Tag Archives: Honduras

Honduras police accused of death squad killings

The operation was quick and under the cover of night. Armed, masked men arrived in late-model SUVs, getting through the gate into the small neighborhood of humble homes. Without firing a shot, witnesses said, they took Kevin Samraid Carranza Padilla, 28, known in the gang world as “Teiker,” and his girlfriend, Cindy Yadira Garcia, 19.

The next morning, Jan. 10, Honduras‘ major newspaper, El Heraldo, reported that police had captured Carranza, a leader of the 18th Street gang suspected in the shooting death of a police commander months earlier. It also published a photo of a shirtless, tattooed young man lying on the ground, his hands behind his back, his face partially wrapped in blue duct tape, the roll still attached. Carranza’s mother, Blanca Alvarado, recognized him from his tattoos.

The photo was distributed to media by a police prosecutor, according to three sources who didn’t want to be named for security reasons. Soon after, agents at the national criminal investigations office acknowledged that there was a detention order for Carranza, and he had been brought in.

More than two months later, Carranza and Yadira have disappeared, The Associated Press has found. They are not in police custody, there are no criminal proceedings against them, and police now say they know nothing about the case.

“At this point,” said Carranza’s mother, “one can only imagine that they are dead.”

Police have long been accused of operating more like assassins than law enforcement officers in Honduras, but few cases ever have been investigated. In the past year, police were alleged to have been involved in the deaths of a prominent Honduran radio journalist and the son of a former police chief — but neither killing has been solved.

Despite millions of dollars in U.S. aid to Honduras aimed at professionalizing the country’s police, accusations persist.

In the last three years, the AP has learned, Honduran prosecutors have received as many as 150 formal complaints about death squad-style killings in the capital of Tegucigalpa, and at least 50 more in the economic hub of San Pedro Sula. The country’s National Autonomous University, citing police reports, has counted 149 civilians killed by police in the last two years, including 25 members of the 18th street gang.

Even the country’s top police chief has been charged with being complicit.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Hampshire Announces Protocol for Investors to Protect Valuable Tax Assets

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Hampshire Announces Protocol for Investors to Protect Valuable Tax Assets

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Hampshire Group, Limited (OTC Markets: HAMP) would like to inform current and prospective investors that the Company is approaching a triggering event as defined by Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (“IRC Section 382”). Under IRC Section 382, the use of the Company’s net operating loss and other carryforwards would be significantly limited in the event of an “ownership change,” which is defined as a cumulative change of more than 50% during any three-year period by shareholders of the Company’s common stock.

This event can be triggered by any current or future shareholder who purchases or sells any amount of shares, prior to August 31, 2014, that would create an “ownership shift” significant enough to trigger the IRC Section 382 limit. Before this date, even small fluctuations in the ownership of shareholders owning 5% or more of the Company’s stock, or new shareholders acquiring 5% or more of the Company’s stock, could trigger the IRC Section 382 limit. Provided there has not been an “ownership change” before August 31, 2014, the consequences of such actions will be less critical to the Company.

At December 31, 2012, Hampshire Group had total federal and state net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $122.1 million and unless otherwise restricted, the Company may utilize these tax attributes to offset future U.S. and state taxable income. If the Section 382 limitation is triggered, this may dramatically decrease the after-tax cash flow generated from Company profits.

Any shareholder or prospective shareholder who may be close to crossing the 5% ownership threshold or any current 5% or more shareholder is urged to contact Hampshire Group at investors@hamp.com or the Company’s Chief Financial Officer, Maura Langley, at (864) 622-0822 prior to consummating such trades, to further discuss the implications of such actions to the Company’s net operating loss carryforwards.

About Hampshire Group

Hampshire Group, Limited (www.hamp.com), along with its wholly-owned subsidiaries, Hampshire Brands, Inc., Rio Garment S.A. and scott james, LLC, is a provider of fashion apparel across a broad range of product categories, channels of distribution and price points. The Company specializes in designing and marketing men’s sportswear to department stores, chain stores and mass market retailers under licensed brands, our own proprietary brands and the private labels of our customers. The Company operates a Honduras-based apparel manufacturer, designing, sourcing …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

OSHA Recognizes Cintas in Statesville, NC with Highest Safety Designation

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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OSHA Recognizes Cintas in Statesville, NC with Highest Safety Designation

CHARLOTTE, N.C.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Cintas Corporation (NAS: CTAS) today announced that its uniform rental facility in Statesville, NC has received Carolina “Star” certification from the North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Carolina “Star” is the state’s highest recognition for the practice of, and commitment to exemplary occupational safety and health, and mirrors the Federal OSHA Voluntary Protection Program (VPP) Star certification.

“Here is a major business in this country, whose number one concern is the safety of the people who work for it – not its bottom line,” said U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) during the award ceremony held at the Statesville facility on Friday. “I just can’t tell you how impressed I am with the culture of Cintas,” she added.

The Cintas uniform rental branch in Statesville began the Carolina Star process in 2011. The designation required close collaboration between management and employee-partners and successful completion of a strict and rigorous audit. Approximately 34 employee-partners work at the facility.

“This day marks both the end and the new beginning of a great challenge because the journey to continuous safety improvement is never ending,” said Tom Rager, Branch Manager. “I am so proud of our wonderful partners for their commitment to Cintas, to each other and to their loved ones by living the Cintas safety culture every day.”

