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The Panama News blog links, April 19, 2022

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The Panama News blog links

a bilingual Panama-centric selection of other people’s work
una selección bilingüe Panamá-céntrica de las obras de otras personas
If you are not bilingual Google Translate usually works
Si no eres bilingüe, el traductor de Google generalmente funciona

Canal, Maritime & Transport / Canal, Marítima & Transporte

La Estrella, Trabajadores del Canal de Panamá convocan protesta
Reuters, Ship engine makers cut ties with Russia
MundoMarítimo, China se sumerge en un caos logístico
Reuters, Stranded seafarers escape Ukraine

 

This is not a paid ad. That Uncle Sam is doing this is newsworthy.

Economy / Economía

TVN, Des-dolarización de la mitad del mundo: ¿Impactará a Panamá?
Telecomlead, Digicel to exit from Panama as Claro and Cable & Wireless unite
La Estrella, Futbolistas de Panamá van a huelga
Radio Temblor, Los Bribrí buscan anular títulos de propiedad a foráneos
CNN, S&P says that Russia has defaulted on its foreign debt
Channel News Asia, Bank of Japan’s Kuroda warns of weak economy
AP, AMLO falls shorts on his try to undo power company “free trade”
The Lever, Oil mogul bankrolls attempt to buy Democratic primary
Tuugi Chuluun: Do poison pills work? The Twitter example.

 

 

Science & Technology / Ciencia & Tecnología

The New York Times, Shriek! Slap! Pow! The small bat wins.
Gizmodo: The wild, uncertain future of carbon dioxide removal
Prensa Latina, Cuban evidence confirms positive impact of pediatric vaccination
The Guardian: Forensic teams uncover gruesome secrets of Bucha in Ukraine
Daily Beast, This ‘e-nose’ can sniff out fine whiskies from fraudulent ones

 

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News / Noticias

La Estrella: China y Ucrania, en la agenda de Blinken en Panamá
FOCO, Evaluarán a jueces y magistrados
TVN, Aumento de sueldos en el Municipio de Arraiján
Metro Libre, Comarca Emberá Wounaan cuenta con nuevas autoridades
Colombia Reports, Petro accused of making deal with corrupt politicians, drug lord
Colombia Reports, The shady forces behind the Gutiérrez campaign
Second Nexus, Senator slammed after texts to Trump White House leak

 

When considering the Ukraine War, you need to think in terms of Russian and Ukrainian culture and history. The monument with Mother Russia and her sword atop Mamaev Hill should not be thought of in US terms as some sort of analog to the Statue of Liberty. In the Battle of Stalingrad about a million people died on this hill as Soviet forces fought to the death against Nazi Germany. City of Volgograd photo.

 

Ukraine background special / Fondo especial de Ucrania

Pozner, How the United States created Vladimir Putin (2018)
Chomsky & Fletcher, A left response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
Faraldo Jarillo, El conflicto entre Rusia y Ucrania explicado con sencillez
Omar, To get justice for war crimes…
CNN, Bill Browder on what really drives Putin
Nueva Sion, La izquierda frente a la guerra
Targ, War and Peace

 

Opinion / Opiniones

TYT, Katie Porter roasts the bad guys
Dolan, A pandemic of the poor
WOLA, The post-Title 42 US-Mexico border
NACLA, In Bolivia Áñez’s trial sparks debate about justice
Concepción, Panamá recibe antorcha de conferencia sobre océanos
Sagel, Adultos mayores ante la tecnología
Turner, Un fallo hacia un estado fallido
Zúñiga, Gobernando en tiempos de democracia

 

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Culture / Cultura

Remezcla, Beauty in Latin America has always been rooted in the Earth
El Tiempo, Entrevista con Rubén Blades
The Forward: Remembering Mimi Reinhardt, who typed Schindler’s List
ARTnews, Sarcophagus discovered beneath Notre-Dame will soon be opened
Drier, Look past the sanitized version of who and what Jackie Robinson was
El Siglo, La chorrerana que cantará con Ulpiano

 

 

Contact us by email at / Contáctanos por correo electrónico a fund4thepanamanews@gmail.com

 

To fend off hackers, organized trolls and other online vandalism, our website comments feature is switched off. Instead, come to our Facebook page to join in the discussion.

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Peace to all on this Easter, Passover and Ramadan

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lamb

A time to get along

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contact us by email at / Contáctanos por correo electrónico a fund4thepanamanews@gmail.com

 

To fend off hackers, organized trolls and other online vandalism, our website comments feature is switched off. Instead, come to our Facebook page to join in the discussion.

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¿Wappin? Solidarity is righteous / La solidaridad es justa

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HR demo
On this Good Friday and first day of Passover, let’s have some empathy for those held captive, forced into exile or otherwise persecuted. It’s the cornerstone of every worthy faith.
En este Viernes Santo y el primer día de Pascua, tengamos un poco de empatía por los cautivos, forzados al exilio o perseguidos de otra manera. Es la piedra angular de toda fe digna. Photo by / Foto por Ted Eytan.

