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    Central America ReportSummer 2010

    Also in this issue:

    Archbishop Romeroremembered, trade union

    solidarity, the real world cup,

    Honduras update

    Gold miningGuatemalan indigenous

    communities denounceCanadian firm

    Transnational companysues El Salvador

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    Editorial

    Published by Central America Report,86 Durham Road, London N7 7DTEmail: [email protected]

    Editorial committee: Ruth Collins, CherylGallagher, James Poke, Megan Rowling,Helen Yuill

    Cover photos: Residents of Sipakapa andSan Miguel Ixtahuacan, Guatemala and theMarlin gold mine, owned by Canadianmining company Goldcorp. Photos by:Allan Lissner

    Design: Jane Warring

    Our thanks to all the contributors for helpingto produce this issue of CAR. The articles inthis magazine should be taken as having

    been written in a personal capacity, unlessotherwise stated. Any views stated in thearticles should not be taken to represent thepolicy of any of the organisations that supportthe production of Central America Report.

    Provocative militarism

    RETIRING FROM THE US ARMED FORCES in 1935, GeneralSmedley Butler reflected with remarkable frankness on his 33-yearcareer with the Marine Corps: In short I was a racketeer for capitalism

    I helped make Mexico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helpedmake Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys tocollect revenues. I helped in the rape of half a dozen Central Americarepublics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for theinternational banking house Brown Brothers in 1909 12 I helpedmake Honduras right for the America fruit companies in 1903.Boasting of a swell racket for which he was rewarded with honours,medals and promotion, he noted he could have given Al Caponea few hints. He went on to condemn war profiteers and warned ofthe evils of provocative militarism.

    In this issue, we highlight how US domination continues to shapeCentral America with the aim of stifling any perceived threat to itsinterests. We reflect on the hundreds of thousands of lives lost in the1980s war on democracy, including Archbishop Romero, gunned downin 1980 by a member of death squads tacitly supported by Washington.Until 2009, a thick wall of impunity surrounded the cases of the estimated45,000 people who disappeared in Guatemala under murderous regimespropped up by the US. Nathalie Mercier reports on a rare breakthrough:the first conviction of a high-ranking military officer.

    The racketeering that Smedley Butler referred to continues today with

    the move by mining company Pacific Rim to sue El Salvador under theCentral America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) for refusing a goldextraction permit. Nor would the Honduras coup have succeededwithout the tacit support of powerful US business interests and political

    backers. Despite widespread international condemnation of the coup,those implicated remain in power, as human rights abuses against thosewho opposed the coup multiply.

    All these threats to sovereignty and democracy in Central America arehappening within the wider context of intensified political, military andpropaganda threats against Cuba, Venezuela and other countries in the

    Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA). They include plans foradditional military bases in Honduras and Panama, which have graveimplications for regional stability. Smedley Butlers warning of the evils ofprovocative militarism remains as relevant today as it was 75 years ago.

    * Washingtons war on Nicaragua, Holly Sklar, 1988

    ContentsArchbishop Romero remembered 3

    Cheryl Gallagher talks to JulianFilochowski of the Romero Trustabout the legacy of the Archbishop

    A story of betrayal 4Betrayed by their own politicians andmilitary and the international community, theHonduran resistance movement continues

    Keeping Nicaraguas forests alive 5

    John Perry reports on a trees for lifeproject in Leicesters twin town of Masaya

    Regional update 6

    Cracks in the wall of silence 7

    Nathalie Mercier reports on the firstconviction of high ranking membersof the military in Guatemala fordisappearances in the 1980s

    Your gold or your money 8 9The Central America Free Trade Agreement(CAFTA) opens the door for transnationalcompanies to sue governments that refusemining permits, Martin Mowforth writes

    Indigenous committees denounce

    Canadian mining company

    in Guatemala 1011

    Banana unions demand their rights 12

    Anna Cooper, Banana Link, highlightsthe success of the World Banana Forumfrom the point of view of the unions

    Team Nicaragua success at the

    Street Child World Cup 13Cheryl Gallagher talks to team membersabout their pride in their achievements

    Solidarity between young

    trade unionists 14

    UNISON member Matt Egan describesthe commitment and passion of youngNicaraguan trade unionists

    Take action 15 16

    *

    Central America Report is online at: www.central-america-report.org.uk

    For information, magazine subscriptions and article submissions,please contact us at: [email protected]

    We are looking for volunteers to help us out with producing ourprint magazine and keeping our website up to date. For furtherinformation, please check the website, email us or call020 7561 4836 (NSC office).

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    El Salvador

    3 Central America Report: Summer 2010

    Honouring Archbishop Oscar Romero,the voice of the voicelessCheryl Gallagher talks to Julian Filochowski of the Romero Trust about the legacy of Oscar Romero,

    gunned down by a member of death squads thirty years ago.

    IN THE DAYS running up to 24March, thousands gathered in SanSalvador to mark the 30th anniversaryof the assassination of Oscar Romero,killed because of his public supportfor human rights and social justice.

    One of those who travelled to theSalvadoran capital to commemoratethe extraordinary Christian leader was

    Julian Filochowski, former directorof CAFOD and current chair of theRomero Trust. Filochowski first metRomero when he volunteered in LatinAmerica for the Catholic Institute forInternational Relations (now knownas Progressio). He worked particularlywith the Jesuits who were involvedin protecting human rights anddenouncing political imprisonmentand torture.

    Filochowski remembers Romero as

    a very gentle, compassionate manwho was close to the people. As wellas his pastoral work, Romero launchedmany community initiatives. In hisearly years he founded a breakfastclub for the shoe shine boys in SanMiguel and later as bishop of Santiagode Maria he opened the church hall forcoffee plantation labourers who camefrom outlying hamlets and had to bein the town square at 4am.

    Romeros social engagement wentunnoticed by the political and militaryauthorities who perceived him as anarch-conservative, hostile to socialaction by the clergy. However, whenhe was appointed Archbishop of ElSalvador, his commitment becamedramatically visible. Within a monthof Romeros appointment, his closefriend, the Jesuit priest RutilioGrande, was murdered, an event thatmarked a turning point for Romero.Filochowski comments: He realisedthat if he followed this through to itslogical conclusion, it would take himthere too. By 1980 Romero knew that

    he was at great risk but I rememberthat his greatest fear was that otherswould die with him. He then beganto travel on his own because he wasafraid his driver would be killed.

    Romeros response to Rutilios

    killing was to close all the Catholiccolleges and send the children homewith a questionnaire asking How isit that in a country named after Christthe Saviour priests are being killed?The impunity with which RutilioGrande was murdered led Romeroto set up Socorro Juridico, a legal aidcentre for poor people to denouncegovernment-sponsored atrocities.

