Thursday, March 11, 2004 9:24:29 AM
China’s attempt to influence El Salvador
Beyond trying to influence El Salvador’s March 21 elections, China is getting as close as possible to the United States and has made moves in Peru, Brazil, Venezuela, Cuba, the Dominican Republic through its relationship with Cuba and the Panama Canal. Probably more to this list. -Am
China interfering in Salvadoran election, Flores charges
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
Knight Ridder Newspapers
Posted on Wed, Mar. 10, 2004
MIAMI - (KRT) - With polls showing the race tightening in El Salvador's March 21 elections, President Francisco Flores accused China in an interview of intervening in his country's affairs by aiding leftist presidential candidate Shafik Handal.
In addition, Flores told The Miami Herald that Handal's Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front has been receiving large caches of weapons in recent weeks from Latin American leftist groups that he declined to identify. He said the FMLN may use these weapons to create chaos, and thus discourage a large turnout on election day.
Flores' government-backed right-of-center candidate Tony Saca is leading in the polls, but analysts say a small turnout could badly hurt his chances. The followers of Handal, a former guerrilla commander whose group laid down its weapons in a 1992 peace agreement, are widely seen as committed voters who are almost sure to vote on election day.
"If Shafik Handal were to win, El Salvador would abandon the system of economic and political freedoms, and adopt the Cuban model," said Flores, one of Latin America's leaders who has been most critical of Cuban strongman Fidel Castro. "Today, the FMLN is in hands of the Communist Party."
Senior FMLN officials admit to having received campaign donations from China, but deny the charges that they tried to import weapons. And Handal, in a recent interview, said he would significantly strengthen ties with Cuba if elected, but rejected allegations that he wants to copy the Cuban model in El Salvador.
According to the Salvadoran government, China's Economic Cooperation Center, a branch of the ruling Communist Party, has delivered two containers filled with computers, cameras, 76,440 FMLN-emblazoned T-shirts, caps and other trinkets to the Handal campaign. The first container arrived Nov. 26 at the Salvadoran port of Acajutla, and the second one arrived in early January, Salvadoran officials say.
Sigfrido Reyes, an FMLN congressman who heads the party's international affairs department, concedes that the items in the containers were a "donation from the Chinese Association of Friendship with the Peoples."
He said the group "has relations with the Chinese government, but isn't part of the government."
Reyes added that Taiwan is known to make large campaign donations to friendly political parties, although he said he cannot prove that the Saca campaign has received such help.
El Salvador is among a few countries that do not have diplomatic relations with mainland China, but with Taiwan.
While the containers were originally documented as purchases by the FMLN campaign, their real value is millions of dollars, way above that declared in customs documents, Salvadoran officials say.
"This (Chinese support) is an intolerable interference in our country's internal affairs," Flores said.
Regarding the weapons, Flores said shipping documents show that a cargo of 288 guns found in a Salvadoran airport warehouse was bound for the FMLN-controlled municipality of Mejicanos. The seven-box weapons shipment had left Jan. 28 from Porto Alegre, Brazil, and gone to Peru and Costa Rica before arriving in El Salvador, Salvadoran officials say.
Flores said the weapons were for 300 people, far more than the number of security agents in Mejicanos.
"That sounded alarm bells to me," he said.
Reyes said the guns were marked as going to the Mejicanos municipality "because of a mistake in the labeling."
He added that they were purchased by a private security firm, "and were never bought by the Mejicanos mayor's office, nor supposed to go there."
"The president is making highly irresponsible statements," Reyes said. "The country's president is supposed to take some distance from the heat of the electoral race. He's supposed to serve all Salvadorans."
A poll released March 1 by the Jesuit University shows that Saca, a former sports announcer turned businessman, has about 46 percent of the vote, followed by Handal with 25 percent.
But skeptics note that Salvadoran polls have been wrong before, mainly because large numbers of Salvadorans don't show up to vote on election day. The FMLN has won El Salvador's last two congressional elections, and the last three mayoral elections in San Salvador, the capital.
If no candidate wins 50 percent of the vote on March 21, the two leading presidential hopefuls will go to a runoff election in late April.
---
© 2004, The Miami Herald.
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/world/8154276.htm
Reference:
The Chinese are continuing their move into our ‘near abroad’, having already made economic moves in Peru, Brazil, and Venezuela. According to a release from (Reuters) on Feb 27, 2004, Chinese state oil firms are under pressure to secure foreign oil and gas assets to fuel the world's fastest-growing major economy as domestic oil and gas output declines.
http://www.forbes.com/markets/newswire/2004/02/26/rtr1278409.html
Cuba and Fidel Castro have been dancing with the Chinese for sometime. The wily Cuban dictator needs a replacement for the Soviet Union who shored up Cuba's economy and military until it went broke and dismantled. Military aid and trade has begun between the two nations and the Chinese have shown particular interest in Cuba as a listening post to spy on U.S. military and commercial communications.
#msg-2488765
China has also taken control of the Panama Canal.
A Chinese-based company believed to be controlled by the People's Revolutionary Army operates the ports and both ends of the Panama Canal. The same company, Hutchinson Whampoa, operates the container port, cruise ship facilities, and a portion of the airport in Freeport, Bahamas.
Note: see China's Taking of the Panama Canal
#msg-2384357
The president of the Dominican Republic, Hipólito Mejía, said that Cuba must be included in the Caribbean regional processes. He noted that the Dominican Republic and Cuba had a "fluid relationship based on historic links and mutual respect."
Cuba and China have excellent relations in political, economic, scientific and cultural areas. On July 7, 2003 a high-level delegation from the Chinese Communist Party arrived in the Cuban capital for an official visit.
