Month: November 2019

Home / Month: November 2019

BIHAC, Bosnia-Herzegovina  — 

A prominent humanitarian group is warning that migrants trying to reach Western Europe are living in “dangerously cold and harsh conditions” in Bosnia, where hundreds have rallied amid tensions over the influx of people fleeing war and poverty.

The protesters in the northwestern city of Bihac on Friday demanded the closure of overcrowded refugee camps and the relocation of the migrants from the city area. They carried banners reading “Free Bihac!” and chanted anti-migrant slogans.

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Bosnia has been overwhelmed by the arrival of migrants heading toward Europe along the so-called Balkan route. Most migrants flock to the northwest section, which borders European Union member Croatia.

This has led to tensions in the border area, with local authorities demanding that other parts of the country share the migrant burden and take in some of the more than 6,000 people staying in the area.

The Doctors Without Borders group warned that “people may die without adequate shelter and other basic services” in Bosnia, where many migrants are sleeping in makeshift shelters and abandoned homes.

“Four official centers for migrants exist, but services are inadequate and tensions are high, leading most people to stay elsewhere,” the report added.

It singled out the improvised Vucjak refugee camp in northwestern Bosnia, describing it as a “dangerous and inhumane place” that does not meet minimum living standards. The camp is located on a landfill and next to a minefield from the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

“People arrive at our clinic from Vucjak in flip-flops, without socks or jackets, a lot of them suffering from respiratory infections and from skin diseases caused by the horrific living conditions,” said Nihal Osman, Doctors Without Borders’ deputy field coordinator. “It should be closed now.”

In a bid to pressure the central Bosnian government to relocate some of the migrants, the regional government vowed to fully restrict migrant movements at the two main camps beginning Friday.

Bosnia’s central government has said it would turn two former army barracks in other parts of the country into new migrant facilities. This was hailed by the EU mission in Bosnia, which expressed hope that it would lead to the closure of the Vucjak camp.

“We expect all the authorities in the country to continue working together in good faith to find ways for burden sharing and long-term solutions,” the EU said.

Ethnically divided since the war, Bosnia has failed to come up with a unified, efficient response to the migrant crisis. The Bosnian Serb part of the country has refused to accept any migrants on its territory and has blocked efforts to deploy the army to stem the influx of migrants from Serbia. Many other Bosnian regions have also rejected hosting refugee centers.

A municipal official in Bihac, Ermic Zulic, said both Bosnia and the EU have failed to manage the migrant influx.

“The situation is out of control. The situation has escalated,” he complained. “They are telling us that even greater number of migrants will be pouring in next year, so we had to react.”

While many Bosnians have expressed sympathy with the migrants because of their own war experience, many also have protested their presence and demanded that the migrants be moved or restricted to the refugee camps.

Fadil Dizdarevic, who lives close to the Bira camp in Bihac, said, “We want this to stop, we want them out of here.” At Friday’s protest outside the camp, another resident, Omer Demirovic, insisted, “We are demanding they be moved out of the city.”

No incidents were reported at the gathering, which was secured by about a dozen policemen.

Inside, migrants said police wouldn’t let them move freely about the town.

“Everything is a problem. It’s cold and everybody is dirty,” said Obit Han from Afghanistan.


MEXICO CITY — 

Postelection violence causing turmoil in the South American nation of Bolivia could “spin out of control” if officials resort to the use of disproportionate force, the United Nations human rights chief said Saturday.

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Michelle Bachelet, the former president of Chile, issued her statement after the deadliest postelection incident to date — the killings on Friday of at least nine people and injuries to dozens of others as coca-leaf farmers sympathetic to ousted President Evo Morales protested and clashed with security services in the town of Sacaba, outside the city of Cochabamba.

Reports indicated that gunshots were responsible for most if not all of the deaths, and that the majority of victims were coca-leaf farmers, whose crop is the prime ingredient in cocaine. Surviving protesters and family members of the victims blamed security services, but government officials said some demonstrators were also armed during clashes.

