person:daniel ortega

  • #Nicaragua : grève nationale de 24 heures contre le président Daniel Ortega.

    Nicaragua amaneció en paro nacional en protesta contra Ortega
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/latinoamerica/nicaragua-amanecio-paro-nacional-protesta-contra-ortega_283216


    Foto: AFP

    Nicaragua amaneció este jueves en paro nacional, en protesta contra el presidente Daniel Ortega, a quien la oposición le exige que libere a los presos políticos y respete los derechos humanos.

    A pesar de que el gobierno amenazó con tomar medidas contra los negocios que se sumaran al paro nacional de actividades, el cierre de establecimientos fue notorio, aunque no total, en las primeras horas del día.

    El paro nacional fue evidente en ciudades como Camoapa, Chichigalpa, Chinandega, Ciudad Sandino, El Viejo, Granada, Jinotepe, León, Nueva Guinea, Managua, Matagalpa y Tipitapa.

    La mayoría de negocios cerrados en la mañana eran las grandes y medianas empresas; por el contrario, la mayor parte de los comercios que abrieron sus puertas fueron los pequeños comerciantes.

  • #Nicaragua : douze années de lutte sans relâche
    https://www.cetri.be/Nicaragua-douze-annees-de-lutte

    Sur #La_Première RTBF (JP 18h), interview par Wahoub Fayoumi de Maria Teresa Blandón, féministe nicaraguayenne qui a participé au mouvement de libération nationale aux cotés de Daniel Ortega dans les années 1970, mais qui s’est distanciée du parti au pouvoir en raison des dérives du régime. Elle était l’invitée du CETRI en Belgique ces derniers jours.

    #Le_Sud_en_mouvement

    / #Le_Sud_en_mouvement, #Audio, La Première, Nicaragua, #Répression, #Mouvement_de_femmes, #Genre, #Droits_de_l'homme, #Néolibéralisme, #Le_regard_du_CETRI

  • #Nicaragua : deux années de lutte sans relâche
    https://www.cetri.be/Nicaragua-deux-annees-de-lutte

    Sur #La_Première RTBF (18h10-18h15), interview par Wahoub Fayoumi de Maria Teresa Blandon, féministe nicaraguayenne qui a participé au mouvement de libération nationale aux cotés de Daniel Ortega dans les années 1970, mais qui s’est distanciée du parti au pouvoir en raison des dérives du régime.

    #Le_Sud_en_mouvement

    / #Le_Sud_en_mouvement, #Audio, La Première, Nicaragua, #Répression, #Mouvement_de_femmes, #Genre, #Droits_de_l'homme, #Néolibéralisme, #Le_regard_du_CETRI

  • #Nicaragua : « Ce n’est pas admissible que Daniel Ortega reste »
    https://www.cetri.be/Nicaragua-Ce-n-est-pas-admissible

    Toujours pas de libération pour les prisonniers politiques au Nicaragua... Les discussions ouvertes dans le cadre du dialogue entre le gouvernement du président Daniel Ortega et l’opposition de la société civile unie (dans la coalition d’opposition Unidad Nacional Azul y Blanco, UNAB) piétine. En cause, essentiellement la revendication non satisfaite de l’opposition de libérer tous les prisonniers politiques. Parmi eux se trouve la Belgo-Nicaraguayenne Amaya Coppens. La jeune étudiante en (...)

    #Le_regard_du_CETRI

    / #Le_Sud_en_mouvement, Nicaragua, #RTBF_info, #Répression, #Genre, #Mouvement_de_femmes, (...)

    #Néolibéralisme

  • Pendant ce temps-là, au #Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega joue l’esquive et cherche à gagner du temps…

    Ortega se escabulle
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/columnista/ortega-escabulle_271792

    Todo el mundo esta tenso. Todos pendientes de Venezuela. Maduro no tiene perdón y él lo sabe y de ahí su conducta, propia de rata acorralada.

    Y mientras tanto, Daniel Ortega se escabulle, pero sin dejar de seguir las instrucciones del viejo Fidel: no dejar ni ceder el poder por ninguna razón.

    Las noticias desde Nicaragua muestran que la situación si no es peor que la de Venezuela, va camino a ello.

    No está claro cuántos son los muertos, si 325 o 561 y los detenidos entre 340 o 767. El gobierno Ortega-Murillo, admite 199 muertos y 340. Qué bueno.

    A ello se suman cientos de exiliados y de desaparecidos, más la represión permanente y hasta golpizas en las cárceles.

    Todo espantoso. Un juez de nombre Edgard Altamirano, condenó a 216 años de cárcel a Medardo Mairena, líder campesino que participó en el Diálogo Nacional como parte de la Alianza Cívica por la Justicia y la Democracia. Lo acusan de ser el responsable intelectual de la muerte de 5 policías y de 11 secuestros y algunos delitos más, según el magistrado. Este mismo señor Edgard Altamirano por el mismo caso condenó a los dirigentes campesinos Pedro Mena y Orlando Icabalzata a 210 y 159 años de prisión. El señor Altamirano no tiene freno: la fiscal había pedido 73 años para Mairena y 63 y 59 respectivamente para los otros dos dirigentes.

