sábado, 27 de febrero de 2021

‘They Wasted Away Four Years of My Life’. Scholar Wang Xiyue talks about spending 40 months in an Iranian prison and what he learned about the regime...,PRESIDENTE.LIBERTAD PARA TOD@S L@S INMIGRANTES,LEGALIZACION AHORA PARA MAS DE 30 MILLONES DE INDOCUMENTAD@S,REUNIFICACION FAMILIAR INMEDIATA.DERECHOS HUMANOS PARA TOD@S.SI NO HAY JUSTICIA NO HABRA PAZ.BASTA DE DISCRIMINACION Y RACISMO CON LATINOS Y AFRODESENDIENTE.QUEREMOS PAN.COMIDA Y TRABAJO Y NINGUN DESALOJO DE VIVIENDAS Y DE MODESTOS NEGOCIOS.Basta de discriminacion con las vacunas.INDEMNIZACION POR EL GENOCIDIO DE LA PANDEMIA CAPITALISTA:COALICION 1 DE MAYO DEL BRONX.2021...,#8M2021 ¡Contra el virus del patriarcado y el capitalismo, la vacuna del feminismo y la solidaridad!. 8 de Marzo de 2021 – Día de las Mujerxs Trabajadoras – Llamado de Acción Global de La Vía Campesina...,EE.UU.SIN LUZ Y SIN AGUA: EL FRACASO DE LA DESREGULACIÓN Y LA PRIVATIZACIÓN EN SUS PROPIAS ENTRAÑAS. El análisis de James Petras en CX36, 23 de febrero de 2021..., Pensamiento. [Dossier] Imperialismo y ciencias sociales x La Haine. Un programa antiimperialista para la cultura y las ciencias sociales :: (Nota introductoria y dossier de la revista «Referencias», mayo de 1970)...,

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justicecommittee.org

 Pensamiento.

[Dossier] Imperialismo y ciencias sociales x La Haine.

Un programa antiimperialista para la cultura y las ciencias sociales :: (Nota introductoria y dossier de la revista «Referencias», mayo de 1970)...,

 8 DE MARZO,2021.



#8M2021 ¡Contra el virus del patriarcado y el capitalismo, la vacuna del feminismo y la solidaridad!.

8 de Marzo de 2021 – Día de las Mujerxs Trabajadoras – Llamado de Acción Global de La Vía Campesina.

(Harare 25 de Febrero 2021) Este 8 de Marzo 2021, articuladxs en nuestra diversidad, y en una sola voz, afirmamos ¡Contra el virus del patriarcado y el capitalismo, la vacuna del feminismo y la solidaridad!, a la vez que resaltamos el rol fundamental de las mujerxs del campo, y del campesinado en su conjunto, como primera línea en la producción de alimentos agroecológicos y saludables que sustentan la vida, y representan entre el 60 y el 70% de la producción mundial.

Al cumplirse 25 años de la construcción colectiva de la Soberanía Alimentaria, ésta es nuestra vía concreta y sostenible frente a las distintas crisis que hoy vivimos, necesitamos acabar con la violencia sistémicamente del capitalismo y del patriarcado, que hoy vulneran principalmente los derechos de las mujerxs, diversidades, de la niñez, y la clase trabajadora, excluyéndolos incluso, del acceso público y gratuito a una vacuna, que debería ser considerada así como la alimentación un derecho humano. Tal como lo defendemos en nuestro llamado internacional ¡Por el Derecho a la Salud pública y gratuita para todas las poblaciones!

En el mundo el rol político, social y económico de las mujerxs es vital, más aun en medio de esta pandemia, y seguimos recibiendo salarios más bajos, estamos en la informalidad, precarizadas, explotadas, somos migrantes, madres solteras, trabajadoras agrícolas, pescadoras, pastoras, que tenemos menor acceso a la tierra, a la tecnología, y a políticas públicas de salud, protección contra la violencia, educación y cultura. El mayor obstáculo al que nos enfrentamos en el campo es la falta de acceso a medios de producción como la tierra. En el mercado, las mujeres apenas poseemos el 1% de las tierras y aun así tenemos el reto de seguir garantizando la alimentación y cuidado de comunidades, familias y del mundo en condiciones de desigualdad política, económica y social.

En ese sentido, en esta jornada también exigimos a los Estados implementar la Declaración de la ONU sobre Derechos Campesinos y de otras personas que trabajan en zonas rurales (UNDROP, por sus siglas en inglés). Donde se reconoce a las mujeres y al campesinado como "sujetxs de derecho. Esta Declaración de las Naciones Unidas es un instrumento estratégico para fortalecer las luchas y propuestas de los movimientos rurales. Además, sienta una jurisprudencia y una perspectiva jurídica internacional para orientar la legislación y las políticas públicas en todos los niveles institucionales en beneficio de quienes alimentan al mundo.

El modelo del agronegocio imperante está estandarizado por el poder económico de la agroindustria, son las grandes corporaciones multinacionales las que controlan que se va a producir, qué comemos, cuánto comemos y el precio de lo que comemos, hacen lobbys con gobiernos, e incluso con organismos multilaterales, tal como hemos venido denunciando con la Cumbre de la Alimentación organizada por la FAO para este año, y cuyo objetivo es seguir acaparando aún más el mercado de la alimentación. Esta dinámica genera altas ganancias para las corporaciones, y costos gravísimos para la salud de las sociedades y del planeta.

A lo largo de la historia las mujerxs luchamos por ser sujetas de transformaciones, de movilización y concientización, es así que como La Vía Campesina saludamos todas las luchas y compañeras que resisten en la India, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela, Cuba, Kurdistán, Palestina, las zapatistas, las mujeres diversas organizadas en la Marcha Mundial de Mujeres y otras redes amigas, que están participando activamente de los cambios que precisan nuestras sociedades, por justicia y dignidad para las mayorías.

Movilízate:

Este 8 de Marzo, como cada Día de las Mujeres trabajadoras, llamamos a nuestras organizaciones miembros, aliados y amigxs a conspirar desde todos los espacios donde estemos, en nuestras comunidades, calles, plazas, mercados, escuelas y trabajos, cuidando de la vida, sigamos denunciando y movilizando conciencias, presionando para que los estados se comprometan con las luchas históricas de las mujerxs de los campos y las ciudades.

¡Contra el virus del patriarcado y el capitalismo, la vacuna del feminismo y la solidaridad!

Envíen sus comunicados, fotografías, videos a lvcweb@viacampesina.org.

¡Amplifica nuestra voz, reproduce y comparte nuestros materiales!

