Thu, 18 December 2014
Rigoberto Escalante entreviste una policia, quien esta quejando de falta de uniformes, falta de seguridad de trabajo, con la Policia Nacional de El Salvador. |
Thu, 18 December 2014
Rigoberto habla con las mujeres en al marcha contra la vilencia en San Salvador, Dic. 2014 |
Fri, 28 November 2014
Pandilleros de El Salvador, Rafael, Part 2. Rafael habla sobre las pandillas de El |
Fri, 28 November 2014
Rafael, pandillero habla sobre la tregua de las pandillas. |
Thu, 21 August 2014
223 Mb 128kbps stereo 24 minutes. Journalist Julie Webb tells us about the impact of the Israeli blockade of Gaza and the effects of the latest breaking of the cease-fire, aborting the Cairo truce negotiations. |
Sun, 13 July 2014
Toni Solo walks us through the cooperative school he has founded on the outskirts of Esteli. |
Sun, 13 July 2014
Toni Solo walks us through the cooperative school he has founded on the outskirts of Esteli.
Direct download: Pt6Stephenguided_tour131109_7mins.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 5:03am AEST |
Fri, 11 July 2014
Paul Baker, living in Nicaragua for the past 20 years recalls the long trajectory that brought him there - from first encounters with refugees from Pinochet's Chile in the early 1970s, to the Peace March through Central America in the 1980s, working with Salvadoran refugees, and most recently a memorial tour for Chilean songwriter Victor Jara, with Victor's widow, Joan Jara. |
Thu, 26 June 2014
Damian talks about the trajectory of the FMLN under the presidency of Salvador Sanchez Ceren |
Sun, 2 February 2014
23 Mb 18 minutes Carl and Carolyne are in El Salvador with the 70 person strong CISPES delegation of observers for the 2014 elections in El Salvador. Carl has been with CISPES almost since its inception over twenty years ago. Carolyne is part of a new generation that sees the work of CISPES as a shared pathway between cultures and generations. The history of El Salvador has been narrated as a history of violence. Nothing in that particular narrative includes the history of US intervention, the history of the US training of the worst perpetrators of violence, the agenda that agencies within the US Government see as the supervening business interests that require the reorganization of the 'State' to their own requirements. CISPES has succeeded in changing the course of the JUggernaut. CISPES, Carl, and Carolyne demonstrate just how false that narrative is. And they tell us now, just how they did it. Can their example follow ? (CISPES has called what amounts to an apology from the former US Ambassador to El Salvador) Watch El Salvador, and watch with care |
Sat, 18 January 2014
The 'voice' of clandestine radio Venceremos, Mariposa, tells us how she was recruited to be the female announcer for the FMLN, and her life in the mountains, moving around with the portable transmitter to avoid discovery by government troops. Mariposa, 'la voz' del radio clandestino 'Venceremos' explica como fue reclutada.
Direct download: MariposaRadioVencemos131111-008.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 10:52am AEST |
Sat, 18 January 2014
Mariposa talks about how she joined the FMLN guerillas and became involved with the clandestine guerilla radio stations in the mountains of El Salvador. Mariposa habla sobre su vida como guerillera y locatura de los radios clandestinos de la guerilla del FMLN en las montanas de El Salvador.
Direct download: MariposaGuerillaLife131111-007.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 10:16am AEST |
Mon, 9 December 2013
Entrevista con la 'Mariposa"- locutora del legendario Radio Venceremos (Espanol) Primera parte. (Interview with Mariposa, of Radio Venceremos fame).
Treinte anos despues, Mariposa recuerda su desarollo como activista en los dias cuando se formo el Frente Farabundo Marti de Liberacion Nacional. (FMLN) |
Mon, 9 December 2013
Toni Solo walks us through the cooperative school he has founded in Nicaragua on the outskirts of Esteli. |
Mon, 9 December 2013
Toni Solo walks us through the cooperative school he has founded on the outskirts of Esteli. |
Sun, 8 December 2013
Entrevista con una mujer votante el dia de las elecciones en Honduras. |
Sun, 8 December 2013
I began by asking Annie if she had any doubts that the election results in Honduras were fraudulent. She was adamant thst they were. What did this mean for Honduras in the near future? |
Fri, 6 December 2013
Juan Barahona entrevistado por periodista veterano, Dick Emanuellson, despues de poner su voto en la manana de Noviembre 24. |
Fri, 6 December 2013
6Mb 4 Minutes Election obsdervers interviewed at ta booth share their initial impressions mid morning on the day. An observer from the European Union team, and two from the US, representing the Union movement.
Direct download: EnglishSpeakingElectionObservers.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 3:26am AEST |
Fri, 6 December 2013
El intento de irrumpir en las Oficinas de LIBRE en el Kennedy Center la noche antes las elecciones. Testigos hablan (Espanol
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Thu, 5 December 2013
La noche de viernes Noviembre 29 salio la dirigencia del LIBRE con las pruebas del fraude en las elecciones del 24. Despues la presentacion, Xiomara explico las medidas y acciones que LIBRE iba tomar. |
Thu, 5 December 2013
Observadores que habian salido al campo antes el dia de las elecciones hablan de como fueron agregidos y amenazados por los autoridades. qui estan sus testimonios. |
Thu, 5 December 2013
En la conferencia de prensa en la sede de COFADEH, Berta Oliva hace una declaracion. |
Thu, 5 December 2013
Observadores y Berta Caceres hablan de la ingerencia de los militares, policia, y officiales en la communidad del Rio Blanco, incluso la detencion de observadores internacionales.
Direct download: PressConDay2RioBlanco131122-002.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 7:48am AEST |
Thu, 5 December 2013
OBservadores contestan las preguntas de la prensa en la sede de COFADEH
Direct download: PressConDay2USCanquestions131122-001.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 7:28am AEST |
Thu, 5 December 2013
Conferencia de prensa despues las elecciones, observadores hablan de los irregularidades y el intimidaciones de que fueron testigos. |
Thu, 5 December 2013
Observadores dan repuestas a las preguntas de los periodistas, sobre sus experiencias y reportajes.
