[RD] News Thread of the Americas

Ah yes, it wouldn't be the first time he's done it. But he got elected doing it, so why should he change? Post-truth comes to the rescue.

Interesting sidenote: a lot of his early campaign funding and free TV and radio airtime came from his opponents who were trying to split the opposition and renew their mandates as a minority government and they accidentally overshot. Now this is an example of things turning out to be Orwellian.
 
another Trumpian failure then .
 
You might not know this, but the fight within MAS in Bolivia currently has Evo Morales claiming that the -credible prima facie- investigations against him for statutory rape and related offences are politically motivated and coca growers are threatening a ‘social convulsion’ (sic) if this goes on.
 

Cuba's national power grid shuts down, leaving millions in the dark​

Country's energy ministry says move necessary after one of the island's major power plants failed

Cuba plunged into a countrywide blackout on Friday after one of the island's major power plants failed and caused the national electrical grid to shut down, its energy ministry said.

The Communist-run government earlier in the day closed schools and non-essential industry and sent most state workers home in a last-ditch effort to keep the lights on for residents.

But shortly before midday, the Antonio Guiteras power plant, the country's largest and most efficient, went offline, prompting a total grid failure and leaving approximately 10 million people without power.

"There will be no rest until [power] is restored," Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on X.

Many services cancelled​

The blackout marks a new low point on an island where life has become increasingly unbearable, with residents already suffering from shortages of food, fuel, water and medicine.

The electricity shortages had already prompted officials to cancel all non-vital government services on Friday. Schools, including universities, were shuttered through Sunday. Recreational and cultural activities, including nightclubs, were also ordered closed.

Officials said in mid-afternoon they had begun taking steps to restore power, but that the process would take time.

Virtually all commerce in the capital Havana ground to a halt on Friday. Many residents sat sweating on doorsteps. Tourists hunkered down in frustration.

"We went to a restaurant and they had no food because there was no power, now we are also without internet," said Brazilian tourist Carlos Roberto Julio, who had recently arrived in Havana.

"In two days, we have already had several problems."

'No electricity anywhere'​

As the afternoon came to a close, Luis González, a 73-year-old retiree in Havana, summed up the extent of the outages to that point in the day.

"The power went out at 8 in the morning and it is now 5 in the afternoon and there is no electricity anywhere," González said.

Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero late on Thursday blamed worsening blackouts during the past several weeks on a perfect storm well-known to most Cubans — deteriorating infrastructure, fuel shortages and rising demand.

"The fuel shortage is the biggest factor," Marrero said in a televised message that was garbled by technical difficulties and delayed several hours.

Strong wind and rough seas that began with Hurricane Milton last week have crippled the island's ability to deliver scarce fuel from boats offshore to its power plants, officials said.

Cuba's government also has long blamed the U.S. Cold War-era embargo, as well as a fresh round of sanctions under former U.S. president Donald Trump, for difficulties in acquiring fuel and spare parts to operate its oil-fired plants.

"The complex scenario is caused primarily by the intensification of the economic war and financial and energy persecution of the United States," Diaz-Canel said on X on Thursday.

"The United States is not to blame for today's blackout on the island, or the overall energy situation in Cuba," a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council said.

Ottawa 'closely monitoring' situation​

Cuba has long been a popular destination for Canadian tourists. The island nation was one of the top three overseas countries that Canadians visited during the first three months of 2024, according to data Statistics Canada published earlier this year.

In an emailed statement on Friday evening, Global Affairs Canada said it is "closely monitoring" the situation and "stand ready to provide consular assistance to Canadians as needed."

Hours earlier, several Canadian companies that bring tourists to Cuba said the power outage had not been an issue for their own operations.

Air Transat told CBC News via email that Cuban authorities had signalled "things should be resolved very soon," and that there had been "no impact" on its operations as of late Friday afternoon.

Canada's Sunwing likewise told CBC News that its airport operations and flights were so far "unaffected," but the company said it would continue to monitor the situation in Cuba.


Fuel-supply challenges​

While demand for electricity has grown alongside Cuba's private sector, fuel supply has evaporated.

Cuba's largest oil supplier, Venezuela, has reduced shipments to the island to an average of 32,600 barrels per day in the first nine months of the year, about half of the 60,000 barrels per day sent in the same period of 2023, according to vessel-monitoring data and internal shipping documents from Venezuela's state company PDVSA.

PDVSA, whose refining infrastructure is also ailing, has this year tried to avoid a new wave of fuel scarcity at home, leaving smaller volumes available for export to allied countries like Cuba.


Russia and Mexico, which in the past have sent fuel to Cuba, have also greatly reduced shipments to the island.

