Mr. Bailey's 1st Block IR-GSI Class blog focused on the current events of the Americas
Friday, April 11, 2014
Jailed Venezuela opposition leader charged with public incitement
Brazil tackling child prostitution for World Cup
New ad campaignA total of 600,000 foreign visitors are expected in Brazil and another three million Brazilian fans are expected to travel around the country.
Job training for victims"They aren't worried about these children growing up in a healthy environment, with jobs and housing, health and education," she says. "They're worried about hiding them."
Jamaican sprinter Sherone Simpson to appeal 'incredibly unjust' ban

Thursday, April 10, 2014
Responding to Quake, Chile Uses Lessons of Past
Soon after an 8.8-magnitude earthquake hit southern Chile in 2010 near the end of President Michelle Bachelet’s first term, officialsfailed to issue a tsunami warning before a massive wave killed a large number of the 525 people who died in the disaster. Looting then plagued hard-hit areas after Ms. Bachelet delayed allowing the military to move in.
This time around, when an 8.2 magnitude earthquake struck Tuesday night off the coast of northern Chile, officials leapt into action by comparison.
Officials ordered the evacuation of Chile’s entire coast, an operation that proceeded largely without major problems aside from the escape of hundreds of inmates from a women’s prison in the northern city of Iquique. It also took just hours for Ms. Bachelet, now at the start of her second term, to send in special police forces as reinforcements, while also putting military generals in control of security in two regions most affected by the earthquake.
By the time the authorities lifted the tsunami warning on Wednesday morning, they counted just six people dead from the earthquake. The feared tsunami was far less intense than previous killer waves, and Defense Minister Jorge Burgos said the situation in the affected regions was normal, with no disruptions of public order.
While good luck and the earthquake’s location seem to have prevented more destruction, the response by officials revealed important shifts in Chile’s preparation for such disasters.
“The 2010 earthquake provided us with an enormous learning opportunity,” said Helia Vargas, an official at Onemi, Chile’s national emergency service.
The changes, largely carried out during the administration of President Sebastián Piñera, a conservative businessman who took office shortly after the 2010 earthquake, included the completion of emergency-response offices throughout the country with staff members prepared to work around the clock.
Ms. Vargas said that telecommunications systems were strengthened and protocols were established to improve coordination on tsunami alerts between public and private emergency relief agencies. Moreover, officials have been carrying out evacuation simulations, establishing routes and procedures used by coastal residents on Tuesday night.
Ms. Bachelet, speaking from Iquique on Wednesday, pointed to the ability of Chile, one of Latin America’s most prosperous and stable countries, to respond “in an exemplary way,” as calm prevailed over areas rattled by the earthquake.
With about 300 smaller earthquakes shaking northern Chile in recent weeks in an unusual surge in seismic activity in the region, geologists say the nation’s preparedness could be tested again soon.
“This one didn’t release all the energy of its earthquake-producing zone,” said Richard W. Allmendinger, a structural geologist at Cornell University who also teaches at a university in Antofagasta, a port city in northern Chile. “It appears to be something of a pipsqueak, making us wonder if it’s a foreshock of a much larger earthquake.”
And just before midnight on Wednesday, the north was struck again, with a major aftershock measuring 7.6. Again, coastal areas were evacuated, including the hotel in Arica where the president was staying. There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties.
It was in 1960 near the Chilean city of Valdivia, Dr. Allmendinger pointed out, that a 9.5-magnitude earthquake, the most powerful recorded since 1900, left trails of destruction and about 1,600 people dead. Another earthquake in Iquique in 1877, with a magnitude of 8.5, set off a 75-foot-high tsunami that left thousands dead.
In contrast, the waves created by Tuesday’s earthquake were just a few feet high. A larger tsunami may have been avoided because of the earthquake’s location near the coastline, preventing a larger wave from forming, according to preliminary analyses by geologists.
Not everyone is convinced that Chile has significantly improved its emergency preparedness methods since the 2010 earthquake.
Michel De L’Herbe, an emergency management consultant, said that policies remained highly centralized, preventing bottom-up responses. Beyond that, he said, recently hired employees of the national emergency service lack experience and training, and only a small portion of equipment purchased during Ms. Bachelet’s first term for the National Seismic Center has been installed.
The Truth About Venezuela, as Marco Rubio Sees It
According to President Nicolás Maduro, life in Venezuela is better than ever, with some minor inconveniences. That was the impression he attempted to give readers.
However, Venezuela is plagued by one of the world’s highest murder rates, rampant corruption related to state assets, a 57 percent inflation rate, a junk rating on the global bond markets and unprecedented scarcity of goods as basic as toilet paper. Venezuela’s government long ago ceased to be a democracy, by failing to live up to its responsibilities under the Inter-American Democratic Charter.
Since Feb. 4, Venezuelans have protested the lack of economic opportunity, public safety, freedom and basic needs, only to be met with brutal state-sanctioned violence.
Mr. Maduro has hailed his efforts at “building a new national police force, strengthening community-police cooperation and revamping our prison system.” He did not disclose that this police force has been unleashed on innocent demonstrators, this “community-police cooperation” manifests itself through groups of armed thugs that routinely roam the streets on motorcycles looking for government opponents to beat and kill, and this prison system now houses several political prisoners, including Leopoldo López.
Congress should resist Mr. Maduro’s charm offensive, expose his regime’s brutal nature and adopt the Venezuela Defense of Human Rights and Civil Society Act of 2014, which authorizes sanctions on people involved in serious human rights violations against peaceful demonstrators in Venezuela.
Now is the time to stand with the Venezuelan people and increase pressure on the Maduro regime.
Venezuela: President and Leaders of the Opposition Agree to Hold Talks
Federal police launch huge raid on Argentina's 'drug capital'
More than 3,000 federal agents involved in raids on around 80 'bunkers' in the Argentine city of Rosario, plagued by violence between drug gangs