It could be you or me
Podrías ser tú o yo

Julian Lennon – Imagine
https://youtu.be/NicWjYMPDG0

Joan Osborne – One of Us
https://youtu.be/8lBuqscNe6o

Juanin Navarro et al – Allí donde tu sabes
https://youtu.be/fvEvlx_506A

Boney M – Rivers Of Babylon
https://youtu.be/c5cR82JPxQY

Roger Waters – The Last Refugee
https://youtu.be/63XfFlqGs0E

Patti Smith – Oh, red viburnum in the meadow (Ukrainian national anthem)
https://youtu.be/tk8GW1DmmHo

Carlos Martínez – El Presidiario
https://youtu.be/gkAdQF42em8

The Rolling Stones – Citadel
https://youtu.be/fTcKGxtWe1Q

The Unwanted – Out on the Western Plain
https://youtu.be/50cDN3-t9dQ

Rubén Blades – Prohibido Olvidar
https://youtu.be/HJu-zuHBk4E

Nina Simone – Tomorrow is my turn
https://youtu.be/GchAs0FjmIs

Enrique Bunbury & Carla Morrison – Porque las cosas cambian
https://youtu.be/uOK5Q6csXiI

Redbone – Come and Get Your Love
https://youtu.be/6qlQpOvVbZI

Mon Lafterte – La Mujer
https://youtu.be/tyA-_YAa-tE

The Golden Gospel Singers – Oh Freedom!
https://youtu.be/nqPZUnV-vrw

 

Contact us by email at / Contáctanos por correo electrónico a fund4thepanamanews@gmail.com

 

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Ben-Meir, Israel’s need for forever enemies

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A recent outrage. The journalists who recorded it were arrested after this widowed Palestinian mother was gunned down for crossing the street. Israel’s harsh treatment of the Palestinians is designed to deepen Palestinian resentment and instigate “controlled” violence, which in turn allows Israeli governments to justify the continued occupation on national security grounds. It’s time for all Israelis to disabuse themselves of the notion that the occupation is central to their national security, when in fact the opposite is true.

Righting the wrong: Israel needs the Palestinians
as a perpetual enemy to justify the occupation

by Alon Ben-Meir

The spree of violent attacks in Israel in which Palestinians and Israeli Arabs killed 14 civilians in the past couple of weeks strongly suggests that it is time for Israel to face the bitter truth about the 55-year-old occupation and admit that making it central to Israel’s national security is an intentional fallacy. Prime Minister Bennett, like his predecessor Netanyahu, is using the recent attacks to justify the continuing occupation, when in fact it is the occupation itself that has instigated these attacks. The inescapable reality is that after more than five decades of ruthless occupation, the Palestinians – especially the young – have had enough and are no longer willing to accept servitude with no hope of a better future. The saddest part is that Israel is deliberately feeding into this hopelessness in the way it is treating the Palestinians, by employing an oppressive strategy to ensure a certain level of Palestinian resentment and hatred, perpetuating their resistance while refining the art of how to contain violence but not end it completely.

The fallacy of linking the occupation to Israel’s national security

The absurdity here is that anyone who is familiar with Israel’s legitimate national security requirements would admit that an independent Palestinian state that fully cooperates with Israel on all security matters (which must be an unequivocal precondition to any peace agreement) would greatly enhance rather than compromise Israel’s national security. A future Palestinian state would significantly augment its domestic security apparatus and work very closely with Israel to prevent extremists from either side from committing acts of violence against the other. Their cooperation should include sharing intelligence, conducting joint operations to prevent violent attacks by individuals or groups from either side, and establishing rules of engagement to prevent accidental clashes between their respective security forces. They invoke Israel’s experience in Gaza, which became a staging ground for Hamas’s attacks, forgetting that Israel withdrew from Gaza over night without and security arrangement with the Palestinian Authority which led to Hamas’s taking over. A security apparatus as described above would render Israeli arguments based on the Gaza withdrawal hollow and deceitful at best.

Normalizing the occupation

What is greatly worrisome is that three generations of Israelis and Palestinians (80 percent of Israelis and 92 percent of Palestinians), have been born since the occupation began at the end of the 1967 war. PM Bennett (who was born in 1972, five years after the start of the occupation) and millions of other Israelis grew up during the occupation and consider the West Bank, or Judea and Samaria as the Israeli government calls the occupied territory, as a natural extension of Israel proper. The sad thing is that instead of developing over the years a closer relationship between Israeli Jews and Palestinians and sympathizing with each other’s concerns and aspirations, Israel deliberately employed oppressive measures which have only widened the gulf between them and further compounded their mutual hatred and distrust.

Three generations of Israelis have grown to believe that the Palestinians are irredeemably violent and harbor a profound ill-feeling toward every Israeli Jew. Those Israelis are steadily growing in numbers (perhaps surpassing 50 percent of the population) and are moving to the right; they support the settlers, and have been made to believe the acrimonious public narrative dished out by right-wing leaders that the Palestinians represent an imminent threat, and so have adopted the common refrain that “the Palestinians are out to destroy us”. To be sure, Israel, especially during Netanyahu’s tenure as prime minister from 2009 to 2021, sought to keep the Palestinians as a perpetual enemy to serve his long-term objective of annexing much if not all of the West Bank.

Hence, the Israeli strategy is to maintain the occupation while remaining vigilant and uncompromising and making the Palestinians’ lives as hard as possible, hoping that many will eventually leave their communities and make more room for settlers. Tragically, Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians flies in the face of the reality that the Palestinians are there to stay, which Israel simply cannot wish away.

Israel needs a perpetual enemy

On the other side of this miserable divide, three generations of Palestinians have grown up with a no less poisonous mindset toward the Israelis. They have been indoctrinated just the same by their leaders that the Israelis are a vicious and brutal enemy bent on breaking their will and subjecting them to the terrible plight of indefinite occupation. The Israeli treatment of the Palestinians only reinforced the Palestinians’ narrative. The Palestinians are suffering under the occupation day in and day out by the Israeli military’s brutality—forced eviction, night raids, almost daily killings (in 2021 more than 300 Palestinians were killed), incarceration, demolition of houses built without permits (which are hardly ever granted), and extreme restriction on travel and movement. To be sure, for Israel to maintain the occupation, it often resorts to gross human rights violations to a point that ascribing the label ‘apartheid state’ to Israel has become increasingly common.