Para descargar afiche oficial 2021 y materiales de comunicación para redes sociales, también puedes hacer tu afiche en tu lengua local encontrarás una versión en blanco, todo disponible aquí.

¡Síguenos también en redes sociales!

#8M2021 #MujerxsEnLucha #SoberaníaAlimentariaY

Via-info-es@viacampesina.org

http://viacampesina.org/Via-info-es/

  1. James Pertras/ Continúan los cortes de luz y agua en varios estados de EEUU provocados por fuertes tormentas y faltas de mantenimiento de los compañías. Biden da muestras de reforzar vínculos con la UE y la OTAN para enfrentar a Rusia y China.
    ▶️ https://archive.org/details/petras-22-feb 

Hallan vacío el camión donde viajaban inmigrantes asfixiados en Texas
 Mundo.

El concepto marxista de nación x Carlos Barros.

El concepto originariamente marxista de nación, móvil y abierto, es el antídoto que precisamos ahora para hacer frente a los imperantes enfoques hipersujetivistas, idealistas..,

Hallan vacío el camión donde viajaban inmigrantes asfixiados en Texas...,

Pensamiento.

El desarrollo del subdesarrollo x André Gunder Frank.

El subdesarrollo ha sido y es aún generado por el mismo proceso histórico que genera también el desarrollo económico: el desarrollo del propio capitalismo...,Noticias de New York
.Causa indignación el video de una niña de 9 años que fue detenida y rociada con gas pimienta por policías de Rochester...,
unrecognizable tourist in mask with suitcase near graffiti wall  

CHILE.“Inmigración ¿Qué hacer?”

Escena 1: Sebastián Piñera y su compadre Duque de Colombia viajan a Cúcuta, en medio de crisis política venezolana. Su intención era aportar bienes para la “crisis humanitaria” de los sufridos venezolanos. En mitad del puente, dio una arenga digna de Winston Churchill, apoyando la democracia y criticando […]

Blancos son los más vacunados contra coronavirus en Nueva York...,A menudo el crecimiento del capitalismo industrial en un sector o área ha ido de la mano de un desarrollo hacía las finanzas o del capitalismo extractivo en algún otro lugar....,--
Chile.

Miguel Enríquez y el desafío de las nuevas generaciones x Néstor Kohan - La Haine.

Revelan impactantes videos nunca vistos del asalto al Capitolio durante juicio político a Trump

Texto de Néstor Kohan :: Carta de Fidel a Salvador Allende (29 de julio de 1973) :: Discurso de Fidel en homenaje póstumo a Allende, La Habana (28 de septiembre de 1973)...

Revelan impactantes videos nunca vistos del asalto al Capitolio durante juicio político a Trump...,

  27 de Febrero 2021 
Partido por el descenso

Paloma Norambuena, quien integró el directorio de Blanco y Negro entre 2017 y 2018, analiza el fracaso institucional y cultural de la sociedad anónima que maneja y es dueña del equipo de fútbol más popular de Chile.


 Por qué la reforma migratoria de Joe Biden depende de 10 republicanos (podcast)

APAPA Applauds CA Legislature's Funding Approval

to Help Address Surge of AAPI Hate Crimes

 

2/24/2021

Asian Pacific Islander American Public Affairs Association (APAPA)

 

Sacramento, CA – APAPA congratulates the efforts of Assemblymember Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), Chair of the Assembly Budget Committee, for securing the approval of $1.4 million in state funding. This will bolster the research and reporting at UCLA that tracks the recent wave of hate incidents targeting Asian Americans in California. The appropriation will be a part of Assembly Bill 85 (AB 85), a fiscal measure to provide additional resources for California’s ongoing pandemic response.

 

The recent trend of racial attacks on Asian Americans in the San Francisco Bay Area and the whole country is of great concern to APAPA and all Asian Americans. APAPA leaders, Carl Chan in Oakland, Dennis Wu in San Francisco, and Ruth Asmundson in Yolo County, are proactively working with local authorities to prevent future hate crimes.

 

We greatly appreciate the efforts of the Asian Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus (APILC) and other legislators for making this fund available to collect data, conduct research, and address racism and hate crimes against the API community. Special thank you to California Governor Gavin Newsom for signing AB 85 into law on February 24, 2021.

 

Please read all about AB 85 here and Governor Newsom’s signin


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From: The Dispatch <thedispatch@substack.com>
Date: Thu, Feb 25, 2021 at 3:25 AM
Subject: ‘They Wasted Away Four Years of My Life’
To: <pueblosenmovimientonorte@gmail.com>





‘They Wasted Away Four Years of My Life’.

Scholar Wang Xiyue talks about spending 40 months in an Iranian prison and what he learned about the regime...,

Danielle PletkaFeb 25CommentShare


Wang Xiyue. (Photograph by Andrew Harnik/AFP/Getty Images)

Wang Xiyue is a Jeane Kirkpatrick fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington and a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University. An American citizen, he went to Iran in 2016 for historical research at the height of the Obama-era U.S.-Iran rapprochement. After some months there, he was detained, then arrested, charged, and finally sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for spying by Iran’s Revolutionary Court. He was freed in a prisoner swap in 2019. He spoke to Danielle Pletka on February 24, 2021. 

Danielle Pletka: Tell me a little bit about your background and how you ended up in Iran.

Wang Xiyue: I was a Ph.D. candidate doing dissertation research in Iran, so my research topic was really comparative governance studies between Iran, later Qajar/early Pahlavi Iran, and then late-imperial Russia and early-Soviet period on frontier Turkmen nomads. I was curious because the nomads cross the border, and it's a really interesting case study to see how Russia and Iran managed the same group of nomads who used to go back and forth between the two countries during this period of time.

DP: That’s a pretty recondite, recherché subject. How did you end up on this nomadic tribe on the Russian-Iranian border?

Wang: I was looking for a project. I had a hard time getting into the Iranian National Archive, so I could only go to the Iranian foreign ministry archive. The foreign ministry archive maintains a good record from frontier regions, because that's where they deal with their neighbors.

I was then looking at things on the Afghan border, on the Russian border, and I realized that the Turkmen issue was actually very interesting. And I was looking for a cross-border governance project with Russia, and the Turkmen area was kind of perfect for that purpose because it was the last piece of land unclaimed in the late 19th century in Eurasia. Iran tried to conquer the Turkmen territory many times, but they failed. And then Russia eventually conquered in 1983 what is today Turkmenistan. So that period of history and that area fascinates me. Very little work has been done, partially because of the difficulties of getting into Iran and Turkmenistan. After the JCPOA, things looked positive. My academic adviser suggested I go to Iran to do this research [after I received a visa].