Direct download: PressCon21stDesQestions131121-000_3.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 7:09am AEST |
Thu, 5 December 2013
Conferencia de Prensa Nov. 21. Introducción a los delegados internacionales y observadores. (Espanol)
Los observadores y delegados se presentan en la oficina de los derechos humanos COFADEH
Direct download: PressCon21stIntroDelegados131121-000_3.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 7:01am AEST |
Sun, 1 December 2013
Los sentimientos de unas activistas del LIBRE en preparacion para las elecciones en el Parque Central de Tegucigalpa, y una encuesta de la gente tranquilamente observando. |
Fri, 29 November 2013
(Foto, Una conferencia de prensa con observadores y victimas de un desalojo y el asesinato de familiares, unos pocos dias antes la fecha de las elecciones) Despues una conferencia de prensa con un equipo de observadores, hablando del ambiente de intimidacion en Honduras en los dias y semanas antes las elecciones de Noviembre 24, un periodista del Radio Globo me conto sus proprios experiencias como periodista, trabajando en Honduras. |
Fri, 29 November 2013
At a press conference in the capital of Honduras and indigenous Canadian enumertes abuses against Honduras´indigenous people that escalated in the days leading up to the elections on November 24 2013 |
Mon, 25 November 2013
Dirigente de COPINH (Representando los Derechos Humanos de los pueblos Indigenes de Honduras), Berta Caceres es bajo detencion domicilio. Sin embargo, sigue hablando fuertemente sobre los derechos del pueblo indigena que estan sufriendo una represion mas fuerte que nunca en los dias antes las elecciones en Honduras. |
Sun, 24 November 2013
15 Mb. 20 minutes Karen Spring is a journalist and researcher based in Honduras. She was present during the 2009 coup and is currently working out of the main human rights office in Honduras (COFEDAH). An expert observer of Honduran politics, she gives her assessment of what is happening in the lead up to the Honduras'elections, behind the facade presented to the rest of the world. |
Fri, 15 November 2013
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Fri, 15 November 2013
Mariposa talks about her life in Nicaragua and her love for that country, in spite of having been a participant in the Salvadoran revolutionary process. Mariposa habla sobre los razones que ella vive casi en exilio en Nicaragua, su respeto y amor por el pais, aunque todavia participa en los procesos politicos de El Salvador. |
Fri, 15 November 2013
Mariposa Part4. Mariposa habla sobre la 'impunidad' - Mariposa talks about 'impunity' for those responsible for human rights violations. (Spanish/Espanol)
Mariposa comments on the current debate in El Salvador and other countries in the region of Central America about the issue of ím punity' - or amnesty for those known to be guilty of war crimes and gross human rights violations that took place during the 12 year civil war in El Salvador. Mariposa habla sobre 'la impunidad' para los militares y otros culpable de violaciones de los derechos humanos y crimenes de guerra (masacres y torturas). Ahora en El Salvador hay un fuerte debate sobre la impunidad y los atentos de controlar los archivos de Tutela Legal, la oficina establecido por el asesinado arzobispado Arnulfo Romero y la Igesia Catolica, para invesigar los violaciones de los derechos humanos de los Salvadorenos. |
Fri, 20 September 2013
13MB 18 mins. estereo Rodolfo Pacheco, un maestro Mexicano explica el como y el porque de las protestas de los maestros. LOs maestros han occupado el Zocalo desde hace 5 meses protestando una ley de 'Reforma Educativa'. Los maestro dicen que es mas una ley de reforma laboral porque obliga a los maestros a someterse a una evaluacion para seguir trabajando en su profesion. En la segunda semana de Septiembre se pasaron la ley, y los maestros cerraron el centro de Ciudad Mexico, y hubo enfrentamientos con la policia. El viernes fueron desalojados del Zocalo. Los maestros se han ubicado en otros lugares, y siguen con sus desfiles. Rudolfo Pacheco, a Mexican Philosophy teacher explains the whys and wherefores of the Mexican teachers' protests. The teachers have occupied the Zocalo for over 5 months in protest against 'Educational Reform' legislation, claiming that it is more about labor reform than educational reform, because it requires the teachers to undergo periodic evaluation to continue working in their profession. In the second week of September the legislation was passed, and the teachers shut down the centre of Mexico City with confrontations with the police. On Friday they were evicted from the Zocalo and they have relocated to other public locations in the city, and are continuing with their protest marches. |
Sun, 4 August 2013
8Mb mono 14 minutes Second part of an interview with Toni Solo, based in Nicaragua. In the context of the legal and international rights controversies generated by Snowden, Assange, the trials of Guatemalan ex-President Rios Montt for war crimes, and the Canadian mining company Hudbay for Human rights violations, the meeting of the Latin American ALBA countries in Ecuador this week, to discuss human rights issues takes on significant geopolitical weight. |
Sun, 4 August 2013
4Mb. Mono. 7 mintes First part of an interview with Toni Solo, based in Nicaragua. In the context of the legal and international rights controversies generated by Snowden, Assange, the trials of Guatemalan ex-President Rios Montt for war crimes, and the Canadian mining company Hudbay for Human rights violations, the meeting of the Latin American ALBA countries in Ecuador this week, to discuss human rights issues takes on significant geopolitical weight. |
Fri, 12 July 2013
28 Mb. 48 minutes, mono Toni Dolo reports from Nicaragua. Why whistleblower Snowden would want to go there , how Venezuela is sending US State Secretary John Kerry bonkers, and why Latin American countries (and some in the Caribbean) are standing up for their rights. Musical breaks from David Rovic's Prism album. |
Sun, 23 June 2013
22MB. mono 24 minutes Toni Solo from Nicaragua talks about some of the environmental and geopolitical issues at stake in the announcement by the Nicaraguan government of an agreement with a Hong Kong based Chinese company to go ahead with feasability studies for a massive canal project connecting the Pacific Ocean with the Caribbean coast through largely uninhabited jungle areas of Nicaragua. |
Sun, 23 June 2013
9Mb. 13 minutes Toni Solo from Nicaragua talks about some of the environmental and geopolitical issues at stake in the announcement by the Nicaraguan government of an agreement with a Hong Kong based Chinese company to go ahead with feasability studies for a massive canal project connecting the Pacific Ocean with the Caribbean coast through largely uninhabited jungle areas of Nicaragua. |
