Tag Archive | "Hague"

Weekly News Roundup, May 4th.


It’s Friday again!

And I have bad news for you: the Malvinas clusterfuck is back in full force!

Because now that the YPF expropriation bill has been passed, what other nationalist cause are we going to be distracted with? The 2014 World Cup is still more than two years away, so that’s a no.

So I guess there’s no choice but to dust off the Malvinas playbook and start yelling at British people again.

Here’s everything you need to know (but don’t want to know):

  • Wenlock and Mandeville, the terrifying mascots of the 2012 London Olympics. I don't condone violence but I must admit it will be funny to see an Argentine athlete kicking them in the crotch in order to make a point about Malvinas. Not because I care about the islands, but because they're just plain ugly. (Photo/Wikipedia)

    Since I’m sure you didn’t go to Velez for the Cristina-palooza last week, here’s the 40-minute speech she gave before thousands of flag-waving, ecstatic youngsters who attended the event to celebrate her existence. Since I’m willing to bet my life that you didn’t click on that link, let me tell you: she basically glorified young people as the future of the nation and told the crowds to remain “united and organized.” Also there was a lot of yelling, even though she was standing two centimeters away from the microphone. All in all, a positive experience for those who survived the yelling.

  • In what could be considered the most awkward exchange of passive-aggressive smiles and ice-cold stares since Alien Vs. Predator, newly appointed Argentine ambassador to the UK Alicia Castro put British Foreign Secretary William Hague in the hot seat as he launched the annual world review of human rights at a ceremony in London.  Sitting right in front of him on the first row as he took the podium, Castro once again repeated the local government’s mantra regarding the Malvinas/Falklands and asked him point blank (or “ambushed,” as The Telegraph put it) if he was ready to give peace a chance. Enjoy the video.
  • Since this Wednesday marked the 30th. anniversary of the sinking of the General Belgrano cruiser during the Malvinas War, Cristina found yet another excuse to hold a ceremony related to the Malvinas. In a televised speech she gave from the Pink House she inaugurated the  brand new (*rolls eyes*) “Malvinas Argentinas Courtyard” and then she defended ambassador Castro’s actions, saying that “refusing to engage in dialogue is unsustainable,” a funny thing to say considering she refuses to talk to journalists since like, ever. She also criticized the permanent members of the  UN Security Council (i.e.: the US and the UK) saying that they always force other countries to follow UN resolutions but they themselves refuse to abide by them, which is actually kind of true.
  • Alright, I’m sure you feel refreshed now. And dirty. Let’s go back to Malvinas.
  • The 2012 London Olympics are right around the corner, and God knows what kind of fuckery will transpire there between the Argentine and the British teams. But if what happened this week is any indication, we’re in for a fun winter of gold medals and diplomatic shenanigans that will certainly end once the Olympic torch goes out and David Cameron little-boys Buenos Aires.  Everyone in the UK and the Malvinas/Falklands was up in arms yesterday after a controversial TV spot aired in Argentina, depicting the Argentine national hockey team captain Fernando Zylberberg “training” on the islands. As if that weren’t insulting enough (for the British), the ad concludes with the phrase “To compete on British soil, we train on Argentine soil.” Oh, snap!
  • And to add insult to injury, the ad was created by Young & Rubicam, an advertising agency that belongs to – you guessed it – a British company.  God, August cannot come fast enough. I’m gonna have so much to write about I may have to start doing a Daily News Roundup.
  • In YPF news, I totally spoiled it at the beginning already but the

    Many criticized The Sun for printing such a disrespectful headline after the sinking of the General Belgrano. But many more failed to realize that even more disrespectful is that The Sun is all about girls showing their tits. (Photo/Wikipedia)

    expropriation bill has been passed, which means that Argentina now owns 51 percent of the oil company. Yay!

