Tag Archives: Bolivia

Even after death, Chavez gets choice of successor

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuelans stripped of their larger-than-life leader awoke to an uncertain future on Wednesday, with jittery throngs flocking to supermarkets and gas stations to stock up, and anti-American vitriol infusing official statements and the chants of the street.

Hugo Chavez‘s body was being brought from the hospital where he died to a military academy where it will remain until the late president’s funeral Friday, an event that promises to draw leaders from all over Latin America and the world. Already, the presidents of Argentina, Uruguay and Bolivia have arrived for the ceremony.

Even in death, Chavez’s orders were being heeded. The man he anointed to succeed him, Vice President Nicolas Maduro, will continue to run Venezuela as interim president and be the governing socialists’ candidate in an election to be called within 30 days.

In a late night tweet, Venezuelan state-television said Defense Minister Adm. Diego Molero had pledged military support for Maduro’s candidacy against likely opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, despite a constitutional mandate that the armed forces play a non-political role.

The streets of Caracas were free of the usual weekday morning traffic as public employees, schoolchildren and many others stayed home on the first day of a week of national mourning. The only lines were at gas stations where Venezuelans could fill up their tanks for pennies a gallon thanks to generous government subsidies.

For diehard Chavistas who camped out all night outside the military hospital where the former paratrooper died, Wednesday was the first full day without a leader many described as a father figure, an icon in the mold of the early 19th century liberator Simon Bolivar. Others saw the death of a man who presided over Venezuela as a virtual one-man show as an opportunity to turn back the clock on his socialist policies.

For both sides, uncertainty ruled the day.

It was not immediately clear when the presidential vote would be held, or where or when Chavez would be buried following Friday’s pageant-filled funeral.

Venezuela‘s constitution specifies that the speaker of the National Assembly, currently Diosdado Cabello, should assume the interim presidency if a president can’t be sworn in.

But the officials left in charge by Chavez before he went to Cuba in December for his fourth cancer surgery have not been especially …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

GTSO Takes its Urban Mining Initiatives International with Chilean LOI

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

GTSO Takes its Urban Mining Initiatives International with Chilean LOI

SAN JOSE, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– As part of a dedicated effort to expand its recycling operations into the booming Latin American market, Green Technology Solutions, Inc. (OTCBB: GTSO) signed a letter of intent this week to finalize due diligence and begin negotiating deal terms with a major electronic waste recycling—or “urban mining”—company in Chile.

Chilerecicla was founded in 2009 and opened the first e-waste recycling plant in Southern Chile. Based in the city of Chillán, 400 kms south of Santiago, Chilerecicla specializes in the direct removal of electronic waste from clients’ offices facilities for transport to its central plant as well as the sale of reusable materials. From handheld mobile devices to aerospace instrumentation, the company is capable of safe removal of a wide variety of e-waste (including hazardous materials) for reuse.

“We’ve targeted Chile for investment for some time now due to the extremely favorable market conditions we’ve identified there, including strong government support,” said GTSO CEO Paul Watson. “The country has bounced back strong from the global recession, and its fledgling recycling industry is open for business. Limited access to credit has prevented any single company there from establishing a dominant market position in the urban mining sector, however.

“With funding and assistance from GTSO, we envision Chilerecicla potentially emerging as the leader of the pack in a nation where demand for e-waste recycling is growing at an unbelievable rate,” he added.

GTSO has thoroughly scouted business opportunities in Chile due in part to its high rate of industrialization and local government support. The nation enjoys easy access to cheap raw materials for processing—such as discarded mobile phones—from neighbors including Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia with few processes and regulations for e-waste management.

Right now, much of Latin America‘s hazardous e-waste ends up in the trash,” Watson said. “We’re interested in turning that trash into cash and applying this company’s best practices to our U.S. operations, as well.”

