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Queens Stands Up: Phillip Josselyn, CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador)
On October 18, 2018, Jackson Heights Immigrant Solidarity Network (JHISN) held a community forum to address a range of urgent immigration issues. Phillip Josselyn, with the long-standing Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES), explains how the US's destructive foreign policy in Central America over the past several decades has forced millions of people to leave their homes in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Many of them come to seek refuge and asylum in the U.S.
published: 26 Oct 2018
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6.4.21 Political Role of Salvadoran Military and Police Threatens Democracy
Samantha Pineda of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) explains how the Bukele administration's militarized approach to public security, demonstrated throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond, has raised urgent concerns regarding the future of human rights in El Salvador.
published: 23 Jun 2021
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New York CISPES Presents: ¡A Más Represión, Más Lucha!
Join the New York chapter of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador to learn about how El Salvador's popular social movements are mobilizing to defend the achievements secured through El Salvador's revolutionary armed struggle in the 1980's and through the Peace Accords signed in 1992 against the threats of unprecedented rollbacks at this event at the People's Forum: ¡A Más Represión, Más Lucha! With Fran Omar, leader in the Popular Resistance & Rebellion Bloc in El Salvador. Speaking on unlawful arbitrary arrests, militarization and rollbacks on democracy.
Fran Omar is a popular social movement leader organizing to fight for the rights of various sectors through the Popular Resistance and Rebellion Bloc (BRP), founded in January 22, 2021 in the face of serious...
published: 10 Nov 2022
-
Leslie Schuld talk on El Salvador, Eugene, October 2023
Leslie Schuld, Oct. 1, 2023, Eugene, OR
Co-founder of CIS, August 1993, Executive Director since 1997.
Bachelor’s Degree in History from the University of Dayton and
Master’s Degree in Human Rights and Peace Education from the
University of El Salvador, born in Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Leslie has worked in solidarity with the people of El Salvador
and refugees from the civil war since 1981. She was the
Program Director of the Committee in Solidarity with the
People of El Salvador during the negotiations
to end the armed conflict in El Salvador.
She was responsible for discussions with other solidarity
organizations and social organizations In El Salvador
to create the CIS as a non-profit organization to accompany
the process post war to implement the Peace Accords,
recons...
published: 23 Dec 2023
-
The Upcoming Elections in Honduras and El Salvador- El Salvador (English)
Co-hosted by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
(El Salvador only)
Honorary Co-host: The Congressional Progressive Caucus
Over the next few months, two high-stakes elections will take place in Central America. On November 24th, Honduras will hold its first presidential and congressional elections since the controversial 2009 vote organized under a de facto government. In early February next year, the people of El Salvador will head to the polls for the first Presidential elections since the historic victory of the leftist party FMLN party in 2009.
Local media and elite business interests are largely hostile to the two countries' main left-leaning presidential candidates -- Xiomara Castro de Zelaya and Salvador Sanchez-Cerén -- though they are both currently in ...
published: 01 Nov 2013
-
Leftist Ex-Rebel Holds Narrow Lead in El Salvador After Entering Race as Heavy Favorite
http://www.democracynow.org Both candidates have claimed victory in El Salvador's presidential election after a preliminary count showed the vote was too close to call. The race pitted the governing party's Salvador Sánchez Cerén against the right-wing candidate Norman Quijano. Sánchez Cerén, a former rebel commander, was running to replace Mauricio Funes, marking the first time an FMLN candidate succeeds another after decades of right-wing governments. Sánchez Cerén was seen as the favorite coming in but the latest results show him ahead less than 1 percent. We go to El Salvador to speak with Laura Embree-Lowry of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador.
Democracy Now!, is an independent global news hour that airs weekdays on 1,200+ TV and radio stations Monday...
published: 10 Mar 2014
-
WTF?: El Salvador (2/12)
CODEPINK's Teri Mattson is joined by Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) to discuss current events in El Salvador.
