COVER

 EDITORIAL

COVER STORY

- 60th Year of UDHR...

COUNTRY UPDATES

- A Classic Example of a Persecuted Human Rights
Defender


- Celebrating Life...

- UN Human Rights Committee Makes Nepal
Responsible...


- Nepal: Disappearance Commission on Cards

- HRC: The Philippine Violates ...

- Riding along Subway Stops ...

 PHOTO ESSAY

 CONTRIBUTION FROM LATIN
AMERICA


- A New Political Era in Latin America...

BOOK REVIEWS

- A Journey Through Asia...

- Desaparesidos: The Untold Story of Martial Law

 NEWS

- The Youth Speaks in AFAD’s 1st Poster-Making
and Essay-Writing Contests


- AFAD Joins the World Wide Web

- Inter-Faith Conference...

STATEMENT OF SUPPORT

- CHR Statement on the Occasion of the Book
Launching of AFAD...

 
POEM

- Missing the Disappeared
 

CONTRIBUTION FROM LATIN AMERICA


A New Political Era in Latin America:
Achievements and Challenges for FEDEFAM
and the Human Rights Movement
 

By Patricio Rice
Senior Advisor FEDEFAM
Buenos Aires, October 2008

 

Most political observers are in agreement that it is not business as usual in Latin America, once considered USA´s “backyard.” On the contrary, for the last decade or more, waves of change have swept the region especially in South America so that another metaphor will have to be coined to describe the new political and economic reality of the emerging hemisphere. While not yet a full-fledged independent neighbor, Latin America is increasingly evolving its own dynamics separate from the US and Canada and this process is giving a radically new identity to the region. Indeed, the infamous wall which the Bush administration is now constructing along the Mexican border ostensibly to keep unwanted Latino immigrants out from the US is becoming a powerful symbol of separateness where beyond the wall, Latin America itself is building its own distinctive politico social reality beyond the surveillance of big daddy, USA.

The creation of MERCOSUR in 1991 - a common market between Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay heralded a new economic departure for the South. While the US, Canada and Mexico embarked on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), this new protective region to the South has become a focus point for a separate development. It has grown so as to catapult Brazil into becoming the 10th economic power of the world.

However, it was not only this pooling of resources among neighbors that gave a decisive impulse to the region. Almost simultaneously, all the MERCOSUR countries underwent such chaotic socio-economic crises in the nineties, largely due to the application of the neo-liberal IMF free trade model in which they were forced to explore other development models wherein the state takes on a central role. “Another World is Possible,” the slogan of the first World Social Forum in Brazil (2000) began to take on real existence. The 2001 collapse of Argentina is a good example but that economic implosion had already transpired in Venezuela and was the backdrop of the first election as President of former military officer Hugo Chavez. Evo Morales, the first indigenous American ever to be elected president, is now leading Bolivia after much turmoil under IMF sponsored policies. The transformation policies of Morales are shaking that country to its roots as the traditional elites see their privileged positions threatened for the first time in history. Paraguay under former Catholic bishop Fernando Lugo, now elected President, is beginning to trod on a similar road searching for a more equitable and sustainable model of development that is distinctly different from the neo-liberal model broached by US-sponsored institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank. Meanwhile, the US, Canada and Mexico continue to espouse free market principles although the recent financial crisis on Wall Street has seen the massive intervention of the US government to save the economy in a move that has been branded as “nationalization” or “US socialism.” Whatever the final outcome, Latin America will undoubtedly continue its own distinctive way for the foreseeable future.

In short, Latin Americans are searching for a new model of social economic development which will finally address the endemic ill of the continent which is social inequality, that is, the tremendous gap dividing the haves and the have–nots or the rich classes from the poor majority. The news that significant advances have been made in terms of social and economic rights in countries such as Venezuela, Brazil and even Argentina shows that positive fruits can be harvested from these new policies. But it is true that there is a backlash from the conservative, oligarchic elites allied with the US who see their status threatened and above all, have a powerful weapon at their disposal which is the control of the media. Mass media influences public opinion and is the major force installing political figures, who in the name of law and order, seek to roll back new progressive policies.

The response is participative democracy expressed in plebiscites and referenda such as the recent ones held in Bolivia and Ecuador. Here, the population are mobilized in support of the new policies whereas sometimes in local city or provincial elections, the traditional sectors can still hold forth as happened in Buenos Aires city where the mayor now is a conservative businessman Mauricio Macri who is intent on rolling back all progressive policies here by privatizing key sectors of life. This virtual war with entrenched conservative elites will be the backdrop of many future conflicts in the region.


The Struggle Against Impunity

The other fundamental feature of this new Latin American identity is the priority given to human  rights and specifically the struggle against impunity. Whereas the US has retrenched into anti- uman rights rhetoric and practices under Bush, justifying such positions in the aftermath of 9- 11 as necessary tools for the global war on terrorism, in South America, impunity laws for perpetrators of human rights violations committed during past US-sponsored military dictatorships have been overturned. For instance, in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Brazil, Peru, Bolivia and Paraguay, human rights trials have begun wherein perpetrators of crimes committed more than 30 years ago have now to respond for their criminal acts in the court room. It is pathetic to hear these aged perpetrators vent their hatred and denouncements of subversion and communism in order to justify torture, assassinations and enforced disappearances. The doctrine of “crime against humanity” is invoked to continue the prosecutions after statuary limitations and the wall of impunity has finally been breached. Even in Peru, a former democratically elected president Alberto Fujimori was extradited from Chile and his trial for charges of corruption and cases of enforced disappearances has begun in Lima.

In many countries, former secret detention centers have been converted into memorial sites and files coming from that period of Latin American history are being collected into special memorial archives. Reparation and compensation programs for victims and their families are in place.

Undoubtedly much still needs to be done in meeting all the demands of the Latin American families of the disappeared but the way ahead is now clear and the major task is to ensure that this positive process continues and full responses are given. New cases of enforced disappearances still occur in countries such as Mexico and Colombia (both are still havens for US-sponsored antiterrorism doctrines) but all self-respecting democracies in the region know that it is their obligation to fight impunity and combat all enforced disappearances in whatever form or shape.  This state of affairs has been a major achievement of the Latin American human rights movement. It permits us to move on to the other substantial part of any human rights agenda which is the enjoyment by common people of their full economic, social and cultural rights. Far from over, the fight for the full enactment of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 60 years after its proclamation has only begun in Latin America.


 


Patricio Rice is a survivor of enforced disappearance during the dictatorship in Argentina. An Irish by nationality, he received support from the Irish government during his secret detention. For which reason, he was resurfaced and later released after a year of imprisonment. He is presently the FEDEFAM adviser.


VOICE December  2008

 

Copyright 2008  AFAD - Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Web Design by: www.listahan.org