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This article by Alexia Villaseñor and Jared Laureles originally appeared in the February 18, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Mexico City. Residents affected by the pollution of the Endhó dam, located in Hidalgo, protested in front of the headquarters of the National Water Commission (CONAGUA), in the country’s capital, demanding immediate attention to the pollution of the reservoir that affects 24 communities.

Members of the Social Movement for the Land (MST) collective, after spending Tuesday night outside the Commission, denounced that despite the fact that in 2024 this dam was declared an ecological restoration zone, under the responsibility of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) and CONAGUA, they have not seen “favorable” results from the measures implemented such as the crushing and manual removal of the water hyacinth “which continues to increase”, and consequently, the proliferation of the culex mosquito.

Another of their demands is the holding of an Indigenous consultation to be taken into account in the restoration program, since the native and peasant communities of the region were not considered.

Water lily removal from the Endhó dam, December 2024. Photo: Cuartoscuro

He noted that the dam was built in 1951 and has been storing wastewater from the Valley of Mexico since 1970, which “creates a critical situation for nearby communities due to the high levels of contaminants in the water.” He added that “it has become infested with water hyacinth due to a lack of control, and there is a large mosquito infestation that has been affecting the population for over a year.”

Therefore, he maintained, they require a plan with technical elements for controlling this pest, as it is the mosquito’s habitat. “You can’t fumigate or control the mosquito if you don’t eradicate the water hyacinth,” he stated. Furthermore, he added, the hot and rainy season is approaching, periods when the insect’s reproduction is at its peak.

After a morning meeting with authorities from the agency, they agreed to a technical meeting next week, which they expect will include the head of CONAGUA, Efraín Morales, and staff from the National Center for Preventive Programs and Disease Control (CENAPRECE), so they removed their tents and returned to their state.

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Every day, President Claudia Sheinbaum gives a morning presidential press conference and Mexico Solidarity Media posts English language summaries, translated by Mexico Solidarity’s Pedro Gellert Frank. Previous press conference summaries are available here.

National Train Network: Public Work Projects That Have Returned and Become Consolidated

The Mexican government reported that Phase 1 is underway for the CDMX–Pachuca, CDMX–Querétaro, Querétaro–Irapuato, and Saltillo–Nuevo Laredo routes.

President Claudia Sheinbaum announced that the Suburban train to the Felipe Angeles International Airport (AIFA) will be inaugurated before Easter Week, continuing former President López Obrador’s strategic projects. The Ministry of Agrarian, Territorial and Agrarian Development (SEDATU) reported that families living adjacent to the railway tracks were relocated through a dialogue with owners of semi-communal lands known as ejidos and Indigenous communities, with an investment of 28 million pesos (US$1.63 million).

Electoral Reform Without Simulations

The President announced that on Tuesday, February 24, she will present her Electoral Reform bill. It seeks to update democratic rules and strengthen electoral institutions from the standpoint of voter participation, legality, and popular sovereignty.

Sheinbaum clarified that the document circulating on social media does not correspond to the Executive Branch’s proposal and explained it will be a substantive bill, without simulations or concessions that dilute its essence.

Trains for Development, Not Monopoly Control

Sheinbaum reported that 76% of trains being built use national components, strengthening Mexican industry and internal development.

She recalled that under former President Ernesto Zedillo, services and tracks were concessioned, limiting competition in freight trains. Therefore, the model is under review by the Antimonopoly Commission. In contrast, the Mayan Train for freight service is public and operated by the State, to ensure sovereignty, competition, and collective benefit.

Textbooks by the People and for the People

The Ministry of Public Education (SEP) reported that in 2025, an exercise was conducted with children, teachers, and school communities to evaluate the reception of free textbooks and generate observations to improve them. The SEP emphasized that “textbooks are by and for the people” as they result from the sum of many voices, especially those of children and adolescents.


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The federal court in New York rescheduled for March 26, 2026 the second hearing of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, National Assembly Deputy Cilia Flores, following an agreement between the prosecution and the defense.

