Showing posts with label AMERICAS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMERICAS. Show all posts

Betancourt rescuer wore Red Cross

Red Cross emblem

Colombia's president says a Red Cross symbol was worn by a member of the military rescue mission that freed 15 hostages from left-wing Farc rebels.

Alvaro Uribe said he had apologised to the organisation for the mistake made against orders by a nervous soldier.

Misuse of the Red Cross emblem is considered a violation of the Geneva Conventions and international law.

Rescuers tricked rebels into releasing Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other hostages by posing as international aid workers.

President Uribe's acknowledgement followed reports that the Red Cross emblem had being displayed on clothing worn by Colombian intelligence officers during the rescue on 2 July.

Mr Uribe said that just one member of the team had worn the emblem "contradicting official orders" because he was nervous about the operation.

Risk to aid workers

The president said the name of the official would not be disclosed "because we do not want to affect his career".

"We regret that this occurred," said Mr Uribe.

President Alvaro Uribe (l) and Gen Freddy Padilla

Falsely portraying military personnel as Red Cross workers is against the Geneva Conventions because it could put humanitarian workers at risk when carrying out missions in war zones.

It also undermines the neutrality of the Red Cross.

Yves Heller, a Red Cross spokesman based in Bogota, said: "Parties to the conflict must respect the Red Cross emblem at all times and under all circumstances."

"We will continue working in the field in Colombia."

Mexico probes online 'hitmen ads'

Killer adverts online

Mexican police are investigating a number of classified ads on the internet which purport to be from hitmen offering the services.

The ads can be found alongside ones for private tuition or domestic help.

In one of them, a person describing himself as an ex-military killer offers "discreet, professional services" for $6,000 (£3,000).

Hired killers are a problem across a country which has seen at least 1,400 killings this year.

Most of the killings are related to drug cartels battling for control of the illegal drugs trade to the US. Reports say the cartels have camps to train killers.

The dead include dealers and gunmen as well as more than 400 police officers and other public officials, this year. Some 25,000 troops are now deployed around Mexico to try to break the cartels.

But correspondents say an ineffective justice system means many killers are never caught.

Help needed

That may be why they are prepared to publically look for work. In the online adverts on one classified site, one advert reads: "Assassin ex-military professional and discreet. Work guaranteed in 10 days or less. Have worked in Spain. $6,000. Serious requests only" and gives a hotmail address as a contact.

Another offering "hitman for hire" asks: "Problems with a certain person? Do you want me to solve it? Write to me. 100% professional, we don't take money in advance."

The classified ads site also appears to be a place where those needing the services of a killer might go.

One advert in the Wanted section reads: "I need to contact a killer for a probable contract in the DF (Federal District of Mexico) must be reliable. it is a simple job."

Police spokesman Miguel Amelio said the problem of hitmen is one that "the whole country is facing: people who offer their service and charge for killing someone".

He told the Reforma newspaper that police had not ruled out the fact that the ads were fake, but all were being investigated.

Diary: Colorado River drought

The south-western US is suffering its eighth consecutive year of drought. There are concerns that the Colorado River, which has sustained life in the area for thousands of years, can no longer meet the needs of the tens of millions of people living in major cities such as Las Vegas and Los Angeles.

The BBC's Matthew Price is travelling along the river to investigate the scale of the problem and is sending a series of diary items from there.

DAY TWO: LAKE MEAD

It takes slightly longer to get to Lake Mead these days.

That's because for the past few years, the largest man-made lake in the US has been shrinking.

Map of the Colorado river

So you have to drive further round to hit the water's edge, towards the famous Hoover Dam, which was built back in the 1930s to help regulate the flow of the Colorado River and to guarantee a constant water supply to Las Vegas and other cities in the American south-west.

Eventually you arrive at a launch ramp. "American Angler Captain R W 'Bob' Wood" (that's what his card says) is waiting on the pontoon with his fishing boat.

"We used to launch the boat clear back where you turned off on the highway. It's probably close to a half mile away," he says.

In just six or seven years, the water level has dropped significantly. Where we are now bobbing on the surface is 102ft (31m) below the old water level.

Bathtub line

We idle out of the little harbour - the marina used to be here, but a few months ago they towed it away because the water level had made it difficult to get the boats in and out. It's now further round the lake, in deeper water.

Pontoon at Lake Mead (Photo: Kevin Bishop) To the left there's a water intake pump, way, way above our heads. It used to be on the water's surface.

