Showing posts with label Arena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arena. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2009

police clash with election violence

Why is it so hard sometimes to see theat people have different views and opinons on many things why must people resort to violence to resolve even the most mundane of issues..

SAN SALVADOR -- At least one person was killed, two police officers were wounded and seven young men were arrested in election-related violence in El Salvador, the National Civilian Police, or PNC, said Sunday.Ulises Vladimir Perez was stabbed to death by unidentified assailants in San Martin, a city located 18 kilometers (11 miles) east of San Salvador, while putting up election posters for the Democratic Revolutionary Front, or FDR, party.Salvadoran media reported that the 17-year-old boy was a target because he had witnessed an attack a month ago on a relative who also belongs to the FDR.Oscar Esquivel, an FDR legislative candidate, told reporters he was not ruling out a political motive for the killing.El Salvador is holding legislative and municipal elections on Jan. 18 and a presidential election on March 15, with different polls showing the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, a former guerrilla group, leading.

Two police officers were wounded Saturday afternoon when supporters of the ruling rightist Nationalist Republican Alliance, or ARENA, party and the FMLN clashed in Santo Tomas, a city located 11 kilometers (6.8 miles) southeast of the capital.Six people were arrested in the incident, which started when young men who back the FMLN saw the ARENA supporters putting up campaign posters and confronted them, the PNC said.

The two sides exchanged words and then started fighting with sticks and stones, injuring two PNC officers who had responded to the disturbance.Six additional patrol cars were needed to restore order, and the FMLN supporters were arrested for allegedly starting the disturbance.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Local volunteers to observe elections in El Salvador

With the fear that it is a stolen election filled with decite and lies at least there are some people willing to stick there necks out to focus on what they can to make sure that the elections in there localities are fair to the best of there knowledge..

A small group of Halifax volunteers are heading to El Salvador next month to help observe the municipal elections. They will return for the presidential elections next March.

The Halifax Observers Project: El Salvador (HOPES) feels that being part of an international presence will help ensure that the country’s elections remain democratic.

Dr. Timothy Bood is one of six volunteers headed to San Salvador, the capital city, in January. HOPES was invited to observe the elections by the popular FMLN party. Bood says many Salvadorians see the coming elections as an opportunity for change.

“There’s a good chance that there’ll be a real choice for the people of El Salvador and a party that is very much interested in improving the health care — dedicated to the welfare of the people who are living in poverty — has a chance to win,” Bood said. “But there’s also a great fear that the election will be stolen.”

El Salvador has only been a democratic country since a 1992 peace accord ended a civil war that killed 90,000 people over 12 years. Around 80 per cent of these were civilian deaths.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

El Salvador’s New Left

Has the new revolution finally come to el salvador with away to continue the support for the governemtn and work for the people at the same time. To change current policys towards a better el salvador for everyone.. ?

Ex-combatant communities: the FMLN’s voto duro


One voting bloc that doesn't want El Salvador's FMLN party to become political pragmatists is the ex-combatant community that spent much of the war in exile.


This group—the party's base—is known as the "voto duro" (or hard vote), and they received appropriated land from the government after the 1992 peace accords. For its members, a victory by the FMLN would help heal wounds inflicted by government repression, burned villages, and murdered family members. It would also mandate a path toward socialism.
The community of Ciudad Romero—in the Bajo Lempa region of Usulután province, where the Rio Lempa empties into the Pacific Ocean—was born from the war's ashes. It was named after El Salvador's martyred Archbishop Oscar Romero, who was murdered by a military assassin on March 24, 1980, for condemning the government's repression of the peasantry.


"Romero denounced everything we wanted to denounce but couldn't," says José Nohé Reyes Granados, 30, who is writing a book about his community's journey. "He was the voice for those without a voice. ... When they killed him, we realized that talking was futile. They killed the archbishop ... who could speak now? The only path was armed resistance."


Two months later, the military attacked the village where Reyes and his family lived in La Union—a province in eastern El Salvador—because many in the community were suspected of being active in the guerrilla movement. Some 600 villagers fled across the Lempa River to neighboring Honduras—under the cover of night because an equally repressive Honduran military was guarding the border.


The Organization of American States learned of the refugees' plight and gave them food and shelter for six months in Honduras, until the Panamanian government agreed to shelter them—under the condition that the Salvadorans would help clear roads through the thick jungle, from Panama City to the Atlantic Ocean.


But when Panama's leftist President Omar Torrijos was assassinated a year later, the Salvadorans found themselves politically isolated. They built a village deep in the jungle that they named Ciudad Romero, or Romero City. There, community members built homes and a church, in which they painted a mural of their beloved archbishop. They were able to pick up a radio signal from the FMLN rebels, which allowed them to follow events back home, as they lived in exile for a decade.