“I am really concerned that the situation in Bolivia could spin out of control,” said Bachelet, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, in a statement. “The country is split and people on both sides of the political divide are extremely angry. In a situation like this, repressive actions by the authorities will simply stoke that anger even further and are likely to jeopardize any possible avenue for dialogue.”

At least 21 people have been killed in the turmoil since the disputed Oct. 20 elections, Bolivia’s human rights ombudsman said.

Morales said he won his fourth term in the balloting, but protesters took to the streets alleging that the election was rigged. Morales stepped down under military pressure last Sunday and fled to Mexico, where he was granted political asylum.

The leftist ex-president says he was the victim of a right-wing “coup” backed by the United States. The Trump administration called his departure a step forward for democracy in Bolivia.

Meanwhile, in a Twitter message from Mexico, ex-president Morales accused the interim administration of Bolivian caretaker President Jeanine Añez of issuing a new decree that shields military personnel from responsibility for acts of violence. “It’s a blank check of impunity to massacre the people,” Morales wrote.

But Jerjes Justiniano, minister of the presidency for the caretaker government in La Paz, denied that the new decree was a “license to kill,” reported the Bolivian daily El Deber. Rather, the minister described the decree as a series of guidelines to ensure that the military “acts in proportion with every situation, which does not mean use of arms in every case,” El Deber reported.

Añez, a former opposition senator, assumed what she called the interim presidency on Tuesday and vowed to restore peace and organize new elections. Morales has labeled her government illegitimate and called for national dialogue brokered by the United Nations or the Vatican.

Añez has accused Morales of “inciting” chaos from Mexico and declared that he would be banned from participating in new elections and should face arrest if he returns to Bolivia. Morales’ allies have been staging daily protests and setting up road blockades calling for his return. Authorities have voiced concern about shortages of fuel and foodstuffs because of blocked roadways.


BANGKOK, Thailand — 

U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Sunday the United States and South Korea have indefinitely postponed a joint military exercise in an “act of goodwill” toward North Korea.

The move comes even as Japan’s defense minister, whose country feels threatened by repeated North Korean missile launches, told Esper “no one could be optimistic about” changing the North’s behavior.

The statement by Japan’s defense chief, Taro Kono, was a stark illustration of the difficulties facing the U.S. and its international allies and partners as they struggle to get North Korea back to negotiations to eliminate its nuclear weapons and missiles. Talks launched by President Trump in 2018 have stalled with no resumption in sight.

Although the U.S. military for years has called its joint military exercises with South Korea an important means of keeping troops and commanders ready for combat on short notice, Trump has called them a waste of money and a provocation to the North.

Esper announced the postponement of the military exercise at a joint news conference with his South Korean counterpart, Jeong Kyeong-doo. They were in Bangkok to attend an Asia defense ministers’ conference.

Esper insisted the postponement was not a concession to North Korea but rather an attempt to “keep the door open” to diplomacy to eliminate North Korea’s nuclear weapons.

“I see this as a good-faith effort by the United States and the Republic of Korea to enable peace, to shape … to facilitate a political agreement — a deal, if you will — that leads to the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula,” Esper told reporters.

North Korea hardly seemed ready to reciprocate. Shortly after Esper and Jeong spoke, the North Korean foreign ministry issued a statement of defiance. It said it has no plans to negotiate over its nuclear programs, even if talks were to resume, unless the U.S. offers to first discuss the withdrawal of its “hostile” policies against Pyongyang.

North Korea’s statement also criticized Washington’s support of a recent United Nations resolution condemning the North’s widespread human rights violations, saying that the resolution shows continued U.S. intent to isolate the North and destroy its political system.

The North also has harshly criticized U.S.-South Korean military drills as provocative and as preparations for an invasion.

Kono, the Japanese defense minister, met with Esper and Jeong after they made their announcement. In remarks with reporters and photographers present, Kono said it was important that the three nations consult closely “under the current situation where no one could be optimistic about North Korea.”

He added that the North Koreans have launched “more than 20 missiles this year including new types of missiles as well as a submarine-launched ballistic missile” in violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions.