Mon, 3 June 2013
19.2 Mb 21 minutes Stereo mp3 Grahame Russel is a Canadian lawyer who works with Rights Action (http://rightsaction.org). He was in Guatemala as an observer for the trial of Rios Efrain Montt who is accused of being responsible for the genocide of over 100 thousand Mayan indigenous people during his term as President in the early 1980s. Grahame makes the point that this is a ground breaking trial as it implicates the current President of Guatemala who was a major in the Guatemalan Armed Forces at the time the human rights abuses and the genocide was peaking. Alan Nairn, a journalist who filmed current President Otto Perez Molina gloating over the bodies of villagers suspected of being supporters of the guerilla forces was blocked from presenting evidence at the trial. (http://www.democracynow.org/2013/4/19/exclusive_allan_nairn_exposes_role_of)
Direct download: rec_grahame.russell_26_May_2013.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 11:20am AEST |
Sat, 5 January 2013
10MB stereo 10 minutes. Pavel Nunez Duarte, Honduras' revolutionary musican and songwriter, of the top selling band 'Cafe Guancasco' talks to community radio about how politics informs their music. A teacher of mathematics, a student organiser, and now active in the Resistance Front of Honduras against the coup, he finds music is 'another language', his guitar 'a megaphone' to communicate the social realities of Honduras. He can't say how he 'came to be involved in politics' because it has always been part of his life. It is more a question of why he can't leave it ! A revealing interview in which even the explanation of 'Guancasco' has a social import. A 'Guancasco, he says, is a gathering , or get together of people in an indigenous community. You don't get that, in the cities but, he explains, in urban communities around the world you have 'Cafes' . Hence the name - a blend of the modern and the traditional, the regional and the global. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRzsUAIAUxQ |
Fri, 14 September 2012
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Fri, 14 September 2012
46.3 Mb. 51 minutes Jose Belo is a Timorese man who perhaps represents the highest values of journalism. Active in the Timorese resistance movement against the Indonesian occupation, he was a critical factor in enabling those few independent Australian journalists who contrived to work in Timor Leste (legendary journalists like John Martinkus, Max Stahl, and others) to gather critical information about the Indonesian occupation, and to get that information out. He was captured and tortured by the Indonesians 7 times, continuing to work in Timor even though he had the opportunity to live in exile in Australia. After Timorese independence he became a journalist, still maintaining a critical and independent attitude to successive governments of Timor Leste. One year he was threatened with house arrest when he accused a government minister of corruption. He is currently the editor of "Tempo Semanal", a weekly publication that is one of the most influential in the country, still attacking the government on issues of corruption and misspending of state finances. He was involved in the making of the film Balibo, and more recently, the subject of a more recent film ('Breaking the news') about to be released exposing the behaviour and role of some foreign journalists working in Timor Leste whose ethical and professional standards do not perhaps, match up to Jose's own. In this interview he talks about his values as a journalist, why he became a journalist, how he became a journalist, and the values that inform his work. Note: This is a raw, unedited sound file. The sound quality is generally adequate for reproduction, but another shortened edited and contextualised version of this interview will be posted soon.
Direct download: JoseBeloHotelDiliThin05_09_12.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 11:54am AEST |
Wed, 12 September 2012
8.2 Mb. 8 minutes 45 seconds (stereo) Head of the PNTL (Timorese National Police), Longhuino Monteiro has been called on to resign for a series of incidents involving 'missing' weapons over several years. The most recent is the disappearance of a high powered automatic weapon, with 60 rounds of ammunition from the car of the head of Police Intelligence while it was parked outside a brothel. Longuino dismissed this as 'not a problem - a single weapon is not a threat to public security'. But this, and other weapons that have gone missing over the years is, according to the NGO Fundasaun Mahein a flaw in the PNTL that Monteiro has not addressed. Fundasaun Mahein (Guardian Foundation) is an NGO that evolved as a watchdog research organisation concerned with issues of public security out of the destabilising conflicts of 2006 and 2007, that involved elements of both the Timorese Police and the the Timorese Armed Forces, who at times were involved in armed conflict against each other. |
Tue, 31 July 2012
20Mb Stereo 28 minutes
A 'soundscape' treatment of the 2012 East Timorese general elections which were peaceful and well conducted. A team of Australian observers went up into the hills of the Ermera province to monitor the process, spread among three mountain villages. Includes interviews with the Australian observers, a Timorese police official, and some of the count. |
Wed, 25 July 2012
Part 6. Early history of East Timorese independence movement. Australian solidarity briefing of CAVR research team.
16.5 Mb. 19 minutes A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was not well known or understood. |
Wed, 25 July 2012
Part 5. Early history of East Timor's independence movement. Australian solidarity briefing of CAVR research team.
5.8 Mb. 7 minutes A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was not well known or understood. |
Wed, 25 July 2012
Part 4 Early history of Timor's independence movement. Australian solidarity. Briefing of CAVR research team.
8.5 Mb. 9 minutes 22 seconds A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was not well known or understood. |
Wed, 25 July 2012
Part 2 Early history of Timor's independence movement. Australian solidarity. Briefing of CAVR research team.
11Mb. 12 minutes 45 seconds A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was not well known or understood. |
Tue, 24 July 2012
Pt 3 Early history of Timor's independence movement - Australian solidarity. Briefing of CAVR researchers.
9.3 Mb. 11 minutes A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was not well known or understood. |
Tue, 24 July 2012
Pt 1 Early history of Timor's independence movement - Australian solidarity. Briefing of CAVR researchers.
