Here’s Venegas performing live last year at Coachella:
By the way, if you are going to the concert and see Maegan or I don’t hesitate to come over and say “hi!”
Sources- Vivirlatino, The Latin Americanist, YouTube, Huevos Pericos
The English-language forum for all things Latin American, covering business, politics, and culture.
Here’s Venegas performing live last year at Coachella:
By the way, if you are going to the concert and see Maegan or I don’t hesitate to come over and say “hi!”
Sources- Vivirlatino, The Latin Americanist, YouTube, Huevos Pericos
* Colombia: According to a communiqué by Colombia’s FARC rebels, the guerilla commanders overpowered in last week’s rescue mission “betrayed their revolutionary ideals.”
* Mexico: The country's National Human Rights Commission denounced the military for an increase in abuses including arbitrary arrests and torture.
* Brazil: Police raided the home and offices of Brazil's richest man who is being investigated for possible fraud and tax evasion.
* Cuba: The economic situation of the island “could worsen” and “key reforms” may be postponed according to a speech given by Cuban president Raul Castro.
Image- Los Angeles Times (“Military police escort FARC commander Gerardo Aguilar Ramirez, alias Cesar, left, who was in charge of the hostages, and another guerrilla” last week)
Sources- The Latin Americanist, Monsters & Critics, BBC News, Bloomberg, Guardian UK
So far, no tour dates in the U.S. or Europe have been set though we certainly hope that changes soon!
Sources- The Latin Americanist, YouTube, fabulosos-cadillacs.com.ar
* Venezuela: Will Alvaro Uribe’s visit to see Hugo Chavez today lead to renewed diplomatic ties between Colombia and Venezuela?
* Panama: A legal battle has continued over the will of an “eccentric American millionaire” who bequeathed $50 million to combat child malnutrition in Panama.
* Cuba: According to officials less foreign investment projects have taken place on the island since Raul Castro first took over on an interim basis in July 2006.
* El Salvador: Over 300 hundred new cases of HIV were found after a “National HIV Test Day” was carried out two weeks ago.
Image- AFP
Sources- The Press Association, The Independent, Reuters, Xinhua
The following is a very brief promo video for “Carried To Dust” which showcases the band’s sound:
A quick word of thanks to Quarterstick Records for informing us of Calexico’s upcoming album.
Sources- Casa de Calexico, NPR
“They are calling him names. They call him an animal in one section. His mom is spanking his butt and it looks like they are drowning him,” said (Shawnedria) McGinty, who went so far as to buy a Spanish dictionary to better understand the comic books.
As Guanabee observed, this isn’t the first time "Memin Pinguin" has been controversial in the U.S.:
“Memin Pinguin” caused a stir in the States a couple of years back when the Mexican government issued a postal stamp commemorating the character. The comic book was then reissued after not having been published for a number of years. So it’s a wee bit surprising, given the blacklash those stamps received, that Wal-Mart would decide to carry it in its stores. In the United States nonetheless! Now they are feeling the wrath of the African American community.
Image- CNN
Sources- CNN, Dallas Morning News, Reuters, Guanabee
The government declared the strike as illegal and claimed that 93% of the country’s workforce made it in for work. Yet the unions which organized the strike had declared it a success:
Marchers in Lima, the capital, carried signs urging Garcia to quit and calling him "right-wing" and a "traitor"…
"This is a government of the rich and of multinational corporations," said Mario Huaman, the leader of Peru's largest labor confederation. "The economic model must change ... people need higher wages."
Yesterday’s rallies coincided with a two-day farmer’s strike; farmers demanded that President Alan Garcia do more towards combating the rising cost of living in Peru. Copper prices grew earlier this month during a miners strike.
Image- BBC News
Sources- Reuters, Living in Peru, BBC News, Bloomberg,
* Latin America: A historic colonial Cuban town and a Mexican butterfly reserve were two of the 27 sites added to the list of World Heritage Sites by the U.N.
* Brazil: The G-5 group of developing countries- which includes Brazil and Mexico- did not see eye-to-eye with their wealthier counterparts during this week’s Group of Eight (G8) summit.
* Chile: Authorities continue to seek the world’s most wanted Nazi fugitive – Aribert “Dr. Death” Heim- who may be hiding in Chile or Argentina.
* Bolivia: A “special edition” of Che Guevara’s journals with forewords written by Fidel Castro and Evo Morales will soon be issued by the Bolivian government.
Image- Sydney Morning Herald (“A migrating monarch butterfly”)
Sources- Monsters & Critics, MSNBC, World Heritage Center, BBC News,
Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa claimed that the raids were justifiable in order to collect debts from “still extremely prosperous bankers” whose actions had crippled the country’s economy. The move was met with resistance from the former chiefs of the Filanbanco bank who currently live in Miami and are wanted by Ecuadorian prosecutors. Meanwhile one of the heads of the seized TV channels claimed that the government had engaged in censorship:
"This is an attack on freedom of expression," said Gamavision's manager, Carlos Dassum, who called on President Correa to rectify the situation.
"They're talking about Filanbanco's debts... we (Gamavision) don't owe anyone anything, we're an independent channel, we report and will continue to report the truth," he told the Spanish news agency Efe.
The incident, along with the subsequent resignation of the country’s Finance Minister, led to Ecuadorian bonds dropping by its steepest rate in almost three months.
Image- TIMESNOW.tv
Sources- BBC News, McClatchy Bureau, Canada.com, earthtimes.org
Meanwhile, the Democratic legislator touched on some of the same issues as McCain such as education, health care, and foreign policy. Yet Obama accused McCain of abandoning “his courageous stance” on immigration reform as he was campaigning for the GOP nomination. “America has nothing to fear from our newcomers,” added Obama as he vowed to make immigration reform a key priority if elected president.