The legitimate president of Venezuela and the first lady are being held illegally imprisoned in the United States, following the US military aggression against Venezuela on January 3, which killed 120 people and wounded a similar number of persons, in addition to causing significant material damage.

The rescheduling of the hearing, originally scheduled for March 17, was authorized by Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein due to “scheduling and logistical issues,” according to official information.

On the designated date, President Maduro and his wife have to appear appear before the Federal Court for the Southern District of Manhattan, where the judge is expected to establish the calendar of proceedings and resolve pretrial motions.

The initial appearance before that court was held on January 5, 2026, just two days after US forces kidnapped the Venezuelan president from his residence in Caracas.

On that occasion, the Venezuelan president pleaded “not guilty” to the charges brought against him, rejected the accusations, and proclaimed himself a “prisoner of war” and the legitimate head of state of Venezuela, while his defense also dismissed the charges presented by the US prosecution, which is pursuing a politically motivated trial without legal basis.

The United States has filed charges that include alleged crimes related to drug trafficking and arms trafficking, accusations that Venezuelan authorities call unfounded and part of a campaign to justify military intervention against Venezuela.

Caracas has questioned the legitimacy of these accusations, highlighting that an original indictment against Maduro for leading the non-existent Cartel of the Suns was withdrawn by the US Department of Justice for lack of evidence.

It has also been reported that President Maduro and Flores received a consular visit with a diplomatic representative of Venezuela. Through a statement, the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York informed Judge Hellerstein that on January 30, 2026, the two had a consular visit with an official representing the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

The document, dated February 17, 2026, complies with the judicial order issued during the arraignment and reading of charges on January 5, when Hellerstein instructed the US government to facilitate the defendants’ access to consular services and to inform the court once completed.

The statement is signed by US Attorney Jay Clayton and his deputies, and confirms that the Venezuelan state has been able to exercise its right of consular protection over the constitutional president and the first lady.

From Noriega to Maduro: The Long US History of Kidnapping Foreign Leaders

The case occurs in a context of prolonged US hostility against Venezuela, in which the White House has frequently resorted to claiming threats to its “national security” to impose political pressure or intervene militarily.

This stance has historically served as a pretext to violate the sovereignty of nations, interfere in their internal affairs, or loot their natural resources through sanctions, military operations, or economic pressure.

The kidnapping of a sitting president and his forced transfer to a foreign court constitutes a flagrant violation of international law, undermining the principles of sovereignty and non-interference in the internal affairs of states.

(Telesur)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SC


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By William Serafino  –  Feb 17, 2026

The secretary of Energy of the Trump administration, Chris Wright, visited Venezuela last week, representing the most important visit by a high-ranking US official to Venezuela in years. During the trip, he held a meeting with Acting President Delcy Rodríguez at the Miraflores Palace, visited oil fields jointly operated by the US oil corporation Chevron and the Venezuelan state-owned PDVSA, and participated in a press conference with foreign journalists.

Wright’s presence in the country, just over a month after the US military aggression against Venezuela and the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro, was widely interpreted by various analysts as the factual embodiment of the thesis that Venezuela is now a Trumpist protectorate.

However, the institutional statements and events surrounding the visit offered clues contrary to that fashionable hypothesis that is generally supported by viewpoints that do not incorporate either nuances or details, precisely where the devil is supposed to be.

The analysis of the current complexity of Venezuela requires paying close attention to fine print and footnotes, as the elusive location of every unprecedented phenomenon lies there.

Suggestive declarations: reasons of the visit
Although Wright’s statements in Miraflores and from the Hugo Chávez Orinoco Oil Belt occupied a prominent place in the media coverage, his declarations in the press conference with foreign journalists, scarcely reported, were extremely revealing, clashing with the thesis of US tutelage over Venezuela.

According to the compilation by Venezuelan journalist Víctor Amaya, the US official indicated that the set of modifications introduced in the recent reform of the Organic Law of Hydrocarbons “was not broad and clear enough to encourage large capital flows, but the dialogue continues.”

