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Nicaragua, vietnam ink oil deal

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

Daniel OrtegaDaniel Ortega

Vietnam will begin prospecting for oil in Nicaragua within four week, according to an agreement signed here between both countries´ state-run companies.

The agreement was signed Monday night in Managua by a PetroVietnam delegation, headed by Dinh La Thang, and Francisco Lopez, president of the state-owned company Petronic.

Lopez announced oil technology transference between both countries will immediately begin, to complement works being done at the oil refinery under construction in Nicaragua with the support of Venezuela.

The refinery is part of the agreements signed by Nicaragua under the Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA), which is also backed by Cuba, Bolivia, Honduras and Dominica.

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega attended the signing ceremony between Petro Vietnam and Petronic.

U.S. to fund actions in Mexico against drug traffic

The administration of US President Barack Obama will invest 700 million dollars to support the Mexican government in its war against drug traffi cking, said the White House in a communiqué Wednesday.

The text of the communiqué picks the concern of the US President because of the growing violence by thedrug cartels in the north of Mexico, which are already infl uencing US regions limiting with Mexico.

The 700 million dollars will be saved in the funds of the Merida Initiative, a program promoted by former US President George W. Bush to fight the drug illegal trade in Central America.

Barack Obama promised he would do his job in the war against drug traffi cking and reduce the drug demand in the national market, just like his Mexican counterpart Felipe Calderon requested many times.

US National Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said in a press release that the Executive would increase border control, by sending more agents and equipments to the zone.

The new agents will have the mission to avoid the smuggling of drugs and people from Mexico to the US, and neutralize the traffic of weapons arming the drug cartels.

Salvadorians honor Archbishop Romero Salvadorian priests and numerous parishioners attended on Tuesday, March 23, a mass to pay homage to Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero, on the 29th anniversary of his assassination by death squads.

The religious ceremony will take place at the Metropolitan Cathedral in this capital, presided over by San Salvador Archbishop Jose Luis Escobar.

On Saturday, they began the activities to honor Romero, who is an emblematic symbol of the struggle for peace, justice and national unity.

Honduran president proposes constitutional revamp

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Honduran President Manuel Zelaya is calling for a new constitution in his Central American nation, following the path of his leftist allies in the region.

Zelaya announced late Monday his government will hold a nationwide poll on June 24.

The poll will gauge whether Honduras should hold a binding vote in November on whether to draft a new charter.

If Hondurans agree, the government would convoke an assembly that would write a new constitution adapted to “substantial and significant changes” that Honduras has experienced since its current constitution was adopted in 1982 as the country was emerging from military rule.

Zelaya did not give details about what changes a new constitution might include, but similar recent reforms promoted by other Latin American leaders have expanded presidential powers and eased bans on re-election. Zelaya’s four year term ends in early 2010 and current law bans re-election.

Zelaya has forged increasingly close ties with Latin America’s leftist bloc, led by Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez. He brought Honduras into the Chavez-founded Bolivarian Alternative trade bloc that also includes Cuba, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua. (Prensa Latina and Associated Press contributed to this report).­

Latino community needs free choice act

by Gabriela D. Lemus

The Latino community should whole-heartedly get behind the Employee Free Choice Act. Introduced March 10, the bill has a majority of support in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, but business groups are spending heavily to make sure the Senate does not reach the 60 votes that it needs to survive a filibuster.

EFCA levels the playing field for workers by ensuring a more democratic decision-making process, providing employees the room to be full partners with management.

At a minimum, democracy involves freedom of speech and freedom to organize collectively around issues. In the case of workers, a minimum standard of democracy involves the ability of workers to discuss and debate amc of harassment from either unions or corporate management as to whether they would like to join a union.

EFCA would reinvigorate the National Labor Relations Act, giving workers additional protections to bargain collectively and join a union. Time and again, we have witnessed that the current system for workers to form unions to bargain over wages and benefits is broken. As a result, the National Labor Relations Board would be better able to ensure that the processes regarding authorization forms are fair, thus preventing coercion from either side.

In 2008, workers represented by unions earned a median weekly salary of $886. This compared to non-unionized workers, with median weekly earnings of $691.