DP: That's fantastic. This is what month?

Wang: It was January 2016.

Pletka: I would say these are the best days of the JCPOA, while Obama is still president and before there are questions raised about the deal. This is after they got the money, right? (Note: The Obama administration transferred $1.7 billion in non-U.S. currency notes to Iran in January 2016.) 

Wang: Mid-January Iran released the hostages, so it looked even better. We didn’t know the true extent of the payment until August. It wasn't really disclosed fully. We thought it was $400 million, but it turned out to be a full $1.7 billion

Pletka: Right. But they should’ve been very happy. So, you arrive in Iran and what happens?

Wang: In the beginning, there were no problems. I was spending a lot of time in language school and then was looking for academic contacts and getting to know Iranian scholars, visiting archives and libraries for access, to get logistics done in the first six weeks. And then it was Iranian new year. Everything was closed down, so I returned home for a month and a half, and then I went again May 1. When I went again in May, I started intensive archival work. I was very anxious professionally, because I didn't know what kind of material I would find. But it was a very hopeful period because I did find good material. Trouble started to show up a few days before I was supposed to leave Iran.

Pletka: When was that? What date was that around?

Wang: I believe mid-July 2016, because I was working with a local scholar who was trying to get some documents for me. The documents are all accessible for Iranians, nothing was confidential. It's just that the national archive never officially said yes or no to my request. So, I asked my Iranian academic contact what I should do, and he suggested, “These materials are available to Iranians, so why don’t I just get these things for you?”

Pletka: And that was a historical document? It wasn’t anything modern.

Wang: Right. It's a Qajar-Iranian historical document. He got half of them for me, and when he went to get the second half, the archive told him that he was getting documents for a foreigner, and they weren’t going to give him the documents. The archive knew that we submitted the same list.


That’s when I felt a bit troubled. A few hours before I was supposed to leave the country, I was called by the intelligence. They claimed to be Iranian police, wanted to ask me questions, and asked me to bring my passport and computer with me. So, I went to the designated diplomatic police station with my passport and computer. There were two people: one interpreter and one interrogator. The first thing the interrogator did was take my passport. He flipped through it and asked me, “Are you Chinese?” Why is that important? That is usually not the first thing that police will ask you when they look at your passport. I think they knew that they were going to take me hostage. So, knowing that I wasn’t Chinese, because he saw my Chinese visa, he decided that I could be taken. (Note: Wang Xiyue was born in the People’s Republic of China, but moved to the United States with his family and became a U.S. citizen.)

Pletka: If you had been a Chinese national, do you think they would’ve done that?

Wang: No. In fact, they made it very clear. They said, “Had you been Chinese, this would not have happened” during interrogation.

Pletka: So, were you ever released after that first interrogation?

Wang: Yes. They took my passport and computer and let me go. They kept me in limbo for 18 days. I reported it to Princeton. I was really naïve. I didn’t understand the dynamic. Actually, to be really fair, many Iran experts have not talked about what I am trying to talk about. So, there is a deep level of misinformation. I would say disinformation, but disinformation might be too strong. I think there is a tendency not to describe Iran and its relation with the United States in certain factual ways.

Pletka: Why do you think that is? 

Wang: Well, you know, I think there are many reasons. For academics on our university campuses, they need access to sources in Iran. Like I can tell you the same people who strongly advised me to go, some Iranian-American scholars, their work is based on access to sources in Iran. Through what has happened to me … it should have become clear to them that the JCPOA could not work as Obama envisioned. But today, they are still proposing the very same line of policy advice that they gave in 2015 and 2016. I don't think it’s a lack of understanding. There's strong vested interest for their professional reasons.

Pletka: You see the same thing with China as well, with reporters in China who want to maintain their access, and are afraid, and are explicitly warned. That’s how authoritarian regimes act. So, 18 days, then you go back for your passport and what happens?

Wang: So, on August 4, I read Jay Solomon’s WSJ article on my smartphone about the true extent of the January 2016 exchange. (Note: The Solomon article broke the news that an airlift of cash from the U.S. to Iran coincided with a prisoner exchange between the two countries.) After reading that piece, I felt, “Oh shoot, they are going to arrest me, because clearly they want to take me for ransom.” I thought, “Okay, I will go to the Swiss embassy on Sunday for a consultation with this new information.” 

Pletka: Why did Jay Solomon’s article make you think you were going to get arrested? 

Wang: Jay Solomon exposed the full extent of the hostages-for-cash exchange.

Pletka: But shouldn’t that have made the Iranians happy, no? It was a ton of money.

Wang: No, because then, Donald Trump came out and said, “Obama has done wrong. Obama shouldn’t have done that, because it will encourage Iranians to arrest more Americans.” 

Pletka: They saw it as a ransom payment. 

Wang: Precisely. Iran saw it as a ransom payment, and they talk about it in the media in the open. 

Pletka: This is a window into how Washington sees this—a good-faith effort to assist the Iranian economy—versus how the transactional Iranians see it.

Wang: Yes, exactly. That is repeatedly talked about in Iranian media, that this is a ransom. It really doesn’t matter how Obama and his administration saw it. It was perceived by Iran as ransom, clearly. It is not even an inference. It's their explicit statement. The moral of this is make America pay.

Pletka: Why not? They understand how markets work. So, you went to the Swiss embassy, our protecting power.

Wang: I probably went to the Swiss embassy four times. They advised me not to escalate. Because if I escalate, the Iranians will think I’m important and may take drastic actions. I didn’t know at that time Siamak Namazi’s passport was taken two months before he was arrested. (Note: Siamak Namazi was arrested by Iranian authorities in 2015. A dual U.S.-Iranian national, he was charged with spying. Months later, his aged father was lured back to Iran and arrested. Both remain in Evin prison.) And then the State Department, having received the information, kept silent. My wife told me, “You should stay in the Swiss embassy.” I asked the Swiss embassy if I could stay and they told me no. 

Pletka: In retrospect that was probably wrong. Although, we can understand why they might have thought that being more circumspect would’ve helped you. I think the decision was probably already made. So, you make the decision on Thursday to go to the Swiss embassy on Sunday, and what happens?

Wang: On Sunday, first thing in the morning, I got a call around 8:30, I remember, from the interpreter. He asked me to go to the Hotel Azadi. By the way, Azadi means “freedom,” it’s the direct opposite of prison. 

Pletka: Nice. Ironic.