Kono called North Korea “a serious threat to peace and stability” in Japan and across the region.

Esper told reporters he did not consider the postponement a concession to North Korea, although it follows earlier cutbacks in the scale and prominence of U.S.-South Korean exercises.

“We have made this decision as an act of goodwill to contribute to an environment conducive to diplomacy and the advancement of peace,” Esper said.

As recently as Friday, when Esper was in Seoul to consult with South Korean officials, there was no word on postponing the military air exercise, which had been called Vigilant Ace.

Seoul and Washington had scaled back the exercise recently and changed the name, but North Korea strongly objected, calling it evidence of a lack of interest in improving relations.

Jeong said the exercise had been put off pending further consultations between Seoul and Washington. No new date has been set.

Esper said Seoul and Washington encourage North Korea “to demonstrate the same goodwill” as it considers decisions on its own military training, exercises and testing.

He also urged the North to return to the negotiating table “without precondition or hesitation.”

Esper said that even without the planned exercise of South Korean and U.S. air forces, both militaries “will remain at a high state of readiness” for potential combat.

The U.S. has about 28,000 troops in South Korea.


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Argentina’s Right-Wing Awakening

November 17, 2019 | News | No Comments

n more ways than one, Argentina’s October 25 elections represented a watershed moment in the country’s political history. After twelve years of a populist, center-left government, Argentine politics are on the brink of turning right. Even if Peronist Daniel Scioli beats out conservative businessman and Cambiemos coalition candidate Mauricio Macri in today’s presidential runoff election, the landscape of Argentine political life is likely to be changed for the foreseeable future.

Last month’s elections confirmed that there is now a strong center-right party in Argentina. The leadership of that party is decidedly porteño in origin, unapologetically pro-market in its ideological orientation, and led by members of the country’s economic elite. What’s more, Macri’s Cambiemos coalition has shown that it has the ability to win votes among the poor on its own.

The elections were not good for Peronism. Scioli raked in the lowest share for the party since 1983 (37 percent), while the Cambiemos coalition surprised everyone, obtaining 34 percent of the national vote. The election in the province of Buenos Aires, which contains 38 percent of all Argentine voters, included even greater losses for Peronist candidates.

Even though the province of Buenos Aires is historically a Peronist stronghold — a non-Peronist governor has not been elected there since 1983 — Cambiemos won the governorship of the province by four points (39 percent to 35 percent). In the cities of the province, voters rejected half of the Peronist mayoral incumbents. This included the defeat of a Peronist trade union leader and sitting mayor, Francisco “Barba” Gutiérrez, who lost in the city of Quilmes to a TV chef.

For the first time, Peronism was even defeated in the town of Berisso, nicknamed “the cradle of Peronism.” The first protesters demanding Juan Domingo Perón’s liberation from prison famously marched from Berisso to Buenos Aires in 1945, a moment that is considered the birth of the Peronist movement.

Moreover, as electoral distribution maps show, the results of October’s elections mean that, for the first time in Argentine history, the same party could control the city of Buenos Aires (which began electing its head of government in 1996), the province of Buenos Aires, and the presidency.

Both the new governor of Buenos Aires and the Buenos Aires mayor are close allies of Mauricio Macri, having risen to their current positions from within Macri’s own inner circle rather than holding positions of local leadership. Neither of them have their own loyal constituencies and would likely answer to Mauricio Macri in a very direct and vertical manner, should he be elected.

A rightward shift in Argentina’s electoral landscape does not necessarily have to do with the candidates per se. Both Macri and Scioli are the sons of wealthy businessmen, and there is little evidence that their public policy portfolios are drastically different.

While Macri’s father amassed his fortune as a public works and housing contractor working for the Argentine state, Scioli’s father was one of the owners of Canal 9, a massively popular TV network in the sixties and seventies. Both came into the public eye through sports; Scioli was a speed-boat racer, and Macri was the elected president of one of Argentina’s more popular soccer clubs, Boca Juniors. And both bring executive experience. For eight years, Scioli was governor of the province of Buenos Aires, while Mauricio Macri has governed the city of Buenos Aires for two terms.