A piece in today’s San Francisco Chronicle noted the problems with each of the candidate’s remarks on immigration:
McCain finds himself pinched between his sponsorship of a major immigration overhaul that failed last year in the Senate and his need to disown his own immigration bill that was loathed in his party…
When the bill came up for a vote, McCain largely left the fight to others as he devoted his time to running for president. He finally said in a Republican debate this year that he would not vote for his own bill now but would work on border security first…
Obama, who struggled to win Latinos during the primaries and played a minor role in the immigration debates, said he had "reached across the aisle in the Senate to fight for comprehensive immigration reform." In fact, while Obama sponsored some amendments, he was not a key negotiator and mainly stuck to the party line. If anything, his amendments and others he supported undermined the fragile bipartisan coalition backing the bill.
Image- The Telegraph (“Barack Obama addresses the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) convention”)
Sources- Washington Post, CBC.ca, SFGate.com, The Age, The Trail, Chicago Tribune“(The threats) are related to comments I made recently about those two (guerillas captured during the mission) but also based on my experience related to the FARC. I have been absolutely clear on how I lived,” said the ex-senator. – [ed. personal translation]
An interview given to the Colombian press shortly before he boarded his flight, Perez vowed to continue working hard for the freedom of all those held in captivity. Earlier this week, Perez told CNN that the hostages at times argued with each other and he blasted his guerilla captors for “treating people like animals.”
Image- BBC News (Image of Luis Eladio Perez during his time as a hostage)
Sources (English)- CNN, The Latin Americanist, Reuters Africa
Sources (Spanish)- Caracol Radio, El Tiempo
Molina will be the opening act for some of Feist’s concerts including tonight in Brooklyn. Her next album is set to come out in October.
FYI – Later this week we’ll look into the Latin Alternative Music Conference which started yesterday in New York.
Stay tuned!
Sources- juanamolina.com, Wikipedia, Brooklyn Vegan, YouTube, LAMC
* Latin America: Cervical cancer has killed 33,000 women in Latin America and without prevention the figure could rise to 70,000 by 2030 according to a recently released medical study.
* Puerto Rico: Controversy has erupted after Governor Aníbal Acevedo Vila proposed constructing a natural gas pipeline on the southern part of the island.
* Chile: Police and protestors clashed again in the capital Santiago over a government-backed education reform bill.
* Mexico: More causalities (so to speak) of last month’s deadly nightclub raid in Mexico City: the city’s police chief and top prosecutor resigned yesterday.
Image- ABC News Online (“Cervical cancer vaccine Gardasil is injected into a volunteer in Sydney, August 28, 2006 (AAP)”)
Sources- chicagotribune.com, BBC News, Caribbean Net News, The Latin Americanist, MSNBC
"There's no doubt: It's changing," Oakland Assistant General Manager David Forst said. "I don't think you see the A's as a player for a talent of this caliber a few years ago, but in order to compete and in order to maintain the health of our farm system, you have to be financially competitive in Latin America."
"The civilians should have never been kidnapped, neither should the soldiers have been kept prisoner in the conditions of the jungle. These were objectively cruel actions. No revolutionary purpose could justify it."
* Peru: A magnitude 6.0 quake rattled Peru this morning; the quake occurred nearly one year after a deadly tremor killed hundreds in the country.
* Venezuela: Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez suggested that OPEC subsidize some of the oil exported to impoverished countries.
* Mexico: Mexico City Attorney General Rodolfo Felix blamed the police for abusing and mistreating the survivors of a deadly nightclub raid last month.
* Colombia: “(The FARC) are not a revolutionary group. They are terrorists,” said one of the U.S. contractors freed last week from his guerilla captors.
Image- TIME (“Members of a church inspect the ruins with a firefighter in Pisco, Peru, August 19, 2007.”)
Sources- AFP, The Latin Americanist, Reuters, CNN
What about other forms of entertainment? Over the weekend Betancourt admitted that she has plans to write a play based on her time in captivity. In remarks made to Le Journal du Dimanche:
"I shall return to Colombia in a few days. Meanwhile I want to see France, all of France. But I also want to be alone with my children ... I want to give this time to my family, to the father of my children whom I adore, who fought an extraordinary fight for me."
Asked whether she would write a book about her experience, she replied: "I'll write a play."
In other developments:
Sources- CNN, ABS-CBN News Online, Canadian Press, azcentral.com, AFP, YouTube, the Telegraph, ABC News Online
* Latin America: John McCain ended his mini-tour of Latin America last week where he emphasized his disagreement with Barack Obama over free trade and praised the center-right governments of Mexico and Colombia. Yet according to BBC News, the differences between the two presidential hopeful on Latin America is minimal.
* Chile: Could a “fruit-bearing cactus” be the key to easing Chile’s energy problems?
* Peru: Mine workers ended a week-long national strike late last night according to government officials.
* U.S.: Conservative stalwart/ultra bigot (depending on your opinion) Jesse Helms died last week; he co-authored a law strengthening the embargo of Cuba and backed Argentina in the Falklands War.
* El Salvador: Heavy rains and flash floods have claimed the lives of at least 15 people.
* Cuba: A “top rights activist” claimed that the island’s government cracked down on over 30 dissidents in anticipation alleged protests.
* Ecuador: Lastly, congrats to LDU Quito who won the Copa Libertadores soccer tourney after a thrilling match against Brazil’s Fluminense:
Sources- BBC News, Boston.com, Reuters UK, Bloomberg, Star-Telegram.com, AFP, cbc.ca, Time, YouTube, The Offside