Wang: Ironic, yes. So, they asked me to go to Hotel Azadi. I went, and I later learned the entire third floor was theirs for interrogation. They told me, “We have investigated you. We don’t think you’ve done anything wrong. We will release you and take you to the airport. And then, I told them, “Well, I want the Swiss to do that. Thank you.” They said “No. We have to take you. You can tell the Swiss to go to the airport and wait for you.” So, I called the Swiss and told them that the Iranians have told me that they are going to release me and asked if they could meet me at the airport to process travel arrangements. The Iranians then took me back to my apartment, asked me to take my luggage, and then instead of taking me to the airport, they took me to prison.

Pletka: So, you weren’t expecting that? 

Wang: No. When I came out to their car I sensed something was wrong, because the airport was in the south, but the prison was in the north. They were taking me up north, and I realized something was wrong. And then they took my cellphone from my hand, switched it off, and put it in their pocket. 

Pletka: Always a good sign. And so were you taken immediately to Evin? 

Wang: I was taken into an office in Evin, like an investigative court. And then, the investigative judge issued an arrest warrant, accusing me of espionage. I was taken directly to solitary confinement. 

Pletka: That’s terrible.

Wang: There was literally nothing but a sink inside. Then there were scribbles on the wall. I was reading things on the wall just to get myself distracted. You know the Iranians don’t use the Arabic numerals we use? They use their own system. But, somebody wrote on the wall, in English, “364 days.” 



A cell in Evin prison. (Photo by Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images)

Pletka: In solitary? With no bed? Just a sink? So how long were you kept there?

Wang: I was kept in solitary for 18 days. They fed me, and then they interrogated me every evening for a couple of hours. The longest probably for 5 hours, maybe longer.

It wasn’t actually clear what they were doing. To me, they were still suspicious of me and investigating me, because they asked very specific, but mundane questions. Stuff like where I was born, where I was educated, where I grew up, what I studied in college, my work experience, my opinion about politics, my knowledge about Iranian history, this sort of stuff. For a long time, they didn’t ask me what I had done. Of course they asked me who I know, the Iranian people I’ve gotten to know, and where I've gone to in Iran, things I’ve done in Iran, but nothing was really incriminating. And then, for the most part, I had wishful thoughts: Maybe they are still seriously investigating, and once they find that I am innocent, they will let me go. But then it became clear what they were doing. On the 18th day, they told me “We have finished the investigation, we think you have done nothing.” This is the second time they have said that. “I have written a positive report about you to my chief. I will take you to my chief tomorrow night, and then he will talk to you. If you convince him that you are innocent, he may release you or let you go on bail." On the second day, they took me to hotel Istiqlal, also in Northern Tehran, third floor. And an old man came. He told me “I’m sorry you have to go through this. Had you been Chinese, this wouldn’t have happened.” And then he said, “We are going to ask you some questions and film you. We are going to analyze your facial expressions, and if you are telling the truth we will release you.” And then they started filming and asked me the same questions that they had time and time again during interrogation. I soon realized that this is not about analyzing my facial expressions on me telling the truth or not. It’s for propaganda, because they were asking me opinion questions that couldn’t be judged by a true or false. 

Pletka: Like what?

Wang: "What do you think about U.S. policy towards the Middle East? What do you think about U.S. strategy towards Iran?" This kind of thing.

And then very late at night they took me back to Evin. And then on the third day, I was allowed to talk to my wife for the first time after 19 days. That was the first time I spoke to anyone outside.

Pletka: Wow. 

Wang: And then they left me alone for 10 days. Then they restarted interrogation. This time, they changed interrogators. They did not allow me to remove my blindfold this time. I never saw the second interrogator. This time there was no interpreter, it was completely done in Farsi. He basically forced me into a confession. He said, “You collected information illegally because you are not on a research visa, but you are doing research.”

Pletka: What kind of visa were you on?

Wang: I was on a student language visa. I also made the research intention very clear to the Iranian interests section in my letter of introduction. But, the intelligence told me, “No, you have done illegal things by collecting information without permission.” And then I said, “Well usually you would deport people doing that. Why don’t you deport me?” Of course, they then said “You have broken our law, and you are a spy. You have to confess that you are a spy. Otherwise, you will never set your foot on American soil or see your wife and son again. You will go back to solitary confinement until you confess. We have a lot of time.” I think they were kind of lazy, and they told me, “We want a deal with the United States. If you confess, hopefully a deal will happen soon. If you don’t, you will suffer for nothing. One day you will confess. We want our money back. We want our prisoners back. You have to be a spy for us to have a case.”

Pletka: I see. So you confessed.

Wang: And so I confessed. One sentence, “I’m a spy for the United States.” One sentence. No details whatsoever. And I felt really disgusted by myself because it’s a self-betrayal. 

Pletka: But there’s nothing you can do.

Wang: Right. There’s nothing I could do. There was no counsel from anybody, no one to give me advice. Although I was with other prisoners for a couple of days, I was already in that condition for almost a month. And that’s a very difficult condition. And they know certainly how to play mental games with you. 

Pletka: And so there you are, and when did they sentence you?

Wang: April or May 2017.

Pletka: So, they sentence you to how long?

Wang: 10 years.

Pletka: 10 years, for spying. Stunning.

Wang: I can tell you, the craziest thing they told me. They said “Your adviser, Stephen Kotkin, single-handedly brought down the Soviet Union.”

Pletka: Really?

Wang: Oh, yeah. Steve Kotkin wrote a book on the collapse of the Soviet Union. And he publishes regularly for Foreign Affairs. So, the judge, Judge Salavati, said, “Your adviser single-handedly brought down the Soviet Union, so he sent you, his student, to bring down our regime.”

Pletka: Sorry, I shouldn’t laugh. And Judge Salavati, he’s an IRGC judge?

Wang: No, he’s the most ferocious judge in the Iranian system. He’s the judge of the Revolutionary Court. And he hands out most of the death sentences. So, he only gives out maximum sentences, that’s what he does.

Pletka: He’s a hanging judge, we say in English.

Wang: Yes, a hanging judge. And then I said, “I am a foreigner. I don’t know anybody here, and I don’t even speak Farsi fluently. And I came with $12,000, how can I bring down your regime?” And he said, “You couldn’t. Because before you could, our Supreme Leader, who’s so wise, and the intelligence voices, who are so capable, they called you before you could do it.”

Pletka: You ended up spending 40 months in prison. What did you learn? First of all, are you taken out of solitary?