Urban mining is key to GTSO‘s plans to compete alongside major international corporations striving for sustainable waste solutions, such as Industrial Services of America (NAS: IDSA) and Sims Metal Management Ltd. (NYS: SMS) . Late last year, GTSO acquired the company Green Urban Mining to handle its domestic recycling and resale operations.

About Green Technology Solutions, Inc.
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Bolivia leader unable to meet ailing Chavez

Bolivian President Evo Morales says he wasn’t able to meet his cancer-stricken “brother,” President Hugo Chavez, during a visit to Venezuela.

Morales said he met Chavez’s head doctor and his family Tuesday, and “my understanding is that they are very encouraged.” But he added that “there are days where the situation of his health are very difficult, according to information from his ministers.”

Morales spoke Wednesday at a news conference at the United Nations, where he was launching the International Year of Quinoa.

Chavez returned to Venezuela on Monday after 10 weeks in Cuba, where he underwent his fourth cancer-related surgery and treatments for complications, including a severe respiratory infection. He has remained silent and out of sight since his return, continuing unspecified treatment at a Caracas military hospital.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Boom in quinoa demand stresses Bolivia highlands

The growing global demand for quinoa by health food enthusiasts isn’t just raising prices for the Andean “super grain” and living standards among Bolivian farmers. Quinoa fever is running up against physical limits.

The scramble to grow more is prompting Bolivian farmers to abandon traditional land management practices, endangering the fragile ecosystem of the arid highlands, agronomists say.

Quinoa currently fetches as much as $3,200 a ton, up nearly threefold from five years ago — a surge fed by “foodies” making quinoa a hot health-food product based on its high content of protein and amino acids. It’s also gluten free. Though used like a grain, quinoa is actually an edible seed.

The United Nations has designated 2013 as the International Year of Quinoa, and Bolivian President Evo Morales planned to be at a special session of the world body in New York on Wednesday along with Peru‘s first lady, Nadine Heredia, to celebrate. Their countries are the world’s two biggest producers.

Quinoa has been cultivated in the Andean highlands since at least 3000 B.C., growing natively from Chile north to Colombia. It grows best at high altitudes in climates with cool days and even cooler nights.

In December, Morales mounted a tractor and plowed furrows into the soil of his highlands hometown, Orinoca, to promote quinoa as sowing season got under way. Townspeople sacrificed a llama to ask Pachamama, or Mother Earth, for a good harvest.

But last week, Morales was out chastising farmers for having planted quinoa in pastures where llamas traditionally graze. Without the llamas’ manure, little would grow in the arid highlands more than two miles (three kilometers) high where the most prized variety of quinoa originates.

“Quinoa goes hand in hand with the natural fertilizer that llamas produce and there must be a nutritional crossing between the two,” said Rossmary Jaldin, an expert in the crop.

Bolivia‘s deputy minister of rural development, Victor Hugo Vasquez, said 30 percent of his country’s 70,000 quinoa producers are now children of peasants who left the farm but have been drawn back by high quinoa prices.

He and the president of Bolivia‘s National Association of Quinoa Producers, Juan Crispin, say many of the growers don’t follow traditional farming methods and are depleting soils because they don’t rotate crops.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Heavy rains kill 23 in Bolivia in recent days

Civil defense authorities in Bolivia say heavy rains have claimed at least 23 lives in recent days.

They say nearly 10,000 families across much of the Andean country have been affected by dangerous, rain-swollen rivers.

Civil Defense Vice Minister Oscar Cabrera said Thursday that the dead include four members of the same family — two women and two children — killed last weekend in the southern region of Chuquisaca when a river overspilled its banks. On Monday, another person died when a bridge collapsed over a swollen river south of La Paz. The other 18 people died last week in various parts of the country.

Cabrera says President Evo Morales‘ government is studying the possibility of declaring an emergency, and that the leader will deliver a report on Friday.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Chilean sailors under fire for nationalist chant posted online

Chile‘s presidency gave the navy 24 hours to punish those responsible for a sailors’ nationalist chant that got posted on Youtube and threatens to upset the country’s neighbors.

