[RD] News Thread of the Americas

So today Chile's elections have had their first impact and the cabinet has five six new members.
Also the police has tear-gassed some student demonstrations.

In Peru yet another one's gone down and two more are under investigation.

In Argentina the misgovernment insists that there is not a hate-speech law in the works even if they continue to push the point that critcising their policies and/or denouncing their corruption is ‘hate speech’ and should therefore be banned.

Fun times!
 
7% inflation for the month of August! (not year-on-year, just as compared with July)
 
The Haitian crisis continues unabated. The capital is basically now a battleground for gang warfare.

‘They have no fear and no mercy’: gang rule engulfs Haitian capital

Violence has spread from the poorest slums to the city centre as up to 200 gangs carve up Port-au-Prince

Spoiler :
Jean Michel thought his neighbourhood in the north of Port-au-Prince, far from the capital’s infamous slums, would shield his family from the violence engulfing the Haitian capital.

But in May young men started coming into town on motorcycles, armed with assault rifles. By June, they were seizing control of the area. And in July the bandits had become the de facto authority, snatching up children to join their ranks and raping any women who took their fancy.

“They take what they want now,” said the construction worker, who fled his home with his wife and two boys once the gangs took over. “They have no fear and they have no mercy.”

Violence, natural disasters and political instability have plagued Haiti for decades but in recent months, the country has descended yet deeper into socioeconomic and political chaos as armed gangs have ramped up their turf wars.

Cité Soleil, a lawless haven for many of the capital’s gangs, has been a hotspot. In the 10 days between 8 and 17 July the UN says 209 people were killed there as the rival G9 and G-Pèp factions battled for control of the sprawling slum with machine guns and machetes.

Now the violence is rippling out across the capital, reaching once-peaceful provinces, and displacing thousands of families.

“I know this is Haiti and I have heard of the security issues elsewhere in places like Cité Soleil. But my neighbourhood was peaceful. I never thought I would one day be forced out of my home by the gangs,” said Michel, who asked not to use his real name for fear of reprisals.

With state forces outnumbered and overpowered, the gangs have pushed into the administrative centre of the capital. Deadly street skirmishes broke out streets away from the presidential palace.

As many as 200 heavily armed factions are estimated to be carving up the capital, leaving many areas that had been relatively safe now engulfed in street warfare.

Human rights atrocities are becoming not just more frequent but more brutal as the gangs become more ruthless in their efforts to expand their territory, say UN observers in Port-au-Prince.

Most of those killed are innocent civilians either caught in the crossfire or deliberately targeted by the bandits.

Women and children as young as one year old have been killed and their bodies burned in the recent wave of violence, a UN report found last month.

Teenagers accused of spying for rival gangs have been shot in public executions and young women and girls have been raped as a form of warfare.

Thousands of families like Michel’s now live far from their homes or shelter in makeshift camps set up by NGOs such as Mercy Corps.

“My sons are eight and 12 years old. My biggest fear was that they would be recruited by the gangs,” he said.

The 5 Seconds gang – which seized control of the country’s supreme court in June – are increasingly training minors in the use of military-grade weapons, observers report.

The violence spreading through Port-au-Prince is exacerbating an already desperate humanitarian crisis, says Annalisa Constanzo, who was sent to the city by the AVSI foundation to manage food and medical aid programmes.

An estimated 1 million people in the capital are going hungry due to the fallout of the conflict and basic healthcare is often unavailable.

Violent protests have broken out in recent weeks as soaring food prices and gas shortages have compounded the misery of growing insecurity.

“Haitians don’t have a lot,” Constanzo says. “But now what little they do have, they are losing.”

Videos appear to show state forces confronting the gangs in pitched street battles but with the reconstituted national forces numbering about 500 soldiers, they are vastly outnumbered.

And most of the skirmishes are theatre, says Nicole Philips, legal director at Haitian Bridge, which provides support for refugees fleeing the Caribbean country.