And the Palestinians’ lot in Gaza fares even worse, as Israel continues to enforce land, air, and sea blockades over the entire Strip, which it justifies on the grounds that Hamas poses an existential threat to Israel. That said, the Israelis have become accustomed to the low level of violence with Hamas and when the situation deteriorates, Israeli forces return to Gaza to “mow the lawn”, as they have done four time in the past—an acceptable ‘price’ in blood which Israel absorbs with near equanimity. Over the years Israel rejected Hamas’ call for a long-term ceasefire, 15-20 years which would have been established under a strict monitoring structure. This would have allowed Hamas to focus on rebuilding infrastructure and institutions and developing a vested interest in maintaining the ceasefire, instead of continuously trying to acquire more sophisticated weapons and prepare its forces for the next war.

This is what capsulizes Israel’s strategy toward the Palestinians: Israel needs a permanent enemy to support its occupation, which explains why it is not interested in any serious peace dialogue if the establishment of a Palestinian state is the ultimate objective.

Embracing a distorted mindset

What is greatly worrisome is that the Israeli public has become increasingly complacent, accepting the argument promulgated especially by former PM Netanyahu that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is no longer an obstacle that prevents many Arab states from making peace with Israel. Netanyahu and now Bennett point to the normalization of relations between Israel and four Arab states under the Abraham Accords (the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan) as evidence to support their argument. They conveniently forget that the precondition to normalization of relations was that Israel cannot annex any Palestinian territory and that the establishment of a Palestinian state with its capital in East Jerusalem is a prerequisite to a comprehensive peace between Israel and the Arab states.

For a relative majority of Israelis to embrace this distorted mindset—linking the occupation to national security—is ominously dangerous, as it leaves little or no room to reconcile with people with whom they must coexist in one form or another. Tragically, the perpetuation of enmity towards the Palestinians is forcing Israel to live by the gun. This is not only inconsistent with the vision of Israel’s founders, but is totally contradictory to Jewish values that have sustained Jewish lives throughout the centuries. Meanwhile, Israel is losing sight of the benefits and advantages it can reap from peace, but especially and most notably is the moral salvation which is central to Israel’s existence.

The far-reaching advantages of peace

Peace with the Palestinians will address Israel’s ultimate national security concerns, as Israel would integrate into the wider Middle East and North Africa, form security alliances against any common enemy, and create a crescent of allies extending from the Gulf to the Mediterranean that would severely undercut Iran’s hegemonial ambitions.

Peace with the Palestinians will open the door wide for the vast majority of Arab and Muslim countries to normalize relations with Israel, which will have far-reaching economic, and especially geostrategic and security benefits.

Peace with the Palestinians will pull the rug from underneath Iran, which uses the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to justify its hostility toward Israel. Moreover, Tehran will be compelled to end its “existential” threats against Israel, especially if the Arab Gulf states enter into a security alliance with Israel, which is being discussed.

Peace with the Palestinians will force Hezbollah, Iran’s proxy in Lebanon, and Palestinian extremists such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad, to reevaluate their position towards Israel, as peace would severely erode the foundation of their resistance.

Peace with the Palestinians will repair the dangerously widening political schism between Israeli Jews who seek to end the occupation and those who don’t, as well as between Israeli Arabs and Jews. Peace would help generate social cohesiveness, which is central to Israel’s domestic security and stability.

Peace with the Palestinians will dramatically improve the fraught relationship between Israel and the American Jewish community, which overwhelmingly supports ending the conflict based on a two-state solution.

Peace with the Palestinians would mitigate to some degree the rise of antisemitism, which countless people the world over ascribe in no small measure to Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians in the occupied territories.

Peace with the Palestinians will not poison the minds of another generation of Israelis who live under the illusion that they can prosper and be safe only if they remain in control of the territories and thwart the Palestinians’ aspirations for statehood.

Peace with the Palestinians will save Israel the additional hundreds of millions of dollars that it allocates to security in the West Bank, which it could alternatively invest in gentrification of scores of debilitated Israeli neighborhoods, improving the infrastructure and housing in many poor communities desperate for a dignified and humane standard of living.

Peace with the Palestinians will project Israel in a new light to the community of nations. Instead of being condemned and criticized because of the occupation, it will be praised for its courage and fortitude and for righting the wrong while enhancing its national security.

Finally, peace with the Palestinians will free the Israelis from the heavy and distasteful moral burden of the occupation, which they have been carrying for more than five decades.

Ending the occupation on moral and practical grounds

The Bennett government, however tenuous it may be, should treat the spree of Palestinian attacks as a wakeup call and begin a process of healing with the Palestinians. Instead of resorting to even more oppressive and ruthless measures in the West Bank, presumably to prevent future attacks, such brutal measures will only galvanize the Palestinians’ resistance and potentially lead to a massive violent uprising. Thousands of Palestinian youth will be prepared to sacrifice themselves instead of living despondent and despairing, with no prospect of ever being free and realizing their dreams. It is now only a question of time when they will rise, unless Israel realizes that the occupation is the recipe for a disaster and acts to end it, for its own sake just as much as for the Palestinians.

Israel does not need a perpetual enemy to survive, and it can no longer justify the occupation on the basis of national security concerns. Israel’s birth was the triumph of what’s right and moral over the worst of all evils. It was the moral responsibility of the community of nations in the wake of the Holocaust that carried Israel into existence. Israel’s strength, permanence, and fortune rests on that moral foundation, which is, and will always be, the essence of its very being.

Only by raising that moral torch high in pursuit of what is right and just, will Israel ensure its continuing existence as a democracy, free and independent, living in safety and security, that no enemy can challenge with impunity.

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a retired professor of international relations at the Center for Global Affairs at NYU. He taught courses on international negotiation and Middle Eastern studies for more than 20 years.

 

 

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Editorials: Embracing foreign residents; and US citizen? VOTE, don’t just watch

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state-sponsored idiocy
The infamous Aqua Tower on Playa Blanca, when they were still working on it and trying to sell the units to foreigners. With government financing the developers built on the sand without bothering to install proper foundations and it got to the point where further construction would have caused the 13-story structure to collapse under its own weight. Perhaps the still-standing shell might be retrofitted with pilings or other foundation enhancements, and buyers who never read that part of the Bible that tells the tale of the foolish man who built on the sand might be found. It would be better if Panama just stopped encouraging businesses that take foreigners to be suckers. Archive photo by Eric Jackson.

