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Advocates map “‘Latino State of the Union’ agenda to bring to community and new natonal leaders

by Cindy Von Quednow

John TrasviñaJohn Trasviña

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Latino organizational, political and community leaders and activists gathered here from throughout the nation Jan. 19 to share in shaping their State of the Union statement for some 50 million Hispanics now residing in the United States. A few hundred participants spent the better part of the day listening and contributing to the second annual Hispanic roundtable on law, policy and civil rights at the Hyatt Regency Hotel on Capitol Hill.

­The event was hosted by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), National Council of La Raza (NCLR) and League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC).

Members of those three and numerous other organizations came together to define and refine the issues most affecting the burgeoning Latino community nationwide as a new Congress that Latinos helped choose is being seated and a new president whom Hispanics helped elect moves into the White House.

In excess of nine million Hispanics voted Nov. 4, a million more than in the 2004 presidential election.

Two-thirds of them cast their ballots for Barack Obama.

Conclave speakers focused on how the Latino community can work with the dramatically altered national political leadership to accomplish its essential goals.

“We all have a duty and we must work with each other and the new administration to make our agenda a reality,” said John Trasviña, president and general counsel of MALDEF, who opened up the event.

To accomplish certain aspirations such as a truly compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform plan, Trasviña acknowledged, will require well-organized, unifi ed efforts by the large and diverse Latino population. “We have a number of things we have to accomplish,” he said, emphasizing, “We need to push the Latino agenda forward now.”

María Elena Salinas, co-anchor of Noticiero Univisión, moderated a discussion, about the priorities under the Obama administration and the incoming Congress.

Contributing expertise were Ben Luján from New Mexico, the lone newly elected member to the Congressional Hispanic Caucus; Rosa Rosales, president of LULAC, Simon Rosenberg, president of New Democrat Network, and Trasviña.

In addition to immigration, they pressed on such issues as affordable health care, renewable energy, jobs and availability to advancing technology for Latino students.

“If we keep doing what we’re doing now, our kids are going to have even fewer opportunities than we had,” said Luján, who also stressed the need for energy independence.

Guests broke into panels expanding on improving educational access and quality, countering growing hate-crime activity against Latinos and immigrants, and addressing the impact of the economic recession on millions of Hispanic families.

Kansas State Representative Delia García and representatives from NCLR, the U.S. Department of Justice, the Anti-Defamation League and the Maryland Department of Labor shared strategy pro­posals, including creating greater national awareness of the problem’s Hispanic dimensions and inviting broader support from all segments of society.

“This is not a Latino issue. This is an American issue,” explained Clarissa Martínez De Castro, director of immigration and national campaigns at NCLR.

Thomas E. Pérez, Secretary of the Department of Labor in Maryland, stressed, “Hate does not exist in a vacuum. Crime does not occur in a vacuum.”How to mobilize Hispanics nationwide to capitalize on a positive, new national mind set drew focus in the special segment, “2009: Taking Back the Message to the Latino Community.” Their consensus message: Federal cooperation and community strength offer much to look forward to in the upcoming year, but not without obstacles.

It featured challenges by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and U.S. Senator Robert Menéndez (D-N.J.). “Never before has the state of the Latino union been so close to the state of the nation,” said Villaraigosa. “We have an administration that is willing to face our reality.”

Among summary speakers were U.S. Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), pioneer farm labor organizer Dolores Huerta, LULAC’s Texasbased president Rosa Rosales and ’08 Voto Latino coordinator María Teresa Petersen. Each one closed with a single beseeching word: “Adelante”…”En- gage”…”Organize”…”Act.”

(Cindy Von Quednow covered Inauguration Week events for Hispanic Link News Service. Email: vonquizu@gmail.com).

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Starting this Jan. 13 in DVD two great movies

It is about Amexicano and August Evening, two movies that were favorite in festivals and that on their way along the same paths were able win themselves the praise of the critique, in addition to a few awards.

