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Hillary stresses human factor in himispheric trade

by José de la Isla

MIAMI BEACH — U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton sees the human factor as topmost in confronting hemispheric trade and immigration issues.

In an exclusive interview with this correspondent the morning after she participated in the Univisión-sponsored Democratic Party presidential primary debate here, Clinton took the opportunity to expand on these two issues of major interest to 49 million U.S Hispanics and nearly 400 million more in some two dozen countries south of our border.

Clinton had shared the spotlight the previous night with six other aspirants for the Democratic nomination in front of a national television audience of 4.6 million.

Frontrunner Clinton expressed to me the event’s stand-out moment as “the fact it occurred” at all. It was the first time in U.S. history that the major candidates appeared before a largely Latino national audience to debate the issues.

A similar event for the Republican candidates is in question. Only Senator John McCain has accepted the invitation so far.

In particular, Clinton emphasized to me the need for a hemispheric engagement that reaches all people and communities. Trade issues, for instance, ought to concern how workers and their families gain, both abroad and in the United States. She observed that while many of the wealthy in some Latin American regions have benefited, trade reforms have yet to reach the less privileged with significant impact. Obviously, not enough to stem illegal immigration into the United States.

Asked whether this country could pay serious attention to the interests of its Latin American neighbors, given the Iraq war and its other worldwide commitments, Clinton responded that the need for hemispheric cooperation doesn’t go away.

Dialogues “do not go up or down,” she elaborated; they should endure. Clinton made reference to her travels in Latin America and familiarity with the region’s many issues. In particular, she noted regional economies, energy, the environment, health, the poor and democracy as essential areas to engage Latin countries.

I brought up our relationship with Mexico President Felipe Calderón, who has led an aggressive police and military confrontation with narco-traffi ckers. He has made recent statements calling on the United States to do more in curbing demand for illegal drugs.

Expressing sympathy with Calderón’s efforts, Clinton agreed the United States should do more by diverting drug-users to treatment and increasing its efforts to push down the crime rate.

She added the caveat that Mexico itself has to re- store public order and take its own measures to curb narco-corruption among police and others. The two nations should partner in developing a comprehensive approach, she said.

Official ties linking Canada, Mexico and the U.S. — the three North American Free Trade countries — would work better if their ongoing “standing committees” worked “smarter” and their dialogues more promptly addressed issues and concerns as they arose.

“All good ideas,” she emphasized, “do not start in the U.S.”

She said the way to get smart about trade is to apply a strict standard and measure NAFTA by how it improves the lives of working people. Reforms that do not reach the middle class and poor exacerbate immigration problems. Clinton has consistently favored comprehensive immigration reform. In particular, she told me, this nation’s changing demographic profi le, with a Latino population approaching 50 million, is a refection on how “America is constantly reinventing itself,” adding the oft-repeated refrain, ”We are a nation of immigrants.”

She addressed the recent wave of demagoguery and immigrant-bashing that has created a public dissonance, blaming much of the current fault-fi nding on the fact that many in this country are susceptible to demagoguery “because Americans don’t see themselves getting ahead.”

Even though the nation has realized real benefits from immigration, those who don’t see themselves as touched directly by the benefits don’t believe it.

Demagoguery, she said, “unfortunately falls on receptive ears.”

Clinton made a similar observation the night before in front of the television audience. By the next morning, she was animated about her statement and the interplay between domestic and transnational perspectives.

At a stand-out moment, as one of seven candidates vying for attention, she referred to demagoguery polluting the waters of the immigration debate.

But now it seems she wanted her message to go the next step. Open minds, she suggested, see the connection between what happens abroad as a link to what happens here. And the judgment about good or bad policy is how it impacts people far away as well as nearby.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail joseisla3@yahoo.com.] © 2007

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It’s time for a new Ellis Island

by Cecilio Morales

Since parity in health care was good enough for Republicans at a recent presidential debate, perhaps their anti-immigrant followers ought to consider parity for today’s immigrants. Immigration restrictions today should be no greater than they were when the majority of this country’s forbears came.

That would be in the spirit of the declaration by former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, who stated during the debate: “Either give every American the same kind of health care that Congress has or make Congress have the same kind of health care that every American has.”