Instead, the rightward shift is more structural, and has emerged out of Macri’s success in building what Argentina’s economic establishment has never had: its own party.

Argentina’s political party system is, as most analysts stress, a curious animal. In the twentieth century, it had a relatively strong party system, particularly compared to other South American countries. The only two national parties — the Peronist party, officially known as the Partido Justicialista, and the Unión Cívica Radical (UCR) — split the vote almost evenly in the first democratic election of 1983, after the country’s military dictatorship came to an end.

But what made Argentina’s political party system so unique is that neither one of these two main formations could be accurately characterized as a right-wing or leftist party. Rather, each contained its own respective left and right wings, a fact which often led to ferocious intra-party conflict. Given that Cambiemos is a much more ideologically defined, pro-market coalition, this situation is about to change.

Another unique characteristic of Argentine political history was the way that the country’s economic elite lost control of the political process in the early twentieth century.

Argentina’s economic and cultural elite, associated with landed interests and guided by a free-trade ideology, spearheaded the modernization of Argentina starting around 1880. However, urban middle-class demands for political participation at the turn of the century challenged the “oligarchical democracy” of the  Argentine belle epoque. Argentina’s conservative parties collapsed under the weight of this transition from a limited democracy to a mass democracy.

The rise of the middle-class UCR initially displaced the conservative political elites. The emergence of the working-class-based Peronist movement in the middle of the twentieth century completed this process. Throughout the twentieth century, Argentine politics never included an elite party or coalition like the British Conservative Party or even the Chilean Concertación para el Cambio — a coalition party fronted by members of that country’s elite, with both an openly pro-business economic agenda and the capacity to win the vote of popular sectors in fair and open elections.

This is not to say that members of the economic and cultural elite did not have political power; in many ways they did. However, that power was not specifically electoral.

Because neither the Sociedad Rural Argentina (the lobby of Argentina’s large landowners) nor the Unión Industrial Argentina (the country’s industrialists’ association) could compete for votes directly, their interests were represented indirectly, often enforced through military intervention, or, after 1983, through the outsourcing of electoral power to neoliberal Peronist candidates, as occurred under former Argentine president, Carlos Menem. Cambiemos changes that, so to speak. This is a party that is directly run by its owners: fronted by a wealthy businessman and surrounded by former CEOs and technocrats.

The policy implications of a possible Cambiemos presidency remain difficult to parse. There is no question that most of the economic and policy advisers that the coalition has recruited advocate what political scientists Steven Levitsky and Kenneth Roberts have called “social liberalism” — that is, support for maximum freedom for economic markets and a reduction of state intervention, with the exception of some anti-poverty initiatives. In matters of foreign policy, leaders of Cambiemos have also suggested that they would realign Argentina toward the United States, and away from Brazil and other South American nations.

Yet the extent of the promised change is hard to gauge. The Cambiemos leadership continues to adhere to a strategy of promising as little as possible, even as it builds a base of volunteers that the party has recruited from NGOs, the business community, and private universities.

Macri’s record as mayor of Buenos Aires under PRO, the main partner of the Cambiemos coalition, may speak to one path his government would pursue, should he win in today’s elections. As mayor, Macri governed the city of Buenos Aires by making quiet changes rather than initiating sudden transformations. He defunded social programs that his administration disliked, rather than shutting them down completely. In Macri’s Buenos Aires, nominal support for public schools continued, for example, but increasingly special subsidies went to private schools instead. The same was true of his approach to the city’s understaffed and under-resourced public health system.

At the same time, a Macri government would almost certainly return Argentina to the capital markets, both settling the bill with the foreign “vulture funds” and using foreign-issued debt as a mechanism to offset the costs of liberalizing the dollar and eliminating soybean export taxes. Most explicitly, a Cambiemos government has promised to carry out its program without what some party members have bemoaned as President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s abrasive political style.