Wang: Yes. So, my interactions were with Iranian officials and the judge and those enforcers of state violence, and with other prisoners who were really from all walks of life. They were really just fundamentalists, they were embezzlers, and corrupt officials, and they were smugglers and intellectuals, scholars. But also a lot of former officials. Some of them were senior, like the political counselor to the Iranian embassy in China. Counselor to Iranian embassy in Venezuela. The ambassador to the Iranian embassy in Turkmenistan. And the consular official, Iranian consulate in Quetta, Pakistan. And then I was with money launderers. People who circumvented sanctions, who were involved in multibillion-euro cases. So, I was with all kinds of different people and I learned a lot from communicating with them.

Pletka: What would you say were your most important lessons that you learned?

Wang: The most important lesson is that the way that they deal with us, their attitude toward us, is not reactive. It’s proactive. We tend to think if we do things right, they will come around and have good relations with us. That’s wishful thinking and that’s totally wrong. We have tried that since the very early days of the revolution. And then people criticize Trump for closing the door for diplomacy. But there’s not a single day where Trump said, “I don’t want to talk to them.”

Pletka: Right, no, that’s true. He, I think most people believed, wanted a better Iran deal. A Trump Iran deal. Not an Obama Iran deal.

Wang: Right. But he always kept the door of diplomacy open. 

Pletka: Let me ask you about a story you told me. At a certain point you said to one of your interrogators that you believed that President Obama should visit Iran and that the United States should have a normal relationship with Iran. And what did he respond to you?

Wang: He said, “No way, we don’t want Americans.” He said, “American president is not welcomed in our country. We will never have American president to visit us. Never, ever.”

And that was used as evidence against me in court.

Pletka: Why was that evidence against you?

Wang: Because they said, “You want American president to visit Iran. So, you want regime change.” You see, this is how they perceive any goodwill gesture from the United States. It doesn’t really matter how much we give them, how much we are willing to compromise and reconcile with them, they will not see it positively. And then they will do everything against that.

Pletka: And so how did you get out?

Wang: That was 40 months later, that was really a surprise. I knew when Mohammed Javad Zarif and Hassan Rouhani came to the U.N. General Assembly in September they talked about exchange, prisoner exchange. And then they started a propaganda campaign about Dr. [Massoud] Soleimani, the scientist eventually exchanged for me. In Iran for like over a month, he’s on TV all the time. So I sense something positive may come out of it, but I wasn’t really sure.

Pletka: And how did you know about that? Did you have access to Iranian news?

Wang: Yeah, we had newspapers and we had a TV in prison.

Pletka: Interesting, okay.

Wang: Yes. And then of course many people were making efforts, the true extent to that was not known to me because the administration would not share information. The day when it happened, it was very strange. Prisoners knew who’s getting out, who’s being released, who’s going to furlough. And around that time, nobody was slated to go. And then I was having my French lesson with a francophone prisoner, we were talking about a novel I was reading, a French novel. And then they started playing this tune in a loudspeaker. When they play it once, it means somebody goes to furlough, when they play it twice it means somebody’s going to be released. So they played it twice and then somebody started reading a poem about God’s will or something like that. And I was asking the teacher, “Who’s going to be released?” And he said, “No one. We don’t know.” And then they read my name. He said, “Mr. Wang, you are released. You are released.” And then that was a shock to me. I totally didn’t expect that it would happen that way. And then they took me out of the general prison, and the warden told me, “As far as we’re concerned, you are released. But we cannot release you onto the street. We have to release you to the intelligence.” So they took me back to the intelligence, high security prison, a special ward inside Evin.

Pletka: Okay.

Wang: It was the first prison, where I stayed for nine and a half months. So, I was taken to a small cell identical to the one that I spent a long time in. I totally freaked out. I just couldn’t stop talking to other prisoners in the cell. I wasn’t allowed to call. I was uncertain whether they were playing a game, what’s going on. And then on Saturday morning, around 4:30, before the morning adhan, they took me out and then they said, “Do you know what will happen to you?” And I said, “No.” They said, “We’re taking you to the airport. You're going home.”

Pletka: Wow.

Wang: Yeah. And in the airport, I saw the Swiss ambassador and some lady who introduced herself as the Swiss deputy foreign minister or something. And then we took a picture and she said, “We don’t have time, let’s go.” And then she grabbed my wrist and dragged me to the exit of the VIP lounge. And we saw this Swiss aircraft parked on the tarmac. But the gate of the lounge was locked. And then she asked the Iranians, “Where’s the key? Why is it locked?” And the Iranians said, “We don’t know where the key is.” Then the Swiss ambassador explained to her it was agreed that the American plane containing Soleimani and the Swiss plane containing me would arrive in Zurich at the same time. And [former Iran envoy] Brian Hook said, “If the Iranians don’t let you go, we will call the plane back and we’ll cancel the deal.” And that was very scary. So she actually told the Iranians, “If you don’t open the door right now, the Americans are going to cancel the deal.” And then, all of a sudden, they got the key and they let us go.

Pletka: I’ve never asked you this, and don’t tell me something you don’t want to share, but were you mistreated in prison? I worry people are going to think, “Oh, well, of course it’s bad to be in prison, but not too bad. It’s not like Guantanamo Bay or anything.” Were you treated decently in prison? You had French lessons with a French speaking prisoner. You learned Farsi from your colleagues. What would you say about that?

Wang: Well, you know, when I told my friends when I came back about my day-to-day life in prison, their first reaction is, “Wow, the Iranians are so humane.” And I think that’s the most offensive thing that they can say. I said, “There’s nothing humane about their behavior. If they’re really humane, they wouldn’t do this to me. They wasted away four years of my life. Caused immense personal suffering and suffering of my family. For their gain. And there’s nothing humane in that. But I do say that I could have been treated much worse, that is true. But, imagine a situation where Iranian prisoners mostly spend a month or two in the high security prison. I spent nine and a half months, mostly in a cell without a window. I could see sunlight twice a week for 20 minutes each. I had telephone calls for 10 minutes a week when I was in the high security prison. And I was under constant psychological pressure. Because I didn’t know what would happen to me. In the first 18 days of solitary confinement, I lost nine kilos. And that was really difficult because I couldn’t sleep, the floor was so hard. And then 24/7, the light was on. They used something called “white torture” for the most part. 

Pletka: What does that mean?

Wang: White torture means no physical torture, but psychological torture. There are many ways to do that. And I later on read Solzhenitsyn in prison. You read the first three chapters, it corresponds exactly to what the Iranians are doing to us.

Pletka: Let’s talk a little about what you’ve learned and how you see current policy through the prism of your experience.

