Thursday, June 20, 2013

UN Panel Notes Plebiscite Vote, Calls for Statehood or Nationhood by Contributing Editor - Puerto Rico Report

The Note: Run For The Border - ABC News

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ABC News

The Note: Run For The Border
ABC News
The report looked at demographic data collected from the 2011 American Community Survey. The report also examined U.S. citizenship, education levels and median income among U.S.Hispanics. Puerto Ricans make up the second largest group,... 

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RUSSIA and THE WEST - РОССИЯ и ЗАПАД: Russia's Eurasian Union Could Endanger The Neighbo...

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RUSSIA and THE WEST - РОССИЯ и ЗАПАД: Russia's Eurasian Union Could Endanger The Neighbo...: »   Russia's Eurasian Union Could Endanger The Neighborhood And ... 15/06/13 01:22 from  russia's and china's interests in puert...

The United States Is Still Pretty Popular In Russia - Forbes

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The United States Is Still Pretty Popular In Russia
Forbes
While Russian state-owned media does traffic in more than its fair share of anti-American and anti-Western conspiracy theories, you don't need to look very far to find Russian TV spouting some pretty strange ideas on, well, almost anything, I've always ...

UN Panel Notes Plebiscite Vote, Calls for Statehood or Nationhood 

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The United Nations committee on ‘decolonization’ Monday unanimously called upon the United States for a process to replace Puerto Rico’s territory status with U.S. statehood or nationhood, whichever may be chosen by the people of the islands.
The committee, which is charged with helping to implement a 1960 U.N. resolution on self-determination and independence, has been discussing Puerto Rico’s status since 1967 and passing annual resolutions on it since 1972.
Despite committee efforts, however, the resolutions have not advanced in the U.N.  The failure is due to U.S. opposition.
The U.S. does not recognize committee jurisdiction over Puerto Rico and does not cooperate with the committee. The U.S. considers Puerto Rico’s status to be an internal matter and does not want to answer to a committee that on Puerto Rico questions has been dominated by governments unfriendly to the U.S. and less democratic than the U.S., such as Cuba and Venezuela.
The U.S. was relieved of the responsibility of reporting to the U.N. on Puerto Rico in 1953 after the territory’s constitution was approved.  Countries generally have to report annually to the U.N. on their Non-Self-Governing Territories.
Although the constitution substantially completed the U.S. process of permitting Puerto Rico to exercise self-government on local affairs, Puerto Rico did not — and still does not — enjoy self-government at the national government level.  And its local governing authority remained — and remains — subject to the authority of Congress for the governing of the territory.
This lack of democracy was recognized by a majority of U.N. General Assembly members when the U.S. was absolved of the responsibility to report on Puerto Rico.  A majority refused to vote for a U.S. resolution — made at the request of the “commonwealth” party-dominated Government of Puerto Rico — on ending U.S. reporting. Thirty-four countries either voted against the resolution or did not vote compared with 26 that voted in favor.  U.S. officials did everything that they could to pass the resolution, even obtaining a statement from President Eisenhower and overstating the territory’s autonomy.
‘Commonwealthers’ have claimed that the end of U.S. reporting meant that Puerto Rico is no longer a territory.  And the “commonwealth” party president, Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla, suggested that in reaction to the committee action Monday.
But U.S. officials did not agree that Puerto Rico was not a territory even when acting to discontinue reporting to the U.N. on the islands.
And perhaps Puerto Rico’s leading official on obtaining an end to U.S. reporting, later Chief Justice Jose Trias Monge, wrote, “There was little sense of triumph among” the party leadership “after the United Nations vote and even second thoughts as to whether it had been wise.”
The decolonization committee resolution noted that the people of Puerto Rico “mostly rejected” the territory’s “current status of political subordination “ in a plebiscite held along the general elections for office last November. The vote was 54% against the current status often misleadingly called “commonwealth” and 61.2% for U.S. statehood among the alternatives, with nationhood in a non-binding association with the U.S. obtaining 33.34% and independence 5.49%.
The committee also considered Puerto Rico to be a “nation” and expressed concern about unspecified alleged “actions carried out against Puerto Rican independence fighters.” This seems to have been a reference to insular and U.S. government actions a half a century ago and earlier.
The resolution similarly called for the U.S. Government to release from prison two Puerto Rican “political prisoners.”  The two committed other crimes in the name of Puerto Rican independence.
The Committee also stated that the U.S. Government should “return … occupied land” that it acquired from owners on the Puerto Rican islands of Vieques and Culebra and clean the land.  The properties were formerly  used for military training, and a major cleanup effort has been underway for years.
The Cuba-written resolution was passed immediately after the committee heard from dozens of petitioners.
Puerto Rico’s representative to the Federal government, Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi, was the most prominent, appearing on behalf of the territory’s statehood party.  He said that Puerto Rico was still a non-self-governing territory, Puerto Ricans had voted for statehood and “the will of the people” should be “respected”. But he also said that there should be a process for obtaining statehood or nationhood.
A statement on behalf of 14 “commonwealth” party leaders was at odds with their party’s leadership.  Puerto Rico House of Representatives Member Luis Vega Ramos delivered the statement.  The group acknowledged that Puerto Rico remains a territory and called for a local status assembly if President Obama’s proposal for another referendum on the islands’ status does not become law by October 1st.
“Commonwealth” party president Governor Garcia generally — but not always — asserts that Puerto Rico is not a territory and has said that he will seek a status assembly sometime next year (vs. this October 1st) if Obama’s legislation does not pass.
Pro-statehood non-territory status choice activist Ricky Rossello and the group that represented nationhood in a non-binding association with the U.S. during the 2012 plebiscite campaign called for the U.N. General Assembly to require the U.S. to resume annual reporting on Puerto Rico.

