No matter the outcome of today’s runoff vote, October 25 marked the awakening of a center-right national party in Argentina. The ability of Macri’s Cambiemos coalition to win in both wealthy and humble neighborhoods — from the uber-exclusive, porteño neighborhood of Recoleta (where it took 70 percent of the vote) to the working-class neighborhoods of Berisso and Tres de Febrero — underscores a significant political shift.

This is a remarkable break from the past and one that will have lasting consequences for Argentina and, quite possibly, for the region as a whole.

María Esperanza Casullo is a political scientist. She has a PhD in government from Georgetown University and is an associate professor at Universidad Nacional de Río Negro, Argentina.

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Gallery: 2019 Alfa Romeo C38 keeps its colors

November 17, 2019 | News | No Comments

There was no bold livery to admire at Alfa Romeo Racing this morning in Barcelona, but the team’s 2019 car still looked sharp in its standard white and ‘rosso’ colors.

While the Sauber name has disappeared from the team’s official denomination, the Swiss outfit’s identity still appears on the C38, with “Sauber Engineering” stamped on the lower part of the engine cover.

Kimi Raikkonen and Antonio Giovinazzi will share testing duties this week, with the Finn kicking things off today.

Check out the gallery of pictures from this morning’s official presentation.

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In a win for tolerance over xenophobia, independent and pro-refugee candidate Henriette Reker—who was stabbed by a violently anti-immigrant constituent during a campaign event just one day prior—scored a decisive victory on Sunday to become the next mayor of the German city of Cologne.

According to Deutsche Welle:

On Saturday, a 44-year-old man stabbed the 58-year-old Reker in the neck while she was visiting an outdoor market in Cologne’s Braunsfeld neighborhood. According to police, the man—an unemployed former painter and varnisher living on welfare—took issue with Reker’s pro-refugee policies. Witnesses said he was shouting something about refugees as he struck Reker.

[…] The assailant stabbed four more people before being subdued by police. No one was fatally wounded, but Reker was rushed to the hospital and immediately underwent surgery. A candlelit vigil to protest xenophobia was held in Berlin, and well-wishers gathered outside Cologne’s city hall to show support for Reker.

Reker, who will also be the first female mayor of Cologne, is currently in serious but stable condition at a local hospital with a positive prognosis for recovery.
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The election outcome is “being seen as an indicator that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s controversial open-arms welcome of refugees has broad support among German voters,” McClatchy reported from Berlin, adding:

Not only did Reker win an unlikely majority in a multi-candidate election, but the second-place candidate was also pro-refugee and collected 32 percent. The candidate of the most prominent anti-immigrant political party in Germany, Alternative for Deutschland, took just 4 percent, and a more radical anti-immigrant party didn’t poll even 1 percent.

Germany expects up to 1.5 million asylum seekers this year, and Merkel’s welcoming stance has invited a right-wing backlash.

Reker, meanwhile, had been Cologne’s top social welfare official, and as part of that job she ran the ancient city’s refugee housing program.

As CNN reported, “Reker has stuck up for refugees as other politicians have advocated turning them out of temporary shelters, according to media reports. And she has praised new arrivals as adding value to German society.”

In a recent statement, she said: “When I speak of refugees, I don’t speak of desperate measures and burdens but instead of potential and opportunity.”

A rash of wildfires in Indonesia and the resulting toxic haze of smoke and smog may be the worst climate crisis on Earth right now, NASA scientists warned this week as Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla announced that the administration was considering declaring a state of emergency.

Forest fires on the island of Sumatra, which were started in August as part of a “slash-and-burn” deforestation plan to clear land for palm oil plantations, have raged out of control for the past two months, sending thick plumes of smoke across the archipelago and much of southeast Asia, including Vietnam, Cambodia, and the Philippines.

Hundreds of thousands of people have reportedly fallen ill and 19 have died—some from battling the fires and others from exposure to the fumes. The smoke has also disrupted public transportation and forced school cancellations.

“The problem is too big,” Kalla said Tuesday, a day after President Joko Widodo cut short his first official visit to the U.S. to visit the affected areas.