There are towering rock formations, rising up above the land, that just a few years ago were islands in the lake.

The most telling sight though is what they call the bathtub line.

We speed towards one section of the lake shore, where the distant white line gets larger and larger, until the boat is alongside a vast towering cliff face, perhaps 600ft or 700ft high.

The rock is naturally black, but where the water used to be it has turned white, because of the calcium in the water. The bathtub line is 100ft high here.

This matters.

The reservoir, and the Colorado River which serves it, is still the principle water source for millions of Americans. Some argue that one day there may not be enough water to feed the cities here.

There are disagreements as to why water levels in the lake are dropping.

Many environmentalists argue climate change is to blame.

Richard Seager from the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory told me that they expect global warming to reduce the amount of water in the area by 10% to 15% by the middle of the century.

"It's comparable to the 1930s dust bowl drought, but instead of that lasting just a few years… it will become the new drier climate that will be there for ever more," he says.

Others - Captain Bob included - do not believe climate change is to blame, arguing that weather is cyclical. He is certain the lake will regain its normal levels one day.

Desert

In a sense, it does not matter what is causing it. Both sides of this debate agree on the fact that humans are using too much water in this part of the US.

"Down in San Diego, there are people watering the grass - and it's raining! Too many people using the water, yes," Captain Bob says.

It is not just people watering their gardens - indeed most scientists say that is almost a minor problem.

It is estimated that around one tenth of the water taken from reservoirs like Lake Mead is used by the urban area - by households, hotels and businesses.

Most of the water that comes down the Colorado River, around 90%, is used by agriculture, and most of that is in vast farms, which help keep America in fruit and veg.

Picnic table at Lake Mead (Photo: Kevin Bishop)

Others are smaller concerns, like that of Robert Houston who farms up near the north rim of the Grand Canyon.

Like farms across this desert area, he sprays his crop of alfalfa with a series of sprinklers.

"Water resources are very scarce," he agrees.

Are they being overused, I ask.

"I guess there's always that chance. The whole world's getting overused. All our resources are getting overused. [There are] more and more people."

But, he adds: "We might as well use the water rather than just letting it flow into the ocean."

Back on Lake Mead, that bathtub rim of white flashing past our heads as we speed back to the pontoon, Captain Bob admits that they are now relying on the weather. They need more snow up on the Rocky Mountains, he says, to feed the river and the lake.

Still, he says, "Sooner or later water is going to become a major, major problem.

"We have to do things to curb water usage."

It's not exactly a radical idea, considering the fact that we're in the middle of a region dominated by deserts and naturally low precipitation.

Do though people who live here realise that they are living in a desert?

"I don't think they do," says Captain Bob. "I think the older people realise it. I think the people who move here from [elsewhere] haven't a clue. They have no idea that it's dry."

Tomorrow Matthew Price rides along with the water police in Las Vegas, one of the ways city officials are trying to reduce the water that people use.

DAY ONE: PAGE, ARIZONA

It takes several hours to get to Page, Arizona. From anywhere.

Banks of the Colorado River (Photo: Kevin Bishop: The drive, though, is far from dull. It's one of those journeys that can make you feel incredibly insignificant.

Vast landscapes dwarf everything made by man. The cars and trucks speeding along the desert highways appear as small as model vehicles.

You could stick the skyscrapers of Manhattan, from where I flew in a few hours earlier, next to the immense rock formations, and they would look like Toy Town.

In places the landscape falls sharply away into canyons, in others it rises up towards plateaus, and everywhere the geological history of the place is obvious.

Today, as I walked alongside the Colorado River just outside the town of Page, I saw two prints in the red Navajo sandstone, each with three "toes". It was the fossilised footprint of a dinosaur which had stood at the same spot many thousands of years before me.

This land is sacred to the Native Americans who live here.

Shana Watahomigie is a park ranger with the National Parks Service. She is also a member of the Havasupai tribe, which still lives alongside the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.

Glen Canyon dam (Photo: Kevin Bishop)

Havasupai means "people of the blue-green water", and, as we dip our toes in the chilly river, Ms Watahomigie tells me the Colorado is part of her history.

"It's my lifeline, my bloodline. We have a lot of respect for the river, water and the earth."

The Colorado River springs up from the snowy peaks of the Rocky Mountains to the north. It winds through the south-western states, towards Mexico and the ocean.

Source of life

The river helped form the Grand Canyon. It is one of planet Earth's most iconic rivers.