In particular, young men and women just entering the work world benefit from protections that collective bargaining provides.

Latinos are among the youngest population group in the United States. Their median age is 25.8 years – more than 10 years younger than that for the U.S. population as a whole.

Also worth mention: they have more children and greater family stability.

More than half are fully bilingual.

Needless to say, union membership would assist them not just in earning a livable wage.

It could move many into jobs where they learn more skills, take on greater responsibilities gain added benefits.

Latino workers want to join unions. Union membership, long in decline, actually increased in 2008, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics annual report.

The unionized share of the U.S. workforce climbed to 12.4 percent last year from 12.1 percent in 2007, an increase of more than 420,000 members.

While the gains were broadly shared across demographic lines and occupations, growth was strongest in the public sector, among Hispanics, and in Western states, driving the largest increase in more than a quarter of a century. More than 120,000 Hispanics became Union members last year. Their membership rate rose1nearly a full percent to 10.8 percent from 9.8 percent in 2007.

EFCA offers workers added access to such benefits as health insurance and pensions. Management gains from the skill sets, contagious motivation and increased productivity that satisfied workers provide. It follows that productive workers help companies grow profits and capital for further economic growth.

As President Obama reminds us daily, the need to revitalize our communities is paramount. Urgent.

Which communities will succeed in doing so?

Where unions are stronger, not only are wages higher and health insurance more accessible; there are numerous other benefits.

In states with higher Union density, it is more likely that poverty will be reduced. There will be more homeowners than renters and better schools because there is greater public education spending per pupil. The three are inter-related.

Together they bring an unintended benefit —a significant reduction in crime. Compare states where Unions are strong with those where they’re weak. In the former, public dollars are more likely to go to schools and less likely to building jails.

By bolstering the middle class, educating our communities and ensuring they are healthy, we give people hope. That’s the essence of the American Dream. The Employee Free Choice Act can help make it real again. Hispanic Link.

(Dr. Gabriela D. Lemus is executive director of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA), with headquarters in Washington, D.C. Email: glemus@Iclaa.org).

Boxing

Friday, Jan. 30 — at TBA, South Africa

  • ­Francois Botha vs. Ron Guerrero.

Saturday, Jan. 31 — at Guadalajara, Mexico

  • Marco Antonio Barrera vs. John Nolasco.
  • Jorge Solis vs. Monty Meza Clay.

Friday, Feb. 6 — at Salisbury, MD (ESPN2)

  • Yusaf Mack vs. Chris Henry.

Saturday, Feb. 7 — at Anaheim, CA (Showtime)

  • WBC/WBA/IBF superflyweight title: Vic Darchinyan vs. Jorge Arce.
  • Antonio DeMarco vs. Almazbek Raiymkulov.

Friday, Feb. 13 — at TBA, USA (ESPN2)

  • Jesus Gonzales vs. Richard Gutierrez.

Saturday, Feb. 14 — at TBA, USA (HBO)

  • Alfredo Angulo vs. Ricardo Mayorga.
  • WBA/IBF/WBO lightweight title: Nate Campbell vs. Ali Funeka.

Saturday, Feb. 21 — at Atlantic City, NJ (HBO-PPV)

  • WBO welterweight title: Miguel Cotto vs. Michael Jennings.

Saturday, Feb. 21 — at Youngstown, OH (HBO-PPV)

  • WBC/WBO middleweight title: Kelly Pavlik vs. Marco Antonio Rubio.

Friday, Feb. 27 — at Hollywood, FL (ESPN2)

  • Glen Johnson vs. Daniel Judah.

Should natural resources – such as water – be turned into a prate monopoly?

by Franck Poupeau

The Progress Report Increasing criticism of market globalisation has not prevented multinationals from controlling such essentials as water, where there are vast potential profits. The market is dominated by two big French multinationals, Vivendi-Generale des eaux and Suez-Lyonnaise des eaux. They now control nearly 40 percent of the world market, each serving, and billing, more than 110m people, Vivendi in 100 countries, Lyonnaise in 130.

They owe their profits to the deregulation of trade and the complicity of international institutions and national governments. The market is all the more lucrative because the water services in nearly 85 percent of the world’s cities are run by public or state companies.