Integrating foreign residents into Panama

There is an English-speaking community, with two main branches from the West Indies and the USA, that has been here for more than 170 years. British, Canadian and other English-speakers are, in lesser numbers, also part of Panama’s English-speaking mix. Then there are a lot of assimilated Panamanians descended from immigrants from the English-speaking world who don’t speak English, or don’t speak it well. Plus, English is taught in the schools here, not always very well, so there are many Panamanians who speak at least some English as a second language.

However, Panama is officially and as a practical matter a Spanish-speaking country. There was an attempt some years back to make English an official language, but that did not pass. The Panama News opposed the idea at the time, and still would. There are tiny little moves to make our indigenous languages official, but there are practical obstacles. It would still be nice to watch the occasional National Assembly video with a legislator speaking Ngabere, his or her colleagues wearing their headphones and a Spanish translation track.

There are demagogues in the legislature and out and about in the general public who would kick all the foreigners out, and the more extreme of them would strip Panamanians born to foreign parents of their citizenship as well. On the other hand, there are folks in the real estate, financial and legal representation industries who depend on foreign clients to make their livings. For a variety of reasons, The Panama News finds flaws on both sides of this coin. We should get off the money laundering economy. We should be building to affordably house Panamanians, not to attract mostly imaginary foreign millionaires to expatriate ghettos. All the racism and xenophobia are ugly enough, but we should also understand that a lot of the ranting of that sort that comes from public officials is intended as a distraction from those politicians’ own peculations.

This country of immigrants, though, has a history. Some things worked to weave people of other nationalities into the fabric of Panamanian society, and other things were ignominious failures. Colonialism, and the notion that people are just passing through here so whatever they do doesn’t count to anyone who matters, are the proven historical monstrosities to avoid. Foreigners who are unwilling to respect Panama and Panamanians should be invited to take their attitudes out on someone else, somewhere else.

But what about MOST foreigners? A few policies should be considered:

1. Those who seek to live here should learn at least some Spanish.

To get foreign residency, there should be an introductory course in Spanish – depending on the applicant’s knowledge of the language, but for those who know little or none at least a bit of “survival Spanish.” It’s a danger to self and community if someone doesn’t know how to report a fire, or a crime. Those who know just a bit of Spanish will do better if they learn a bit more. Let’s not talk about a business, or an opportunity for some functionary to shake some residency applicant down for a bribe in order to get a “passing grade.” Forget the tests, but do offer the instruction, and require it if a newcomer non-citizen who speaks little or no Spanish is to become a resident.

2. We should encourage foreigners willing to lend a hand.

Many of Panama’s firefighters are Panamanian part-time volunteers. Why not create volunteer components into other national institutions, in part using the talents that foreigners may bring to these shores along with the abilities of local people? As an international transportation hub, we need more people who can take emergency calls in many other languages, not just English. Also, hospital translators. Also, as teachers’ assistants who help with second languages instruction in the public schools. A lot of foreign retirees have a lot of time on their hands and are willing and eager to lend a hand. We saw the foreigners who took the repatriation flights, and heard those who railed against the Panamanian government’s mask and vaccination policies, but with that chaff separated out we had a solid majority of Panamanians who endured and cooperated during the epidemic. A few who sought out and performed helpful roles during the epidemic, though churches or civic organizations or just as individuals or couples. Whether or not they ever intend to become Panamanian citizens, foreigners disposed to give their volunteer service to Panama should be invited to do so.

3. We should be searching for and welcoming foreign talent.

When you look at which foreigners Panama officially welcomes and which it at best tolerates, the monopolistic avoidance of competition in almost every sector beats out the attraction of talent that would raise Panama. If we want to have world-class universities, or internationally renowned hospitals, or cutting-edge development technologies, we should welcome more talented foreigners to come here and work. The current preference for the idle rich doesn’t do much for our economy, and attracts too many rich criminals who only pretend to be idle. A rational immigration policy presupposes a national development plan, but the latter has for years been prevented by a “What’s in it for me?” attitudes in high places. Panamanians badly need to adopt a political culture where the first and main question is “What’s in it for Panama?” That sort of attitude shift is needed on the immigration issue as well as with respect to many other matters.

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Well, of course. Every country that has a decent hospital has a laboratory with biological specimens. Every country with a competent public health system makes or stores vaccines against things like measles and polio. But here the Republicans are parroting a Putin insinuation that Ukraine has biological weapons facilities. But Ukraine actually doesn’t have facilities to make such weapons of mass death and destruction. Many Republicans seeking election or re-election are distancing themselves from such support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but they, in turn, are under attack from the QAnon / Trump factions of their party. Even with all of the state vote suppression laws and gerrymandered new districts, the triumph of authoritarian weirdos is not a foregone conclusion in next year’s US elections. Screenshot of Tucker Carlson’s Twitter feed.

Despite it all

Two and a half years before the next presidential election, Fox News proclaims with glee the fall of the House of Biden.

Will the GOP take both houses of Congress this November and give us two years of stalled federal government while their goons run amok with their assault rifles? Only if the American people let them do it.

The Republican compulsions to beat up queers, ban all abortions, keep lynching legal and support aggressive right-wing dictators around the world are not actually all that popular with Americans. Confederate Heritage Month may be quite popular among white voters in Mississippi. Qanon conspiracy theories may impress up to one-third of the US electorate. Maybe a quarter of the voters in the United States believe in a version of End Times Religion that would encourage a Battle of Armageddon.

But all of that can and should be defeated at the polls. First in the primaries, when Democrats can and should retire some of the corporate shills who want to “reach across the aisle” and compromise with white supremacy, nominating real Democrats instead. Then in November, with an unprecedented swarming of polls by Putin’s non-friends.