Wang: I think first of all the Iranian hostility against the United States has its own roots. And secondly, the regime is a very vicious, opportunistic, and suspicious regime that views its relations with the outside world as zero sum. So, if you don’t advance, they think you are weak. That’s why, I say, you can’t really engage it through goodwill. It will abuse your goodwill to the max it can. And they are doing that very thing right now. I tweeted yesterday, what do you gain by making all these concessions to Iran? Nothing, but so far, more hostages have been taken, Iran has restricted IAEA access for inspection, and they hijacked the Korean ship and all that. There’s nothing they have given us in return. And they’re going to keep doing that. 

Pletka: So you feel like you were naïve. I look at these people who are accomplished, serious: Tony Blinken, Jake Sullivan. These are not babies. They’re not academics, these are people with experience in the world. Do you have a sense of why it is that in your view they are misinterpreting Iranian signals and intentions?

Wang: [Rep.] Ro Khanna wrote something very interesting. So he said, “Iran is a 0.44 percent of global GDP. US, 25 percent. China, 19 percent. Why are we wasting our time on 0.44 percent? And getting bogged down in the Middle East with Iran? We need to get out and focus on China.” And I told him, “Sorry, it doesn’t work that way. It costs you a million to build a nice house. But it doesn’t cost an arsonist so much to burn it down." [Note: Xiyue Wang and Rep. Khanna have been debating the Iran issue on Twitter.]

Pletka: Well said.

Wang: And I think this reflects somehow their way of thinking: They believe we have to somehow set aside Iran conundrum. We cannot solve it. Let’s manage it. Set it aside. Focus on more important issues, be it China, Asia, or domestic issues of COVID or other things. But they don’t really understand the Iranian regime, or they’d prefer not to understand it. Because it is a time- and resource-consuming topic. When I was a school boy, it was Desert Storm. Iraq was shooting scud missiles to Kuwait and Israel, and America would launch missiles to intercept the scud missile. And I remember clearly in the Chinese news, they talked about missiles, and said the scud missile is a low technology missile and it doesn’t cost that much. The Patriot missile is much more expensive. I asked my father, “Why do they intercept the scud missile with a Patriot that is much more expensive?” And the answer was simple: You need to prevent the scud missile from causing much greater damage. And I think that’s the question we don’t want to really think carefully about.

Pletka: Iran is the scud missile. 

Wang: Iran is the scud missile. It’s not like you give them a deal and they will abide by the deal and keep quiet. Iran has an offensive defense strategy. And the only way to deal with that is to counter its malicious behavior. You constrain it. And you contain it. You cannot do it by persuasion, appeasement. 

Pletka: This is one of those lessons that unfortunately is very hard for some people to learn. And you learned it the most personally, very painful way. But I suspect that there are others who for political reasons and ideological reasons don’t wish to learn it.

Wang: Exactly, that’s the problem ... We certainly don’t think Tony Blinken or Jake Sullivan are naïve, or they don't understand. What I do fear though, is that they do understand, but they are cynical in the way that they don’t want to seriously deal with it. So, they want to set aside the problem so it’ll be a problem for others.

Pletka: Kick the can down the road.

Wang: I think that’s a dangerous idea to do that. In my Foreign Policy piece, I propose a way that the United States should deal with Iran in relation to China. You keep pressure on Iran because once you start showing an intention to take that pressure away, you will see China getting closer to Iran. It is already proven that China’s illicit purchases of Iranian oil skyrocketed since the election. Because they sense that Biden is going to open up with Iran, reengage with Iran, so there’s nothing to lose. And then the people who argued beforehand, “Trump has failed. We have pushed Iran and China closer, we need to undo that.” And that’s wrong because once you start reengaging, you will see that process unfolding exactly, like a self-fulfilling prophecy. So, I want to suggest, it’s impossible for the US to stop working with China in some regards. You need to constrict the Chinese influence but you don’t want head-on conflict with Chinese influence. You want to kind of work with it, coordinate policy when you can and then limit its influence. So, for example, you can allow China to buy more Iranian oil. But in return, you will tell China not to support Iran any further.

Pletka: We’re going to have an opportunity to see how strong-minded, how tough this administration is in the coming months. And I look forward to watching it with you and understanding better through your experience how they can do better. Wang Xiyue, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me.

Wang: We have warned about this, and I think it’s important to keep my voice loud, for better future policy.

27 DE FEBRERO 2021.

Investigación

La ruta del tráfico de migrantes: 5.000 kilómetros entre coyotes

AGENCIAS PUEDEN LLEGAR A COBRAR US$1.800 DESDE VENEZUELA A CHILE

La ruta del tráfico de migrantes: 5.000 kilómetros entre coyotes

27.02.2021

Por Rodrigo Verdejo (desde Colchane)

La existencia de redes transnacionales dedicadas al tráfico de personas es el dato imposible de soslayar en medio de la crisis migratoria de Colchane. Hasta ahora nadie ha logrado desarmar esas redes, incluso las autoridades chilenas reconocen que no saben demasiado sobre ellas. Culpan a los migrantes por no hacer las denuncias, y quienes migran acusan que los coyotes los estafan y les roban. CIPER reconstruyó la ruta que recorren los miles de migrantes venezolanos que desde fines de 2020 abarrotan la frontera norte del país. Esta es una historia de voluntades de hierro y de viajes sin papeles.


VAMOS HACIA EL 1 DE MAYO 2021.A TUMBAR EL MURO DE TRUMP.

DEMANDAMOS AL NUEVO PRESIDENTE.LIBERTAD PARA TOD@S L@S INMIGRANTES,LEGALIZACION AHORA PARA MAS DE 30 MILLONES DE INDOCUMENTAD@S,REUNIFICACION FAMILIAR INMEDIATA.DERECHOS HUMANOS PARA TOD@S.SI NO HAY JUSTICIA NO HABRA PAZ.BASTA DE DISCRIMINACION Y RACISMO CON LATINOS Y AFRODESENDIENTE.QUEREMOS PAN.COMIDA Y TRABAJO Y NINGUN DESALOJO DE VIVIENDAS Y DE MODESTOS NEGOCIOS.Basta de discriminacion con las vacunas.INDEMNIZACION POR EL GENOCIDIO DE LA PANDEMIA CAPITALISTA:COALICION 1 DE MAYO DEL BRONX.2021

Y

EE.UU.Legalizacion ahora...,LA PANDEMIA ES UN GENOCIDIO DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE,GLOBAL E IMPERIALISTA.EXPLOTADORES TIENEN QUE RESPONDER.LA CLASE TRABAJADORA DEBE DEMANDAR A TODA LA VIEJA CLASE POLITICA CAPITALISTA.TODO LO QUE SE HABLA SOBRE PANDEMIA ES MIERDA Y BASURA...,450 MIL ASESINADOS POR LA PANDEMIA CAPITALISTA SOLO EN EE.UU.?




