.

In addition, we are asking for an expansion of our reservations, legal title to our lands, and enough land to keep our cultures alive, work them, and obtain the products needed for the survival of our communities, in order to keep indigenous people from having to move to the cities, which is leading to the gradual loss of our cultural identity.

We are asking not to be violently pushed off our lands — a phenomenon that is facilitated by the Colombian government so that transnational companies can exploit our land, leaving us without water, and without minerals like iron, nickel and gold.

Furthermore, we are seeking the repeal of a number of laws that were passed without consulting us (as required by the constitution) by the illegitimate Congress elected by the narco-paramilitaries, and which hurt our communities: the laws on forestry, water and land. (The far-right paramilitaries, many of whose leaders have been extradited to the United States on drug trafficking charges, have publicly claimed that they control at least 35 percent of the members of Congress.)

IPS: Have the guerrillas infiltrated the indigenous march?

DP: Whenever a protest or march is held, the political leaders in this country always tell the media that the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrillas are behind it, and that the subversives are manipulating and using the Indians or peasant farmers who are demonstrating for a just cause.

For us that’s an old story. But we have to make it clear to public opinion that we, who are standing up to demand respect for our rights and for the dignity and physical, cultural and political integrity of every one of our indigenous brothers and sisters, as well as the fulfillment of a number of agreements that have been ignored, are the only ‘subversives’ here.

Claiming the guerrillas have infiltrated the demonstration is false, and irresponsibly puts our lives at risk.

IPS: What should the international community know about what Colombia’s indigenous movement is asking for?

DP: They should know what things are really like. That we live in a battleground created by the armed sectors that for years have displaced us from the best lands, and forced us farther and farther up into the mountains.

They should know we are peaceful, hard-working people who are justly demanding our right to our land and the freedom and the right to demand humane, decent conditions to live in peace.

ECONOMY-US: It’s Not the ”Greedy Poor People”

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Analysis by William Fisher

NEW YORK, Oct 23 (IPS) – A 31-year-old law designed to put an end to ”redlining” and other restrictive practices that effectively shut poor and minority families out of home-ownership and neighbourhood development is being attacked by conservative commentators as a major cause of today’s sub-prime mortgage mess.

The charge is being incessantly repeated by some of the so-called mainstream media as well as by right-wing bloggers.

For many years, local and regional banks were happy to take deposits from people who lived in deprived neighbourhoods. A large proportion of these depositors were members of racial minority groups.

But the banks did not extend credit to these depositors. Small businesses did not receive finance. Mortgage loans were not made. Supermarkets and other shops were not built, forcing residents to travel miles for their household needs. Local jobs dwindled. Crime rose. Riots broke out in some cities in the U.S. Whole neighbourhoods fell apart.
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Q&A: ”EU Should Place Greater Importance on Latin America”

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Mario de Queiroz interviews MARIO SOARES

LISBON, Oct 23 (IPS) – Mario Soares, two times president and three times prime minister of Portugal, says he is sorry that the European Union has not yet understood the importance of strengthening relations with Latin America.

The EU should make relations with that region a real priority, ”but from my point of view it has failed to do so sufficiently or concretely,” the longtime leader of Portugal’s Socialist Party says in this interview with IPS correspondent Mario de Queiroz.

Recognised even by his adversaries as the ”father” of Portuguese democracy since the end of the country’s decades-long dictatorship in 1974, Mario Alberto Nobre Lopes Soares first became politically active at the age of 17 when he joined the clandestine opposition to the dictatorship of Antonio de Oliveira Salazar (1889-1970).
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