WW4 Report

Paraguay: campesinos disappeared, killed

The Agrarian and Popular Movement (MAP) of Paraguay reported in a June 26 statement that base-level MAP leader Perfecto Irala was abducted and disappeared by police on June 25 from Pariri, in Vaqueria district, Caaguazu department. Since last Feb. 26, Irala and other MAP members had been occupying lands in Pariri designated for agrarian reform which were sold by the National Institute of Rural Development and Land (INDERT) to foreign companies for the production of transgenic soy. "According to the information of several witnesses, Perfecto Irala was kidnapped by an officer of the National Police with the last name Vazquez, of the deputy police station of the Colonia Santa Clara in the Vaqueria district. Several fellow leaders have gone to the police stations of Santa Clara and Vaqueria in search of information, but they have not received any response concerning the whereabouts of the companero Perfecto Irala," said the MAP statement.

Argentina: campesinos march

On June 25, some 5,000 campesinos set out from 11 different areas of Argentina on a "national march for rural development." The mobilization culminated with a rally in the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires on June 28, where the campesinos demanded that the government of Nestor Kirchner support their struggle against what Argentine Agrarian Federation (FAA) leader Eduardo Buzzi called "faceless agriculture"—the control of vast farming and ranching resources by a few wealthy companies and individuals. Police said fewer than 2,000 people participated in the closing rally. (Adital, June 26; Prensa Latina, June 28; Clarin, June 29)

Los Angeles: protesters defend immigrant rights

On June 24, several thousand demonstrators, many carrying US flags, marched through Hollywood, California, to demand full rights for immigrants. Police estimated the crowd at 1,100. Organizer Raul Murillo said the marchers want lawmakers in Washington to know immigration reform is essential. (Los Angeles Times, June 25; Los Angeles Daily News, June 25) The Coalition in Defense of Immigrant Rights (CDIR), which organized the march, said more than 15,000 people took part. (CDIR Update No. 15, June 24, via Los Angeles Indymedia)

Immigration bill fails

On June 28, the US Senate defeated a measure that would have limited debate on immigration reform and cleared the way for final passage of a proposed "compromise" bill. The measure to end debate and move forward with the bill got 46 votes, 14 short of what it needed to pass. The measure was backed by 33 Democrats, 12 Republicans and one independent; opposing it were 37 Republicans, 15 Democrats and one independent. One senator was absent. The measure's failure means that immigration reform is likely dead until after the 2008 elections, according to the New York Times.

Geopolitics of the "missile shield": our readers write

Our June issue featured the story "Resisting the New Euro-Missiles: Czech Dissidents Stand Up Again—This Time to the Pentagon!" by WW4 REPORT contributor Gwendolyn Albert, noting the emergence of popular opposition to US plans to build a radar base for the new "missile shield" in the Czech Republic. The "missile shield" has opened a new rift with Russia, and is surely topping the agenda in the Bush-Putin meeting underway at the Bush family estate in Kennebunkport, ME. Our June Exit Poll was: "Is the 'missile shield' actually intended to protect the US and the world from 'rogue' nations like Iran and North Korea, or is the 'real' enemy still Russia?" We received the following responses:

Sudan, Iraq, Somalia top "failed states index"

Sudan, Iraq and Somalia top an independent ranking of the world's leading failed states by Foreign Policy magazine and the Fund for Peace. The annual "Failed States Index" ranks 177 countries according to 12 social, economic, political and military indicators. Leading benchmarks for failed state status are loss of physical control of territory or monopoly on the use of force, erosion of legitimate authority, and inability to provide reasonable public services.

Qaddafi calls for United States of Africa

Speaking on the eve of an African Union summit in Accra June 30, Libyan leader Moammar Qadaffi called on the continent to unite under a single government. Declaring himself a "soldier for Africa," Qaddafi said AU leaders had not yet achieved the dream of unity voiced half a century ago by Ghana's first president, Kwame Nkrumah, leading icon of African independence and unity. "For Africa, the matter is to be or not to be," Qadaffi told a cheering audience of students, activists and local Muslim leaders at the University of Ghana. "My vision is to wake up the African leaders to unify our continent."

Mauritania arrests al-Qaeda suspects?

Mauritania's independent news agency Al-Akhbar reported June 26 that security forces had arrested four men supposedly linked to "al-Qaeda in the Maghreb" in raids on some Internet cafes in the the capital, Nouakchott. The detainees are said to be four foreigners (two Moroccans and two Algerians) and a Saudi national of Mauritanian origin. The arrests coincided with the opening of a trial of 11 detainees accused of links to al-Qaeda in the Maghreb. (BBC Monitoring, AKI, June 26)

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