American citizens living in Panama can and should vote. Go to https://www.votefromabroad.org to learn more, register and order your ballot. Voting rules vary from state to state but the rights of American voters living outside of the USA are federally protected.

  

Leonardo da Vinci. Photograph by E. Desmaisons of a print. Wikimedia graphic, cropped.

                  Learning never exhausts the mind.

Leonardo da Vinci                  

Bear in mind…

Servility always curdles into rage in the end.

Tina Brown

I said “Somebody should do something about that.” Then I realized I am somebody.

Lily Tomlin

Hope has two beautiful daughters. Their names are Anger and Courage; anger at the way things are, and courage to see that they do not remain the way they are.

St. Augustine

 

Community: Spay Panama emerges from the epidemic

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husky eyes
She wanted to play with the kitty standing in line with me. The cat might have liked that idea, but cats running at large are not appreciated at Spay Panama. Dogs are supposed to be kept leashed or caged as well. That, and the rule that you must wear a mask during these plague times, is posted along the alley where you line up outside the spay clinic. So all these would-be cross-species female friends could do was look.

An appointment at Spay Panama’s headquarters in Betania

photos and notes by Eric Jackson

Spay Panama is a movement that has metastasized into a bunch of local groups, and is mobile. Its road shows go to corregimientos where the mayors or representantes welcome them, but where I live the PRD representante dismisses the movement started by Panama native Patricia Chan as “foreigners.” (He’s also the kind of local elected official who, when our neighborhood had no water coming to us for eight months a few years back, did not see fit to show his face.) So people by and large have to seek other solutions here in El Bajito.

Dogs and cats running at large are part of the neighborhood custom. Generally somebody takes them in, or at least feeds them (which is often really the same thing). Thing is, we have too many in the area, and we are the poor side of a non-rich corregimiento, such that when the epidemic hit people from the city thought it a convenient place to dump inconvenient animals. Some died, most were taken in. And THIS old Panagringo hippie had all these cats coming to dinner, and over the two years when spay events were shut down some of them had kittens.

But WAIT! There is a spay organization in Anton, the sprawling municipal district of which my neighborhood in Cocle is a part. Yes there is. And as Animal Rescue of Anton stirred back to life, they helped me to spay this affectionate puppy with a slight hip dysplasia — watch her run from behind and it’s slightly like a car whose wheels are out of alignment — but at this point in her life gets around well enough without need for orthopedic surgery. When she went into heat and attracted multiple dog packs, however, once the excitement was over it was time to get her spayed and aborted and Animal Rescue of Anton was there for her.

Then, with the help of volunteers from Animal Rescue, we caught a half dozen of the cats from my household and they were sent off to be neutered, then returned. That left most of the sterilization work yet to be done.

As a bus rider with modest means, I decided to do two things — take this look at Spay Panama’s old outpost in the city and get one more cat spayed. The one that I initially chose, this wily and beautiful black and orange tortoiseshell, got away. The gray tiger who might or might not have been early into her first pregnancy was not so swift. So I put her in the cat carrier and off we went.

We were early and had to wait in line. We fell in behind this young man and his beautiful and friendly husky mix, and ahead of some people with multiple cats to neuter. Spay Panama has these rules about being in line — if you come early for your appointment, the person with the earlier appointment gets attention before you do. If you come in with a poorly secured cat, you wait because they don’t want the chaos of a terrified cat running around the waiting room. There was a man at the door maintaining this order, and nobody seemed very impatient or annoyed.

Eventually, into the pre-op waiting room. Registration and a $15 per cat charge. Then, into the animals’ waiting room to leave the kitty in a temporary new cage. Then to the post-op waiting room, waiting for a volunteer to take my cat out, waiting some more for after that for her to come to. The volunteer looked in after awhile and said it was OK to go, that the kitty was just sleeping.

At Spay Panama they gave me this printed set of guidelines about post-operative care. Let the cat lick on ice at first, rather than gulp down water until she pukes. Keep her clean. That sort of stuff.

However, this was a feral cat, and I doubt that my finca is the only place that she comes to find a meal.

Got home, got a little bowl full of crushed ice ready, opened the lid to the cat carrier… and she bolted! Surely I will see her again at dinnertimes.

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Waiting patiently in line.

  

3
Like most Panamanians who live with huskies whom I have encountered, the human half of this symbiotic relationship with a canine had not heard of Frank Zappa’s notorious song. Is that because we don’t get snow here?

  

4
A scared kitty peeks out while waiting in line.

  

5
In the pre-op waiting room, this dog probably had no idea of what was to come on the other side of that door.

  

6
Post-op: a volunteer checks to see if the kittens are OK.

  

7
Post-op, cats brought in by a company’s security / public relations crew. Spay Panama has over the years built relationships with the National Police, municipal authorities, businesses and institutions on whose grounds feral or abandoned cats gather and community organizations. A cultural shift away from cruelty and toward responsibility has accompanied that work.

 

8
Post-op: she came to without a chance to know the joys and sorrows of bearing litters of puppies.

 

 

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Getting there yesterday morning…

0
Arraijan
Can you much blame the Panama Oeste bus drivers, who are squeezed between high fuel prices and steady bus fares set by the government? Can you imagine the riot squad, who mostly come from social origins much like the drivers, and who, being sort of even-handed, also more or less kept many bus stops from being used by inter-urban drivers to pick up passengers and scab on the brief and intermittent strike? As in, keeping some semblance of “the peace.” Photo, from a bus, by Eric Jackson.

Early on a protest morning

by Eric Jackson

A later start than I had planned. It was just shy of five dark thirty when I got to the usual bus stop. Until the sun is fully up, better to stand under the light than sit in the shade of the caseta. But I had not yet gotten under the light when the Juan Diaz – Anton bus pulled up.