The two French giants and their subsidiaries have been signing highly remunerative privatisation contracts on the water market for 15 years. The successes of Suez-Lyonnaise des eaux in China, Malaysia, Italy, Thailand, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Australia and the United States cannot beat those of Generale des eaux (now Vivendi), sometimes in association with Suez-Lyonnaise, as in Buenos Aires in 1993.

Over the last 10 years, Vivendi has entered Germany (Leipzig, Berlin), the Czech Republic (Pilsen), Korea (Daesan complex), the Philippines (Manila) and Kazakhstan (Almaty). It is also represented in the US by its subsidiaries Air and Water Technologies and US Filter.

But the water multinationals have had setbacks. They have been forced to withdraw from some South American countries and to seek “compensation” from international authorities. In Tucuman, Argentina, in 1997 the population started a civil disobedience campaign against a Vivendi subsidiary, refusing to pay their bills in protest at deteriorating water quality and doubled charges. Generale des eaux had acquired the province’s privatised water and sewerage concessions in 1993. But its immediate increase in the price of those services (averaging 104 percent) brought protests from the consumers.

“The first to organise themselves were the towns in the interior, in the region of sugar cane production where there was a long experience of struggle. At first, seven small cities formed a committee and later established the national association in defence of the consumers of Tucuman”.

The provincial government then called for penalties on the company after finding tap water contaminated.

Faced with the payment boycott, Generale des eaux first threatened to cut off supplies.

Then it tried to renegotiate the contract before finally withdrawing and refusing to fulfill its obligations. It brought an action against the Tucuman consumers before the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), which found in the province’s favour.

(The ICSID is part of the World Bank.) Since then, a change in provincial government has removed legal protection for the payment boycott.

SOCIAL EFFECTS OVERLOOKED

Local loss of control over water charges goes hand in hand with price increases that deny the poor access not only to the water service but also to clear information about minimum health standards.

Water privatisation in La Paz, Bolivia, is an example.

In Alto Lima, the oldest and poorest quarter of La Paz, in February rain formed muddy streams that overflowed the sewers and flooded the roadway. The unpaved streets are rutted and potholed, piles of refuse testifying to the absence of public cleaning; they have not been lit at night since that service was also privatised.

The monopolies are a total failure. The most basic services are now provided by nongovernment nonprofit organizations.

Antonio has lived in Alto Lima since he was a child. It is a working-class district nearly 4000m above sea level; the richer folk live lower, at 3,200 m. Alto Lima overlooks the rest of the capital, but it takes over an hour to reach the city centre. That is why Antonio goes to the centre so rarely: it is too far and too expensive. Antonio cannot understand why water, which is flowing so freely here, is no longer available for him to wash 2or drink. Since the supply was taken over by the French Aguas del Illimani consortium (which belongs to Lyonnaise des eaux), its price has risen from 2 to 12 bolivianos (Bs). Most of the population cannot afford that and have replaced showers by communal washing facilities, for which they also have to pay.

The private concession has seen a deterioration in service as a result of cost-cutting job losses. The team of 18 technicians who used to check nearly 80,000 water meters in the northern district every month has been cut in half and given other maintenance tasks. It is rare that any house’s consumption is recorded accurately and they are billed without regard to the amount used.

Lack of maintenance is making interruptions in supply increasingly common, and they take longer to be repaired. Businesses sometimes have to resort to old wells.

“Water is now a luxury in Alto Lima,” according to a worker. A luxury he can no longer afford.

Aguas del Illimani has already been prosecuted for cutting off municipal water authorities for several weeks; that included all the schools. But in general, the supply is cut with impunity.

Some try to blame the citizens, not the monopolists.

Alvaro Larrea Alarcon, an engineer with the National Regional Development Fund, says the concession could be profitable if the population changed its habits and consumed more. “The population has to be taught that it must get used to paying water bills. They grow up without water and use public facilities or the river. They are used to not having water in the home. It’s a question of culture. They have to be taught to take a bath, to water their plants, wash their cars.”

Why do the people put up with such lack of consideration?