Regarding the deliberate intention to exclude China from the equation of Venezuelan crude oil supply, Wright commented that it is “one of the topics to discuss. If they are legitimate trade agreements with China under legitimate trade conditions, that’s fine. China has already bought part of the crude oil sold by the American government.”

Both statements undermine the foundation of the tutelage thesis. On one hand, if it were true that the current authorities of Venezuela only take dictation from what is ordered by the White House, the Trump administration official would not have questioned the oil law reform, implying between the lines that reform is not attractive enough for US energy interests. On the other hand, the clarification regarding China can be interpreted as a readjustment very possibly associated with informal pressures from Beijing and Venezuela’s demand to maintain an autonomous administration of its international energy ties.

In practical terms, with these statements, the US official acknowledged the existence of a bilateral negotiation in which the coercive influence of the US is notable, but at the same time it is insufficient to completely undermine a Venezuelan regulatory framework where, despite its redesign to attract private capital, the state still plays a significant role in the operational, taxation, and contractual spheres.

The answer to why Wright was forced to embark on his Venezuela tour lies precisely in the meanders of his statements. Since the reform of the oil legislation was not as open as the White House wanted, the official had to visit Venezuela to inject confidence and credibility into Trump’s oil plan, in a desperate attempt to show that there are indeed favorable conditions for investment and profitability for US companies.

Fundamentally, Wright admitted a fact that had been becoming clearer as a trend in recent weeks: US pressure on the Venezuelan government has limits, and the cost of bringing the country to a state of precariousness in the style of Libya, in which oil companies would have unrestricted and cheap access to the resource, is too high. As Nathan Thompson correctly explains in a recent article in The American Prospect, “Trump, while certainly no anti-interventionist, has also shown disinterest in both the subtle, sustained regime change operations and the large-scale, blowback-prone wars born out of the neoconservative movement.”

Caracas, in an intelligent manner, is gauging these limits and frictions within the Trump administration as highlighted by Thompson, finding a balanced approach that prioritizes not exposing the country to a new attack or greater coercion, while simultaneously avoiding strategic concessions. Moreover, in a context where, according to recent data from Baker Hughes, active oil platforms in the US continue on their declining trend, the US government cannot afford to overestimate its influence to break the limits drawn by Venezuela.

Wright’s comment that the quarantine on Venezuelan crude “essentially ended” serves as a telling sign of an ongoing unequal negotiation, in which Caracas concedes but also demands under a programmatic premise of national self-determination.

Reading Between the Lines of OFAC General License 46 Regarding Venezuela

OFAC licenses: the labyrith of flexibilization of sanctions
Prior to the visit, the US Department of the Treasury, through its Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), issued four licenses whose immediate effect corresponds to a substantial flexibilization of the sanctions regime against the Venezuelan oil industry. After Wright’s tour, two additional licenses were issued to authorize investments, contract signings, and operations of European energy companies.

Conducting an analytical review of these measures, Venezuelan opposition-aligned economist Francisco Rodríguez argued in a post on his X account that “General Licenses 46/46A, 47, 48, and 50 authorize the resale of Venezuelan oil, the sale of U.S.-origin diluents to Venezuela, the supply of certain items and oil and gas sector operations in Venezuela,” but that since “these licenses authorize contracts with the Venezuelan government or with PDVSA, they effectively require that the United States recognize the government under Delcy Rodríguez — whose appointees would be signing these contracts.”

Rodríguez’s prospective analysis is important, given that, without the official recognition of the Venezuelan government by the US, the scope of the licenses will be severely limited, negatively impacting the investment and production goals that Wright himself hinted at, by promising that Chevron would increase Venezuelan crude production in the short term.

Right now, Washington is facing the challenge of whether or not to openly recognize the Venezuelan government to steer its energy agenda before the dreadful midterms, in which a resounding defeat for Trump is projected.

Advancing in that direction would imply greater strength for Venezuela, as by the very act it would have achieved what it has been demanding for years, turning the act into a political and symbolic victory and a significant amount of autonomy, in addition to a potential accelerated growth in oil production, even if such recognition is carried out from an intermediate approach that maintains the coercive limits of the licenses.