    Filochowski remembers: Romero

    decided that he was not going to bepresent... where the church washonouring the state until the murderof Rutilio Grande was clarified. Thiswas an amazing stance. Its like theArchbishop of Canterbury refusing toattend the coronation of the Queen.

    In the absence of a free press,Romero began to use the pulpit tohighlight human rights abuses. Hehad a section of the homily called thegood news of the week and a sectioncalled the bad news of the week. Thebad news was used to denouncekillings and abuses. He would namethe disappeared individually and the

    time and place of the disappearance.It was like a kind of truth commissionsaid Filochowski.

    Meanwhile, Filochowski workedto support Romero from the UK. Heorganised a Parliamentary delegation

    to El Salvador in 1978 and worked toget Romero nominated for the NobelPeace Prize. While Romeros life wasbrutally cut short, Filochowski affirmsthat his legacy still lives on: He was acourageous man for whom faith waseverything. They called him the voiceof the voiceless because he wantedto give the voice back to the poor.Hundreds and hundreds of peoplewere killed but the name people

    remember is Romero.The current Salvadoran governmenthas recognised Romeros legacy byissuing a formal apology for hismurder to coincide with the 30thanniversary. 24 March has beendeclared a National Day MonseorRomero and left-wing Mauricio Funes,declared that he would dedicate hisPresidency to the memory of Romero,whom he has described as thespiritual guide of the nation and oneof Salvadors greatest patriots.

    Further information:www.romerotrust.org.uk

    Archbishop Romero with Julian Filochowski and Lord Chitnis during a UK Parliamentary

    delegation to El Salvador in 1978.

    Photo:Rome

    roTrust

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    Honduras

    International community betraysHonduran resistanceHelen Yuill reports on escalating repression against activists since

    Porfirio Lobo was inaugurated as president in January.

    ON JUNE 28 last year, HonduranPresident Manuel Zelaya wasousted in a coup, denounced byalmost the entire world asillegitimate. Fake elections followedin November and Porfirio Lobo wasinaugurated as president on January27. Zelaya left the country to takeup exile in the Dominican Republic.

    Hondurans who mobilised againstthe coup have been left with aprofound sense of betrayal, not onlyat the hands of their own politiciansand military, but also theinternational community.

    Lobos coming to power has hadbroad repercussions, not only inHonduras but throughout LatinAmerica. As the US and Canadapromote recognition of the post-coup

    regime and the EU restarts talks ona trade agreement with CentralAmerican nations, state-sponsoredrepression, the criminalisation ofsocial protest and killings ofmembers of the popular resistanceand journalists continue. On March4, Hillary Clinton announced theresumption of US aid on the groundsthat Honduras has reached asuccessful conclusion to the crisiswithout violence.

    The US, Canada, internationallending institutions and countriesparticipating in regional economicdevelopment have rapidly moved torestore loans, and renew plans foreconomic and security integration.Colombian President Uribe wasthe first to visit Lobo following hiselection, signing a security agreementin February.

    Inside Honduras, those responsible

    for the coup have consolidated theirpower. General Vsquez, whodirected the coup, has beenappointed head of the statetelecommunications company

    Hondutel. According to AndresPavn of the Committee for theDefence of Human Rights inHonduras (CODEH), Vasquez hasbeen a central figure in intelligenceoperations to identify, find, andassassinate prominent membersof the resistance.

    As part of allegedly restoring

    democracy, the Lobo governmenthas set up a Truth Commission.However, this was offset by theannouncement of an amnesty givingimmunity from prosecution for 40years to key figures in the coup.In the meantime, repression hasescalated. CODEH reported 160human rights violations in the first30 days after Lobo took office,including illegal detentions, torture,

    kidnapping and killings.Three journalists have beengunned down, along with two tradeunionists, a judge, the daughter ofa trade unionist and three leadersof the United Farm WorkersMovement of Aguan (MUCA)involved in a land dispute with landowners in the municipality of Tocoa.In April, CODEH reported a buildup of 4,000 troops sent to evictcampesinos. This was accompanied

    by inaccurate information in theHonduran press accusing MUCA ofbeing an armed guerrilla movement,financed by international drugtraffickers and tied to ColombianFARC rebels with the backing ofVenezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua.

    The National Front of PopularResistance (FNRP), which began as aprotest movement calling for Zelayasreinstatement, has been transformed

    into a movement for change. In mid-March, some 800 people from tradeunions, womens and indigenousorganisations, farmers associationsand Afro-descendents discussed the

    movements future and repeated theircall for a constituent assembly tore-found Honduras.

    In April, the FNRP wrote to theGeneral Secretary of the Organisationof American States (OAS) urging it to

    intervene to re-establish institutionalorder. The Front denounced thecriminalisation of social protest andpolitical persecution by the PublicMinistry, the judiciary and theNational Human Rights Commission,as well as the military.

    On the coup anniversary in June,the Front plans to organise actionsto highlight its demand for a newconstitution including economic and

    political transformation that confrontsthe culture of domination; thatbenefits our people through justice,humanity, solidarity, sovereignty, selfdetermination, and equality.

    Photo:OscarMendoza

    Demonstration against the 2009 coup.

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    Nicaragua

    Keeping Nicaraguas forests aliveJohn Perry reports on a project teaching Nicaraguan school children why trees matter

    when it comes to climate change.

    CENTRAL AMERICA is one of theparts of the world suffering theearly effects of climate change. SinceHurricane Mitch in 1998, almost everyyear has brought damaging storms,floods or droughts. Yet until now,Nicaraguans could rightly say theywere feeling the effects of somethingthat was not their responsibility.The country produces only a tinyproportion of man-made global

    warming gases. And Nicaragua canalso claim a role in protecting theclimate: it has the largest area oftropical forest in the Americas northof the Amazon basin, covering 40percent of its land area.

    But the balance is tipping. AsNicaraguans consume more, theycreate more greenhouse gases. Thereally big factor though onlyrecognised fully in the last few years is the effect of deforestation on the

    countrys carbon emissions. In anygraph showing the main sources ofgreenhouse gases, global deforestationis up there at the top with China andthe United States. And its particularlytropical deforestation that has sucha dramatic impact, because tropicalforests soak up carbon, yet aredisappearing at a rate reported asequalling two football pitchesevery minute.

    A typical Nicaraguan is unlikelyto know much about their countrysforests or their role in maintaining ahealthy climate. One reason is that thebiggest forests are in the remote east,never visited by most Nicaraguans.Another is beef and milk exports areimportant sources of income, but fewpeople realise the link between thegrowth of cattle farming and the retreatof the forests. Also Nicaraguas forestshavent yet become a tourist attractionas in neighbouring Costa Rica.

    Most importantly, firewood stillprovides half the countrys domesticenergy and people are so used to

    trees growing back that they dontnotice when they disappear fasterthan they can regenerate. Where I live,in an area south of Masaya the treecoverage is still fairly good but thesound of the motor saw is heard daily.