The recording shows Chilean sailors chanting “I will kill Argentines, I will gun down Bolivians, I will decapitate Peruvians.”

Government spokeswoman Cecilia Perez called the footage “shameful images” on Wednesday.

Navy chief Edmundo Gonzalez and Deputy Defense Minister Alfonso Vargas said those responsible would be punished.

He said Chile had been “a victim of similar situations in other countries and we didn’t like it.” He added that the chant doesn’t conform with Chile‘s peaceful neighborly relations.

Bolivia and Peru are currently disputing their borders with Chile, and Argentina came close to war with Chile in the 1970s over islands in Patagonia.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Chilean sailors' warlike chant makes noise online

Chile‘s presidency gave the navy 24 hours to punish those responsible for a sailors’ nationalist chant that got posted on Youtube and threatens to upset the country’s neighbors.

The recording shows Chilean sailors chanting “I will kill Argentines, I will gun down Bolivians, I will decapitate Peruvians.”

Government spokeswoman Cecilia Perez called the footage “shameful images” on Wednesday.

Navy chief Edmundo Gonzalez and Deputy Defense Minister Alfonso Vargas said those responsible would be punished.

He said Chile had been “a victim of similar situations in other countries and we didn’t like it.” He added that the chant doesn’t conform with Chile‘s peaceful neighborly relations.

Bolivia and Peru are currently disputing their borders with Chile, and Argentina came close to war with Chile in the 1970s over islands in Patagonia.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bolivia mining town erects huge statue of Virgin

The Carnival celebrations in this Andean mining city already rival Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro for color and culture, if not for size. Now Oruro has erected a huge statue of the Virgin Mary that’s a little taller than Rio’s famed Christ the Redeemer.

Oruro formally dedicated the new statue Friday as it kicked off its Carnival celebrations, which have been recognized as part of the patrimony of humanity by UNESCO.

The Virgin of Socavon is almost 150 feet (45 meters) high — a shade shorter than New York’s Statue of Liberty and 23 feet (seven meters) higher than Rio’s image of Christ. It’s built of cement, iron and fiberglass to withstand the fierce winds of the high plain.

“If Rio has its Christ and its Carnival, Oruro has it’s Carnival, and now it has the Virgin. We’re complete,” said Virginia Barrios, a neighborhood leader.

She said construction of the statue cost $1.2 million and took four years.

During Carnival each year, more than 30,000 people dance in procession through the streets, some in elaborate costumes, and brass bands blare. They honor the Virgin of Socavon, the patron saint of the city of roughly 250,000 people.

President Evo Morales, who was a musician in Oruro in his youth, participated in the inauguration of the statue and Pope Benedict XVI sent a message of blessing.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mexico breaks up alleged border sex-slavery cult

Mexican officials say they have broken up a bizarre cult that allegedly ran a sex-slavery ring among its followers on the U.S. border.

Mexico‘s National Immigration Institute says 14 foreigners have been detained in the raid on a house near Nuevo Laredo, across the border from Laredo, Texas.

Those detained six Spaniards, and two people each from Brazil, Bolivia and Venezuela. One person from Argentina and one from Ecuador were also detained, the institute announced Tuesday.

The institute said Tuesday that 10 Mexicans were also found at the house in filthy conditions, and are presumably among the victims of the cult.

The institute said the sect’s leaders called themselves “The Defenders of Christ” and made members of the cult pay quotas, which they apparently paid with forced labor or sex.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Feminists demand rape probe in Bolivia sex video

Women’s groups are demanding a criminal sexual assault investigation for a provincial lawmaker who was caught by security video having what appears to be forced sex with a female legislative employee so drunk she may have been unconscious.