In spite of the applauses, very few cinemas exhibited both movies, remaining inaccessible to the great Spanish-speaking audience in the United States. Presently,thanks to the effort of Moctesuma Esparza, founder of Maya Entertainment to encourage the Latin cinema, there come two full-length films that offer emotions.

Both movies are available in the shops of selling the public and in line.

Explore the latest books on Latino subjects

by Jackie Gúzmán

The Last Supper of Chicano Heroes: Selected Works of José Antonio Burciaga, edited by Mimi R. Gladstein and Daniel Chacón, is one of the best books I have read in a long, long time. The entries into this retrospective deserve a reading between the lines.

José Antonio Burciaga is one of the important voices of Chicano literature. Burciaga was also a muralist and creator of memorable pictorial commentary. He was a poet, a humorist, a satirist, a cartoonist and mostly a humanist. An early and frequent contributor to Hispanic Link, Burciaga died of cancer on Oct. 7, 1996.

He was unique in how he treated cultural differences and difficulties, including the inequities he revealed through humor, art, and deceptively simple prose. In this book Burciaga tells us through anecdotes his Chicano heritage and how it ripples in from Mexico. He tells about growing up between the proverbial two cultures and languages. Gladstein and Chacon address Burciaga’s importance to Chicano letters. That alone puts this book on a collector’s shelf, to visit and revisit some of his original thought in Latino literature.

Burciaga stretches that rubber band, also. With the turn of a phrase, he takes us into those creative and spiritual depths that get a rise or a laugh from us. In his essay, “What’s in a Spanish Name?” he describes the pronunciation mistakes that we would like to pretend aren’t common. How about polamas when trying to say palomas or numberos for – you get the picture. It isn’t beyond him to make fun of our everyday foibles. Very little, if anything, is so sacrosanct we ought not joke about it. There too is a quality of Burciaga. His humor and truths may sting. But they don’t injure.

The Last Supper book can make the reader laugh from beginning to end as it delves into reality and fantasy.The cartoon collection is evidence of Burciaga’s imaginative ways to characterize Chicano culture. Included is a picture of the book’s namesake mural, “Last Supper of Chicano Heroes,” a DaVinci impression,with Diego Rivera- or José Clemente Orozco-like insertions of the iconic heroe from Latino history.

Pachuco stories aren’t left out. In “Pachucos and the Taxicab Brigade,” Burciaga talks about Mexicans and Mexican-Americans targeted as gangsters. His poetry and art give the reader an unquenching look into what his work was like and why it is remembered. Left to the next generation of writers who discover Burciaga is to place his life in relation to what else was going on in the nation’s culture and the arts. What used to be Chicano morphed into Latino later, and then becomes mainstream. Transnational. Transcultural. Transcendantal,even.

(University of Arizona Press: paperback, 38 illustrations, $16.95. 208 pages.) Hispanic Link.

Mall Cop, a comedy to laugh with laughter

by the El Reportero’s staff

In Columbia Pictures’ comedy Paul Blart: Mall Cop, Kevin James stars as the title character, a single, suburban dad, trying to make ends meet as a security officer at a New Jersey mall. Though no one else takes his job seriously, Paul considers himself on the front lines of safety. When a heist shuts down the megaplex, Jersey’s most formidable mall cop will have to become a real cop to save the day.

Paul Blart: Mall Cop has been rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America for some violence,mild crude and suggestive humor and language. The film will be released in theaters nationwide on January 16, 2009.

Great events at La Peña Cultural Center

Friday, Jan. 16

Dgiin is a band with a unique style encompassing various cultures and influences and songs sung mainly in French. The Flamenco Django-esque band puts on one memorable show accessible to all types of tastes and ages. Their energetic performances draw a lively crowd that can dance all night. A show not to be missed! 9 p.m. $10 gen. $8 students w/ID

Saturday, Jan. 17

Havana Dance Party! Los Boleros. An evening of tropical Latin beats and traditional melodies that will not only provoke your passion
for music but compels you to dance. 9:30 p.m. $10 gen. $8 students w/ID

Sunday, Jan. 18

Afro-Cuban music with Sandy Perez y Su Lade. Enjoy this performance of traditional Afro-Cuban folkloric music & dance directed by Ramon “Sandy” Garcia Perez, of the world famous Villamil family of Matanzas, who is joined by special guests. 7 p.m. $20 gen. $15 adv.