On the flip side of such an action by the US, theoretically, Venezuelan funds and properties would be unblocked, the country would be readmitted into multilateral spaces, and the current US financial control over oil sales would be institutionally compromised, among other complementary effects of utmost importance in terms of financial and banking connectivity.

However, resistance to recognizing the Venezuelan government would mean maintaining the current levels of coercive influence at the risk of oil production not recovering quickly enough for Trump to exploit it for electoral purposes, within his central objective of keeping oil prices low.

For Washington, short-term action involves deciding between two strategic sacrifices, and in both cases, Caracas is trying to extract the maximum possible benefit while navigating unknown waters.

(Diario Red)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/SC


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This article by Juan Carlos Rodríguez originally appeared in the February 19, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

Social organizations and human rights groups are on alert so that the Mexico City authorities do not take them by surprise as the World Cup approaches.

Four months before the start of the World Cup, among groups that defend the right to memory, the version circulating is that the capital’s government will seek to hide or remove the anti-monuments in an effort to “clean up” the urban environment.

Although the head of government, Clara Brugada, has said that she does not plan to remove the spaces designated for protest, the groups believe that the strategy may be indirect: to order the structures to be vandalized and thus have the pretext to move them.

“It is so real that the removal of the anti-monuments is actually happening,” said a spokesperson for the organization La Ruta de la Memoria, responding to an email sent by El Sol de México.

“We have information that Clara Brugada’s advisory team has mounted a dismantling operation and passed it off as acts of vandalism,” the informant added.

Glorieta de las Mujeres que Luchan

During a tour of the anti-monuments placed on Paseo de la Reforma and Avenida Juárez to assess their physical condition, it was observed that the one showing the greatest deterioration is the Glorieta de las Mujeres que Luchan (Roundabout of the Women Who Fight), located where the Columbus monument used to be.

Four of the panels surrounding the memorial , which display photographs and information about groups fighting against violence against women and enforced disappearances, are broken. In addition, some of the slogans painted on the metal fences surrounding the main structure show signs of attempts to erase them with some type of solvent.

Another anti-monument that has been vandalized is the one commemorating the 43 missing students from Ayotzinapa, located at the intersection of Reforma and Bucareli. The planters surrounding the structure are filled with accumulated trash, and the portraits of the students printed on canvas have been torn down.

The only memorial where people are guarding its safety is the so-called anti-monument, located on Avenida Juárez, across from the Palace of Fine Arts. The metal structure is surrounded by banners, photos, and posters denouncing the government’s inaction against femicides.

The women who guard the anti-monument, where they sell some handicrafts, say that, for the moment, there have been no actions to remove the structure, but they have put up a sign that reads: “My children won’t eat goals. No to the World Cup.”

The anti-monument route began in April 2015 with the installation of the +43 memorial, dedicated to the 43 students from the Ayotzinapa teachers’ college and the thousands of people who have disappeared in Mexico.

Unlike traditional monuments, placed to commemorate past events, anti-monuments are a form of permanent protest and a demand for justice from the State in public space.

“The causes they refer to are not intended to be part of the past for remembrance or commemoration, but rather are events that continue to occur; at least, not until there is truth and justice for these grievances,” states the book “Antimonuments. Memory, Truth and Justice,” published by the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

In an interview with El Sol de México, Jorge Verástegui, coordinator of the foundation that has financed the construction of the anti-monuments, highlighted that the Head of Government has said that she respects the memorials placed in public spaces without the approval of the capital’s authorities, but has also warned that she can move them, which implies a latent threat on the eve of the World Cup.

“An attempt by the city government to ‘whitewash’ the city of social causes, protest, and resistance would be counterproductive,” predicts Verástegui, who warned that the groups are prepared to respond with marches, sit-ins, and road blockades if the anti-monuments are removed.

