Tag Archives: Ecuador

Monkey-mothering 24-hour chore for Colombian woman

The tiny night monkey is with Martha Silva 24 hours a day, nestled in a wool pouch inside her coat or beside her while she sleeps. Eight times a day, she pulls out a milk syringe and nurses the five-inch baby like an attentive mother.

The long hours of monkey mothering don’t bother the 54-year Colombian woman, she said, because she already raised two children.

“To me there is no difference. You have to look after each the same. When you give them the bottle, you have to make sure they don’t choke. When I’m working, I make sure he doesn’t get out of the little bag I have. If there is sun, I take him out of the sun,” said Silva, who works with the neonatal unit of Bogota’s Wildlife Reception Center, part of the capital’s environment ministry

Silva, who has children of 20 and 30, began working at the center west of Colombia‘s capital in 2000. There she has nurtured species ranging from birds to turtles to primates.

Now she is looking after night monkey of the genus Aotus that lives in the tropical forests of South America, including Colombia, Brazil and Ecuador. The monkeys got their common name because of their unusual nocturnal habits.

“I carry them with me for a couple of months, in general, or the time that is required,” she told The Associated Press. Her husband and daughter help her with the household chores and cooking while she is occupied with a baby animal.

She never gives her animal charges names so they don’t become seen as pets. In the long term, the center aims to return them to the wild.

Her latest baby, a male night monkey with dark fur, beige brows and large, protruding brown eyes for night vision, arrived at the center on Feb. 4, weighing a scant 100 grams, or about one-quarter of a pound. It was brought by a man who said he found it abandoned on the side of a highway in Colombia‘s eastern plains near Meta province, said Judith Cardenas, the center’s chief biologist.

When the monkey arrived it was about 5 days old and the man said he couldn’t bring himself to leave it to die, Cardenas said.

Biologists at the Bogota center don’t how this baby ended up …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Julian Assange Hatches Plan to Get Out of Embassy

By Evann Gastaldo Julian Assange has a plan to finally escape Ecuador‘s embassy in London: Get elected to the Australian Senate. He started the process of becoming a political candidate in the Sept. 14 election last week, and he believes that if he’s elected, both the US and Britain will back down from… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Official results show Correa winning Ecuador presidential election

First official results in Ecuador‘s presidential election show incumbent Rafael Correa leading with 56.6 percent of the vote against 24 percent for his closest challenger.

The results, with 30.5 percent of the vote counted, would mean that Correa has coasted to a third term.

None of the other six candidates had more than 6 percent.

Correa is a dynamic but polemical leftist economist who first took office in 2007.

He has spent heavily on the poor but drawn broad criticism as intolerant of dissent.

He confidently celebrated victory even before the first official results were announced.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ecuador's Oil-Focused President Wins Another Term in Office

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Contributor

On February 17, 2013 Rafael Correa, an ally of Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and amigo to Iran and China, won another term in office in Ecuador. Correa, a politically savvy and pragmatic president who is prone to occasional rhetorical flourishes when discussing the United States, won nearly 60 percent of the vote. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Ecuador leader heavily favored to win re-election

Rafael Correa, a dynamic, polemical economist whose leftist government has won broad backing from the lower classes as it leads Latin America in social spending, is expected to sail to a second re-election Sunday as the Andean nation’s president.

His leading opponent, former Banco de Guayaquil executive president Guillermo Lasso, trailed Correa in pre-election polls by more than 20 points in the field of eight candidates.

Correa, 48, has brought uncharacteristic political stability to an oil-exporting nation of 14.6 million people that cycled through seven presidents in the decade before he first took office in 2007.

He won re-election in April 2009 after voters approved a constitutional rewrite that mandated a new ballot, and he would be legally barred from running again following a victory Sunday.

To avoid a run-off, Correa needed a simple majority or 40 percent of the vote plus a 10-point margin over the No. 2 vote-getter.

Correa, a graduate of the University of Illinois-Champaign, focused his campaign on increasing tax revenue and social services. Lasso promised to be friendlier to foreign investment, lower taxes on job-creating companies and roll back actions taken under what Correa calls his “21st century socialism,” such as a 5 percent tax on capital removed from Ecuador.

A champion of big government in the mold of Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez but less radical, Correa has endeared himself to the lower classes by making education and health care more accessible, building or improving 7,820 kilometers (4,870 miles) of highways and, the government says, creating 95,400 jobs in the past four years.