Of the 220,000 businesses in the state of North Carolina, only 145 have achieved Carolina star, according to Cherie Berry, North Carolina Labor Commissioner. “You are very special people and you should be very proud,” she said.

The uniform rental branch in Statesville is the 8th uniform rental facility and the 11th company-wide to receive OSHA‘s highest safety distinction. Cintas Corporation has approximately 350 facilities throughout the world actively pursuing VPP recognition by OSHA or the equivalent under a similar certifying body. This includes operations in the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Honduras.


About Cintas

Headquartered in Cincinnati, Cintas Corporation provides highly specialized services to businesses of all types primarily throughout North America. Cintas designs, manufactures and implements corporate identity uniform programs, and provides entrance mats, restroom supplies, tile and carpet cleaning, promotional products, first aid, safety, fire protection products …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Delta Apparel, Inc. to Present at the 25th Annual ROTH Conference

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Delta Apparel, Inc. to Present at the 25 th Annual ROTH Conference

GREENVILLE, S.C.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Delta Apparel, Inc. (NYSE MKT: DLA) announced today that the Company will deliver a presentation on its business strategy and financial results to investors at the 25th Annual ROTH Conference being held at the Ritz-Carlton in Laguna Niguel, California. The presentation is scheduled for Monday, March 18, 2013, at 1:30 p.m. Pacific Time (4:30 p.m. Eastern Time).

A webcast of the conference presentation will be available on Delta Apparel‘s website at www.deltaapparelinc.com. Real Player or Windows Media Player is required to listen to the webcast.

About Delta Apparel, Inc.

Delta Apparel, Inc., along with its operating subsidiaries, M. J. Soffe, LLC, Junkfood Clothing Company, To The Game, LLC and Art Gun, LLC, is an international design, marketing, manufacturing, and sourcing company that features a diverse portfolio of lifestyle branded activewear apparel and headwear, and produces high quality private label programs. The Company specializes in selling casual and athletic products across distribution tiers and in most store types, including specialty stores, boutiques, department stores, mid-tier and mass chains. From a niche distribution standpoint, the Company also has strong distribution at college bookstores and the U.S. military. The Company’s products are made available direct-to-consumer on its websites at www.soffe.com, www.junkfoodclothing.com, www.saltlife.com and www.deltaapparel.com. Additional products can be viewed at www.2thegame.com and www.thecottonexchange.com. The Company’s operations are located throughout the United States, Honduras, El Salvador, and Mexico, and it employs approximately 7,100 people worldwide. Additional information about the Company is available at www.deltaapparelinc.com.

Delta Apparel, Inc.
Deborah Merrill, 864-232-5200 x6620
Chief Financial Officer
or
Investor Relations
Sally Wallick, 404-806-1398
CFA
investor.relations@deltaapparel.com

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  South Carolina

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

IAPA: Latin America press freedom is under attack

The Inter-America Press Association says attacks on press freedom have intensified in Mexico, Central America, Brazil, Argentina and Ecuador.

The group says assassinations and assaults on journalists continue in Mexico, Honduras and Brazil, while the governments of Ecuador and Argentina have put legal and economic restrictions on media, especially those that don’t go along with government interests.

The nonprofit press group says the worst situation is in Mexico, where 127 journalists have been attacked the last 12 years.

IAPA says such incidents have continued under new President Enrique Pena Nieto, who canceled an appearance at the group’s conference in Puebla, Mexico. In recent days, a journalist was killed in the Mexican border town of Ojinaga and attacks were staged on the two newspapers, Diario de Juarez and Siglo de Torreon.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mexico is Implementing Reforms, But Still Faces a Challenging Security Dynamic

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Contributor

A few weeks after Enrique Peña Nieto was elected as Mexico’s new president, I walked through the gate in the heavy metal security fence and into the modern, high-tech campus of Mexico’s Public Security Ministry in Mexico City. I watched Francisco Niembro González, who then served as former president Felipe Calderon‘s vice-secretary of Information Technology at the security ministry, or SSP for its initials in Spanish, enter into the federal government’s crisis-planning center inside a hermetically sealed bunker. He pulled up a map showing the flight trajectories of cocaine-carrying planes leaving Colombia.  Curved red lines marked the flight paths of the smuggling routes between Colombia, one of the world’s top cocaine producers, and Guatemala and Honduras, two countries to the south of Mexico, the gateway country to the United States, the world’s number one cocaine consumer.  “Planes with drugs no longer enter Mexico,” Niembro explained, aiming a laser pointer at one of the conference room’s massive display screens. Another room shows graphics of cartel hierarchies. “Evolution of the Michoacán Cartel,” said one poster. “La Familia Michoacána,” said another. The faces in the photos were marked with labels explaining which leaders had been killed or captured. “We’ve invested in technology and the results are there,” Niembro said. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Honduran general accuses police in son's murder

A Honduran army general whose son was shot to death at a restaurant is charging that someone in the National Police was behind his son’s slaying.

Gen. Ricardo Ramirez del Cid says a witness has said a police official hired gang members to kidnap his 17-year-old son. Ramirez didn’t identify anyone by name.

Authorities have said at least 10 gunmen entered the restaurant where Ramirez’s son was eating Sunday and killed him after a shootout with two bodyguards.

During a radio interview Thursday, Ramirez called HondurasNational Police director and security minister “incompetent” and said they should resign.