Britain is 'disappointed' with America over Falkland Islands, finds Commons report
America's failure to back the principle of national self-determination over Falklands continues to dog Britain's otherwise solid 'special relationship' with the US, MPs say

Brazil 2014: less than half of country favour hosting World Cup
Just 48 per cent of Brazilians are in support of the country hosting this year's tournament, which begins in June


Uruguay to make medical marijuana available to prisoners
Any inmates who have been prescribed marijuana to improve their physical or mental health will have access to it according to the country's drug tsar

Wednesday, April 9, 2014
SERRA DA CAPIVARA NATIONAL PARK JOURNAL Discoveries Challenge Beliefs on Humans’ Arrival In Americas'
SERRA DA CAPIVARA NATIONAL PARK, Brazil — Niede Guidon still remembers her astonishment when she glimpsed the paintings.
Preserved amid the bromeliad-encrusted plateaus that tower over the thorn forests of northeast Brazil, the ancient rock art depicts fierce battles among tribesmen, orgiastic scenes of prehistoric revelry and hunters pursuing their game, spears in hand.
“These were stunning compositions, people and animals together, not just figures alone,” said Dr. Guidon, 81, remembering what first lured her and other archaeologists in the 1970s to this remote site where jaguars still prowl.
Hidden in the rock shelters where prehistoric humans once lived, the paintings number in the thousands. Some are thought to be more than 9,000 years old and perhaps even far more ancient. Painted in red ocher, they rank among the most revealing testaments anywhere in the Americas to what life was like millenniums before the European conquest began a mere five centuries ago.
But it is what excavators found when they started digging in the shadows of the rock art that is contributing to a pivotal re-evaluation of human history in the hemisphere.
Researchers here say they have unearthed stone tools proving that humans reached what is now northeast Brazil as early as 22,000 years ago.Their discovery adds to the growing body of research upending a prevailing belief of 20th-century archaeology in the United States known as the Clovis model, which holds that people first arrived in the Americas from Asia about 13,000 years ago.
“If they’re right, and there’s a great possibility that they are, that will change everything we know about the settlement of the Americas,” said Walter Neves, an evolutionary anthropologist at the University of São Paulo whose own analysis of an 11,000-year-old skull in Brazil implies that some ancient Americans resembled aboriginal Australians more than they did Asians.
Up and down the Americas, scholars say that the peopling of lands empty of humankind may have been far more complex than long believed. The radiocarbon dating of spear points found in the 1920s near Clovis, N.M., placed the arrival of big-game hunters across the Bering Strait about 13,000 years ago, long forming the basis of when humans were believed to have arrived in the Americas.
More recently, numerous findings have challenged that narrative. In Texas,archaeologists said in 2011 that they had found projectile points showing that hunter-gatherers had reached another site, known as Buttermilk Creek, as early as 15,500 years ago. Similarly, analysis of human DNA found at an Oregon cave determined that humans were there 14,000 years ago.
But it is in South America, thousands of miles from the New Mexico site where the Clovis spear points were discovered, where archaeologists are putting forward some of the most profound challenges to the Clovis-first theory.
Paleontologists in Uruguay published findings in November suggesting that humans hunted giant sloths there about 30,000 years ago. All the way in southern Chile, Tom D. Dillehay, an anthropologist at Vanderbilt University, has shown that humans lived at a coastal site called Monte Verde as early as 14,800 years ago.
And here in Brazil’s caatinga, a semi-arid region of mesas and canyons, European and Brazilian archaeologists building on decades of earlier excavations said last year that they had found artifacts at a rock shelter showing that humans had arrived in South America almost 10,000 years before Clovis hunters began appearing in North America.