No Republican spoke in contradiction to that notion.

So let’s let immigrants in as easily as the great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents of our current crop of patriots arrived — or else send their descendants back across the ocean until they can meet modern immigration rules.

The sepia-tinted memories of the millions upon millions of U.S. residents whose ancestors came through Ellis Island usually include images of immigrants of yore who stood in line patiently awaiting their turn. All 22 million of them who checked in there between 1892 and 1924.

In fact, until 1882 there was no legal barrier whatsoever to entry into the United States.

That’s how millions of Irish immigrants could flee the genocidal policy of Britain that produced the infamous Potato Famine of the 1850s. The only barrier they faced on these shores was the ethnic prejudice of the Anglo-American vigilantes.

Some things don’t change much, do they?

Indeed, the history of U.S. immigration law is the history of prejudice. The first law of this kind was the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act. As its name 7suggests, the act was meant to keep out one specific group of people for reasons not even worth considering.

Many non-Chinese immigrants’ ancestors could still come into the United States without limit so long as they did not have an infectious disease (a reasonable health consideration in the age before penicillin).

The free-for-all intended for Europeans ended in 1922 with another law grounded in prejudice. It explicitly sought to preserve the then-current ethnic composition of the country by severely limiting immigrants from southern and eastern Europe.

The flow was still fairly large and easy for most other Europeans until 1924. Indeed, that flow actually turned outward during the Great Depression, when more people left the United States than came.

Another myth stricken. It’s the economy, not the Statue of Liberty, that draws in immigration.

Want to curb immigration?

Make sure the economy is so lousy you lose your job and stand in soup lines.

Otherwise, observe the following catastrophe that befell the United States when the nation had nearly open borders:

Through Ellis Island alone, the nation got novelist Isaac Asimov, body-builderCharles Atlas, composer Irving Berlin, children’s book writer Ludwig Bemelmans who authored the beloved “Madeline” books, actor and director Charles Chaplin, makeup expert and entrepreneur Max Factor, Boys’ Town founder Father Flanagan, Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, comedians Bob Hope and Stan Laurel, actor Bela Lugosi, dance master Arthur Murray, journalist James Reston and football star Knute Rockne.

Most of these and other immigrants, who came as nobodies, were the best gift the world has given the United States.

Now what about the Hispanics? Aren’t they overtaking the country?

While they are among the newest immigrants, they are also among the oldest. They didn’t face a passport inspector at the border, either.

St. Augustine, Florida, the oldest city in the United States was established by Spaniards. It was already 42 years old in 1607 when there was still doubt about the survival of Jamestown, Virginia, which celebrates its 400th anniversary this year.

So let’s hear it for parity. Let’s accord the same legal treatment to newcomers that was accorded to the great-grandparents of the vast majority of today’s model citizens.

(Cecilio Morales is executive editor of the Washington, D.C.-based weekly Employment & Training Report. Reach him at Cecilio@miipublications.com.) ©2009

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LBJ’s ‘great society’ ignited Hispanic Heritage Month

by Kenneth Burt

It took 403 years after immigrants from Spain first settled in St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565 for the United States to proclaim Hispanic Heritage Week as an official annual national celebration.

In 1968, at the behest of Congress, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced the commemorative event, which was extended to a full month—from Sept 15 to Oct. 15—20 years later.

With deep roots in the Great Society and some successful campaigns to insert Latinos into presidential politics, the initiative differed from most others at the time by establishing an annual celebration, not a one-time event. Co-sponsors of the Congressional Joint Resolution were predictably liberal for the most part. They included Edward R. Roybal of California and Henry B. González of Texas.

Also among them was George H. W. Bush, the current president’s father. The elder Bush was in the forefront of the Republican Party’s outreach efforts to Mexican Americans.

But President Johnson went way beyond symbolism. Johnson’s War on Poverty was the first serious effort to uplift economically disadvantaged Latinos. He started a host of federal programs, pumping money into job training and educational opportunities. He appointed a record number of Latinos to help oversee these programs, including Daniel Luevano as the Western states director of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO).

And for the first time, Johnson directed millions of dollars into Latino-run programs, such as Project SER, operated by the American GI Forum and the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), and such California-based institutions as the Center for Employment Training (CET) and the Mexican American Opportunity Foundation(MAOF).