Public Viewing of the presidential inauguration at San Francisco Public Library

The San Francisco Public Library is holding a special free public viewing of the live, televised coverage of the inauguration of President-Elect Barack Obama.

The event is sponsored by the Library’s African American Interest Committee in recognition of the tremendous level of interest in the inauguration. “This is a momentous occasion for America, the election of an African American president, and even doubly so for African American communities who are looking at this past election and its outcome as miraculous and earth shaking,” said African American Center Librarian Stewart Shaw.

On Tuesday, Jan. 20,beginning at 9 a.m. Pacifi c Standard Time in the Koret Auditorium of the Main Library, 100 Larkin St.

An evening of original compositions. The John Santos Sextet

A musical journey through jazz and Caribbean rhythm with some of the Bay Area’s most creative instrumentalists and composers led by four-time Grammy-nominated, US Artists Fontanals Fellow,John Santos. At La Peña Cultural Center, Friday,Jan. 23, 8:30 p.m. $12 adv.$14 dr.

Democrats blocked bill that may have prevented Oakland youth shooting death

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by the SF Green Party

OAKLAND – Political remedies to hold police more accountable for outrageous acts such as the shooting death of an African-American youth here on New Day have been blocked by even by supposedly “sympathetic” Democratic Party politicians, charged Green Party of California spokespeople Friday.

Greens said the killing of 22-year-old Oscar Grant by Oakland police should spark a renewed interest in police misconduct, transparency and accountability.

“Elected offi cials, including lawmakers representing the Bay Area such as Democrat Assemblywoman Fiona Ma (D-SF), have been blocking police accountability for years in Sacramento, She helped kill police accountability legislation in 2007,” said Erika McDonald, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Green Party.

Ma was a member of the 2007 Assembly Public Safety Committee which refused to even bring to a vote two pieces of legislation, SB 1019 and AB 1648, which would have given the public access to police records about misconduct and discipline involving police officers, including excessive force, -involved shootings and dishonesty.

“Another young man of color is dead. So much for change we can believe in,and an end to a practice of allowing law enforcement offi cials to act as a class.Supposedly “progressive”Oakland Mayor Ron , and the District Attorney, both Democrats, have not done what needs to be done,”added McDonald.

“Public access to police records about sustained police misconduct not only protects the public by helping deter police misconduct,but it generates confi dence in the police by holding police accountable,” said Cres Vellucci, Green Party spokesperson and member of the ACLU Board of Directors in Sacramento.

Prior to a relatively recent court decision,there was access to some discipline records of police with virtually no problems regarding the rights of police officers. Now police are protected from any real disclosure of problems.

News from the Unified School District

This week, after testimony from SFUSD and other educators and parents across California, the State Board of Education unanimously adopted its firstever content standards for teaching world languages.Margaret Peterson, SFUSD Program Administrator for Multilingual Education, was brought into the committee for her 16 years of experience teaching Japanese as a world language and developing the Foreign Language in Elementary Schools (FLES)curriculum.

U.S. Group asks Europe not to cut aid ton Nicaragua

The US-based Nicaragua Network has joined the Grupo Sur of European non-governmental organizations to plead with the European Union and Nicaragua donor countries not to cut or suspend their aid to Nicaragua based on concerns about fraud during the Nov. 9 municipal elections in Nicaragua.

“Cuts or suspension of aid is collective punishment that will only hurt the poor in Nicaragua,” said Chuck Kaufman, Nicaragua Network national co-coordinator. The Nicaragua Network is a US grassroots network of local committees that has worked for three decades to improve US-Nicaragua relations and to support social and economic justice in the Western Hemisphere’s second poorest country.

The Nicaragua Network letter cited efforts by the government of President Daniel Ortega to reduce poverty and increase social welfare in the areas of education, health, peasant agriculture, housing, and child labor. The group said cuts in aid by European countries will only harm the poor Nicaraguans who benefi t from those programs.

