Showing posts with label Sebastian Pinera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sebastian Pinera. Show all posts

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Police clash with protesters in Chile



Chilean police used a water cannon to disperse protesters.

Source: Press TV
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/181149.html

Police in the Chilean city of Valparaiso have clashed with demonstrators protesting against the government of President Sebastian Pinera's policies.

Most demonstrators were peaceful, but bands of hooded protesters attacked police and smashed shop windows and damaged other properties.

The demonstration -- organized by the country's main trade union movement, the CUT -- was in protest at Pinera's environmental, education and labor policies, state-run BBC reported.

Protesters said his promises were “in the opposite way from those the populations were demanding.”

Many had come to protest against the construction of a dam that would flood 6,000 hectares of land in the remote southern Chilean Patagonia.

The environmentalists predict that the construction of the dam will not only have immediate impacts on the Chilean ecosystem, but will affect the environment of neighboring Argentina, and in the long run will affect the Latin American countries of Uruguay, Paraguay and even Bolivia.

But the government says the HidroAysen project is needed to meet Chile's increasing demand for electricity and is expected to give its final approval in June.

"We can't say we need energy, consume it abundantly, and at the same time oppose all of its sources," said Pinera during his state of the nation address.

Besides HidroAysen, Pinera has approved the construction of three very pollutant coal thermo-electric plants this year, one of which will be the biggest in Latin America.

Chilean officials have ruled out nuclear energy following Japan's nuclear disaster, saying Chile is as seismic as Japan.

The Latin American country witnessed an 8.8-magnitude earthquake on February 7, 2010 which entailed a tsunami.

Monday, January 3, 2011

'Chile, Paraguay to recognize Palestine'


PA Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki

Source: Press TV
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/158377.html


Chile and Paraguay are set to declare Palestine as an independent state based on 1967 borders to continue the move in Latin American countries, a Palestinian Authority (PA) official says.

PA Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki announced on Sunday that Chile and Paraguay will declare their recognition of an independent Palestinian state in the coming weeks, Ha'aretz reported.

More than 130 countries have officially recognized Palestine as a state based on the 1967 borders, the boundaries that existed before Israel occupied East al-Quds (Jerusalem), the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.

The United States and Israel have criticized the move and have so far refused to recognize an independent Palestinian state.

Last month, Uruguay announced that it will recognize Palestine in March 2011.

In early December, Brazil, Argentina, and Bolivia also recognized Palestine as an independent state.

Chile's President Sebastian Pinera is scheduled to visit the occupied West Bank in three months, the PA foreign minister said.

Maliki also said that Ecuador is to follow Brazil and open a PA embassy on its soil. Ecuador became the fifth Latin American country that recognized Palestine in late December.

Acting PA Chief Mahmoud Abbas said that the recent move by several Latin American nations would force the US and Israel to return to negotiations after the latest round of talks collapsed in late September because Tel Aviv refused to extend a partial freeze on its construction and expansion of illegal settlements on the occupied Palestinian territories.

Abbas was in Brazil on Dec. 31 to lay the head cornerstone for the building of the Palestinian Embassy.

ICJ delivers ruling in favour of South Africa

South Africa's Closing Argument Against Israel for Genocide at the ICJ