    Altamirano será el juez que juzgará el próximo 18 de marzo a los periodistas Miguel Mora y Lucía Pineda Ubau, presos desde diciembre pasado acusados de terrorismo. Ortega y Murillo los acusan de hacer terrorismo; el delito que cometieron fue informar. Altamirano será el encargado de decidir.

    Miguel Mora es el director y propietario del canal de televisión 100% Noticias, y Lucía Pineda es su jefe de prensa. A fines del año pasado el canal fue allanado por fuerzas policiales y aquellos fueron detenidos y hay otros tres periodistas requeridos ya en el exilio. Los cargos: "fomentar e incitar al odio y la violencia" y «provocación, proposición y conspiración para cometer actos terroristas».

    Como toda dictadura que se precie, la de Ortega-Murillo ha terminado con la libertad de prensa. No quieren que se sepa lo que hacen.

    Y hay noticias que pueden ser peores. Parece que el gobierno nicaraguense ha aceptado discutir con la Secretaría General de la OEA reformas a su sistema electoral, descartando de entrada un adelanto de las elecciones previstas para noviembre de 2021, que es lo que la oposición, la Iglesia, los estudiantes y todo el mundo reclama. Casi 2 años –33 meses– es mucho tiempo: ¿cuántos serán los muertos y los presos y los desaparecidos? ¿Hasta qué límites llegará la represión?

    ¿Y todo ese tiempo sin libertad de prensa, de asociación y de reunión como hasta ahora?

    Ortega-Murillo siguen los pasos de Maduro: ganar tiempo. El venezolano con distintas ayudas en cada momento –Rodríguez Zapatero, el papa Francisco, dos o tres presidentes vecinos, el gobierno uruguayo del izquierdista Frente Amplio y algunos europeos en los que nunca hay que confiar mucho– ha conseguido continuar en Miraflores.

    Aparentemente los de Nicaragua quieren involucrar al secretario general de la OEA con este intento de ganar tiempo . Se supone que no tendrán mucha suerte; el secretario de la OEA ha solicitado para el régimen nicaraguense –acusado ya de delitos de lesa humanidad– la aplicación de la Carta Democrática Interamericana. Y Ortega y Murillo no pasan esa prueba: bastan para desnudarlos los informes de la propia Comisión de Derechos Humanos y del Relator para la Libertad de Expresión, de la OEA.

    Con lo que se vive hoy en Nicaragua, con ese estado de situación, hablar de reformar y reforzar el sistema electoral parece una broma, un chiste de muy mal gusto.

  • Nicaragua : le régime d’Ortega s’attaque aux organisations de défense des droits humains
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2018/12/13/nicaragua-le-regime-d-ortega-s-attaque-aux-organisations-de-defense-des-droi


    La police anti-émeute monte la garde devant le siège des Nations unies (ONU), à Managua, le 10 décembre 2018, à l’occasion de la Journée internationale des droits de l’homme.
    INTI OCON / AFP

    Le Cenidh, une ONG emblématique, s’est vu retirer son statut légal, alors que toute forme d’opposition est réprimée.

    Près de huit mois après le début des protestations de masse contre le président Daniel Ortega, le régime continue de maintenir la pression sur toute forme d’opposition. Mercredi 12 décembre, l’Assemblée nationale a retiré son statut légal au Centre nicaraguayen des droits humains (Cenidh), une organisation emblématique créée en 1990 et qui défend sans relâche les victimes de la répression.

    Le vote est intervenu à la demande du ministère de l’intérieur. Le Cenidh est accusé de n’avoir pas agi conformément aux objectifs pour lesquels son statut juridique lui avait été accordé, et d’avoir « utilisé le schéma de l’organisation pour gérer, recevoir, canaliser et faciliter des fonds pour altérer l’ordre public et réaliser des actions pour déstabiliser le pays ».

  • #Nicaragua : fin de régime ?
    https://www.cetri.be/Nicaragua-fin-de-regime-4793

    Depuis avril 2018, le Nicaragua traverse une profonde crise de régime. Fortement contesté, le couple régnant – le président Daniel Ortega et la vice-présidente Rosario Murillo, épouse du premier – s’accroche au pouvoir.

    #Le_regard_du_CETRI

    / #Le_regard_du_CETRI, #Le_Sud_en_mouvement, #Analyses, #Cause_commune, Nicaragua

    https://www.cetri.be/IMG/pdf/causecom-nica.pdf

  • Bishops bloodied, churches besieged in #Nicaragua crackdown - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/bishops-bloodied-churches-besieged-in-nicaragua-crackdown/2018/07/27/3f4a0440-9152-11e8-ae59-01880eac5f1d_story.html

    A pro-government mob shoved, punched and scratched at Cardinal Leopoldo Brenes and other Catholic leaders as they tried to enter the Basilica San Sebastian. “Murderers!” people shouted. An auxiliary bishop was slashed on the arm with some sort of sharp object.

    The ugly scene in the normally sleepy town of Diriamba, an hour’s drive south of Nicaragua’s capital, was a dramatic example of how rapidly a wave of unrest has soured relations between the Roman Catholic Church and beleaguered President Daniel Ortega.

