Irvine -- This weekend, the Zapatistas will enter Mexico City after
marching the route taken by Emilio Zapata, in a massive show of support
for indigenous rights.

Alternative News this evening brings you a report on that from Free Speech
Radio News (www.savepfacifica.net/strike/news/index.html).  
The show airs from 5-6 p.m. on KUCI, 88.9 fm in Orange County, Calif., and
is Web-cast at kuci.org simultaneously.

There's also a report on the battle between South Africa and drug
companies over AIDS drugs.

In addition, WBAI management has yanked off the air an interview with
Congressman Major Owens, a librarian; it's one more incident in a
continuing saga of the deterioration of Pacifica network under the present
regime. 

And a California university has just started a Central American Studies
program; and Nigerians speak out against abuses by a major oil
company...

....................................

On KUCI, we'll also update listeners on the controversial ID law in
Anaheim.  Anaheim has suspended its ID law and plans to repeal it March
20.  For my essay on why enforcement was resurrected recently for this
36-year-old law, see: 

Show Us Your Scars!
http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/01/27/news-tsang.shtml

......................................

In addition, we'll bring listeners the latest edition of Making Contact, a
production of National Radio Project (radioproject.org).   This week
features a look at large-scale mining and its impact on indigenous
communities.

Also, many of you have asked for reviews of restaurants... i recently
reviewed (under the code name DCT) 14:

Holy Mackerel!
http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/01/21/cover.shtml
 .........................

thanx, dan.
..............................................................
Free Speech Radio News

March 9, 2001

     ZAPATISTAS MARCH ON MEXICO CITY
     On New Year's Day in 1994, as the North American Free Trade Agreement
went 
     into effect, the Zapatista National Liberation Army took over the
southern 
     Mexican state of Chiapas. Since that revolt and the subsequent
retaking of 
     Chiapas by the Mexican military, the Zapatistas have waged a war of
ideas. 
     Their latest offensive is a three-week caravan from Chiapas to Mexico
City, 
     where the Zapatistas are scheduled to arrive on Sunday. As Thatcher
Collins 
     reports from the caravan route, the Zapatistas aim to place the
rights of 
     indigenous people at the center of Mexican national politics. 
       
     PATENTS V. PEOPLE IN PRETORIA
     A South Africa this week began its consideration of a case which pits
the 
     right of international drug companies to protect their intellectual
property 
     against the right of millions of people infected with the HIV virus
to have 
     access to drugs which could save their lives. The Pharmaceutical 
     Manufacturers Association of South Africa, a trade group representing
a 
     number of major international drug companies, sued the South African 
     government over its 1997 Medicines and Related Substances Control
Act. That 
     act would have allowed for the production or import of cheaper
generic 
     versions of patented anti-retroviral drugs. The companies say that
would 
     violate their property rights under the South African constitution
and 
     international trade agreements, but health officials and some two
thousand 
     protesters who rallied outside the courtroom say that the AIDS
epidemic 
     legally justifies setting aside patent protections. For now, the
court has 
     delayed the case until April, when South Africa's leading AIDS
pressure 
     group, the Treatment Action Campaign, will offer testimony on the 
     devastation caused by the disease. Host Matt Martin asked Free Speech
Radio 
     News correspondent Patrick Bond to describe the scope of the health 
     emergency which has made this issue so urgent for South Africans. 
       
     FIRST EVER CENTRAL AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM LAUNCHED
     It's estimated that there are more than 2 million Central Americans
in the 
     United States today. Most came during a wave of immigration in the
1980's 
     when hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans, Guatemalans and
Nicaraguans fled 
     war and economic collapse in their countries. So far, there's been
little 
     academic research on the Central American population in the United
States, 
     and even less written by Central Americans themselves. But, as Robin
Urevich 
     reports, that may be changing, as one California university has
developed 
     the nation's first Central American Studies Program. 
       
     NIGERIANS CONDEMN ABUSES BY SHELL OIL
     The Anglo Dutch Oil Company Shell Petroleum is one of the richest
     corporations in the world. It makes fourteen percent of its profits
in 
     Nigeria, a country which relies almost solely on crude oil for its
export 
     earnings. With control over more than half of Nigeria's crude oil 
     production, Shell effectively controls more than half of the
country's 
     export economy. Villagers in the Niger Delta where Shell operates
recently 
     told a human rights commission that the company uses its economic
power to 
     violate their rights. They say the company's monopoly power must be
broken 
     to prevent further abuses and strong-arm tactics. Sam Olukoya has the 
     details from the Niger Delta. 
       
     PACIFICA RADIO GAGS A MEMBER OF CONGRESS
     The bitter two year-old fight over control of the nation's oldest 
     listener-sponsored radio network is about to spill over on to the
floor of 
     Congress. That after the General Manager of Pacifica Radio's New York 
     station WBAI yanked Brooklyn Congressman Major Owens off the
station's 
     airwaves after he violated a rule laid down by management forbidding 
     discussion of internal matters on the air. The struggle at WBAI is
part of 
     a larger conflict over control and direction of the non-profit
Pacifica 
     Foundation, which owns five stations across the country. Long-time 
     supporters of Pacifica, which was founded by a group of pacifists,
fear 
     that the Foundation's board is trying to weaken the radical tenor of
its 
     stations' programming. Aaron Glantz has the story. 

..........................................

Making Contact 
    a weekly international radio program 

       March 7, 2001

    "Digging for Profits: Impacts of Large-Scale Mining" 
                                                   
    By many accounts, large-scale industrial mining projects have
    caused ecological devastation, and harm to communities around the
    world. In particular, mining projects have displaced many Native
    peoples, and cancer-causing chemicals at mine sites have poisoned
    workers and the environment. On this program, we take a look at the
    impacts of mining on communities in the United States, Peru, Ghana
    and South Africa. photo: 

    FEATURING: 

    Danny Kennedy, Project Underground 
    Say-Okla Kindness, Indigenous Mining Campaign Project 
    Lori Goodman, Din Citizens Against Ruining the Environment
    (Din CARE) 
    Julio Marin, Federacon Femininas de Rondas Campesinas (Peru) 
    Shanna Langdon, Project Underground 
    Rachel Kyte, International Finance Corporation 
    Lwazi Kubukeli, Project Underground 
    Immanuel Agyapong, Friends of the Earth-Ghana 

Daniel C. Tsang
Host, Subversity, now Tuesdays, 4-5 p.m.
Host, Alternative News, now Fridays, 5-6 p.m.
KUCI, 88.9 FM and Web-cast live 
 selected shows available as RealAudio files
URL: http://kuci.org/~dtsang/
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Daniel Tsang, KUCI, PO Box 4362, Irvine CA 92616
also check out:
  Home Page: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~dtsang
especially: 
  WWW News Resource Page
    http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~dtsang/netnews1.htm
  Alliance Working for Asian Rights and Empowerment
    http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~dtsang/aware.htm
UCI Tel: (949) 824-4978
UCI Fax: (949) 824-2700
UCI Office: 380 Main Library
Member, National Writers Union.
The only labor union committed to improving the economic and working 
conditions of all freelance writers. For more information visit NWU's Web
site <http://www.nwu.org>, call (212) 254-0279, or email <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.

 




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