Correa’s critics, including leading international human rights groups, consider him an intolerant bully who arbitrarily wields his near-monopoly on state power against anyone who threatens what he sees as his “citizens’ revolution.”

Correa has eroded the influence of opposition parties, the Roman Catholic Church and the news media and used criminal libel law to try to silence opposition journalists. Critics decry his stacking of the courts with friendly judges and the government‘s prosecution of indigenous leaders for organizing protests against Correa’s opening up of Ecuador to large-scale mining without their consent.

Oil prices that have been hovering around $100 a barrel have been a blessing for Correa. Petroleum accounts for more than half Ecuador‘s export earnings and have allowed it to lead the region in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

How Women Entrepreneurs are Transforming Economies and Communities

By Candida Brush, Contributor For the first time in 13 years, the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) (http://www.babson.edu/Academics/centers/blank-center/global-research/gem/Pages/reports.aspx) study of 59 economies shows that women are creating businesses at a greater rate than men in three economies and in four others, the rates are nearly equal. In Ghana, Nigeria and Thailand the rate of nascent women is higher than men and in Brazil, Ecuador, Uganda and Switzerland the start-up rates by gender are equal. While in the other 52 economies the rates of women’s start-up are lower than men, sometimes up to 6x lower, this is generally good news, perhaps signaling a positive trend. This equalization follows decades of legislative, policy and socio-cultural changes that have gradually empowered, supported and trained women to perceive opportunities and believe they have the capabilities to start businesses. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Ecuador's political juggernaut faces re-election

On a campaign stage, Rafael Correa is a dancing, singing, swirling tornado of energy. Ecuador‘s president doesn’t make promises. He’s way past that.

With characteristic bravado, Correa instead reminds the enthusiastic crowd in a northern Quito suburb of the nearly 5,000 miles (8,000 kilometers) of highway he’s improved, of the schools and hospitals built during his six years in office.

Loathed by civil libertarians and free-market champions, but embraced by beneficiaries of state largesse, the leftist economist appears ready to coast to a second re-election on Sunday.

Correa, 48, has brought political stability to a traditionally unruly nation that cycled through seven presidents in a decade, from 1997-2007. If re-elected, this four-year term will be his last unless the constitution is changed.

Correa’s “21st-century socialism” is a tamer variation of that practiced by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. Yet Correa has been just as intolerant of dissent as Chavez, keeping a tight lid on public discourse and the press.

Meanwhile, Correa has overseen Latin America‘s most generous public spending regime, keeping his support high by introducing low-interest mortgage for new homeowners, state-bankrolled study abroad and welfare payments that now reach nearly one in five Ecuadoreans.

The bulk of his backers are poor and lower-middle class Ecuadoreans who in 2010 represented 37 and 40 percent, respectively, of the country’s population according to the World Bank.

Correa doesn’t take those supporters for granted.

Every Saturday and a few nights a week, Correa pre-empts commercial TV and radio stations to spread his “citizen’s revolution” and verbally skewer his “oligarch” enemies. It’s the kind of prerogative of power wielded regularly by Chavez’s government and Argentina‘s president, Cristina Fernandez.

Opposition journalists, meanwhile, have been slapped with criminal libel charges for calling Correa a dictator. Indigenous leaders have been prosecuted for sabotage for protesting the government‘s refusal to consult with native peoples over water rights and its insistence on opening Ecuador to large-scale precious metals mining.

Correa has set back the rule of law two decades by packing the courts with loyalists and politicizing them, said Grace Jaramillo, an Ecuadorean political scientist studying in Canada.

“Without an independent judiciary, anyone who opposes the government …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Green Crusader Goes Down In Flames; Record $18 Billion Lawsuit In Doubt

By Breaking News

Ecuador Map SC Green Crusader Goes Down in Flames; Record $18 Billion Lawsuit in Doubt

They called it the “rainforest Chernobyl.” When Texaco left Ecuador, in 1992, it allegedly left behind open pits overflowing with black sludge and rivers laced with chemicals. The damage was so bad that a number of indigenous tribes almost died out completely. Those that remained, according to a group of Ecuadoreans who waged a nearly hopeless battle against Texaco for reparations, were plagued by miscarriages, birth defects, and poisoned fish and livestock.

The lawsuit lasted 18 long years, and one judge in New York died before he could make a ruling. It even outlasted Texaco, which Chevron purchased in 2001. It wound its way through a dozen American federal courts to a lonely concrete courtroom in the Ecuadorean jungle, where Judge Nicolás Zambrano at last rewarded the Ecuadorean plaintiffs for their epic struggle—to the tune of $18 billion. It was the largest sum ever awarded in an environmental lawsuit.