LBJ TAUGHT LATINO KIDS

Johnson’s special relationship with Latinos went back to his days in Texas. He taught Mexican North American school children, and Spanish-surnamed voters provided the winning margin in his 1948 U.S. Senate election.

Shortly thereafter, Johnson helped Pvt. Felix Longoria fi nd a permanent resting spot in the Arlington National Cemetery after a Texas cemetery refused to bury the World War II casualty because he was Mexican.”

Given the controversy over Ken Burns’ initial exclusion of Latinos from his forthcoming PBS documentary on World War II, it is signifi cant to note that Congress signaled out battlefi eld bravery in promoting Hispanic Heritage Month.

“The Spanish-surnamed population has contributed the highest proportion of Medal of Honor winners through acts of bravery and determination in the defense of our land,” declared the U.S. Senate.

Veterans played a central role in that era’s presidential politics and in the political appointments by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Before overseeing the War on Poverty, Daniel Luevano, a World War 11 veteran, served as Undersecretary of the Army, making him at the time the highest ranked Latino in the federal government.

VETS NAMED TO LOCAL POSTS

Veterans were likewise represented at the local level. For example, President John F. Kennedy named Héctor Godinez as postmaster in Santa Ana, Calif. The national LULAC president had learned his leadership skills as a tank commander for General George Patton.

This nexus between politics and military service is best represented by Vicente Ximenes. In 1967, the president appointed Ambassador Ximenes to chair the newly created Inter-Agency Cabinet Committee on Mexican American Affairs. Winner of the Distinguished Flying Cross during World War II, Ximenes, of New Mexico, was formerly the national head of the GI Forum.

XIMENES STRESSED POLITICS

In an interview for my new book, The Search for a Civic Voice: California Latino Politics, Ximenes stressed the role of veterans in national politics. His tangible achievements included working with Congressman Roybal to enact the nation’s first bilingual education bill, which Johnson signed in January 1968.

Hispanics.He also stated that his most lasting contribution was placing Latino professionals and Latino issues into a federal government that had only started to recognize

Hispanic Heritage Month is a good time to honor the early trailblazers, many of whom served in World War II. Hispanic Link.

[Kenneth Buff is author of The Search for a Civic Voice: California Latino Politics (www.amazon.com and www.barnesandnoble.com). For more details, go to www.KennethBurt.com. Reach Burt at k.burt@sbcglobal.net.]

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Hispanic heroes recognized

by Raquel Sharp-Mendoza

Hispanic Heritage Month: Left to right: Guillermo Hispanic Heritage Month Left to right: Guillermo “Memo” Morantes, Mary Helen Rocha, Marcia Treidler, Cío Hernández, Marcia Treidler, Martín Mora, and Tony Ramírez hold their certificates received from KQED as Latino heroes. (photo by Marvin J. Ramírez)

To open Hispanic Heritage Month, KQED presented its annual Local Heroes event, honoring those who have excelled with their contribution to the advancement and better the lives of Latinos.

This year’s heroes included Cío Hernández, from the Marín County Health and Human Servicews Department; Martín Mora, Fire Fighters of Northern California; Guillermo “Memo” Morantes, New York Life Insurance; Tony Ramírez, Dover Elementary School; Mary Helen Rocha, The Perinatal Council; and Marcia Treidler, with ABADA- Capoeira San Francisco Grazilian Arts Center.

During his acceptance speech, Morantes said that in the Spanish language there is no concept of volunteering.

“When it comes to deciding where to volunteer or ‘to help’ with, it should be ­something that is dear to your heart and there should be some personal interest to make sure you stay committed.

For example, I started volunteering because of my sons,” Morantes said.

Helen Rocha pointed out: “I came up in a time in the U.S. when Latinos were not acknowledged and much less recognized for our involvement and contributions. I had to fight to get elected and had to fight stay in.

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Second round certain in Guatemala

by the El Reportero news services

Álvaro ColomÁlvaro Colom

With 76 percent of votes counted, Alvaro Colom, of the Unidad Nacional de la Esperanza leads the 9 September presidential elections with 28.04 percent.