El "Mini" Manifiesto..., Intraduccion:MAS DE 6O MILLONES ESTA MURIENDO DE HAMBRE EN EE.UU.,100 MILLONES YA EMPIESAN A MORIR DE HAMBRE EN LATINOAMERICA.ESTA REALIDAD YA VENIA ANTES DE LA MALVADA PANDEMIA-COVID19.EL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE RESPONSABLE DE TODAS LAS DESIGUALDADES Y MALES DEL MUNDO.DIGAN LA VERDAD CABRON@S.

LA PANDEMIA - Covid19  ES UN GENOCIDIO DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE GESTADO DESDE HACE MUCHO TIEMPO .La recesion economica que se arrastra desde hace una decada a intentado un Golpe de Estado Mundial.Estamos al borde del fin del Mundo.La inscapacidad de  todas las fracciones de la clase capitalistas y la de sus intrumentos politicos e institucionales.Arrastro a su vez a todos los Conglomerados,Multinacionales,Poderes economicos,Militares,Financieros y Bancaios.  como el Wall Street,FMI, Los Grupos de los 7,8,9 10 y 20 a enfrentarse entre si.Por tanto la crisis se prolongo,dio paso a las conspiraciones,guerras y a un callejon sin Salida.UNA CRISIS CRIMINAL CAPITALISTA,ECONOMICA Y FINANCIERA MUNDIAL LLEGANDO A PARIR LA MAL LlAMADA PANDEMIA QUE NO ES MAS QUE UN ENGENDRO Y CONSECUENCIAS DE LAS DESIGUALDADES IMPUESTAS POR EL CAPITALISMO Y POR SUS DIVERSAS PRACTICAS DE DOMINACION.

 

REPETIMOS LA PANDEMIA ES UN GENOCIDIO Y LA PRIMERA CONSECUENCIA DE LA CRISIS DEL VIEJO SISTEMA CAPITALISTA E IMPERIALISTA MUNDIAL.LOS DISCURSOS Y ANALISIS.PROPUESTAS DE HAYER Y HOY SON LAS MISMAS BERBORREA DEL CAPITALISMO.ASISTIMOS OTRA VEZ A LAS ALTERNATIVAS. O SOCIALISMO LIBERTARIO O BARBARIE IMPERIALISTA.

Los Muerto que Hablaran.?.COBRARAN INDEMNIZACION Y HARAN QUE LOS RICOS DE LAS MULTINACIONALES,EL WALL TREET Y LA VIEJA DIRECCION POLITICA DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE.ARREGLEN EL CHANCHUYO Y PAGUEN LOS GASTOS DE LA PANDEMIA Y CRISIS HAN GENERADO.NI UNA CORA PARA LOS BANCOS Y NI UN PENI PARA EL WALL STREET.

EE.UU. supera la barrera de los 500.000 decesos por coronavirus.De acuerdo a los datos de las universidades estadounidense, en las últimas 24 horas se registraron 39.457 contagios y 871 nuevas muertes.  LEER MÁS.

COVID-19
Contagiados:
106,995,622
Recuperados:
59,847,167

El "mini" Manifiesto: AQUI LA LUCHA RECIEN COMIENZA.SE VIENEN A LAS CALLES mas de 70 MILLONES DE DESEMPLEAD@S,30 MILLONES DE INDOCUMENTAD@S.En el 2006 eramos 12 MILLONES reconocidos por Obama,HOY SOMOS MILLONES DE HAMBRIENTOS Y SIN VIVIENDAS.Millones que No TIENEN COMO Pagar LAS Rentas A LA ORDEN DEL DIA,CRISIS DE VIVIENDAS A NIVEL NACIONAL.,MILES DE DESAMPARAD@S,POBRES Y MARGINAD@S EN EL EX PAIS MAS RICO DEL MUNDO.Quien Responde por los mas de 500.000 mil Muertos de la Pandemia en USA.?.COMO PARAR EL RACISMO Y BRUTALIDAD-POLICIAL EN AUMENTO.SE VA EL PRESIDENTE TRUMP. O DEBERA SER DERROTADO POR LA FUERZA DEL PUEBLO Y DE TOD@S L@S DESCONTENT@S.USTED SE RESISTE A DEJAR LA CASA BLANCA,PERO DEBERA SER DEMANDADO POR TODOS LOS CRIMENES DE LESA HUMANIDAD Y POR EL GENOCIDIO DE LA PANDEMIA IMPERIALISTA.A PREPARAR LA HUELGA GENERAL UNITARIA y a Desmantelar el sistema Nacional de las Policia Racista y Fascistas ABOLIRLO YA. Existen y se vienen variadas Crisis CRIATURAS DE LA CRISIS MAYOR.VAMOS POR MOVLIZACIONES A ESCALA INTERNACIONAL Y NACIONALES UNIDOS CONTRA LA CRISIS MAYOR DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE A LEVANTAR EL PROGRAMA Y LA ALTERNATIVA DEL PODER POPULAR,LA NUEVA SOCIEDAD DE TOD@S L@S AFECTAD@S POR UN MUNDO MEJOR.MIL FORMAS DE LUCHAS,MIL FORMAS DE ORGANIZACION Y UNA SOLA PROPUESTA POR LA CUAL TOD@S A LUCHAR HASTA VENCER,TENEMOS RAZONES,LA FUERZA Y LA VERDAD.NADIEN NOS TRANCARA EL CAMINO.PARAR EL GENOCIDIO DE LOS GRANDES CAPITALISTAS,SUS EJERCITOS Y LA PANDEMIA2020 ES LA ENFERMEDAD DEL CAPITALISMO EN DECADENCIA NO HAY SOLUCIONES DE PARCHES NI REVOLCANDOSE EN LA CRISIS DE TODAS LAS FORMAS DE DOMINACION DE LA VIEJA CLASE POLITICA DEL IMPERIALISMO Y DE SUS DISFRACES.,La 'Era del desorden' que vendrá tras la muerte de la globalización, según Deutsche Bank.UN SOLO CULPABLE EL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE Y SU VIEJA CLASE POLITICA.LAS SOLUCIONES LIMITADAS Y AUN SUJETAS AL NEOCAPITALISMO ESTAN DESTINADAS AL FRACASO Y A LA PROLONGACION DE LA CRISIS,RECESION Y ETERNA PANDEMIA SOSTENIDA POR LA FUERZA Y CONSPIRACIONES,GUERRAS Y HAMBRUNAS.LA PANDEMIA ES LA ORGANIZACION MAS CRIMINAL Y PERFECTA DEL IMPERIALISMO,DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE Y DE TODAS LAS CORPORACIONES EN ESTE SIGLO,NINGUNA SOLUCION DE PARCHES RESUELVE EL CRIMEN DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE MENOS LOS ANALISIS PERIODISTICOS DE BAJA MONTA,NO DEN DEMORAR UNA CAUNA GRATUITA Y MUNDIAL,LOS ABOGADOS DE LOS PUEBLOS DEBEN DEMANDAR A LA AUTORIDADES Y PRESIDENTES POR  ESTE BRUTAL Y  DESCARADO GENOCIDIO CAPITALISTA.EL PERIODISMOS LACAYOS DEL CN,DEL WALLSTREET Y FONDO MONETARIO INETERNACION TAMBIEN SON CULPABRA DE LOS CRIMENES Y GENOCIDIO DE LA PANTEDEMIA2020ESTAMOS CONVOCANDO A PARO DE RESISTENCIA NACIONAL POR L@S INMIGRANT@S Y TRABAJADOR@S DE LOS EE.UU.EL 1ero DE MAYO del 2021..ALERTAS SOBRE LAS DIVERSAS VACUNAS QUE PODRIAN CONSTITUIRSE EN LA CONTINUIDAD DEL GENOCIDIO EN MUCHAS PARTES.EL GENOCIDIO CONTINUARA SI NO TERMINA LA RECESION Y CRISIS MUNDIAL DEL CAPITALISMO SALVAJE QUE SIGUE CON SU EXTERMINIO SOCIAL Y HINUMAN@S.