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Weekly #USjobless aid applications rise to 354K . Read: http://ow.ly/mdL4W #cari... 

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Weekly #USjobless aid applications rise to 354K . Read: http://ow.ly/mdL4W #caribbeanbusiness

Immigration reform should protect families

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The immigration reform bill now being debated on the floor of the US Senate, while not perfect, would bring millions of undocumented immigrants and their families out of the shadows, and deserves to be passed into law.

Key sections recognize the harm caused to families by the current system -- especially "mixed status" families deeply rooted in the US but living day to day in fear of being split apart after a traffic stop or an immigration raid.
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Bipartisan Hemp Amendment Passes House Over DEA Objections - Huffington Post

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Bipartisan Hemp Amendment Passes House Over DEA Objections
Huffington Post
Other hemp advocates were bullish about House passage, having had a chance encounter with Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) at the Kentucky Derby in early May. The state'sagriculture commissioner, James Comer, bent the ear of Boehner and his chief of ...

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Puerto Rico authorities discover heroin and cocaine inside vehicles

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- US Customs and Border Protection officers discovered 7.3 kilograms of heroin concealed within a vehicle arriving from the Dominican Republic on the ferry on Monday.

National Guard turns out Champs

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The National Guard of the United States is a reserve military force composed of National Guard military members or units of each state and the territories of Guam and the Virgin Islands plus the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia under federally recognized active or inactive armed force service for the United States.

Immigration reform: Good for America and our economy

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For decades our county has largely ignored the 11 million illegal or undocumented immigrants living within the United States.  It is time for us to open our eyes and confront the problem staring us in the face.  By not addressing the issue, we place an unnecessary burden on American households and hinder our economy from growing to its full potential.  Members of Congress must now come together and allow immigration reform to go through an open and transparent process in order to create a bill that works best for all Americans.

US to send more federal agents to help fight drug trafficking in Puerto Rico

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Puerto Rico's representative in Congress says additional federal law enforcement agents will be deployed to the U.S. territory this summer to help fight a surge in drug-fueled violence.
Pedro Pierluisi said Thursday that the Department of Defence also will provide a report in the next three months on what actions it's taking to crack down on drug trafficking in the region.
His spokeswoman Dennise Perez says they do not yet know how many agents will be sent to Puerto Rico.
The House Appropriations Committee has said data seems to indicate that U.S. Caribbean territories have become a popular transshipment route for drug traffickers.
The island of 3.7 million people reported a record 1,117 killings in 2011, with police attributing the majority of slayings to drug trafficking.

OBAMA’S STRATEGIC MOVES ON PUERTO RICO – Could Sotomayor Influence the Puerto Rican Status Issue? « Puerto Rico and the American Dream

Could Sotomayor Influence the Puerto Rican Status Issue? « Puerto Rico and the American Dream


        1. OBAMA’S STRATEGIC MOVES ON PUERTO RICO â€“ Could ...

          www.prdream.com/.../obamas-strategic-moves-on-puerto-rico-could-sot...
           
          by escalona
          Dec 16, 2009 – OBAMA’S STRATEGIC MOVES ON PUERTO RICO â€“ Could Sotomayor Influence the Puerto Rican Status Issue? 9:00 AM BY MAEGAN LA MAMITA MALA – POLITICSPUERTO RICO| WOMEN 1Jun2009 – VivirLatino.