He letter was sent on Dec. 31 to the ambas sadors to the US from the European Union, The Netherlands, Finland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.

Mainstream U.S. media: government propaganda

More than ever, alternative media is taking the place of the ‘mainstream media’ for real information,especially on what our government is doing. Most people, however, still believe that if the information doesn’t come from CNN, NBC, ABC, Fox News, Univision, or the S.F. Chronicle, etc, they call it “a conspiracy theory,” a phrase that has become a populace’ slogan. And that is precisely what the government-faithful news media has made people believe for decades, while little by little take our constitutional freedoms away.

The more I navigate the internet, the more I am exposed to new sites rich in investigative information, far more than what I find in our local daily, or when I watch local TV channels, since I have no access to cable.

And you’ll find all kind of information, from what and how foods sold in the traditional supermarkets are poisoning us, to alternative health guides sources to the real players of the economic crisis to what and how the financial crisis works and why we are in the situation we are. All these also include news on ways to saving the planet and ourselves from a foreseeable destruction we are about to witness, thanks to our current corrupt Congress and Senate, judicial system and presidency.

People are waking up, they are starting to perceive mainstream media as too heavily biased, and since most alternative media outlets have little advertisements,they can’t be bought and silenced by advertisers, or worse: political parties and special interest groups.

The media establishment is seeing its days ending.Readers and audience are coming to the conclusion that, “we’ve been lied to.”

“The price of obtaining alternative views is falling fast. In fact, the main expense today is the value of our time. We have less and less time for the boring, superficial, and lying mainstream media. They know it. There is nothing they can do about it,” says Gary North in an article published in the LewRockwell.com blog. North is a former president of the Los Angeles Newspaper Guild/Southern California Media Guild.

“The monopoly that they have enjoyed … is coming to an end. So is the free ride of political parties that rely on the mainstream media to keep the masses in line,” North added.

I am driving home one night listening to the radio, and this KGO radio personality, whose name I can’t remember, is pushing a question about the Israeli Gaza bombardment on to his listeners, who, like children,call him to respond to the question. He is monopoliz- ing public opinion like they were children. And this is seen everywhere in the news media and broadcast networks, full-of-crap programming like telenovelas(soap operas), and crime movies teaching viewers at any age how to kill. They have had control of the print media and the airwaves for so long, that they have practically maintained control over the people – like zombies.

“What would you do if your neighbor wants to destroy you and start bombarding your country…don’t you have a right to fi re back?” and so on. It was so obvious his biases toward the Israeli government. It just reassured me on my believe that mainstream media is really a government-corporate voice, and is not there to serve us the public to tell us the true, but to conceal it and to entertain us to keep us aware of a long history of lying and manipulation by those sources, suggests that the corporate media is quite content to operate as an instrument of U.S. foreign policy by providing disinformation and outright lies to the U.S. public,” said Garry Leech, in his article published in the Global Exchange blog. Leech is an independent journalist and editor of the online publication

Colombia Journal, which analyzes U.S. foreign policy in Colombia. He also teaches international politics at Cape Breton University in Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Check out the nationally syndicated news/talk show, The Alex Jones Show, which can be found on over 60 AM, FM, and shortwave radio stations across the United States. Jones has been referred to as a conspiracy theorist by mainstream media outlets, while Russia Today (R/T TV) has referred to him as an investigative journalist. Here’s one of his video-radio shows you can copy and past into your web browser. http://prisonplanet.tv/members/livetv/LiveTV_Archive2.php?id=20090106_Tue_Alex

Another excellent show is that of Mike Rivero’s What Really Happened radio show on GCN six days a week www.whatreallyhappened.com. His WRH website is among the top ten ranked daily political news sites on the Internet. It might be fair to consider it like the “New York Times” of internet news…only instead of the Times’ slogan ,’all the news that’s fit to print’, WRH ‘s slogan could be ‘all the news that’s “not fit to print” ‘…and that’s why the information found at WRH is almost always shockingly enlightening to first time visitors.