Paramilitary groups sprang up when Haiti’s army disbanded in 1995 and have grown in power as governments lost control of the country.

Haiti has not held presidential elections since November 2016. The assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in July 2021 added to the country’s woes, causing a surge in violence.

As the government has grown weaker its reliance on the gangs to maintain order has increased, said Philips. What appears to be state resistance is often a show intended to mask that many of the gangs are collaborating with the government.

“Any skirmishes are symbolic. The reason the gangs are being allowed to proliferate is because elections are coming up,” she said.

While some gangs enrich themselves from arms and drug trafficking or kidnapping, others like the G9 are used to exert political power.

In areas such as Cité Soleil, gangs are reportedly withholding food and water in order to subjugate the local population.

If ongoing protests gain momentum the government could also turn to the gangs to violently quell the unrest as it’s the only option they have left.

“I’m not even angry at the gangs,” said Michel, who is unable to find work and is relying on handouts from Mercy Corps to support his family. “I’m angry at the state. They have not taken their responsibility. Now we’re in God’s hands.”

It's somewhat sobering to see what happens if you really make authority collapse. So many times the country I live in has come dangerously close to such a collapse and, so far, has just barely avoided, included the nearly cartoonish assassination attempt on CFK from two weeks ago.
 
Amazingly, the government's big event for this week (as far as yesterday and today are concerned) is not about inflation, organised crime, corruption or any such complicated uninteresting issues but a double whammy that manages to be a parody of all at the same time.
Firstly, we get to know that the ‘president’ managed to show the head of the IMF a photograph of his one-year-old tot.
Second, there is a meeting to co-ordinate between manufacturers and distributors of World Cup™ stickers to ensure that everybody has fair access to them.

…also, there's this bit where CFK's lawyer personally threatened the prosecutors in her ongoing trial and Peru's former president Ollanta Humala's brother running for the post himself and saying that any corrupt official -including his aforementioned brother- should be executed, but those are minor things…
 
Argentina took another tumble into the dark this week.

During the manufactured Columbus Day super-long weekend, three ministers have left their jobs and are, for now, unreplaced. They are:
-The ministress for women, genders and diversity (sic), who holds that men are naturally rapists and that all men are perpetrating patriarchy by being men and decided to rename her all-female team of colleagues ‘the teamess’. It was a very useful ministry to effect no real change, because maybe one or two other ministries have been headed by men and all of them have been able to say ‘solving gender inequality's not my job’.
-The minister for work, in a country where work no longer ensures being above the poverty or even the indigence line.
-The minister for social development, whose job is to handle the dole and try to cover up the fact that a large part of it ends up in the pockets of intermediaries who use it to fund their political careers.

Last Thursday only, the police risked mimicking their Indonesian counterparts by mishandling a football match. A club decided to oversell unnumbered tickets to cash in on a high-attendance match and the Buenos Aires province police decided to vent some of its frustrations on people, as it often does, by locking a few doors so that people couldn't get out, then shooting pepper spray and tear gas grenades, then shooting even at paramedics and at the TV cameramen who were recording them live. (picture gallery here - no paywall)
One man died, over 100 people were injured, but Security Minister Berni remains in office. Simply because he's the hatchet-man who knows too much.

Child malnutrition, aggravated by the practice of appropriating emergency funds theoretically apportioned to feed the poor and/or locking the poor up in their hovels at gunpoint to keep them quiet using the pandemic as an excuse, is now hitting such critical levels that it's noticeable at one of Argentina's few remaining viable exports: football players. Argentina's producing physically weaker future athletes.
But fear not! A congresswoman has come up with a solution: we have a new law to declare table football a professional sport and also illegalise spinning the bar over 360º. It's not a joke.
 
But fear not! A congresswoman has come up with a solution: we have a new law to declare table football a professional sport and also illegalise spinning the bar over 360º. It's not a joke.
Criminalising spinning in table football sounds like a good idea...
 
