Colombia: Awá indigenous people massacred —again
Twelve members of the threatened Awá indigenous group were killed when their community in southern Colombia was invaded by unkown gunmen.
Twelve members of the threatened Awá indigenous group were killed when their community in southern Colombia was invaded by unkown gunmen.
Strikes and protests continue in Honduras despite a pattern of repression documented by an Inter-American Commission on Human Rights delegation.
A series of wildcat strikes continue to shut down an industrial park on Port-au-Prince’s northern outskirts.
On Aug. 13 leaders of the Dominican Medical Guild (CMD) and the National Union of Nursing Services (UNASED) announced the suspension of a strike they started on July 29 over salaries. The unionists said the suspension was based on what… Read moreDominican Republic: medical strike suspended
Three major Canadian, Mexican and US labor federations responded to “Tres Amigos” summit with a joint statement harshly criticizing NAFTA.
Peru’s President Alan GarcĂa accused his Bolivian counterpart of Evo Morales of an “under the table” deal with Chile over the coastline disputed by the three countries.
As a condition of peace with the government, Peruvian indigenous leaders are demanding a “truth commission” to investigate the June violence at Bagua, dubbed the “Amazon’s Tiananmen.”
According to a new report, in 2008 Colombia produced 430 tons of cocaine compared to 302 in Peru. But Colombian authorities supposedly intercepted 198 tons compared to only 20 in Peru.
Prosecutors in Peru are seeking a 30-year prison term for Vladimiro Montesinos, former intelligence chief under autocratic president and convicted political criminal Alberto Fujimori.
Xiomara Castro, wife of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, called on followers to continue marching in support of her husband—as an Amnesty International report documents brutal repression.
Deposed Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, speaking to reporters on a visit to Lima, asserted that “Barack Obama is the president of the United States, but not the chief of the empire.”
Peru’s Prime Minister Javier Velásquez is proposing legislation that would authorize the National Police to use deadly force against civilians if they believe a violent confrontation is imminent.