The shortfalls have left Cuba to fend for itself on the far costlier spot market, at a time when its government is near bankrupt.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/cuba-power-grid-1.7356496
 
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Why did you cross so much out?
 
Mmmm.
There's a new power outtage in Cuba today.
 
And the outtage is ongoing.
 

Mexican priest who spoke out against cartel violence killed​

Gunmen in Mexico have shot dead a Catholic priest who was an outspoken advocate for indigenous rights and who had condemned the violence plaguing his community.
Father Marcelo Pérez was killed after celebrating Mass in the southern state of Chiapas on Sunday, the prosecutor's office said.
The Jesuit priest had spent almost two decades fighting for the rights of the Tzotzil indigenous group, of which he was a member.
The Jesuit Order said his murder should not be "minimised" as an isolated case - insisting it was part of the wave of violence that organised crime groups have unleashed in Chiapas.

"Father Marcelo has been a symbol of resistance and support in Chiapas, defencing the dignity, the rights of the people, and the construction of an authentic peace," the Jesuit Order said.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said his murder was being investigated and would not go unpunished.
Mexico's bishops' conference described Father Marcelo as one of the "prophetic voices" that had fought for peace, and said justice in Chiapas had been silenced.

The priest was killed by two men on a motorcycle, who opened fire on his vehicle in the city of San Cristóbal de Las Casas.
The incident happened early on Sunday as Father Marcelo was returning to his parish after saying Mass in the Cuxtitali neighbourhood of the city.
He had been transferred to San Cristóbal de Las Casas after receiving death threats in the rural parish where he had previously worked.
The priest had tried to negotiate an end to the violence caused by clashes between a criminal gang and a vigilante group.
In an interview last month, he had described the southern state of Chiapas as "a time bomb".
"There are many [people who have] disappeared, many who have been kidnapped, many who have been murdered because of the presence of organised crime here," he said as he was leading a protest march he described as a "pilgrimage".
Chiapas has seen a spike in violence over the past year, with the Sinaloa cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel fighting for control of the area.
The criminal groups extort migrants who cross the southern state on their way north to Mexico's border with the United States.
Communities in the region have been hard hit by the violence, sometimes having to hide in their homes for days as shots ring out outside.
But the targeted murder of an outspoken human rights advocate is seen as a dangerous escalation of the violence that has been plaguing the community for months.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm292nvkvzmo
 

Venezuela vents its anger at Brazil's Brics snub​

Venezuela has criticised Brazil's decision to veto its admission to the Brics group of emerging economies.
Venezuela's foreign ministry described the move, which came at the group's summit in Russia attended by more than 20 heads of state, as an "immoral aggression".
Relations between the two left-wing governments have worsened since July's contested presidential election in Venezuela. President Nicolás Maduro said he had secured re-election, despite evidence that the opposition's Edmundo González won by a landslide.
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva initially supported Maduro, but eventually said he would not accept the official results until a breakdown of the vote was released.

Multiple foreign governments have said they believe the opposition won the election in Venezuela, but stopped short of recognising González as the president.
"The Brazilian foreign ministry has decided to maintain the veto that [former Brazilian president] Jair Bolsonaro has applied against Venezuela for years, reproducing the hatred, exclusion and intolerance promoted from the centres of power in the West," the Venezuelan foreign ministry said in a statement.
"The Venezuelan people feel indignation and shame at this inexplicable and immoral aggression," it added.
Venezuela had lobbied hard to join the Brics, with Maduro even making a surprise appearance at the summit in the city of Kazan and declaring that his country was "part of the Brics family".
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who hosted the summit, said he agreed with Venezuela's position, but added that it would only be able to join the Brics if there was a consensus in favour among its members.
"We know Brazil's position. We don't agree, Venezuela is fighting for its survival," Putin said at a news conference on Thursday.
He said he discussed the issue with Lula when they spoke on the phone this week. Lula was scheduled to travel to Russia for the summit, but cancelled the trip after injuring his head in an accident at home on Saturday.
Putin added that he would work to help the two South American neighbours mend relations.

The Brics began as a grouping that unites Brazil with Russia, India, China and South Africa. Last year, however, the original members agreed to admit a number of new joiners, including Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates.
Lula is a passionate advocate of the Brics as a means of reforming global governance and giving a greater voice to the developing world.
He has criticised the "paralysis" of global institutions, while praising the expansion of the Brics as strengthening the fight for more diverse perspectives.
But other observers retort that the Brics are themselves paralysed by their own internal contradictions, with Russia at war in Ukraine, while China and India have their own mutual squabbles.
The latest Brics summit in Kazan was seen as an opportunity for President Putin to demonstrate that attempts to isolate Russia over its invasion of Ukraine had failed.
But in his attempts to strengthen the grouping as a counterweight to the Western-led world, he has also exposed other divisions, leaving relations between Brasília and Caracas at their lowest ebb since Lula's re-election two years ago.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c624m4kgrg3o
 
After 9 years, the mining giants responsible from the collapse of the Mariana dam agree to pay nearly 30,000,000,000 USD in compensation under Brazilian courts.

