View Full Version : IMPORTANT! Ecuador, Honduras support Bolivia, Venezuela in expulsion of U.S. envoys
QUESTINY
09-14-2008, 03:08 AM
Ecuador, Honduras support Bolivia, Venezuela in expulsion of U.S. envoys
www.chinaview.cn
2008-09-13 10:40:29
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/20...nt_9961571.htm
LIMA, Sept. 12 (Xinhua) -- Ecuador and Honduras on Friday voiced support for Bolivia and Venezuela's decision to expel U.S. ambassadors in their countries in protest of Washington's intervention in their domestic affairs.
"The president of Bolivia, Evo Morales and the president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, have enough reasons to label (as "persona non gratas") the U.S. ambassador in La Paz, Philip Goldberg, and that in Caracas, Patrick Duddy. I respect those countries' decisions and I am sure that they had their concrete and verified reasons," Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa said during his visit to Peru.
"Ecuador will make its resolutions in a sovereign way," Correa noted.
"I have to acknowledge that former U.S. ambassador to Ecuador always respected my country," the president said, adding that "if any U.S. ambassador or of any place attempts to interfere in our internal affairs or affect the country's security, he will be immediately expelled."
Correa made the remarks at a press conference at the Andean Community of Nations (CAN) that groups Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.
The Ecuadorian president had previously met with his Peruvian counterpart Alan Garcia.
Meanwhile, reports monitored here said that Hondurian President Manuel Zelaya also voiced support for Bolivia's decision to expel the U.S. ambassador, saying he will not receive the new U.S. ambassador to Honduras for the moment, though he does not want to have problems with Washington.
In another development of the day, the Venezuelan government said it formalized the expulsion of U.S. ambassador to Venezuela, Patrick Duddy, after President Hugo Chavez announced the decision on Thursday to show solidarity with Bolivia.
The U.S. ambassador was asked to leave the country within 72 hours starting from 19:15 local time (2345 GMT) on Thursday.
In a communique, the government declared Duddy as "persona non grata" , saying it subjects the ties with the United States to an intense evaluation "to guarantee the respect to our homeland."
Bolivian Ambassador to Venezuela Jorge Alvarado said on Friday that he appreciates Venezuela's sympathy with La Paz, describing the words of President Chavez as a honor and an incentive for the Bolivian people.
"The Bolivians, Venezuelans and the Latin Americans should feel proud because our governments are dignifying us," Alvarado said.
Alvarado said Latin American nations could not react to the U.S. intervention before, because they lived with alleged help from it. "But we are now showing that we can expel a U.S. ambassador," Alvarado told local VTV channel.
Bolivian President Evo Morales on Wednesday requested U.S. Ambassador to Bolivia Philip Goldberg to leave the country immediately, accusing him of "heading the division" inside Boliviaby encouraging, together with the opposition, the protests agains this government.
CONDE
09-14-2008, 03:55 AM
Ecuador, Honduras support Bolivia, Venezuela in expulsion of U.S. envoys
www.chinaview.cn
2008-09-13 10:40:29
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/20...nt_9961571.htm
LIMA, Sept. 12 (Xinhua) -- Ecuador and Honduras on Friday voiced support for Bolivia and Venezuela's decision to expel U.S. ambassadors in their countries in protest of Washington's intervention in their domestic affairs.
"The president of Bolivia, Evo Morales and the president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, have enough reasons to label (as "persona non gratas") the U.S. ambassador in La Paz, Philip Goldberg, and that in Caracas, Patrick Duddy. I respect those countries' decisions and I am sure that they had their concrete and verified reasons," Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa said during his visit to Peru.
"Ecuador will make its resolutions in a sovereign way," Correa noted.
"I have to acknowledge that former U.S. ambassador to Ecuador always respected my country," the president said, adding that "if any U.S. ambassador or of any place attempts to interfere in our internal affairs or affect the country's security, he will be immediately expelled."
Correa made the remarks at a press conference at the Andean Community of Nations (CAN) that groups Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.
The Ecuadorian president had previously met with his Peruvian counterpart Alan Garcia.
