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Volume
14, Number 8 |
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Also
in this
section:
Panama
News Briefs
Artes
y Oficios principal shot by cops
Artes
y Oficios, the vocational high school across the street from the
University of Panama where many of Panama's skilled construction
workers learn their trades, began the school year with its workshops
in disrepair and lacking certain equipment and materials. The
Ministry of Education announced that the problem would be fixed ---
by October. The school year ends in December. The boys at Artes y
Oficios, many of them the kids of members of the militant SUNTRACS
construction workers and many destined to join the same union,
reacted as is customary --- they masked their faces and took to the
streets to do battle with riot police, also allegedly caused some
damage to the school and the bus stop in front of the school. In
three days of rioting one driver complained of being assaulted and
robbed, and a police lieutenand complained that the little monsters
injured his toe. The police, meanwhile, responded rather
indiscriminately with tear gas and bird shot. They gassed not only
Artes y Oficios, but also the University of Panama and the Arnulfo
Arias Hospital Complex. When the gas went into the university, some
of the campus radicals poured out into the street to join in the
battle. At The Panama News office in Perejil, which is close to Santa
Fe Hospital and about a mile away from Artes y Oficios, we also got
an eye-stinging dose of gas. Among those injured by the bird shot
fired by police was Artes y Oficios principal Luis Powell, who was
hit in the side of the face while trying to intervene to calm the
situation. After the three days of disturbances the school was closed
and parents were summoned and told that they had to pay $11,000 for
various damage. The parents took a vote and declared that they won't
pay a cent.
Cops
accused in businessman's abduction
Three
employees of the National Police have been arrested for alleged roles
in April 3 abduction of 66-year-old Cuban-American businessman
Cecilio
Padrón in Panama
City. Padrón,
who has real estate investments here, was taken when returning to his
home in Costa del Este and is still missing. According to reports
published in various newspapers his family says that it has received
communications from his abductors but no specific ransom demand.
According to La Prensa, one of the cops has confessed and named a
Colombian as the mastermind behind the crime. So how were the cops
caught? The National Police say by one of those little video cameras
that have been springing up around the city of late, which recorded
an image of their paddywagon escorting the vehicle in which
Padrón
was kidnapped.
Dictatorship's
goon
dies under house arrest
Nivaldo
Madriñán
Aponte,
who headed the National Department of Investigations (DENI) when
General Noriega was dictator and before that served under Noriega in
the G-2 espionage and torture unit, died of complications from kidney
failure on April 17. He was 62 years old. Madriñán
was technically a prisoner, having been convicted of kidnapping in
the 1971 disappearance of Father Héctor Gallego and having
been implicated in a number of other deaths, robberies and acts of
brutality. However, due to his kidney disease he was released to
house arrest after having served 12 years in prison.
Madriñán
died without ever having spoken to clarify the facts of Gallego's
fate or the whereabouts of his remains. The most commonly believed
version of what happened to the priest was that he was abducted and
killed because he founded a Santa Fe, Veraguas farmers' cooperative
that competed with a business owned by then-dictator Omar Torrijos,
the father of our current president, and that the priest was thrown
from a helicopter high over the Pacific Ocean, at a point where the
current would have taken the body out to sea. The failure to find a
body has, due to old Vatican rules, meant that Gallego can't be
declared a saint as many Catholics think he should be. The
cooperative that Gallego founded, however, has thrived and is the
largest business enterprise in Santa Fe.
Police
major charged in beating death under house arrest
Prosecutors
say that National Police Major Emilio
León
supervised the beating death of La Joyita inmate Daniel Vela
Rodríguez and the clumsy subsequent attempt to cover it up
by
claiming that the injuries were from a fall out of a tree. The
medical examiner showed that the police explanation --- supported by
de León's
superiors --- was patently false and a number of eyewitnesses to the
beating said the same, so the major and two other officers were
charged with murder by prosecutors. Generally one is incarcerated to
await trial on a murder charge, especially when one is alleged to be
the ringleader. But Major León is living at home while a
prosecutor studies his lawyer's petition to allow him to await trial
under house arrest. Health reasons are proffered in the petition, but
there is a prison ward at Santo Tomas Hospital where those with
health problems who are awaiting trial for murder are generally
treated.
Civic
group protests house arrest for Noriega-era bank chief
Rafael
Arosemena was head of the Banco Nacional de Panama under the Noriega
dictatorship and at the time of the 1989 US invasion he fled to
Mexico. Tried and convicted in absentia for large-scale embezzlement
from the bank, after Martín Torrijos became president
Arosemena flew back to Panama in his private jet and was promptly
arrested. However, after a few months in El Renacer Penitentiary near
Gamboa, the aging ex-banker was allowed to serve his time under house
arrest due to illness. Late last year the Institute of Legal Medicine
opined that Arosemena should return to prison but the Torrijos
administration has not accepted that recommendation. Now the Alianza
Ciudadana Pro Justicia, a coalition of professional, human rights and
civic groups, is pressing the government to put Arosemena back in
jail, pointing out that prisoners who aren't millionaires like him
routinely suffer through terminal illnesses under incarceration and
demanding a single standard.
Hunger
strike in David over inmate's death
On
April 14 inmates in David's jail staged a hunger strike to protest
the death of prisoner Segundo
Batista Hernández. Batista, awaiting trial on murder and
robbery charges, died in his cell the week before after a tear
gassing by police. The other prisoners claimed that the police caused
the death and were trying to block a genuine investigation into the
matter.
Roundup
in Cocle
It
was one of those "social prophylaxis operations," wherein
the police roust suspicious looking people and those committing petty
crimes, across Cocle province on the weekend of April 19 and 20. The
haul was 34 people, including some minors caught out after curfew,
some foreigners with their papers not in order and some junkie or
mentally ill - looking types.