Mining giants sign $30bn settlement for 2015 Brazil dam collapse

Ione Wells - South America correspondent

The mining giants BHP and Vale have signed a deal with the Brazilian government to pay nearly $30bn (£23bn) in compensation for the Mariana dam collapse in 2015 that caused the country's worst environmental disaster.
Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva attended the signing of the deal on Friday.
The dam collapse released toxic waste and mud, which flooded nearby towns, rivers and forests.
It killed 19 people, left hundreds others homeless, and poisoned the river.

Spoiler :
President Lula said: "I hope the mining companies have learned their lesson; it would have cost them less to prevent the disaster."
The dam was owned by Samarco, a joint venture between Vale and BHP.
Since the disaster, the companies have set up a foundation to compensate people, which has already carried out billions of dollars’ worth of repairs. This included building a new town to replace one of the towns that was destroyed.
However, many people in the community were still arguing they had not received justice or enough to rebuild their lives nine years on.

Separately to these legal proceedings in Brazil, more than 620,000 people had taken BHP to court in the UK, where BHP was headquartered at the time, in a trial that started earlier this week.

They are seeking about $47bn in damages in the civil trial. The first stage of it will determine if BHP – as a parent company – was liable. About 70,000 complainants are also taking Vale to court in The Netherlands.

Both companies deny liability and argue that this overseas legal action is "unnecessary" and duplicates legal proceedings in Brazil.

Some members of the community in Mariana had told the BBC they had joined the UK legal action after frustration that the Brazilian proceedings were taking too long, but suspected that the Brazilian settlement may be reached soon after the UK case opened due to more international pressure.
In 2016, both companies agreed to pay about $3.5bn in today’s rate in compensation but negotiations were reopened in 2021 due to the slow progress of Brazil’s justice system in resolving the dispute.
Friday’s agreement covers their past and future obligations to assist people, communities and ecosystems affected by the disaster.
The companies agreed to pay 100bn reais ($17.5bn; £13.5bn ) to local authorities over 20 years and 32bn reais towards compensating and resettling the victims and repairing the harm caused to the environment.
The remaining 38bn reais is the amount the companies say they have already paid in compensation.
Don't forget that there's a concurrent judicial process in the UK over the same thing which should cost them even more in due time (next year?).
 
As if things couldn't worsen, Evo Morales is now accusing the Bolivian government of a failed plot to assassinate him.
 

Argentina's Milei fires foreign minister for opposing US embargo on Cuba​

Argentina's president, Javier Milei, has sacked his foreign minister, Diana Mondino, after the country voted in favour of lifting the US economic embargo on Cuba at the United Nations.
Argentina was one of 187 countries that supported the non-binding UN resolution on Wednesday. Only the US and Israel voted to oppose the resolution.
It was the first time since Milei's arrival in office that Argentina has not aligned itself with the US and Israeli governments.
Mondino has been replaced by the ambassador to Washington, Gerardo Werthein. Following the move, President Milei's office said Argentina was "categorically opposed to the Cuban dictatorship".

Under the previous left-wing Peronist government, Argentina enjoyed close relations with Cuba, backing the end of the economic embargo, which the US imposed in the 1960s when Cuba adopted communism.
Cuba has, in exchange, consistently supported Argentina's claims of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, a British overseas territory. Britain and Argentina waged a brief but bitter war over the territory in 1982.

President Milei's office later issued a statement intended to outline the political vision behind his foreign policy.
"The country is going through a period of profound changes and this new stage requires that our diplomatic corps reflect in each decision the values of freedom, sovereignty and individual rights that characterise Western democracies," it said.
The statement went on: "Our country is categorically opposed to the Cuban dictatorship and will remain firm in promoting a foreign policy that condemns all regimes that perpetrate human rights violations."
Friction had been growing between the president and the foreign ministry over a range of issues in recent months, observers say.
However, Mondino was seen as important to Argentina's public image abroad, often stepping in to defuse tensions after confrontational statements made by Milei had upset other nations.
The US trade embargo was first imposed in 1962 in the wake of the revolution in Cuba, which swept Fidel Castro to power.
Washington wanted to force the island to reject Castro's socialist policies and embrace capitalism and democracy.
However, the embargo has failed to achieve that objective and has become a bone of contention between Washington and its neighbours in the region.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgl4y6w2r33o
 
It's a bit complicated because Mondino has been walking on a tightrope for a long time and this just triggered a possibly overdue dismissal… yet I'm reading right now that it appears that Mondino will be reshuffled within the cabinet.
The political analphabetism of the BBC is evident in painting Peronism as ‘left-wing’ when it's literally a Hitler-inspired anti-Marxist ideology.

