Last week Representative Raul Grijalva (AZ-7) introduced HR 2076, The Border Security and Responsibility Act of 2009. The purpose of this bill is to restore the rule of law to the borderlands, protect communities, federal lands, and wildlife habitat from the destructive impacts of the border wall.
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 Timeshere and in The Washington Post, “Obama Closes Summit, Vows Broader Engagement with Latin America,” April 20, 2009).
President Obama today returned the right of Cuban Americans to travel to Cuba whenever they want and to support their families with remittances in whatever amount. We applaud that action. And we urge the President to do more. Watch this video of Silvia Wilhelm, founder and executive director of Puentes Cubanos, asking for “travel for all” in addition to “travel for some.”
"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.
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.
El Salvador celebrated a historical presidential election on Sunday,
March 15th. The Farabundo Marti Front for National Liberation (FMLN),
the former Salvadoran guerilla movement during the 12-year civil war,
won 51.3% to 48.7% for the conservative ARENA party. Mauricio Funes,
the president-elect, became the first left-leaning president in the
country’s history. His victory puts an end to the twenty years of ARENA
party rule and makes El Salvador the latest to join a growing number of
Latin American countries that have democratically chosen leftist
governments.
Check out this Friday afternoon article with news from the White House on President Obama’s apparent intention to announce an end to all restrictions on Cuban-American family travel and remittances to Cuba . . . prior to the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago in mid-April. Momentum is building. The world will notice. The next move is congressional action on “travel for all.” here.
At a Capitol Hill news conference scheduled for tomorrow, a wide array of senators and interest groups -- including Senate Democratic Policy Committee Chairman Byron L. Dorgan (N.D.); Banking Committee Chairman Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.); Richard G. Lugar (Ind.), the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; the U.S. Chamber of Commerce; and Human Rights Watch -- will rally around a potentially historic bill to lift the travel ban.
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.”