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Saturday, November 22, 2008

Bush pledges help to fight corruption, poverty in Paraguay




Right: George preparing to blow smoke up Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo's ass



Originally published October 28, 2008

President George Bush joined Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo Monday in a pledge to bring assistance to the poverty-stricken South American nation while fighting corruption in the ranks of its government.



After a meeting with Lugo at the White House, Bush said his administration welcomed the opportunity to open discussions with Lugo that could lead to assistance from Washington.



"We want to help with education and health care. We care deeply about people being able to work," Bush said. “We believe in the social justice agenda. I believe that it's important that the United States be in a position to help influence the lives of citizens that simply want a more hopeful day." In his post-meeting statement, Lugo pledged to fight corruption and work to lift the nation out of poverty.

"We are profoundly hurt in our souls by poverty, by the exodus of our young people, by the lack of education, by people who don't have roofs over their heads," said Lugo. "Our dream is that Paraguay be known not for its corruption, but for its transparency and for its dignity as a people and as a country."



Noting that Lugo had a "hard job" in moving toward his goals, President Bush said he recognized the South American leader's commitment to work against government corruption plaguing his country's ability to lift itself out of poverty.



"I'm impressed by the fact that you want to take a strong stand against corruption. There's nothing more discouraging than to have the government of a people steal their money," said Bush. "And so we stand with you. It's -- you got a hard job. I understand that. But you bring the right spirit to the job."



Lugo underscored that he entered politics in order to change the history of Paraguay. “We have not come into politics in order to get into the smokeless industry that is to steal from the people of the country. We came in as Christians, because our Christian duty is to serve the poorest and the neediest of our people. And today, as President of Paraguay, we're taking on all of the challenges with the greatest serenity possible so that we can help our people”.



“I'll never forget that when I talked to one of our farm people, one of the people out in the country, a farmer who said, "What we need is bread. We don't care if it comes from the left hand or from the right hand; we just need somebody to give us food." And that's why we're here, because the Paraguayans have asked us to be here as President to try to recover Paraguay's dignity as a nation”.



Lugo is a former Catholic bishop who ended 61 years of one-party conservative rule in Paraguay when he became head of state in August with the support of a catch-all centre left coalition.






Bush Buys Land in Northern Paraguay
Prensa Latina – Buenos Aires, Oct 13, 2006



An Argentine official regarded the intention of the George W. Bush family to settle on the Acuifero Guarani (Paraguay) as surprising, besides being a bad signal for the governments of the region. Luis D Elia, undersecretary for the Social Habitat in the Argentine Federal Planning Ministry, issued a memo partially reproduced by digital INFOBAE.com, in which he spoke of the purchase by Bush of a 98,842-acre farm in northern Paraguay, between Brazil and Bolivia.



The news circulated Thursday in non-official sources in Asuncion, Paraguay. D Elia considered this Bush step counterproductive for the regional power expressed by Presidents Nestor Kirchner, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Evo Morales, Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro. He said that "it is a bad signal that the Bush family is doing business with natural resources linked to the future of MERCOSUR."



The official pointed out that this situation could cause a hypothetical conflict of all the armies in the region, and called attention to the Bush family habit of associating business and politics. www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID={EBA55617-2676-4091-ABBC-20650EB6FEE1}&language=EN


Update Bush Family Residence in Paraguay? Written by April Howard – Upside Down World October 11, 2006


The Governor of Alto Paraguay, Erasmo Rodríguez Acosta has admitted to hearing that George Bush Sr. owns land in the Chaco region of Paraguay, in Paso de Patria. Acosta says that rumor has it that Bush owns near to 70 thousand hectares (173,000 acres) as part of an ecological reserve and/or ranch. However, the governor said he had no documents to prove the rumor. Acosta said that some stories credited the land to the Fundación Patria, which Bush would be a member of. The spokespeople of the organization were not available to comment.




Timothy Towell, the U.S. Ambassador in Asunción (the capital of Paraguay) is the present administrator of the land. First accounts signaled that Bush had acquired 40,000 hectares (99,000 acres) in the Chaco zone of Fuerte Olimpo, near the Bolivian Border. A spark of the interest in this property may have been Jenna Bush's private visit to Paraguay with Unicef, which started Saturday, October 7, 2006. Jenna will travel to the ranch to ''observe'' several indigenous villages are located on the property. http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/457/0/

3 comments:

skywalker said...

Be wary of Bush - very.

He may 'help' Paraguay the way he 'helped' the millions of now dead Afghanis and Iraqis.

- Then again one thing that absentee landlord from Texas could do is hand over the keys and deeds to his Paraguayan ranch to the Paraguay's poor.

Janet said...

I agree. We need to keep a close eye on him in the next two months. But then, it is not like we could do anything about it. It seems we have just sat back and watched him plunder our country. sigh.

Some people say he doesn't own land there, but he certainly does, right along with his father and Sun Myong Moon. The official Jenna story was that she went down there with UNICEF, but the organization denies that her side trip to Paraguay was not part of the program. And she's there to observe the indigenous people? Maybe George is trying to figure out if he owns them, too.

What spurred this in my mind is that George left for Peru yesterday.

Maybe he is trying to make a fortress in case he is charged with war crimes. It is really not a vacation spot.

Janet said...

sorry for the spelling and grammar. It's early.