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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: NY Nica News Update #136, 9/6/92
- Message-ID: <1992Sep6.214400.18612@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Sun, 6 Sep 1992 21:44:00 GMT
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- Lines: 475
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.0 **/
- ** Topic: Weekly News Update #136, 9/6/92 **
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
-
- NICARAGUA SOLIDARITY NETWORK OF GREATER NEW YORK
- 339 LAFAYETTE ST., NEW YORK, NY 10012 (212) 674-9499
- WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE #136 SEPTEMBER 6, 1992
-
- In This Issue:
-
- 1. At Least 116 Dead After Tidal Waves Strike Nicaragua's
- Pacific Coast
- 2. Nicaraguan Police Chief Fired
- 3. US State Department Agrees With Helms: All Sandinistas
- Must Go
- 4. Nicaraguans React: "All Lies"
- 5. "Extraordinary" FSLN Congress Coming Up?
- 6. Other Nicaragua News: Atlantic Coast, Strikes, Arms
- 7. Brazilian President Refuses To Resign; Impeachment Almost
- Certain
- 8. Mexico: Free Trade, Strikes, Protests
- 9. FMLN Drafts Constitution
- 10. Salvadoran News Agency Threatened Again
- 11. Hurricane Andrew's Damage Increased by Corruption
- 12. Upcoming Events in the NYC Area
-
- These updates are published weekly. A one-year subscription is
- $25. Back issues and source materials are available on request.
- (Many of our source materials are accessed through Peacenet.)
- Feel free to reproduce these updates or reprint any information
- from them, but please credit us. We welcome your comments and
- ideas: send them via Peacenet to <nicanetny>.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.1 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 1. AT LEAST 116 DEAD AFTER TIDAL WAVES STRIKE NICARAGUA'S PACIFIC
- COAST
- On Sept. 1, an earthquake off the Pacific coast of Nicaragua
- registering 7.2 on the Richter scale caused tidal waves as high
- as 45 feet which hit a stretch of coastline 140 miles long at
- 6:16 in the evening. In low-lying coastal fishing villages and
- towns, raging waters pushed as far as 1,500 meters inland. So far
- 116 people are dead, 150 more are missing, and at least 16,000
- homeless. [New York Times 9/3/92, 9/4/92; Latin America Database
- 9/4/92 from Notimex, AFP] The earthquake's epicenter was located
- 75 miles southwest of Managua. The resulting tidal wave affected
- every community from the Costa Rican border to the Port of
- Corinto; whole fishing villages were washed away, neighborhoods
- in Corinto were flooded and two small islands protecting the port
- were struck by a six foot wave. The Nicaraguan government is
- evacuating the entire Pacific coastline to protect the population
- from aftershocks. [Nicaragua Network (DC) Hotline 9/2/92]
-
- To contribute to relief measures for this latest natural disaster
- you can send your tax-deductible contribution to the Nicaragua
- Network Education Fund, 1247 E St., SE, Washington, DC 20003.
- Designate your contribution for tidal wave relief. Also, Casa
- Nicaragua in Philadelphia has organized a campaign to assist
- victims of the tidal wave: donations can be sent to the American
- Red Cross/Nicaragua Fund, 23rd & Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
- PA 19103, or by calling 1-800-257-7575. Casa Nicaragua is also
- seeking food and medicine to be sent to Nicaragua via a cargo
- plane: for more information call 215-288-0109. In addition, Quest
- for Peace continues to ship containers to Nicaragua, so if you
- have clothing, medicine, fishing nets, housewares, or other items
- that would help the people of the coast rebuild, call Quest for
- Peace (301-699-0042) to locate the container nearest you. [Nica
- Net Hotline 9/2/92; Casa Nicaragua Press Release 9/3/92]
-
- The US government, which initially indicated it would release
- only $25,000 in disaster relief, has made $5 million available.
