Tag Archives: Panama

Panama's ethnic Gunas commemorate their revolution

With wooden rifles and the explosion of firecrackers, members of Panama‘s Guna indigenous group re-enacted an uprising by their ancestors against abuses and the repression of their traditions by police and soldiers.

Clad in red, tribe members simulated the Feb. 25, 1925, clash with police called the Guna Revolution amid parades and dances in a plaza on Ustupu, an island in the Guna Yala region on Panama‘s Caribbean coast.

“With this we reaffirm before the country and the world that the Guna people want to live in freedom,” Anelio Merry Lopez, who serves as the communications secretary for the Guna General Congress, told The Associated Press.

In the revolution, Gunas under leader Nele Kantule attacked a Panamanian police outpost, accusing police of abuses and of repressing their traditions. After the uprising, the region was recognized as the Guna Yala reserve with an autonomous status. They were the first indigenous people to be so organized in Panama. They are currently governed by traditional authorities.

With 80,000 members, the Gunas are Panama‘s second most numerous indigenous group. They are known around the world for their brightly color “mola” woven cloths.

Celebrations began Saturday, and the straw- or cane-roofed huts were adorned with the red-and-yellow flag of the Gunas.

The flag has an ancient Guna symbol in the middle that resembles an inverted swastika representing the four directions and the creation of the world.

The color of the flag was originally white, representing mother earth. Today it is associated with the Guna Revolution, and the color of the flag was changed by revolutionaries to yellow and red, with the yellow representing gold and red representing blood

Celebrations ended Tuesday with adults drinking traditional “chicha” cane liquor.

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Associated Press writer Juan Zamorano in Panama City contributed to this report.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

What will we look back upon with pride?

By BronxKnight

One hundred years ago, the United States completed what was then the most expensive, complex but ultimately successful government program in human history. It was a project where everything went wrong.

The French had tried to build the Panama canal a few years earlier, but despite putting the builder of the Suez Canal, Ferdinand de Lesseps, on the job, they left in total failure. The American project’s first chief engineer quit after the first year. His replacement left as well. Only with the third did the project start moving. Yellow fever killed thousands of workers and caused others to flee in fright. The engineering challenges were immense and they often seemed insurmountable. Media reports about the project were largely negative….

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Cuban dissident blogger heads on world tour

Cuban dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez is setting out on a three-month, dozen-nation world tour after a new law eased travel restrictions on islanders last month.

Sanchez says via Twitter that she successfully made it past the migratory checkpoint at Havana’s international airport, and all that’s left is to get on the plane.

She’s heading first to Brazil with a layover in Panama, where she tweets she’s excited to try out the airport’s free Wi-Fi.

Sanchez says Cuba has denied her permission to travel about 20 times in recent years. But the exit permit requirement ended with the government‘s travel reform in January, and Cubans now only need a passport to leave the country.

She said Sunday that she will be away from Cuba for about three months.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Miami man in illegal business with Cuba reportedly faces 35 years in prison

A man now jailed in Florida while awaiting a federal trial reportedly might not be behind bars if only he had waited two decades to allegedly ship $93,000 worth of goods from Miami to Cuba.

The Miami Herald reports that Pedro Adriano Borges, 68, was a couple of years ahead of a law covering the trade embargo against Cuba in 2002 and is now awaiting federal trial under a 1997 indictment alleging that he and four other men illegally shipped 18 containers to Cuba.

The goods sent between 1993 and 1996 included spices and mayonnaise as well as light bulbs and diapers, according to court documents in the case. The receivers in Cuba paid $93,000 for the shipments, the newspaper reports.

The Cuba-born Borges had fled to Costa Rica three years before those charges were filed, breaking his parole on a prior charge of money laundering in New Jersey. He was later detained in Panama in November and was put on a plane to Florida.

He now faces up to 35 years in prison, including 20 years for helping to launder the money that went from Cuba to Miami to pay for the shipments.

Click for more from the Miami Herald.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

First woman to lead in combat 'thrilled' with military's policy change

Former U.S. Army Capt. Linda L. Bray says her male superiors were incredulous upon hearing she had ably led a platoon of military police officers through a firefight during the 1989 invasion of Panama.

