Home > Programs
> FSRN
> Fri., July 16, 2004
FSRN
FREE SPEECH RADIO NEWS
Thanks to FSRN.org
for making the daily programs available to Pacifica.org
Today's lead stories:
Foreign Operations Bill
Energy Referendum in Bolivia
HIV-AIDS in Sudan
Unethical HIV Research
Police Torture in Chicago
DC Minimum Wage
FSRN Headlines
Philippine Troops Leave Iraq
Today, troops from the Philippines started to leave Iraq.
U.S. and Australian officials have criticized the move saying
the Philippine government is caving into pressure by terrorists.
A Filipino man, Angelo de la Cruz is being held hostage in
Iraq. His captors say they will execute him unless the Philippines
withdraws the 50 people from Iraq who are mostly engaged in
“humanitarian” assistance. Spain, the Dominican
Republic, Nicaragua, and Honduras have already decided to
withdraw troops from what the Bush administration continues
to call “the Coalition of the Willing.”
Peace Activists Win in NYC
Peace activists will be able to put up their anti-war billboard
in New York City during the Republican National Convention.
Leigh Ann Caldwell reports from WBAI.
Bush Slams Undocumented Immigrants
Trade Unions and Immigrants rights groups are slamming the
Bush Administration today accusing it of squashing two measures
designed to help legalize the undocumented. From KPFK, Aaron
Glantz reports.
Largest Timber Sale Begins
Today the Forest Service begins largest timber sale in modern
U.S. history. Leigh Robartes reports.
Caribbean Leaders to Haiti
Representatives of 5 of the 15 Caribbean nations of CARICOM
ended a two-day summit with the installed leaders of Haiti
this week. They say they are hoping to find mutual ground
and gain financial assistance from the world’s wealthiest
nations. Kody Emmanuel has the story.
[top]
Foreign Operations Bill
Thursday night, the House of Representatives passed its
foreign operations spending bill that provides billions of
dollars in military assistance to countries around the world,
including 2.2 billion dollars for Israel and billions more
for other U.S. allies. The measure will also cut off aid to
countries that refuse to exempt US soldiers from the International
Criminal Court. Mitch Jeserich reports on the various odds
and ends of this all encompassing foreign aid bill.
[top]
Energy Referendum in Bolivia
Last October, tens of thousands of poor indigenous Bolivians
blocked highways and faced off with heavily armed soldiers
in protest of a controversial plan to export natural gas to
the United States through Chile. They drove then-Bolivian
President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada from office, but
not before government security forces killed at least 59 people
and wounded more than 400. On Sunday, Bolivians will revisit
the issue of how their natural gas should be exploited, this
time in a national referendum convoked by Sánchez de
Lozada's successor and former vice-president, Carlos Mesa.
The referendum is an attempt to fulfill one of two promises
Mesa made soon after assuming office nine months ago, when
he ceded to the principal demands of indigenous-based unions
and social movements that led the popular uprising. Reed Lindsay
reports from La Paz, Bolivia.
[top]
HIV-AIDS in Sudan
As the 15th International AIDS conference comes to a close
in Bangkok, communities in Southern Sudan are awaking from
the nightmare of the deadly threat posed by HIV-AIDS. Rupert
Cook reports
[top]
Unethical HIV Research
Many members of communities most affected by HIV-AIDS say
Non Profit and Non Governmental Organizations are harming
their communities in the name of stopping the epidemic. At
the forefront of the fight are sex workers demanding the right
to lead healthy lives free of infection and state interventions.
FSRN's Darby Hicky reports.
[top]
Police Torture in Chicago
While the prison torture scandal in Iraq continues to draw
criticism, another torture scandal is capturing public attention
in Chicago. Earlier this week, nine current and former Chicago
police officers cited the 5th amendment - which protects against
self-incrimination - in refusing to answer subpoenas for a
special investigation into police torture. Chris Geovanis
reports from Chicago.
[top]
DC Minimum Wage
According to the AFL-CIO if wages in the United States kept
pace with the rate of inflation since 1968 when it was a $1.60
per hour, the minimum wage in 2003 would be at $8.46 per hour.
As a result, eleven states and the District of Columbia have
acted independently to raise the minimum wage. This week,
the District Council held a public hearing to consider raising
the minimum wage to $7.00 per hour. FSRN's Tom Gomez has more
from DC.
[top]
|