          OBAMA’S STRATEGIC MOVES ON PUERTO RICO – Could Sotomayor Influence the Puerto Rican Status Issue? « Puerto Rico and the American Dream

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          9:00 AM BY MAEGAN LA MAMITA MALA – POLITICS| PUERTO RICO| WOMEN
          1Jun2009 – VivirLatino.com
          According to an article I received in my inbox Sotomayor has said something on Puerto Rico’s status and sovereignty.
          NCM Puerto rico
          OBAMA’S STRATEGIC MOVES ON PUERTO RICO
          Jesús Dávila (Translation by Jan Susler)
          SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, May 26, 2009 (NCM) – President Barack Obama named to the Supreme Court a jurist who developed the theory that it is viable to make special arrangements with Puerto Rico if it is annexed as a state of the Union, at the same time that its Government initiated steps to free an independentista political prisoner.
          Obama’s two strategic actions on Puerto Rico, taken the same day, refer to events that took place about 30 years ago related to two very different aspects of the colonial case of this Caribbean nation, which the U.S. chief has promised to resolved during his first term in office.
          The first took place in 1979 when Sonia Sotomayor, a Puerto Rican born and raised in the Bronx, New York, wrote an essay for the Yale University Law Journal — from which she graduated with honors — in which she argued that the history of Puerto Rico as a colony made it constitutionally viable for the United States to respect Puerto Rico’s rights over mining and petroleum in its territorial waters up to 200 miles. According to Sotomayor, as a colonial power, the U.S. acquired a responsibility over “several poor dependencies” and that “some of them, like Puerto Rico, may seek statehood unless they are accorded a greater measure of self-government,” so that arrangements such as giving them the rights over underwater resources would help the new state of the Union to “overcome its economic problems.”
          Sotomayor argued then that nothing in the Constitution would prevent the U.S. from giving that special treatment to Puerto Rico. Over time, that brilliant young attorney, whose juridical history is described as “moderate,” and who is a member of the American Philosophical Society, became a district court judge under the presidency of Democrat William J. Clinton, and became an appellate judge during the mandate of his Republican successor George Bush. Now, after intense lobbying by powerful Puerto Rican congresswoman Nydia Velázquez, with the support of Senator Charles Schumer (both Democrats from New York), Sotomayor has become the first Puerto Rican woman named to the U.S. Supreme Court.
          Many people mention famous cases in which she has ruled, such as the decision which resolved the dispute that paralyzed the U.S. professional baseball league, but few recall her expertise in terms of special means to make viable Puerto Rico’s becoming a state of the Union .
          The second case occurred only months after Sotomayor wrote her essay, when, in Evanston , Chicago , a dozen members of the Armed Forces of National Liberation of Puerto Rico were arrested — an organization with a history of attacks related to the struggle for the independence of Puerto Rico. Among those arrested, who refused to defend themselves because they took the position of “prisoner of war,” was young Carlos Alberto Torres.
          At the same time Obama monopolized the media’s attention by naming Sotomayor, without making much noise, the U.S. Parole Commission convened a hearing with Torres, one of the longest held political prisoners. The commission agreed to recommend a gradual process to release Torres, which would include his transfer to a halfway house for six months, after which he could be released under special conditions.
          The nomination of Sotomayor, as well as Torres’ release, related to determinations which will have to be approved by their respective organisms before being finalized. In the particular case of the Supreme Court nominee, the vote will be taken by the Senate in Washington , and sectors of the right wing U.S. press have already begun to attack her.
          For the statehood movement, which controls the Puerto Rican government, legislature, Resident Commissioner in Washington , and even the insular Supreme court, Sotomayor’s nomination to the U.S. Supreme court was received with great enthusiasm. The high court would be that last appellate resource if legal controversies are generated over the process to review Puerto Rico’s political condition, a process already begun in Congress, though without the consensus of Puerto Rican political forces.
          But Sotomayor’s nomination was not only applauded by annexationists; it immediately received solid support from the autonomists and from various Puerto Rican sectors, in the Island as well as in the Puerto Rican “diaspora” in the U.S. Sotomayor’s father died when she was young, and her mother raised her in a poor neighborhood in the Bronx. She was a superior student with an impressive record of social service — such as her participation in the Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund. Sotomayor is now a symbol of Puerto Rican pride that goes beyond party lines or doctrines.
          The case of the release of the political prisoners, on the other hand, is another topic that has shown itself to be the object of support from broad sectors in Puerto Rico and the U.S. However, these are the first perceptible moves by the new President of the U.S. in a road that seems like a minefield. Evidence of this came last May first when the Boricua Popular Army Macheteros reported they had detected agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in concert with the Puerto Rico Police, taking positions as sharpshooters on the roofs of nearby buildings as a huge demonstration of workers passed by.
          Consistent with its usual policy, the FBI reported that it could not confirm or deny reports that its agents were active the day of the labor demonstration. The Macheteros confirmed that what was seen is indicative that the FBI and the Puerto Rico Police “continue planning operations” like the one of the commando group that killed its commander Filiberto Ojeda in 2005.
          The 2005 operation aborted conversations Ojeda was having with the Catholic Church to explore the possibility of a peaceful process for the U.S. to grant independence to Puerto Rico .
          NCM-CHI-NY-26-05-09-28
          This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 16th, 2009 at 10:03 am and is filed under The Forum. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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