Got to the puente in Anton in short order, and went into Doña Evy’s to grab some caffeine and carimañolas. Breakfast on the run. A mostly full Santiago bus was filling up, so I decided to skip that one and take the time to scarf down my carimañolas and cola and wait for a ride with more selection. I was barely done when the Anton to Panama bus pulled up and I chose the dangerous but photographically advantageous shotgun seat. It had the added advantage of a bit more space for my chacara and the cat carrier with cat-to-be-spayed inside that I was carrying.

USUALLY when I have over the years taken the bus into Panama at this hour, it’s full of construction workers. But this time, although the bus filled with working people, few were carrying tools. More than two-thirds of SUNTRACS members are currently not working due to the epidemic and its economic consequences. Few got off at the stalled money laundering towers and upscale gated neighborhoods where a lot of them used to go to work before the virus hit us. The eternal question: Who eats the losses on this unsold / unfinished inventory?

Lots of service workers on this early morning bus ride the Monday after Palm Sunday. A bunch got off at San Carlos stops. A lot got off in the Coronado area. They were replaced by others on their way to jobs in the city.

You have heard about how “The early bird gets the worm?” Do YOU eat worms? Would you accept them if offered to you for brunch? No, you HATE worms, at least at meal times. So you don’t want to be EARLY if you don’t want to eat worms. Basic preschool pedagogy, for those who would push to the head of the line.

But with Spay Panama just reactivating, going to their HQ in Bethania near the gym, appointments need to be made and you don’t want to be LATE and and miss one. Especially if your little finca is besieged by cats who were abandoned during the epidemic for the convenience of unscrupulous city dwellers, and the progeny of these animals that were put out of cars, which then drove away. 

(El Bajito as dumping ground? Now THERE is a bit of class snobbery for you, compounded by a PRD representante who doesn’t care to hear about dog and cat population problems.)

Anyway, I was concerned about getting this cat to her appointment on time, and had been following the transportistas’ call for protests in Panama Oeste that morning.

No sign of it, until in Chorrera we passed by the protesters massing. Just ahead of a scene like this — but not at this particular spot — pirated from the Internet:

Published on Twitter by Tráfico Panamá. Didn’t see a credit or a copyright notice.

Luck held out. Past Chorrera, onto the turnoff to the Arraijan ensanche.

Then, at the bus stop in Arraijan town center, a traffic jam and a bunch of cops. There were spaces to fill on the bus, but neither this driver nor any of the others were picking up passengers. Although the inter-urban drivers were not participating in their Panama Oeste colleagues’ stoppage, neither were they that brazenly scabbing on it.

So, how severe?

Maybe a half-hour caught in very slow traffic. Passed some riot cops and some protesting drivers, but they were not doing battle. Other media report cat-and-mouse stoppages, nobody really committed to an all-out brawl.

Pulled into the terminal at Albrook at 8:20. A bit of time to kill. Got a newspaper to read and a chicken thigh and chicha de maracuya for part 2 of breakfast before grabbing a taxi to Bethania.

I was early. Read about it in a story to follow.

I don’t THINK that either the kitty or I got any worms yesterday.

3
Waiting it out. Life is more bearable in this country when ditching the gringo values and getting into pana passivity. Time is not money. It’s just time. Photo by this Panagringo, Eric Jackson.

 

 

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Bernal, What we have is authoritarian and personalist government

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What would the Belushis say about this?
What?!? Bernal denigrates the legacy of Comrade Enver Hoxha, the genius architect of the mighty Albanian-Chinese Alliance? An old Chinese poster, from when the Albanian-Chinese Alliance was “one billion strong.”

Institutionality?

by Miguel Antonio Bernal V.

“Institutionalized power,” Rodrigo Borja teaches us in his Encyclopedia of Politics, “is that which has been stripped of the personal, capricious, uncertain and accidental that it had since the dawn of human society. One of the great values of peoples’ political development is the predictability of power, that is, the possibility of knowing how far its effects can reach and what the limitations of public authority are. Herein lies the legal certainty of the governed, that is, their certainty and sense that they will not be bothered without committing acts contrary to the law.”

The degenerate democracy that we have to live under day by day nin Panama has zero institutionality. Hence, the legal security of the inhabitants within the national territory, is every day more precarious and dangerous.

The militaristic constitution, imposed in 1972, established the cult of personality by which tribute had to be paid to the dictator, who by its provision (Art. 277) was a military chief, legislator, judge, attorney, magistrate, comptroller and a long etcetera. Nowadays his political heir has spent 34 months reveling in self-absorption and imitating the father of the military regime in walking, speaking and acting.

Proof of the above is the style of authoritarian and personalist government, with its concentration of political power. Then there is the semi-divine cult professed by his ministers and officials, who do not miss an opportunity to deify him with the usual paraphernalia.

The cult of personality is the clumsiest denial of institutionality, in addition to being one of the engines of corruption and impunity. The world’s bestiary of rulers who hated institutionality due to the cult of their personality is extensive: Stalin, Franco, Hitler, Mussolini, Trujillo, Mao, Idi Amin, Kim Il-sung, Enver Hoxha, Bokassa, Mobutu, Hussein, Papa Doc, Marcos and many other operetta tyrants, who today serve as inspiration for authoritarian presidentialism.

Old wisdom has it that “the powerful always know how to set the stage for deception” and bring down the institutional framework. Having seen it, civic activism through a constituent process is urgent, in order to secure power and spaces for citizens to act.

 

 

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¿Wappin? Aspects of the human condition / Aspectos de la condición humana

0
Blades
Rubén Blades, Casa de América photo.

I think we risk becoming the best informed society that has ever died of ignorance.

