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          | Central American University - UCA |  
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                      | Number 362 | Septiembre 2011 |  |  |  |  
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 NicaraguaA civic fiesta, less than healthy competition  or utter chaos? Will November’s elections be a civic fiesta, as such events are often called?
Will they be merely unequal competition against an entrenched incumbent?
Or, in the worst case, might they trigger scenarios of violence and chaos?
The Nicaraguan Human Rights Center has warned of the latter:
“The government is making things too tense.
It wants a clear path in the elections.
And violence is the recourse Daniel Ortega
has almost always used as his modus operandi.”... continuar...
 
 
 
   NicaraguaNICARAGUA BRIEFS ORTEGA – GHADDAFI On September 2, after having delivered four speeches without mentioning what was happening in Libya, President Daniel Ortega finally referred to those events, stating that Nicaragua... continuar...
 
 
 
   NicaraguaWhat education priorities should this or the next government have? Nicaragua’s current  priorities for improving public education 
are described and analyzed by this education researcher, 
who also shows us the educational plans of the two leading presidential candidates.... continuar...
 
 
 
   NicaraguaMemories of the betrayed generation How did those in rival bands facing each other
 on the battlefronts in the 1980s survive? 
How have they coped with that drama? 
What did the war give them or take from them?
I searched out eight former combatants 
and war wounded to interview.
I’m a long overdue listener to their testimonies,
 in which I heard commitment, humor and pain. 
Disillusionment, too. 
These are the memories of a generation 
that today feels betrayed.... continuar...
 
 
 
   El SalvadorThe case of the murdered Jesuits: An un-extraditable crime Military assassins won the most recent round 
in the case of the Jesuit priests murdered in November 1989,
aided by the Salvadoran Supreme Court’s unwillingness 
to comply with INTERPOL’s “red notice.” 
But the case isn’t closed.  There will be new rounds 
to test a country that must fight against impunity.... continuar...
 
 
 
   HondurasWhat the “gold fever” has left us For eight years the Entre Mares mining company devastated the forest, 
contaminated the waters, changed the climate and ruined the health
and even the lives of thousands of citizens in the Siria Valley.
Despite this well-known, documented and condemned disaster,
the Honduran government has awarded various mining companies
a third of the country’s land, granting them 157 exploration licenses.
Who’ll stop this monster?... continuar...
 
 
 
   América LatinaFrom Latin America to Abya Yala: The new awakening of indigenousness Mestizo America reigned supreme until the 1960s.
Since that time, thanks to an array of factors, 
indigenous peoples have been shucking off that mask. 
Via many routes, zigzagging between successes and setbacks,
they and their proposals have found their place 
on the continent’s agenda and in its public policy. 
One can no longer talk about Latin America
without also speaking of Abya Yala: ripe or fertile land.... continuar...
 
 
 
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