  • Also this week, two romantic revolutionaires decided that a good way to make a point about something was to set off a bomb outside the European Union‘s offices in Recoleta. God bless these people, and their fight for peace by blowing stuff up.
  • Another tourist allegedly raped in Salta. The suspect has already turned himself in, assuring that he was in a relationship with the victim, a 21-year-old Swiss woman who was doing volunteer work there. I have no idea what the hell is going on there, but stay away.
  • Also in Salta this week, since such attacks pose a PR nightmare to the tourism industry there, the media (that’s us!) found a way to distract the population with a most sensationalist story that was covered by every network in the country: the tragic, heartbreaking story of an 8-year-old girl that was seen driving around in a car.
  • No, really. That happened. And boy, people were outraged. I mean, look at that video! The low quality! The shaky camera! The epic soundtrack! Rape? What rape?
  • Now onto the football part, which always comes last because it is obviously the least important one: Congratulations football megastar Lionel Messi! Not only you’re going to be a father soon, but this week you broke yet another record! After scoring his 68th. goal this season, Messi broke the record for goals scored in a European club season, previously held by some German guy called Gerd Müller. I have no idea what any of this means, all I know is that I get more internet hits thanks to it.

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Send Adrian your comments, thoughts or tips at adrianbono@hotmail.com or follow him on Twitter at @AdrianBono

Posted in Thoughts of a ForeignerComments (2)

Chile: Government Rejects Peru’s Demands at The Hague


Chile’s government has presented it’s rejoinder at the International Court of Justice in The Hague, following a three year dispute over maritime land with Peru.

Lawyers presented a central document, three additional annexes and one document detailing maritime maps in an attempt to rebuff Peru’s claims to 95km squared of sea within its territories in 2008.

Whilst Chile cites treatises drawn up in 1952 and 1954 that established maritime zones under the jurisdiction of Peru, Chile and Ecuador, Peru claims these were merely fishing agreements.

Chancellor Alfredo Moreno released a statement asserting that the legal documents blew Peru’s arguments out of the water “one by one”. Oral proceedings will begin in 2012, aft which the International Court of Justice will order an obligatory and fixed ruling.

Posted in Current Affairs, Round Ups Latin AmericaComments (0)

Nicaragua: President Will Take Border Dispute with Costa Rica to the Hague


The President of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, announced that he will take a dispute concerning border lines of the River San Juan with Costa Rica to the International Court of Justice, The Hague.
The Nicaraguan government decided to present the border matter before the Court after a presentation that the Costa Rican government made in the Organization of the United States (OEA).

Ortega claimed that “it is the Court that says who is in the right” as it is them that has “the information in order to do it”. He added that “the OEA doesn’t have anything to do with that.”

The Nicaraguan head of state affirmed that he had proposed to talk with the Costa Rican authorities but they went to the OEA although the organization “does not have the power to declare the borders of nations.”

Also, he reminded that for a long time, imperial powers had tried to minimise the territory of his country. He affirmed that currently, Colombia seeks an agreement with Honduras and Costa Rica for this same aim.

In thise sense, he underlined that his country has the sovereignty over the River San Juan.

Likewise, he said that Nicaragua always has resorted, in confrontation with whatever international problem, to the International Court of Justice. He emphasised that already they have passed three favourable decisions for his country and against Honduras, Colombia and Costa Rica.

Finally he said that they will submit themselves to the judge and will not resort to force. He hoped that his Costa Rican counterpart, Laura Chinchilla, shared the sentiment.

Story courtesy of Agencia Pulsar, a news agency run by AMARC-ALC network of community radios


Posted in Round Ups Latin AmericaComments (0)

Protests Continue Against Uruguayan Paper Mill


Yesterday, Gualeguaychú Assembly members protested for three hours on Route 14 (the Mercosur Route). The group met at Gualeguaychú Industrial Park and from 2.30pm to 5.30pm the procession travelled for three miles along the highway. When they came to a stop, they held an assembly meeting. They were protesting against the Botnia paper mill on the Uruguayan side of the Río Uruguay, in Fray Bentos. The Hague recently ruled that the paper mill could go ahead with processing, despite protests from environmentalists.

José Pouler, one of the assembly members said: “The Botnia conflict continues, the fight is not finished with the court ruling of the Hague.” Another assembly member, Jorge Fritzler, reiterated: “The Assembly will continue to fight, the fight continues against Botnia.”

An environmentalist in the protest, Liliana Melnick, said: “We’re disappointed, we feel betrayed.”

The procession included 150 to 200 vehicles and, once the group came to a stop, the assembly used the meeting to “decide on new action to continue the struggle.”

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner will meet José “Pepe” Mujica, Uruguayan president, on Wednesday in Anchorena, Uruguay. However, it has been reported that the issue of the paper mill is not on the agenda for these meetings.


Posted in Round Ups ArgentinaComments (1)


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