Other independent media: InfoWars.com, PrisonPlanet.com, InfoWars.net, PrisonPlanet.tv, The Jones Report, TruthNews.us

Journal unfairly pins housing crisis blame on Latinos

by José de la Isla

A Jan. 5 Wall Street Journal story by Susan Schmidt and Maurice Tamman mugged some Latino leaders connected with housing advocacy.

Congressional Hispanic Caucus members and CHC’s separate but closely allied nonprofit public policy institute came under close scrutiny for the appearance of an overly close association with troubled mortgage lenders. The Journal article said congressional representatives and the institute received contributions for dubious purposes.

Schmidt and Tamman asserted Congressional Hispanic Caucus members “received donations from the lending industry and saw their constituents moving into new homes, pushed for eased lending standards, which led to problems.”

At least $2.3 million in political contributions were made to members of the Hispanic Caucus at the height of the subprime mortgage expansion in 2005.

Countrywide Corp., Washington Mutual, and New Century Financial, Ameriquest Mortgage Corp., Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were among the companies mentioned that contributed and participated in an internship, research and advocacy program,called Hogar, administered by the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute.

Aracely Panameño, of the Center for Responsible Lending, was said to have attempted to warn Hogar with data about shortcomings
in housing lending practices and impacts on Latinos.

The biggest judo chops were saved for California Congressman Joe Baca, the immediate past chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus and a longtime advocate for opening up first-time home-buyer opportunities.Roughly 9,200 families in San Bernardino, Calif., Baca’s district, lost homes to foreclosures.

AmeriDream Inc., a nonprofit housing company and an Hogar sponsor, provided a $25,000 charitable contribution in October 2008 to a foundation set up by Baca. Baca backed AmeriDream’s seller-financed down-payment assistance program with money that originated from home builders who made donations to the nonprofit.

The program was outlawed last year through new housing legislation. Now Baca is cosponsoring a bill to allow similar, but not the same, approach for seller-financed down-payment assistance to low-income Federal Housing Administration borrowers.

The WSJ story’s tone and impression was that of borderline wrongdoing or at least ethically challenged activity. Lapses in good judgment, yes. Coming under the soft, romanticsway of money, probably. But having Latinos take the brunt of the subprime mess is taking it too far.

There’s no question subprime schemes front-loaded Latino clients, although so far data is unavailable by ethnicity. Nationally 1.5 million homes (not just Hispanic households) were lost and another 2 million families with subprime loans are in danger of losing theirs in the near future.

Esther Aguilera, president of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, told WSJ she was shocked by the story’s conclusions and its accusations. They missed the point about the root causes of the housing crisis and “protections for families from unscrupu lous predatory lenders,” she said.

Ed Gonzáles of the Real Estate Associates Latinos in Houston, told me by e-mail that lending fundamentals were clearly compromised during the go-go years. Now, he asks “who/what made the decision to overlook or minimize lending guidelines?”

There is plenty of blame to spread around and other aspects to investigate. But, for scapegoating purposes one would have to believe Latinos were turning the dials on world banking vaults and making puts and calls on hedge funds and packaging mortgages on Wall Street for Europe and China.

So trying to hang the jacket on what seems like an “Industrial-Latino Housing complex” is, to say the least, going too far. While it may have uncovered some of those reaching into the cookie jar, they are not the ones who baked the bad batch. Getting little attention is another damage done by this housing collapse. It is one affecting many families of this generation who will now look at the American Dream thing as just another scam.

[José de la Isla writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. He is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (Archer Books). E-mail
joseisla3@yahoo.com.
] ©2008

Cuba’s people – 50 years later, still hungry

by Ricardo Chavira

After 50 years of revolutionary rule, Cubans are still waiting for the one thing that matters most: economic security. While they enjoy free health care and higher education, millions of Cubans endure the grim hardship imposed by salaries of less than 30 dollars a month.

Traditional analysts and exile activists will tell you that Cubans above all yearn for democracy and full respect for human rights, and that assessing Cuba in simple economic terms is wrongheaded.