11Mb. 14 minutes A small group of Australians with a long history of support for the East Timorese struggle for independence meet with the research team of the CAVR (Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation). The team is producing a book about the East Timorese struggle for independence, and the years fo the resistance struggle, but from a bottom up perspective. Rather than focus on the well known identities, leaders and personalities that have characterised many of the histories of the struggle fo the Timorese, they are focussing on the testimonies of the mass of people who supported the struggle and were often the main victims of Indonesian reprisals and repression. It will focus particularly on women, and also the solidarity movement. Four Australians recall the early years of Australian solidarity at a time when the struggle of the Timorese people was virtually unkown to the general Australian public. |
Wed, 18 July 2012
17 Mb. 18 minutes 30 seconds Tetum with English translation. Only a few years old but with 6000 members the Federation has struggled for gains which have flowed through to the Public Service sector in general. |
Wed, 18 July 2012
12.4 Mb 12 minutes 40 seconds A press conference held by General Secretary of Fretilin, Mari Alkatiri on Monday 16 after some violent incidents following the broadcast of the CNRT General Assembly on Sunday. The CNRT had decided to exclude Fretilin from government. Fretilin was prepared for the decision, but not the provocative and offensive language in which it was couched. Many Fretilin supporters felt insulted, and reacted angrily. The press conference was mainly in Tetum, but a short translation in English is posted below. *Fretilin secretary general calls for CNRT’s responsibility |
Wed, 18 July 2012
16.3 Mb. 16 minutes 30 secondns Remarks, comments and observations from some of the 160 Australian observers who came to see the East Timor elections, shortly before they return to Australia |
Tue, 17 July 2012
Part 4 of 4 Charles Scheiner and Juvenal are researchers for the Lao Hamutuk ("Walking Together) NGO in Timor Leste. For many years Lao Hamatuk has been monitoring the governance of Timor Leste. Among other things, they look at how TL spends its oil revenues, which come from exporting the nonrenewable oil and gas reserves under the Timor Sea. Returns on investing the Petroleum Fund are only about one-tenth of the royalties and revenues paid by oil companies. As the oil and gas reserves are depleted, and oil revenues fall, investment returns will not be nearly enough to sustaining TL's state spending.At the time of the 2012 general elections they are particularly critical of the government of the past five years, and concerned that the incoming government review its spending priorities. The Lao Hamatuk website can be found at http://www.laohamutuk.org/ |
Tue, 17 July 2012
6.02 Mb. 8minutes Part three of three Charles Scheiner and Juvenal are researchers for the Lao Hamutuk ("Walking Together) NGO in Timor Leste. For many years Lao Hamatuk has been monitoring the governance of Timor Leste. Among other things, they look at how TL spends its oil revenues, which come from exporting the nonrenewable oil and gas reserves under the Timor Sea. Returns on investing the Petroleum Fund are only about one-tenth of the royalties and revenues paid by oil companies. As the oil and gas reserves are depleted, and oil revenues fall, investment returns will not be nearly enough to sustaining TL's state spending.At the time of the 2012 general elections they are particularly critical of the government of the past five years, and concerned that the incoming government review its spending priorities. The Lao Hamatuk website can be found at http://www.laohamutuk.org/ |
Tue, 17 July 2012
5.2 Mb. 5 minutes 30 seconds Part two of three Charles Scheiner and Juvenal are researchers for the Lao Hamutuk ("Walking Together) NGO in Timor Leste. For many years Lao Hamatuk has been monitoring the governance of Timor Leste. Among other things, they look at how TL spends its oil revenues, which come from exporting the nonrenewable oil and gas reserves under the Timor Sea. Returns on investing the Petroleum Fund are only about one-tenth of the royalties and revenues paid by oil companies. As the oil and gas reserves are depleted, and oil revenues fall, investment returns will not be nearly enough to sustaining TL's state spending. For more details, seehttp://laohamutuk.blogspot.com/2012/05/how-timor-leste-got-ten-billion-dollars.html . At the time of the 2012 general elections they are particularly critical of the government of the past five years, and concerned that the incoming government review its spending priorities. The Lao Hamatuk website can be found at http://www.laohamutuk.org/ |
Mon, 16 July 2012
Part one of three Charles Scheiner and Juvenal are researchers for the Lao Hamutuk ("Walking Together) NGO in Timor Leste. For many years Lao Hamatuk has been monitoring the governance of Timor Leste. Among other things, they look at how TL spends its oil revenues, which come from exporting the nonrenewable oil and gas reserves under the Timor Sea. Returns on investing the Petroleum Fund are only about one-tenth of the royalties and revenues paid by oil companies. As the oil and gas reserves are depleted, and oil revenues fall, investment returns will not be nearly enough to sustaining TL's state spending. For more details, seehttp://laohamutuk.blogspot.com/2012/05/how-timor-leste-got-ten-billion-dollars.html . At the time of the 2012 general elections they are particularly critical of the government of the past five years, and concerned that the incoming government review its spending priorities. The Lao Hamatuk website can be found at http://www.laohamutuk.org/ |
Mon, 16 July 2012
7.3 Mb Stereo 11 minutes 7 seconds Three days after the 2012 general election results it was still unclear how the new government would be formed. Neither of the two major parties had a clear majority. The governing CNRT could either form a coalition government with the two minor parties, or a government of National Unity with Fretilin. Speculation was rife. At this time Mari Alkatiri, the General Secretary of Fretilin granted an exclusive interview with an Australian media team, where he referred to the events of 2006 that led to the destabilisation of his government and forced his resignation from the position of Prime Minister. |
Sun, 15 July 2012
The tale of an Aboriginal community, a Cuban teacher, a Timorese woman, and the CWA. - Bob Boughton.
8Mb. 8 minutes. Bob Boughton, Associate Professor at the University of New England has been working on education programs in Timor Leste. He was impressed with the work of the Cuban literacy brigades and succeeded in bringing a Cuban educator to an Aboriginal community in Willcania. The pilot project has thus far proved to be eminently successful, and could be applied to other remote Aboriginal communities. |
Tue, 29 May 2012
15.5 Mb stereo 21 minutes East Timor expert Jim Dunn discusses the election prospects of the Fretilin party next July. East Timorese politics is best understood by looking at the historic role of Fretilin as the political party which declared East Timor's independence in 1975, the event which triggered the illegal Indonesian invasion of 1975, and its role in the resistance movement against the Indonesian occupation through the 1970s and beyond. Jim details this history, drawing on his own experience and knowledge of the key figures involved. |
Tue, 29 May 2012
David Bradbury on Tomas Borge - Independent film maker remembers the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua.
