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Indymedia ireland

Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

offsite link Army Sergeant Travis Decker Murdered His Three Children After Being Denied Mental Health Care at JBL... Sat Jun 07, 2025 04:52 | JBLM Whistleblowers
A corrupt military police force and incompetent Commander who denied emergency mental health care and crisis counseling to an American service member resulted in the murder of the sergeant's three young daughters

offsite link Gaza doctor grieves her nine children killed in Israeli strike Sun May 25, 2025 20:00 | imc
Israeli regime continues it's slaughter
'The children were completely charred'

Paediatrician Alaa al-Najjar was treating victims of Israeli attacks when her children were killed by an Israeli strike on their home

offsite link British doctors working in Gaza describe territory as a ?slaughterhouse? Sat May 24, 2025 00:23 | imc
There?s no food getting in so people are starving,? surgeon Tom Potokar says
British doctors working in Gaza have described the territory as a ?slaughterhouse,? where the patients they are treating are severely malnourished.

Plastic surgeons and orthopedic specialists from the UK are based at the Amal and Nasser hospitals in Khan Younis in the south of the territory.

Dr. Tom Potokar, a plastic surgeon specializing in burn injuries, has worked in Gaza 16 times but said this mission had revealed a level of destruction far greater than his last visit in 2023,

offsite link It is time to talk about the Out of Control Immigration. Mon Mar 31, 2025 22:12 | imc
For the last few years since the CV19 scamdemic undocumented immigration into Ireland has surged. No one is allowed discuss it because they do not want any rational debate about it. If you do you are labelled an extremist. However this out of control immigration is fully facilitated by the Irish government and the EU and the shady figure behind the Neo Con movement pushing for endless war, wokeism and globalist agenda.

offsite link [Dublin] National Demonstration for Palestine: End Israeli Apartheid & Genocide Thu Mar 06, 2025 22:35 | ipsc
Sat, 22 March 2025, 13:00 Assemble at the Garden of Remembrance, Parnell Square, Dublin 1
The Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign, supported by over 150 Irish civil society organisations, has called another National Demonstration for Palestine on Saturday 22nd March.

The march will begin at the Garden of Remembrance at 1pm and finish outside the D?il on Molesworth Street/Kildare Street to bring our demands to the Irish government?s doorstep.

The Saker >>

Public Inquiry
Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

offsite link RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony

offsite link Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony

offsite link Robert Watt complaint: Time for decision by SIPO Anthony

offsite link RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony

offsite link Waiting for SIPO Anthony

Public Inquiry >>

Human Rights in Ireland
Promoting Human Rights in Ireland

Human Rights in Ireland >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Meet Obki the Alien: Sky TV?s Little Yellow Man Who Aims to Turn Your Children Green Wed Aug 13, 2025 07:00 | Steven Tucker
If you thought Sky Drama was bad when it comes to pumping out climate alarmist propaganda, wait until you watch Sky Kids. Steven Tucker takes a look at Obki, a children's cartoon and mouthpiece for green propaganda.
The post Meet Obki the Alien: Sky TV?s Little Yellow Man Who Aims to Turn Your Children Green appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link News Round-Up Wed Aug 13, 2025 01:00 | Toby Young
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Student Who Called Hospital Worker a ?Welsh C***? is Convicted of Racism Tue Aug 12, 2025 19:00 | Richard Eldred
A Cardiff student has been fined for racially aggravated harassment after calling a hospital worker a "Welsh c***" when staff couldn't help her sister during a seizure.
The post Student Who Called Hospital Worker a ?Welsh C***? is Convicted of Racism appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Government Uses Credit Cards to Pay for Skilled Worker Visas Tue Aug 12, 2025 17:00 | Richard Eldred
Despite Labour's promise to slash migration, the Department for Work and Pensions has splurged ?213,000 on government credit cards to extend visas for hundreds of foreign staff.
The post Government Uses Credit Cards to Pay for Skilled Worker Visas appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Land That Forgot About Wolves Tue Aug 12, 2025 15:00 | Dr David McGrogan
In a world where fairy tales once warned of deadly wolves, David McGrogan reveals how modern tales now tackle these predators with kindness, reflecting a society that's lost its edge against genuine threats.
The post The Land That Forgot About Wolves appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

Search words: honduras

Plan Puebla Panama, Dams and Indigenous Survival.

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Monday March 18, 2002 03:42author by francisco rojas - Chiapas Indymediaauthor email frojas at genoaresistance dot org Report this post to the editors

Plan Puebla Panama may be trying to get rid of Indigenous resistance by drowning it.


"If we look at the State of Chiapas, for instance, the majority of the potential sites for the generation of hydroelectric power are located within the Conflict Zone. It’s calculated that over 40 potential sites are located in the Conflict Zone, where Zapatista Autonomous Communities are located. What this would do is dislocate the majority of the population in that region and could, essentially, create more conflict.
If the projects within the PPP were eventually realized, they could flood up to 800 archeological sites within the Peten and Chiapas. In fact, up to one third of the Peten could be flooded if all these dam sites were put into place.
Would the benefit be going to those communities that are dislocated and destroyed? No, it would be going to the people who are investing in the creation of that hydroelectric energy, and most of the hydroelectric energy used would then be exported and sold. So investors would probably make a bundle on the projects, while the local communities would suffer."
Chris Treter, Global Exchange