- US diplomats cited in the New York Times indicated that the funds
- would come from previously-approved aid which has been held up by
- aid officials, not from the $104 million held up by the State
- Department [see #3 below]. [9/4/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.2 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 2. NICARAGUAN POLICE CHIEF FIRED
- President Violeta Chamorro announced on Sep.5 that National
- Police Chief Rene Vivas and eleven of his aides were being
- removed from their posts, and swore in his replacement, Fernando
- Caldera Azmitia. She also appointed a civilian, Ronald Aviles, as
- the new vice minister for public security, who will have direct
- authority over the police and report to the Governance Minister,
- Alfredo Medieta. [NYT 9/6/92]
-
- Vivas, along with Sandinista Popular Army head Gen. Humberto
- Ortega, had been a particular target of Sen. Jesse Helms (R-NC),
- who this spring asked the State Department to hold up aid to
- Nicaragua because the Sandinistas still occupy important
- government posts. [NYT 9/6/92] Presumably Chamorro hopes that
- Caldera, although also a Sandinista, will be more acceptable to
- Helms. Vivas had been criticized by UNO and FSLN elements in
- Nicaragua for being too lenient or too harsh, respectively, with
- strikers, anti-government demonstrators and irregular armed
- groups.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.3 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 3. US STATE DEPARTMENT AGREES WITH HELMS: ALL SANDINISTAS MUST GO
- The US State Department sharply criticized President Violeta
- Chamorro's administration on Sep. 1, charging that the government
- had failed to investigate murders of former contras, and has
- moved slowly on returning property that was confiscated by the
- Sandinistas following the triumph of the Revolution in July,
- 1979. State Department spokesperson Richard Boucher also
- criticized Chamorro's record on judicial, economic and military
- reform, and announced that a delegation led by deputy assistant
- secretary of state for Central American affairs John Maisto would
- leave for Managua Sep. 2 to investigate these and other matters.
- [Washington Post 9/2/92]
-
- Boucher's charges echoed a report released Aug. 30 by Republican
- staff members of the Senate Foreign Relations commitee, which
- charged that "all real power" in Chamorro's government "remains
- with the Sandinistas." The 144-page report, written by Deborah De
- Moss, longtime aide to Sen. Helms, alleges that the country is
- run by Presidency Minister Antonio Lacayo and Gen. Humberto
- Ortega, head of the armed forces and a member of the Sandinista
- National Directorate until President Chamorro took office in
- 1990; that 217 former contras have been murdered since April 1990
- and none of these murders have been investigated; and that
- Sandinistas still control the army police, courts, intelligence
- services and all other major government agencies. [WP 9/1/92; NYT
- 9/3/92]
-
- The State Department has been holding up $104 million in US aid
- to Nicaragua in response to a request by Helms, making Nicaragua
- unable to meet upcoming foreign debt payments and threatening to
- destabilize the currency. A Washington Post editorial criticized
- the State Department, saying "the overwhelming requirement on
- American policy is to get off the back of the democratic
- government.... Instead, Mr. Bush lets Mr. Helms be his election-
- year secretary of state for Nicaragua." [9/2/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.4 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 4. NICARAGUANS REACT: "ALL LIES"
- Many in Nicaragua reacted angrily to the news, including Lacayo,
- who said "I have read the first two pages of the report and it is
- full of lies." Former president and FSLN Secretary General Daniel
- Ortega said the Moss report demonstrated that Helms and US
- Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American affairs Bernard
- Aronson were "trying to govern Nicaragua from abroad." Ortega
- warned the Chamorro administration not to bow to US pressures:
- "If the government yields, then the people will wake up, and the
- Sandinistas will support them. If the government falls, then so
- be it. Another will come, and if that doesn't work either, then
- another will come." Ortega concluded that, given the trend of
- diminishing US aid levels throughout the region, the government
- has no reason to bow to pressures for release of the funds.
-
- In Washington, Nicaraguan Ambassador to the US Ernesto Palazio
- released a statement declaring that the Moss report was
- "deceitful, misleading and unfair to [our] fledgling democracy
- and its people..." Palazio said that "Sen. Helms' staff is out
- there by itself hurling insults at people who are trying hard to
- mend our country. They are acting like loose cannons." He added
- that the US aid freeze is making it even more difficult for the
- government to implement reforms. President Chamorro commented
- that the report "doesn't make me sick, nor does it bother me, and
- the less we hear about it, the better." [LADB 9/4/92 from
- Barricada, AFP, AP, UPI, Reuter, Notimex]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.5 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 5. "EXTRAORDINARY" FSLN CONGRESS COMING UP?