Cops
beat heads in Santiago
Students
from the Normal School in Veraguas were tear gassed and beaten on
April 17, when they tried to block the Pan-American Highway to
protest a Torrijos administration attempt to legislate their school's
legal status. There were 20 arrests and 40 minor injuries, mostly
reactions to heavy tear gas exposure.
Martín's
DR license to steal was tax-free
The
high pay for virtually no work contract that a company owned by
President Torrijos and former Minister of the Presidency Ubaldino
Real had with the Dominican Republic between 2001 and 2004 had an
extra advantage. Newspapers in Panama and the DR, relying on
Dominican tax records, note that the company, Land &
Construction, a subsidiary of Torrijos's and Real's Constructores y
Consultores SA, paid no taxes on the $300,000 per year it got from
the Dominican public works ministry.
Another
school embezzlement case
Auditors
for the Ministry of Education have discovered about $200,000 missing
from the Escuela Aserrio in Bugaba, Chiriqui. El Panama America
reports that the former principal is the main suspect.
President's
uncle beats the rap
First
he was allowed to jump ahead of someone else who had applied to
Reforma Agraria to get the property. Then, despite the fact that it
was a government-owned mangrove forest that's not supposed to be
privatized, he got it at a tiny fraction of its market value. Then,
in violation of environmental laws, he bulldozed 38 hectares of
mangroves. No problem. La Chorrera judge Ricardo
Mazza created a special standard and came up with an amazing finding
of fact: bulldozing a mangrove forest doesn't do "irreversible
damage to the eco-system," so Rodolfo "Charro" Espino
was found not guilty. Well, of course. To President Torrijos, you
see, the defendant is "Uncle Charro." Environmentalist
leader and University of Panama biologist Ariel Rodríguez
blasted the reasoning behind the decision as an scientific and
environmental absurdity. Panama's coastal fisheries depend on the
mangroves for their nutrients and as hatcheries upon which the marine
food chain depends, and the wetland forests also filter a lot of
pollution that would otherwise get into the sea.
Former
legislator doesn't beat the rap
Carlos
Santana --- the former Arnulfista legislator from Veraguas, not the
Mexican rock musician who can make his guitar cry --- has been sent
to jail for six months for using public funds for his 2004 campaign.
The Electoral Tribunal has, on the other hand, allowed the use of
public funds for political campaigning by the current PRD regime.
Murder
conviction in American retiree's death
Marlon
Enrique Hunter won't be at large for awhile. He was convicted in the
May 2004 robbery and slaying of American retiree Jill
Canganelli, who was forced to sign checks to various individuals
allied to Hunter, forced to drive to a forested area near Gamboa,
then shot in the head. Four co-defendants were acquitted of murder
but are still in prison on charges of receiving stolen property in
the case.
Criminal
Procedure Code passes on first reading
Dictatorship-era
Supreme Court magistrate Jerry Wilson, now the pro-corruption
president of the National Assembly's Government and Justice
Committee, says that "95 percent" of what people who had
participated in the process of consultation to write a new Code of
Criminal Procedure is included in the version that was passed on
first reading by the committee on April 22. Which 95 percent, hardly
anybody knows because the document has not been published.
Anti-corruption and civic groups are demanding time to read the
document before it gets jammed the rest of the way through the
legislative process. Wilson has been an adamant backer of procedural
rules that make it virtually impossible to investigate, prosecute or
punish acts of political corruption. The committee has attached the
label "urgent" to the proposed law, but not, according to
Wilson, to jam it through the legislature without opportunity for
public disclosure and debate. It would need that status to go into
effect at about the same time that the new Penal Code does next
month. However, that's going to be a problem to the extent that it
will be expected that lawyers and judges will adjust to new
procedures with less than a month of preparation. Anticipating that
problem, Attorney General Ana Matilde Gómez
has called for a transitional period to implement the new rules.
SUNTRACS
leader on trial
Saúl
Méndez, the number two leader of the militant SUNTRACS
construction workers' union, will go on trial on April 29 for
allegedly hiring a thug to start a shooting incident at a labor
protest last year. One Frederic
Mayre, a petty hoodlum with a long record of arrests and convictions,
said that Méndez
paid him $500 and gave him a pistol to start a shooting incident at
an August 16, 2007 protest march in response to the killing by an
Odebrecht company goon and a police officer respectively of two
SUNTRACS activists earlier that week. The trial was set for April 23
but postponed for a week.
Pentagono
members sentenced for gangsterism
Under
a 2004 law belonging to a gang dedicated to criminal purposes is a
crime in itself and that law was enforced on April 16. Judge Zaida
Cárdenas tried 10 members of the Santa Ana - El Chorrillo
drug
(etc.) gang El Pentagono, found six of them guilty and handed out
sentences of one year in prison.
US
help requested in Danger Man slaying case
One
of the theories about the February 21 murder of regueton singer
Alonso
"Danger Man" Blackwood Drakes is that he was gunned down
because he was a witness in a US drug trial. To pursue this angle of
the investigation, the Panamanian government has asked for US
government assistance. It may be a problem. Although US authorities
pay a lot of money to informers and witnesses in drug cases, such
people are notoriously expendable to American justice.
Representantes
invite
Hugo Chávez
Members
of Panama City's city council have invited Venezuela President Hugo
Chávez to come here for the September meeting of the Latin
American Congress of Mayors and City Council Members. Across Latin
America, most governments are highly centralized and the main theme
of the congress will be to push for a greater degree of local
autonomy throughout the region. Within Venezuelan politics Chávez
has promoted neighborhood councils with powers that would infringe
those of local governments, but that idea has been rejected by his
country's voters.These briefs were compiled on April 25 Also
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