"the Isthmus is not for sale!",
Subcomandate Marcos, EZLN


From March 20th to 24th, representatives of indigenous communities, local civil society and Non Governmental Organizations from Mexico, Central and South America, Europe and the USA will be meeting in a small village near the Mexican Guatemalan border to plan how to resist dam projects in the Plan Puebla Panama (PPP). This will be the first time such a broad a range of groups will be meeting to organize against a specific aspect of the PPP.
Little know outside the region, the Plan Puebla Panama was proposed last year by President Vincente Fox of Mexico as a way of bringing "the fruits of globalization" to the region South and East of Mexico City along with the countries of Guatemala, Belize, honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. It is an ambitious combination of infrastructure projects, tax and legal incentives designed to expand the Maquiladora (assembly plant) concept, where manufactured US goods are assembled in low wage factories in Mexico before being returned to the US, from the North of Mexico to the South, and to facilitate the shipping of those products to Asia.
A centerpiece of this will be a series of ‘dry canals’ from the Caribbean to Pacific, including one across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, near the border of the Mexican States of Chiapas and Oaxaca. This would cut out 2,500 miles from the present journey that goods have to take through the Panama Canal when they go by sea from the US East and West Coasts, and over 1000 miles from the journey that goods would have to take to go from the US East Coast to Asia. Given that some 80% of US manufacturing takes place on the East Coast, this would represent a massive cost savings to American, and increasingly European, multinational companies. The ‘dry canal’ would consist of a new port in Gulf of Mexico, a major freight railway to Salina Cruz on the Pacific side, a new highway network, and improvements to the port in Salina Cruz. This railway would be flanked by Maquiladoras to assemble the unfinished goods being manufactured in the US and Europe before they would be reshipped out to the Asian and West Coast markets for sale. And, in addition, there are plans for industrial shrimp farms, tree plantations, oil refineries, and smelters along this corridor.
To power this and other mega-projects, the PPP envisions some 70 new dams in the Chiapas, Mexico/Petan, Guatemala region. These dams would have the additional effect of helping to dislocate and disrupt the Indigenous populations of the region which have a long history of resistance against the exploitation of the Governments and businessmen of Mexico and Guatemala. Further, these displaced populations would provide a convenient workforce for the Maquiladoras in the Industrial Centers being envisaged by the PPP. Carlo Fazio, an Uruguayan writer, has concluded that the PPP represents a counter-insurgency strategy to undermine and eliminate the largely Mayan resistance in the area.
In order to respond to the challenge posed by PPP, NGOs, representatives of civil society and indigenous communities have begun to hold regional conferences. The first meeting was held in Tapachula in Chiapas in May, 2001, with a follow-up meeting in Quetzaltenango in Guatemala in November, 2001. During those meetings it was decided, given the broad nature of the PPP, that aside from general organizing against the Plan, it would be necessary to start to make action plans against specific elements of the PPP. As such, the Foro por la Vida in La Quetzal, Guatemala was planned to focus specifically on the question of dams and their impact.
Dams have a checkered history, particularly in Latin America. Anti-dam activists in Mexico, Guatemala, honduras, El Salvador, Colombia, Brazil, Chile have repeatedly been harassed, beaten, disappeared and murdered. In 1982, almost 400 people were murdered by the Guatemalan Military and Paramilitaries for resisting the World Bank sponsored, Chixoy Hydroelectric Project. Hundreds of thousands of Indigenous peoples have been displaced and ‘resettled’ across Mexico and Central America in the last century, often resulting in near total destruction of communities and cultures. On the subject of large hydroelectric projects Balakrishnan Rajagopal, a professor of law and development at MIT states, ‘"development cleansing" may well constitute ethnic cleansing in disguise, as the people dislocated so often turn out to be from minority ethnic and racial communities.’ In order to learn from other experiences in resisting dams, the first day of the conference will be devoted to presentations from activists from Guatemala, Colombia, Bolivia, honduras, El Salvador, and, possibly, Ecuador and the Mexican State of Guererro.
La Quetzal, near the river Usumacinta, on the Guatemalan side of the Mexico/Guatemalan border is particularly well situated to reflect the complicated context of the PPP. Having survived a civil war in which more than 100,000 Indigenous people were murdered, in April, 1995, after spending almost 15 years in refugee camps in Mexico, 200 families of Guatemalan refuges crossed back over the border into Peten to found the Union Maya Itza, as the La Quetzal finca is called. Within days, they found that they had been abandoned to their fate, lacking access to any real government aid or NGO assistance, and only through their own self organization were able to survive the first year in the jungle. Drawing on their experiences as refugees in Mexico, they organized their own health and education, and proceeded to develop a viable community in their new lands, with an economy based on agriculture, animal husbandry and sustainable forestry. Now, having lived through the upheavals of the past two decades to rebuild their lives in their homelands they face having their lands inundated and, once again, being displaced by the flooding of the Usumacinta river due to the PPP dam projects.
La Quetzal is remote and isolated, the 15 km trek from the town of Bethel on the border taking 1 ½ hours. Electricity is sparse, and there is only limited satellite phone available from the village. Bringing several hundred people to this spot is an attempt by the organizers to make the conference more accessible to the people living in the region, even if it represents added hardships for conference participants.
As Chris Treter of Global Exchange says, "One of the most important things we are trying to do in organizing conferences is to get local support for what’s going on. It is important for educating the communities which are going to be affected and to have the communities play a large part in the process of creating an organized resistance to the projects."
by Francisco Rojas,
frojas@genoaresistance.org
http://www.genoaresistance.org
For more coverage of the Foro por la Vida in La Quetzal, Guatemala, visit http://chiapas.indymedia.org

Related Link: http://chiapas.indymedia.org
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