Indonesia has used slash-and-burn tactics for decades. “Most burning starts on idle, already-cleared peatlands and escapes underground into an endless source of fuel,” explained David Gaveau of the Center for International Forestry Research.

Researchers with the World Resources Institute (WRI) wrote earlier this month:

The burning of tropical peatlands is so significant for greenhouse gas emissions because these areas store some of the highest quantities of carbon on Earth, accumulated over thousands of years. Draining and burning these lands for agricultural expansion (such as conversion to oil palm or pulpwood plantations) leads to huge spikes in greenhouse gas emissions. Fires also emit methane, a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide (CO2), but peat fires may emit up to 10 times more methane than fires occurring on other types of land. Taken together, the impact of peat fires on global warming may be more than 200 times greater than fires on other lands.

But a particularly long dry season this year, along with the impacts of El Niño, have exacerbated conditions and set the outbreak on the track to be the worst environmental crisis on record.

“This is a crime against humanity of extraordinary proportions,” said Sutopo Puro Nugroho, the spokesperson for the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency (BMKG), who added that number of health impacts may be much higher than reported.

Also at risk are orangutans, which have been left sick and malnourished by the thousands due to the haze, while the fires turn their habitats to burned up wasteland.

Indonesia has the world’s highest rate of  deforestation and is the fifth-highest greenhouse gas emitter. According to the WRI, land use like palm oil plantations make up about 61 percent of the country’s emissions—but with forest fires reaching more than 1,500 hot spots in the archipelago this week, Indonesia sent out more greenhouse gases in the past few days than the U.S., the world’s second-highest polluter, according to climate analysts.

The last time an Indonesian fire season led to record levels of air pollution was in 1997, when similar conditions led to a lack of rainfall and allowed the hot spots to burn out of control on a wide scale.

“We are on a similar trajectory to other bad years,” said Robert Field, a Columbia University scientist based at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies. “Conditions in Singapore and southeastern Sumatra are tracking close to 1997, with some stations having visibility less than 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) on average for a week. In Kalimantan, there have been reports of visibility less than 50 meters (165 feet).”

Luhut B. Pandjaitan, Indonesia’s coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs, said heavy rainfall Tuesday night has helped temper the fires, reducing the number of hot spots from more than 1,500 on Monday to 291 on Wednesday. But he added that much more rain would be necessary to get them under control.

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Underscoring how the struggles for racial, environmental, and economic justice are deeply intertwined, this year’s Food Sovereignty Prize, honoring those who are taking back their food systems, will be bestowed Wednesday to the Georgia-based Federation of Southern Cooperatives and the Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras.

“On the heels of a visible resurgence of the struggle for black liberation made visible by a spate of police brutality against Black Americans, the two winners this year demonstrate a commitment to solidarity with Black people’s struggles globally,” wrote of the global hunger and poverty non-profit WhyHunger.

“Everything we’re about is food sovereignty, the right of every individual on earth to wholesome food, clean water, clean air, clean land, and the self-determination of a local community to grow and do what they want. We just recognize the natural flow of life. It’s what we’ve always done.”
—Ben Burkett, Federation of Southern Cooperatives

Both of the 2015 honorees “have struggled for decades against oppression from their governments and large agricultural companies,” said WhyHunger co-founder Bill Ayres in an op-ed last week. “They have pioneered excellent agricultural practices, fought for their rights, and produced nutritious food for people.”

And in doing so, he concluded, they have shown that “[t]here is another way to fight hunger. It is not through the latest tech solution or the latest chemical toxic concoction, but it does utilize science rooted in ecological principles, community participation, and democratic management.”

The Federation of Southern Cooperatives, whose members are farmers in 16 Southern states—approximately 90 percent of them African-American, but also Native American, Latino, and White—grew out of the civil rights movement in the late 1960s. But its work “is today more important than ever,” the prize committee writes, given that African-American-owned farms in the U.S. have fallen from 14 percent to 1 percent in less than 100 years.