For a decade now, since the first of the 15 anti-monuments that make up the Memory Route was erected, the relationship between local governments and these structures has been uneasy and far from easy. While they have been tolerated, there have been attempts to move them to less visible locations, such as the Glorieta de las Mujeres (Women’s Roundabout).

“Of course the authorities don’t like anti-monuments, because they are a reminder of what they are not doing right,” said Meyatzin Velasco, Education Coordinator at the Miguel Agustín Pro Juárez Human Rights Center.

“It’s a thorn in the side of the various governments, in that they haven’t done their job of finding out where those responsible for the worst tragedies in the country are,” the activist added.

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This article by Jorge A. Pérez Alfonso originally appeared in the February 19, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Oaxaca, Oaxaca. After 38.1 percent of voters in the recall referendum held on January 25 requested the resignation of Morena party governor Salomón Jara Cruz, he announced yesterday the departure of seven directors of public institutions in the state and five secretaries of his government, including Carlos Vichido Hernández, husband of his niece, Daniela Jara, who was head of Infrastructure and Communications.

Two weeks ago, Jara Cruz announced that he was conducting an analysis of his administration and would make adjustments to his team in response to the results of the recall process; but he is also doing so after this newspaper documented that at least 20 state public officials are related to the governor.

Just on Tuesday, Shabin Jara Bolaños, the governor’s son, and his nephew, Emmanuel Navarro Jara, resigned as Secretary of Organization and State President of Morena, respectively; that same day Sara Jara Carrasco, also a niece of the head of the state Executive, left the position of Secretary General of the Electoral Tribunal of the State of Oaxaca.

Oaxaca Governor Salomón Jara during a press conference on January 29 at the municipal palace. Photo: Jorge A. Pérez Alfonso

A day later, Salomón Jara reported on the changes in his cabinet and in various departments; however, he did not refer to his relatives who hold public office, only stating that “those people whose participation in the government has generated social unrest have also submitted their resignations.”

He asserted that with these resignations, which he did not specify, how many there are, or their replacements, “any possible conflict of interest that affects the credibility and trust in the government is eliminated.”

Jara Cruz specified that Sildia Mecott Gómez was appointed to the Secretariat of Infrastructure and Communications – where Carlos Vichido, husband of her niece, was dismissed; and Admiral Félix Quiroz Javier was appointed to head the Secretariat of Security and Citizen Protection, replacing the marine Iván García Álvarez.

Anahí Sarmiento Pérez left the Secretariat of Women and will be replaced by Rogelia Guzmán Ruiz; Juana Hernández López, who was Secretary of Interculturality, was replaced by Víctor Vásquez Castillejos, who throughout this government has been head of Culture and director of the Institute of Native Languages ​​of Oaxaca.

Delfina Guzmán Díaz left the Ministry of Public Education and the position was obtained by Fernanda Chávez Cruz; in turn, Guzmán Díaz is the new director of the College of High School Graduates of the state, replacing Angélica García Pérez.

Also appointed were directors Luis Alberto Sosa Castillo, in the Civil Registry; Juan Manuel García Cañas, in Housing and Welfare; Sergio López Sánchez, in the College of Scientific and Technological Studies of Oaxaca (Cecyteo).

In addition, Alba Velasco Armas, at the Youth Institute; Carlos López Jarquín, at the Commission for the Regularization of Urban Land Tenure of the State of Oaxaca (Coreturo) and Vania Rosalía Bautista, at the Oaxaca Radio and Television Corporation.

Among these appointments, it is noteworthy that Carlos López Jarquín, brother of the deposed Alejandro López Jarquín, who until yesterday was head of the Oaxaca Institute for the Construction of Educational Physical Infrastructure, was appointed to the directorship of Coreturo.

Likewise, Sergio López Sánchez, the new director of Cecyteo, is the brother of Toribio López Sánchez, the current head of the State Traffic Police, and of Israel López, a local deputy for Morena.

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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez has announced that she will meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro to advance a bilateral agenda focused on economic, energy, and security cooperation. The move follows a period of heightened regional tension promoted by the US empire, and aims to restore a relationship based on mutual respect and shared benefits.