    The church has tried to play a mediating role between Ortega’s Sandinista government and protesters who have increasingly demanded his ouster amid demonstrations and clashes in which about 450 people — most of them protesters — have been slain.

    Instead it finds itself increasingly targeted by Ortega and his backers, reviving a hostility between the Sandinista base and the church establishment that burned hot during the 1980s but seemed to have been overcome in recent years, when the former guerrilla commander had formed a sort of alliance with once-critical bishops.
    […]
    Through his verbal attacks, Ortega is “telling his followers, especially the (pro-government gangs), ‘You can go ahead and beat up priests and bishops and vandalize church buildings without any punishment,’” Gooren said.

  • Nicaragua : «Daniel, arrête cette barbarie» - Libération
    http://www.liberation.fr/planete/2018/07/17/nicaragua-daniel-arrete-cette-barbarie_1667057

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qm9iWPx2D8w

    Chanteur emblématique de la gauche, Carlos Mejía Godoy, 75 ans, conjure dans une lettre ouverte le président Ortega de cesser le bain de sang et la répression contre l’opposition.

    Les chansons engagées du Nicaraguayen Carlos Mejía Godoy, avec son groupe Los de Palagüina, ont accompagné la guérilla contre la dictature du clan Somoza, puis la victoire du Front sandiniste en juillet 1979 et les premières années du gouvernement socialiste. Célèbre dans tout le monde hispanophone, le musicien se revendique à la fois d’Augusto Sandino (1895-1934), guérillero assassiné dans les années 30 pour avoir combattu la mainmise des Etats-Unis sur le Nicaragua, et de la théologie de la libération, le christianisme de gauche.

    Le 14 juillet, Mejía Godoy publiait sur son compte Facebook une lettre ouverte au président Daniel Ortega, après deux mois de féroce répression du mouvement citoyen qui exige son départ, et dont le bilan atteint 300 morts. Il a aussi publié une vidéo sur YouTube où il lit son message.

    #los_pájaros_no_se_jubilan !

  • Nicaragua : « La droite vandale » | Le Club de Mediapart
    https://blogs.mediapart.fr/kassandra/blog/300518/nicaragua-la-droite-vandale

    Les têtes pensantes de certaines fractions de la gauche qui se prononcent dans le monde pour la défense de Daniel Ortega, devraient se demander – comme doit se le demander la CIA – pourquoi ces marches populaires sont accompagnées aussi par la musique et les chants insurrectionnels de la lutte contre la dictature de Somoza ?

    Ils pourraient alors constater que ces hymnes de bataille du peuple révolutionnaire, chantés et inspirés par les frères Carlos et Luis Enrique Mejía Godoy, le groupe vénézuélien Los Guaraguaos, les Chiliens Inti Illimani et la chanteuse argentine Mercedes Sosa, sont les mêmes qui sont entonnés 48 ans plus tard, dans les rues du Nicaragua, parce que les muchachos d’aujourd’hui, se battent avec le même patriotisme contre une autre dictature ; comme les muchachos d’hier !

    Un autre détail : si cette insurrection de la conscience et sans recours aux armes de tout le peuple n’avait pas un but patriotique, juste et démocratique, les Mejía Godoy et d’autres auteurs-compositeurs n’auraient pas créé, comme ils le font aujourd’hui, de nouvelles chansons inspirées et dédiées aux jeunes assassinés par les paramilitaires de l’ortéguisme. Même les adeptes du rap sont sensibilisés à cette lutte populaire.
    […]
    Tôt ou tard, cette crise trouvera son dénouement dans une société démocratique et, espérons-le, ne devra plus jamais faire face au continuisme dictatorial d’aucun autre opportuniste. La garantie de cette démocratie résidera dans les courants juvéniles sains inspirés par la révolution - et qui, avec leur lutte, inspirent un autre type de révolution -, libres de compromissions et de soumission à qui que ce soit.

    pour Carlos Mejía Godoy, cf. https://seenthis.net/messages/704134

  • The Rise and Fall of the Latin American Left | The Nation
    https://www.thenation.com/article/the-ebb-and-flow-of-latin-americas-pink-tide

    Conservatives now control Latin America’s leading economies, but the region’s leftists can still look to Uruguay for direction.
    By Omar G. Encarnación, May 9, 2018

    Last December’s election of Sebastián Piñera, of the National Renewal party, to the Chilean presidency was doubly significant for Latin American politics. Coming on the heels of the rise of right-wing governments in Argentina in 2015 and Brazil in 2016, Piñera’s victory signaled an unmistakable right-wing turn for the region. For the first time since the 1980s, when much of South America was governed by military dictatorship, the continent’s three leading economies are in the hands of right-wing leaders.

    Piñera’s election also dealt a blow to the resurrection of the Latin American left in the post–Cold War era. In the mid-2000s, at the peak of the so-called Pink Tide (a phrase meant to suggest the surge of leftist, noncommunist governments), Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Ecuador, and Bolivia, or three-quarters of South America’s population (some 350 million people), were under left-wing rule. By the time the Pink Tide reached the mini-state of Mexico City, in 2006, and Nicaragua, a year later (culminating in the election of Daniel Ortega as president there), it was a region-wide phenomenon.