    Changing peoples attitudestowards trees and forests is a slowprocess, but one thats importantlocally as well as globally. There arenumerous organisations working to

    change farming practices and promotesustainable forestry, linked witheducational work so that the widerpublic starts to appreciate the valueof trees and forests.

    One of these projects, Trees forLife, is funded by the UK organisationCool Earth, whose slogan is keepingcarbon where it belongs. With agrant from its small projects fund,the Leicester Masaya Link Group isworking with local partner ADIC

    Masaya to run lessons in a school inEl Pochote. Since last year, classes ofabout 30 primary school children havebeen learning about the importance oftrees, their role in climate change, andhow they can take action themselves.

    They have planted trees around theschool and each pupil has takenyoung forest trees home to plant intheir backyards. The message ispassed on to parents at an annualtree-planting day.

    The plan is to show that a smallamount of funding goes a long way,and to extend the project to otherschools in the Masaya department.In 2011, the aim is to start a similar

    project in a village school nearMasayas volcanic lagoon. As wellas the school programme, ADIC willrun a sustainable farming project toencourage tree-planting and createfootpaths on the wooded slopesleading down to the lake. By workingwith adults and children at the sametime, this small section of Nicaraguasforests might be given a chance tosurvive and even grow. This initiativeneeds to be replicated across all parts

    of Nicaragua that still have forests.

    Further information:www.coolearth.orgwww.leicestermasayalink.org.ukwww.cih.org/nicaragua

    Photo:JohnPerry

    Tree planting,

    El Pochote

    school,

    Masaya

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    Central America

    Regional update

    CENTRAL AMERICA

    EU trade talks back on trackAfter a seven-month suspensionbecause of the Honduras coup,the EU restarted negotiationson the EU-Central AmericaAssociation Agreementimmediately after theinauguration of HondurasPresident Lobo in January.The Spanish EU presidency ispushing forward talks in the

    hope an agreement can besigned during the EU-LatinAmerica and Caribbean Summitin Madrid on 18 May. The EUhas approved the officialinclusion of Panama, anobserver since the talks began in2007. However, a final decisionlies with the Central AmericaIntegration System (SICA).

    Plan Puebla Panama (PPP)

    reinvented

    The infrastructure anddevelopment project PPP,involving the Central Americacountries, Mexico, Panama andColombia was initiated in 2008.It has now been renamed theMesoamerican Project, astronger, more focused versionof the PPP with specific goalsover ten years. It covers

    telecommunications, energy,transport, sustainabledevelopment, health, naturaldisasters, and housing and isfunded by regional banks andprivate interests.

    New regional block

    excludes US

    In February, 32 Latin Americaand Caribbean countriesparticipated in the Rio Group

    Summit in Cancun, Mexico.The meeting created a newregional body that does notinclude the US and will act

    as a block with its owninterests and agenda.

    GUATEMALA

    Murdered lawyer arranged

    own death

    In May 2009 Guatemala wasmesmerised by the apparentmurder of Rodrigo Rosenberg,a lawyer who made a videoclaiming that, should he bekilled, President lvaro Colomwas responsible. Days later hewas shot dead and the videowas released to the media. TheUN-sponsored anti-impunitybody CICIG, which supportsinvestigations into difficultcases, concluded that Rosenberghad in fact arranged his ownkilling after becoming depressedabout the murder of a womanhe was having an affair with.

    Fifth interior minister

    appointed

    In a sad indictment of the stateof the ministry in charge ofpolice, justice and criminalinvestigation, another interiorminister Raul Velazquez hasbeen sacked for allegedcorruption. The head of thepolice anti-narcotics unit was

    also arrested, accused of drugtrafficking, holding illegalarms and obstructing justice.Guatemala now has its fifthminister of the interior sincePresident Colom took office in2008. Except for the first, whowas killed in a helicoptercrash, they all left under acloud and some have criminalcharges pending against them.

    Anti-corporate activists

    murdered

    The organisation FRENA, theFront for Resistance in Defence

    of Natural Resources and theRights of the People, opposesthe activities of a privateelectricity supply company inSan Marcos. Spanish-ownedfirm DEOCSA is accused of

    overcharging and unreliablesupply. Since October, threeleaders of the FRENAcampaign and five othercommunity activists havebeen killed, the last of theseon 21 March. No credibleefforts have been made bythe authorities to findthose responsible.

    NICARAGUA

    Poverty reduction

    programmes praised

    and recognised

    The U.N. Food and AgricultureOrganisation has includedNicaragua in a list of 16countries that have reducedthe incidence of poverty. Datafrom the Nicaraguan Institute

    for Information andDevelopment indicates thatquality of life has improved.Extreme poverty in ruralareas has fallen by 10 percent.A March poll by independentpollster M&R Consultantsindicates public recognition ofimprovements in health careand education. Just over 62percent of respondents had a

    positive opinion on the qualityof education, and 80 percentof those who had beenpatients or accompanied apatient to a health facilityindicated satisfaction.

    Trading begins in new

    ALBA currency

    Nicaraguas Central Bank hasopened an account to thevalue of US$24 million in the

    new currency sucres (namedafter independence fighterAntonio Jose de Sucre), whichwill be available for exporters

    and importers to facilitatetrade with Venezuela, Bolivia,Ecuador, Cuba and Caribbeancountries in the BolivarianAlliance for the Americas(ALBA) without using US

    dollars. In 2009, Venezuelabecame Nicaraguas third-largest trading partner,buying Nicaraguan productsworth US$160 million. Thatfigure is expected to rise toUS$200 million in 2010.

    COSTA RICA

    First woman president

    elected

    Laura Chinchilla of theNational Liberation Party won47 percent of the vote in CostaRicas February elections,becoming the countrys firstwoman president. However,her election also representsa continuation of thedominance of right wingparties implementing what

    Carlos Sandoval,professor,University of Costa Ricadescribes as popularauthoritarianism.

    EL SALVADOR

    Death threats against

    rights ombudsman

    El Salvadors Human Rights

    Ombudsman, Oscar Luna,announced in January thathe and his family had beenreceiving death threats. Hesaid the threats came fromsupposed exterminationgroups, demanding that heleave the country so as to notobstruct the work of socialcleansing they are attemptingto carry out againstdelinquency. The re-

    emergence of such groupswas denounced by formerombudswoman Beatricede Carrillo in 2006.

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    Guatemala

    Cracks in the wall of silenceNathalie Mercier reports on breakthroughs in cases of forced disappearance, including the first conviction of

    a high-ranking member of the military for forced disappearances in the 1980s. Nathalie spent eight months in

    Guatemala in 2009 as an international accompanier.