Ramirez headed the National Police for six months until he was replaced last May amid charges that police were involved in the kidnapping and murder of one of Honduras‘ best-known journalists.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pepe Palacios, LGBT Activist In Honduras, Talks About Crimes Against The Community

By The Huffington Post News Editors

With 86 people killed for every 100,000 inhabitants, Honduras recorded the world’s highest murder rate last year. In a deeply homophobic atmosphere, it is even more dangerous to be LGBT, yet Pepe Palacios, one of the founding members of the Diversity Movement in Resistance, continues to be an LGBT activist. He joined Huffpost Live‘s Ahmed Shihab-Eldin in studio.

“Honduran culture is really conservative, it’s a really religious society and its also a heterosexual society,” Palacios said. “So if you’re against what they call normality, you’re in danger not only socially but also physically.”

In the last four years, over eighty LGBT individuals have been murdered, and these murders aren’t investigated, Suyapa Portillo, Assistant Professor at Pitzer College told Huffpost Live. An LGBT activist herself, Portillo pointed out that while the police might not investigate the murders, that doesn’t mean they ignore the community.

Read More…
More on LGBT

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

New Zealand plans logo-free cigarette packs

Strict against smoking already, New Zealand plans to make tobacco companies remove their logos from cigarette packs but will wait until a challenge to Australian legislation is resolved.

The packaging law “will remove the last remaining vestige of glamor from these deadly products,” Associate Minister of Health Tariana Turia said in announcing the plan Tuesday.

New Zealand already has increased cigarette taxes and makes retailers hide packs below the counter. The new legislation would be similar to an Australian law that took effect in December and replaced logos on packs with graphic warnings including cancer-riddled mouths.

The proposed law could be introduced in Parliament later this year to take effect when the trade case over Australia‘s law plays out — next year at the earliest.

Tobacco companies lost a legal challenge in Australia‘s highest court last year, but the World Trade Organization has agreed to hear a complaint about it from several tobacco-growing countries led by the Ukraine.

The Ukraine, Zimbabwe, Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua and Indonesia argued that governments should pursue health policies “without unnecessarily restricting international trade and without nullifying intellectual property rights.”

New Zealand, Norway and Uruguay have lined up behind Australia in the WTO case. Uruguay told the trade body it couldn’t remain silent about “the most serious pandemic confronting humanity.”

Turia said the New Zealand government wants to minimize its legal exposure by waiting until the outcome of the Australian challenge. Even so, she said, the government is planning to set aside up to 6 million New Zealand dollars ($5.1 million) to defend against possible lawsuits from the “very litigious” tobacco companies.

Steve Rush, the New Zealand general manager of British American Tobacco, said in a statement Tuesday that the company is exploring its legal options.

“We expect to see numerous repercussions as a result of the government ignoring several international agreements as well as setting a dangerous precedent for other industries,” he said.

New Zealand has set itself a target of eliminating smoking altogether by 2025. Turia said the government would consider introducing further measures, such as banning smoking in cars and public places and further hiking taxes.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Costa Rica toughens its stance in drug fight

On a recent Friday morning at a gleaming new international airport in Costa Rica, hundreds of tourists from New York and Minnesota emerged blinking onto the sun-blasted tarmac. At the other end of the runway, eight Americans zipped into tan flight suits aboard a massive white surveillance plane.

As four propellers roared, the P3 Orion flew out above the tourists and over the hotels and beach clubs of the Pacific coast, its bulbous radar dish scanning for speedboats loaded with U.S.-bound cocaine. In the cabin’s bank of radar screens, a dot pulsed just north of Panamanian waters. The P3 swooped down to 1,000 feet and soared past a tiny Costa Rican fishing boat. Using a long-lensed digital camera, one of the military veterans snapped a string of photos. A colleague radioed the boat’s details back to the U.S.

This prosperous paradise of golden beaches and lush cloud-forest preserves is throwing itself wholeheartedly into the U.S. war on drugs as a flood of cocaine shipments and a surge in domestic crime erodes Costa Ricans‘ sense of proud isolation from the problems of the rest of Central America. Crime levels here are among the lowest in the region, but many Costa Ricans fear even the slightest possibility that their country could become more like Mexico, Guatemala or Honduras, where the unchecked power of drug cartels and ordinary criminals have millions of people living in fear.

In 1948, Costa Rica abolished its army, plowing money into education, social benefits and environmental preservation. As a result, Costa Rican officials say, the country whose laidback national slogan is “pura vida” — pure life — is poorly equipped to battle ruthless and well-equipped Mexican drug cartels. To assist, the U.S. is patrolling Costa Rica‘s skies and waters while also providing millions of dollars in training and equipment. The Costa Rican government, in turn, has launched a tough line on crime backed by a top-to-bottom transformation of its law-enforcement and justice systems.

Costa Rica is today the closest the US has to a protectorate in Central America,” said Sam Logan, director of Southern Pulse, a risk-analysis firm focused on Latin America.

Fed up with crime, many Costa Ricans are welcoming the change. A wide range of serious crimes have risen sharply in Costa Rica over the last decade, though some, like homicide, have begun to dip.

“Security in general is going backwards. You can’t walk in peace in the street, you’re not at peace at home, or anywhere,” said Roberto Arce, a 23-year-old university student.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Speculation mounts on who will be next pope

By Joshua Rhett Miller

The likely successor to Pope Benedict XVI will continue his conservative vision with a younger, more energetic outlook and perhaps hail from Africa, Asia or Latin America, religious experts told FoxNews.com.