The lawmaker, Domingo Alcibia, was arrested Tuesday a week after the scandal broke, and prosecutors said he would be charged with abuse of power but not with rape because the woman, a janitor, had not filed charges against him.

Patricia Branez of the Center for Womens’ Information and Development said on Wednesday that women’s group “are demanding that the prosecutor’s office investigate the incident and if it is necessary we will be the ones to file a rape complaint.”

Feminists has been picketing the prosecutor’s office in Sucre to press the demand.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bolivia leader says Chavez in therapy for return

Bolivian President Evo Morales says his ally Hugo Chavez “is now receiving physical therapy” after cancer surgery in Cuba so that he can return home to Venezuela.

Morales says he expects to see the Venezuelan president attending “international events” soon. He says he recently spoke to someone in Cuba about Chavez, but did not elaborate.

Morales made the comments to his country’s congress on Tuesday.

Chavez has not been seen or heard in public since undergoing cancer-related surgery in Cuba on Dec. 11, though Venezuelan officials insist he is improving.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Partial victory for Bolivia in coca fight

Bolivian President Evo Morales has attained a partial, symbolic victory in his international campaign to decriminalize the coca leaf.

His nation has rejoined the 1961 U.N. global convention on narcotic drugs with an important caveat: the centuries-old Andean practice of chewing coca leaves will now be recognized as legal within its borders.

At least 15 nations including The United States, Germany, Mexico and Japan filed objections with the United Nations ahead of the midnight Thursday deadline. The U.S. cited fears of a greater cocaine supply.

In order to block Bolivia‘s return, a full third of the convention’s signatories — or 63 — would have needed to object.

Coca is the basis of cocaine but a mild stimulant when consumed unprocessed.

Morales plans a celebration on Monday with coca farmers.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bolivia expropriates Spanish energy subsidiaries

President Evo Morales has nationalized electricity distribution subsidiaries of the Spanish energy company Iberdrola.

Morales issued a decree Saturday allowing the takeover of shares in Empresa de Electricidad de La Paz (Electropaz) and Empresa de Luz y Fuerza de Oruro (Elfeo), which supply energy in the Andean nation.

In a public act at the government palace, Morales also announced the expropriation of an investment management company and a service provider belonging to the Spanish energy giant.

Morales said he had “been forced to take this step” to ensure that electric service rates remained “equitable” in the regions of La Paz and Oruro. Soldiers guarded the installations of the electricity distribution companies, marked with signs reading: “Nationalized.”

Telephone calls and emails seeking comment from Iberdrola in Spain were not immediately answered.

Source: Fox World News

Venezuela's Chavez up and walking after surgery, VP says

Venezuelan Vice President Nicolas Maduro said late Monday night that he had spoken by telephone with President Hugo Chavez and that the leader is up and walking following cancer surgery in Cuba.

It was the first time a top Venezuelan government official had confirmed speaking personally with Chavez since the Dec. 11 operation. Venezuelan officials have given few specifics on Chavez’s condition, and have yet to offer information on his long-term prognosis.

Maduro told state television station Venezolana de Television that the Christmas Eve conversation lasted about 20 minutes. He said the president was walking and doing some recovery exercises. He added that Chavez had given him guidance on budgetary matters for 2013.

“He was in a good mood,” Maduro said. “He was walking, he was exercising.”

“He wants to send a hug from the comandante to all the girls and boys in the country who will soon be receiving a visit from baby Jesus,” he added. Venezuelan tradition has it that baby Jesus delivers gifts to children on Christmas, along with Santa Claus.

Maduro’s surprise announcement came after Chavez’s ally, Bolivian President Evo Morales, made a lightning visit to Cuba that had added to the uncertainty surrounding the Venezuelan leader’s condition.

Morales was largely silent Monday on the details of his trip or even whether he met with the ailing Venezuelan leader.

Morales did not speak to the foreign media while in Havana. Journalists had been summoned to cover his arrival and departure, but hours later that invitation was canceled. No explanation was given, though it could have been due to confusion over Morales’ itinerary as he apparently arrived later than initially scheduled.