10.3 Mb. mono 23 minutes 44 seconds Independent documentary film maker David Bradbury made a big impact on the English speaking world with his documentary about the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, released in 1984. The centrepiece of this powerful documentary was a meeting with the last surviving founding member of the Sandinista National Liberation Front, Tomas Borge. When Tomas Borge died at the age of 81, a few hours before Mayday, 2012, David shared some of his memories of the man with community radio, and the story of how his documentary "Nicaragua, No Pasaran" came to be made. (More about David and his work can be found at his website http://frontlinefilms.com.au) |
Mon, 13 February 2012
18.5 Mb Stereo CBR 192kbps. 14 minutes. Jose Texeira, Fretilin Parliamentarian and member of the Central Committee of Fretiliin comments on te upcoming East Timorese Elections. There are over a dozen candidates for the Presidential elections in East Timor coming up in March. Fretilin candidate, former resistance leader and Fretilin organiser looks like the strongest candidate to challenge the incumbent Jose Ramos Horta. But with a wide range of candidates, some with a strong personal following, a run off between Horta and Lu'Olo could be unpredictable. |
Sat, 12 November 2011
Honduras' new Party. (Nuevo Partido Politico de Honduras). Toni Solo entrevista al Margarita. (Espanol) Spanish.
15.2 25 minutes Toni Solo, (http://tortillaconsal.com) entrevista una dirigente del FNRP de Honduras y candidata del nuevo partido que se formo para representar al Frente. |
Sat, 12 November 2011
11.4 Mb. 17 minutes 10 seconds Toni Solo, host of http://tortillaconsal.com continues his analysis of the Nicaraguan elections and the landslide victory of the Sandinista Front looking at what this means for the region, and what it will mean for the Nicaraguan people in the future.
Direct download: Pt2tortillaconsal_11_Nov_2011PCversion.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 11:30am AEST |
Sat, 12 November 2011
6:65Mb. 12 minutes 33seconds Toni Solo, host of http://tortillaconsal.com calls from Nicaragua to talk about the landslide electoral victory of the Sandinista Front. Much to the chagrin of the neo-liberal oriented opposition parties, the social programs of the Sandinista Front has one the respect of the people.
Direct download: Pt1tortillaconsal_11_Nov_2011.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 11:22am AEST |
Fri, 28 October 2011
33Mb mono 30 minutes Corrina Grace is visiting Australia after five years working on aid projects in Guatemala. An engineer by profession she is passionate about appropriate technologies and sustainability. She emphasises that there is a high level of consciousness in the underprivileged communities of Guatemala of climate change and the Global financial crisis. It is no longer a topic for debate, but critical issues to which they are already taking steps to adapt. With her is a team of six young Guatemalans who are touring Australia to learn techniques and methods of sustainable technologies and permaculture. Corrina's web site can be found here: |
Tue, 20 September 2011
6.3Mb 256kbps. stereo. 13 minutes. Interview with student spokesperson for the Chilean student movement that is sending a shockwave through Latin American society with its determined resistance to the privatisation of the education system. Entrevista con un vocero de los estudiantes en resistiencia a la privitisacion de educacion en Chile, y America latina. |
Fri, 16 September 2011
The Other September 11 - Recollections of a Chilean Refugee. (English). Victor Marillanca remembers.
29 Mb. 128kbps. stereo. 31 mins 36 seconds. Victor Marillanca was one of the first wave of Latin American refugees arriving in Australia to escape the US promoted 'dirty wasr' in Latin America. He describes graphically his experience of the days of the coup against Salvador Allende in Chile on September 11 1973. A tireless worker on community radio in Australia he presents his view of the student uprising happening in Chile at this time, the role of the media, and how and why it is happening.
Direct download: VictorMarillanca_16_Sep_2011_19.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 10:44pm AEST |
Thu, 4 August 2011
24.5 Mb mono. 17 minutes, 48 secondes (Note, there is some noise interference about two thirds of the way into the interview0 Former Guatemalan General Otto Perez Molina was in Washington last May seeking approval and support for his Presidential aspirations. He is expected to win the Guatemalan elections scheduled for September this year. Perez Molina is a graduate of the US “School of the Americas” Military Academy. He was also the head of the notorious Guatemalan D2 Intelligence Unit that was responsible for the disappearances and torture of thousands during the 1980s and 1990s ‘counterinsurgency campaigns’ in Guatemala, during which over 200,000 mainly indigenous people were massacred. US citizen Human Rights lawyer Jennifer Harbury whose Guatemalan husband was one of the victims of the D2 intelligence unit, is a co-signatory of a document filed with the UN rapporteur Torture calling for Perez Molina to be put on trial for war crimes. Jennifer has spent the last twenty years accumulating evidence that Perez Molina and others were not only complicit in abduction, torture, and genocide, but that the CIA had illegally withheld documents which demonstrated its complicity in these acts. Jennifer is seeking an end to the impunity of those responsible for gross human rights violations through the Guatemalan legal system and the United Nations. But before discussing the “document of allegation” presently before the UN rapporteur, I asked her if she had had recourse through the US legal system. Jennifer has published a book about her experience recently, "Truth, Torture and the American Way" and interviews, documentation and links to supporting material on YouTube can be found on http://rigtsaction.org |
Sat, 7 May 2011
Radio Communitario en Honduras. Escuadrones de la Muerte amenezan el dirigente de periodismo critico.