Significance: Otto Pérez Molina of the rightwing Partido Patriota (PP) is behind him with 24.59 percent, well ahead of Alejandro Giammattei from the ruling Gran Alianza Nacional (Gana) who 17.51 percent. This means that a runoff between Colom and Pérez Molina is certain on 4 November.

One surprise in the elections was the strong performance of some of the smaller rightwing parties. Eduardo Suger, of the right wing Centro de Acción Social (CASA) scored 8.11 percent; Luis Rabbé from the Frente Republicano Guatemalteco (FRG) (led by the controversial dirty war president, Efraín Ríos Montt) had 7.07 percent.

One big loser in the elections was Rigoberta Menchú, from the centre-left Encuentro por Guatemala (EG) who took only 3.02 percent of the vote, slightly worse than the opinion polls had been forecasting.

Neoliberalism in Latin America: what has survived

Otto Pérez MolinaOtto Pérez Molina

The abandonment of neoliberalism in Latin America has become particularly strident since the tail-end of the 1990s, when Hugo Chávez was elected president of Venezuela. It is not, however, a new phenomenon: almost as soon as neoliberal policies – or ‘reforms’ as they were called by their proponents – began to be introduced, politicians began to campaign, if not for their outright rejection, at least for giving the policies “a human face”. Much of the ensuing disillusionment with politics and politicians arose from neoliberalism not delivering what it had initially promised, and from the failure of critics to give it that ‘human face’.

New threat to fiscal reform

The government is running into some last minute hitches over its ambitious and crucial fiscal reform package. The centrepiece of this is the innovatory Contribución Empresarial de Tasa Unica (Cetu). The last minute row, in the fi rst week of September, was over the introduction of a 5.5 percent tax on petrol.

State governors (predominantly members of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional) and the PRI itself, which wants to fl ex its political muscles after its successes in Yucatán and Veracruz – the country’s third most electorally important state – want to force changes to the government’s plan. The danger is that they will try to force too many changes which will create a majority in congress against the whole package.

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It’s (un)official in Cuba: Fidel cedes power – and problems – to Raúl

by Ricardo Chavira

(First in two-pant series on changes in Cuba, exclusive to Hispanic Link News Service)

Raúl CastroRaúl Castro

HAVANA, Cuba— Everything has changed, and nothing has changed. How else to describe the momentous and surreal political and social transformation rippling across Cuba?

With no announcement, Fldel Castro has permanently ceded power to his defense-minister brother RaúI, officials here tacitly acknowledge. In the year since Fidel became gravely ill and turned over temporarily presidential duties to Raul, the hand-off began.

It has been so gradual that only now is Washington waking up to the fact that Fidel has ensured the revolution will survive his passing. Cubans, though unsettled by the switch, continue day-to-day life as before. The transition is further complicated by the fact that Fidel has not died (contrary to recent published rumors in Miami) and still has some say in government policy.

This has led certain analysts to conclude mistakenly that the elder Castro continues to run Cuba, though in seclusion. He has weighed in to stall badly needed economic reforms, but increasingly Raul is exerting his will.

It is important to keep in mind that Raul is a staunch communist, which means the government will not veer far from its revolutionary origins.

On the other hand, Fidel’s younger brother is fairly pragmatic. He successfully pushed for reforms in the mid-9Os that saved the economy from collapse.

But under Fidel’s fieHerenciarcely anti-capitalist rule, Cuba’s economy has remained fairly anemic. Judging by his public comments, Raul is acutely aware of the nation’s plight.

Speaking at the annual July 26th Revolution Day celebration, he acknowledged what Fidel never would Cubans don’t earn a living wage. “Wages today are markedly not enough to satisfy all needs,” he said.

By contrast, Fidel, in one of the many opinion pieces he’s written in recent months, said simply reducing waste and raising Cubans’ self-esteem would boost the standard of living.

Similarly in contrast to Fidel, Raul acknowledged that on-the job theft is rampant and the product of paltry pay. The pilfering, he said, is “social indiscipline which, having taken root [will] prove difficult to eradicate.”

These are the words of a leader staking out an independent position.

Perhaps in recognition of his brother’s moderating role, RaúI asked Cubans to be patient while unspecified structural change is undertaken.

On Havana’s streets, most believe that Fidel will need to die before there can be profound economic reforms.