North in Salta province, the home of a mayor has been raided and his son arrested. The charge? Dismantling the railway network piece by piece to sell the tracks as scrap iron. Using actual city government equipment, to boot. The materials seized include toilet seats, 150 metric tons of metal, 150 railway tracks hidden at the bottom of a river, a lot of money in cash and firearms.

Meanwhile in Bolivia, a group of apparent supporters of Evo Morales has taken hostage a military regiment in Cochabamba.
 

Mexican city's security chief held over mayor's beheading​

Officials in Mexico have arrested a man suspected of involvement in the brutal murder of the mayor of the city of Chilpancingo last month.
The killing of Alejandro Arcos, whose beheaded body was found just days after he had been sworn in as mayor, caused shock and revulsion in the violence-wracked state of Guerrero.
On Tuesday, police detained Germán Reyes, who is the top security official in Chilpancingo, for his alleged role in the murder.
Germán Reyes has denied any involvement in the crime and has said he is being used as a scapegoat.
Rights groups have long warned that local security forces in Mexico are being infiltrated by powerful criminal gangs, which bribe, blackmail and threaten local officials to make them compliant.
The brutal murder of Mayor Arcos within a week of him taking office on 1 October, and Tuesday's arrest of Reyes is seen by many in Chilpancingo as further evidence of attempts by local criminal groups to tighten their grip on the city and its authorities.
The fact that Reyes - a retired army captain who headed the office of the Guerrero state prosecutor for serious crimes before taking over as Chilpancingo's acting security chief - has been named as the main suspect in the mayor's murder has sent further shock waves through the city.
Much of the violence in Chilpancingo is blamed on a bloody turf battle between a criminal gang called Los Ardillos and rival local crime group Los Tlacos.

Los Ardillos specialise in drug trafficking in the state of Guerrero but have reportedly been expanding into extortion and other lucrative criminal enterprises.
Its members have also been trying to gain control of the city's security forces.
According to Mexico's security minister Omar García Harfuch, Mayor Arcos had travelled to an area controlled by Los Ardillos unaccompanied and without a security detail "for a meeting" when he was killed.
Prosecutors have so far provided little detail as to why they suspect Germán Reyes of involvement in the murder.
Reyes told a judge he "had no motive" to harm the mayor, saying that it was Mayor Arcos who had named him as the city's security chief.
Meanwhile, the federal government has deployed more than 12,000 soldiers and members of the National Guard to the state.
Confronting the wave of violence in Guerrero and other hotspots of cartel and gang violence is one of the main challenges facing President Claudia Sheinbaum, who took office on 1 October.
During her campaign for the presidency, Sheinbaum had dismissed the "militaristic" approach of former Mexican president Felipe Calderón - who declared war on the cartels in 2006 - as ineffective.
She vowed instead to continue the approach of her immediate predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who avoided direct confrontation with the cartels, arguing it only led to more bloodshed.
Since being sworn in as president, she has said her government would work on solving crimes and combatting widespread impunity by creating a national intelligence system.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5yxqjqed81o
 
Well. Just now, an appeals court has upheld last year's conviction for embezzlement against former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. She (a self-professed follower of Trump - ??) has proclaimed this to be lawfare, political persecution, etc. etc.

Should the Supreme Court uphold the ruling again next year (in March?) then CFK will be sentenced to at least 6 years' imprisonment, which she'll skip out on by virtue of being over 70 years old, but also permanently barred from holding political office.
 
Oh FFS, Argentina's embassy in Caracas is under siege by Venezuelan forces again.
 
"The United States is not to blame for today's blackout on the island, or the overall energy situation in Cuba," a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council said.

I know this is from a while ago but this is the dead giveaway that the US is to blame
 
Heh. When you actually live in notAmerica you realise that the US is an interesting scapegoat. Falsely accusing it of a lot of garbage also enables it to dismiss a lot of accusations that are true. Business is good for everyone, as long as ‘everyone’ is understood to be limited to politicians and other people with power.

In other news, Uruguay follows the regional trend of ousting the incumbent party from the executive, replacing the centre-right with the centre-left.
 
basically every politician in the "third world and whatnot" gain power only after acceptance by the "markets" which in this case means the US . UK and major EU countries closely or not so closely following up . Means if some chief fails , the failure is vetted and approved by the US . The blackouts in Cuba ? Years of embargoes , kinda sorta more than failures of the Goverment in Habana . Shouldn't directly blame the CIA ; supposedly they keep to themselves more , after the Havana sickness thing .
 
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