    THE NUMBER 45,000 splattersthe walls of cities in Guatemala.You could ignore it if it werentfor the posters, each a poignantreminder that every one of the 45,000has a face, a name, and a family thatsuffer because of the silence thatsurrounds the forced disappearanceof their loved-one. This silencerepresents a wall of impunity whichprotects the perpetrators. But recentevents could hold the key tobreaking down this wall.

    In July 2009, the ConstitutionalCourt announced an historicresolution in the case of six forceddisappearances in Choatalumbetween 1982 and 1984. The defencehad argued that, as forceddisappearance was only defined as acrime in 1996, over a decade after theevents, the case contravened Article

    15 of the Constitution, which statesthat laws cannot be retroactive. TheConstitutional Court resolved thatthe crime of forced disappearance ispermanent, the key issue being notwhen the crime started but when itceases to be committed. The silencemeans it continues to this day.

    This resolution had hugeimplications. Weeks later hearings inthe case of Choatalum reopened,after a 15 month postponement.On 1 August former militarycommissioner Felipe Cusanero Cojwas sentenced to 150 yearsimprisonment: 25 years for eachperson he forcibly disappeared.It was the first ever conviction forthis crime in Guatemala.

    Shortly after, hearings opened inthe case of eight people from El Jute,forcibly disappeared on 19 October

    1981. In December 2009, the verdictwas announced: a former colonel andthree former military commissionerswere found guilty and sentenced to53 years. Colonel Marco AntonioSnchez Samayoa was the first high-ranking member of the military tobe convicted for this crime.

    The cases of Choatalum and ElJute could set a precedent. At the

    beginning of March exhumationsstarted at the La Verbena cemeteryon the outskirts of Guatemala Citythat could shed light on hundredsmore disappearances.

    These are hopeful signs that cracksare emerging in the wall of silenceand impunity which surrounds thecrime of forced disappearance.

    Further information:www.guatemalasolidarity.org.uk

    Book reviewA NicaraguanJourney

    by Luciano Baracco

    Published by WilliamSessions Ltd 2010, 9.50

    More than 30 years after theSandinista Revolution inNicaragua, a new book collectsstories from those who livedthrough the insurrection thatended the Somoza militarydictatorship.

    A Nicaraguan Journey traces

    the writers 1997 journey toresearch a doctoral thesis onthe Sandinistas. HoweverBaracco, whose fascinationwith the Sandinista movement

    started as a child, alsoembarked on a personal questto uncover the truth about theNicaraguan revolution throughthe people that experienced

    it firsthand.Baraccos interactions with

    ordinary Nicaraguans, fromtaxi drivers to elderly women,reveal that nobodys life hasbeen left untouched by therevolution. The story ofBaraccos landlady Zulema,whose children all died at thehands of the National Guard,is an allegory of a whole

    nation rather than the storyof a single family.

    As well as his manyinsightful meetings with localpeople, Baracco also speaks to

    former members of theSandinista government whoreveal their own fascinatingand sometimes contradictoryfeelings on the revolution.

    He meets CarlosTnnermann, theSandinista governmentsfirst Education Minister,who was the drivingforce behind theUNESCO acclaimed

    literacy crusade.Baraccos book takesinto account thecomplex nature of therevolution. But oneresounding feature ofall the stories is thedevastation that theintervention of theReagan governmentcaused.

    Cheryl Gallagher

    To purchase a copy see

    www.sessionsofyork.co.uk/

    books/general

    Central America Report: Summer 20107

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    El Salvador

    IN 2002, CANADIAN company PacificRim Mining Corporation acquiredthe El Dorado gold project in ElSalvador, 65 km east of San Salvadorin the department of Cabaas. The

    project covers 144 sq km and PacificRim has estimated a return of $43.6million over three and a half years.Between 2002 and 2006, the companyreportedly invested almost $80 millioninto its Salvadoran explorations.

    Pacific Rim submitted its firstEnvironmental Impact Assessment(EIA) to the Salvadoran Ministry ofEnvironment and Natural Resources(MARN) in 2004. As Lisa Skeen

    relates in a report for North AmericanCongress on Latin America (NACLA)magazine, although the corporationvehemently contended that it fullyupheld Salvadoran law, activistscalled the assessment a sham. Shedraws attention to an independent,nonpartisan review of the EIA,conducted in 2005 by hydro-geologistRobert Moran, which highlights thelack of transparency in the publicconsultation process required under

    Salvadoran Law, and concludes thatthe EIA would not be acceptable incountries such as Canada or theUnited States.

    In 2006, the Salvadoran EcologicalUnit (UNES) proposed a ten-yearmoratorium on granting miningconcessions. As a result, the NationalRoundtable against Mineral Mining inEl Salvador was formed as a coalitionof environmental, faith-based, and

    community activists (brought) togetherto successfully block mining permits. According to Michael Busch

    (research associate at the Ralph BuncheInstitute for International Relations),

    If they cant extract your gold,theyll take your moneyMartin Mowforth, associate lecturer at the University of Plymouths School of Geography,

    Earth and Environmental Sciences (ALD), reports on how the Central America Free Trade

    Agreement (DR-CAFTA) opens the door for transnational companies to sue governments

    that prioritise protecting their own citizens and the environment.

    a statement opposing gold mining bythe Catholic Bishops conference addedfurther weight to the anti-miningmovement and influenced governmentdecisions. Despite its initial

    enthusiasm for Pacific Rims miningproposals, he says, officials fromthe ruling conservative ARENA partyrefused to issue the company permitsto begin extracting gold.

    The level of local and civil societyopposition to mining also becamea factor for political parties in therun-up to the March 2009 presidentialelections. Faced with polls showing alead for the FMLN candidate Mauricio

    Funes, who did not support miningoperations, the then President TonySaca also committed the right-wingARENA party to an outright ban onthe granting of new mining permits.

    Following repeated denials of itsmining permits, in December 2008,Pacific Rim began an attempt toinfluence the election campaign byindicating its intention to bring theSalvadoran government before aninternational arbitration tribunal to

    resolve the dispute in other words,it would sue the government for $100million in damages and lost profit.Sacas conversion to a protector ofthe local people against transnationalcorporations was to no avail andFunes and the FMLN won the election.

    In April 2009, under the rules of theDR-CAFTA trade agreement, PacificRim carried out its threat and filed alawsuit at the International Centre for

    Settlement of Investment Disputes(ICSID), a World Bank institution.Adding further pressure on Funes

    government in March 2009, theCommerce Group Corporation and

    San Sebastian Gold Mines Inc alsogave notice of their intent to claimcompensation for $100 million bothfor the revocation of permits formines in San Sebastin (in La Unin

    department) and San Cristbal (inSan Miguel department) and for thedenial of the extension of permits atother mines in the departments ofLa Unin and Morazn.