The decision by the 85-year-old pope to step down sets the stage for a conclave next month to elect a new leader for a Roman Catholic church carefully navigating a global clerical sex abuse scandal and other hurdles, including declining membership. Several theologians told FoxNews.com they expect the next leader of the billion-member church to continue Benedict’s conservatism, especially since the bulk of the College of Cardinals was selected by Benedict himself.

“The entire College of Cardinals has been appointed by Pope John Paul II and Benedict XVI, therefore it’s extraordinarily unlikely that the next pope will not reflect their collective interpretation of the council, which means in worldly terms, a conservative pope,” said R.R. Reno, editor of First Things magazine and professor of theology at Creighton University, in Omaha, Neb. “So the question is whether the College of Cardinals wants another ‘professor pope’ or do they want someone to kind of deal with the Vatican bureaucracy, or a diplomat?

“I’m not a handicapper and I couldn’t begin to speculate,” he said. “But the common wisdom is these things swing like a pendulum.”

William Hill, Britain’s largest bookmaker, offered odds of 3/1 against for Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze, who is 80 and was once the world’s youngest bishop. Odds were set at 7/2 for Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet and Ghanian Cardinal Peter Turkson.

Irish bookmaker Paddy Power had the same trio as frontrunners, but made Ouellet the favorite. Britain’s Ladbrokes had Turkson the leading contender.

Other possible successors include Cardinal Angelo Scola, the archbishop of Milan, Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the archbishop of Vienna and Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras.

Whomever is selected, Reno said, will have the initial task of providing a “strong, clear identity and purpose” internationally, particularly in Europe and throughout Latin America.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York is a “long shot” at best, Reno said.

“It’s not clear that the rest of the church would accept American hegemony,” he said, despite the fact that Dolan backs the pope’s conservative vision.

Rev. James Bretzke, a professor of moral theology at Boston College, told FoxNews.com he sees the decision going one of two ways.

“There will be debate and discussion that will pull in two directions: younger and more energetic, but more or less the same theologically with [Benedict],” Bretzke said. “And the other major consideration would be to look specifically for a face that represents the emerging church in Africa, Asia and possibly Latin America.”

Turkson, 64, of Ghana is seen as the leading candidate from Africa, Bretzke said. He currently heads the Vatican’s office for justice and peace. Another possible candidate is Cardinal Antonio Tagle, the archbishop of Manila, but at age 56 he is considered far too young.

“But he’s very well respected,” Bretzke said of Tagle.

Within Latin America, Bretzke cited Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio — archbishop of Buenos Aires — as the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Little change in Honduras prison where 362 died

On the 14th day of each month, Jesus Garcia joins other relatives to hoist a cardboard coffin and carry it in a macabre procession down a road to the prison where two cousins died with 360 other inmates in the worst prison fire in at least a century.

It’s their way to demand justice in the deaths of Antonio and Franklin Garcia, who were among many left locked in their cells as fire raced through the wooden barracks, and the handful of guards on duty ran for their lives.

“We go to the jail, in a symbolic procession with a casket, to ask for justice, but we get no answers,” Garcia said. “We go to the minister of human rights and she passes it along to the president and he passes it along to the first lady, but then nothing gets done.”

A year after the fire in Comayagua, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) from Tegucigalpa, the investigation remains open and prosecutors have filed no charges. The burned cells and electrical system are still being repaired.

While the government created a new agency told to replace the police in the prisons with specially trained guards, social workers and doctors, the three-person commission that started working last week was given no budget and has no office, according to its director, Agusto Avila.

Even the inmate who was the hero of the fire, finding keys and freeing hundreds of men, was never pardoned as President Porfirio Lobo had promised. Honduran law forbids commuting a murder sentence, so Marco Antonio Bonilla is still serving his time, working in the prison infirmary, where he was awakened that night by the screams of inmates as they were devoured by flames.

“There was no mechanism to extinguish fires, no evacuation plan. The firefighters were not allowed to get there quickly and the guards, instead of acting appropriately, only fired shots in the air, supposedly because that is the established procedure in case of escapes,” said government human rights prosecutor German Enamorado, who led the investigation for the Attorney General’s Office.

Garcia is in a position to know it can happen again. Besides being a relative of the dead, he is the warden of the Juticalpa prison northeast of the capital in rural Olancho state. A fire today in the Juticalpa facility of 500 inmates could cause similar devastation because it doesn’t have running water to fight a blaze, despite the fact it is one …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pope Benedict successor will likely be another conservative, perhaps hail from Latin America, experts say

By Joshua Rhett Miller

The likely successor to Pope Benedict XVI will continue his conservative vision with a younger, more energetic outlook and perhaps hail from Africa, Asia or Latin America, religious experts told FoxNews.com.

The decision by the 85-year-old pope to step down sets the stage for a conclave next month to elect a new leader for a Roman Catholic church carefully navigating a global clerical sex abuse scandal and other hurdles, including declining membership. Several theologians told FoxNews.com they expect the next leader of the billion-member church to continue Benedict’s conservatism, especially since the bulk of the College of Cardinals was selected by Benedict himself.