- According to Sandinista National Assembly deputy Dora Maria
- Tellez, at the Aug. 7 meeting of the Sandinista Assembly, Daniel
- Ortega broached the idea of holding a second party congress in
- the relatively near future. Such a congress would be
- "extraordinary," given that current statutes envision another
- meeting only in 1995, and would be dedicated to filling the gaps
- left open at the First Congress in terms of party strategy and
- program. Though Tellez said she considered reopening the
- leadership question "secondary," the possibility of a new
- congress spurred demands for a fresh election of the National
- Directorate (DN). (At the previous Congress in July 1991 she was
- the only alternative candidate to the reelection of all incumbent
- members of the DN.) With the apparent backing of the so-called
- "center group" in the FSLN, former tourism minister Herty Lewites
- announced he would seek a place in the top leadership. The
- Lewites bid comes in the midst of DN member Luis Carrion's recent
- departure for the United States to study, along with indications
- that Jaime Wheelock is considering the same move.
-
- Serious differences over the holding of another congress quickly
- surfaced, however, with DN member Henry Ruiz arguing that
- "conditions are not propitious, and might even lead the FSLN into
- more difficult and perhaps traumatic situation if things are done
- hastily." Ruiz said a new congress only makes sense if the party
- is prepared for a serious, in-depth change, and is untimely in
- view of the grave national problems the country is now facing. In
- a round table discussion with journalists on Radio Ya on Aug. 25,
- Daniel Ortega kept the congress issue open but appeared to
- minimize prospects for another leadership election, saying that
- removal of DN members would have to be done in a "very gradual,
- nontraumatic and constructive way." [Central America Historical
- Institute Memo #241 8/20-26/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.6 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 6. OTHER NICARAGUA NEWS: ATLANTIC COAST, TRANSPORT STRIKE,
- HELICOPTERS
- On Aug. 25, the South Atlantic Regional Council voted to remove
- Governor Alvin Guthrie from his position and replace him with
- Sandinista councilmember Ray Hooker. Guthrie appealed a similar
- vote May 4 claiming that there wasn't a quorum present; after the
- Supreme Court failed to rule on the appeal within the 45 days
- mandated by law, the council held a new vote. This time 25 of the
- 43 members voted to replace Guthrie with Hooker: three UNO
- councilmembers joined nineteen Sandinistas and three YATAMA
- members. [Nicaragua Network (DC) Hotline 8/31/92]... The
- Nicaraguan transport strike which started Aug. 20 was suspended
- Aug. 24 pending negotiation of road taxes. The strike closed
- product transport over the borders, quickly resulting in market
- shortages. Meanwhile the pro-FSLN teachers union ANDEN announced
- staggered work stoppages seeking a pay increase, compliance with
- the collective bargaining agreement, employment guarantees, and
- teacher training. [Nica Net Hotline 8/31/92]... A Peruvian
- official announced Aug. 25 that Peru has purchased sixteen
- Soviet-made helicopters from the Nicaraguan military [see Update
- #132] for $20 million. The helicopters will be used to fight the
- Peruvian Communist Party (also known as Sendero Luminoso), the
- Mao-inspired insurgent group that controls up to a third of
- Peru's countryside and is increasing its influence in Lima, the
- nation's capital. [Inter Press Service 8/25/92] Security has
- reportedly been tightened at the Nicaraguan embassy in Lima
- following the announcement of the sale. [CAHI #241 8/20-26/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.7 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 7. BRAZILIAN PRESIDENT REFUSES TO RESIGN; IMPEACHMENT ALMOST
- CERTAIN
- On Sep. 1, the Brazilian Bar Association and Press Association
- filed a formal request for the impeachment of Brazil's President
- Fernando Collor de Mello so he can face charges of lying and
- profiting from corruption. While procedural matters may delay
- impeachment for up to a month, 354 Congressional deputies plan to
- vote for impeachment, 18 more than the two-thirds majority needed
- for such a move. After impeachment, Collor would face a trial
- before the Senate, 51 of whose 83 members already say they will
- vote to convict him. A two-thirds majority of the Senate is
- required to remove a Brazilian president from office permanently.