It has also been the source of life for this region and the people living here for hundreds of years, which is now a problem, as far as people like Shana Watahomigie are concerned.

Two vast dams were built along the river in the last century. They have caused changes to the ecology of the river.

The lakes behind the dams supply water to agriculture, to industry and to tens of millions of people living in the south-western US.

"We are compromising [the river] by controlling it," says Ms Watahomigie. "The plants have suffered. The wildlife has suffered, as well as human beings. Now the water isn't reaching them."

On the river though, as I get onto a raft with Drew Grim, a local river guide, it is hard to see the problem.

It is a haven. Our boat glides almost silently past the terracotta red canyon walls that rise up high on either side above us.

The river seems to be flowing well, there are plenty of other tourist boats out on the river, there are fishermen angling for trout.

It is what is happening behind the dams on the waterway that is the problem.

"Lake Powell [the lake formed by the Glen Canyon Dam] has been less than half full for a number of years and it didn't show signs of going up," says Mr Grim.

"This year we did get some good snow, and levels rose, quite dramatically, eight inches at a time, but this is just one year."

Trees of salt

For the best part of a decade the water levels have been falling rapidly.

The tens of millions of water users downstream, in huge sprawling cities like Las Vegas and Los Angeles, are simply using too much water.

Colorado River (Photo: Kevin Bishop) So too, Drew Grim says, is some of the vegetation along the river. Tamarisk trees - otherwise known as salt-cedars - were brought to the region from overseas decades ago to try to stop erosion elsewhere in the south west.

Their seeds spread, and now the plants line much of the river.

"The problem is the amount of water they drink. They drink a tremendous amount," says Mr Grim. "This adds to the problem of water, as now we have our fresh water source being sucked dry by these invasive trees."

He says they are trying to remove the tamarisk trees. Once they were seen as no particular threat.

"Now it's becoming more of an issue, since water's such a concern. Anything we can do to save water, we need to try."

This though is a pretty minor problem, compared to the vast amounts of water used by households, and, more importantly, by agriculture.

Washington diary: Political humour

By Matt Frei
BBC News, Washington

In America these days, political humour is a field of egg shells interspersed with a few safe stepping stones.

Cartoon on the front cover of the New Yorker depicting Barack Obama in Muslim garb, and Michelle Obama as a terrorist

Jokes about Hillary, although less compelling now than when she was still running for President, are one such stone.

So are jokes about Bill, although his once famously errant libido seems to have become distinctly off-off Broadway.

President Bush continues to provide a rich reservoir of humour.

He is the open strip-mine of satire: cheap, easy access and in no immediate danger of running dry - no offshore drilling required.

Jibes about Senator McCain's age practically fill the nocturnal airtime of the comedy shows.

Self-deprecating

What all the above politicians - with the possible exception of Bill Clinton - have in common is that they relish (or pretend to relish) making fun of themselves.

Towards the end of her campaign, Hillary was practically doing stand-up.

President Bush partially built his re-election strategy on sending up his mangling of the English language, becoming the first successful candidate in US history to turn inarticulacy and poor grades into an electoral asset.

Even the glowering Dick Cheney likes to crack a joke at his own expense.

He tells a hilarious one about holding his hand on his heart during the National Anthem only to find every doctor in the audience rushing towards him with a defibrillator.

Mr McCain likes to say that he is "older than dirt and has more scars than Frankenstein".

If politics is a minefield, then satire, self-deprecating jokes and irony are its minesweepers and detonation teams.

"The magazine was not making fun of Mr Obama, it was ridiculing the people who think he might be a Muslim"

Send us your comments

The extraordinary fuss over the front cover of this week's New Yorker magazine, which shows Barack Obama dressed in traditional Muslim garb, his wife Michelle looking like a cross between a Colombian Farc guerrilla and Jimi Hendrix, and an American flag burning in the Oval Office fireplace, illustrates the perils of Obama humour for the hallowed guild of comedians and for the candidate.

Firstly, if you have to explain a joke ad nauseam, as the editor of The New Yorker David Remnick and his supporters have been forced to do, then it probably was not very funny in the first place.

In fact, most people seemed to have missed the joke.

The magazine was not making fun of Senator Obama; it was ridiculing the people who think he might be a Muslim, who believe that a fist bump is the terrorists' version of a high-five and who are convinced that if Mr Obama refuses to willingly wear a flag pin he might as well put a match to the Stars and Stripes.