In November 1989, the FMLN launched a successful offensive in both San Salvador and in the countryside, proving to the military regime that it had the popular support to continue its resistance indefinitely. The offensive, coupled with the military's massacre of six Jesuit priests at the University of Central America, forced the government to negotiate with the FMLN.
The refugees took down the church wall, piece-by-piece, and returned to El Salvador with the mural in tow. The government granted land in Bajo Lempa to the approximately 220 families that represented Ciudad Romero, and there they arrived in March 1991 to build another community from scratch.


Approximately 1,000 people live today in Ciudad Romero, which operates under the umbrella of the Associacion Mangle, a nonprofit rural development organization that works with 70 communities to facilitate public projects, such as building homes or protecting the nearby endangered mangrove forests. The association also operates Radio Mangle, a radio station in nearby San Nicolas that broadcasts music, news and cultural programming.


Other communities in the Associacion Mangle share similarly dramatic war stories. The residents of San Hilario and Amando Lopez were originally from Morazán and La Union, provinces in eastern El Salvador where the guerrilla was based, because of their remoteness and access to the Honduran and Nicaraguan borders. Most joined the rebels or were active in the resistance. Like Ciudad Romero, many had to leave the country when the military arrived in their villages.


San Hilario resident Arnoldo Ortiz, who joined the guerrilla at age 14 in 1980, never thought he'd survive the war—and see the other side. "The transition from armed conflict to peace has been difficult because I grew up with the war," he says. "We arrived from a process where we didn't know much about civilian life. We had no idea about houses, land or economics.
"What we learned during the war was to live together like brothers. As combatants, we shared everything to survive... whether it was a tortilla, a cookie or a cigar."


Mariela Luciña Hernandez, 45, of Amando Lopez—a community named after one of the Jesuit priests the military murdered in 1989—was a doctor with the rebels. The military captured and tortured her in 1981, and she later escaped to Nicaragua.


Today, Hernandez directs an association of community women and works with war veterans. She says the most important thing she and her compañeros learned during that time is how to organize and work together.


"We work to organize on a local level for the party, to advance the cause through the community, through Radio Mangle," she says. "If we can plant corn, and harvest all the seeds we plant, the FMLN can buy them and feed the people. The country has to change, bit by bit."
In a striking turn of the political tide, Ciudad Romero's neighbors in Nuevo Amanecer now join them in wearing the red shirts of the FMLN. The military granted land to ex-soldiers, who named their community Nuevo Amanecer ("a new dawn"), and they have remained faithful to the ARENA-government, until little by little, Reyes says, they realized that ARENA was doing little to help their community. For 20 years, they've struggled with limited water access and agricultural projects.


In the 20 years of ARENA rule, El Salvador has suffered from neoliberal economic reforms that privatized social services and destroyed jobs, primarily in the agriculture sector. Paul D. Almeida, a professor of business at Georgetown University, writes in his 2006 book, Waves of Protest: Popular Struggle in El Salvador, 1925-2005, that the post-war generation of Salvadoran dissidents has fought not for land or to overthrow the government, but to oppose the privatization of key human needs like healthcare, education and water access. In return for the hundreds of millions of dollars the United States sent to the Salvadoran government during the war, Washington insisted on planting the seeds to liberalize the post-war economy.

The repression has continued. In July 2007, the Salvadoran police arrested 14 rural activists in the town of Suchitoto, who were protesting water privatization. They were tried under the government’s “Special Law Against Acts of Terrorism,” which was modeled after the U.S. Patriot Act.

Julia Evelyn Martinez, a progressive economist at the University of Central America, says that the privatization of social services, El Salvador’s adoption of the U.S. dollar in 2001, and free-trade agreements — such as the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) — have placed the country at the mercy of foreign corporations and made it too dependent on imports.
Remittances from Salvadorans living in the United States — which represent an astounding 20 percent of the country’s gross domestic product — are keeping the economy afloat, and as many as one-third of all Salvadorans live abroad.


Meanwhile, food and fuel prices have skyrocketed in El Salvador. A can of beans that cost 30 cents a couple years ago now sells for over $1. Gasoline prices topped $5 a gallon in mid-October. Those staple products cost more in El Salvador than they do in parts of the United States. An estimated 100,000 Salvadorans — approximately one out of every 60 — fell below the poverty line between September 2007 and June 2008, according to the World Food Program.

Martinez says the first thing the new government must do is to tear down all the neoliberal policies that were implemented in El Salvador since 1989. She suggests the new president and parliament put their focus on developing markets within the country: “That would stimulate businesses to produce for internal markets, and not just for certain groups of the population,” Martinez says. “Instead, all the opportunities for development are directed outside of the country, in the form of remittances, maquiladoras [that export cheap clothing] or the need for foreign investments.”

The U.N. Development Program reported recently that 62.4 percent of Salvadoran youth are underemployed — lacking work sufficient to sustain a dignified life — compared to half of the general population.

