Saturday, December 24, 2011
Weekend World Watch: Holiday Spirit
* Israel: Over 120,000 pilgrims and tourists are estimated to have gathered in Bethlehem in order to celebrate Christmas.
* Libya: For the first time since 1969 Libya will publicly celebrate its day of independence, which was sixty years ago on this date.
* Russia: Tens of thousands of protesters rallied in several Russian cities calling for new parliamentary elections and the resignation of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
* North Korea: Kim Jong Un was named as the "supreme leader of the revolutionary armed forces" days after the death of his father, former ruler Kim Jong Il.
* India: A court ordered that 22 Internet companies, including Google and Facebook, remove “objectionable content” from their websites.
* Nigeria: At least 68 people were killed as a result of clashes between police and “Islamic militant group Boko Haram.”
Video Source – YouTube via Al Jazeera English
Online Sources – Voice of America, BBC News, ABC Online, USA TODAY, PC World, The Guardian
Labels:
Christmas,
independence,
India,
internet,
Kim Jong Un,
Libya,
Nigeria,
North Korea,
protest,
religion,
Russia,
violence,
Vladimir Putin,
World Watch
Weekend Headlines: December 24-25, 2011
* Cuba: The U.S. State Department is “deeply disappointed” that jailed contractor Alan Gross will not be among the 2900 prisoners to be reportedly released by the Cuban government.
* Central America: Nicaragua filed a lawsuit at the International Court of Justice against plans by neighboring Costa Rica to build a road along the banks of the San Juan River.
* U.S.: A federal judge ruled in favor of expanding a class action lawsuit against Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio to include every Latino questioned or detained by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office since January 2007.
* Brazil: Brazilian officials placed an additional $5.4 million fine on Chevron as a result of environmental damage from an offshore oil spill last month.
* Mexico: Authorities at the port of Lazaro Cardenas seized over 229 metric tons of chemicals that are used to make methamphetamine.
* South America: Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa said that he would deploy 10,000 troops along the border with Colombia due to security concerns.
Video Source –YouTube via euronews
Online Sources- Reuters, Voice of America, Huffington Post, Xinhua, MSNBC, AFP
Labels:
Alan Gross,
Brazil,
Chevron,
Colombia,
Costa Rica,
Cuba,
Ecuador,
immigration,
Joe Arpaio,
justice,
Mexico,
Nicaragua,
oil,
prison,
sovereignty,
war on drugs,
Weekend Headlines
Friday, December 23, 2011
Today’s Video: Tamales 101
We'll be back on the weekend with headlines from around the Americas and the world as well as posting our final poll of 2011.
For now we'll leave you with the following video from YouTube user xcookage on how to make Christmas tamales, a traditional holiday dish in several Latin American countries.
Buen provecho y felices fiestas!
Video Source - YouTube via xcookage
For now we'll leave you with the following video from YouTube user xcookage on how to make Christmas tamales, a traditional holiday dish in several Latin American countries.
Buen provecho y felices fiestas!
Video Source - YouTube via xcookage
World Watch: The Mind is Sharper than the Beak
* World: According to a study published in the latest issue of the journal Science pigeons posses basic math knowledge on par with certain primates like rhesus monkeys.
* Czech Republic: Mourners gathered at Prague’s St. Vitus Cathedral for the state funeral of recently deceased playwright, activist, and ex-president Vaclav Havel.
* Syria: The U.S. State Department condemned a series of car bombings in Syria that left over forty people dead and dozens injured.
* Europe: Turkey froze political and military ties with France in response to the French parliament's approval of a bill criminalizing denials of the Turkish genocide against Armenians over a century ago.
Image Source – Flickr via Aurelijus Valeiša (CC BY 2.0)
Online Sources – Discovery News, New York Times, Voice of America, CNN
Labels:
Czech Republic,
diplomacy,
France,
funeral,
pigeons,
science,
Syria,
Turkey,
Vaclav Havel,
violence,
World Watch
Daily Headlines: December 23, 2011
* Peru: Defeated presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori admitted that her family is seeking a pardon for her father, disgraced and imprisoned ex-president Alberto Fujimori.
* U.S.: A judge blocked several provisions of South Carolina’s staunch anti-immigration law that had been opposed to be over a dozen Latin American governments.
* Cuba: Over 180,00 Cubans could obtain Spanish citizenship via a “grandchildren’s law” though that number could spike ahead of the December 27th deadline to apply for benefits.
* Brazil: The country’s unemployment rate dropped to 5.2% in November; thus making it the lowest mark since records began in 2002.
* Central America: Citing “security concerns” the U.S. Peace Corps program will pull out of Honduras and have cancelled training classes for El Salvador and Guatemala.
Image Source – Flickr via Pedro Rivas Ugaz (“The headlines of Lima-based newspapers one day after ex-president Alberto Fujimori was sentenced to 25 years in prison” in 2009.) (CC BY 2.0).
Online Sources- MSNBC, Peru this Week, Bloomberg, LAHT, Fox News Latino
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Daily Headlines: December 22, 2011
* Ecuador: A statement from oil giant Chevron called for Ecuadorian authorities to investigate a judge that handed down a multibillion-dollar verdict against the oil giant last February.
* Latin America: The U.N.'s Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean said that the region’s economic growth is expected to slow down to 3.7% in 2012.
* U.S.: Attorneys representing fourteen Latin American countries filed an amicus brief criticizing a Utah anti-immigration law that “dangerously contributes to a patchwork of laws that impede effective and consistent diplomatic relations.”