El virus más letal no es el covid-19, es la guerra.por John Pilger | .

etc.etc..,por el Melinka....,PRESO POLITICO EN EEUU (Prohibido Salir del Pais),INDOCUMENTADO Y PERSEGUIDO POR ORGANOS DE REPRESION DEL IMPERIO Y DE CHILE.

James Petras Para: 'Rosario Campos'.

Solidaridad incondicional  con Victor Toro!
Amigo,compañero y gran luchador desde que nos conocemos en “Nueva Havana”en 72
Un abrazo.
James Petras.1ro de mayo,2014.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RED sinfronteras@riseup.net

Libro: Derechos y violencias en los extractivismos

Derechos y violencias en los extractivismos es un muy reciente libro que presenta el primer estudio detallado de las denominadas extrahecciones en América Latina. Ese nuevo término se aplica a la apropiación de recursos naturales incumpliendo los derechos y bajo violencia. El libro se publicó pocas semanas atrás, y parte de estudios de caso basados […]

Argentina_Santiago del Estero: Amicha, Comunidad en la Tierra.

CHILE.PRESENTES entre 1965-1972.SIN CASAS DE  LA 26 DE ENERO(LA BANDERA),LA NUEVA HABANA Y EL FER SOLIDARIZANDO.Melinka.2020-2921.
PLAZA DE LA DIGNIDAD-CHILE.IMAGEN DE 1970 -1972-73.HABLA EL MELINKA.?

 
 
HAY “UNA GUERRA DE MARRUECOS CONTRA LOS SAHARAUIS PARA MANTENER SU DOMINACIÓN”.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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JOVENES

plrchile.com  

justicecommittee.org

DEL MIR DE CHILE.1983-1984. 

RESUMEN. CEDEMA.

27 DE FEBRERO 2021. 

http://www.cedema.org 

Documentacion

FechaPaísGrupoCategoriaTitulo
2021 02 19ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoFrente de Guerra Occidental (19-2-2021)
2021 02 18ColombiaDisidencias de las FARC-EPComunicadoFrente 28 José María Córdoba (18-2-2021)
2021 02 05ColombiaDisidencias de las FARC-EPComunicadoComando Coordinador de Occidente (5-2-2021): Los falsos positivos del General Mayorga en Argelia
1987 02 20El SalvadorFrente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN)ComunicadoEl FMLN denuncia la incursión de helicópteros de EEUU
1982 02 18GuatemalaOrganización del Pueblo en Armas (ORPA)ComunicadoComunicado Nº 79 (18-02-1982)
2021 02 05ColombiaDisidencias de las FARC-EPComunicadoComando Coordinador de Occidente (5-2-2021)
1980 02 01ChileMovimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR)ComunicadoEl Rebelde en la clandestinidad Nº 158
2021 02 10ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoFrente de Guerra Oriental (10-2-2021)
2020 12 26PeruPartido Comunista del Perú (PCP)ComunicadoConvocatoria en defensa del maoísmo
1971 02 13ArgentinaGuerrilla del Ejército LibertadorComunicadoAutocrítica de Dirección
2021 02 10ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoDesmentido de la Dirección Nacional del ELN
1988 02 11GuatemalaUnidad Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca (URNG)ComunicadoCarta al Arzobispo Metropolitano Próspero Penados del Barrio
2021 02 01ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoAccionar eleno en el Oriente durante enero
2021 01 01PeruMovimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR)LibroEl MIR histórico. Luis de la Puente y Guillermo Lobatón
1986 02 07GuatemalaUnidad Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca (URNG)ComunicadoMensaje de la URNG en su cuarto aniversario al pueblo de Guatemala
2021 02 01ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoRechazamos la manipulación de información contra Ecuador
1990 02 03ColombiaPartido Comunista de Colombia (marxista-leninista) / Ejército Popular de Liberación (EPL)ComunicadoRevolución Nº 357
1983 02 01El SalvadorFuerzas Populares de Liberación Farabundo Martí (FPL)ComunicadoEntrevista con el Comandante Salvador Cayetano Carpio (Soberanía Nº 3)
2021 01 29ColombiaFARC-EP (Segunda Marquetalia)ComunicadoDeclaración Política
2021 01 29ColombiaFARC-EP (Segunda Marquetalia)Comunicado Bertulfo, el que murió peleando
2021 01 01ColombiaEjército de Liberación Nacional (ELN)ComunicadoFrente de Guerra Darío Ramírez Castro (01-2021)
1980 01 01ChileMovimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR)ComunicadoChile Documentación - Ed. Especial Enero de 1980
2021 01 17ColombiaPartido Comunista de Colombia (marxista-leninista) / Ejército Popular de Liberación (EPL)ComunicadoEstado Mayor Central (17-01-2021)
2021 01 13ColombiaDisidencias de las FARC-EPComunicado33 Frente Mariscal Antonio José de Sucre (13-01-2021)
1986 01 24ColombiaMovimiento 19 de Abril (M-19)Comunicado¡Oiga hermano! Nº 139