Cochabamba in Bolivia is the only town where the local people, together with peasants from the surrounding ­area, have found the strength and resources to respond and reverse the privatization of the water supply. But then the Aguas del Tunari group (controlled by the U.S. multinational Bechtel), which was trying to get a foothold there, did not put as much energy into “public relations” and lobbying as the French groups did.

We live in a disguised dictatorship

­by Marvin Ramírez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramírez

Had not been because of the wonderful things the internet provides us all in terms of information, we would continue being ignorant, since colleges and universities – I have come to discover – do not tell us the real history and facts.

The mindfully.org, an internet website, opens it page with a provocative headline: “FEMA concentration camps: locations and Executive Orders.”

Wow! I never imagined I would be reading and writing about these issues, about the United States of America! These would fit instead to the Soviet Union or Hitler’s Germany.

It may be easy to find fault with the premise of this article, starts the article, but you may even know of numerous sites that are not used as camps. But the plain fact remains that the U.S.A. maintains illegal prisons around the world. It remains a secret only to imbeciles in the U.S. The rest of the world knows for certain that it’s quite real.

The way things are going in the US, it’s not a matter of if, but when these underused facilities come online to serve the master — otherwise known as Moloch. Most likely, not many Japanese in the US doubt the premise of this article. And for Jews in Europe during the Holocaust, the article must hit a hard note, explains the article.

So, what makes you think it can’t happen here?

El Reportero has been writing about these touchy issues in an effort to inform the public with information that exists behind the stage or behind the curtain, that will affect everyone of us in the event the elite bankers decide to send the troops after the citizenry, who are expected take on to the streets in protest for the government abuse and tyranny.

This is expected as the government continues to draft legislations to disarm the population – a clear violation of the United States Constitution’s Second Amendment – nationalize the banking industry, and intervene on people rights in every area of our lives.

Halliburton subsidiary received a $385-million contract from the Department of Homeland Security to provide “temporary detention and processing capabilities.”

The contract — announced Jan. 24, 2006 by the engineering and construction firm KBR — calls for preparing for “an emergency influx of immigrants, or to support the rapid development of new programs” in the event of other emergencies, such as “a natural disaster.” The release offered no details about where Halliburton was to build these facilities, or when, wrote Peter Dale Scott in a commentary for Pacific News Service.

The powers granted to the President until now, makes him practically a dictator. His order is by decree, and called Executive Orders.

Following you will read the orders by which the American people will be deprived from those inalienable rights afforded by the framers of the Constitution. Here are some of the Executive Orders associated with FEMA that would suspend the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. These Executive Orders have been on record for nearly 30 years and could be enacted by the stroke of a Presidential pen:

  • ­EXECUTIVE ORDER 10990 allows the government to take over all modes of transportation and control of highways and seaports.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 10995 allows the government to seize and control the communication media.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 10997 allows the government to take over all electrical power, gas, petroleum, fuels and minerals.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 10998 allows the government to seize all means of transportation, including personal cars, trucks or vehicles of any kind and total control over all highways, seaports, and waterways.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 10999 allows the government to take over all food resources and farms.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 11000 allows the government to mobilize civilians into work brigades under government supervision.
  • EXECUTIVE ORDER 11001 allows the government to take over all health, education and welfare functions.

We must pray the Creator to help us defeat the evil that is coming up us.

After Obama session, Latino caucus upbeat on immigration reform

by Jacqueline Baylón

San Francisco childcare providers and housecleaners distribute flowers on March 30 in S.F.: to raise consciousness about their working conditions.San Francisco childcare providers and housecleaners distribute flowers on March 30 in S.F. to raise consciousness about their working conditions.

The two dozen members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus engaged in an hour long discussion with President Barack Obama strictly about comprehensive immigration reform at the White House’s State Room March 18.

Obama’s campaign promise to construct such a policy helped bring Hispanics to the polls on Election Day. Two-thirds of them checked his name on their ballots.

The meeting’s participants hailed it as a positive sign to the Hispanic community that the President will follow through with his promise to address the issue during his first year in office.

“We couldn’t have asked for a better response’” said CHC chair Nydia Velázquez.

“Under his leadership, we will repair this broken system and stop tearing families apart. ­We realize the real work begins now.”