* Haiti: The number of cholera cases reportedly continues to decline one year after an outbreak of the disease killed over 7000 people.
Image Source – Flickr via Steve Snodgrass (CC BY 2.0)
Online Sources- NPR, The Latin Americanist, Monsters & Critics, Deseret News, Huffington Post
Labels:
Caribbean,
Chevron,
cholera,
Daily Headlines,
Ecuador,
environment,
Haiti,
health,
immigration,
international economy,
Latin America,
Utah
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Ads Nauseam: Toy Soldiers
Toys: innocent, fun and entertaining. Yet they are sometimes used in ads in order to effectively make a serious political statement. For instance, a 1972 ad for the campaign to reelect U.S. President Richard Nixon used toy warships and troops in order to attack rival candidate George McGovern's pledge to cut defense spending.
The following video was commissioned by the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) in order to call attention to human rights violations caused by Colombia's armed conflict. The use of toys along with jarring piano music and a twist in the end creates a very moving ad that highlights the horrors of war:
(Hat tip: Copyranter).
Online Sources - The Museum of the Moving Image, Copyranter
Video Source - YouTube via TheAdvertisingFan
The following video was commissioned by the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) in order to call attention to human rights violations caused by Colombia's armed conflict. The use of toys along with jarring piano music and a twist in the end creates a very moving ad that highlights the horrors of war:
(Hat tip: Copyranter).
Online Sources - The Museum of the Moving Image, Copyranter
Video Source - YouTube via TheAdvertisingFan
Labels:
ads,
Colombia,
human rights,
refugees,
United Nations,
video
Daily Headlines: December 21, 2011
* Uruguay: The English Football Association suspended striker Luis Suarez over alleged racial abuse against an opposing player during a match last October.
* Peru: Julio Galindo, Peru’s “anti-terrorist attorney general”, was none too pleased that paroled activist Lori Berenson was allowed to leave the country in order to spend the holidays with her family.
* U.S.: The number of National Guard troops along the U.S.-Mexico will be reduced starting next month in order to put a greater emphasis on “aerial surveillance missions.”
* Argentina: The political tensions between the government and the Clarin media group are expected to worsen after police raided the offices of a Clarin-owned cable TV firm.
Image Source – Flickr via jikatu (#9 Luis Suarez celebrates with his teammates after scoring all four goals in Uruguay’s victory over Chile in World Cup qualifiers last month). (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Online Sources- USA TODAY, Reuters, Christian Science Monitor
Labels:
Argentina,
Daily Headlines,
immigration,
journalism,
Lori Berenson,
Luis Suarez,
Mexico,
National Guard,
Peru,
racism,
soccer
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Daily Headlines: December 20, 2011
* Puerto Rico: Though the murder rate this year will top a record 1100 homicides, the local government rejected a newspaper report claiming that Puerto Rico shows signs of being a ”narco-state.”
* Brazil: A judge ordered Joe Sharkey, the New York Times' business-travel columnist, to pay a fine of over $26,000 regarding a blog post he wrote on a 2006 plane crash.
* Honduras: The Committee to Protect Journalists issued a letter to Honduran President Porfirio Lobo expressing “deep concern” over violence against members of the media.
* South America: Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is expected to attend the Mercosur summit today in Uruguay and back his country’s full membership in the bloc.
Image Source – Flickr via Jason Sturner 72 (Torn poster in San Juan, Puerto Rico reading “Violence – coming to a corner near you.”)
Online Sources- The Committee to Protect Journalists, Fox News Latin, Brazzil Magazine, Mercopress
Monday, December 19, 2011
World Watch: Death
* North Korea: Could the death of Kim Jong-Il lead to the resumption of international nuclear negotiations that have been suspended since 2009?
* Czech Republic: Thousands of mourners in Prague paid their final respects to former president and activist Vaclav Havel who died on Sunday.
* Cape Verde: Grammy-award winning singer Cesária Évora passed away on Saturday at the age of 70.
* Philippines: Over 900 people have died in the Philippines as a result of flooding and heavy rains from tropical storm Washi.
Image Source – Flickr via jdxyw (“North Korean lawmakers, army and state officials attended a national meeting in 2010) at Pyongyang Indoor Stadium to honor North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.”) (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Online Sources – Sky News Australia, Huffington Post, CBC News, The Guardian
Daily Headlines: December 19, 2011
* Peru: Federal authorities have yet to explain why Lori Berenson was barred from leaving Peru despite a court allowing her to spend the holidays with her family in the U.S.
* Mexico: Senior officials issued an apology to an indigenous woman who was raped and tortured by the military in 2002.
* Cuba: Restrictions on travel and remittances from the U.S. to Cuba were dropped by Congress from a $1 trillion spending bill.
* Brazil: The environmental secretary for Rio de Janeiro state claimed that thousands of barrels of oil from a leak reached the shore.
Video Source – YouTube via larepublicaweb1 (The above video from Peruvian TV claimed that paroled activist Lori Berenson arrived late to the airport and subsequently missed her flight to the U.S. But according to Gothamist “witnesses claim that Berenson was ‘at the airport hours before the flight was to leave.’”)
Online Sources- Gothamist, Houston Chronicle, UPI, MSNBC, ABC News
Labels:
Brazil,
Cuba,
Daily Headlines,
indigenous,
Lori Berenson,
Mexico,
oil,
Peru,
remittances,
Rio de Janeiro,
travel,
violence against women
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