    It’s no mystery why the Pink Tide ran out of steam; even before the Chilean election, Mexican political scientist Jorge Castañeda had already declared it dead in The New York Times. Left-wing fatigue is an obvious factor. It has been two decades since the late Hugo Chávez launched the Pink Tide by toppling the political establishment in the 1998 Venezuelan presidential election. His Bolivarian revolution lives on in the hands of his handpicked successor, Nicolás Maduro, but few Latin American governments regard Venezuela’s ravaged economy and diminished democratic institutions as an inspiring model. In Brazil, the Workers’ Party, or PT, was in power for 14 years, from 2002 through 2016, first under its founder, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, between 2003 and 2011, and then under his successor and protégée, Dilma Rousseff, from 2011 to 2016. The husband-and-wife team of Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of the Peronist Party governed Argentina from 2003 to 2015. Socialist Michelle Bachelet had two nonconsecutive terms in office in Chile, from 2006 to 2010 and from 2014 to 2018.

    Economic turmoil and discontent is another culprit. As fate would have it, the Pink Tide coincided with one of the biggest economic expansions in Latin American history. Its engine was one of the largest commodities booms in modern times. Once the boom ended, in 2012—largely a consequence of a slowdown in China’s economy—economic growth in Latin America screeched to a halt. According to the International Monetary Fund, since 2012 every major Latin American economy has underperformed relative to the previous 10 years, with some economies, including that of Brazil, the region’s powerhouse, experiencing their worst recession in decades. The downturn reined in public spending and sent the masses into the streets, making it very difficult for governments to hang on to power.

    Meanwhile, as the commodity boom filled states’ coffers, leftist politicians became enmeshed in the same sorts of corrupt practices as their conservative predecessors. In April, Lula began serving a 12-year prison sentence for having accepted bribes in exchange for government contracts while in office. His prosecution, which in principle guarantees that he will not be a candidate in this year’s presidential race, was the high point of Operation Car Wash, the biggest anti-corruption dragnet in Brazilian history. Just after leaving office, in 2015, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was indicted for fraud for conspiring with her former public-works secretary, José López, to steal millions of federal dollars intended for roadwork in Argentina. The “nuns and guns” scandal riveted the country, with the arrest of a gun-toting López as he hurled bags stuffed with millions of dollars over the walls of a Catholic convent in a suburb of Buenos Aires. In Chile, Bachelet left office under a cloud of suspicion. Her family, and by extension Bachelet herself, is accused of illegal real-estate transactions that netted millions of dollars.

    All this said, largely overlooked in obituaries of the Pink Tide is the right-wing backlash that it provoked. This backlash aimed to reverse the shift in power brought on by the Pink Tide—a shift away from the power brokers that have historically controlled Latin America, such as the military, the Catholic Church, and the oligarchy, and toward those sectors of society that have been marginalized: women, the poor, sexual minorities, and indigenous peoples. Rousseff’s impeachment in 2016 perfectly exemplifies the retaliation organized by the country’s traditional elites. Engineered by members of the Brazilian Congress, a body that is only 11 percent female and has deep ties to industrial barons, rural oligarchs, and powerful evangelical pastors, the impeachment process was nothing short of a patriarchal coup.

    In a 2017 interview, Rousseff made note of the “very misogynist element in the coup against me.… They accused me of being overly tough and harsh, while a man would have been considered firm, strong. Or they would say I was too emotional and fragile, when a man would have been considered sensitive.” In support of her case, Rousseff pointed out that previous Brazilian presidents committed the same “crime” she was accused of (fudging the national budget to hide deficits at reelection time), without any political consequence. As if to underscore the misogyny, Rousseff’s successor, Michel Temer, came into office with an all-male cabinet.

    In assessing the impact of the Pink Tide, there is a tendency to bemoan its failure to generate an alternative to neoliberalism. After all, the Pink Tide rose out of the discontent generated by the economic policies championed by the United States and international financial institutions during the 1990s, such as privatizations of state enterprises, austerity measures, and ending economic protectionism. Yet capitalism never retreated in most of Latin America, and US economic influence remains for the most part unabated. The only significant dent on the neoliberal international order made by the Pink Tide came in 2005, when a massive wave of political protests derailed the George W. Bush administration’s plan for a Free Trade Area of the Americas, or FTAA. If enacted, this new trade pact would have extended the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to all countries in the Americas save for Cuba, or 34 nations in total.

    But one shouldn’t look at the legacy of the Pink Tide only through the lens of what might have been with respect to replacing neoliberalism and defeating US imperialism. For one thing, a good share of the Pink Tide was never anti-neoliberal or anti-imperialist. Left-wing rule in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Chile (what Castañeda called the “good left”) had more in common with the social-democratic governments of Western Europe, with its blend of free-market economics and commitment to the welfare state, than with Cuba’s Communist regime.

    Indeed, only in the radical fringe of the Pink Tide, especially the triumvirate of Chávez of Venezuela, Evo Morales of Bolivia, and Rafael Correa of Ecuador (the “bad left,” according to Castañeda), was the main thrust of governance anti-neoliberal and anti-imperialist. Taking Cuba as a model, these self-termed revolutionaries nationalized large sectors of the economy, reinvigorated the role of the state in redistributing wealth, promoted social services to the poor, and created interstate institutions, such as the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, or ALBA, to promote inter-American collaboration and to challenge US hegemony.