Rubén Blades

Before there was reality TV there was real culture
Antes de que existiera la telerrealidad era cultura real

Robert Johnson – Me and The Devil Blues
https://youtu.be/pfLGJLHGVFs

Vivir Quintana – Canción Sin Miedo
https://youtu.be/uRQLBhvCv10

Leonard Cohen – The Partisan
https://youtu.be/–bxTVx8L8E

Camila Moreno, Ximena Sariñana & Lido Pimienta – Déjame
https://youtu.be/VXQvjPbeZYI

Bruce Springsteen – This Depression
https://youtu.be/PNKe2XZR1qc

Peter Tosh – Burial
https://youtu.be/zLBVfatI8IM

Ólafur Arnalds & Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir – Particles
https://youtu.be/dJjJoHlJVho

Gilberto Santa Rosa – La Conciencia
https://youtu.be/3SQucMV8LHY

Luis Arteaga – La Última Canción
https://youtu.be/xLGJcpZ86Ag

Kany García & Carlos Vives – Búscame
https://youtu.be/18X9QQQO5Xk

Pablo Milanés – De que callada manera
https://youtu.be/E8MRVmT9eZ4

Yomira John – Solita
https://youtu.be/9B4G7wppIuY

Natalia Lafourcade – Alfonsina y El Mar
https://youtu.be/edLHHvTx6-w

Townes Van Zandt – Pancho and Lefty
https://youtu.be/zprRZ2wFQD4

Miles Davis Quintet – Round Midnight
https://youtu.be/GIgLt7LAZF0

 

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Para defendernos de los piratas informáticos, los trolls organizados y otros actos de vandalismo en línea, la función de comentarios de nuestro sitio web está desactivada. En cambio, ven a nuestra página de Facebook para unirte a la discusión.  

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Dinero

Legal and political aftershocks of Electoral Tribunal’s Martinelli impunity ruling

0
Don Ricky
From Ricardo Martinelli’s Twitter feed: most of his critics say similar things, but point in the opposite direction.

These may not be “after-effects” — Martinelli ruling
set off things that will have lives of their own

by Eric Jackson

Now isn’t THAT a bold statement: “In what was done by Magistrate María Eugenia López there is a hairy hand and electoral fraud.” So declared former president Ricardo Martinelli Berrocal’s legal team, two days before they filed criminal charges against the presiding magistrate of the Supreme Court with “persecution.” That is, “crimes against the administration of justice” and “crimes against public servants.” That is, in very short order, she accepted a constitutional petition from attorney Héctor Herrera, who challenged an Electoral Tribunal decision announced on March 23 wherein Martinelli was given candidate’s immunity for internal party elections in which he is not a candidate.

The litigation

Under Panama’s constitution, Martinelli’s criminal charge against López was filed with the National Assembly and will be considered by its Credentials Committee. Is there a political deal in the works to “exonerate” Martinelli along with all legislators accused any sort of corruption? We shall see. She is, however, a Nito Cortizo appointee and has a long and honored career on the bench. Part of that career was some pioneering work in domestic violence cases and policies. To put her on trial before the legislature would tear the PRD apart and would be the occasion for a vast women’s mobilization.

The Electoral Tribunal based its decision upon the supposition that Martinelli enjoys “specialty” immunity from prosecution from his extradition by the United States and various subsequent rulings acquitting him of charges from his electronic eavesdropping activities against many Panamanians. The key decision in the eavesdropping case was a “trial” in which the Supreme Court had sent down stacks of evidence to the lower courts and the lower court threw out that evidence on strange procedural grounds.

In any case, the principle of specialty in extradition generally provides that if someone is extradited for one crime, she or he may not be tried for another crime committed before the extradition without, once the matter for which the defendant was extradited has been resolved, being given the opportunity to return to the jurisdiction from whence extradited. Were Ricardo Martinelli to return to the USA, there can be little doubt that there is a sealed indictment for laundering the proceeds of Odebrecht bribes awaiting him there. His two sons have pleaded guilty in a Brooklyn federal district court to this and have in open court implicated him in the scheme.

In international law the question of who gets to assert specialty clauses is controversial. One stream of cases says it’s the extraditing country. As to Ricardo Martinelli, US authorities say that it does not apply. But might Panama decide that specialty is a defense personal to the accused, such that what the United States says doesn’t matter? It might. But then they’d have to get to the grounds for extradition. The 1904 US-Panamanian extradition treaty has a specialty clause, but the 2001 Budapest Cyber Crimes Convention that was also part of Panama’s extradition request for Martinelli has no such clause, and arguably rejects the notion.

A knotty bit of criminal law? But where is the Electoral Tribunal’s jurisdiction to decide any penal matter other than a specific electoral crime? THAT’S the constitutional issue that’s being raised in all of the criticism of and legal challenges to the Martinelli candidate’s immunity ruling. The charge is that two out of the three Electoral Tribunal magistrates exceeded their jurisdiction by intruding into the legal bailiwick of ordinary criminal justice.

The practical matter? In May there is a pretrial hearing for the New Business case, in which it is alleged that Martinelli and 20 other people are accused of a money laundering scheme. In that arrangement overpriced public construction contracts were made, with payments to the contractors run through a “factoring” company called New Business. Kickbacks for Ricardo Martinelli front people, it is alleged, were extracted from these and the graft money was used to buy the EPASA newspaper chain — Critica, El Panama America and Dia a Dia — which forms the nucleus of a larger Martinelli media empire and is a political tool that the former president uses. So if Martinelli has candidate’s immunity because he called internal RM party elections in which he will be unopposed, he would be immune for the May pretrial and that and the October trial would probably have to be postponed.

The same delay would apply to the Odebrecht bribery and money laundering trial, in which Martinelli former president Juan Carlos Varela and some 50 other defendants are accused. In that case the pretrial would take place in July and the trial in November.

Panamanian criminal law has no tolling provision on its statutes of limitations. The defendant who can deploy legions of lawyers, go on the lam and otherwise delay a case until the statute of limitations has run gets away with whatever crime, except for things like murder in which there is no time limit on prosecution.