Meanwhile, reports monitored here said that Hondurian President Manuel Zelaya also voiced support for Bolivia's decision to expel the U.S. ambassador, saying he will not receive the new U.S. ambassador to Honduras for the moment, though he does not want to have problems with Washington.
In another development of the day, the Venezuelan government said it formalized the expulsion of U.S. ambassador to Venezuela, Patrick Duddy, after President Hugo Chavez announced the decision on Thursday to show solidarity with Bolivia.
The U.S. ambassador was asked to leave the country within 72 hours starting from 19:15 local time (2345 GMT) on Thursday.
In a communique, the government declared Duddy as "persona non grata" , saying it subjects the ties with the United States to an intense evaluation "to guarantee the respect to our homeland."
Bolivian Ambassador to Venezuela Jorge Alvarado said on Friday that he appreciates Venezuela's sympathy with La Paz, describing the words of President Chavez as a honor and an incentive for the Bolivian people.
"The Bolivians, Venezuelans and the Latin Americans should feel proud because our governments are dignifying us," Alvarado said.
Alvarado said Latin American nations could not react to the U.S. intervention before, because they lived with alleged help from it. "But we are now showing that we can expel a U.S. ambassador," Alvarado told local VTV channel.
Bolivian President Evo Morales on Wednesday requested U.S. Ambassador to Bolivia Philip Goldberg to leave the country immediately, accusing him of "heading the division" inside Boliviaby encouraging, together with the opposition, the protests agains this government.
Thanks Questiny!..
.About Time.:sneaky2:
Operator
09-14-2008, 04:02 AM
Yes, I feel supportive for this now ....
However, history tells us that most of the time this creates new dictators of tomorrow ...
Ashatav
09-14-2008, 04:09 AM
The majority of the dictators are Vatican made.
Read the Alberto Rivera's history.
Cheers!
rustanddust
09-14-2008, 04:09 AM
its all goin down the toliet and I really can't say I feel bad about it
Excellent news! Are they awakening ?????
They all know about the manipulations, but how come Bush and cronies have bought miles of lands in South America?
Can this be rescinded? Blocked?
Silly me, - er - are there tunneling machines delivered there also...?
We know the Nazis escaped to South America after WWII - so is this a hidden development?
I smell rats again....
Rocky_Shorz
09-14-2008, 05:26 PM
When I was in Brasil, I visited the town that German was the first language, portugese the second... Blumenau<?>
great place to visit, the people were wonderful...
and no swasticas to be seen anywhere, lots of churches and beer...
QUESTINY
09-14-2008, 05:34 PM
You are seeing the public display of governments choosing sides. This is not good for the US. We are losing support very quickly. Please watch closely to what Saudi Arabia does. Once they drop the dollar everything will fall apart fast. We WILL quickly lose control in the Middle East (control is debatable, I know).
doodah
09-14-2008, 05:40 PM
This could be a good thing. Since the US represents the rape-the-Earth mentality, this fits with the Ecuadorians' recent proposal to grant legal rights to "Nature." As most of you know, Corporations gave themselves "personhood" under the law in the US sometime in the late 1800s. A Corporation is treated as a single unit, a person.
[One wonders if a real live biological human being is still considered to be a person under the law, it is so screwed up!]
There is a movement in the US to address this absurdity of legalese by declaring natural environments to be people, too, so as to be able to establish equal footing and fight some of the Corporate mauling. Several towns and localities now have such legal statements on their books. Ecuador is the first country I am aware of to take this same approach. God bless 'em!
THE eXchanger
09-14-2008, 05:45 PM
the biggest holocast of all
ended in 1490
there, you want the end date of the mayan calender,
well, you got it
and, as, a curse, for what was done
9 hells were given to this earth
lasting 52 years
over 60,000,000 south americans/and, north americans
indigeous people,
we were slaughtered--
shocking you have NOT read about it yet
why are the people in south america so poor ?
they are poor, because, it was NOT them
who organised the sale of their lands
those lands, were ripped out,
from under us
look to who it is, that owns the land masses
then, you will find answers
who is the richest corporation on the planet
it starts with a "c", and, it needs to be "lic'd"
(Pardon the pun !!!)
the real truth, is about to be told !!!
to the south americans, i will say this
if the people were NOT born on your land
make it impossible for them to own it
rent it to them instead, and, charge them a premium
they took what was yours, and, it is time for you to take it all back !!!
whatever is yours, you always get to keep
it is "the law of return" that governs this
it is time, to put that law, into action !!!
brightest blessings to all
i am susan
white lotus star
the eXchanger
doodah
09-14-2008, 05:55 PM
Yes, eXchanger.