- [NYT 8/31/92, 9/2/92, 9/6/92]
-
- Although Collor's chief political strategist calls the
- impeachment vote "a lost cause," Collor announced, "We will win
- the vote" in a nationally-televised speech on Aug. 30, adding the
- next day, "I'm not the kind of man to resign." [NYT 8/31/92,
- 9/2/92] Collor apparently plans to fund pet projects of
- Congresspeople who may be convinced to vote against impeachment,
- but he has run into problems: the Economy Minister has refused to
- spend money on such projects, and the bank employees in Brasilia,
- the nation's capital, are unlikely to be helpful since they
- support the leftist Workers Party (PT), whose presidential
- candidate, Luiz Inacio "Lula" da Silva carried Brasilia en route
- to his close second place finish in the 1989 elections. [NYT
- 9/6/92]
-
- While Collor struggles to cling to power, attention is turning to
- Vice President Itamar Franco, who will become temporary president
- if Collor is impeached. Franco has displayed great pragmatism
- during his career, abandoning his criticism of the International
- Monetary Fund and foreign investment when he had the opportunity
- to run for Vice President on Collor's ticket. (He has since quit
- Collor's National Reconstruction Party.) He sought to run as the
- PT's candidate for governor of Minas in 1982 and 1986, and has
- opposed privatization, but his friends say he will generally
- continue Collor's free market policies. [NYT 9/5/92]
-
- Meanwhile, police sought the arrest of two of Collor's former
- aides on charges of obstructing investigation of government
- corruption. Television reports said the police had evidence that
- the two, Claudio Vieira and Paulo Cesar Farias, Collor's former
- campaign treasurer who is at the center of the scandal, have been
- trying to intimidate witnesses in the investigation. [NYT 9/3/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.8 **/
- ** Written 1:40 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 8. MEXICO: FREE TRADE, STRIKES, PROTESTS
- The US government made part of the North American Free Trade
- Agreement (NAFTA) on public on Sep. 5, with a promise that the
- rest of the text would be released Sep. 8. The accord has been
- under review by government lawyers since it was signed by Canada,
- Mexico and the US on Aug. 12. [NYT 9/5/92] Meanwhile, the Mexican
- Confederation of Workers (CTM) announced on Aug. 30 that its 13
- million members would support the ongoing strike of 22,000
- textile workers with a one-hour work stoppage Sep. 10; the job
- actions are to increase by one hour a day until the strike is
- general or the textile council gives in. "We have to win this
- strike at all costs," says the CTM's 92-year old head Fidel
- Velazquez. The confederation is allied with the ruling
- Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI), the major promoter of
- NAFTA, which business leader Vicente Gutierrez Camposeco says may
- destroy 70% of Mexico's light industry, especially the textile,
- garment and electronic sectors. [La Jornada (Mexico) 8/30/92]
-
- The PRI faced more problems on Aug. 29 when about 50,000
- supporters of the opposition Democratic Revolution Party (PRD)
- filled most of Mexico City's mammoth Zocalo plaza, joining
- unemployed oil and fishing industry workers who remain camped in
- front of the National Palace. The left-leaning PRD, headed by
- former PRI dissident Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, was protesting what it
- considers a fraudulent PRI victory in Michoacan state elections
- last July. Banners called President Carlos Salinas de Gortari a
- dictator; one read: "Brazil--Collor de Mello. Mexico--Salinas de
- Gortari." [LJ 8/30/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.9 **/
- ** Written 1:41 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 9. FMLN DRAFTS CONSTITUTION
- On Sep. 1, in a ceremony attended by representatives of political
- parties, popular organizations, the Catholic Church and foreign
- diplomats, about 125 leaders of the Farabundo Marti National
- Liberation Front (FMLN) signed a draft constitution and bylaws
- that will serve as the basis for establishment of a formal
- political party. The draft constitution's eight chapters include
- a statement of principles such as "profound humanization" of the
- country's social, economic and political system; a commitment to
- the "poor majority"; efforts to achieve national unity through
- "concertacion" and dialogue; struggle for the rights of youth and
- children;
- defense and promotion of the rights of women; protection of the
- environment; and Central American unity.
-
- The constitution stipulates that a National Convention will be
- the party's highest decision-making authority. In the interim
- between Convention meetings, the party is to be run by a National
- Council composed of 50 members elected by the Convention for two-
- year terms, as well as representatives elected by each of the
- party's departmental branches, who will serve three-year terms.
- The National Council will elect from among its members a 10-
- person Political Commission, which will be responsible for the
- day-to-day affairs of the party and will make recommendations on
- programs and actions to the National Council and the Convention.
- The Political Commission will also appoint a coordinator, who
- will be the party's legal representative.