Instead of being lauded for her actions, the first woman in U.S. history to lead male troops in combat said higher-ranking officers accused her of embellishing accounts of what happened when her platoon bested an elite unit of the Panamanian Defense Force. After her story became public, Congress fiercely debated whether she and other women had any business being on the battlefield.

The Pentagon’s longstanding prohibition against women serving in ground combat ended Thursday, when Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced that most combat roles jobs will now be open to female soldiers and Marines. Panetta said women are integral to the military’s success and will be required to meet the same physical standards as their male colleagues.

“I’m so thrilled, excited. I think it’s absolutely wonderful that our nation’s military is taking steps to help women break the glass ceiling,” said Bray, 53, of Clemmons, N.C. “It’s nothing new now in the military for a woman to be right beside a man in operations.”

The end of the ban on women in combat comes more than 23 years after Bray made national news and stoked intense controversy after her actions in Panama were praised as heroic by Marlin Fitzwater, the spokesman for then-President George H.W. Bush.

Bray and 45 soldiers under her command in the 988th Military Police Company, nearly all of them men, encountered a unit of Panamanian special operations soldiers holed up inside a military barracks and dog kennel.

Her troops killed three of the enemy and took one prisoner before the rest were forced to flee, leaving behind a cache of grenades, assault rifles and thousands of rounds of ammunition, according to Associated Press news reports published at the time. The Americans suffered no casualties.

Citing Bray‘s performance under fire as an example, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., introduced a bill to repeal the law that barred female U.S. military personnel from serving in combat roles.

But the response from the Pentagon brass was less enthusiastic.

“The responses of my superior officers were very degrading, like, `What were you doing there?”‘ Bray said. “A lot of people couldn’t believe what I had done, or did not want to believe it. Some of them were making excuses, saying that maybe this really didn’t happen the way it came out.”

Schroder’s bill died after top generals lobbied against the measure, saying female soldiers just weren’t up to the physical rigors of combat.

“The routine carrying of a 120-pound rucksack day in and day out on the nexus of battle between infantrymen is that which is to be avoided and that’s what the current Army policy does,” Gen. M.R. Thurman, then the head of the U.S. Southern Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

For Bray, the blowback got personal.

The Army refused to grant her and other female soldiers who fought on the ground in Panama the Combat Infantryman Badge. She was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for Valor, an award for meritorious achievement in a non-combat role.

Bray was also the subject of an Army investigation over allegations by Panamanian officials that she and her soldiers had destroyed government and personal property during the invasion that toppled Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega

Though eventually cleared of any wrongdoing, the experience soured Bray on the Army. In 1991, she resigned her commission after eight years of active duty and took a medical discharge related to a training injury.

Today’s military is much different from the one Bray knew, with women already serving as fighter pilots, aboard submarines and as field supervisors in war zones. But some can’t help but feel that few know of their contributions, said Alma Felix, 27, a former Army specialist.

“We are the support. Those are the positions we fill and that’s a big deal — we often run the show — but people don’t see that,” Felix said. “Maybe it will put more females forward and give people a sense there are women out there fighting for our country. It’s not just you’re typical poster boy, GI Joes doing it.”

Spc. Heidi Olson, a combat medic, received a Purple Heart for injuries she suffered when an IED exploded in Afghanistan last May.

“It makes it official now,” Olson said. “We don’t have to do the back door way of getting out into a combat zone.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Statement by President Obama on Ambassador Ron Kirk’s Announcement to Depart in Late February

By The White House

I want to thank Ambassador Kirk for his hard work on behalf of the American people over the past four years. There’s no question Ron delivered results for the American people and for our economy. From bringing home new trade agreements with Korea, Colombia and Panama and negotiating to open up new markets for American businesses, to cracking down on unfair trade practices around the world, he has been a tremendous advocate for the American worker. As a former mayor, Ron was relentless in making the case to the American public that a balanced, thoughtful trade policy can contribute to a stronger economic future for America. I appreciate his service and wish him the best of luck.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office