Un Escuadron de diez,enmascardos llegaron a la casa del periodista Hondureno, y dirigente del Radio Uno, para secuestrarlo y intimidar su familia. Aqui una entrevista que presenta la situacion en Honduras, dominado por un regimen post-golpista que niega los derechos humanos, fundamental, de un pueblo muy sufrido. Arnulfo tiene una historia de un radio communiatrio, independiente en su periodismo, y perseguido fuertemente por un 'gobierno' que no soporta ni tolera una punta de vista independiente.
Direct download: AguilarRadioUno07_May_2011_04_39_19.mp3
Category:Latin Radical -- posted at: 12:20pm AEST |
Tue, 5 April 2011
8.72 Mb. 10 minutes 12 seconds (Interview with English language voiceover) Union leader Jorge Max Zavala Galeano talks about the second day of a national uprising in Honduras against the Post-coup regime of Pofirio ('Pepe') Lobos. Police have started using live ammunition against peaceful protestors who have succeeded in closing down much of the country, as a response to the intransigence of the regime in meeting the just claims of teachers who have been out on strike for over a week and who have met with brutal repression. |
Fri, 1 April 2011
12.3 Mb mono 23 minutes Gabriela talks with community radio from the Washington Office of School of Americas' Watch. She traces the history of this anti-war movement from its creation about the time of the death of Salvadoran Archbishop Romero at the hands of US. trained Death Squads. They track the careers and movements of graduates from the School who are linked to gross human rights violations, and their current work of persuading progressive Latin American governments not to send candidates to be trained by the US. The role of Obama in current US/Latin American relationships is assessed, and the significance of his visit to the burial place of Archbishop Romero, in his recent visit to El Salvador.
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Wed, 23 March 2011
Massive repression of Teachers' strike in Honduras. (Actuality with English translation/commentary).
10.6 Mb 13 minutes 30 seconds English commentary to soundtrack of actuality, Original video: http://vimeo.com/21181376 (Extract from live to air radio show "Latin Radical" broadcast from 2pm to 4pm every Saturday from Community Radio 2NimFM 102.3 Webcast from http://nimfm.org) Dick Emanuelsson is on the spot to report the heavy repression of teachers in Tegucigalpa, March 18. A three month old baby is nearly poisoned by the tear gas fumes as hundreds of canisters (costing over $100 each) are fired on the peaceful protesters. Later in the day a schoolteacher was killed when a tear gas canister was fired directly at her head, and she was run over by a military vehicle. The teachers are on strike to reclaim a years worth of back wages that haven't been paid, to protest the looting of their pension fund shortly after the coup of 2009, the raising of the pension age to 70 years, and legislation that will lead to the privatisation of the education system and the end of public education in Honduras.
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Wed, 16 March 2011
9Mb. 10 Minutes Alexis, coordinator of CISPES (Committees in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, USA) examines some of the reasons US President Barack Obama might be visiting El Salvador for an exclusive meeting with Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes. |
Mon, 7 March 2011
22.3 MB. 28 minutes
Rosanna Wong interviews indigenous Garifuna leader, Alfonso, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Alfonso talks about the growing levels of repression and human rights violations since the post coup regime has been in power, and particularly how it affects the indigenous Garifuna people.
(Photo by Rosanna Wong) |
Wed, 3 November 2010
Latin American Conference Part 5. - FMLN representative, Dr. Guillermo Mata Bennett. El Salvador, Health, and popular power.
22.3 Mb 128 kbps mono 24 minutes 21seconds. Spanish with simultaneous translation into English. Dr. Mata Bennett, FMLN representative in the Salvadoran Assembly talks to the Latin American Solidarity Conference in Sydney via Skype video-conferencing. He talks about the gains made, as well as the problems faced by the FMLN's social programs, particularly in the field of health. He responds to questions from the audience, including the question of how the problem of organised criminal gangs is approached through drug rehabilitation programs. (Picture: Video conference with San Salvador in Sydney) |
Wed, 3 November 2010
Latin American Conference - Confronting Global Corporatism. Pt. 4 Nelson Davila, Venezuelan Ambassador. Social Missions in Venezuela
28Mb 128kbps mono 31 minutes 5 seconds Nelson Davila, Ambassador of Venezuela to Australia talks about the role of the 'social missions' in Venezuela, the current political situation in Venezuela, post election, and the ongoing contest with the international media campaign against his country. (Picture: Venezuelan Ambassador Nelson Davila fields a question) |
Mon, 25 October 2010
Latin American Conference - confronting Corporate Globalism - 3. Honduras. Santiago Reyes, representative in Australia of FNRP (Honduras Resistance Front)
26 Mb. 28 kbps mono 28 minutes 33 seconds (Spanish with English translation) Santiago Reyes is the Australian representative of the FNRP, or Honduras' National Front for Popular Resistance. In his presentation he talks about the background of last year's coup against popular President Mel Zelaya, and the real reasons for the unprecedent rise of the Resistance Front and its unsurpassed militancy, while yet sustaining a consistent policy of non violence in their resistance. He talks of the pattern of open US intervention, the rise of human rights violations under the administration of the coup regime and the efforts of the US to have Honduras readmitted to the Organisation of American States in spite of continuing non-recognition of the regime from most of the international community. The future course of the FNRP hinged on three major points. One, the return of Mel Zelaya, two, no negotiation with the Porfirio Lobo regime, and the creation of a Constituent Assembly for constitutional reform on its own terms.