---------
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/codepinkaction
SIGN UP FOR EMAIL UPDATES: http://www.codepink.org/join_us_today
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/codepinkalert
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codepinkalert/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/codepink
ABOUT CODEPINK
CODEPINK is a women-led grassroots organization working to end U.S. wars and militarism, support peace and human rights initiatives, and redirect our tax dollars into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs. Join us!
http://www.codepink.org
published: 12 Feb 2020
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CISPES May Day Delegation
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's orga...
published: 16 May 2013
-
CISPES May Day Labor Delegation 2013
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's organ...
published: 26 Jun 2013
-
WTF Is Going On In Latin America: Bukele's Authoritarianism
Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) joins CODEPINK's Leonardo Flores to discuss current events in El Salvador.
published: 17 Jun 2020
11:33
Queens Stands Up: Phillip Josselyn, CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador)
On October 18, 2018, Jackson Heights Immigrant Solidarity Network (JHISN) held a community forum to address a range of urgent immigration issues. Phillip Jossel...
On October 18, 2018, Jackson Heights Immigrant Solidarity Network (JHISN) held a community forum to address a range of urgent immigration issues. Phillip Josselyn, with the long-standing Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES), explains how the US's destructive foreign policy in Central America over the past several decades has forced millions of people to leave their homes in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Many of them come to seek refuge and asylum in the U.S.
https://wn.com/Queens_Stands_Up_Phillip_Josselyn,_Cispes_(Committee_In_Solidarity_With_The_People_Of_El_Salvador)
On October 18, 2018, Jackson Heights Immigrant Solidarity Network (JHISN) held a community forum to address a range of urgent immigration issues. Phillip Josselyn, with the long-standing Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES), explains how the US's destructive foreign policy in Central America over the past several decades has forced millions of people to leave their homes in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Many of them come to seek refuge and asylum in the U.S.
- published: 26 Oct 2018
- views: 29
1:17:39
6.4.21 Political Role of Salvadoran Military and Police Threatens Democracy
Samantha Pineda of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) explains how the Bukele administration's militarized approach to public secur...
Samantha Pineda of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) explains how the Bukele administration's militarized approach to public security, demonstrated throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond, has raised urgent concerns regarding the future of human rights in El Salvador.
https://wn.com/6.4.21_Political_Role_Of_Salvadoran_Military_And_Police_Threatens_Democracy
Samantha Pineda of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) explains how the Bukele administration's militarized approach to public security, demonstrated throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond, has raised urgent concerns regarding the future of human rights in El Salvador.
- published: 23 Jun 2021
- views: 19
1:47:54
New York CISPES Presents: ¡A Más Represión, Más Lucha!
Join the New York chapter of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador to learn about how El Salvador's popular social movements are mo...
Join the New York chapter of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador to learn about how El Salvador's popular social movements are mobilizing to defend the achievements secured through El Salvador's revolutionary armed struggle in the 1980's and through the Peace Accords signed in 1992 against the threats of unprecedented rollbacks at this event at the People's Forum: ¡A Más Represión, Más Lucha! With Fran Omar, leader in the Popular Resistance & Rebellion Bloc in El Salvador. Speaking on unlawful arbitrary arrests, militarization and rollbacks on democracy.
Fran Omar is a popular social movement leader organizing to fight for the rights of various sectors through the Popular Resistance and Rebellion Bloc (BRP), founded in January 22, 2021 in the face of serious setbacks in democracy, human rights and abuses of power.
Fran Omar is part of the leadership team of BRP and of the Batucada Network "TamborHilando", as well as of the Collective of Consistent Professionals that are part of the Block.
Fran is a Professor of Social Sciences, Popular Educator and a graduate student of Law at the University of El Salvador, where he participated for several years in university student organizing through the Fuerza Estudiantil Salvadoreña (FES).
Masks will be required at this event. Presentation will be largely in Spanish with interpretation into English available.
