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Volume
14, Number 4 |
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Chaos ratchets up after cop kills labor activist at hospital entrance Obama grabs early lead in Democrats Abroad primary Not so easy for Wever to take over Panama Oeste PRD organization International verdict pending on dictatorship disappearance case Panama News Briefs British business dispute, Panamanian political scandal or a little of both? American youth shot by Carnival rent-a-cop Prior news briefs, through February 10 Panama News Briefs Colon Agrarian Reform director assassinated On
February 15 the director of Reforma Agraria for Colon province,
Irving
Saurí, was shot by an assailant outside that governmental
entity's offices and later died of his wounds. Reforma Agraria is a
part of the Ministry of Agricultural Development, and theoretically
was set up for the purpose of giving land to landless farmers.
Actually, however, it has notoriously for many years been in the
business of transferring beach front properties and other choice
lands to the rich and politically connected, often forcing families
who own their land by valid squatters rights off of farms they have
worked for decades. In Colon there have been various complaints of
abuses during the Torrijos administration, but although his
colleagues told television reporters right after the shooting that
they suspect that the assassination was related to a land dispute,
police and prosecutors have identified no specific suspect or motive. Irving
Saurí was the brother of Iván Saurí,
the PRD
mayor of Capira, who called for divine justice against his brother's
killer.
Cops and FARC shoot it out at sea Somewhere
near the Panamanian - Colombian maritime border in the waters off of
Panama's Darien province and Colombia's Choco province on February
22, a Panamanian border patrol vessel approached a boat that gave the
appearance of having a broken down engine --- or was faking it in
order to spring an ambush --- and was met with a hail of automatic
weapons fire. By some published reports this encounter happened in
international waters, by others in Panamanian territorial waters off
of Jaque district's Playa de Muerto. In any case three of the
stricken boat's six occupants were wounded, as was one cop. Police
say that the boat that broke down was carrying a half-dozen members
of the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) --- five men and a
woman --- belonging to that leftist guerrilla group's 57th Front,
which dominates the Colombian territory just across the border from
Darien province. The Colombians are all being held, some in a
hospital prison ward, the others in places of detention.
Mitchell calls for action on "historical cases" Presiding
Supreme Court magistrate Harley Mitchell says he wants to clean up
Panamanian justice, and he may just mean it. He's calling for quick
action on 54 petitions to open criminal investigations against 33
legislators or members of the Central American Parliament who enjoy
legislative immunity and under a long-existing tacit mutual
non-aggression pact between the high court and the National Assembly
have seen the petitions to lift immunity for things ranging from
civil matters through bribery and embezzlement all the way up to
big-time drug trafficking and murder. Many of these petitions have
been lying dormant for years.
Suplente busted with 50 kilos of heroin Fausto
Misselis González, the alternate legislator (suplente)
for Enrique Garrido (Panameñista - Kuna Yala) was arrested
on
February 21 along with two other men, a Panamanian and a Colombian,
with 50 kilos of heroin, eight kilos of cocaine and an amount of
marijuana that the police would not specify. The two alleged
accomplices were taken away for interrogation, booking and
incarceration, but González
was released because his public office protects him from
investigation or prosecution for crimes. The Supreme Court might lift
that immunity, but there have also been rulings that when a
legislator commits a crime in league with a non-legislator, the
legislator's immunity extends to protect the non-legislator
accomplice. According to a report in El Panama America,
González
transported the drugs in his four-wheel-drive SUV with assembly
plates, which can't be searched by police due to his immunity.
Assembly committee debates criminal procedure The
legislature is not in session, except that the National Assembly's
Government and Justice Committee is going over a 516-section proposed
new code of criminal procedure. Allegedly the reforms would reduce
court dockets by allowing easier dismissal of charges and having more
in-person trial testimony by witnesses, among many other changes.
Blasser running for mayor Businessman Iván
Blasser announced on February 16 that he's running for the Union
Patriotica party's nomination for mayor of Panama City. That makes
him the fourth declared candidate, along with independent Miguel
Antonio Bernal (who looks likely to get the Vanguardia Moral
nomination and maybe others) and PRD hopefuls Balbina Herrera and
Noel Riande.
Electoral Prosecutor loses another one Electoral
Prosecutor Orlando
Barsallo has again been blocked in an attempt to legalize the use of
public funds to promote the PRD's election chances in 2009. He had
petitioned the Electoral Tribunal to drop charges that Vice Minister
of Agricultural Development Adonai Ríos had used public
funds
for political purposes, but the magistrate in charge of the
investigation, Gerardo Solís, insisted that the probe
continue and that Ríos's sworn deposition be taken. Barsallo
was similarly rejected in cases involving anti-corruption czarina
Alma Montenegro de Fletcher and Vice Minister of Housing Doris Zapata
using public funds to promote the political ambitions of Housing
Minister Balbina Herrera.