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Mon, 25 October 2010
Latin American Conference - confronting Corporate Globalism - 2. Cuba. Reinaldo García Perera, cónsul general en Australia (English)
21.1 Mb. 128 kbps mono 23 minutes
Reinaldo Perera, Cuban Consul on the US blockade against his country and other challenges. He responds to questions about the role of Barack Obama. |
Mon, 25 October 2010
19.2 Mb. 128 kbps mono 21 minutes Alina Sullcani from Bolivia was guest speaker at the Latin American Solidarity Conference held in Sydney October 16; "Challenging Global Corporatism". Alina is the leader of the National Federation of Indigenous Bolivian Campesino Women "Bartolina Sisa" and a member of the 'Movement for Socialism'. She spoke of what it meant to have an indigenous President of Bolivia for the first time in history, the political struggle to gain that indigenous representation, and the nature of future struggles to protect and defend the benefits of popular power. |
Thu, 2 September 2010
3.6 Mb. mono 5 minutes 42 seconds (Spanish) Dick Emanuelsson reporting from Honduras. Dick describes how the right attempts to subvert journalism to 'intelligence' activities, either through subornation, or intimidation. Independent journalism is seen as a threat to the right. He describes his experience in Colombia in 2005 when he was persuaded to leave after constant threats from the Colombian intelligence agencies, and recent pressures on him in Honduras after a visiting Colombian delegation to the post coup 'government' of Honduras. Periodista Dick Emanuelsson explica como las fuerzas de seguridad de Colombia le 'presiono' a salir del pais en 2005. Ahora esta resistiendo presiones del gobierno golpista de Honduras despues una visita a Honduras de una delegacion Colombiano de las fuerzas de 'seguridad'.
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Thu, 2 September 2010
4.6 Mb. mono 10 minutes, 12 seconds El destacado periodista Dick Emanuelsson habla con radio communitario como sobrevivir como periodista en Honduras bajo el regimen golpista. Renown journalist tells community radio how he survives as a journalist in Honduras, under the control of the coup regime. |
Wed, 25 August 2010
Santiago Reyes habla sobre el FNRP en Australia sobre las violaciones de derechos humanos y violencia por parte del 'gobierno' de facto de Honduras en la semana de crecimiento de violencia en contra de la huelga de Maestros en Honduras. Santiago Reyes speaks for the FNRP in Australia about the new round of repression, even as the post coup government renews attempt to be accepted into the Organisation of American States in spite of failing to accept the condition of accepting the norms of human rights.
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Sun, 15 August 2010
7.15 Mb 128 kbps mono 7 minutes 50 seconds. Toni Solo analyses what is happening within the FNRP (The Honduras Resistance Front), and drive to allow exiled ex-President Zelaya back inside the country - move that the coup regime has strongly resisted. |
Sun, 15 August 2010
9 Mb. 128 kbps mono 9 minutes 34 seconds. Toni Solo speaks with community radio 2NimFM and Latin Radical about the reasons for the teachers strike and mobilisation this week in the capital of Honduras, Tegucigalpa, after the Special Forces Cobra squad entered the University, firing over 60 tear gas canisters. Teachers are calling on the resignation of the Rector of the University, and there is a possibility that this week's mobilisation by the teachers could lead to a general strike. |
Thu, 22 July 2010
40Mb. 129kbps mono 2hrs 52mins 16secs. Ricardo Valenzuela, a minister in the government of deposed President Zelaya of Honduras spoke for two hours on public radio last April in San Pedro de Sula. During the interview he quoted from documents which he said had been mislaid by the coup plotters, which laid out in detail the plans for the coup, and a note to the US Ambassador. During the interview he jokingly said "This will probably get me killed". Two months later he was; shot in bar restaurant by a gunman who is still at liberty.
Ricardo Valenzuela, ex-ministro del gobierno de Mel Zelaya hablaba en una entrevista de dos horas en Radio San Pedro Sula sobre pruebas documentales de la planificacion del golpe de estado contra ex-Presidente Mel Zelaya. En la entrevista dijo en broma "algo me puede pasar cuando salgo del radio". Dos meses fue assasenido en el bar de un hotel. Su asesino queda libre. |
Wed, 21 July 2010
A DOCUMENTARY OF THE HONDURAS COUP
In the first months of the brutal coup in Honduras on June 28 last year over two million Hondurans came out on the streets in protest, largely ignored by the mainstream media.
Katia Lara and Carlos del Valle grabbed their cameras and started shooting. Soldiers were firing live rounds into the crowds on the Tegucigalpa streets. A year later Katia Lara (working in exile) has released a devastating documentary. The first Australian showing (with English subtitles) will be here in Nimbin at Djanbung Gardens on Friday 23rd of July. Warming soup and hot drinks available from 6 pm for a 7 pm screening.
(Admission will be by donation to cover costs and to send donations to the Resistance Front in Honduras)
Category:Latin Radical
-- posted at: 2:33pm AEST
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Sun, 27 June 2010
11.6 Mb. 128 kbps. mono 12 minutes 42 seconds.
Steven Schnoor, documentary maker (http://www.schnoorversuscanada.ca/) and researcher has won a $10000 lawsuit for defamation against a former Canadian Ambassador to Guatemala for defamation. Steven filmed the eviction of a Guatemalan indigenous community from their land to make way for a large Canadian mining enterprise. The Canadian Ambassador on several occasions told organisations investigating the incident that the documentary was 'staged' and the woman central to the events was a hired actress. Canadian mining companies have been involved in a number of incidents in Central America and southern Mexico involving forced evictions and selective assassinations of community leaders trying to block the incursions of Canadian mining companies with a questionable record of environmental practices.
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Sat, 5 June 2010
4Mb. 128kbps mono 4 minutes 26 seconds (Espanol/Spanish language)
Aron, locutor de Radio Zacate explique la situacion de Radio Zacate, que fue rodeado por 300 effectivos armados del Gobierno Golpista de Honduras. Existe un pequeno movimiento de campesinos resistiendo su desalojamiento de terrenos reclamados con poco legalidad por el terrateniente billionario Miguel Facusse. El Radio Communitario solo dio voz a los campesinos en resistencia. Por eso esta cerrado y segregado como 'sitio de un crimen' por los 300 policias y agentes de seguridad. La communidad esta rebiendo fuerte apoyo por la Comision de Derechos Humanos de Honduras, y el FNRP, y estableciendo un planton alredor el Radio. Aron habla con Radio Communitario 2NimFM en Australia.
