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Judi Lynn

(164,122 posts)
12. Lugo likes Chavez very much, invited him to his inauguration, worked for Venezuela
Tue Oct 2, 2012, 12:35 AM
Oct 2012

as hard as he could to get admitted to Mercosur.

Their legislature is loaded with members of the Colorado Party which controlled Paraguay for over 50 or 60 years, including over 35 straight years by a twisted, sadistic Nazi-supporting, genocide-committing monster, Alfredo Stroessner, who died a few years ago.

The Colorado Party still dominates Paraguay's politics, clearly, regardless of the fact Fernando Lugo, whose family was persecuted by Stroessner, was elected by a massive majority of the public, eager, desperate for change away from the Colorado Party's vicious leadership.


Genocide in Paraguay

Mark Munzel, a German anthropologist, was the first to call attention to the massacre of the Paraguayan Indians, with whom he lived for a year. He points out that "the Ache are inconvenient" - particularly, for the few enterprises with a majority of foreign (Brazilian, United States, and Western European) shares that dominate the Paraguayan economy, and for the Stroessner dictatorship that has imposed its terrorist rule with substantial U.S. support, as did its murderous predecessors. As the forests are cleared for foreign & domestic mining and cattle-raising interests, Indian removal, using some combination of outright killing and forcible resettlement , is a normal facet of "development" policy. In the case of a "poor man's Nazi" regime such as Stroessner's Paraguay, the nature of the resettlement (comparable to those in Nazi concentration camps&quot is such as to make the charge of genocide an appropriate one.

Munzel records the campaign against the Indians by manhunts, slavery, and deculturation. In manhunts with the co-operation of the military, the Indians are "pursued like animals," the parents killed, and the children sold (citing professor Sardi). Machetes are commonly used to murder Indians to save the expense of bullets. Men not slaughtered are sold for field-workers, women as prostitutes, children as domestic servants. According to Sardi, "there is not one family in which a child has not been murdered."

The process of deculturation aims at the intentional destruction of Indian culture among those herded into the reservation. Little effort is made to maintain secrecy about any of this, except by agencies of the U.S. government and by the U.S. media. For example, Munzel was offered teenage Indian girls by the Director of Indian Affairs of the Ministry of Defence, who "sought my goodwill," and he comments that "slavery is widespread and officially tolerated." Slaves can be found in Asuncion, the capital city.

Indians who survive the manhunts are herded into reservations where, according to Munzel, they are "subjected to stress and physcological degradation calculated to break the body as well as the spirit." Torture and humiliation of Indian Chiefs is a "standard procedure designed to produce the disintegration of group identity." Medication and nourishment are purposely withheld. When spirits are broken, the reservation is used " as a manhunt centre where tamed Indians are trained in fratricide." In a recent visit, Arens was impressed with the "striking absence of young adult males," the horrendous condition of the children, with festering sores, distended abdomens and widespread symptoms of the protein- deficiency disease Kwashiorkor, and the refusal of medication and medical care as a general practice. Arens, even on a guided tour, was aghast at the systematic maltreatment and felt himself "engulfed by the collective gloom of a people who had given up on life."

More:
http://totse2.com/totse/en/politics/foreign_military_intelligence_agencies/parageno.html

[center]~ ~ ~ ~ ~[/center]
Alfredo Stroessner
~snip~
Operation Condor

Paraguay was a leading participant in Operation Condor, a campaign of state-terror and security operations which were jointly conducted by the right-wing military governments of six Latin American countries (Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay and Brazil). Human rights violations characteristic of those in other Latin American countries such as kidnapping, torture, forced disappearance and extrajudicial killing, were routine and systematic during the Stroessner regime. Following executions, many of the bodies of those killed by the regime were dumped in the Chaco or the Rio Paraguay. The discovery of the "terror archives" in 1992 in the Lambaré suburb of Asunción, confirmed allegations of widespread human rights violations.

Pastor Coronel was the chief of the pyragüés (hairy-footed in Guaraní) or secret police. He would interview people in a pileta, a bath of human excrement or ram electric cattle prods up their rectums. The Secretary of the Paraguayan Communist Party was dismembered alive with a chainsaw while Stroessner listened on the phone.[9]

Under Stroessner, egregious human rights violations were committed against the Ache Indian population of Paraguay's east-coast. The Ache Indians resided on land that was coveted by foreign multinationals and had resisted relocation attempts by the Paraguayan army. The government retaliated with massacres and forced many Ache into slavery. In 1974 the UN accused Paraguay of slavery and genocide.[10]

Stroessner was careful not to show off or draw attention from jealous generals or foreign journalists. He avoided rallies and took simple holidays in Patagonia. He did become more tolerant of opposition as the years passed, but there was no change in the regime's basic character.

More:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfredo_Stroessner

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Does it look like there will be a clean election Sunday? hrmjustin Oct 2012 #1
Jimmy Carter has described Venezuelan elections under Chavez as the cleanest in the world. Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #2
I heard that Chavez is favored to win in a close race. hrmjustin Oct 2012 #3
From the little I know tama Oct 2012 #5
I agree. I think of Capriles as the air-brushed, USAID candidate. Peace Patriot Oct 2012 #15
"The Chavez government hasn't really been in power that long" joshcryer Oct 2012 #17
selective amnensia? SESKATOW Oct 2012 #22
Chavez and the Boligarchs are good friends. joshcryer Oct 2012 #23
wealthy ranch owners cannot tolerate even the thought of world without inequality. SESKATOW Oct 2012 #25
You mean Hugo Chavez, right? How many boligarchs has Chavez arrested for campesino murders? joshcryer Oct 2012 #26
Wonder why these murders are never mention in your right wing media? SESKATOW Oct 2012 #27
Even Venezuela Analysis and other left wing sites can't provide... joshcryer Oct 2012 #28
So you agree and what "left wing" sites? SESKATOW Oct 2012 #29
Hi, Seskatow. Just saw your post, and glanced at a couple of the responses. Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #30
no, they just changed the ballot so that some who vote for where Capriles picture is located Bacchus4.0 Oct 2012 #6
What's the Paraguay story? tama Oct 2012 #4
he was impeached after a deadly riot where numerous peasants and police were killed Bacchus4.0 Oct 2012 #7
Fernando Lugo's exit after Paraguay 'coup' a setback for development Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #8
Why was Lugo tama Oct 2012 #10
Lugo wasn't naaman fletcher Oct 2012 #11
Lugo likes Chavez very much, invited him to his inauguration, worked for Venezuela Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #12
Latin American leaders reject Paraguay 'coup' Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #9
Paraguay's fascists used the Honduran template--a fake "constitutional crisis"-- Peace Patriot Oct 2012 #13
Thanks everybody tama Oct 2012 #14
Paraguay is hopeless then.. naaman fletcher Oct 2012 #16
The Colorado Party which has completely controlled Paraguay over 61 years IS fascist. Judi Lynn Oct 2012 #18
Right, but here is the question, naaman fletcher Oct 2012 #19
no, they weren't of course. his liberal coalition abandoned him n/t Bacchus4.0 Oct 2012 #20
The fascists (the Colorado Party) still rules the country, obviously. They are entrenched. Peace Patriot Oct 2012 #21
answers naaman fletcher Oct 2012 #24
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