Obama told caucus members that one of his first steps will be to conduct an immigration reform forum at the White House.

“To help us craft the best and most comprehensive immigration bill possible, he committed to hosting a public forum—as he has on other critical issues such as health care—that will include key stakeholders,” said Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.).

The President didn’t specify when, but Velázquez offered her interpretation.

“We will enact comprehensive reform by the end of this year. And by end of the 111th Congress, we will have seen the beginning of the positive impact: of that legislation on our community and our nation’s economy, and put an end to people living in fear and in the shadows.”

During the meeting, CHC members were vocal in condemning the Homeland Security raids that have separated thousands of families around the nation.

In a follow-up news release, CHC referenced Obama’s assurance that he was looking for ways to end the raids, including administrative fi rst steps, so that enforcement policies do not result in the separation of families.

“His past efforts and commitment on this issue are a matter of record,” said Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.).

Among other vocal reform advocates participating in the discourse were Senator Bob Menéndez (D-N.J.) and Rep. Luis Gutierrez ­(D-lll.).

Key Obama administration staff in attendance included Cecilia Munoz, director of Intergovernmental Affairs, and Rahm Emanuel, chief of staff.

 

­

Biden request patience from the isthmus

by the El Reportero’s news services

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden met leaders from Central America in Costa Rica on March 30.

BIDEN tells top leaders that deportations from U.S. won’t change in short-term This was Biden’s first trip to the region since the new Barack Obama administration took office in January.

Biden promised a new era for US-Central America relations, but delivered nothing firm.

What was interesting is which Central Americans turned up to meet him. The presidents of Nicaragua and Honduras, Daniel Ortega and Manuel Zelaya, both allies of Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez, spurned the invitation to attend, sending representatives instead.

Both presidents, however, are likely to meet President Obama when he comes to the forthcoming Summit of the Americas in Trinidad on April 17-19.

Clinton appeases Mexico

The U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, pleased the Mexican government on March 25, the first day of her two-day visit to Mexico.

On the second day she was due to go north from Mexico City to Monterrey to get a clearer view of what is happening in the gang-ridden Mexican states which border the U.S.

In Jan. 14, El Reportero newspaper published a U.S. Army’s Journal story that suggested that because the United States was in danger of collapse, “the U.S. may be forced to intervene in México to prevent the country’s ‘rapid and sudden collapse.’” Another article published in the NPR online edition headline read: “the CIA And Pentagon Wonder: Could Mexico Implode?”

“Drug-related violence in Mexico is escalating at an alarming rate and threatening the government of President Felipe Calderon,” the article said. “CIA and U.S. military planners now fear a worst-case scenario — that the country could implode. The American military is quietly stepping in with more training.”

Colombia reassesses its foreign policy priorities

Colombia under the right-leaning administration of President Alvaro Uribe has positioned itself as the US’s closest regional ally.

The arrival in the White House of President Barack Obama has, however, prompted a subtle shift in Colombia-US relations, with the new administration likely to oversee a gradual reduction in US military aid to Colombia.

With this in mind, Colombia is reaching out to the region’s emergent leader – and Obama’s regional ally of choice – Brazil. Bogotá’s decision to join the Brazil-initiated South American Defense Council, attached to the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), formally launched in March, was a clear gesture to the government of President Lula da Silva.

Central America looks to U.S. for solution to economic crisis

To offset the recent wave of factory closings and work suspensions at U.S. textile and manufacturing plants in Central America, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega is asking the U.S. government for an economic bailout plan for Central America.

Speaking at Wednesday’s extraordinary presidential meeting of the Central American Integration System, Ortega went against the current of other leaders in attendance by criticizing the U.S.-Central American Free Trade Agreement-Dominican Republic (CAFTA-DR) as being fickle and unjust. Despite the promises of CAFTA-DR, Ortega said, “What’s happening now is that they are closing U.S. investment linked to the trade agreement in Central American countries, especially in Honduras and Nicaragua.’’

The closing of free-trade zones has already led to 20,000 lost jobs in Honduras, and independent economic analysts in Nicaragua predicts an additional 30,000 – 50,000 jobs will be lost in Nicaragua this year, on top of the thousands already lost at the end of 2008. more workers.