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Sat, 29 May 2010
11Mb. 128 kbps. mono 12 minutes
The voices of the evictees Los voces de los mismos desplazados:
El martes seis y miércoles siete de abril, el mal gobierno de la ciudad de México publico en su Gaceta Oficial, el decreto, por medio del cual ordena el despojo de las casas de las y los pobres a los que desprecia y reprime, para dar paso a la construcción de la supervía poniente. En el mismo sentido el martes veinte del presente mes y año publicó el decreto de declaratoria de La loma como Área Natural Protegida, ANP argumentando en uno de sus considerandos la declaratoria de necesidad publicada el pasado once de diciembre del año 2009, donde se anunció la obra en cuestión, y en el artículo octavo del decreto de declaratoria de la Loma como ANP, expone que: “podrá realizarse una vialidad subterránea” por debajo de La Loma. |
Sat, 29 May 2010
19.3 Mb. 128 kbps mono 22 minutes Spanish Language (Espanol) Luis Miguel Cano, Lawyer, addresses residents of several poor 'barrios' (suburbs) of the Mexican Federal District (most of Mexico City) who have been given two weeks to get out, with just a few weeks of rent in compensation, to make way for a ring road, and a subterranean tunnel under one of the few nature reserves remaining in the Federal District. The Mexican government handed this project over to private enterprise last year, when much of their own funding 'went missing'. Residents are being hounded out of homes that have been in the family for 50 years, with no alternative accommodation made available. Luis Miguel Cano, a Mexican lawyer who is challenging the legality of the forced evictions addresses local residents determined to resist, laying out the options, the tactics and steps to be taken to resist.
El martes seis y miércoles siete de abril, el mal gobierno de la ciudad de México publico en su Gaceta Oficial, el decreto, por medio del cual ordena el despojo de las casas de las y los pobres a los que desprecia y reprime, para dar paso a la construcción de la supervía poniente. En el mismo sentido el martes veinte del presente mes y año publicó el decreto de declaratoria de La loma como Área Natural Protegida, ANP argumentando en uno de sus considerandos la declaratoria de necesidad publicada el pasado once de diciembre del año 2009, donde se anunció la obra en cuestión, y en el artículo octavo del decreto de declaratoria de la Loma como ANP, expone que: “podrá realizarse una vialidad subterránea” por debajo de La Loma. Las cuatro ruedas del capitalismo: despojo, represión, desprecio y explotación se han echado a andar en forma contundente contra las y los pobres del Sur Poniente de la ciudad de México. Para ello, el mal gobierno de la Ciudad se ha amancebado con el gran capital que desea esta obra. El despojo del derecho a la vivienda y a una vida digna y la privatización de los espacios públicos en la ciudad, no son en lo absoluto parte de una política de izquierda, sino una práctica del más rancio neoliberalismo de derecha. |
Sun, 23 May 2010
19.3 Mb 128kbps mono 21minutes 11 seconds Luis Aguilar, a member of the activist movement 'Los Necios' in Honduras updates us on the situation there for community radio. Luis is part of a team that is developing Honduras' independent media outlet Resistencia Honduras which will be the voice for the FNRP, or Popular National Resistance Front of Honduras. Luis talks about the latest selective assassinations of activists, the 'dirty tricks' being utilised to displace the peasant communities of Bajo Aguan in the latest land grab, and the subtle pressures being exerted on the few sectors of the media that remains critical of the coup regime. While the eyes of the world are on the situation in Thailand the Honduras Resistance continues, and is slowly gathering greater strength.
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Fri, 7 May 2010
7.2Mb 64kbps mono 15 minutes 26 seconds. Toni Solo of tortillaconsal gets behind the media facade and explains some of the subtleties of the situation in Central America. The growing success of the Sandinista party and President Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, in spite of US hostility, the potential of a new elected Costa Rican President after decades of the established figurehead Arias, and the surprising and paradoxical role of the Salvadoran President in the fraught relationship with the coup regime in Honduras, and the contentious recognition of the newly inaugurated President there. |
Fri, 7 May 2010
11.5 Mb. 128 kbps mono 24 minutes 35 seconds. Entire interview with Tamar Sharabi. Tamar Sharabi had been working in Honduras on projects involving sustainability and water for several years when she was witness to the effects of the coup in Honduras at the end of June last year and turned to working on a media project. As a media worker she was directly affected by the heavy repression and was witness to the numerous human rights violations of the coup regime. She has much to say about the particular effects of domination of Honduras a by a small elite on the situation of women, and how resistance to the coup and the coup regime has led to new levels of self empowerment. |
Fri, 7 May 2010
13Mb. 128 kbps. mono 21 minutes 31 seconds Singer Karla Lara had just completed a tour of the US when she did this interview for community radio. She tells how she began singing at the age of 16 when she was invited to work with the Salvadoran guerilla band Cutumay Camones and how the New Song movement sweeping Latin America informed her political commitment and her life as an activist. Karla is touring to bring attention to the situation in Honduras where a regime that resulted from a coup last year is responsible for continuing gross human rights violations. |
Tue, 27 April 2010
2.6 Mb. 128 kbps mono 4 minutes 35 seconds
Honduran native Karla Lara broke into the music scene in 1986 as a singer in the popular group "Rascaniguas" and later with the famous Salvadoran group "Cutumay Camones" that accompanied the political struggle during that country’s brutal civil war. She returned to Honduras to join bands intending to harness music as a form of rebellion, where she was a founding member of "Doble-Via" and "Trovason".
To speak of Karla Lara is to tell the story of many women, or maybe that is only the intention: that many women can see their reflection in her songs, in the harshness of their reality in contrast with the hope and joy that a woman can fight for her rights.
Karla is part of an extensive and diverse movement of young Honduran musicians that believes in the need to create Honduran music with its own history, own rhythm, and pride of being part of a new generation that builds dignity in the country.
In December 2004, she presented her first album, Donde andar, which brings together many of the issues that she has supported and sung about for years. From that date, her music has brought her to various other venues, from unknown villages in Honduras to Copenhagen, Denmark.
In December 2008 she recorded her second album, Antes del Puente, "an album that will help to build identity, to allow ourselves to feel, through stories, clichés and characters of our country, a sense of belonging, which we believe makes the difference in how you design your participation in the construction of a different kind of citizenship."
She is currently part of the first Central American feminist band, CantArte Vida, that has given concerts in Guatemala and Honduras.
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