When the King of Spain told Hugo Chavez to "shut up" at the Ibero-American summit in Chile, it kind of felt like a symbolic moment, and then it was finished off with a regal flourish as the King walked out while Daniel Ortega was in full flow. A storm in a tea cup or just a scene from just any other school playground?
Personally, watching the video from the standpoint of a reader of body language - it's fascinating. Politicians always attempt to claim the higher ground for themselves and that's exactly what was on view when current Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero railed against Chavez's charge of fascist against former Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar.
More seriously and more worrying here is how poorly the issues are covered. To the BBC for example, it almost seemed incidental that the basis to Chavez' name calling was Spain's support for the coup in Venezuela in 2002. In one article on the exchange the BBC fails to mention the substance of Spanish support of a coup in Venezuela, in another it prefers simply to collect Chavez's verbals (again without any reference to issues or context like this from the New York Times) and in a third it refers to a 'brief' coup. As if coups can be brief. Let's not get into semantics, but it was the illegitimate government of Pedro Carmona in 2002 that was brief, not the coup. Coups either take place or they don't. What's also interesting is the ignoring of issues in the wider region. For example, a Spanish King turning his back and walking out on Daniel Ortega doesn't attract any attention, even though as far as schoolboy behaviour goes, it's as childish to runaway with your hands on your ears as it is to say shut up.
Finally today, the BBC's Martin Murphy ran an article that reflected on the incident from the weekend, only without any reflection. It contained the curious sentence:
"For a president whose role model is the Latin American independence hero Simon Bolivar it was particularly ignominious that a Spanish king treated him like a schoolboy."
That says it all. Deference is and has been everything for many years in international politics regarding Latin America. We should know who are betters are and accept it. Only now things are different with Chavez, and what might be outbursts for some or colourful quotations as the BBC puts it, are for others rare moments where we see that the Emperor, or indeed the King, has no clothes on after all.
"Pedro Zamora, General Secretary of the Guatemalan STEPQ dockers' union was shot 20 times by multiple assailants who ambushed him and his children on Monday, January 15. After firing 100 shots, one walked up to the wounded Zamora and shot him at point blank range in the face. Three-year-old Angel was wounded in the attack. Zamora's last act had been to push the children to the floor to try and protect them. Since the murder, the five surviving leaders of the STEPQ union have received telephoned death threats, that they are subject to surveillance. Their families are also being threatened."
Another trade unionist, Marco Tulio Ramirez Portela, was murdered recently (23-09-07). You can read an excellent article by Kimberley Kern on this case and what you can do to voice your concerns here.
“On September 23rd Marco Tulio Portela Ramirez, a union organizer, was brutally gunned down outside his home as he prepared to go to work at the Bandegua banana plantation, a subsidiary of Del Monte Fresh Produce.”
Welcome, Guatemala Solidarity Network (GSN) based in the United Kingdom supports the people of Guatemala who continue to struggle for change after centuries of oppression, violence, racism and exploitation.
You can keep in touch with all the news and views on Guatemala in many, many blogs and sources of information here via Pageflakes.