    The outcome of these lawsuits isstill unknown, but if the Salvadorangovernment chooses not tocompromise, an unfavourable resultfor the government and thearbitration process itself could prove

    extremely costly. It is still uncertainhow Funes will take this matterforward, although on 12 January 2010he unequivocally stated that:

    There can be no misunderstanding:

    my government will not

    authorise any mining extraction

    projects No one has convinced

    us that there are ways to extract

    minerals and metals without

    contaminating the environment

    and affecting public health.Despite these strong statements,uncertainties remain. What is certain,however, is that these two cases arebeginning to expose the reality ofwhat lies behind DR-CAFTA thatthe trade agreement gives foreigninvestors and transnationalcorporations (TNCs) the right to suegovernments for profit infringementwhen those governments decide to

    prioritise environmental and publichealth over the profits made by TNCs.

    www.enca.org.ukwww.cispes.org

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    El Salvador

    Water shortages Pacific Rim hasidentified 24 sites to extract gold near the

    Ro Lempa, which supplies drinking waterto two million inhabitants in San Salvador

    alone. In 2008, ranchers noticed that the

    springs used for irrigation and water

    supply were drying up. Investigations

    found that exploratory drill holes utilised

    by Pacific Rim to estimate gold deposits

    were re-channelling underground streams

    and drastically impacting the aquifer.

    Water, soil and atmosphericcontamination Cyanide leaching during

    mining can contaminate water sources.

    Chemical residues may seep into the soil

    from a tailings pond and/or spillages and

    can affect the food chain if the land is

    subsequently used for farming. Although

    cyanide evaporates relatively rapidly, it

    can cause acid rain.

    Increased corruption The Centre ofResearch into Investment and Commerce

    (CEICOM) has accused Pacific Rim of

    corruption, claiming that it provoked

    community conflicts and bought off

    mayors, deputies, etc. Similarly, in an

    article in Upside Down World, JasonWallach suggests that Pacific Rim

    attempted to buy public support

    with a PR campaign touting the virtues

    of green mining.

    Violence and social divisions Afterthe submission of Pacific Rims lawsuit

    against El Salvador, four anti-mining

    activists (Marcelo Rivera, Ramiro Rivera

    Gmez, Felicta Echeverra and Dora Sorto

    Recinos) were assassinated. Although

    there is no direct evidence to link Pacific

    Rim with the assassinations, the victims

    and the others who have received death

    threats, have all been opposed to mining.

    The company has failed to denounce the

    violence. As Miguel Rivera, the brother of

    Marcelo who was assassinated, said, we

    want to know who is behind all this and

    we have serious suspicions that it has

    been the Pacific Rim mining company that

    is financing these activities to terrorise

    those who are opposed (to mining).

    Problems associated with the El Dorado mine,

    Cabaas, El Salvador

    If you dare to say

    no Ill sue you

    ACCORDING TO Pacific Rims

    website the companys legal

    action under DR-CAFTA and theEl Salvadoran Investment Law

    started on April 30, 2009, when

    Pacific Rim (Pacrim) filed its

    Notice of Arbitration with the

    International Centre for

    Settlement of Investment

    Disputes (ICSID), part of the

    World Bank. On November 18,

    2009, a three-member Arbitration

    Tribunal was constituted to hear

    the case.

    On 4 January, 2010, the

    government of El Salvador

    filed its preliminary objections.

    (www.pacrim-mining.com).

    A hearing on objections is

    scheduled for 31 May and

    1 June, 2010 with a ruling

    by September 2010. PacRim

    claims that El Salvador's

    objections are not only

    completely without merit,

    but are also frivolous, and

    that the government filed

    them purely as an attempt

    to stall the arbitration

    proceedings. PacRim fully

    expects that the Tribunal will

    reject the objections and

    proceed with the arbitration

    claim. After President Mauricio

    Funes expressed concerns

    about the environmental impact

    of gold mining, Pacific Rim

    claimed the Presidents views

    were groundless and ill-

    conceived. Pacific Rim goeson to state that the actions

    and inactions of the government

    of El Salvador over the past

    years have severely eroded

    not only Pacific Rims market

    value, but also El Salvadors

    reputation as a place for

    foreign investment.

    Pacific Rim claims to be

    an environmentally and

    socially responsible

    exploration company focused

    exclusively on high grade,

    environmentally clean gold

    deposits in the Americas.

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    MARLIN MINE is an open castgold mine near San MiguelIxtahuacn, an area populated byMam Mayans, in GuatemalasWestern Highlands. It is owned byMontana Exploradora de GuatemalaS.A., a wholly owned subsidiary of

    Canadas Goldcorp. In 2005, usinga $45 million loan from the WorldBank, Montana constructed acomplex of open pit and undergroundmines which covers a 100,000 hectareland package and encompassesother mineralised zones.

    A number of local residents claimthat their land was unfairly procuredby Montana and that they werebullied into selling land cheaply.Canadian NGO Rights Action,supports the claim made by Sacmujresidents that their refusal to sellland to Montana resulted in themines security guards harassing thelocal population and the companybringing vehicles and explorationequipment onto their property.Gregoria Crisanta Prez, a singlemother from Agel, who is the subjectof an arrest order along with sevenother local women, states her

    viewpoint unequivocally: Montanais extending its territory. we arethe legitimate owners of thoseterritories. we were born there,and we should die there.

    Local residents have accusedMontana of drying up wells,attempting to access the community-controlled water source andpolluting local waterways. On July24, 2009, during a meeting at the SanMiguel Ixtahuacn Peoples House,villagers reported that water beingused to wash extracted gold wasbeing dumped near a well. Themines workers have reportedly

    Central America Report: Summer 2010 10

    Guatemala

    Indigenous communitiesdenounce Canadian mining firm

    told people that the water in thisarea is contaminated.

    The Pastoral Commission forPeace and Ecology (COPAE inSpanish) monitorsthe River Cuilco.It has found

    traces of heavymetals suchas arsenic,aluminium,copper, iron,manganese andzinc downstreamfrom the mine,the amounts ofwhich exceed thelimits set by theWorld Bank andthe CanadianGovernment.These metalshave been

    Martin Mowforth visited Guatemala in 2009 with Alice Klein and Karis McLaughlin to record

    testimonies from people affected by mining operations.

    blamed for causing skin complaintsamongst local Mayan children. Theyhave also been known to causecancer of the bladder, lung, skin,

    Photo:MartinMowforth

    Irma fears her house will crumble due to vibrations from Goldcorp vehicles.

    Photo:

    AllanLissnerwww.a

    llan.l

    issner.net

    A Montana billboard in San Miguel Ixtahuacn tries to persuade

    local people of the benefits of mining Development is what is

    important.

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    Guatemala

    Central America Report: Summer 201011

    kidney, nose, liver and prostateand to adversely affect livestockmortality and fertility rates.Although Montana insists that thetailings pond, which captures thewater used to treat ore with cyanide,

    is secure, it is not lined, and criticsbelieve it has leached into the RiverCuilco, 1,000 feet below.