You could just, y'know, git gud at the game.
 
Yes, like that! Latin American talent plus European material standards and training and you get… well, UEFA.
 
Well, since we like round numbers we've just managed to achieve a solid 15 different exchange rates with a few more on the way to bring it up to 20 hopefully while everybody is looking at the World Cup.
 
6.1% official inflation rate for the month of September (foodstuffs at the highest with ~10%), 83% year-on-year.
And textbooks just went up…
 
PING! Three ministers left over the weekend a fortnight ago, while two more are returning to the posts whence they'd come on leave:
-Cabinet Chief Manzur has announced that he'll be leaving as of next year in order to reassume control of his province,
-housing minister Ferraresi has announced that he's returning to his post as mayor of Avellaneda.

Meanwhile the ‘government’ managed to make itself look even more ridiculous. A contestant in the umpteenth edition of Big Brother was live on PlutoTV in the early hours of the morning claiming that the so-called president of the country is corrupt. They spent a couple of days railing at him and threatening to sue the pants off the man even as tidbits of information such as proven links between the two emerging told them that the worst thing that they could do was keep people interested in the subject.
They also insisted that this was a conspiracy by the US embassy and the Paramount Pictures corporation to toppple the government.
Perhaps the presidential voicebearer (sic) will be going soon as well, it is speculated.
 
This week, Paraguay got a new justice minister. He lasted eight hours after a little scandal and then they appointed a new one.

Peru's lost its umpteenth health minister.
 
history will laugh at this endless rant at people . There are countries where scandals do not make people go .
 
Argentina took another tumble into the dark this week.

During the manufactured Columbus Day super-long weekend, three ministers have left their jobs and are, for now, unreplaced. They are:
-The ministress for women, genders and diversity (sic), who holds that men are naturally rapists and that all men are perpetrating patriarchy by being men and decided to rename her all-female team of colleagues ‘the teamess’. It was a very useful ministry to effect no real change, because maybe one or two other ministries have been headed by men and all of them have been able to say ‘solving gender inequality's not my job’.
-The minister for work, in a country where work no longer ensures being above the poverty or even the indigence line.
-The minister for social development, whose job is to handle the dole and try to cover up the fact that a large part of it ends up in the pockets of intermediaries who use it to fund their political careers.

Last Thursday only, the police risked mimicking their Indonesian counterparts by mishandling a football match. A club decided to oversell unnumbered tickets to cash in on a high-attendance match and the Buenos Aires province police decided to vent some of its frustrations on people, as it often does, by locking a few doors so that people couldn't get out, then shooting pepper spray and tear gas grenades, then shooting even at paramedics and at the TV cameramen who were recording them live. (picture gallery here - no paywall)
One man died, over 100 people were injured, but Security Minister Berni remains in office. Simply because he's the hatchet-man who knows too much.

Child malnutrition, aggravated by the practice of appropriating emergency funds theoretically apportioned to feed the poor and/or locking the poor up in their hovels at gunpoint to keep them quiet using the pandemic as an excuse, is now hitting such critical levels that it's noticeable at one of Argentina's few remaining viable exports: football players. Argentina's producing physically weaker future athletes.
But fear not! A congresswoman has come up with a solution: we have a new law to declare table football a professional sport and also illegalise spinning the bar over 360º. It's not a joke.

How are you managing in all this chaos? :(

I'm sure our GOP is watching carefully so they can follow a similar path as they take over the US.
 
Well, we are not managing. It just happens to not be an overnight collapse. It's too fast to stop but not so fast that you can't notice. When you get a fast collapse you get the following:

Haitian ambassador warns criminal gangs may overrun country

Armed gangs have shut off access to Haiti’s main fuel terminal, decimating basic services amid a cholera and hunger crisis

The Haitian ambassador to Washington has appealed to the international community to accelerate talks on deploying an armed intervention, warning that criminal gangs were in danger of taking over the country.