#msg-2452245
Beyond trying to influence El Salvador’s March 21 elections, China is getting as close as possible to the United States and has made moves in Peru, Brazil, Venezuela, Cuba, the Dominican Republic through its relationship with Cuba and the Panama Canal. Probably more to this list. -Am
China interfering in Salvadoran election, Flores charges
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
Knight Ridder Newspapers
Posted on Wed, Mar. 10, 2004
MIAMI - (KRT) - With polls showing the race tightening in El Salvador's March 21 elections, President Francisco Flores accused China in an interview of intervening in his country's affairs by aiding leftist presidential candidate Shafik Handal.
In addition, Flores told The Miami Herald that Handal's Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front has been receiving large caches of weapons in recent weeks from Latin American leftist groups that he declined to identify. He said the FMLN may use these weapons to create chaos, and thus discourage a large turnout on election day.
Flores' government-backed right-of-center candidate Tony Saca is leading in the polls, but analysts say a small turnout could badly hurt his chances. The followers of Handal, a former guerrilla commander whose group laid down its weapons in a 1992 peace agreement, are widely seen as committed voters who are almost sure to vote on election day.
"If Shafik Handal were to win, El Salvador would abandon the system of economic and political freedoms, and adopt the Cuban model," said Flores, one of Latin America's leaders who has been most critical of Cuban strongman Fidel Castro. "Today, the FMLN is in hands of the Communist Party."
Senior FMLN officials admit to having received campaign donations from China, but deny the charges that they tried to import weapons. And Handal, in a recent interview, said he would significantly strengthen ties with Cuba if elected, but rejected allegations that he wants to copy the Cuban model in El Salvador.
According to the Salvadoran government, China's Economic Cooperation Center, a branch of the ruling Communist Party, has delivered two containers filled with computers, cameras, 76,440 FMLN-emblazoned T-shirts, caps and other trinkets to the Handal campaign. The first container arrived Nov. 26 at the Salvadoran port of Acajutla, and the second one arrived in early January, Salvadoran officials say.
Sigfrido Reyes, an FMLN congressman who heads the party's international affairs department, concedes that the items in the containers were a "donation from the Chinese Association of Friendship with the Peoples."
He said the group "has relations with the Chinese government, but isn't part of the government."
Reyes added that Taiwan is known to make large campaign donations to friendly political parties, although he said he cannot prove that the Saca campaign has received such help.
El Salvador is among a few countries that do not have diplomatic relations with mainland China, but with Taiwan.
While the containers were originally documented as purchases by the FMLN campaign, their real value is millions of dollars, way above that declared in customs documents, Salvadoran officials say.
"This (Chinese support) is an intolerable interference in our country's internal affairs," Flores said.
Regarding the weapons, Flores said shipping documents show that a cargo of 288 guns found in a Salvadoran airport warehouse was bound for the FMLN-controlled municipality of Mejicanos. The seven-box weapons shipment had left Jan. 28 from Porto Alegre, Brazil, and gone to Peru and Costa Rica before arriving in El Salvador, Salvadoran officials say.
Flores said the weapons were for 300 people, far more than the number of security agents in Mejicanos.
"That sounded alarm bells to me," he said.
Reyes said the guns were marked as going to the Mejicanos municipality "because of a mistake in the labeling."
He added that they were purchased by a private security firm, "and were never bought by the Mejicanos mayor's office, nor supposed to go there."
"The president is making highly irresponsible statements," Reyes said. "The country's president is supposed to take some distance from the heat of the electoral race. He's supposed to serve all Salvadorans."
A poll released March 1 by the Jesuit University shows that Saca, a former sports announcer turned businessman, has about 46 percent of the vote, followed by Handal with 25 percent.
But skeptics note that Salvadoran polls have been wrong before, mainly because large numbers of Salvadorans don't show up to vote on election day. The FMLN has won El Salvador's last two congressional elections, and the last three mayoral elections in San Salvador, the capital.
If no candidate wins 50 percent of the vote on March 21, the two leading presidential hopefuls will go to a runoff election in late April.
---
© 2004, The Miami Herald.
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/world/8154276.htm
Reference:
The Chinese are continuing their move into our ‘near abroad’, having already made economic moves in Peru, Brazil, and Venezuela. According to a release from (Reuters) on Feb 27, 2004, Chinese state oil firms are under pressure to secure foreign oil and gas assets to fuel the world's fastest-growing major economy as domestic oil and gas output declines.
http://www.forbes.com/markets/newswire/2004/02/26/rtr1278409.html
Cuba and Fidel Castro have been dancing with the Chinese for sometime. The wily Cuban dictator needs a replacement for the Soviet Union who shored up Cuba's economy and military until it went broke and dismantled. Military aid and trade has begun between the two nations and the Chinese have shown particular interest in Cuba as a listening post to spy on U.S. military and commercial communications.
#msg-2488765
China has also taken control of the Panama Canal.
A Chinese-based company believed to be controlled by the People's Revolutionary Army operates the ports and both ends of the Panama Canal. The same company, Hutchinson Whampoa, operates the container port, cruise ship facilities, and a portion of the airport in Freeport, Bahamas.
Note: see China's Taking of the Panama Canal
#msg-2384357
The president of the Dominican Republic, Hipólito Mejía, said that Cuba must be included in the Caribbean regional processes. He noted that the Dominican Republic and Cuba had a "fluid relationship based on historic links and mutual respect."
Cuba and China have excellent relations in political, economic, scientific and cultural areas. On July 7, 2003 a high-level delegation from the Chinese Communist Party arrived in the Cuban capital for an official visit.
#msg-2452245
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