Cuban state media published photos of President Raul Castro receiving Morales at the airport and said he came “to express his support” for Chavez, his close ally, but did not give further details.

At an event in southern Bolivia on Monday, Morales made no mention of his trip to Cuba, even though aides had told reporters that he might say something about Chavez’s recovery. Later, Morales’ communications minister did not respond directly to a question about whether the two South American presidents had met face-to-face, saying only that he “was with the people he wanted to be with” and had no plans to return to Cuba.

“The report that President Morales has given us is that Chavez is in a process of recovery after the terrible operation he underwent,” Amanda Davila told The Associated Press.

Morales was the second Latin American leader to visit since Chavez announced two weeks ago that he would have the operation. Rafael Correa of Ecuador came calling the day of the surgery.

The visits underscore Chavez’s importance to regional allies as a prominent voice of the Latin American left, as well as how seriously they are taking his latest bout with cancer.

Chavez underwent his fourth cancer-related operation of the last year-and-a-half on Dec. 11, two months after winning re-election to a six-year term. He was treated for a respiratory infection apparently due to the surgery.

If Chavez is unable to continue in office, the Venezuelan constitution calls for new elections to be held. Chavez has asked his followers to back Maduro, his hand-picked successor, in that event.

Earlier Monday, Venezuelan Information Minister Ernesto Villegas read a statement saying that Chavez is showing “a slight improvement with a progressive trend.”

Luis Vicente Leon, a pollster who heads the Venezuelan firm Datanalisis, said that the government‘s daily but vague updates on the president’s health seem designed to calm anxious Chavez supporters rather than keep the country fully informed. For government opponents, however, he said the updates likely raise more questions than they answer.

“It’s more for the Chavez movement than the country in general,” Leon said. “There’s nothing that one can verify, and the credibility is almost nil.”

Maduro and several Cabinet ministers attended a Christmas Eve Mass in Caracas on Monday afternoon to pray for the president.

The vice president and other officials continued to strongly suggest that Chavez would not return in time for his Jan. 10 inauguration.

Opposition leaders have argued that the constitution does not allow the president’s swearing-in to be postponed, and say new elections should be called if Chavez is unable to take the oath on time.

But Attorney General Cilia Flores insisted the constitution lets the Supreme Court administer the oath of office at any time if the National Assembly is unable to do it Jan. 10 as scheduled.

“Those who are counting on that date, hoping to thwart the Revolution and the will of the people, will end up frustrated once again,” Flores said. “What we have is a president who has been re-elected, he will take over, will be sworn in on that day, another day, that is a formality.”

Source: Fox World News

Judge's arrest ordered in widening Bolivia scandal

Bolivian authorities ordered the arrest of a judge in a widening scandal triggered by an American businessman’s report of being fleeced and extorted by corrupt prosecutors.

Authorities ordered the arrest of magistrate Ariel Rocha after he failed to appear before a commission investigating the case, Prosecutor General Ramiro Guerrero said on Wednesday.

The arrest order was announced a day after New York businessman Jacob Ostreicher was granted house arrest. He was arrested in a money-laundering case in June 2011 but insisted he was innocent and said rice, cattle and farm equipment was stolen from him by corrupt officials.

“I almost feel like I’m in a dream,” Ostreicher told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from his home in Santa Cruz on Wednesday. He said it will take time to adjust after 18 months of detention.

“Faith and family is what got me through this nightmare,” Ostreicher said Tuesday night after the judge ordered him freed. He said his lawyers expect that within three or four weeks the case could be dropped, and then he hopes to return to New York.

“My 11 grandchildren, my wife told me I will not recognize them,” Ostreicher said.

He thanked U.S. Congressman Chris Smith of New Jersey and Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez of New York, both of whom had visited Bolivia to press for his release. He also thanked actor Sean Penn, who days ago made a direct public appeal to Bolivian President Evo Morales to order him freed.