    Second, the focus on neoliberalism and US imperialism obscures the Pink Tide’s biggest accomplishments. To be sure, the picture is far from being uniformly pretty, especially when it comes to democracy. The strong strand of populism that runs through the Pink Tide accounts for why some of its leaders have been so willing to break democratic norms. Claiming to be looking after the little guy, the likes of Chávez and Maduro have circumvented term limits and curtailed the independence of the courts and the press. But there is little doubt that the Pink Tide made Latin America more inclusive, equitable, and democratic, by, among other things, ushering in an unprecedented era of social progressivism.

    Because of the Pink Tide, women in power are no longer a novelty in Latin American politics; in 2014, female presidents ruled in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile. Their policies leave little doubt about the transformative nature of their leadership. In 2010, Fernández boldly took on the Argentine Catholic Church (then headed by present-day Pope Francis) to enact Latin America’s first ever same-sex marriage law; this was five years before same-sex marriage became the law of the land in the United States. A gender-identity law, one of the world’s most liberal, followed. It allows individuals to change their sex assigned at birth without permission from either a doctor or a judge. Yet another law banned the use of “conversion therapy” to cure same-sex attraction. Argentina’s gay-rights advances were quickly emulated by neighboring Uruguay and Brazil, kick-starting a “gay-rights revolution” in Latin America.

    Rousseff, who famously referred to herself with the gender-specific title of a presidenta, instead of the gender-neutral “president,” did much to advance the status of women in Brazilian society. She appointed women to the three most powerful cabinet positions, including chief of staff, and named the first female head of Petrobras, Brazil’s largest business corporation; during her tenure in office, a woman became chief justice of the Federal Supreme Court. Brutally tortured by the military during the 1970s, as a university student, Rousseff put human rights at the center of Brazilian politics by enacting a law that created Brazil’s first ever truth commission to investigate the abuses by the military between 1964 and 1985. She also signed laws that opened the Brazilian Army to women and that set into motion the corruption campaign that is currently roiling the Brazilian political class. These laws earned Rousseff the enmity of the military and conservatives.

    Bachelet, the last woman standing, made news when she entered office, in 2006, by naming the same number of men and women to her cabinet. After being term-limited, she became the first head of the newly established UN Women (formally known as the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women), before returning to Chile to win a second term at the presidency in 2014. During her second term, she created the Ministry of Gender Equality to address gender disparities and discrimination, and passed a law that legalized abortion in cases of rape, when there is a threat to the life of the mother, or when the fetus has a terminal condition. Less known is Bachelet’s advocacy for the environment. She weaned Chile off its dependence on hydrocarbons by building a vast network of solar- and wind-powered grids that made electricity cheaper and cleaner. She also created a vast system of national parks to protect much of the country’s forestland and coastline from development.

    Latin America’s socioeconomic transformation under the Pink Tide is no less impressive. Just before the economic downturn of 2012, Latin America came tantalizingly close to becoming a middle-class region. According to the World Bank, from 2002 to 2012, the middle class in Latin America grew every year by at least 1 percent to reach 35 percent of the population by 2013. This means that during that time frame, some 10 million Latin Americans joined the middle class every year. A consequence of this dramatic expansion of the middle class is a significant shrinking of the poor. Between 2000 and 2014, the percentage of Latin Americans living in poverty (under $4 per day) shrank from 45 to 25 percent.

    Economic growth alone does not explain this extraordinary expansion of the Latin American middle class and the massive reduction in poverty: Deliberate efforts by the government to redistribute wealth were also a key factor. Among these, none has garnered more praise than those implemented by the Lula administration, especially Bolsa Família, or Family Purse. The program channeled direct cash payments to poor families, as long as they agreed to keep their children in school and to attend regular health checkups. By 2013, the program had reached some 12 million households (50 million people), helping cut extreme poverty in Brazil from 9.7 to 4.3 percent of the population.

    Last but not least are the political achievements of the Pink Tide. It made Latin America the epicenter of left-wing politics in the Global South; it also did much to normalize democratic politics in the region. With its revolutionary movements crushed by military dictatorship, it is not surprising that the Latin American left was left for dead after the end of the Cold War. But since embracing democracy, the left in Latin America has moderated its tactics and beliefs while remaining committed to the idea that deliberate state action powered by the popular will is critical to correcting injustice and alleviating human suffering. Its achievements are a welcome antidote to the cynicism about democratic politics afflicting the American left.

    How the epoch-making legacy of the Pink Tide will fare in the hands of incoming right-wing governments is an open question. Some of the early signs are not encouraging. The Temer administration in Brazil has shown a decidedly retro-macho attitude, as suggested by its abolishment of the Ministry of Women, Racial Equality, and Human Rights (its functions were collapsed into the Ministry of Justice) and its close ties to a politically powerful evangelical movement with a penchant for homophobia. In Argentina, President Mauricio Macri has launched a “Trumpian” assault on undocumented immigrants from Bolivia, Paraguay, and Peru, blaming them for bringing crime and drugs into the country. Some political observers expect that Piñera will abridge or overturn Chile’s new abortion law.