Torrijos support slips, PRD back to base The
methodology that the reputable Dichter & Neira polling firm
used
for the PRD-aligned La Prensa was weird, but 14 months before Panama
goes to the polls the bottom line of the results doesn't look good
for the ruling Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD). First, President
Torrijos's public approval rating slipped more than eight points in a
month, down to 51.3 percent. Second, when the question was posed one
way 37.3 percent of voters said that they would vote for an
opposition candidate next year, against 38.7 for a candidate for the
ruling party. Notoriously, however, in Latin American polling
"undecided" usually means against the ruling party but
fearful to say that to anyone. By another methodology wherein Dichter
& Neira asked voters whom they supported among a grab bag of
political figures, some of whom say they are not running, 44.4
percent supported possible opposition while 34.9 percent supported
possible PRD candidates. Historically the PRD is a disciplined block
of about one-third of the Panamanian electorate, which has sometimes
expanded that base and won on pluralities but has never won a
majority in a national election.
Cedulas go missing A
few opposition political figures are beginning to comment on
circumstances that may point to rigged 2009 elections. Earlier, more
than 90,000 names were stricken from the voter rolls, including ---
in an embarrassing mistake --- some incumbent PRD politicians in
Colon. Then there are the several ongoing controversies about use of
public funds for PRD political activities. Then there is the new
election schedule, wherein people need to get their voter
registrations in order at the proper addresses by the end of April
2008 in order to be able to vote in May 2009. Now a package of about
100 cedulas --- according to an anonymous Electoral Tribunal source
cited in El Panama America --- has gone missing. Those identity
cards, necessary for voting, are for people in Chiriqui province.
Officially, the Electoral Tribunal has nothing to say about it, as it
is said that the police are investigating. The proffered excuse is
that the cedulas went missing in the possession of a courier service.
Rapper Danger Man slain On
the evening of February 21, as he was leaving his cousin's house in
Don Bosco, regueton singer Alfonso Blackwood Drakes, known
professionally as "Danger Man," was slain by two gunman who
had stalked him and, after shooting him at least four times, fled in
a gray sedan. Blackwood was 35 years old and is survived by a
two-year-old daughter. As these briefs were written, no suspects had
been identified by police or prosecutors to the public. Regueton, a
music form that has its certain roots in in the dance hall offshoot
of reggae but is best defined as Spanish-language hip hop, has its
analogue to gangsta rap, of which Danger Man was a noted exponent.
The singer's cousin and manager, who had been meeting with him to
design a website moments before the crime, were held by police for
questioning and then released. Blackwood had been receiving death
threats for more than a year before his murder.
Tighter curfew for minors As
of February 18 the curfew on minors was tightened. Now kids under 18
who are found out of their homes after 9 p.m. are subject to arrest.
The curfew applies to Panama City, San Miguelito and all of Colon
province.
Colon Free Zone customers robbed The
modus operandi is banal. Buyers carrying large amounts of cash are
driving, usually on the Transistmica, to the Colon Free Zone. Robbers
who know who their targets are force the cars in which their chosen victims are
riding to the side of the road and, brandishing automatic weapons,
rob these buyers. It happened on February 17, when two Nicaraguan
businessmen were robbed of $16,000. It happened again to a Dominican
businessman, who was robbed of $3,000 and his credit cards on
February 19. In both instances the victims were riding in taxis.
Collusion with the taxi drivers? A stalking operation involving a
number of people other than the gunmen? The knowledge that taxis from
the capital driving toward Colon are probably going to the Free Zone?
However it's done, this sort of crime is threatening one of Panama's
main sources of income and the police don't seem to be very effective
at fighting it.
Noriega beats a murder rap Except
that he was General Omar Torrijos's top enforcer, the man who was in
charge of such things --- or as the late Torrijos called him, "my
gangster" --- there really wasn't much reason to believe that
Manuel Antonio Noriega was involved in the 1969 disappearance and
murder of activist Luis Antonio Quiroz Morales. At least, that's the
way an appeals court saw it, and thus this particular murder charge
against Noriega has been thrown out. General Noriega has several
convictions rendered in absentia and a number of other pending cases
against him here in Panama, but President Torrijos and the National
Assembly have passed a law that would allow Noriega to serve any time
that he may have to do under house arrest if he comes back to this
country.
These briefs were compiled through February 24. Also in this section: Chaos ratchets up after cop kills labor activist at hospital entranceObama grabs early lead in Democrats Abroad primary Not so easy for Wever to take over Panama Oeste PRD organization International verdict pending on dictatorship disappearance case Panama News Briefs British business dispute, Panamanian political scandal or a little of both? American youth shot by Carnival rent-a-cop Prior news briefs, through February 10 Make
the Executive Hotel your headquarters in Panama City --- http://ww.executivehotel-panama.com
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©
2008 by Eric Jackson email: editor@thepanamanews.com or e_l_jackson_malo@yahoo.com Mailing
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