Ostreicher said under the conditions set by the judge, he must remain at his home in the city of Santa Cruz during nighttime hours.

Ten officials have been arrested in the extortion ring that his case exposed, including two prosecutors and alleged ringleader Fernando Rivera, who had been managing Bolivia‘s most important prosecutions in the Interior Ministry.

Ostreicher was trying to salvage a rice-growing venture when he was arrested in June 2011.

The Orthodox Jew, who has a flooring business in Brooklyn, New York, complained from the start that he was being fleeced. His case had come to light after he accused the venture’s original manager, a Colombian woman who also is jailed, of defrauding investors and falling in with a Brazilian drug trafficker.

Ostreicher says prosecutors and government employees illegally sold 18,000 metric tons of the venture’s rice and stole equipment and demanded $50,000 to get him out of jail.

The case quickly became the biggest scandal to face the country’s judicial system. Since then, more than 30 other complaints have been made to the authorities about the alleged extortion ring, Interior Minister Carlos Romero said.

Rocha, the wanted magistrate, is president of the Court of Justice of Santa Cruz and the highest judicial official under investigation in the scandal. Prosecutors raided his home on Tuesday but did not find him.

“The apprehension order was issued because there is information in our investigations that he had to a certain degree been part of this network with some prosecutors and judges,” Guerrero said at Wednesday’s news conference.

___

Associated Press writer Ian James contributed reporting from Caracas, Venezuela.

Source: Fox World News

New UN Climate Ploy: Institutionalize Payments for Still-Unspecified 'Loss and Damage'

By George Russell

The United Nations is pushing for a novel way to get billions of extra dollars from Western nations by imposing a retroactive penalty for still-unspecified losses and damages that can be laid at the doorstep of rich countries for their longstanding production of greenhouse gases.

The notion was vigorously opposed by the U.S. at the talks, which concluded in Doha on Dec. 8 — even though the U.S. has never ratified the Protocol. But that did not stop the assembly of more than 195 nations from rolling the idea forward to their next meeting, in Warsaw next December.

In the meantime, the Kyoto parties are calling for more research “to further the understanding of and expertise on loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change.”

In other words, the Protocol nations do not yet even know how exactly to define the loss and damage concept, especially the sort associated with “slow-onset” change associated with rising seas and desertification. Yet in their final resolution on the topic they underlined that “the lack of full scientific certainty should not be used as reason for postponing action.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE RESOLUTION

The notion of some financial mechanism to compensate some countries for their extreme weather or climate would mark a large and acrimonious step in the climate debate, especially in a time of faltering international economies.

Until now, Western nations participating in the climate discussions have tacitly accepted the historical blame for greenhouse gas emissions, but avoided the notion of specific liability, by focusing on measures to cut greenhouse gases and adapt to climate measures.

At the same time, they have handed over plenty of cash already, through the Green Climate Fund, established in 2011 as a conduit for $30 billion in annual climate financing, with a long-term target of $100 billion a year of public and private funding. At Doha, the assembled nations agreed that the GCF would be headquartered in South Korea.

By the end of the Doha meeting this month, however, the Kyoto Protocol seemed weaker than ever, with Canada, Russia and Japan having formally declared they were not participating, and Japan and Canada having declared that they were leaving the pact.

In all, about 35 industrial nations led by the European Union have said their will comply with formal carbon emission reductions under the treaty, while many others, including rising industrial giants China and Brazil, are not called on to make such cuts. For its part, the Obama Administration says it will reduce U.S. carbon emissions by 17 percent from their 2005 level by 2020, even without formal adherence to the Protocol.

President Obama, for one, has declared fighting “climate change” to be a second-term priority– and so is the Kyoto process.