This event will be presented in person at The People’s Forum and online on YouTube. If attending in person, please be prepared to show proof of vaccination and ID at the door.
https://wn.com/New_York_Cispes_Presents_¡A_Más_Represión,_Más_Lucha
Join the New York chapter of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador to learn about how El Salvador's popular social movements are mobilizing to defend the achievements secured through El Salvador's revolutionary armed struggle in the 1980's and through the Peace Accords signed in 1992 against the threats of unprecedented rollbacks at this event at the People's Forum: ¡A Más Represión, Más Lucha! With Fran Omar, leader in the Popular Resistance & Rebellion Bloc in El Salvador. Speaking on unlawful arbitrary arrests, militarization and rollbacks on democracy.
Fran Omar is a popular social movement leader organizing to fight for the rights of various sectors through the Popular Resistance and Rebellion Bloc (BRP), founded in January 22, 2021 in the face of serious setbacks in democracy, human rights and abuses of power.
Fran Omar is part of the leadership team of BRP and of the Batucada Network "TamborHilando", as well as of the Collective of Consistent Professionals that are part of the Block.
Fran is a Professor of Social Sciences, Popular Educator and a graduate student of Law at the University of El Salvador, where he participated for several years in university student organizing through the Fuerza Estudiantil Salvadoreña (FES).
Masks will be required at this event. Presentation will be largely in Spanish with interpretation into English available.
This event will be presented in person at The People’s Forum and online on YouTube. If attending in person, please be prepared to show proof of vaccination and ID at the door.
- published: 10 Nov 2022
- views: 469
1:25:13
Leslie Schuld talk on El Salvador, Eugene, October 2023
Leslie Schuld, Oct. 1, 2023, Eugene, OR
Co-founder of CIS, August 1993, Executive Director since 1997.
Bachelor’s Degree in History from the University of Da...
Leslie Schuld, Oct. 1, 2023, Eugene, OR
Co-founder of CIS, August 1993, Executive Director since 1997.
Bachelor’s Degree in History from the University of Dayton and
Master’s Degree in Human Rights and Peace Education from the
University of El Salvador, born in Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Leslie has worked in solidarity with the people of El Salvador
and refugees from the civil war since 1981. She was the
Program Director of the Committee in Solidarity with the
People of El Salvador during the negotiations
to end the armed conflict in El Salvador.
She was responsible for discussions with other solidarity
organizations and social organizations In El Salvador
to create the CIS as a non-profit organization to accompany
the process post war to implement the Peace Accords,
reconstruction and foment solidarity and empowerment
with the most marginalized and excluded communities.
https://wn.com/Leslie_Schuld_Talk_On_El_Salvador,_Eugene,_October_2023
Leslie Schuld, Oct. 1, 2023, Eugene, OR
Co-founder of CIS, August 1993, Executive Director since 1997.
Bachelor’s Degree in History from the University of Dayton and
Master’s Degree in Human Rights and Peace Education from the
University of El Salvador, born in Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Leslie has worked in solidarity with the people of El Salvador
and refugees from the civil war since 1981. She was the
Program Director of the Committee in Solidarity with the
People of El Salvador during the negotiations
to end the armed conflict in El Salvador.
She was responsible for discussions with other solidarity
organizations and social organizations In El Salvador
to create the CIS as a non-profit organization to accompany
the process post war to implement the Peace Accords,
reconstruction and foment solidarity and empowerment
with the most marginalized and excluded communities.
- published: 23 Dec 2023
- views: 115
23:45
The Upcoming Elections in Honduras and El Salvador- El Salvador (English)
Co-hosted by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
(El Salvador only)
Honorary Co-host: The Congressional Progressive Caucus
Over the ne...
Co-hosted by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
(El Salvador only)
Honorary Co-host: The Congressional Progressive Caucus
Over the next few months, two high-stakes elections will take place in Central America. On November 24th, Honduras will hold its first presidential and congressional elections since the controversial 2009 vote organized under a de facto government. In early February next year, the people of El Salvador will head to the polls for the first Presidential elections since the historic victory of the leftist party FMLN party in 2009.