Certainly political freedom does matter. However, it’s far less pressing for most Cubans than the day-to-day struggle to make ends meet. That has never been truer than today. It could well be the ultimate standard by which the revolution’s success or failure is eventually judged.

I reached this conclusion after 20 years of travel to Cuba and conversations with hundreds of its residents.During most of this time Cuba has endured an economic calamity. Its tenuous recovery is now seriously threatened by the global financial crisis.

Because the Cuba debate is so intensely politicized,I was surprised during my first trip in 1989 to find most Cubans preoccupied with their personal economic plight. The same day I attended an event at which Fidel Castro vowed to preserve socialism, a teacher quietly complained to me he did not earn enough to provide for his family. He brushed off questions about revolutionary politics, pressing on the possibilities of making a new life in Spain or the United States.

In August 1993 Cuba was fully in the depths of its euphemistically named “Special Period in Peacetime,” the near-collapse of the system after Soviet aid ended. The government offi cials I met were shaken.They expressed grave concern about their country’s future. Food and other basic necessities were in alarmingly short supply and blackouts lasted most of the day. A senior bureaucrat and her husband invited me over for dinner, a lone avocado adorned with lettuce.

Over the next several years I witnessed Cuba’s agonizing climb away from the precipice. But its people, not unlike millions of others throughout the Caribbean and Latin America,have never attained liberation from the torment of not having enough.

Cuba’s poverty is less dire, for example, than that which prevails in Haiti or Honduras. Its 11.4 million residents aren’t starving or homeless. They are generally grateful for universal medical attention and education. Still, those advances do nothing to alleviate the stress caused by a dire housing shortage and chronically existing on too little.

Government rationing and subsidies are supposed to make for a decent standard of living. The reality is considerably different. Pay, for reasons never clear to me,is simply too paltry to cover the cost of living. The price of cooking oil, meat, produce, clothes, shoes among others items is prohibitive.A pound of powdered milk,for example, can cost two dollars. Cars and vacations to nearby resorts are out of the question for most.

Those with relatives elsewhere have the relief of remittances. Even they and many more pilfer from where they work. Food, beverages, clothes and anything else that has a black market buyer fi nds its way from the workplace to the street.

Recently Vice President José Ramón Machado Ventura acknowledged in understatement that Cuba was confronting “very diffi cult”economic times. That’s hardly news to Cubans I know. They are nurturing the hope that Presidents Raúl Castro and Barack Obama will overcome half a century of hostility,meet and pave the way for a relationship that includes economic betterment for the island.

“We want political change that will bring with it improvement in the standard of living,” one Havana native tells me, speaking for multitude. “It’s not really possible for us to continue on as we have.” Hispanic Link.

(Ricardo Chavira, a former foreign correspondent who covered Cuba, last visited the island in 2008 and continues to have contact there. He teaches journalism and Latin American Studies at the University of California, Irvine and California State University,Fullerton. E-mail: ricardo.chavira50@yahoo.com)
©2009

Vets and depression: Returning from war to fight new battel

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — When Lamont Christian returned from war, he often felt angry, afraid and unworthy. Years later, Christian found himself living in a homeless shelter, a sign that time had not healed his emotional wounds.

He went to the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System for help, and there, he learned the root of his problems: he was suffering from depression,post-traumatic stress disorder and anger management problems. Now, he wants others to learn from his experience.

“If I had a message to give to veterans who are coming out of the military now or even veterans who have been out for a long period of time, it’s that nothing is going to happen in your life unless you go and get the help you need,” he says.

Christian is a veteran of Vietnam, but his experience holds true for soldiers returning from current battlegrounds as well.

Nearly a third of veterans who are treated at Veterans Affairs health care centers have significant depressive symptoms, and about 13 percent have clinically diagnosed depression, says Marcia Valenstein, M.D., clinical psychiatrist with the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System and associate professor of psychiatry with the University of Michigan Health System.