    But there is reason for optimism. Temer and Macri have been slow to dismantle anti-poverty programs, realizing that doing so would be political suicide. This is hardly surprising, given the success of those programs. Right-wing governments have even seen fit to create anti-poverty programs of their own, such as Mexico’s Prospera. Moreover, unlike with prior ascents by the right in Latin America, the left is not being vanished to the political wilderness. Left-wing parties remain a formidable force in the legislatures of most major Latin American countries. This year alone, voters in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia will have presidential elections, raising the prospect that a new Pink Tide might be rising. Should this new tide come in, the Latin American left would do well to reform its act and show what it has learned from its mistakes.

    Latin American leftists need not look far to find a model to emulate: Uruguay. It exemplifies the best of the Pink Tide without its excesses. Frente Amplio, or Broad Front, a coalition of left-wing parties in power since 2005, has put the country at the vanguard of social change by legalizing abortion, same-sex marriage, and, most famously, recreational marijuana. For these reasons alone, in 2013 The Economist chose “liberal and fun-loving” Uruguay for its first ever “country of the year” award.

    Less known accomplishments include being one of only two countries in Latin America that enjoy the status of “high income” (alongside Chile), reducing poverty from around 40 percent to less than 12 percent from 2005 to 2014, and steering clear of corruption scandals. According to Transparency International, Uruguay is the least corrupt country in Latin America, and ranks among the world’s 25 least corrupt nations. The country also scored a near perfect 100 in Freedom House’s 2018 ranking of civil and political freedoms, virtually tied with Canada, and far ahead of the United States and neighboring Argentina and Brazil. The payoff for this much virtue is hard to ignore. Among Latin American nations, no other country shows more satisfaction with its democracy.

    Omar G. EncarnaciónOmar G. Encarnación is a professor of political studies at Bard College and author of Out in the Periphery: Latin America’s Gay Rights Revolution.

    #politique #amérique_latine #impérialisme

  • #Nicaragua, De Vivirás Monimbó, 1982 à Adelante Monimbó, 22/06/2018 du même Carlos Mejía Godoy, accompagné des mêmes Los de Palacagüina, de Camilo Ortega, petit frère de Daniel à … Daniel Ortega, le «  tyran  »

    Vivirás Monimbó
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_ndsQYCJ2c

    Monimbó, el bastión histórico del FSLN, se rebela ante el orteguismo
    https://www.laprensa.com.ni/2018/04/20/politica/2406908-la-valiente-historia-de-monimbo
    (article du 20/04/2018)

    Vivirás Monimbó,
    Llama pura del pueblo
    Oigo tu corazón,
    Atabal guerrillero
    Donde el indio cayó
    Floreció el granadillo
    Para hacer las marimbas
    Que toquen los sones de liberación

    La canción de Carlos Mejía Godoy evoca la gesta de 1978 del barrio índigena Monimbó, en Masaya, durante la insurrección popular en contra de la dictadura somocista. Desde este jueves, la proeza ha sido revivida en ese barrio por las barricadas que han levantado y los enfrentamientos que han tenido los pobladores con los antimotines luego que acogieran la marcha de jubilados en contra de la reformas al Seguro Social, firmadas por el presidente designado Daniel Ortega. El enfrentamiento duró más de 10 horas y este viernes continúa.

    La valentía de Monimbó está enraizada en la memoria histórica de Nicaragua, ya que el 26 de febrero de 1978, en la plaza Pedro Joaquín Chamorro, Mártir de las Libertades Públicas, fue donde se dio el primer levantamiento popular de Masaya en contra de la dictadura somocista.

    Monimbó así cultivó fama de aguerrido. Los indígenas fueron los protagonistas en el levantamiento de barricadas y fogatas para impedir la entrada de la Guardia Somocista. En represalia, el régimen los bombardeó sin piedad y buscó casa a casa a los combatientes y en la refriega cayeron al menos 50 monimboseños, de acuerdo a los testimonios de los participantes, porque nunca se pudo lograr recuento oficial de víctimas.

    Sin embargo, el simbolismo del levantamiento del barrio indígena toca de manera particular al presidente designado Daniel Ortega, ya que en esta lucha fue abatido su hermano menor, Camilo Ortega Saavedra. También se recuerda al indígena Asunción Armegol Ortiz, a quien se le atribuyen la invención de las famosas bombas de contacto, que fueron utilizadas por los guerrilleros en sus combates en contra de la Guardia Nacional.

    Carlos Mejía Godoy, combattant sandiniste de la première heure et un temps député après la chute de Somoza, diffuse hier une chanson à la gloire de Monimbó, à la pointe des manifestations contre la réforme des retraites appliquée à la demande du FMI.

    Adelante Monimbó - Carlos Mejía & Los de Palacagüina - YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUk__d5Iwoc

    Carlos Mejía Godoy escribió un tema en honor a Masaya y Monimbó, en el contexto de la crisis en NicaraguaCarlos Mejía Godoy, cantautor de Nicaragua, ha presentado una nueva canción en honor a Masaya, en especial al pueblo indígena de Monimbó, que justo hoy sufre un ataque combinado de policías y civiles armados, que ha dejado al menos a tres personas muertas y decenas de heridos.