There's a wonderful book titled 1491 that describes the Americas before Columbus got here in 1492. Millions of people lived here. It was not a vast open wilderness until the Christian Europeans killed everybody off. So, yes, it was done before. And it seems to be the plan to do it again.
QUESTINY
09-14-2008, 06:20 PM
This could be a good thing. Since the US represents the rape-the-Earth mentality, this fits with the Ecuadorians' recent proposal to grant legal rights to "Nature." As most of you know, Corporations gave themselves "personhood" under the law in the US sometime in the late 1800s. A Corporation is treated as a single unit, a person.
[One wonders if a real live biological human being is still considered to be a person under the law, it is so screwed up!]
There is a movement in the US to address this absurdity of legalese by declaring natural environments to be people, too, so as to be able to establish equal footing and fight some of the Corporate mauling. Several towns and localities now have such legal statements on their books. Ecuador is the first country I am aware of to take this same approach. God bless 'em!
Do you know how your birth certificate is registered with the US Government. As a Commerce Unit. That's right, you are a resource not a person.
doodah
09-14-2008, 06:46 PM
Questiny:
Exactly. There is much of this information out there now, thank goodness -- the things they call "law" that they enforce at the point of a gun [such a pitiful place of weakness!] No, I am a sovereign being, thank you, no matter what they say.
If the constitution is "just a piece of paper," what is a birth certificate? If that's the game they want to play, when words have no meaning or are changed at will, there is no basis for trust or for communication. They have created a terrible world and have undercut themselves at the same time.
Their whole way of thinking needs to crash and burn. Well, I am a peaceful person, so I really would prefer that they would just go away, and, if they're sane enough to think it through, perhaps Fulford's amnesty idea will have some appeal. Then this whole contorted nest of snakes called "law" may have a chance of changing.
Certain channelled info says: "The control of the past has ended." All of this nonsense is based in the past, in England, in history, in Rome, in Sumeria, in a controlling script for this world. We are here to write a new script, so Go, you authors, Go!
broken_sword
09-14-2008, 06:57 PM
It's ok for all humans including governments to do whatever is on their own agendas because of this little universal truth of free will. we are NOT allowed to take ANYTHING ANYONE DOE PERSONALLY for all of us are guilty of manipulating circumstances and people to get what we want or to reach a goal. it's human's sinful nature to do so and to fight it is ridiculous and futile. we can't, no matter how much we reject the basic assumption of the importance of material posession, change the fact that humans are selfish and full of pride. My soul is at peace with my decisions and until we can all be happy with ourselves and stop blaming someone else for the worlds problems we will continue on this torrid journey. But hey, if everyone was happy with the way the world is then we wouldn't have a forum to vent on. peace everyone.
Zarathustra
09-14-2008, 07:50 PM
You are seeing the public display of governments choosing sides. This is not good for the US. We are losing support very quickly. Please watch closely to what Saudi Arabia does. Once they drop the dollar everything will fall apart fast. We WILL quickly lose control in the Middle East (control is debatable, I know).
Questiny is dead on with her analysis here, I believe. These are sentiments being expressed publicly that have been long held in private. The world is aligning into two camps right now, and Questiny is correct when she notes that Saudi Arabia, along with China, is a huge key to the outcome. If the Saudis decide to stop being our aiders and abetters in the Middle East, and if China decides that suppressing their own economy for the sake of dollar support is no longer in their best interest (Shanghai cooperative with Russia?) , then things with change - Quickly!
See Questiny's posts on Russian and China involvement in the fannie and freddie buyout for insight into that potential.
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