The lack of sustainable markets within El Salvador leaves many youth with two options: Scrounge up $9,000 — reportedly the going rate for a coyote to traffic a person into the United States — or join a gang.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

President Bush and Tony Saca meet again


The two leaders are meeting again.. what will the accomplish or not accomplish this time around. Every time they meet there is a great initiative on the table yet nothing is ever done to promote the bettering of either country in there relationships. sorry to fume but tired of the fluff these to spew..


President Bush will welcome President Elias Antonio Saca of El Salvador to the White House on December 16, 2008. El Salvador is an important ally of the United States, and this visit underscores the deep friendship between the United States and El Salvador. The two leaders will discuss a range of issues, including their shared commitment to strengthening democracy and advancing economic development.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Tony Saca urges Salvadoran immigrants to stay in the U.S

Reported from the L.A Times Click Here


Salvadoran President Tony Saca will be traveling to the United States to urge Salvadoran immigrants there to re-register in a temporary visa program.


The Central American leader plans to visit Dallas, Houston and Los Angeles Dec. 6-9. Earlier this month, Saca visited Washington, D.C. and New York's Long Island.


During his trip, Saca will ask some 240,000 Salvadorans to stay in the visa program created to help El Salvador after two deadly earthquakes in 2001. The U.S. government extended the program in September.


Salvadoran immigrants have until Dec. 30 to sign up for the extension, which allows them to stay in the United States until September 2010.


Some 2.5 million Salvadorans live in the United States and sent home a record $3.7 billion in 2007.

-- Deborah Bonello in Mexico City

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

FMLN Campaign...

The campaign today officially started with the FMLN they continue to be the favorite in the polls and people seem to be responding well.. this will be a historic move for El Salvador. with most people feeling that the Arena party has let them down and that a change in govenment is badly needed. i will continue to watch another historic election not to unlike americas.

article referanced from Here "http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44738"

SAN SALVADOR, Nov 17 (IPS) - As the campaign gets underway, the left-wing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) is the favourite in the polls for El Salvador’s March 2009 presidential elections.

A win for the FMLN would be historical in a country traditionally governed by the right, analysts point out. Since this Central American country declared its independence from Spain in the 19th century, it has been governed by conservatives, economic liberals or military dictatorships (from 1931 to 1979). And since 1989, it has been ruled by the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA). Christian Democratic and Social

Democratic parties won the presidential elections in 1972 and 1977, but the military resorted to fraud and repression of opponents, forcing many of them into exile. In 1980, civil war broke out, with the leftist FMLN guerrillas fighting government forces. The insurgent group became a political party after a peace agreement was signed in 1992.

Today, the party’s presidential candidate, Mauricio Funes, is leading the polls by a margin of two to 15 percentage points over his main rival, ARENA’s Rodrigo Ávila. Although the campaign did not actually begin until Friday, Nov. 14, political scientist Napoleón Campos told IPS that the Supreme Electoral Court has allowed the parties to informally campaign for nearly two years. Under the country’s electoral laws, campaigns can only last four months in the case of presidential elections, two months in the case of parliamentary elections, and one month for municipal elections.

For the first time ever, the FMLN -- the main opposition party -- stands a real chance of winning the presidency, after four unsuccessful attempts since 1994. But despite the natural wear and tear suffered by ARENA after nearly 20 years in power, and the impact of the current international financial crisis, Campos said the scenario could change from here to Mar. 15. Local media outlets have estimated that the country’s six political parties will spend a combined total of 30 million dollars in the campaign.

The parties taking part in the elections, besides the FMLN and ARENA, are the Christian Democratic Party, the National Reconciliation Party, Democratic Change and the Democratic Revolutionary Front.

The FMLN is also ahead in the polls for the Jan. 18 legislative and municipal elections. Nelson Zárate, director of the Centre for Research on Public Opinion (CIOP), whose latest poll found that Funes is 15 points ahead of Ávila, told IPS that the leftist candidate has generated "a wave of credibility that is drawing people to vote for the FMLN" at all levels, not only in the presidential elections. Funes, a popular journalist and talk-show host, did not even actually belong to the FMLN until August, which in the view of analysts puts him in a position to draw voters who would not have cast their ballots for one of the party’s long-time leaders. The FMLN kicked off its campaign with a caravan of hundreds of cars that set out from San Salvador on Saturday with Funes at its head. T

hey were joined by more and more cars until thousands were driving from city to city around the country. The aim of the caravan, said the head of the party, Medardo González, is to awaken people’s "confidence" in the change that the FMLN proposes to bring to the country. ARENA’s campaign opened, as always, in the western city of Izalco, which is a symbol for the governing party. In 1932, an estimated 30,000 indigenous peasants were slaughtered there by the anti-communist dictatorship of General Maximiliano Hernández Martínez, who took power in a January 1931 military coup. (END/2008)

Friday, November 14, 2008

El Salvador's softened rebels see chance of power


While it was not that long ago that El salvador was in the middle of a civil war and after years of failed arena partys positions on many things the FMLN will finally have a chance to prove themselves in a rough political country. I hope they do well. Not everything arena has done has been bad but like most political parties hunger for more power takes over and maybe with a more left wing government the el salvadorens might finally have a chance at a renewed hope.