At Doha, the assembled nations agreed to extend the treaty, which would otherwise expire at the end of this year, until 2020. In the meantime, the Kyoto members along with the U.S. and even such dissidents as Canada have agreed to start work on negotiating a new treaty by 2015 that would expand the existing promises of carbon emission cuts.

The idea of a new international “loss and damage” arrangement — likely including a catastrophic insurance fund that would be subsidized by rich nations — has also taken on a life that may not be easy to stop.

There is no doubt that the havoc wreaked by extreme weather — as Hurricane Sandy attested — can be enormous. But the relationship between whatever damage may currently be wreaked, and man-made greenhouse gases as its cause, is still a matter of enormous controversy and disagreement.

At Doha, for example, the U.S. argued that “attribution of specific incidences of loss and damage to climate change, as opposed to natural climate variability and/or vulnerabilities stemming from non-climatic stresses and trends like deforestation and development patterns, is technically impossible in most every case.”

Moreover, the U.S. argued in its submission to a Doha technical panel, the very notion of how to measure the magnitude of climate effects is still highly problematic, in part due to “a lack of climate observing stations in the developing world that allow for monitoring of the climate system and would provide indicators for when thresholds are passed.”

The U.S. also put forward a flurry of other technical reasons why the idea of compensation, rather than adaptation, would not fly, including that some countries would be more likely to get cash than others, as a result of their longstanding vulnerability to tropical storms.

CLICK HERE FOR THE U.S. SUBMISSION

Overall, a State Department told Fox News, in response to queries about the U.S. position, “we noted the U.S.’s strong record in providing humanitarian and disaster assistance around the world and stressed that we see this issue as inherently part of broader efforts to promote adaptation and resilience to such events.”
The spokesman noted, however, that “a substantial number of [Kyoto] parties” advocated for a new and additional institution. Among them was the radical government of Bolivia, which saw the loss and damage idea as the access-point to a whole new trove of international cash to deal with such general environmental conditions as “sea level rise, increasing temperatures, ocean acidification, glacial retreat and related impacts, salinization, land and forest degradation, loss of biodiversity and desertification.”

Or, in short, just about everything, including the likely results of bad national development policy, local misuse of resources, and local pollution, over-hunting, or over-fishing.

The new money, according to the Bolivian submission, would be used for such things as a “solidarity fund” to provide compensation for residual or unavoidable loss and
damage,” “rehabilitation support,” and “compensation for lost development opportunities.”

Lack of consensus on the approach means that the idea will not spring to life soon, but it remains on the bargaining table, in what is likely to be an excruciating series of climate negotiation talks in the years ahead.

Meantime, according to many climate skeptics, the issue of whether there is any aggregate increase in damaging climate events at all that can be traced specifically to “climate change” is still open to question.

“I’m not sure what damage you can point to that you can say with certainty occurred on account of climate change,” one skeptical analyst who has been working on climate issues for more than two decades, told Fox News — even while requesting anonymity. He added that when it came to extreme weather events, such as hurricanes, the record shows that their devastating force has, if anything, declined in past decades.

The difference in devastation, he argued, is not that hurricanes and similar calamities are worse, but that humanity in general is much richer, and therefore loses more when such events as Sandy strike. As he put it: “We have more assets at risk.”

When it comes to huge storms, at least, scientific studies seem to bear that contention out.

In a paper that is about to be published by the American Meteorological Society’s Journal of Climate, three researchers from the University of Colorado’s Center for Science and Technology Policy Research surveyed 60 years’ worth of data from around the world on the intensities of hurricane-strength storms as they made landfall.

While stressing that “considerable uncertainties likely remain unresolved” in the estimates contained in the data, they conclude that while the frequency of the occurrence of such storms hitting land has gone up and down over the decades, “no significant trend” of increased frequency can be found covering the entire period.

In short, “our long-period analysis does not support claims that increasing [hurricane] landfall frequency or landfall intensity has contributed to … increasing economic losses” due to extreme weather despite claims that storms amplified by “human-caused climate change” are on the rise.