    Mejía Godoy, quien también es autor de la tradicional canción “Vivirás Monimbó”, usada durante la insurrección popular en contra de la dictadura de Anastasio Somoza de Debayle, en 1979, dio a conocer esta mañana a través de Radio Corporación de su nueva canción.

    _Han pasado cuarenta años
    De aquellos días de gloria
    Y se repite la historia
    La masacre de la juventud
    Han pasado cuarenta años
    No aprendimos la leccion
    El pueblo no se olvida
    De tanta perfidia
    De tanta traición

    Adelante Monimbó
    Nadie detendrá jamás
    Esa fuerza incontenible
    De valor y dignidad
    Adelante Monimbó
    Estare siempre con vos
    Si yo me encuentro a tu lado
    Estoy arrobado con tu bendición
    Si yo me encuentro a tu lado
    Me siento brindado con tu corazón

    Monimbó, quartier de Masaya
    Masaya - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
    https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masaya

    El 18 de junio de 2018, ante la situación de plena ingobernanza y caos que empezó a atravesar la ciudad en el contexto del conflicto nacional contra Daniel Ortega, fue declarada «zona de autogobierno autónomo» por un grupo de protestatntes encabezados por el insurgente Christian Fajardo. Al día siguiente, grupos armados del gobierno central de Nicaragua invadieron la ciudad. El proclamado autogobierno duró veintidós horas.

    version très (très…) raccourcie, dans WP[fr]
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masaya

    Carlos Mejía Godoy WP[fr]
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Mej%C3%ADa_Godoy

  • Estudio indica que Venezuela, Nicaragua y Brasil son democracias amenazadas
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/politica/estudio-indica-que-venezuela-nicaragua-brasil-son-democracias-amenazada

    La regresión autoritaria en Nicaragua, el endurecimiento de la autocracia en Venezuela y la inestabilidad en Brasil son los casos que ilustran de forma ejemplar los crecientes peligros para las democracias en América Latina, advierte el Índice de Transformación (BTI) presentado este jueves por la Fundación Bertelsmann.

    El informe, que analiza la calidad de las democracias, la economía de mercado y la gobernanza en 129 países en desarrollo y emergentes, constata que Nicaragua forma, junto con Bangladesh, Líbano, Mozambique y Uganda, el grupo de cinco países entre los 13 «perdedores» del índice que viven una regresión a la autocracia.

    El punto culminante de esta regresión tuvo lugar cuatro meses antes de las elecciones de 2016 con la destitución decretada por el Tribunal Supremo del líder del principal partido de la oposición y candidato a la presidencia, lo que hizo que por primera vez desde 1990 se celebrase unas elecciones sin candidato alternativo y Daniel Ortega pudiera así permanecer en el cargo.

    Destaca también en el período de estudio, que abarca entre el 1° de febrero de 2015 y el 31 de enero de 2017, el agravamiento de la situación política en Venezuela, "país inmerso en una dinámica de radicalización durante marzo y julio de 2017" y en el que «se ha agravado de forma dramática la situación de los Derechos Humanos».

    De acuerdo con el informe, la situación en Venezuela representa incluso “una declaración de quiebra del socialismo del siglo XXI”, con un país que “apenas se preocupó de procurar alternativas a la dependencia del petróleo” y donde la pobreza volvió a impactar con fuerza «después de dos décadas de un derrochador populismo rentista».

    La victoria aplastante de la oposición en los comicios parlamentarios de 2015, agrega el documento, ha conducido a que el régimen de Nicolás Maduro mantenga su curso con aún más dureza.

    En tanto, en Brasil, ejemplo del «descalabro de una futura superpotencia», se percibe claramente una pérdida de la calidad de la democracia, relacionada según el informe con la “dudosa destitución” de Dilma Rouseff, «iniciado por políticos corruptos», que en mayo de 2016 aupó a Michel Temer al poder.

    Al mismo tiempo, el informe alude al Latinobarómetro 2016, según el cual el 55 % de la población de Brasil no rechazaría un régimen autoritario, siempre que dé solución a los problemas económicos.

    Esta tendencia a la «desconsolidación de la democracia» en Brasil no es un caso aislado y se observa en toda la región, donde la aprobación de la democracia por parte de la ciudadanía ha disminuido visiblemente desde el informe de 2010, constata el BTI.

  • ANALYSIS-Nicaragua climate politics in hot water over canal plan
    http://af.reuters.com/article/africaTech/idAFL5N1NC4S4

    Shaking off its climate change “pariah” status alongside the United States and war-torn Syria, Central American nation Nicaragua took the plunge and joined the Paris Agreement to tackle global warming before U.N. climate talks began on Monday.

    But environmentalists say Nicaragua’s lecturing of big polluters and ambitious renewable energy goals contrast with its slack environmental protection and a controversial plan to carve out a $50 billion Chinese-backed shipping canal from coast to coast with potentially severe impacts.

    The government talks a lot about respect for ‘Mother Earth’ and care of the environment. But that is just political rhetoric - in practice, the government is too lenient on environmental contamination,” said Jorge Huete-Pérez, University of Central America professor and vice president of Nicaragua’s Academy of Sciences.