“The entire College of Cardinals has been appointed by Pope John Paul II and Benedict XVI, therefore it’s extraordinarily unlikely that the next pope will not reflect their collective interpretation of the council, which means in worldly terms, a conservative pope,” said R.R. Reno, editor of First Things magazine and professor of theology at Creighton University, in Omaha, Neb. “So the question is whether the College of Cardinals wants another ‘professor pope’ or do they want someone to kind of deal with the Vatican bureaucracy, or a diplomat?”

Possible successors include Cardinal Angelo Scola — the archbishop of Milan — and Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the archbishop of Vienna. Both men are scholarly clerics in the “mold” of Benedict, Reno said, but he stopped short of suggesting a favorite.

“I’m not a handicapper and I couldn’t begin to speculate,” he said. “But the common wisdom is these things swing like a pendulum.”

Whomever is selected, Reno said, will have the initial task of providing a “strong, clear identity and purpose” internationally, particularly in Europe and throughout Latin America.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York is a “long shot” at best, Reno said.

“It’s not clear that the rest of the church would accept American hegemony,” he said, despite the fact that Dolan backs the pope’s conservative vision.

Rev. James Bretzke, a professor of moral theology at Boston College, told FoxNews.com he sees the decision going one of two ways.

“There will be debate and discussion that will pull in two directions: younger and more energetic, but more or less the same theologically with [Benedict],” Bretzke said. “And the other major consideration would be to look specifically for a face that represents the emerging church in Africa, Asia and possibly Latin America.”

Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, 64, of Ghana is seen as the leading candidate from Africa, Bretzke said. He currently heads the Vatican’s office for justice and peace. Another possible candidate is Cardinal Antonio Tagle, the archbishop of Manila, but at age 56 he is considered far too young.

“But he’s very well respected,” Bretzke said of Tagle.

Other candidates to succeed the German pope include Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the Canadian head of the Vatican’s office for bishops, and Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras.

Within Latin America, Bretzke cited Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio — archbishop of Buenos Aires — as the leading candidate.

“He’s well respected in Latin America and was a leading candidate in the last conclave,” Bretzke …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Honduras sends soldiers to fight crime in 2 cities

Honduran President Porfirio Lobo has deployed 1,400 soldiers to fight street gangs in the country’s two biggest and most violent cities.

The troops began patrolling the capital of Tegucigalpa and the city of San Pedro Sula on Friday.

Lobo says the soldiers will coordinate with police to patrol neighborhoods that are hotspots for crime. He says 800 soldiers have been assigned to Tegucigalpa and 600 to San Pedro Sula.

National Police Director Juan Bonilla says this is part of a “frontal attack against crime.”

According to Honduras‘ National Autonomous University, the Central American nation recorded 7,173 homicides in 2012 and 7,014 in 2011. Honduras has 8 million people.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Guatemala declares national coffee emergency

Guatemala‘s president has declared a national emergency over the spread coffee rust, a fungus that is affecting 70 percent of the country’s crop.

President Otto Molina Perez also has ordered the release of more than $14 million to aid coffee growers.

He says the funds are aimed at helping 60,000 small farmers to buy pesticides and to teach them how to prevent the disease and stop it from spreading.

Molina said Friday that the pesticides will start being applied to coffee plants in April and that two more applications will be needed during the year.

Coffee rust is currently affecting plantations in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Costa Rica.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

US military expands its billion dollar drug war in Latin America

The crew members aboard the USS Underwood could see through their night goggles what was happening on the fleeing go-fast boat: Someone was dumping bales.

When the Navy guided-missile frigate later dropped anchor in Panamanian waters on that sunny August morning, Ensign Clarissa Carpio, a 23-year-old from San Francisco, climbed into the inflatable dinghy with four unarmed sailors and two Coast Guard officers like herself, carrying light submachine guns. It was her first deployment, but Carpio was ready for combat.

Fighting drug traffickers was precisely what she’d trained for.

In the most expensive initiative in Latin America since the Cold War, the U.S. has militarized the battle against the traffickers, spending more than $20 billion in the past decade. U.S. Army troops, Air Force pilots and Navy ships outfitted with Coast Guard counternarcotics teams are routinely deployed to chase, track and capture drug smugglers.

The sophistication and violence of the traffickers is so great that the U.S. military is training not only law enforcement agents in Latin American nations, but their militaries as well, building a network of expensive hardware, radar, airplanes, ships, runways and refueling stations to stem the tide of illegal drugs from South America to the U.S.

According to State Department and Pentagon officials, stopping drug-trafficking organizations has become a matter of national security because they spread corruption, undermine fledgling democracies and can potentially finance terrorists.

U.S. drug czar Gil Kerlikowske, pointing to dramatic declines in violence and cocaine production in Colombia, says the strategy works.

“The results are historic and have tremendous implications, not just for the United States and the Western Hemisphere, but for the world,” he said at a conference on drug policy last year.

The Associated Press examined U.S. arms export authorizations, defense contracts, military aid, and exercises in the region, tracking a drug war strategy that began in Colombia, moved to Mexico and is now finding fresh focus in Central America, where brutal cartels mark an enemy motivated not by ideology but by cash.

The U.S. authorized the sale of a record $2.8 billion worth of guns, satellites, radar equipment and tear gas to Western Hemisphere nations in 2011, four times the authorized sales 10 years ago, according to the latest State Department reports.

Over the same decade, defense contracts jumped from $119 million to $629 million, supporting everything from Kevlar helmets for the Mexican army to airport runways in Aruba, according to federal contract data.