­(Latin News, NBC News, and the Miami Herald contributed to this report.)

El Salvador election draws expatroiot interest but few in U.S. traver there to participate

by Cindy Von Quednow

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Of the 40,000 Salvadorans living outside this nation of seven million who were eligible to vote in its presidential election March 15, only 221 did so, according to El Salvador’s Supreme Tribunal Electorate.

Of those, 122 cast ballots for former CNN newsman Mauricio Funes, the candidate for the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN), while 99 went to the ruling Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) candidate, Rodrigo Avila.

Funes won, 51%-49%.

The preference of those living abroad reflected the rest of the electorate in the first FMLN victory in history, which ended the 20year rule of its right-wing government Unlike Mexico and Peru, the Salvadoran government requires nationals who live outside the country to obtain an identification card and vote in person.

While ARENA’s Avila had opposed allowing those Salvadorans living abroad to vote as too difficult and costly, FMLN Vice President-elect Salvador Sanchez Cerén argued they should not be denied that right. He promised to “work hard with initiative” to allow them to participate in choosing the country’s elected officials in the future.

There are now an estimated 2.5-to-3 million Salvadorans living in the United States, most from refugee families who fled its civil war during the’80s and ‘9Os.

Gisela Edith Bustamante, who flew “home” to cast her ballot this month, agrees: “In a moment such as this, we have an opportunity to change the country’s history.” The San Salvador native has lived for eight years in Washington, D.C.

By Census count, 200,000 Salvadorans reside in the capital and surrounding suburbs, making it the second largest U S. conclave of Salvadoran immigrants after Los Angeles, which has 350,000.

Like other Salvadorans living in the exterior, Bustamante was assigned to vote in San Salvador’s Mágico Gonzalez Stadium.

To cast his vote, Benito Garcia, dressed in the red, white and blue colors of the ARENA party, had traveled from Bethesda, Md., where he has lived for 25 years. “If we could vote from there, we wouldn’t lose time off from work,” he said.

This was also the feeling in Ana Gladys Rubio’s family. She flew in from Los Angeles. Her husband stayed home. “Someone had to work,” said Rubio, who lived in Arlington, Va. for 18 years before moving West.

A survey conducted at the Central American Research and Policy Institute at California State University-Northridge showed that 87% of the Salvadorans living in the Los Angeles area would have liked to have voted from their U.S. city of residence Some 300 people participated in a March 8 symbolic election in Los Angeles’ MacArthur Park, a haven for Central American immigrants.

CARPI director Douglas Carranza noted that the results of El Salvador’s election clearly mimicked those of the survey, which showed that while there was a will to vote, most people could not do so because of immigration status, cost or time constraints.

TSE president Walter Araujo, who visited the stadium on election-day morning, emphasized the importance of being able to vote outside the country, stating, ­“Salvadorans want to participate in their democracy, even when they are far away. The state should revise the Constitution, and that can be done by the national assembly.”

(Cindy Von Quednow traveled to San Salvador to cover the election for Hispanic Link and El Nuevo Sol elnuevosol.net Email her at: vonquizu@gmail.com).

Boxing

Saturday, March 21 — at Stuttgart, Germany (ESPN)

  • WBC heavyweight title: Vitali Klitschko vs. Juan Carlos Gómez.

Saturday, March 21 — at Pensacola, FL

  • Roy Jones Jr. vs. Omar Sheika.

Friday, March 27 — at Los Angeles, CA (ESPN2)

  • Samuel Peter vs. Eddie Chambers.

Saturday, March 28 — at Cancún, Mexico

  • Interim WBO bantamweight title: Fernando Montiel vs. Eric Morel.
  • WBC super featherweight title: Humberto Soto vs. Antonio Davis.
  • Julio César Chávez Jr. vs. Luciano Leonel Cuello.

Saturday, March 28 — at Miami, OK (Showtime)

  • Andre Dirrell vs. David Banks.
  • Ronald Hearns vs. Harry Yorgey.

Friday, April 3 — at Primm, NV (Showtime)

  • Yuriorkis Gamboa vs. TBA.
  • Breidis Prescott vs. TBA.