Chief among the expected changes would be substantial wage increases, additional private enterprise and greatly reduced Inflation.

For the second time since his brother took ill, Raul suggested it was time for Cuba and the United States to workout their differences. “If the United States authority were to finally desist from their arrogance and decide to converse in a civilized manner, it would be a welcome change,” he said.

It’s hard to imagine such talks with the Bush administration.

Washington has formed a commission to foster a transition to democracy and thwart Raul’s succession.

For the most part, life goes on, with Cubans clearly preoccupied with making a living.

Yet many ponder the strange nature of the political change. “For all of my life he has been out among the people everywhere,” says factory worker Yuriel of Fidel. “He is not dead, but he is no longer among us,” Next week: Raul inherits country restive for change.

(Hispanic Link contributing columnist Ricardo Chavira is conducting research for a book on contemporary Cuba. His e-mail is ricardochaviraSG@yahoo.com)

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Boxing

Saturday, September 8 – at Los Angeles (HBO PPV)

  • 12 rounds, super middleweights: Fernando Vargas (26-4, 22 KOs) vs. Ricardo Mayorga (28-6-1, 23 KOs).
  • 12 rounds, light middleweights: Luis Collazo (27-3, 13 KOs) vs. Sharmba Mitchell (57- 6, 30 KOs).
  • 12 rounds, light middleweights: Daniel Santos (30-3-1, 21 KOs) vs. Jose Antonio Rivera (38-5-1, 24 KOs).
  • 12 rounds, light heavyweights: Paul Briggs (26-3, 18 KOs) vs. Hugo Hernan Garay (28-2, 15 KOs).

Saturday, September 15 – at Las Vegas (HBO)

  • 12 rounds, WBC super featherweight title: Juan Manuel Marquez (47-3-1, 35 KOs) vs. Marco Antonio Barrera (63-5, 42 KOs)
  • 10 rounds, middleweights: Kassim Ouma (25-3-1, 15 KOs) vs. Sergio Mora (19-4, 4 KOs).

Saturday, September 22 – at Munich, Germany

  • 12 rounds, heavyweights, Vitali Klitschko (35-2, 34 KOs) vs. Jameel McCline (38-7-3, 23 KOs).

Saturday, September 29 – at TBA (Showtime)

  • 12 rounds, WBC heavyweight title: Oleg Maskaev (34-5, 26 KOs) vs. Samuel Peter (28-1, 22 KOs).

Saturday, October 6 – at Vancouver

  • 12 rounds, super featherweights: Manny Pacquiao (44-3-2, 35 KOs) vs. Humberto Soto (42-5-2, 26 KOs).
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Latin Grammy Award nominations announced

by Alex Meneses Miyashita

LATIN GRAMMYS: Nominations for the 8th annual Latin GRAM MY Awards were announced Aug. 29 in Miami.

  • Dominican artist Juan Luis Guerra leads this year’s nominations with five nods—thanks to his album La llave de mi corazón —including Album of the Year, Best Merengue Album, Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Tropical Song.
  • Puerto Rican superstars Ricky Martin and duo Calle 13 earned four nominations each. Martin for Album of the Year, Best Male Pop Vocal Album, Best Long Form Music Video for MTV Unplugged and Record of the Year. Calle 13 for Album of the Year, Best Urban Music Album, Best Short Form Music Video and Best Urban Song.
  • With three nominations are Miguel Bose, Franco De Vita, producer Carlos Jean, Kevin Johansen, Orishas and Zoe.
  • With two nominations are Aterciopelados, Belinda, Bob Clearmountain, Daddy Yankee, Kinky, Ivete Sangalo, Tommy Torres and Caetano Veloso.
  • Several other artists received nominations in one category, among them Pepe Aguilar, Beyoncé, Don Omar, Jorge Drexler, Ibrahim Ferrer, Intocable, La Quinta Estacion, Maná, Manu Chao, Vicentico, Gustavo Santaolalla, Alejandro Sanz and Shakira.

The Latin Recording Academy, which produces the Latin GRAMMY Awards, received more than 5,000 entries this year.

Its president, Gabriel Abaroa, stated, “It’s encouraging to see so many albums, songs and musicmakers getting due recognition from their peers, and it’s exciting to see unique collaborations breaking new ground in music.”