“The Clovis paradigm is finally buried,” said Eric Boëda, the French archaeologist leading the excavations here.
Exposing the tension over competing claims about where and when humans first arrived in the Americas, some scholars in the dwindling Clovis-first camp in the United States quickly rejected the findings.
Gary Haynes, an archaeologist at the University of Nevada, Reno, argued that the stones found here were not tools made by humans, but instead could have become chipped and broken naturally, by rockfall. Stuart Fiedel, an archaeologist with the Louis Berger Group, an environmental consulting company, said that monkeys might have made the tools instead of humans.
“Monkeys, including large extinct forms, have been in South America for 35 million years,” Dr. Fiedel said. He added that the Clovis model was recently bolstered by new DNA analysisancestrally connecting indigenous peoples in Central and South America to a boy from the Clovis culture whose 12,700-year-old remains were found in 1968 at a site in Montana.
Such dismissive positions have invited equally sharp responses from scholars like Dr. Dillehay, the American archaeologist who discovered Monte Verde. “Fiedel does not know what he is talking about,” he said, explaining that similarities existed between the stone tools found here and at the site across South America in Chile. “To say monkeys produced the tools is stupid.”
Having their findings disputed is nothing new for the archaeologists working at Serra da Capivara. Dr. Guidon, the Brazilian archaeologist who pioneered the excavations, asserted more than two decades ago that her team had found evidence in the form of charcoal from hearth fires that humans had lived here about 48,000 years ago.
While scholars in the United States generally viewed Dr. Guidon’s work with skepticism, she pressed on, obtaining the permission of Brazilian authorities to preserve the archaeological sites near the town of São Raimundo Nonato in a national park that now gets thousands of visitors a year despite its remote location in Piauí, one of Brazil’s poorest states.
Dr. Guidon remains defiant about her findings. At her home on the grounds of a museum she founded to focus on the discoveries in Serra da Capivara, she said she believed that humans had reached these plateaus even earlier, around 100,000 years ago, and might have come not overland from Asia but by boat from Africa.
Professor Boëda, who succeeded Dr. Guidon in leading the excavations, said that such early dates may have been possible but that more research was needed. His team is using thermoluminescence, a technique that measures the exposure of sediments to sunlight, to determine their age.
At the same time, discoveries elsewhere in Brazil are adding to the mystery of how the Americas were settled.
In what may be another blow to the Clovis model of humans’ coming from northeast Asia, molecular geneticists showed last year that the Botocudo indigenous people living in southeastern Brazil in the late 1800s shared gene sequences commonly found among Pacific Islanders from Polynesia.
How could Polynesians have made it to Brazil? Or aboriginal Australians? Or, if the archaeologists here are correct, how could a population arrive in this hinterland long before Clovis hunters began appearing in the Americas? The array of new discoveries has scholars on a quest for answers.
Reflecting how researchers are increasingly accepting older dates of human migration to the Americas, Michael R. Waters, a geoarchaeologist at Texas A&M University’s Center for the Study of the First Americans, said that a “single migration” into the Americas about 15,000 years ago may have given rise to the Clovis people. But he added that if the results obtained here in Serra da Capivara are accurate, they will raise even more questions about how the Americas were settled.
“If so, then whoever lived there never passed on their genetic material to living populations,” said Dr. Waters, explaining how the genetic history of indigenous peoples links them to the Clovis child found in Montana. “We must think long and hard about these early sites and how they fit into the picture of the peopling of the Americas.”