In other words, the New Yorker was making fun of those "bitter", poor white people who "cling" to guns and religion that Mr Obama referred to in a speech in April.

And as we now know, that fragile, thin-skinned group of voters is off limits.

"He's a Red Neck. Don't hurt his feelings!"

Crass and tasteless

In fact the only safe rule is to stick to telling jokes about your own ethnic, religious, gender, salary, allergy group.

Don't go off-piste. Ever.

Although The New Yorker cover did not touch overtly on Mr Obama's African-American origins, any hint of racial stereotyping is, of course, an absolute no-go area.

Can you imagine if last week's comments about Obama's "nuts" had been made by a white man?

There would have been demands for his scalp.

Jay Leno

He would have been forced to resign, go into hiding, while being compared to the lynch mobs of the darkest days of racial hatred.

As it happened, Jesse Jackson was merely ridiculed for being crass and tasteless.

I believe his comments were so absurd that they actually cried out for a quick-witted, perhaps even gently crude response from Mr Obama himself.

Yes - forgive me, readers - but this was an opportunity missed for a candidate who needs to remind voters that he is more than just the rhetorical embodiment of nouns like Hope and Change.

Pincer movement

Barack Obama used to be funny.

Who can forget his comment about smoking and inhaling dope: "Of course I inhaled. I thought that was the point!"

When he introduced himself to the American public he used to start most of his speeches with a quip about how his wife was really the boss and would not let him run for office unless he quit smoking.

This was funny because it jelled with Michelle's feisty image.

Nowadays Barack Obama is boxed in by a pincer movement of political correctness: his race on one flank, his squeaky-clean image as the torch-bearer of hope and change on the other.

The guardians of Mr Obama's saintly image do not tolerate satire of any sort and the New Yorker cover has merely reinforced those limits.

Joke about Barack Hussein Obama at your peril!

This is bad news for late night comedians, who treat Obama as if he was a fragile Faberge egg.

But it is even worse news for the candidate himself.

If he is no longer making fun of himself, because he is too busy proving to the nation that he is a serious commander-in-chief-in-waiting and if his followers regard humour as apostasy, then the man is in danger of becoming an icon on a pedestal.

And we know what happens to them.

Voters, especially in this country, like to imagine that they can have a beer with their President, even though any attempts to do so will probably result in a half nelson from the secret service.

Al Gore failed to pass that test.

So did John Kerry.

And although Obama is really quite down to earth and millions of Americans would love to sit down with him for a drink and a chat, they might be too awestruck and hamstrung to think of anything to say, for fear of sounding crass, offensive or stupid.

Policies apart, therein lies a danger.

If unchecked it breeds a resentment that could express itself in the privacy of the ballot booth with a vote for the grumpy old maverick who looks as if he would be happy to down vodka shots with you, even if his doctors did not allow it.

Court seeks to stay US executions

Death row inmate Jose Medellin

The US has been advised not to execute five Mexican nationals on death row by the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

The ICJ - the UN's highest court - had previously ruled that the men had been denied the right to help from their consulate after their arrests.

Mexico says the US has not reviewed the cases - as advised by the ICJ.

The court told the US it should not execute the men before it made its final judgement.

The five are among 51 Mexicans on death row in the United States who were not told after arrest that they were entitled to assistance from Mexican consulates.

Bush overruled

All five are currently on death row in Texas.

A general view of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, file pic from February 2008 One of them, Jose Medellin, is scheduled for execution in less than three weeks for his part in the gang rape and murder of two teenage girls.

After the executions were cleared to proceed in the US, Mexico went back to the world court last month to stop the sentences from being carried out.

The international court called for a review of all their cases, and President George W Bush directed state courts to do so, but the US Supreme Court overruled him, saying he had no authority to intervene.

The ICJ is the highest United Nations court. Set up in 1946, it offers advisory opinions to international disputes brought to it by member states.

Six die as Bolivian boats collide

map

At least six people have died and one is missing after a boat collided with another vessel and sank on Lake Titicaca, Bolivian police have said.

The two boats, carrying a total of 48 people, hit one another in the dark on Tuesday evening, police said.

The accident, which happened in an area known as the Strait of Tiquina, split one of them in half, officials said.

One of the vessels was reported to be carrying Brazilian nationals, although all the dead are said to be Bolivian.

The victims were travelling on board a boat called the Cisne, which split in two after being in a collision with another vessel, the Mercurio, a police spokesman said.

The collision happened at around 1930 (2330 GMT) on Tuesday, when it was already dark.