Local media and elite business interests are largely hostile to the two countries' main left-leaning presidential candidates -- Xiomara Castro de Zelaya and Salvador Sanchez-Cerén -- though they are both currently in the lead according to most polls. In Honduras, the electoral campaign has been marred by killings targeting opposition candidates and there are concerns about potential fraud. On October 15th, Representatives Grijalva, Johnson, and Honda sent a letter to Secretary Kerry expressing their concern about the human rights situation ahead of these elections. In contrast, El Salvador has made some exciting democratic advances in recent years, including extending the right to vote to Salvadorans living here in the U.S., now the third-largest Latino population in the country, who will vote absentee for the first time in February.
In this video:
Hector Perla
Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
https://wn.com/The_Upcoming_Elections_In_Honduras_And_El_Salvador_El_Salvador_(English)
Co-hosted by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
(El Salvador only)
Honorary Co-host: The Congressional Progressive Caucus
Over the next few months, two high-stakes elections will take place in Central America. On November 24th, Honduras will hold its first presidential and congressional elections since the controversial 2009 vote organized under a de facto government. In early February next year, the people of El Salvador will head to the polls for the first Presidential elections since the historic victory of the leftist party FMLN party in 2009.
Local media and elite business interests are largely hostile to the two countries' main left-leaning presidential candidates -- Xiomara Castro de Zelaya and Salvador Sanchez-Cerén -- though they are both currently in the lead according to most polls. In Honduras, the electoral campaign has been marred by killings targeting opposition candidates and there are concerns about potential fraud. On October 15th, Representatives Grijalva, Johnson, and Honda sent a letter to Secretary Kerry expressing their concern about the human rights situation ahead of these elections. In contrast, El Salvador has made some exciting democratic advances in recent years, including extending the right to vote to Salvadorans living here in the U.S., now the third-largest Latino population in the country, who will vote absentee for the first time in February.
In this video:
Hector Perla
Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
- published: 01 Nov 2013
- views: 507
4:21
Leftist Ex-Rebel Holds Narrow Lead in El Salvador After Entering Race as Heavy Favorite
http://www.democracynow.org Both candidates have claimed victory in El Salvador's presidential election after a preliminary count showed the vote was too close ...
http://www.democracynow.org Both candidates have claimed victory in El Salvador's presidential election after a preliminary count showed the vote was too close to call. The race pitted the governing party's Salvador Sánchez Cerén against the right-wing candidate Norman Quijano. Sánchez Cerén, a former rebel commander, was running to replace Mauricio Funes, marking the first time an FMLN candidate succeeds another after decades of right-wing governments. Sánchez Cerén was seen as the favorite coming in but the latest results show him ahead less than 1 percent. We go to El Salvador to speak with Laura Embree-Lowry of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador.
Democracy Now!, is an independent global news hour that airs weekdays on 1,200+ TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream 8-9am ET at http://www.democracynow.org.
Please consider supporting independent media by making a donation to Democracy Now! today, visit http://owl.li/ruJ5Q.
FOLLOW DEMOCRACY NOW! ONLINE:
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/democracynow
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https://wn.com/Leftist_Ex_Rebel_Holds_Narrow_Lead_In_El_Salvador_After_Entering_Race_As_Heavy_Favorite
http://www.democracynow.org Both candidates have claimed victory in El Salvador's presidential election after a preliminary count showed the vote was too close to call. The race pitted the governing party's Salvador Sánchez Cerén against the right-wing candidate Norman Quijano. Sánchez Cerén, a former rebel commander, was running to replace Mauricio Funes, marking the first time an FMLN candidate succeeds another after decades of right-wing governments. Sánchez Cerén was seen as the favorite coming in but the latest results show him ahead less than 1 percent. We go to El Salvador to speak with Laura Embree-Lowry of CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador.
