4/18/2009

In memoriam Edu




Eduardo Rozsa Flores (Santa Cruz, Bolivia, 1960. March 31. - Santa Cruz, Bolivia, 2009. April 16) Hungarian actor, writer, publicist.


Eduardo Rózsa-Flores
FAREWELL

I can see already my
Wonderful but
Passing
Body
Nicely stretched out.

/Loneliness is big here.
Silence, total
All the little spots are filled
with
Bitterness and shadows./

Outside, the unbridled four horsemen
of the Apocalypse
Treading on virginal pure dreams of
little girls

Screams – long and mind-shattering –
Stream in through the window

There's life out there, still
The fight goes on

I am receding now, with
Deserved angelic wings earned,
in loneliness.

The Only One's all encompassing
Embrace awaits me.


Rest in peace my Brother!

Bolivian video after the bloody police action



Terrorist in underwear? Just think about it...

Bolivia Police Uncover Plot to Assassinate President

Bolivian police say they broke an armed international group on Thursday that was plotting to assassinate President Evo Morales and the vice president.

Three suspects were killed and two were arrested in a half-hour long shootout with officers in the eastern city of Santa Cruz, police said. The area is the center of political opposition to Morales.

Police confiscated explosives, high-caliber weapons and plans to follow the president's motorcade, Police Commander Victor Hugo Escobar said in a news conference.

They included C-4 explosives "that don't exist in Bolivia," Vice President Alvaro Garcia said.

Morales told journalists in Venezuela's seaside city of Cumana that he and Garcia were the targets.

"I had information several days ago that they were preparing an assassination attempt," Morales said. "Yesterday, I gave the vice president and the commander of the national police instructions to stage an operation and detain those mercenaries."

Escobar said that among those killed were Hungarians, while Garcia said in a statement that the band was composed of Croatians, Irish and Bolivian "far right."

Among the seized weapons were rifles with telescopic sights. Documents were seized "pertaining not only to past events but future attacks against the highest authorities of the national government," Garcia said.

Police are searching for other suspects, adding "there are other cells," he added.

Police said the group also is responsible for a dynamite attack Wednesday on the home of Bolivia's Catholic Cardinal Julio Terrazas, who was not home at the time.

Santa Cruz Gov. Ruben Costas said in a news conference that local police were not involved in the operation and suggested that it was staged to discredit his government.

"The government for three years has repeated allegations of a coup but has never shown any evidence," Costas said.

Costas promotes the autonomy of the region along with other opposition governors.

Garcia called his comments "regrettable."

Witnesses told the radio station Fides that the shooting began at 4 a.m. and lasted half an hour. The windows of the hotel were destroyed.

Source: AP

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Bolivia launched an investigation on Friday into a suspected militant group that police say was plotting to kill President Evo Morales, but the opposition slammed the probe as an "international show."

Three suspected mercenaries were killed in a shootout on Thursday in the anti-Morales stronghold of Santa Cruz after police moved to arrest a gang that officials say traveled from Ireland or Croatia to kill leading public figures in the Andean nation.

"The investigative work is now in the hands of prosecutors. I hope they do their work quickly so we can have clear and concrete information" about who was behind the conspiracy, police chief Victor Hugo Escobar told state television.

Interpol has offered to help Bolivia with the investigation. But opposition Senate chief Oscar Ortiz said investigators "should aim to find the truth, instead of helping the president stage an international show".

Ortiz attacked Morales for "playing the victim" and said the country's first indigenous leader was trying to disparage the eastern city of Santa Cruz because he lacked support there.

Morales has accused right-wing politicians and business leaders in Santa Cruz of organizing violent protests there last year to try to destabilize his government.

On Thursday, he said the rightist opposition wanted to "riddle us with bullets," referring to himself and the vice president.

Government officials said the suspected conspirators had also targeted Santa Cruz Governor Ruben Costas, a fierce Morales' critic. They said the men were likely behind a dynamite attack on the residence of Roman Catholic Cardinal Julio Terrazas earlier this week. The cardinal was not home at the time.

"The terrorist group had a strategy and part of the strategy was to attack the cardinal ... and (take) other actions, not only against the president or vice president, but other authorities as well," Deputy Interior Minister Marcos Farfan told the Erbol radio network.

Farfan said the suspected plotters tried to blow up a navy boat on which Morales met with Cabinet ministers two weeks ago and aimed to trigger "a spiral of violence" in Bolivia.

The head of the Organization of American States, Jose Miguel Insulza, condemned the suspected assassination plot on Friday after meeting with Bolivia's foreign minister in Trinidad and Tobago, where Morales was attending the Summit of the Americas.

Confusion lingered over the nationalities of the three men killed. State news agency ABI reported that one of them was a Bolivian-Hungarian, Eduardo Rozsa Flores, who fought in separatist movements in the former Yugoslavia.

ABI said the other two men who died in the gunfight hailed from Ireland and Romania, although Bolivian authorities initially said two of the men had been Hungarian.

Police arrested two others in the Santa Cruz raid, whom local media identified as a Bolivian and a Hungarian. Authorities said police confiscated sniper rifles, high-caliber guns and other explosives from a nearby building.

Source:Reuters

Gaza in pictures