Depression is a “very potent” risk factor for suicide among people receiving treatment for depression at the VA, she notes, with a suicide rate that is three times higher than that of the overall VA patient population.

Such high rates led Valenstein and her colleagues to study the best time to provide intensive interventions to veterans with depression to prevent suicide. In a study just published by the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers found that veterans with depression were at highest risk for suicide in the 12 weeks after they were hospitalized for psychiatric conditions.

“This finding highlights the need for very close followup for patients who are discharged from our inpatient services because this is a particularly vulnerable time for them,” says Valenstein,a core investigator with the Serious Mental Illness Treatment Research and Evaluation Center at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.

Current government recommendations have focused on providing intensive follow up for patients following all new antidepressant starts. More attention needs to be paid to the highest-risk periods that follow psychiatric hospitalization, Valenstein says. “Health systems with limited resources should focus their efforts on this time period to have the greatest impact on suicide prevention.”

The Department of Veterans Affairs has made mental health issues a priority,Valenstein notes. VA health centers have received more than $300 million for expansion of suicide prevention and other mental health services from the Veterans Health Administration.

Note: The views expressed in the study are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Summits in Brazil foreshadow some kind of “OAS without U.S.”

by the El Reportero’s news services

A flurry of summits held in the Brazilian resort of Costa do Sauípe in mid-December — Mercosur,Unasur, Rio Group and the new regionwide CLAC— was not only a display of President Lula da Silva”s aspiration to regional leadership but also a sign that the creation of something akin to “an OAS without the US” could be in the offing.

Symbolic of the region’s new assertiveness was the much-publicised incorporation
of Cuba to the Rio Group. Meanwhile, in Panama, a US reminder of its own continuing influence passed largely unnoticed by the regional media.

Bolivia panics over Brazil gas sales

On Jan. 8 the government of President Evo Morales announced it was sending a emergency mission to Brasilia to discuss the sudden drop in Brazil’s natural gas imports from Bolivia.

Since Jan. 1, Brazil’s state energy group, Petrobras,has cut its daily imports of natural gas from Bolivia by a third, to around 19m cubic metres a day, from 31m.

This is because good rains in Brazil have fi lled reservoirs, allowing it to switch to cheaper hydroelectric plants rather than natural gas-fired thermal plants. Brazil is Bolivia’s main customer for Bolivian natural gas, which provides the Morales government with an estimated 41 percent of its fi scal income.

Divisions could cost ruling Frente Amplio elections in Uruguay.

The ruling Frente Amplio (FA) coalition is in danger of losing October’s presidential elections. Such a contingency seemed re-
mote throughout the entirety of the mandate of President Tabaré Vázquez so far.

It is now a real possibility with the FA facing divisive primary elections in June after failing to offer unanimous support to a single candidate for the presidency during a party congress in December.

Israel’s Gaza invasion provokes protests throughout Latin America.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Opposition to Israel’s invasion of the Gaza Strip is heating up throughout Latin America .

Venezuela has expelled Israel’s ambassador. Guatemala and Colombia have called on Israel to stop fighting and begin immediate peace talks. Demonstrators in Argentina , El Salvador and Bolivia have condemned the invasion.Brazil is sending aid to victims.

“There is a tradition in Latin America of rejecting violence to solve any international confl ict,” said Adrian Bonilla , the director of the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Ecuador . “There is also a tradition of supporting the weakest country in a confl ict since most Latin American countries have been part of the Third World network.Another factor is that Israel is a close ally of the United States.”

Not surprisingly, Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez has taken the harshest stance.On Tuesday, he kicked out Israel’s ambassador and diplomatic staff. The Palestinian militant Islamist group Hamas applauded the move on Wednesday as a “courageous step.”

Chávez on Wednesday showed the photograph of a Palestinian child killed by Israeli bombs and said Israeli leaders should be tried for killing innocent men,women and children.

“Behind Israel is the American empire,” Chaavez said.

Chávez questioned why President-elect Barack Obama “until now hasn’t said anything” about Israel’s aggression. (Latin News and McClatchy Newspapers contributed to this report.)