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Volume
16, Number 5 |
Also in this
section: Garbage
woes, aggravated by an incompetent mayor During his mayoral
campaign, Bosco Vallarino accused the mayor at the time, Juan Carlos
Navarro, of corruption in a refuse recycling contract with a Spanish
company, and of corruption with respect to the purchase of a fleet of
garbage trucks. Bosco promised 100 new garbage trucks on the streets.
He said he wanted an energy-generating garbage incinerator for the city. Bosco has never
produced a shred of evidence of the corruption he alleged. His idea of
coating the city in toxic incinerator ash has, mercifully, been blocked
for the time being. There are just 55 garbage trucks on the streets of
the capital now, only three of them compactors. The mayor and the
city council agreed on a no-bid contract to buy 51 new garbage trucks,
and since absolutely nobody expects Bosco the Clown to use the mayor's
office as a springboard to the presidency, they ought to be here in
four months or so. Contrast that with the three years of litigation,
then paperwork and border hassles created by PRD rivals in the national
government, between when the Navarro administration ordered and
received the last batch of garbage trucks. So, with that $8.6
million purchase order accomplished, what does Bosco do? He asks each
national government ministry to provide him with a garbage truck and
driver, something that's not going to happen. He declares that
privatization of garbage collection is the best way to deal with the
garbage problem, even though that has proven to be a failure everywhere
that it has been tried in Panama. The best way to
deal with The cultural
change of ending a throw-away mentality and culture of littering is a
longer-term job, one that Navarro began with one of the few worthwhile
government publicity campaigns we have seen. The messages that
littering is unacceptable should be resumed. Recycling is
another important city effort, which must be accompanied by a public
education campaign to be effective. We need to reduce
the input of solid wastes, which is a job for the national government
but should be a cause led by the mayors, who should be demanding
deposits on bottles and cans, charges per bag at grocery stores to
encourage people to bring their own bags or baskets, incentives or
edicts to reduce extra packaging materials that go with retail
products. We need to look at regulations that reduce the volume of
packaging materials that can neither be reused nor recycled. Bosco Vallarino is
and has been the subject of a number of criminal investigations,
several of which are pending and some of which have been blocked by
dubious court decisions. Removing him would be just a matter of lifting
the shield of political interference in the judicial system and
allowing him, for example, to face the ordinary consequences of his
extraordinary warrantless raid on a Then we could see
whether Roxana Méndez
can pass the tests that Bosco has so dismally flunked. It's not a sure
bet, but for the next few years it's our only option. Institutionalized corruption In recent days the
National Assembly has made a couple of moves that build corruption into
the structures of the way that public business is done. The recent tax
reforms levy a sales tax on luxury cars equivalent to 25 percent of the
amount of the price in excess of the first $30,000. For cars under that
price, the tax is five percent. An earlier legislative reform package
that originally would have ended the legislators' car import duty
exemption altogether was amended to give them an exemption up to the
value of $100,000. The tax reform, however, did away with the import
duties in favor of a sales tax. Now the legislators have given
themselves a sales tax discount on cars --- they will pay five percent,
regardless of value. What it means is a
continuation of a racket, whereby legislators buy luxury cars with a
huge tax savings over what other people pay, and then lease or
otherwise transfer those cars and tax savings to very wealthy private
individuals. These tax break transfers are technically illegal, but the
courts, prosecutors and legislatures have consistently refused to
intervene. Thus we saw racketeer David Murcia Guzmán,
serving a Colombian prison sentence as he awaits trial for drug money
laundering in the National Assembly
president José Luis Varela has made lame efforts to defend
the practice, and both government and opposition deputies have
supported it. But what the nation has to deal with is a built-in
business tie between government and organized crime. Now the
legislature --- just the Martinelli coalition parties this time --- is
moving to gut what's left of the right of parties to expel and remove
elected officials who go against the policies of their parties. It's
promoted as a freedom of conscience and independence of action move. But let us recall
the origins of the party discipline provisions in While we might
truthfully say nasty things about the parties that these elected
officials are leaving in favor of Cambio Democratico, the mercenary
attitudes of those who are switching parties are one of the great
ethical problems of Panamanian political life. Thus the
Martinelli caucus's move against party discipline is at the same time
both another attack on the constitutional rule of law and another
institutionalized encouragement for bribery. Yes, we need a new
constitution that reduces the power of the party leaderships. No, we
don't need Martinelli's self-serving tinkering with the system that
this "reform" is all about.
Bear in mind... Most people are
bothered by those passages of Scripture they do not understand, but the
passages that bother me are those I do understand.
Mark
Twain
I am patient with
stupidity but not with those who are proud of it.
Edith
Sitwell
Any community's
arm of force --- military, police, security --- needs people in it who
can do necessary evil, and yet not be made evil by it. To do only the
necessary and no more. To constantly question the assumptions, to stop
the slide into atrocity.
Lois
McMaster Bujold
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