-
- Juan Ramon Medrano, a member of the FMLN's current political
- commission, said the FMLN "will be a revolutionary, democratic
- and pluralist party," whose principal fronts of struggle will be
- "demilitarization of the country, democratization of the state,
- and the socialization of private property." Under current
- Salvadoran legislation, the adoption of formal statutes and
- bylaws is the first step in the process of securing legal status
- for a political party. [LADB 9/4/92 from AFP]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.10 **/
- ** Written 1:41 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 10. SALVADORAN NEWS AGENCY THREATENED AGAIN
- Less than two months after arson destroyed the offices of
- Salpress, the Salvadoran news agency is receiving new threats. On
- August 27, an anonymous caller warned, "Salpress will burn
- again," and the following day a caller threatened the life of
- Salpress Director Ricardo Gomez. There has still been no official
- report from any government agency about the Jul. 2 fire, and
- officials have interviewed no one but Salpress staff. The threats
- against Salpress come during the worst wave of violence to hit El
- Salvador since the Feb. 1 cease fire. According to the human
- rights group CODEFAM, 39 people were assassinated in the month of
- August alone, and another 7 disappeared.
-
- Meanwhile, two human rights commissions created as part of the
- peace agreements are moving forward with investigations which are
- almost certain to implicate top Army officers. The Ad Hoc
- Commission, whose mandate is to review the records of military
- officers, recently requested a one-month extension in order to
- compile more evidence. The Truth Commission, responsible for
- investigating the most serious human rights cases, opened its
- doors to the public in order to hear testimony from survivors.
- Thirty names have been presented to the Ad-Hoc Commission in
- connection with the murder of six Jesuit priests in 1989, and the
- non-governmental Human Rights Commission (CDHES) submitted a list
- of 78 officers who are accused of violating human rights. The
- attacks against Salpress may be connected to efforts by the Army
- to sabotage the work of the Truth Commission and the Ad Hoc
- Commission.
- After the July 2 fire, CDHES suggested that the motive may have
- been the destruction of archives which could have helped the
- Commissions document Army human rights abuses. Urge your
- Congresspeople (Congressional Switchboard: 202-224-3121) to call
- President Alfredo Cristiani to express concern over the threats
- against Salpress, and push him to investigate the July 2 Salpress
- fire and the current threats; also, urge them to end all military
- aid to El Salvador: Senators should be encouraged to sign on to
- the Specter-De Concini letter, which calls for the transfer of
- all military aid into the Demobilization and Transition Fund.
- Representatives should be urged to support a conferenced bill
- containing similar language. [CISPES Alert 9/1/92]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.11 **/
- ** Written 1:41 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 11. HURRICANE ANDREW'S DAMAGE INCREASED BY CORRUPTION
- Miami-based anti-Castro Cuban columnist Luis Ortega charges that
- Miami's Cuban-American political and business leaders are
- responsible for the devastation that left 250,000 Floridians
- homeless in the wake of Hurricane Andrew. They created "a vast
- system of corruption," he writes, which left Miami "a cardboard
- city where everything is appearance and cosmetics... For years
- the main business in Miami has been to have a good friend in the
- bank so as to get a $1 million loan to build a building that
- might cost half as much." [El Diario-La Prensa (NY) 9/2/92] The
- FBI and the US Attorney's Office in Miami have now begun an
- investigation of "systematic violations" of building codes in
- South Florida. [NYT 9/6/92] Meanwhile, the area is rife with
- rumors that federal and state authorities burned and otherwise
- hid the bodies of hundreds of hurricane victims in order to
- underreport the death toll. The unknown victims are often said to
- be Haitian and Mexican migrant workers. [NYT 9/5/92; ED-LP 9/4/92
- from Notimex]
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- /** reg.nicaragua: 135.12 **/
- ** Written 1:41 pm Sep 6, 1992 by nicanetny in cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-
- 12. UPCOMING EVENTS IN THE NYC AREA
-
- [For more information, call NSN at 212-674-9499. Events listed
- and flyers enclosed are not necessarily endorsed by the Nicaragua
- Solidarity Network.]
-
- 9/11 FRI, 8 PM - "Friday with Cuba" video series. "Por Quien
- Merece Amor" featuring Silvio Martinez and Grupo Irakere. Casa de
- las Americas, 104 W 14th St. Call 212-675-2584.
-
- 9/12 SAT, 1 PM - Radical Walking Tour of the East Village. Meet
- at Astor Place. $6. Call 718-492-0069 for more information.
-
- 9/12 SAT, 7 PM - Celebrate the birthday of Puerto Rican
- independentist Don Pedro Albizu Campos, with speakers and
- cultural performances. Casa de las Americas, 104 W 14th St. Call
- 212-538-0988.
-
- SPREAD THE WORD ABOUT NICARAGUA! The NSN Speakers Bureau is
- available to speak at any event--in English or Spanish--about the
- current situation in Nicaragua and what activists in this country
- can do to help. For details call 212-674-9499.
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.nicaragua **
-