Democracy Now!, is an independent global news hour that airs weekdays on 1,200+ TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream 8-9am ET at http://www.democracynow.org.
Please consider supporting independent media by making a donation to Democracy Now! today, visit http://owl.li/ruJ5Q.
FOLLOW DEMOCRACY NOW! ONLINE:
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/democracynow
Twitter: @democracynow
Subscribe on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/democracynow
Listen on SoundCloud: http://www.soundcloud.com/democracynow
Daily Email News Digest: http://www.democracynow.org/subscribe
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+DemocracyNow
Instagram: http://instagram.com/democracynow
Tumblr: http://democracynow.tumblr.com
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/democracynow
- published: 10 Mar 2014
- views: 1544
33:53
WTF?: El Salvador (2/12)
CODEPINK's Teri Mattson is joined by Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) to discuss current events in El Salvado...
CODEPINK's Teri Mattson is joined by Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) to discuss current events in El Salvador.
---------
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/codepinkaction
SIGN UP FOR EMAIL UPDATES: http://www.codepink.org/join_us_today
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/codepinkalert
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codepinkalert/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/codepink
ABOUT CODEPINK
CODEPINK is a women-led grassroots organization working to end U.S. wars and militarism, support peace and human rights initiatives, and redirect our tax dollars into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs. Join us!
http://www.codepink.org
https://wn.com/Wtf_El_Salvador_(2_12)
CODEPINK's Teri Mattson is joined by Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) to discuss current events in El Salvador.
---------
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/codepinkaction
SIGN UP FOR EMAIL UPDATES: http://www.codepink.org/join_us_today
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/codepinkalert
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/codepinkalert/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/codepink
ABOUT CODEPINK
CODEPINK is a women-led grassroots organization working to end U.S. wars and militarism, support peace and human rights initiatives, and redirect our tax dollars into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs. Join us!
http://www.codepink.org
- published: 12 Feb 2020
- views: 100
8:15
CISPES May Day Delegation
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salv...
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's organizations and anti-mining activists, among others, as well as the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) political party, took to the streets Wednesday for the largest May 1st march since the election of President Funes in 2009.
"We're really happy to have had such a diverse and strong showing of the working class on May 1st," said Vilma Vásquez, one of the leaders of the Salvadoran Union Front (Frente Sindical Salvadoreño, FSS). "It takes a lot of work to mobilize that many people but the working class and the popular movement in El Salvador have always carried out our struggle with love."
A main theme of the march was opposition to a bill before the Salvadoran Legislative Assembly that could lead to the privatization of a broad array of economic sectors, including ports and airports, healthcare, education, and other government services. The Public-Private Partnership Law (Ley de Asocio Público Privado) was written with the assistance of the US Treasury Department under the framework of the US State Department's Partnership for Growth initiative in El Salvador. The proposal, which creates lucrative incentives for large corporations to exploit the country's resources, is widely recognized among Salvadoran social movements as a threat to wages and working conditions, as well as to the government's ability to provide essential public services.
Members of the delegation recognized striking similarities between the attacks on Salvadoran and US workers and their right to organize, especially in the private sector. "What we see is that we're dealing with multinational corporations so we have to in turn fight internationally. This is not about one country to the next, it's about an international working class struggle," said Jamie Thompson, from the Northern California airport division of SEIU United Service Workers West.
Representatives of the labor delegation met with John Barrett, economic counselor at the US Embassy in San Salvador to deliver letters from the AFL-CIO, the Utility Workers Union of America, United Electrical Workers and other US labor organizations denouncing US pressure on the Salvadoran government to adopt the law. US Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte has made multiple statements to the Salvadoran press indicating that privatization is a prerequisite for further US investment through the Millennium Challenge Corporation.
