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- <text id=90TT3158>
- <title>
- Nov. 26, 1990: Meanwhile, Back In Panama
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 26, 1990 The Junk Mail Explosion!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 38
- PANAMA
- Meanwhile, Back in Panama
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>If the Noriega trial seems like a fiasco, consider the plight
- of his country one year after the U.S. invasion
- </p>
- <p>By RICARDO CHAVIRA/PANAMA CITY
- </p>
- <p> Even as the case against Manuel Noriega was degenerating
- into a legal three-ring circus, the country he once dominated
- was mired in a deep slump. Nearly a year after being installed
- by the U.S. invasion, the government of President Guillermo
- Endara is stumbling badly in the monumental chore of rebuilding
- a country devastated by corruption and the financial squeeze
- applied by the U.S. during the final two years of Noriega's
- reign. Though Bush Administration officials praise Endara for
- his good intentions, they fear that he and his government may
- not be up to the task of converting Panama into a stable
- democracy.
- </p>
- <p> One example of Panama's woes is the Atlantic Coast city of
- Colon (pop. 100,000). Once a prosperous port of call for ocean
- liners, today the country's second largest city seems to harbor
- only misery. Rotting tenements line the streets, unemployment
- exceeds 25%, drug use and violent crime are rampant. Deane
- Hinton, the American ambassador to Panama, first visited Colon
- in 1938, when it was "a beautiful city." Now, he says, it is
- "a disaster area."
- </p>
- <p> The city's tragic transformation began in the 1950s, when
- an economic boom in Panama City diverted investment and, later,
- government spending from Colon. But after Noriega was
- overthrown, there was hope that Colon might begin to recover.
- More than 80 residents, most of them unarmed civilians, were
- killed in the U.S. invasion, but even that toll seemed an
- acceptable price for Colon's rehabilitation. "We thought maybe
- this government would remember us," says Father Carlos Ariz,
- bishop of Colon. "Instead the government says it has no way to
- help."
- </p>
- <p> So far this year, although the U.S. has given Panama $130
- million to pay off arrears on its $5 billion foreign debt,
- Washington has laid out only $70 million in direct aid. "What
- we're giving them is not even equal to direct damages caused
- by the invasion," says former U.S. Ambassador Ambler Moss, who
- estimates the destruction's price tag to be $1 billion.
- Meanwhile, the surge in global oil prices has dealt the country
- an unexpected and potentially disastrous blow. Totally
- dependent on imported oil, Panama expects to see its petroleum
- costs double to $300 million next year. Says Comptroller
- General Ruben Carles: "The economy is strangled."
- </p>
- <p> Drug trafficking and money laundering, which reached
- epidemic proportions under Noriega, continue to flourish. More
- than 13,000 lbs. of cocaine--worth $153 million wholesale in
- the U.S.--have been seized since January. "One can only
- surmise that if this much is being seized, a lot more is
- moving," says Hinton. At the same time, U.S. attempts to
- control money laundering have been stymied by Panama's banking
- laws, which remain unchanged since Noriega's days. Washington
- is eager to negotiate a treaty that would give American
- investigators access to secret accounts when they suspect
- criminal activity. But Endara's associates claim this would
- destroy the banking industry.
- </p>
- <p> Endara's task is not made easier by the fact that he
- presides over a coalition government whose members seem to have
- spent more time sniping at one another than governing. Critics
- accuse the President and his ministers of handing out jobs to
- cronies and relatives. That is part of a larger problem: Endara
- and company are a throwback to the white-dominated governments
- that ruled Panama until 1968. Military dictator Omar Torrijos
- came to power that year and revolutionized the country by
- giving government posts to blacks and mixed-race Panamanians--some 90% of the country's 2.4 million people. The trend
- continued with Noriega, and so while the abuses of 21 years of
- military rule were rampant, nonwhite, frequently poor
- Panamanians achieved unprecedented upward mobility. Under
- Endara the rabiblancos, or "white tails," as wealthy whites are
- known, are ascendant once more.
- </p>
- <p> Endara officials protest that it's unfair to expect rapid
- solutions to Panama's problems. But it's equally unrealistic
- to expect eternal patience from Panamanians. Leftist parties
- and labor unions are the natural beneficiaries of popular
- unrest. In recent weeks, antigovernment protesters have clashed
- with riot police and blocked a major highway in the capital.
- "It's not yet a simmering discontent," says a top Bush aide.
- "But you can just start to see the steam rising."
- </p>
- <p> While the U.S. appears intent on lowering its profile in
- Panama--troop strength is below 10,000, less than half of
- what it was during the invasion--some in the new government
- maintain that without extensive American involvement, the
- fledgling democracy might collapse. Meanwhile, the Endara
- government remains absorbed in its efforts to eliminate the
- vestiges of Noriega. The general's Panama Defense Forces have
- been replaced with a police force, and criminal charges are
- pending against nearly 50 ex-military men. Banishing Noriega's
- ghost is vital. Yet moving ahead is even more important.
- American officials say they want to hand over the canal as
- scheduled on Dec. 31, 1999. Whether the waterway ends up in the
- control of a stable democracy or a new dictatorship may depend
- on Endara's questionable ability to win the confidence of
- Panama's battered and alienated poor.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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