Spoiler :
Bocchit Edmond made his appeal as efforts to agree to a UN resolution backing such a force appear to have stalled, and as the US and Canada have been holding urgent talks looking for ways to break the impasse.

“It is important to see how we can go fast and make sure that we take those armed gangs out of business, because if we don’t do that urgently, it’s a matter of time for them to take over the entire country,” Edmond told the Guardian.

“It is not going to be in the interests of all our closest neighbors if we allow such a thing to happen.”

Heavily armed gangs have blocked off Haiti’s main fuel terminal, bringing much of the country to a halt and triggering the collapse of basic services, amid a cholera outbreak and widespread hunger. The UN has said 96,000 Haitians have been forced to flee their homes to escape the violence.

The UN security council agreed to a resolution earlier this month to sanction gang leaders but there was no consensus on giving a green light to a non-UN force to be recruited from willing nations aimed at helping the outgunned Haitian police break the gangs’ stranglehold.

The US has said it remains hopeful that the council would eventually pass a resolution giving UN blessing to a force, and the secretary of state, Antony Blinken, visited Ottawa for talks with his Canadian counterpart and the country’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau.

Canada sent a fact-finding team to Haiti to assess the humanitarian and security needs, but Trudeau was noncommittal, saying on Friday: “Before we establish any sort of mission, we need to see a clear plan of action.”

Ned Price, the state department spokesman, said that intensive diplomatic work at the UN and outside would continue.

“The resolution that’s being discussed needs to be limited, carefully scoped. We’ve made clear it would be a non-UN mission led by a partner country, with deep and necessary experience required for any such effort to be effective,” Price said on Friday. “A number of countries around the world are working with us on this … This is a work in progress, but we are absolutely working on it.”

There is widespread apprehension that such an intervention could mire the countries sending troops in a protracted struggle with no clear exit, as had happened with previous UN forces.

Haitian activists have also warned that intervention could exacerbate the violence without offering a long-term solution. Peacekeepers deployed after a devastating 2010 earthquake were accused of systematic sexual abuse of Haitian women, and introduced a cholera outbreak which killed 10,000 and took nine years to eradicate.

Edmond, the Haitian ambassador, said a method would need to be found to get around those hurdles.

“I understand that there have been mistakes and I’m sure that we have learned from them, and we can see how we can do things differently,” Edmond said. “But the only thing I will say is: just look at the situation in Haiti, because you have a population that is defenseless in front of armed gangs, who have firepower far superior to the national police.

“There are 4 million kids who cannot go to school. All the elderly who need care at [a] hospital cannot get access to hospital, and now you have an outbreak of cholera. The companies that make potable water cannot work because the main fuel terminal is blocked. So it is the exact recipe for very apocalyptic ends,” the ambassador said. “Just look at this scenery and make your own judgment, if the Haitian people do not deserve to live like your people.”

but when you do it just slow enough it's like the proverbial frog in a boiling pot.
 
wasn't the American Canadian "invasion" on a week or a fortnight ago ?
 
Interestingly, some countries are threatened with electoral reform.

Argentina's misgovernment is floating the possibility of abolishing midterm elections. Which are explicitly mandated by the constitution, but still.
And it also is trying to abolish primaries. Which are only in federal law rather than in the constitution and help the opposition not eliminate each other by treating the countrywide election round as a primary. The curious thing is that since the sitting president wants to try for reelection then he needs the primaries because the party bureaucracy, which would otherwise decide whom to nominate, does not answer to him but to his VP.

Meanwhile, in Mexico the president wants to abolish the National Electoral Institute in order to save money. Oh, and change the size and apportionment of the legislature: from 500 members to 300.

In both cases parliamentary discussion is scheduled to happen during the football world cup.
 
In Nicaragua there've just been some elections, we are assured. After a few years of the central government arresting all opposition candidates and banning all non-government parties, organisations, foundations, etc. every single municipality now has pro-central-government mayor.
 
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