    Other complaints lodged againstMontana include dynamiteexplosions in the mine and heavylorry traffic, both causing damageto local houses. As one residentcomments, All the houses arecracked. My daughters house istotally cracked. Its only three years

    old. When the explosions start, youfeel the movement of the earth.

    In response to these problems,

    Mayans in San Miguel Ixtahuacnhave taken direct action and evengone as far as burning Montanasequipment and cutting off the minespower supply. Rights Action says thishas provoked a criminalisation ofprotest that led to the arrest of eightMayan women in 2008 and sevenMayan men and women in 2009.

    In February the UN InternationalLabour Organisation (ILO) called

    upon the Guatemalan governmentto suspend all mining operationsin indigenous Mayan territories.The government is being accusedof acting in violation of ILOConvention 169 on Indigenous andTribal Peoples, which stipulates thatconsultation with local indigenouspopulations must be carried outbefore engaging in activities suchas mining projects. Communityorganisers say that they did not

    consent to Montanas project andcriticise the consultation, saying itwas as inadequate and full of liesand empty promises.

    Collecting orchids and conning

    the locals

    The following are extracts from a testimony collected by MartinMowforth, Alice Klein and Karis McLaughlin in San Jos

    Ixcaniche, San Marcos department in July 2009. The testimony

    relates to the introduction of gold mining activities to the area around

    the Marlin Mine which is owned and run by Montana Exploradora

    de Guatemala S.A.

    When the company came into San Miguel, they did many

    things such as making meals for the people to get them on their

    side. They also started games of football, buying the balls and

    getting all the neighbours around for lunch. They also held raffles

    for bicycles, radios and many other things to attract people

    They said they were going to generate some work here collecting

    orchids from the trees A little more than a year later, they

    came and it wasnt for collecting orchids, but for exploring, to

    collect samples of rock; but they didnt say anything about gold

    or silver, only that we are going to do some work here Then

    suddenly there was something about minerals

    This was 1996 when they came. A year after that they began to

    collect rocks. They talked to the locals about selling a part of the

    land. The local people were certainly excited by the money. Then

    more people started arriving, including gringos, and then the

    machinery. Seventeen people met to talk about if they could sell

    their land or not. They agreed that it would be better not to sell

    the land. It would be better to go first to the Mayor of San Miguel

    to make an agreement which would prevent the sale of the land.

    But the Mayor said if you want to sell, you can sell. Better to

    have a good job there [at the mine] and a source of work.

    The Mayor didnt turn up [for a meeting with the people]; so

    from that time the group got a bit downhearted, and each took

    their own decisions about giving up their land. Of the seventeen

    people, one by one they gave up their land.

    Source: Testimony taken from Don Pedro (a pseudonym), a formerworker in the Marlin Mine in San Jos Ixcaniche, San Marcosdepartment, Guatemala, July 24, 2009

    In February 2010 the UNInternational Labour Organisationcalled on the Guatemalangovernment to suspend all miningoperations in indigenous Mayanterritories.

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    Central America

    THIS MARCH MORE than twentyrepresentatives from bananaworkers unions and small farmerorganisations (from Costa Rica,Honduras, Nicaragua, Guatemala,Ecuador, Peru, El Salvador and theCaribbean Windward Isles) met in San

    Jose, Costa Rica, to evaluate and shareideas on how banana workers canwork together to ensure their voicescontinue to be heard at the forefrontof the newly established WorldBanana Forum (WBF).

    After over a hundred years ofharsh treatment, exploitation anddamage to the health of generations,workers in the worlds bananaplantations have achieved whatnobody thought possible a few yearsago. They have brought together allthe players in the global industry from plantation to supermarket shelf around the same table to talk about

    key issues: trade union rights,collective bargaining, decent wages,fair prices for small producers, healthand safety, womens employment,scaling back chemical use, andreducing environmental damage.

    After over a decade in gestation,the WBF was born in Rome onDecember 8, 2009. Two days later, thegovernment members of the UN Foodand Agriculture Organisation (FAO)confirmed their support for the newmulti-stakeholder forum on the futureof one of the worlds most importantcrops. Global retailers like WalMart

    and Tesco and the big fruit brands likeChiquita, Dole, Fyffes and Bonitajoined trade unions and small farmersorganisations in welcoming the

    Forums focus on creating a socially,economically and ecologicallysustainable banana industry.

    The March WBF evaluationmeeting of trade unions and smallfarmers provided a platform to planthe next two years of collaborative

    action to ensure that, by the nextWBF meeting in 2012, significantdevelopments are made on theissues covered by the five Forumworking groups: employmentrights and other workplace issues;sustainable production systems;reduction of agrochemical use;environmental impact; andcertification.

    The British governmentsDepartment for InternationalDevelopment, the Norwegian freshproduce company Bama and Dutchdevelopment agency ICCO fundedthe evaluation meeting and theForum preparation and participationof some 35 representatives of tradeunions, small farmers organisationsand NGOs from 15 banana exportingcountries in Latin America, theCaribbean, Africa and Asia.

    One article in the fruit trade press

    was entitled: Hasta la victoriasiempre!, referring (ratherironically) to the leading role playedby trade unions in the Forum.The hope for workers is that thefruits of a victory for banana justicewill be shared.

    For further information or tosupport the trade unions involvedin the World Banana Forum, contactBanana Link on 01603 765670 [email protected] visit our website atwww.bananalink.org.uk

    Banana trade unions leadindustry to the tableAnna Cooper from Banana Link reports on the leading role of banana unions in

    the World Banana Forum.

    Adela Torres Colombian trade

    union leader and former

    packhouse worker, Womens

    Secretary of the Latin American

    Agro-industrial Workers UnionCoordinating Body and member of

    trade union federation IUFs Global

    Agricultural Workers Trade Group

    took part in the Forum and the

    FAO Inter-Governmental

    Conference on Bananas and

    Tropical Fruit:

    For the tens of thousands of

    men and women plantation

    workers that we represent, this

    is a very important moment in anindustry that has an infamously

    violent and exploitative history.

    Our challenge now is to

    translate the commitments made

    by all the major players to work

    together to really change things

    for people on the ground in their

    workplaces, on their farms.

    Workers in the worlds bananaplantations have achieved whatnobody thought possible a fewyears ago.

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    Nicaragua

    Team Nicaragua at theStreet Child World Cup

    THE NICARAGUAN TEAM of eightteenagers was organised by aninternational NGO called Casa Alianzathat campaigns and provides a homefor street children in Honduras,Nicaragua and Mexico.

    The teenagers, aged between 14 and16, are all residents at the Casa Alianzarefuge in Managua. For many of theteam, football was the highlight of thetrip. Juan Carlos, 16, said: My ambitionis to be a professional footballer andto play for Nicaragua in the realWorld Cup. Kevin, 15, who alsoplans to be a professional footballer,was very pleased with the teamsperformance: Im very proud that wewere the only team who managed tobeat India, the winning team.