    In 2015, Nicaragua was the only one of about 195 countries to reject outright the Paris deal, which it deemed too weak to keep global temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times, as well as unfair for holding poorer nations to account in the same way as developed countries.
    […]
    The decision by President Daniel Ortega, a former Marxist guerrilla leader, to join the Paris Agreement could help funnel more cash into green energy and other development projects in Nicaragua which once received subsidised Venezuelan oil.

    Lauded by the World Bank as a “renewable energy paradise”, Nicaragua generates over 50 percent of its power from geothermal, wind and other clean sources, with plans to reach 90 percent.

    Raul Delgado, lead climate change specialist at the Inter-American Development Bank, said joining the Paris accord could open the door for Nicaragua to access money from the Green Climate Fund and other international pots. “It’s a good time for them to join,” he added.

    Some said the timing fits with the expected appointment next year of Nicaragua’s chief climate negotiator Paul Oquist to the influential co-chair position at the multi-billion-dollar Green Climate Fund, where he is now an alternate board member.

    Je ne me prononce pas sur le bien-fondé des contestations écologiques, mais une chose est sûre, les opposants écologistes à un canal chinois en Amérique centrale ne devraient pas avoir trop de mal à trouver des financements…

  • Puisque M. Daniel Ortega vient de se faire réélire pour un quatrième mandat — après une terrible métamorphose bigote et néolibérale —, retour sur les belles heures du Nicaragua sandiniste…

    Au Nicaragua, que reste-t-il du sandinisme ? (septembre 2016)
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2016/09/DUTERME/56231

    Dans nos archives :

    · Nicaragua : une « modération » radicale, enquête de Régis Debray (septembre 1979) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/1979/09/DEBRAY/35254

    · Construire un État de droit dans la légalité révolutionnaire (janvier 1982) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/1982/01/MATTAROLLO/36539

    · La résistance du Nicaragua, par Maurice Lemoine (juin 1983) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/1983/06/LEMOINE/37390

    · Le sandinisme sans fatalité, par Philippe Videlier (septembre 1984) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/1984/09/VIDELIER/14201

  • Le canal du Nicaragua, projet pharaonique ou vaste escroquerie  ?
    http://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2016/11/03/le-canal-du-nicaragua-projet-pharaonique-ou-vaste-escroquerie_5024606_3234.h

    Promis par le président Daniel Ortega, qui brigue dimanche un quatrième mandat, cet ouvrage devant relier l’océan Pacifique à l’Atlantique est dans les limbes. Le concessionnaire hongkongais HKND n’a quasiment rien fait depuis deux ans.

    Derrière #paywall

  • Un #Canal au #Nicaragua (2/3) : la folie du comandante
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/010116/un-canal-au-nicaragua-23-la-folie-du-comandante

    Daniel Ortega, omniprésent sur les murs des villes du Nicaragua © Jean de Peña - Collectif À-vif(s) Autrefois révolutionnaire, #Daniel_Ortega est revenu au pouvoir il y a huit ans, avec la ferme intention de ne plus le lâcher. Quitte à affronter ses anciens camarades et à faire allégeance au néolibéralisme.

    #International #canal_transocéanique #chinois #dégâts #environnement #Front_sandiniste #projets_inutiles #Rosa_Murillo #Wang_Jing #Amériques

  • Le Venezuela et le Nicaragua prêts à accorder l’asile à Edward Snowden

    http://www.lemonde.fr/technologies/article/2013/07/06/le-nicaragua-pret-a-accorder-l-asile-a-edward-snowden_3443414_651865.html

    Le président du Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, et son homologue nicaraguayen, Daniel Ortega, ont tous deux affirmé vendredi 5 juillet qu’ils étaient disposés à accorder l’asile à l’ancien consultant de l’Agence de la sécurité américaine Edward Snowden, bloqué depuis 13 jours dans la zone de transit de l’aéroport de Moscou-Cheremetievo.
    A Caracas, le jeune informaticien pourrait bénéficier de « l’asile humanitaire » et d’une protection « contre la persécution de l’empire le plus puissant du monde, qui s’est déchaînée sur lui », selon le chef d’Etat vénézuélien. « Nous, nous sommes ouverts et respectueux du droit d’asile et il est clair que si les circonstances le permettent, nous recevrons Snowden avec grand plaisir et lui donnerons l’asile ici au Nicaragua », avait déclaré plus tôt Daniel Ortega.

  • Une gauche délavée s’enracine au #Nicaragua
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2012/05/LEMOINE/47659

    La réélection de M. Daniel Ortega à la tête du Nicaragua a confirmé l’ancrage à gauche d’une grande partie de l’Amérique latine. La récente évolution du pouvoir sandiniste, notamment sur la question des #Droits_des_femmes, éclaire cependant les écueils d’une logique conduisant parfois les forces de gauche (...) / #Christianisme, Élections, #Logement, #Parti_politique, Pauvreté, #Politique, #Religion, Santé, #Amérique_centrale, Nicaragua, #Socialisme, Droits des femmes - (...)

    #Élections #Pauvreté #Santé #2012/05