Saturday, April 4 — at TBA, USA (Showtime)

  • WBC/WBO lightwelterweight title: Timothy Bradley vs. Kendall Holt.

Saturday, April 4 — at San Antonio, TX (HBO-PPV)

  • Interim WBC lightweight title: Edwin Valero vs. Antonio Pitalua.
  • Joel Casamayor vs. Julio Díaz.
  • Jorge Barrios vs. Carlos Hernandez.­
  • Jesus Chávez vs. Michael Katsidis.

Robert Baer: Inside Iran

by the El Reportero’s staff

The man behind the 2005 Oscar winning film “Syriana” and former CIA operative Robert Baer will explain why America needs to negotiate directly with Iran. He contends that American foreign policy has kicked Iran down the road for 30 years, and the time has come to open dialogue with the burgeoning regional power.

Baer, considered one of the world’s foremost authorities on the Middle East will also explain why he maintains that America’s hopes in the Gulf lie in a peaceful collaboration or even an alliance with the fastest growing power in the Middle East.

Bear recently visited Iran to interview suicide bombers, a grand ayatollah, the hard-line chief of staff of Iran’s military forces and the terrorist chief of Hezbollah.

Baer’s two novels See No Evil and Sleeping with the Devil became the basis for the 2005 Academy Award winning film “Syriana.”

At 6 p.m. check-in | 6:30 p.m. program, at The Veterans Memorial Hall, 3780 Mt Diablo Blvd., Lafayette. $12 for Members | $18 for Non-Members | $7 students.

Barbara Lee: The renegade for peace and justice

Congresswoman Barbara Lee will explain how her political career has become defined by her personal experiences and why she strives to speak for those in need of a voice in Washington. From the HIV/AIDS pandemic to the genocide in Darfur, Lee has fought to end the grossest injustices of our time.Congresswoman Barbara Lee will explain how her political career has become defined by her personal experiences and why she strives to speak for those in need of a voice She will chronicle her rise from being a young, single mother of two working for the Black Panther Party’s Community Learning Center to one of Congress’s most progressive and respected voices.

At 11:30 a.m. Check-in | Noon Program Club office, Friday, March 27, 2009, at 595 Market St., 2nd floor, San Francisco. To buy tickets call 415/597-6705 or register at www.commonwealthclub.org.

Book Release “Yolanda M. López” by Karen Mary Dávalos

Artists talk: A conversation between Dr. Amalia Mesa Bains and Yolanda López Ms Lopez’s book is part of the series “A VER: Revisioning Art History” by UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press. In this groundbreaking overview of Yolanda M. López’s life and career, Karen Mary Davalos traces the artist’s participation in Bay Area activism in the late 1960s and her subsequent training in conceptual practices.

Davalos explores how López’s experiences informed her art, which ranges from posters to portraiture and the highly influential Guadalupe series to later installations.

López has consistently challenged predominant modes of Latino and Latina representation, proposing new models of gender, racial, and cultural identity.

Yolanda M. López reveals the complexity of the artist’s work over time 2and illuminates the importance of her contributions to Chicana/o art, Chicana feminism, conceptual art, and the politics of representation. Friday, March 27, 7-9 pm $5 Main gallery, Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, 2868 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA 94110, (415) 821 1155. www.missionculturalcenter.org.

Eduardo Peralta on Tour from Chile in Concert with Rafael Manriquez

Rafael Manríquez has been one of the leading exponents of Latin American music in the San Francisco Bay Area for over twenty years.

Peralta, ingenous payador, returns from his native Chile for a concert of his most popular songs. He will be joined by Rafael Manriquez who will perform songs from a new compilation CD of Chilean music produced by the Smithsonian Folkways. On Friday March 27, 2009. $13 adv. $15 dr. – 8pm.

La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley 510-849-2568 http://www.lapena.org/event/1044.

La hora del Planeta Tierra

A cast of artists selected for their developed, ingenious and original world arts.

­With ranchero and balad singer Araceli Zamora, Colombian dancer Adriana Sánchez and her group Colombian Soul. Also an exposition of a variety of brush artist arts and poets work. At Colombian restaurante El Majahaul, at 1142 Valencia St., San Francisco. Starting at 8:00 p.m.