~terry
Sat, May 16, 1998 (11:53)
seed
How's the air quality over Austin today?
~terry
Sat, May 16, 1998 (11:55)
#1
Austin is *smokin'*! Literally. Smoke clogs the air form fires burning
away in Mexico.
The worsening smoke has triggered a statewide health alert. And
Mexico has belatedly accepted US aid to put out the fires. They're
sending a US team to "assess" the best way to fight the fires. Translated, that
means another week of delays.
Hire me as an "expert". I would tell them to send planes with water and
lots of firefighters.
Meanwhile, Texas officials pronounced Austin the worst spot in Texas on
Friday afternoon. But they added that the situation is dynamic,
"changing literally by the hour,'' according to state environmental chief
Barry McBee.
"We have seen conditions change from the highest incidences of smoke
in the (Rio Grande) Valley now to the highest . . . here in the Austin
area,'' said McBee, chairman of the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
Commission.
Mexican Embassy spokesman Jose Antonio Zabalgoitia. "We are not to blame
because of the direction the wind blows.''
But they are to blame for waiting a week before asking for aid. And
the US and Texas to blame for waiting another week while they do a "study".
Step outside in Austin that study that.
~terry
Sat, May 16, 1998 (18:31)
#2
TRANSLATION FROM THE SPANISH BY MARIA ELENA HOPE, FOR NUEVO AMANECEER
PRESS-USA/MEXICO
La Jornada, May 13, 1998
Without precedent, the proliferation of fires in the area of conflict
Hermann Bellinghausen, envoy, Altamirano, Chiapas, May 12.
"Fiiire, fiiire" voice the men of the communities calling each other to take
up machetes, shovels and pails; the hill is on fire.
An epidemic of fires, beyond all precedent, is sweeping away the forests as
well as the vegetable plots, the coffee plantations, the milpas and animals
of the communities. Mostly they seem provoked. They start at places
where no
one burns for agriculture. They destroys forests that no one dared cut down,
that were part of the communities' patromony. They do not respect ditches
nor protections, because the hands that fire them do not rest, they are
ubiquitous, invisible, unpunished, they have bared the surface.
To see each other's faces; so that no one can hide.
Never before a layer of smoke had covered such a large extension of the
Chiapas territory.
The peasants are astounded, indignant, sad and worried. Although government
officials are trying all kinds of somersaults to blame the peasants (see the
case of the coffee plantations set on fire in Taniperlas), they are
accusations no one believes.
In the Altamirano canada there are places where, at noon, one cannot
distinguish another person two meters away, as it happens in the communities
10 de Abril and San Miguel Chiptic. But there is worse: the Sierra of
Corralon is ablaze, from Morelia to La Garrucha at the canada of Patihuitz.
Smoke shoots up from everywhere.
Officially, up to now there are 46 thousand hectares burnt down in Chiapas.
Also officially, at this moment 35 fires are being fought against. The
largest at the selva and frontier regions. In the area of the Montebello
lakes, between La Trinitaria and La Independencia, three thousand hectares
are burning, and one thgousand two hundred at the Taniperla ejido. Between
Pueblo Nuevo and Sitala, at Tila, in the northern region, the Capalna hill
is ablaze. The fires have affected the Palenque National Park and large
forested areas at Las Margaritas, Chanal and Comitan. At the El Bosque and
Bochil, between Los Altos and the North, fires spring up when it is less
expected. And in Chenalho.
These are not the traditional burnings of the agricultural cycle, it is not
that the peasants have become more careless nor that they harbor evil
intentions.
For the communities, the fires are an omen of hunger.
Putting aside the great fires of Copainala and Cintalapa, and the fires
that can be associated with urban speculation, as in Ocozocuautla, the
largest concentration of fires coincides with the "conflict zone", that is,
where the indigenous population lives, where there exist autonomous
municipalities, where the EZLN and their suupporting bases move;
hundreds of
resisting communities.
Although there are no existing proofs (which is typical) the incendiary
proliferation in zones of conflict is "normal" during contra-insurgency
campaigns. It has been seen in Central America, in Vietnam and in Cambodia;
it can be seen in Colombia and Indonesia. Why should it not be seen in
Chiapas, if the mannuals are the same? And besides, there are so many fires
in the Republic, there's no reason why a few more should be noticed.
The moors of tomorrow
The roads that lead to Morelia, to Belisario Dominguez, to the mountains,
show their desolation. The inhabitants of Morelia speak with sadness of the
scenery lost. Coughing, injected conjunctivitis, children's runny noses,
lung pains, spitting, hurting noses. The permanent smell of bonfire on the
clothes.
"The blaze appears as distributed" says a peasant. "below the trees and
in bonfires near the coffee plantations. Everything is dry and as soon as
the wind blows it sets all evenly afire".
"People from here it is not"', he says,"how can it be. But who does it,
we don't know.".
At the environs of La Laguna, near Altamirano, there are almost no
forests. At La Laguna a new air strip of the armed forces is being set up,
that the peasants fear can be turned into an air base.
At the autonomous municipality 17 de Noviembre, many recently founded
towns ("New Population Centers") are being affected by the absurd burnings.
When the smoke disperses, the moors will remain. And if the rains, as it is
feared, are delayed, the moors will last.
__________________________________________________
Translated from Spanish by Maria Elena Hope
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
NUEVO AMANECER PRESS- N.A.P.
_________________________________
Registered as a Non Profit Corporation in USA,N.A.P. translates and
distributes
information in support of human rights in Mexico.
Advisory team: Mexico. General Director:Roger Maldonado-Mexico
Darrin Wood: Director NAP-Spain office. Susana Saravia: Coordinator NAP:
Mexico/USA/Spain
Our web page in spanish:http://www.nap.cuhm.mx/nap0.htm
~terry
Wed, May 20, 1998 (07:47)
#3
We're still experiencing smoky conditions, you can see the sun clearly
outlined in the smoky sky hours earlier that you would see it as it would
be on the horizon.
Wow, what a garbled sentence. Let me try again. You can see the sun's
disk clearly many hours before sunset.
The US government is still "studying" the situation. Time to put some
guys in planes with water and wrap up the study, we're choking on this stuff!
~stacey
Wed, May 20, 1998 (18:36)
#4
what is the stuff???
(best guess?)
~terry
Sun, May 24, 1998 (00:07)
#5
Mostly smoke containing who knows what pesticides, etc.
~stacey
Wed, Aug 26, 1998 (14:54)
#6
check out http:\\www.scorecard.org
kinda scary
depending on your zip code
~KitchenManager
Wed, Aug 26, 1998 (15:15)
#7
http://www.scorecard.org
(your slashes running the wrong way...)
~stacey
Wed, Aug 26, 1998 (15:22)
#8
I prefer them that way!
(thanks, I am a dweeb!)
~KitchenManager
Fri, Dec 18, 1998 (00:00)
#9
You're welcome...
(even if it is December now...)
~KitchenManager
Thu, Apr 22, 1999 (13:08)
#11
(previous response scribbled...)
"Three out of every four Americans want strong clean air."
--Max Baucus, Montana state representative