Last year $830 million, almost $9 out of every $10 of U.S. law enforcement and military aid spent in the region, went toward countering narcotics, up 30 percent in the past decade.

Many in the military and other law enforcement agencies — the Drug Enforcement Administration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, FBI — applaud the U.S. strategy, but critics say militarizing the drug war in a region fraught with tender democracies and long-corrupt institutions can stir political instability while barely touching what the U.N. estimates is a $320 billion global illicit drug market.

Congressman Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), who chaired the U.S. House Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere for the past four years, says the U.S.-supported crackdown on Mexican cartels only left them “stronger and more violent.” He intends to reintroduce a proposal for a Western Hemisphere Drug Policy Commission to evaluate antinarcotics efforts.

“Billions upon billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars have been spent over the years to combat the drug trade in Latin America and the Caribbean,” he said. “In spite of our efforts, the positive results are few and far between.”

——

At any given moment, 4,000 U.S. troops are deployed in Latin America and as many as four U.S. Navy ships are plying the Caribbean and Pacific coastlines of Central America. U.S. pilots clocked more than 46,400 hours in 2011 flying anti-drug missions, and U.S. agents from at least 10 law enforcement agencies spread across the continent.

The U.S. trains thousands of Latin American troops, and employs its multibillion dollar radar equipment to gather intelligence to intercept traffickers and arrest cartel members.

These work in organized-crime networks that boast an estimated 11,000 flights annually and hundreds of boats and submersibles. They smuggle cocaine from the only place it’s produced, South America, to the land where it is most coveted, the United States.

One persistent problem is that in many of the partner nations, police are so institutionally weak or corrupt that governments have turned to their militaries to fight drug traffickers, often with violent results. Militaries are trained for combat, while police are trained to enforce laws.

“It is unfortunate that militaries have to be involved in what are essentially law enforcement engagements,” said Frank Mora, the outgoing deputy assistant secretary of defense for Western Hemisphere affairs. But he argues that many governments have little choice.

“We are not going to turn our backs on these governments or these institutions because they’ve found themselves in such a situation that they have to use their militaries in this way,” Mora said.

Mora said the effort is not tantamount to militarizing the war on drugs. He said the Defense Department‘s role is limited, by law, to monitoring and detection. Law enforcement agents, from the U.S. Coast Guard, Customs and Border Protection or other agencies are in charge of some of the busts, he said.

But the U.S. is deploying its own military. Not only is the Fourth Fleet in the Caribbean, the Pacific and the Atlantic, but the Marines were sent to Guatemala last year and the National Guard is in Honduras.

The Obama Administration sees these deployments as important missions with a worthy payoff. Hundreds of thousands of kilograms (pounds) of cocaine are seized en route to the U.S. every year, and the Defense Department estimates about 850 metric tons of cocaine departed South America last year toward the U.S., down 20 percent in just a year. The most recent U.S. survey found cocaine use fell significantly, from 2.4 million people in 2006 to 1.4 million in 2011.

Aboard the Underwood, the crew of 260 was clear on the mission. The ship’s bridge wings bear 16 cocaine “snowflakes” and two marijuana “leaves,” awarded to the Underwood by the Coast Guard command to be “proudly displayed” for its successful interdictions.

Standing on the bridge, Carpio’s team spotted its first bale of cocaine. And then, after 2 1/2 weeks plying the Caribbean in search of drug traffickers, they spotted another, and then many more.

“In all we found 49 bales,” Carpio said in an interview aboard the ship. “It was very impressive to see the bales popping along the water in a row.”

Wrapped in black and white tarp, they were so heavy she could barely pull one out of the water. Later, officials said they’d collected $27 million worth of cocaine.

——

The current U.S. strategy began in Colombia in 2000, with an eight-year effort that cost more than $7 billion to stop the flow from the world’s top cocaine producer. During Plan Colombia, the national police force, working closely with dozens of DEA agents, successfully locked up top drug traffickers.

But then came “the balloon effect.”

As a result of Plan Colombia‘s pressure, traffickers were forced to find new coca-growing lands in Peru and Bolivia, and trafficking routes shifted as well from Florida to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Thus a $1.6 billion, 4-year Merida Initiative was launched in 2008. Once more, drug kingpins were caught or killed, and as cartels fought to control trafficking routes, increasingly gruesome killings topped 70,000 in six years.

Mexican cartel bosses, feeling the squeeze, turned to Central America as the first stop for South American cocaine, attracted by weaker governments and corrupt authorities.

“Now, all of a sudden, the tide has turned,” said Brick Scoggins, who manages the Defense Department‘s counter-narcotics programs in most of Latin America and the Caribbean. “I’d say northern tier countries of El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Belize have become a key focus area.”

The latest iteration is the $165 million Central America Regional Security Initiative, which includes Operation Martillo (Hammer), a year-old U.S.-led mission. The operation has no end date and is focused on the seas off Central America‘s beach-lined coasts, key shipping routes for 90 percent of the estimated 850 metric tons of cocaine headed to the U.S.

As part of Operation Martillo, 200 U.S. Marines began patrolling Guatemala‘s western coast in August, their helicopters soaring above villages at night as they headed out to sea to find “narco-submarines” and shiploads of drugs. The troops also brought millions of dollars’ worth of computers and intelligence-gathering technology to analyze communications between suspected drug dealers.