During the group's press conference outside the Embassy, Julia Kann from the Washington DC Metro Labor Council said, "Our government has tried to argue that so-called 'public-private partnerships' will be beneficial for the Salvadoran people. But the people we have met with have been clear that this is a law that clearly favors transnational corporations and foreign companies at the expense of the Salvadoran people."
https://wn.com/Cispes_May_Day_Delegation
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's organizations and anti-mining activists, among others, as well as the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) political party, took to the streets Wednesday for the largest May 1st march since the election of President Funes in 2009.
"We're really happy to have had such a diverse and strong showing of the working class on May 1st," said Vilma Vásquez, one of the leaders of the Salvadoran Union Front (Frente Sindical Salvadoreño, FSS). "It takes a lot of work to mobilize that many people but the working class and the popular movement in El Salvador have always carried out our struggle with love."
A main theme of the march was opposition to a bill before the Salvadoran Legislative Assembly that could lead to the privatization of a broad array of economic sectors, including ports and airports, healthcare, education, and other government services. The Public-Private Partnership Law (Ley de Asocio Público Privado) was written with the assistance of the US Treasury Department under the framework of the US State Department's Partnership for Growth initiative in El Salvador. The proposal, which creates lucrative incentives for large corporations to exploit the country's resources, is widely recognized among Salvadoran social movements as a threat to wages and working conditions, as well as to the government's ability to provide essential public services.
Members of the delegation recognized striking similarities between the attacks on Salvadoran and US workers and their right to organize, especially in the private sector. "What we see is that we're dealing with multinational corporations so we have to in turn fight internationally. This is not about one country to the next, it's about an international working class struggle," said Jamie Thompson, from the Northern California airport division of SEIU United Service Workers West.
Representatives of the labor delegation met with John Barrett, economic counselor at the US Embassy in San Salvador to deliver letters from the AFL-CIO, the Utility Workers Union of America, United Electrical Workers and other US labor organizations denouncing US pressure on the Salvadoran government to adopt the law. US Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte has made multiple statements to the Salvadoran press indicating that privatization is a prerequisite for further US investment through the Millennium Challenge Corporation.
During the group's press conference outside the Embassy, Julia Kann from the Washington DC Metro Labor Council said, "Our government has tried to argue that so-called 'public-private partnerships' will be beneficial for the Salvadoran people. But the people we have met with have been clear that this is a law that clearly favors transnational corporations and foreign companies at the expense of the Salvadoran people."
- published: 16 May 2013
- views: 136
8:35
CISPES May Day Labor Delegation 2013
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salva...
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's organizations and anti-mining activists, among others, as well as the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) political party, took to the streets Wednesday for the largest May 1st march since the election of President Funes in 2009.
"We're really happy to have had such a diverse and strong showing of the working class on May 1st," said Vilma Vásquez, one of the leaders of the Salvadoran Union Front (Frente Sindical Salvadoreño, FSS). "It takes a lot of work to mobilize that many people but the working class and the popular movement in El Salvador have always carried out our struggle with love."
A main theme of the march was opposition to a bill before the Salvadoran Legislative Assembly that could lead to the privatization of a broad array of economic sectors, including ports and airports, healthcare, education, and other government services. The Public-Private Partnership Law (Ley de Asocio Público Privado) was written with the assistance of the US Treasury Department under the framework of the US State Department's Partnership for Growth initiative in El Salvador. The proposal, which creates lucrative incentives for large corporations to exploit the country's resources, is widely recognized among Salvadoran social movements as a threat to wages and working conditions, as well as to the government's ability to provide essential public services.
Members of the delegation recognized striking similarities between the attacks on Salvadoran and US workers and their right to organize, especially in the private sector. "What we see is that we're dealing with multinational corporations so we have to in turn fight internationally. This is not about one country to the next, it's about an international working class struggle," said Jamie Thompson, from the Northern California airport division of SEIU United Service Workers West.
