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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Thu Feb 19, 2015, 05:24 PM Feb 2015

Court to combine Against wiretapping cases Martinelli

Court to combine Against wiretapping cases Martinelli

The former president is facing seven charges related to illegal wiretaps.

Rubén Polanco 19 feb 2015 - 08:02h

The Supreme Court has DECIDED to combine the seven pending cases Against former President Ricardo Martinelli for Alleged illegal wiretaps That Were Conducted by the National Security Council During His government.

The complaints were filed by PRD leaders Mitchell Doens, Balbina Herrera, Juan Carlos Navarro and Bernabé Pérez, Panameñista Deputy Jose Luis Varela and lawyers Miguel Antonio Bernal and Rosendo Rivera.

At the end of January, the Prosecutor's Office sent the complaints to the Supreme Court, the only entity that can investigate Martinelli since he is a deputy in the Central American Parliament (Parlacen).

Initially, the complaints were assigned to five different judges despite the fact that they relate to the same facts. Now, all the cases will be handled by Judge Harry Diaz. Prosecutors have identified about 150 victims of the illegal surveillance.

The penalty for illegal surveillance is two to four years in prison, with an additional year if the offender is a civil servant. Martinelli is also facing seven criminal complaints related to irregularities in the National Assistance Program (PAN.)

http://www.prensa.com/in_english/Supreme-Court-Martinelli-charges_21_4145795381.html#sthash.1BG0zvPL.dpuf

(Short article, no more at link.)

As you recall, the last we heard of this story was that Panama's ex-President Martinelli had run off to stay with his friend, Silvio Berlusconi, in Italy, ahead of various charges being brought against him by the Panamanian government.

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Court to combine Against wiretapping cases Martinelli (Original Post) Judi Lynn Feb 2015 OP
Honduras: AFL-CIO blames trade policies for crisis Judi Lynn Feb 2015 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
1. Honduras: AFL-CIO blames trade policies for crisis
Thu Feb 19, 2015, 05:44 PM
Feb 2015

Honduras: AFL-CIO blames trade policies for crisis
Submitted by Weekly News Update... on Tue, 02/17/2015 - 12:39

US political and trade policies "play a major role" in worsening the poverty and violence that are root causes of unauthorized immigration to the US by Hondurans, according to a report released by the AFL-CIO, the main US labor federation, on Jan. 12. The report, "Trade, Violence and Migration: The Broken Promises to Honduran Workers," grew out of the experiences of a delegation the union group sent to Honduras in October following a sharp increase in migration from the country by unaccompanied minors the previous spring. The report notes that Honduras is now "the most unequal country in Latin America," with an increase in poverty by 4.5 percentage points from 2006 to 2013. "[T]he percentage of those working full time but receiving less than the minimum wage has gone up by nearly 30%."

One cause of poverty and violence in Honduras, according to the report, was the June 2009 coup that removed former president José Manuel ("Mel&quot Zelaya Rosales (2006-2009), with only token objections from the US government. "Since the 2009 coup, the ruling governments have failed to respect worker and human rights or create decent work, and instead have built a repressive security apparatus to put down dissent," the authors wrote. Another principal cause of the country's problems was the implementation of the 2004 Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR). The delegation found that CAFTA-DR's "architecture of deregulation coupled with investor protection allowed companies to outsource labor-intensive components of their supply chains to locations with weak labor laws and low wages." The agreement "accelerated free market devastation," Larry Cohen, president of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and a participant in the delegation, told a reporter. He noted "constant violations of organizing rights…that included everything from the murder of [union] leaders to the collapse of bargaining rights where they once existed."

"Failed trade and migration policies continue to exacerbate Honduras' problems," the report concludes. "The US government criminalizes migrant children and their families, while pursuing trade deals that simultaneously displace subsistence farmers and lower wages and standards across other sectors, and eliminate good jobs, intensifying the economic conditions that drive migration. This dynamic is enhanced in countries like Honduras, where the government's own policies leave workers and families vulnerable to abuse." (National Catholic Reporter, Jan. 28; The Nation, Feb. 6; Equal Times, Feb. 10)

Probably the best known of the displacements of subsistence farmers occurred in northern Honduras' Lower Aguán River Valley, where campesino groups struggling to regain their land have been victims of violence by the military and private security forces since 2009. A recent example was the forced disappearance of Cristian Alberto Martínez Pérez, a young activist in the Gregorio Chávez Campesino Movement (MCGC, also referred to as the Gregorio Chávez Collective), as he was riding his bicycle the evening of Jan. 29 near his home in Panamá community, Trujillo municipality, Colón department.

More:
http://www.ww4report.com/node/13986

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