    For other children, the chance totravel and explore new cultures waswhat they liked most. Fifteen-year-oldWendy particularly enjoyed teachingother teams about Nicaragua: Someof the children in the other teamsdidnt even know where Nicaraguawas, so I enjoyed sharing my culturewith them and learning about theircountries. Sometimes it was difficult

    to communicate with the languagedifference but we managed tounderstand each other.

    As well as training hard andplaying football, the children tookpart in a rich social, cultural andeducational programme. The teamwent to Durban University ofTechnology for a series of workshopson the themes set out in the UnitedNations Declaration on the Rights

    of the Child: home and shelter;protection from violence; and accessto health and education.

    For Wendy, who plans to be ahuman rights lawyer, the chance to

    travel to South Africa also meant awelcome break from her problems athome: I felt really valued in SouthAfrica and stopped thinking aboutnegative things at home. There arelots of children who dont know their

    rights. Children arent respectedenough in society, sometimes we feelinvisible. Marcia, aged 15, also wantsto see a change in the perception ofstreet children: Some people see usas a kind of bacteria and they mistreatus. I want to see more respectfor childrens rights.

    The children said that the mostimportant role internationalgovernments can play is to supportinitiatives like Casa Alianza. JuanCarlos said: In every city thereshould be a safe place of refuge forchildren. We need understanding tohelp us deal with our problems. Thereare laws against mistreating childrenbut a lot people dont respect thoselaws, particularly the police. Thechildren alsosaid that moreshould bedone in

    schools toteach childrenabout theeffects ofviolence.

    PoonamSattee, avolunteerwith CasaAlianza whoaccompanied

    the children toSouth Africa,said: Thistrip has hada profound

    impact on the family relationships ithas improved some relationshipssignificantly, reunited some childrenwith a parent they were not speakingto previously.

    The Nicaraguan government aimsto have no more children on thestreets by 2011 and Poonam said thaton their return to Nicaragua thechildren will make a public call tothe government to enforce the lawsthat protect children. Poonam alsocommented that there is a lack ofinternational recognition of theunique needs of street children.

    Funding should to be allocated on alarge scale to prevent these childrenfrom slipping through the net.

    Further information:www.casa-alianza.org.ukwww.streetchildworldcup.org

    Team Nicaragua at the World Cup

    Team Nicaragua came joint third with Britain in the inaugural

    nine-team competition in Durban. On their way back to Nicaragua,

    Cheryl Gallagher talked to them about their pride in their

    achievements and hopes for the future.

    All eyes will be on the WorldCup in South Africa. But I amdelighted the country has alreadystaged another World Cup theinaugural Street Child World Cup.I was pleased to be able to supportthe project when it was firstlaunched, and I am thrilled that ithas gone so well.

    Sir Alex Ferguson

    Photo:P

    oonamSattee

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    Nicaragua

    Linking young trade unionistsNeeta Norton interviews UNISON project worker Matthew Egan who visited Nicaragua in

    January as part of the Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign Action Group (NSCAG) Linking Young

    Trade Unionists Project.

    MATTHEWS INTEREST inNicaragua was sparked bymeeting Nicaraguan trade unionistKarina Gomez last year. Karina cameto Manchester during her speaker tourand I was so impressed with howprofessional and organised she was atjust 18, it really inspired me. It struckme that I could learn a lot from trade

    unions in Nicaragua, he said.Arriving in Managua, Matthew wasfaced with both the reality of povertyhe had only read about but also youngpeoples drive to combat it througheducation and awareness of their rights.He was impressed by the level ofcommitment and passion shown byyoung trade unionist and their eagernessto learn. The NSCAG has been workingin partnership with the FNT (NationalWorkers Front) on linking young trade

    unionists from both countries since2007, with funding from UNISON andCommunication Workers Union (CWU).

    Matt spent ten days in Managuameeting trade union members fromthe FNT and its member federations,including the UNE (Public ServicesUnion) and the CTCP (Informal SectorUnion). The unions have a community-based approach, hosting culturalevents such as dances and food fairs,

    as well as sporting activities such asbaseball, football and volleyballleagues. Their activities evoked storiesof the important roles unions used tohave in many communities throughoutBritain, Matthew, 27, said. Although Iam too young to have witnessed thesedays myself I have certainly seen thefirst hand effects on life in northerncommunities bereft of a visible tradeunion presence. Trade unions in theUK used to provide a social as wellas a work place function. I know asa society we have become moreindividualistic but I think there isno reason we cant go back.

    The FNT has used the Linking Projectfunding to co-ordinate training andeducation with its member federations.The setting up of youth committeeshas enabled them to hold their firsttwo national youth assemblies. TheFNT Youth Committee, established in2009, formalized and recognised young

    member involvement.Increasing the number of rights

    advocates is one of the driving forcesbehind the UNEs training with 44young members trained as advocatesin 2009. Their most popular trainingcourse is Youth Empowermentwhich explains the importance ofbeing a union member.

    Matthew says the CTCP wants toend not just material poverty butalso intellectual poverty and toachieve this the union providesevening and weekend classes forworkers who have to fit theireducation around employment.

    Matthew said: The range of workthat they (all unions) are involved inand their enthusiasm, consideringthey have to manage on extremelymeagre resources, was extremelyheartening and impressive andcertainly indicated that UNISONsfunding was being put to good use.

    The trip strengthened Matthewsbelief in international solidarity andhe is keen to explore acts of practicalsolidarity such as establishing linksbetween hospital unions in the twocountries. The biggest thing theyneed is resources and moneybasically. It was my first trip to acountry like Nicaragua and it openedmy eyes. Once you have been thereyou leave with not only a sense offriendliness and warmth, but alsoa sense of responsibility.

    Further information:www.nicaraguasc.org.uk/nscag

    Matt Egan with Nicaraguan trade unionistsPho

    to:JulianGuevara

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    Take action

    GUATEMALA

    Members of Guatemala SolidarityNetwork (GSN) lobbied theGuatemalan government in severalurgent action cases, notably thoserelated to murders of Front forResistance in Defence of NationalResources and Peoples Rights(FRENA) activists (see page 10). GSNjoined with other European solidarityorganisations in a joint protest letterto the Guatemalan and Spanishgovernments and the Spanish owned

    electricity supply company ofDEOCSA.

    Nathalie Mercier, who volunteeredas an international accompanier, hasbeen giving awareness-raising talksabout Guatemala in the UK, includingschools, Amnesty groups anduniversities.

    GSN will be fundraising at musicfestivals this summer by providingvolunteers for the Workers BeerCompany.www.guatemalasolidarity.org.uk

    NICARAGUA

    Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign

    Action Group (NSCAG)

    Eight young trade unionists will betravelling to Nicaragua in May as part

    of NSCAGs ongoing trade unionistslinking project. Domingo Perez, thegeneral secretary of the Nicaraguanpublic service union (UNE) will visitUK in June as a guest of UNISON.

    Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign

    NSCs partner organisation, thePopular Literacy Association CarlosFonseca Amador (AEPCFA), isorganising celebrations of the 30thanniversary of the National LiteracyCrusade. These began on 23 Marchand end on 23 August with thedeclaration of the indigenousterritories of the Northern Caribbean

    Over 50 ex-pupils are currentlystudying at university. We havehad a fantastic year says TrusteeMagdalena Pickton. The money isflowing in but what we really neednow is more members.See www.imfa.org.uk

    Santa Rosa Fund (SRF) Tavistock

    In 2007 and 2009 the SRF successfullyplaced volunteer computer trainers inthe Santa Rosa School in Managua andis currently looking for volunteers totake on one-to-one computer training

    for staff members from July toSeptember. Two staff members aretaking over responsibility for thecomputers from Gill Holmes, who hasprovided support for the past two years.

    The SRF also continues to supporta range of educational projects andinitiatives in Nicaragua.See www.santarosafund.org

    Bristol Link with Nicaragua

    (BLINC)

    Local Authorities &

    Nicaragua Conference

    On 12 November Bristol hosted aconference for local authoritiesfrom towns with twinning linksin Nicaragua. There was goodrepresentation from Bristol City

    Council, with Service Directors KateDavenport and Eileen Armstrongchairing sessions. Key speakersincluded: Emigdio Tellez, mayor

    Coast illiteracy free. NSCrepresentative in Nicaragua JulinGuevara will be participating in theseevents. In addition, NSC is organisinga study tour to Nicaragua from 15 25 August which will also take partin the celebrations.

    Nicaragua English for

    Sustainable Tourism Trust (NEST)

    NEST was set up in 2006 to supportthe learning of English in the MiraflorNature Reserve near Esteli and hassince been extended to other

    communities.Trust coordinator Maggie Jo St John

    reports that the next stage of theEnglish in Miraflor project hasbegun with the awarding of partscholarships to two young womenfrom families in Miraflor who havebegun studying English at university.The two women learnt English asstudents of the first NEST teachers togo to Miraflor from the UK. Another

    success in December was theorganisation of a five day intensiveEnglish course by one of the Englishspeaking eco-tourism guides,modelled on NEST courses, butwithout any input from NEST itself.

    The computer classes in El Cebollal(the highest zone of Miraflor)continue to thrive with 45 studentsand an additional local teacher.A third computer centre is runningsuccessfully with a further 27 students.

    www.nest.org.uk

    Islington: pub quizzes generate

    three new classrooms

    The Islington Managua FriendshipAssociation has raised funds for threenew classrooms in Barrio EdgardMunguia in Managua, enabling theschool to offer full primary as well asnursery education. Most of the moneyhas been raised through regular pub

    quizzes. Teachers' salaries are paid bySponsor a Teacher standing orders.As well as launching a website thegroup is now recognised as a charity.

    Solidarity and campaign news

    Celebration in Puerto Morazan of the 20th

    anniversary of the twinning link with Bristol

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    Take action

    of Puerto Morazan, Gioconda PerezArostegui, BLINC developmentworker in Puerto Morazan, KatrinSturham from the Utrecht-Leon Link,Sheila Lock, Chief Executive ofLeicester City Council and Guisell

    Morales from the NicaraguanEmbassy. Guisell gave animpassioned speech stressing theimportance of friendship andsolidarity between communities inBritain and Nicaragua. The conferencereceived very positive feedback and itis hoped that it will encourage furtherdevelopment of projects and linksbetween our communities.

    School Links

    During their visit Emigdio andGioconda visited local schools andencouraged further development ofschool to school links. Over a numberof years several Bristol teachers have

    volunteered in schools in PuertoMorazan, sharing their skills andknowledge. This summer a teacherfrom Cotham is planning to take agroup of students to volunteer inschools in Puerto Morazan. Anothervolunteer is planning to visitEl Chavo, a pre-school that BLINChas helped to build and develop.www.bristolnicaragua.wordpress.com

    GET IN TOUCHWales NSC:

    Betws,Fford Haern Bach,Pen Y Groes LL54 6NY

    Tel: 01286 882359Email: [email protected]

    NSC, ENCA and local links:

    86 Durham Rd,London N7 7DT

    Tel: 020 7561 4836Email: [email protected]

    GSN:

    6 Marylands,Haywards Heath,

    West Sussex RH16 3JZTel: 01444 443401Email: [email protected]

    CAWN:

    c/o One World Action,Bradley Close,White Lion Street,London N1 9PF

    Tel: 020 7833 4174Email: [email protected]

    ON INTERNATIONAL WOMENS DAYthis March, women activists includingCAWNs Honduran partner, the Centre for

    Women's Studies (CEM-H), marched in the

    Plaza La Merced in Tegucigalpa, condemning

    a wave of murders of women (femicides) in

    the last two years and demanding an end to

    such crimes. Security forces tried to prevent

    the protestors from entering the open public

    space near the National Congress, but

    community leaders intervened to restore

    calm and the event proceeded. Womens and

    civil society organisations have strongly

    condemned the temporary disappearances,

    torture, rape and murder suffered by

    members of the popular movement and other

    social sectors since the coup who refuse to

    accept what they consider to be fakedemocracy. The coup has sharpened distrust

    in the judicial system, which was already

    precarious. The ineffective legal system and

    police repression have worsened access to

    justice for victims of domestic violence and

    increased the risk of femicide.

    In UK CAWN continues supporting (CEM-H)

    in their work to eliminate violence against

    women and femicides. This includes highlighting

    cases of human rights violations that are

    being presented to international institutions

    such as the Inter-American Court of Human

    Rights. CAWN is raising these concerns in

    the UK, EU and internationally, to ensure that

    the voices of Honduran women are heard.

    On 12 May the 3rd Conference on Femicide

    No More Killing of Women Stop Impunity!

    Demand universal responsibility will be held

    at the European Parliament, organised by

    MEP Ral Romera i Rueda, CAWN and other

    Europe-based civil society groups that supportLatin American womens organisations.

    Further information: www.cawn.org

    Repression against women continues in HondurasKatherine Ronderos, Central America Womens Network

    International womens day march, Tegucigalpa

    Latin America Bureau (LAB)

    website and newsletter

    LAB has initiated a regular emailingservice that provides links forinteresting, progressive articles andanalysis on Latin America and the

    Caribbean, and lists upcoming events.Some of the articles have been writtenby LAB analysts, while others havebeen forwarded to LAB.

    If you would like to contributearticles or announcements pleasesend them to [email protected] subscribe to the newsletter:[email protected] www.lab.org.uk

    Photo:CAWN