Quote from article "Mauricio Funes, the man she hopes will heal old wounds by bringing a party of softened former rebels to power for the first time in presidential elections in March.
Funes, a bespectacled former TV journalist is the first presidential candidate fielded by the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front who is not himself a former guerrilla. An eloquent centre-leftist, he reported on El Salvador's 12-year civil war but never fought in it.
Leading in opinion polls, Funes promises to pursue market-friendly policies and get on well with Washington if he wins. He appeals to pro-U.S. voters who never before supported the FMLN, while maintaining strong support from long-time loyalists like Hernandez.


"We remember what they fought for. Before, the war was in the streets and now it's inside us," Hernandez said in the former FMLN rebel stronghold town of Suchitoto, ringed by forest where her parents and hundreds of others died.


Quote take from "http://uk.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUKLNE4AD05K20081114" click here for full article


Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Émigrés Want to Meet in El Salvador

Émigrés Want to Meet in El Salvador


For those El Salvadorens liveing a outside the counrty this is a was for them to voice there vote for there home country i think this is a great idea to help people that have moved on from el salvador around the world to help and participate in there countrys Future.




San Salvador, Nov 11 (Prensa Latina) Hundreds of émigrés will participate in the 6th Convention of Salvadorans Abroad, which will take place in this capital from November 25 to 27 at the Jose Simeon Cañas University.


During the annual meeting, organized by the Association of Salvadorans in the World, Salvadoran residents in other countries will talk about a lecture called “The Human Capital of Diaspora: Far Beyond the Remittances.”


Francisco Rivera, president of the group, said that the meeting will last three days, with the central objective to strengthen the vision of those who are living abroad, said local newspaper el Diario de Hoy.


Salvador Sanabria, director of El Rescate, now involved in the preparation of the meeting, said that the meeting will call for the approval of the vote for Salvadorans living abroad to meet their families.


“The political class in El Salvador confirms the lack of will to grant the human right of suffrage to more than 2 million Salvadorans, who are now living abroad, and will not be able to take part in the elections in January and March 2009,” said Sanabria.


Jose Manuel Ortiz, a member of the organization living in Spain, considered that being included in the vote, will be a great expectation.


During the event, a panel will work with 4 candidates of the 6 political parties in El Salvador, inscribed to participate in the elections.


On the financial and economic crisis in the US, organizers said they have not scheduled a specific panel to discuss the problem, and people interested can be present in the event, if they register on:


http://salvadorenosenelmundo.blogspot.com/ "source of original article --


Monday, November 10, 2008

Funes Leads Polls in El Salvador..

Interesting article on how we can start to see El Salvador also leaning to the left. along with our own country. I guess the time for change has taken hold around the world i look forward to watching the rest of el salvadors political season

Angus Reid Global Monitor) - Left-wing presidential candidate Mauricio Funes is leading in El Salvador, according to a poll by Borge & Asociados published in El Diario de Hoy. 41.5 per cent of respondents would support Funes of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) in next year’s election, up 3.9 points since July.


Rodrigo Ávila of the governing conservative Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) is second with 37.8 per cent, up 7.3 points in four months. One-in-five respondents remain undecided.
ARENA’s Antonio Saca, a media businessman, was elected in March 2004, garnering 57.73 per cent of the vote. ARENA candidates have won the last four presidential elections in the Central American country. Saca is ineligible for a consecutive term in office.


In September 2007, Funes became the FMLN’s presidential nominee. In March 2008, Ávila, a former National Police chief, won ARENA’s three-candidate internal nationwide primary.
The FMLN was once an umbrella armed group of left-wing revolutionaries fighting against the Salvadoran establishment. In the early 1990s, the FMLN was disbanded and became a legal political party.


On Oct. 27, Funes reiterated that he would maintain a close relationship with Washington if elected and regardless of who becomes the next president of the United States, saying, "I will work hand-in-hand with the American president-elect, because the relationship between our countries is government-to-government."



Polling Data
Which candidate would you vote for in the next presidential election?

Oct. 2008
Jul. 2008
Jun. 2008
Mauricio Funes (FMLN)
41.5%
37.6%
37.5%
Rodrigo Ávila (ARENA)
37.8%
30.5%
23.2%
Other candidates
--
0.4%
0.8%
Undecided
20.7%
31.6%
38.5%

original article published here. http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/view/32175/funes_leads