To counter that trend, and to keep farms Black- and family-owned instead of corporate-owned, the Federation promotes land-based cooperatives and community development credit unions; provides training in sustainable agriculture and forestry, management, and marketing; and advocates to the courts as well as to state and national legislatures.

“Our view is local production for local consumption,” said Ben Burkett, co-founder of the Federation and a fourth-generation Mississippi farmer. “It’s just supporting mankind as family farmers. Everything we’re about is food sovereignty, the right of every individual on earth to wholesome food, clean water, clean air, clean land, and the self-determination of a local community to grow and do what they want. We just recognize the natural flow of life. It’s what we’ve always done.”

As Andrianna Natsoulas and Beverly Bell wrote in an op-ed this week, “the Federation’s work to keep land in the hands of the small farmers is one of the foundations of food sovereignty, a framework of policies, principles and practices through which food systems are controlled by, and serve the best interest of, people instead of corporations.”

Meanwhile, the Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras (OFRANEH), was created in 1979 to protect the economic, social, and cultural rights of 46 Garifuna communities along the Atlantic coast of Honduras. In the face of Big Ag land grabs, tourist-driven development, and climate change, OFRANEH helps this historically oppressed minority, descending from Indigenous Caribbean and African groups, fight back through direct-action community organizing, legal action, leadership training, and movement-building. At the center of the organization’s work is a focus on strengthening land security and sustainable, small-scale farming and fishing.

“Our liberation starts because we can plant what we eat,” stated Miriam Miranda, coordinator of OFRANEH. “This is food sovereignty.”

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She continued: “We need to produce to bring autonomy and the sovereignty of our peoples. If we continue to consume [only], it doesn’t matter how much we shout and protest. We need to become producers. It’s about touching the pocketbook, the surest way to overcome our enemies. It’s also about recovering and reaffirming our connections to the soil, to our communities, to our land.”

Watch the award ceremony, taking place in Des Moines, Iowa, and streaming live starting at 7 pm CDT:

If you thought Dory was as lovable as she is forgetful, wait until you see her as a baby.

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The latest Disney-Pixar film Finding Dory brings audiences back to the life and times of the blue tang fish. Dory, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, is in a frantic search to find her family, which sends her on an epic adventure to reconnect with her seafloor roots. Along the way, fans are given a glimpse into her early childhood.

A newly-released clip from the film, which you can watch above, reveals the adorable Dory in her younger years, voiced by Lucia Geddes, and her parents, voiced by veteran actors Diane Keaton and Eugene Levy, try to help her learn how to make new friends.

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This sequel to Finding Nemo brings back familiar faces and introduces new fishy friends, including characters voiced by Ed O’Neill, Ty Burrell and Kaitlin Olson. Fans of Finding Dory can swim into theaters now to see the whole story unfold.

The first official trailer for Passengers is finally here! Sony dropped the look at the new sci-fi romance starring Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence this morning—and you can consider our appetites whet.

The trailer (above) begins with a cute moment between Jim (Pratt) and Aurora (Lawrence) on a deserted spaceship, when he asks her to dinner with the help of a note and a robot.

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“Are you asking me on a date?” Aurora asks the little robot holding a note that reads “dinner?” The robot, which is being controlled by Jim, replies with a nod of its head and hands her a pen. Aurora smiles, writes “Yes” on the note, hands it to the robot and returns to her cup of coffee.

“She didn’t seem that impressed,” Jim, who is somewhere else on the ship, mutters to himself as he maneuvers the robot away from her.

But as the trailer flashes to a clip of them on a romantic date later that night, it’s clear his charm tactics worked.

Passengers is set on a spacecraft in the future, with thousands of passengers making an interstellar voyage to a distant new planet. The story begins when Jim awakens from the cryogenic sleep 90 years before anyone else and decides to wake up Aurora, sparking the beginning of a love story. It’s all fun and games—and robots—until the ship begins to malfunction and they find themselves in a critical situation.

Sounds like a hit to us!

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Watch the full trailer in the video above. Passengers hits U.S. theaters Dec. 21.