by Lisa Haugaard
on April 29, 2009
As our country is reflecting upon the use of torture by U.S. interrogators since 9/11, some history and literature from Latin America’s dirty wars offers insights. A new translation of Uruguayan author Mario Benedetti’s play Pedro and the Captain, about to be released by Cadmus Editions, provides an unblinking look into the psychology behind such abuses.
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by Travis Wheeler and Lisa Haugaard
on April 07, 2009
While many of our readers know that Colombian human rights defenders
are frequently targeted and stigmatized by public threats and innuendo
that call the very legitimacy of their work—and sometimes their
personal integrity—into question, what’s less well understood is how
often the voices of those denouncing human rights abuses are stifled by
baseless investigations and prosecutions.
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by Lisa Haugaard
on April 20, 2009
As our President addressed the gathering of the hemisphere’s leaders,
the Summit of the Americas, in Trinidad-Tobago, he got the tone right.
“There is no senior partner and junior partner in our relations; there
is simply engagement based on mutual respect and common interests and
shared values,” he said in his official speech. In other settings, he
went farther: “If our only interaction with many of these countries is
drug interdiction, if our only interaction is military, then we may not
be developing the connections that can, over time, increase our
influence,” he said, noting that Cuba’s sending of doctors to care for
the poor in other countries offered an example to the United States. He also stated he is “absolutely opposed and condemn any efforts at
violent overthrows of democratically elected governments” (reported in The New York Times here and in The Washington Post, “Obama Closes Summit, Vows Broader Engagement with Latin America,” April 20, 2009).
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by Travis Wheeler and Lisa Haugaard
on March 26, 2009
Speaking to reporters after a local “security council” meeting in Norte
de Santander earlier this week, President Uribe claimed that only 22 of
the many hundreds of cases of “false positives” civilian killings by
the Colombian army in recent years have any “judicial foundation.”
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by Lisa Haugaard
on April 13, 2009
"For 25 years we knew absolutely nothing," said Alejandra García Montenegro, 26, who was a baby when her father, labor leader Fernando García, left for a meeting in February 1984—when Guatemala was under military rule—and never came home. "It was as if the earth had swallowed up my father and he had never existed," she said.
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by Lisa Haugaard
on March 11, 2009
Day after day we hear nightmarish stories of gangland slayings in Mexico, as drug-related violence expands, affecting the lives of countless families and communities across Mexico, as well as the U.S-Mexico border region. Mexico’s Attorney General estimates that rival drug cartels killed 6,262 people in 2008.
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