The New Business case would be barred by the statute of limitations in March of next year. The Odebrecht affair would be less amenable to being time-limited out if treated as an overall bribery scheme that ended only in 2019. It might even be argued to be a still-continuing conspiracy, in which assets are still squirreled away and moved around. But at least some of the defendants would want to argue that each offense be treated as different, so if, for example, he or she took a bribe in 2004 it’s too late to bring the case to trial now.

It’s not a secret that Martinelli and his teams of lawyers play delay games. There is in effect no disbarment of attorneys in Panama, so lawyers can and often do create delays in bad faith without fear of unpleasant consequences.

And Team Martinelli howled in protest when Magistrate López reviewed and researched Héctor Herrera’s petition for two hours, promptly asked acting attorney general Javier Caraballo for his opinion — which is that Martinelli isn’t protected by specialty — and accepted the case for the high court’s docket. There are two other constitutional challenges of the same Electoral Tribunal decision pending before other magistrates who might accept or reject the petitions. Ordinarily, all petitions that are accepted would go before a nine-member Supreme Court plenum (perhaps with some alternates sitting in for magistrates for one or another reason), and decide the case. If they find that what the Electoral Tribunal did was beyond its jurisdiction, Martinelli’s specialty defense is defeated. Surely, however, it would be repeatedly raised again just to cause delays. The May and July pretrials, and trials later this year, would likely go on.

If Martinelli prevails and is given impunity, the proceedings as to all the other defendants might still go on. There are already people who have pleaded guilty and turned state’s evidence in both cases, so would an overall conviction, minus Martinelli, in the New Business case result in the state seizure of the EPASA newspaper chain, as purchased with stolen government funds? It gets complicated and that’s Martinelli’s purpose.

But López isn’t playing along, so Team Martinelli is accusing her of a crime for her celerity.

It’s not the first time that Martinelli et al have called María Euginia López a criminal. The last time they charged persecution was in 2020 when she ruled against the former president in another matter. That case went nowhere.

To extra-added complicate the legal matters? There are also two other criminal complaints, against the two Electoral Tribunal magistrates who ruled in favor of Martinelli. The charges are exceeding their powers in official acts, which is a crime here. Any trial of such charges would take place before the Supreme Court at the tribunal of first instance. Would a conviction be appealable to the Inter-American Human Rights Court? It might be supposed so, but this has never happened and that regional body might well rule that the jurisdiction of Panama’s Electoral Tribunal is not a matter of human rights law that it would take up. 

The politics

Ricardo Lombana, who ran for president as an independent and finished third in 2019, has formed a political party, the Movimiento Otro Camino (the Other Road Movement) and is talking basic good government stuff that has allowed the party to qualify for the 2024 ballot. They just elected delegates to their first party convention, which will happen in May. Will they, at that convention, adopt rules to encourage independents of many sorts to run on their ticket if they can get past a primary? That’s what former tourism minister and entertainer Rubén Blades has advocated.

More recently, most of the National Assembly’s independent caucus has called for a “Vamos” (Let’s go) coalition of independent candidates for 2024.

As present election rules go, political parties may not form alliances with independent candidates, although they may do so with other parties as to some or all of their candidates.

Our present constitution, adopted in 1972 under the military dictatorship, supposes disciplined political parties that get shares of government funding to pass around based on how many votes they get at election times. They rarely actually say so, but all of the established political parties are used to and support this system. It’s unpopular with the electorate at large if they are asked about it, yet there are expectations that candidates will come around with goodies before the voting and that those who get elected owe it to their families to get as many of their relatives as possible on the government payroll.

Former National Police director, attorney, sometimes journalist, and a Civilista way back when Ebrahim Asvat opines that there are “moralizing” political forces like Otro Camino and Vamos that arise from time to time on a cyclical basis and have a ceiling of some 20 percent of the electorate. So goes a version of the ‘don’t waste your vote’ argument — which might work better if there were a major party or party leader who unmistakably stands for something that people want.

And then in the Twitterverse, the troll armies that have invested a lot of energy into satanizing various others are trying to associate some or all of the new forces with those previously cast as the devil incarnate. A lot of this is of the religious far right, some of it is thinly veiled antisemitism about supposed rich Jewish puppetmasters, all of it appears to be aimed at suppressing any new forces. There are usual suspects with troll armies that we have seen before.

THEN the question becomes whom the voters hate more. Will those who put their votes in the box the next time around despise or fear the upstarts the most, or will they vent their wrath at the establishment? At the moment it appears that this is the format of campaigns to come, because nobody’s positive program of action has captured the public imagination.

Skeleton key to the screeds: MOVIN, the Independent Movement, something to which businessman Stanley Motta contributes and with which Vamos says it isn’t associated. The evil Jewish puppetmaster screed. Diversity, gay marriage and legal abortion: red meat for the religious far right. Such is the tenor of the Twitterverse of late.

A number of recent polls suggest that Ricardo Martinelli might win the presidency back with about one-third of the vote. Both polls and electoral history suggest that the PRD won’t repeat in the presidency. Fragmentations and uneasy alliances among established forces are ever-present possibilities. Then there is the possibility that Martinelli will be a convicted criminal who’s ineligible to run for president the next time.

The real kicker lurking out there? That, as about half of the people belong to no party and people join and leave parties based not on belief systems but on the perceptions of personal gains or losses, what will be decisive are momentary transactional calculations. Some will support the apparent front runner, thinking that there will be advantages for siding with the winner. “Front runner” may not ever be about presidential politics, but the local politicians — voting decisions not based on who might be president but who might be representante. A gift before the vote may count for much more than a promise of what will be done after Election Day.

And how might the current battle over Martinelli having or not having immunity from criminal prosecution play into that? Whether and how it gets resolved would have much do do with perceptions. But the way it looks now, the system is broken on every level and in every branch of government, such that anybody counting on anything from any sort of next government would seem imprudent. So many people don’t want to be called a pendejo, and will go through interesting contortions to avoid it.

 

 

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