Assistant Secretary of State William Brownfield, head of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, predicts the balloon effect will play out in Central America before moving to the Caribbean.

The goal, he said, is to make it so hard for traffickers to move drugs to the U.S. that they will eventually opt out of North America, where cocaine use is falling. Traffickers would likely look for easier, more expanding markets, shifting sales to a growing customer base in Europe, Africa and elsewhere in the world.

Brownfield said almost all Peruvian and Bolivian cocaine goes east through Brazil and Argentina and then to Western Europe. Cocaine that reaches North America mostly comes from Colombia, he said, with U.S. figures showing production falling sharply, from 700 metric tons in 2001 to 195 metric tons today — though estimates vary widely.

When the drug war turns bloody, he said, the strategy is working.

“The bloodshed tends to occur and increase when these trafficking organizations, which are large, powerful, rich, extremely violent and potentially bloody, … come under some degree of pressure,” he said.

Yet the strategy has often backfired when foreign partners proved too inexperienced to fight drug traffickers or so corrupt they switched sides.

In Mexico, for example, the U.S. focused on improving the professionalism of the federal police. But the effort’s success was openly questioned after federal police at Mexico City’s Benito Juarez International Airport opened fire at each other, killing three.

In August critics were even more concerned when two CIA officers riding in a U.S. Embassy SUV were ambushed by Mexican federal police allegedly working for an organized crime group. The police riddled the armored SUV with 152 bullets, wounding both officers.

The new strategy in Honduras has had its own fits and starts.

Last year, the U.S. Defense Department spent a record $67.4 million on military contracts in Honduras, triple the 2002 defense contracts there well above the $45.6 million spent in neighboring Guatemala in 2012. The U.S. also spent about $2 million training more than 300 Honduran military personnel in 2011, and $89 million in annual spending to maintain Joint Task Force Bravo, a 600-member U.S. unit based at Soto Cano Air Base.

Further, neither the State Department nor the Pentagon could provide details explaining a 2011 $1.3 billion authorization for exports of military electronics to Honduras — although that would amount to almost half of all U.S. arms exports for the entire Western Hemisphere.

In May, on the other side of the country, Honduran national police rappelled from U.S. helicopters to bust drug traffickers near the remote village of Ahuas, killing four allegedly innocent civilians and scattering locals who were loading some 450 kilograms (close to 1,000 pounds) of cocaine into a boat.

The incident drew international attention and demands for an investigation when the DEA confirmed it had agents aboard the helicopters advising their Honduran counterparts. Villagers spoke of English-speaking commandos kicking in doors and handcuffing locals just after the shooting, searching for drug traffickers.

Six weeks later, townspeople watched in shock as laborers exhumed the first of four muddy graves. At each burial site, workers pulled out the decomposing bodies of two women and two young men, and laid them on tarps.

Forensic scientists conducted their graveside autopsies in the open air, probing for bullet wounds and searching for signs the women had been pregnant, as villagers had claimed.

Government investigators concluded there was no wrongdoing in the raid. In the subsequent months, DEA agents shot and killed suspects they said threatened them in two separate incidents, and the U.S. temporarily suspended the sharing of radar intelligence because the Central American nation’s air force shot down two suspected drug planes, a violation of rules of engagement. Support was also withheld for the national police after it was learned that its new director had been tied to death squads.

As the new year begins, Congress is still withholding an estimated $30 million in aid to Honduras, about a third of all the U.S. aid slotted for this year.

But there are no plans to rethink the strategy.

Scoggins, the Defense Department‘s counter-narcotics manager, said operations in Central America are expected to grow for the next five years.

“It’s not for me to say if it’s the correct strategy. It’s the strategy we are using,” said Scoggins. “I don’t know what the alternative is.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US 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

Honduras can't pay its bills, neglects services

Street surveillance cameras in one of the world’s most dangerous cities were turned off last week because Hondurasgovernment hasn’t paid millions of dollars it owes. The operator that operates them is now threatening to suspend the police radio service as well.

Teachers have been demonstrating almost every day because they haven’t been paid in six months, while doctors complain about the shortage of essential medicines, gauze, needles and latex gloves.

This Central American country has been on the brink of bankruptcy for months, as lawmakers put off passing a government budget necessary to pay for basic government services. The country is also grappling with $5 billion in foreign debt, a figure equivalent to last year’s entire government budget.

The financial crisis adds to a general sense that Honduras is a country in meltdown, as homicides soar and drug trafficking overruns its cities and coasts.

“There are definitely patients who haven’t been able to get better because of this problem,” said Dr. Lilian Discua, a pediatrician. “An epileptic who doesn’t take his medicine will have a crisis. This is happening.”

Many streets are riddled with potholes, and cities aren’t replacing stolen manhole covers. Soldiers aren’t receiving their regular salaries, while the country’s education secretary says 96 percent of schools close several days every week or month because of teacher strikes.

Some government offices must close because they don’t have ink to take fingerprints. The country’s national registration agency has been shuttered for 10 days because of unpaid salaries.

“In many ways, the state is no longer functioning,” said Robert Naiman, policy director of Just Foreign Policy, a Washington D.C.-based organization aimed at reforming U.S. foreign policy. “If they keep not paying their soldiers, those soldiers are probably going to stop being soldiers and maybe take some other action.”

Experts say a mix of government corruption, election-year politics and a struggling economy has fueled the crisis.