CLICK HERE FOR THE PAPER

Source: Fox World News

Judge grants American house arrest in Bolivia

Bolivian judge on Tuesday released a New York businessman and granted him house arrest after he was jailed for 18 months without charge despite strong evidence that he was fleeced and extorted by corrupt prosecutors.

Jacob Ostreicher hugged his wife and his lawyers after hearing the judge’s ruling. The 54-year-old American will now be under house arrest while the authorities finish investigating his money laundering case.

Ostreicher was never charged with any crime, and the people who led his prosecution, including the No. 1 legal adviser in the Interior Ministry, are now themselves in jail, accused of belonging to a shakedown ring that authorities say preyed on people deemed to have deep pockets.

Ten officials have been arrested, including two prosecutors.

The decision to grant Ostreicher came days after American actor Sean Penn made a direct public appeal to Bolivian President Evo Morales to order him freed.

Ostreicher has been weakened from a liquids-only hunger strike and was moved to a private clinic on Oct. 31 after Penn intervened on his behalf. Upon his release, he was headed back to the clinic and then to his home in Santa Cruz.

He told reporters after the decision that he felt better and that Morales had kept a promise to have those responsible arrested. He said that many Bolivians have also been victims of similar extortion.

The Orthodox Jew, who has a flooring business in Brooklyn, N.Y., complained from the start that he was being fleeced. His case had come to light after he accused the venture’s original manager, a Colombian woman who also is jailed, of defrauding investors and falling in with a Brazilian drug trafficker.

Ostreicher says prosecutors and government employees illegally sold 18,000 metric tons of the venture’s rice and stole equipment and demanded $50,000 to get him out of jail.

The Associated Press drew attention to the case beginning last year and a U.S. congressman, Chris Smith of New Jersey, began this year to lobby for Ostreicher’s release.

Judge Eneas Gentilli set bail at the equivalent of $14,400 and ordered Ostreicher to remain under house arrest in the city of Santa Cruz.

Source: Fox World News

Judge releases American from jail in Bolivia

A judge in Bolivia has released a New York businessman who has been jailed for 18 months without charge and who helped uncover a shakedown ring led by prosecutors. Jacob Ostreicher will now be under house arrest while the authorities finish investigating his money laundering case.

The 54-year-old American hugged his wife and his lawyers after hearing the judge’s ruling.

Judge Eneas Gentilli set bail at the equivalent of $14,400 and ordered Ostreicher to remain under house arrest in the city of Santa Cruz.

The decision came days after American actor Sean Penn made a direct public appeal to Bolivian President Evo Morales to order him freed.

Source: Fox World News

Chavez recovering satisfactorily after surgery, government says

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is recovering satisfactorily after cancer surgery in Cuba and has spoken with relatives, his government said Friday.

“His recuperation has been slow but progressive,” Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said, reading a government statement.

The 58-year-old president underwent his fourth cancer-related operation in Havana on Tuesday after tests found the illness had come back despite previous operations, chemotherapy and radiation treatments.

The Venezuelan government has said that Chavez suffered complications during a complex six-hour operation.

“The bleeding that occurred during the operation was attended to in an opportune manner and the patient has responded in a favorable manner,” the government said.

“Chavez has communicated with his close relatives,” it added.

Vice President Nicolas Maduro has said that Chavez’s children are with him in Havana as well is his science and technology minister, Jorge Arreaza.

The government said that through Arreaza, Chavez “has sent a greeting to the entire Venezuelan nation.”

Bolivian President Evo Morales was traveling to Havana on Friday night to visit Chavez, said Amanda Davila, Bolivia‘s communication minister.

Speaking at a news conference in La Paz, Davila said that after seeing Chavez, Morales would travel to Venezuela for an event Saturday marking the creation of the leftist ALBA bloc, to which both countries belong.

Source: Fox World News