But all is not what it seems.

The integrity of the plaintiff team, led by Steven Donziger, a tenacious American environmental crusader, has come under scrutiny. So has the notoriously corrupt Ecuadorean court system. A 2009 documentary, Crude, contained scenes where Donziger appeared to suggest bribing various people associated with the case in order to get a whopper settlement. He also implied that the scientific evidence used to condemn Texaco was “just a bunch of smoke and mirrors and bull[….].” Indeed, just a few days ago, an affidavit posted on Chevron’s website describes in great detail how one of the Ecuadorean judges essentially gave Donziger and his team the power to ghostwrite the court’s judgment in return for $500,000.

Meanwhile, Donziger recruited a group of hedge funds to provide the capital his team needed to pursue the case, in exchange for a cut of the final award if it succeeded. They call this “litigation finance.” “These arrangements are unregulated and controversial,” Patrick Radden Keefe wrote in the New Yorker. “But for Donziger they presented a crucial opportunity to keep the litigation alive. He offered investors a high-risk, high-reward proposition. The judgment could run to billions of dollars, he said, with attorneys’ fees making up roughly a third of that figure. In confidence, he noted that his personal fee alone could amount to two hundred million dollars.”

Read More at The American Interest . By Walter Russell Mead.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Knife-wielding attacker kills 2 at Correa rally

Authorities in Ecuador say a man wielding a large knife killed two people and wounded four in a crowd that was awaiting President Rafael Correa for a political rally.

Video of the Monday night attack broadcast by local media shows a tall, stocky man attacking people apparently indiscriminately in the crowd’s first few rows next to the stage.

Officials arrested the man and have not yet identified him or disclosed a possible motive.

Correa canceled his appearance at the rally in the northeastern town of Quininde and called the attacker “deranged” in a tweet. Correa is up for re-election on Feb. 17, and the campaign has been peaceful.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Argentine court upholds freeze on Chevron assets

The winners of a major environmental damages judgment in Ecuador say an appeals court in Argentina has spurned an attempt to unfreeze Chevron Corp.’s assets there.

Plaintiffs’ attorney Pablo Fajardo says an appeals court refused Wednesday to lift an embargo that a lower-court judge imposed in November.

The plaintiffs are trying to collect on a $19 billion award ordered by an Ecuadorean court over oil contamination in the Amazon more than two decades ago.

Chevron has no assets in Ecuador, so the plaintiffs have filed suits in Canada, Brazil and Argentina.

Chevron has refused to pay the Ecuador judgment, calling it the result of judicial fraud.

It said Wednesday that if the judgment were legitimate the plaintiffs would be seeking relief in the United States, where the company is headquartered.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Quito's nerve-testing urban airport shuttered

Landing at Ecuador‘s capital can be a white-knuckle affair. High altitude, a cramped runway and towering volcanos nearby make it one of Latin America‘s most challenging airports for pilots. And the constant roar of the planes torments those on the ground as well.

That will change on Feb. 19 as Quito moves its airport to an agricultural setting 12 miles (20 kilometers) northeast of the city, joining other cities that have moved — or tried to move — planes further from people.

Mariscal Sucre airport sat amid cornfields when it was christened in 1960. Over the years, Quito grew dense around it, turning the airfield into a notoriously nerve-wracking neighbor, with planes booming in and out from 5:45 a.m. until 2 a.m. without rest.

“The racket of the planes sometimes woke us at dawn,” said Maria Davila, 40, who has lived two blocks from the runway since she was a child. “The windows of the house would rattle and it seemed they would shatter.”

“I often thought a plane would fall onto my house and kill all my family,” she added. “The airport has been a bad neighbor, a very dangerous neighbor.”

There are a lot more of those neighbors than when it opened. Just about 350,000 lived in Quito then. The population has grown to about 2.2 million now.

Over the course its life, Mariscal Sucre has seen 10 serious accidents. In 1984, a DC-8 owned by the company Aeca clipped some navigation aids on takeoff and plunged onto neighboring homes. Forty-nine people were killed.

Fourteen years later, A Cubana de Aviacion Tupolev 154 failed on takeoff and slammed into the airport’s wall, killing 76.

Most accidents were what the industry calls “runway excursions” — as in running off the runway. They tend to plague urban airports with minimal margins for error.