Awards will be given in 49 categories.

The event will take place Nov.8 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, broadcast live on Univisión starting at 8 p.m.

A complete list of nominees is available at www.grammy.com.

A limited number of tickets will be available to the public starting Sept. 13.

To purchase tickets: Mandalay Bay Events Center Box Office, (702) 632-7580, www.mandalay.com; or Ticketmaster, (702) 474-4000, www.ticketmaster.com.

Hispanic Link.

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Monterey Bay Acuarium’s annual “Fiesta del Mar”

by the El Reportero staff

El comediante George López. Comedian George LópezComedian George López

Families can learn how to protect the ocean and celebrate the sea at the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s annual “Fiesta del Mar,” a Latin American cultural festival celebrating ocean conservation, from 10 to 5 on Sunday, September 9. This year’s fun-filled day will include activities for the whole family including live performances by musicians and traditional dancers, special auditorium programs, bilingual feeding shows, information booths, and crafts for kids. Children 12 and under will be admitted free to the aquarium all day. One highlight will be the presentation of the “Heroe del Medio Ambiente” (Hero of the Environment) award to Mexican Lucha Libre wrestler El Hijo del Santo (Son of the Saint). The aquarium will present this award to El Hijo del Santo in recognition of his commitment to defend the oceans and battle the “enemies of the sea”.

For more information about “Fiesta del Mar,” visit www.montereybayaquarium.org.

KQED free screening addresses Latino media and marketing

Latinos, the largest and fastest growing minority group in the United States, are big business. “Brown Is The New Green: George Lopez and the American Dream” examines how American media and Hispanic marketing are shaping the contemporary Latino identity. It investigates the current attempts to portray and profit from the Latino market. KQED presents a free screening of “Brown is the New Green” on Thursday, September 13 at 6pm at the Oakland Museum of California. Filmmaker Phillip Rodriguez will be available to answer questions in a session following the program, which premieres on Wednesday, September 12 at 8:00 pm on KQED Public Television 9.

For more information: http://www.pbs.org/previews/brownisthenewgreen/.

Local Artists in Concert at Allyne Park

The first concert of the Jerry Garcia Amphitheater Series, celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Summer of Love will be held at Allyne Park, on the corner of Gough & Green Streets on Saturday, September 8th, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The open-air performance will feature two of San Francisco’s premier singer-songwriters: Deborah Pardes and Kevin McCarthy.

Party to Support Teatro Nahual

Teatro Nahual is a Santa Clara County based organization dedicated to education and entertainment through the Spanish speaking theatre; including music, dance, and art. Teatro Nahual pursues the dream of preserving Latin identity for new generations that deserve to know their past, to understand their present reality and build a successful future.

Featuring a DJ and local Latin actors and actresses, a party in support of Teatro Nahual will be held on Friday, September 14 at 9:30 p.m. at the Estrellita Restaurant in Los Altos. The $15 donation includes aperitivos, and more information can be found at teatronahual.org, or by calling (650) 669-2949.

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Gold Medal for Sergio Tapia

by the El Reportero staff

L-R: Actress Evelyn Martínez, singer/author Sergio Tapia, Mexico Embassador Columba Calvo, and the president of the Association: of Nicaraguan Artists Hosman Balmaceda, during the award the Artist of the Year event in Managua, Nicaragua.L-R: Actress Evelyn Martínez, singer/author Sergio Tapia, Mexico Embassador Columba Calvo, and the president of the Association of Nicaraguan Artists Hosman Balmaceda, during the award the Artist of the Year event in Managua, Nicaragua.

From a group of more than a dozen artists awarded with the Artist of the Year award, in Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan and San Francisco resident Sergio Tapia, was one of three only ones, who received the golden medal “Honor to the Merit “, and the diploma “Honor and Glory” to Nicaragua.

Artist Luis Enrique Mejía López and Hernaldo Zúniga were the other two other artists who also received the golden medal, whom are part of the international category.

Among the prizewinners with a diploma were: as folklorist, Carlos Mejía Godoy; interpreter, César Andrade; writer and librettist, Fabio Gadea Mantilla; memorial music revival, Los Hermanos Cortez; musician of the year, Ricardo Palma; among other artists in other categories.

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