Representatives of the labor delegation met with John Barrett, economic counselor at the US Embassy in San Salvador to deliver letters from the AFL-CIO, the Utility Workers Union of America, United Electrical Workers and other US labor organizations denouncing US pressure on the Salvadoran government to adopt the law. US Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte has made multiple statements to the Salvadoran press indicating that privatization is a prerequisite for further US investment through the Millennium Challenge Corporation.
During the group's press conference outside the Embassy, Julia Kann from the Washington DC Metro Labor Council said, "Our government has tried to argue that so-called 'public-private partnerships' will be beneficial for the Salvadoran people. But the people we have met with have been clear that this is a law that clearly favors transnational corporations and foreign companies at the expense of the Salvadoran people."
https://wn.com/Cispes_May_Day_Labor_Delegation_2013
Fourteen members of a recent labor delegation led by the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) marched with fellow workers in El Salvador for May Day, speaking out against the U.S.'s pressure on the Salvadoran government to privatize its public resources. "Privatization and subcontracting are damaging to people's rights wherever they're imposed," said Socrates Bravo, who works at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. "I have seen hundreds of fellow workers work in horrible conditions and have pay that barely covers the cost of living, while the airlines and companies are making billions of dollars in profit. Meanwhile, the state earns nothing."
An estimated 80,000 Salvadorans representing a wide array of labor organizations, university students, women's organizations and anti-mining activists, among others, as well as the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) political party, took to the streets Wednesday for the largest May 1st march since the election of President Funes in 2009.
"We're really happy to have had such a diverse and strong showing of the working class on May 1st," said Vilma Vásquez, one of the leaders of the Salvadoran Union Front (Frente Sindical Salvadoreño, FSS). "It takes a lot of work to mobilize that many people but the working class and the popular movement in El Salvador have always carried out our struggle with love."
A main theme of the march was opposition to a bill before the Salvadoran Legislative Assembly that could lead to the privatization of a broad array of economic sectors, including ports and airports, healthcare, education, and other government services. The Public-Private Partnership Law (Ley de Asocio Público Privado) was written with the assistance of the US Treasury Department under the framework of the US State Department's Partnership for Growth initiative in El Salvador. The proposal, which creates lucrative incentives for large corporations to exploit the country's resources, is widely recognized among Salvadoran social movements as a threat to wages and working conditions, as well as to the government's ability to provide essential public services.
Members of the delegation recognized striking similarities between the attacks on Salvadoran and US workers and their right to organize, especially in the private sector. "What we see is that we're dealing with multinational corporations so we have to in turn fight internationally. This is not about one country to the next, it's about an international working class struggle," said Jamie Thompson, from the Northern California airport division of SEIU United Service Workers West.
Representatives of the labor delegation met with John Barrett, economic counselor at the US Embassy in San Salvador to deliver letters from the AFL-CIO, the Utility Workers Union of America, United Electrical Workers and other US labor organizations denouncing US pressure on the Salvadoran government to adopt the law. US Ambassador Mari Carmen Aponte has made multiple statements to the Salvadoran press indicating that privatization is a prerequisite for further US investment through the Millennium Challenge Corporation.
During the group's press conference outside the Embassy, Julia Kann from the Washington DC Metro Labor Council said, "Our government has tried to argue that so-called 'public-private partnerships' will be beneficial for the Salvadoran people. But the people we have met with have been clear that this is a law that clearly favors transnational corporations and foreign companies at the expense of the Salvadoran people."
- published: 26 Jun 2013
- views: 81
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WTF Is Going On In Latin America: Bukele's Authoritarianism
Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) joins CODEPINK's Leonardo Flores to discuss current events in El Salvador.
Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) joins CODEPINK's Leonardo Flores to discuss current events in El Salvador.
https://wn.com/Wtf_Is_Going_On_In_Latin_America_Bukele's_Authoritarianism
Yesenia Portillo of CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) joins CODEPINK's Leonardo Flores to discuss current events in El Salvador.
- published: 17 Jun 2020
- views: 391