In addition to the cramped runway and nearby mountains, which force a steep angle of approach, the airport sits at an elevation of nearly 8,700 feet (2,850 meters), an oxygen-thin altitude that diminishes aircraft performance on takeoff and landing.

Frequent air travelers, even those accustomed to the Andes’ choppy air currents, can get anxious on approach to Quito, which handles about 220 departures and arrivals a day, carrying an average of 451,000 passengers a year.

Growing up with the constant roar of jets surging skyward in their midst has engendered fatalism in some neighbors.

Fernando Araujo, a 22-year-old university student, plays soccer just outside the northern end of the runway and said he’s not bothered by the gleaming hulks of steel that pass just over the field.

“I’m not at all afraid. We’re accustomed to the planes’ takeoffs and landings,” he said. “Only God knows when we’ll be taken, so we’re relaxed.”

The new airport at Tababela is built to handle 290 flights a day and has a runway 4,100 meters (13,450 feet) long. That’s nearly 1,000 meters (3,300 feet) longer the soon-to-be shuttered airfield.

Other cities in the region have tried to move airports to less troublesome sites. Honduras is planning to move most airline flights out of notorious Toncontin airport in Tegucigalpa, whose short runway and urban location make it the region’s most dangerous major airport by many accounts. It was closed to commercial jets in 2008 for six weeks after a Taca A320 jet ran off the runway and into a busy street, killing five, including two on the ground.

Land disputes, however, have frustrated efforts to move Mexico City‘s airport to more spacious terrain further from the urban sprawl.

Tight space has led the tiny Caribbean islands of St. Barts, St. Maartin and Saba to put up with airports widely considered among the most hair-raising in the world.

Quito’s new airfield, which also carries the name of 19th-century independence leader Antonio Jose de Sucre, is bordered by cropland and encompasses nearly 6 square miles (15.5 square kilometers), twelve times the area of the old airport, most of which will now become a public park.

As runway becomes grassy esplanade, a flurry of construction is anticipated nearby. The newly revised code will allow for buildings as high as 40 stories, up from the current four.

“I can’t even imagine what it’s going to be like without all the noise and fear,” said Francisco Cahuines, whose construction supply business borders the airfield’s northern end.

There will, however, be one big drawback.

While the old Mariscal Sucre could be reached from downtown in 20 minutes or so it will take at least an hour to get to the new airport, and no train-to-the-plane is yet planned.

Associated Press Writer Frank Bajak in Lima, Peru contributed to this report.

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

Chevron Says Plaintiffs Offered Ecuador Judge $500,000 For Verdict

By Daniel Fisher, Forbes Staff Chevron dropped another evidentiary bombshell in its long-running battle against lawyers suing it over toxic waste in the Ecuador jungle, a sworn affidavit from a former judge who claims the plaintiffs offered $500,000 to the judge who issued an $18 billion judgment against Chevron.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Today in History for 8th January 2013

Historical Events

1955 – Louise Sugg wins LPGA LA Golf Open
1956 – Operation Auca: Five U.S. missionaries are killed by the Huaorani of Ecuador shortly after making contact with them.
1962 – Golfer Jack Nicklaus, 21, 1st pro appearance, he came in 50th
1980 – Islander Glenn Resch’s 20th shut-out opponent-Canucks 3-0
1988 – 9th largest NBA crowd 38,873-Chicago at Detroit
2009 – A 6.2 magnitude earthquake hit Costa Rica´s region of Volcan Poás, with an epicenter near Cinchona. It was caused by Varablanca-Angel fault.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1860 – Nancy Jones, US black missionary in Africa
1891 – Storm Jameson, English writer (d. 1986)
1940 – Anthony Gaurdine, (Little Anthony and Imperials-Goin Out of My Head)
1959 – Paul Hester, Australian drummer (d. 2005)
1964 – Peter [Ped] Gill, rocker (Frankie Goes to Hollywood-Relax) [or 3/5]
1977 – Ryan Frances, actor (Trevor-Sisters)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1874 – Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg, French writer and historian (b. 1814)
1950 – George Rowe, cricketer (15 wckts in 4 Tests for S Af 1895-1902), dies
1980 – John Mauchly, American physicist (b. 1907)
1993 – Asif Nawaz, Pakistani general, dies
1993 – Theo Bruins, Dutch pianist/composer (Syncope), dies at 63
1994 – Jay Blackton, US conductor/arranger (Oklahoma!), dies at 84

More Famous Deaths »

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History