The local chapter of the international watchdog group Transparency International issued a study in December that alleged some lawmakers had spent money on plane tickets to a tennis tournament in Spain, Mother’s Day gifts and other personal expenses, the report found.

The study’s author, Ludin Ayala, said the country’s Congress is the most expensive in Central America, although Honduras is known as the second-poorest country in Latin America.

“The Congress doesn’t have rules for making these expenses, which are at the discretion of the (legislative) president,” Ayala said. “I don’t know if it’s shameful, sad or disgusting that in the National Congress, there doesn’t exist any type of transparency.”

Former presidential candidate and legislator Olban Valladares said much of the public money has indeed gone into campaigns ahead of November’s elections, in which the president, mayors and 128 congressional representatives will be elected.

“Sadly, we have a great number of candidates who are state officials and their tendency is to abuse state resources that they control to fund their campaigns,” Valladares said.

Congress President Juan Orlando Hernandez said that ousted former President Manuel Zelaya and his allies created much of the current mess.

“They are the ones who have left us today with an enormous debt … leaving us a country that’s unsafe, indebted and isolated in the world,” Hernandez said in a news release.

Although Congress goes on recess Friday, lawmakers have only partially passed a budget so that the government can pay some of its employees and contractors. That leaves undecided the budgets of autonomous institutions such as utilities and the port authority.

Instead, lawmakers are discussing proposals already declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court and don’t deal with the immediate financial problems. On Tuesday, for example, Congress approved a law that would allow any elected official to be impeached.

Hugo Noe Pino, an economist at Honduras‘ Central American Institute for Fiscal Studies, noted that Congress approved the sale of an additional $750 million in bonds last November without resolving any of the core budget issues.

“In this political year, the state resources can be used for political campaigns,” Pino said. “If they haven’t discussed the budget, why are they approving the financing (through bonds) of a budget that doesn’t exist?”

Financial fraud isn’t limited to the government. Tax evasion, for example, is widespread, with the government missing out on an estimated 43 percent of revenue due, said Mario Lopez Steiner, Honduras‘s tax director.

“The culture of tax evasion is incredible in Honduras,” he said.

The institutional paralysis has also spread to the justice system. The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court has not met for a month and a half because President Porfirio Lobo accused the magistrates of being part of a conspiracy to overthrow him.

Congress, whose majority belongs to Lobo’s party, dismissed several judges without an impeachment trial. Meanwhile, the fired judges continue to enjoy the use of their offices and cars with drivers, even as other government employees go unpaid.

Because Congress hasn’t replaced the dismissed judges, no one can rule on their appeal to be reinstated because the court’s other justices have recused themselves from the case.

“Public power has been turned upside down in a brazen way,” said Oscar Cruz, a former prosecutor in charge of defending the constitution.

The government and the ruling bloc have at least one idea to solve the fiscal crunch: They’ve introduced a bill that would create the country’s first sales tax while eliminating tax breaks for companies that import goods. Such firms make up about 70 sectors of the economy, among them fast food franchises, airlines, power generation companies, agribusinesses and companies that sell spare parts for machinery and heavy vehicles.

The bill’s supporters predict it will generate an additional $1.2 billion in revenue, which would double the government‘s yearly tax intake.

Businesses such as fast food franchises have long been exempt from taxes because they supposedly promote tourism even though many of them “are neither in tourist zones nor do they attract tourism,” said Lopez Steiner.

Such tax breaks have been “approved as payments for political favors and as a result of the financing of election campaigns, which are always linked to tax favors,” he said.

Legislators have so far suspended all tax exemptions for 60 days while a commission reviews whether to reinstate them.

Some families have survived the government vacuum with remittances sent by some of the 1 million Hondurans living in the United States. Their money equals 19 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, according to the World Bank.

Yet it isn’t enough for government workers such as teacher Daniel Espunda, who have lost paychecks to the political crisis.

“Now they owe me five months of salary. January will be the sixth I haven’t been paid,” Espunda said. “No one says anything about when the payday will come.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Honduras once again passes 'model cities' law

The Honduran congress approved once again a “model cities” project that the country’s Supreme Court had previously declared unconstitutional because it would create special development zones outside the jurisdiction of ordinary Honduran law.

Congressman Rodolfo Irias of the ruling National Party says the law “includes the necessary modifications” to answer concerns about unconstitutionality.

The vote was 110 to 13, with 5 abstentions.

The court’s rejection of the plan led Congress to fire four of the court’s five justices in December.

The plan would create “special development regions” with their own independent tax and justice systems, to spur economic growth in this Central American country struggling with corruption and crime.

The project was opposed by civic groups as well as the indigenous people.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Nicaragua sentences 18 Mexicans to 30 years

A Nicaraguan judge has sentenced 18 Mexicans who posed as a television crew to 30 years in prison for drug trafficking and money laundering stemming from $9.2 million found in their news vans.

Judge Edgard Altamirano says the 17 men and one woman deserve the harshest penalty possible under the Central American nation’s law. Altamirano said Friday’s sentencing that each of those convicted must also pay a $9.2 million fine.

The 18 fake journalists were arrested in August near Nicaragua‘s northern border with Honduras in six vans bearing logos like those used by Mexican television giant Televisa. Gym bags stuffed with bundles of cash were found stashed in compartments inside the vehicles.

Televisa says none of the 18 worked for it and the vans aren’t part of the company’s fleet.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News