Strengthening binational cooperation
The announcement, made on social media this Wednesday, February 18, followed a telephone conversation between Rodríguez and her Colombian counterpart earlier that day. While a specific date has not yet been set, the heads of state are expected to convene soon to address pressing regional and bi-national issues.

Rodríguez emphasized that the meeting would take place within a framework of joint work intended to promote “a relationship of understanding and shared benefits for the well-being of our people.”

On February 13, Colombian Foreign Minister Rosa Villavicencio indicated that such a meeting was in the works, noting that officials were waiting for a formal response from the Venezuelan government to finalize the logistics. While some sources suggest the meeting will take place in Bogotá, others point to Cúcuta, a strategic border city that has historically struggled with the presence of far-right paramilitary groups and narco-terrorist criminal gangs.

Changing political tides in Bogotá
The upcoming summit occurs in the wake of the January 3 US military attacks on Venezuela. Those strikes resulted in the murders of approximately 120 people, including many children and women, and led to the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores.

Months prior to the aggression, President Petro had maintained a firm stance in support of Venezuelan sovereignty and was a vocal critic of the US extrajudicial killings that began on September 2. However, observers noted a dramatic shift in his rhetoric weeks leading up to the US bombing. Following threats from the president of the US entity, Donald Trump—who announced sanctions against Petro and threatened military action against Colombia—the Colombian president began demanding so-called “democratic changes” and a “transition” in Caracas, in a sudden violation of friendly diplomatic norms.

Over 32,000 Pregnant Women at Risk Due to US Fuel Blockade Against Cuba

Economic and security priorities
Despite the political friction caused by US pressure, analysts suggest that Bogotá has an immense interest in maintaining a functional relationship with Caracas. Key priorities for the Colombian side include:

• Energy Security: Reaching agreements to access Venezuela’s vast natural gas reserves.
• Border Security: Improving coordination to combat paramilitary and narco-trafficking mafias operating along the shared border.
• Trade Growth: Strengthening commercial ties that have seen exponential growth in recent years.

The meeting represents a critical attempt to insulate binational relations from external imperialist pressure and address the immediate security and economic needs of both nations, as well as Petro’s recurrent interference in Venezuelan sovereign affairs.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/AU


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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—The Venezuelan government has rejected an attempt by Guyana to disregard and distort the nature of the 1966 Geneva Agreement, which established “the legally binding obligations” regarding the disputed Essequibo territory and mandated a mutual agreement to solve the controversy.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil published a statement this Wednesday, February 18, categorically condemning the recent claims issued by Guyana within the framework of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the accord.

Surprisingly, according to experts, the Guyanese Foreign Ministry released a following statement also on Wednesday recognizing the agreement as a binding international instrument, despite several recent attempts to disregard it or claim it was a colonial imposition by the British Empire.

Guyana recognizes agreement while attempting to bypass terms
In its statement, Guyana noted that it would “commemorate the sixtieth anniversary of the signing of the Geneva Agreement of 17th February 1966, a treaty of immense legal and diplomatic significance.” The statement noted that the agreement is a binding international instrument grounded in the principles of the United Nations Charter and the rule of international law.

However, experts have noted that the distorting nature of the communiqué was contained in the third paragraph. It states that after “good offices” failed to resolve the controversy between 1990 and 2017, the UN Secretary-General chose adjudication by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in January 2018 as the “final means of resolution,” claiming that “both Guyana and Venezuela were bound by his decision.”

Analysts argue that claiming Venezuela is bound by a unilateral decision is a clear manipulation of the agreement, as Article 4(2) stipulates that a final decision, after exhausting UN peaceful settlement mechanisms, should be decided by an “international organ upon which they both agree.”

The 2023 referendum and the ICJ jurisdiction
The Venezuelan statement emphasizes that “Guyana continues its desperate and irresponsible attempt to distort and disregard the legally binding obligations assumed with the signing of the Geneva Agreement.”

The Chavista government highlighted that a consultative referendum was held in 2023, in which the majority of Venezuelans expressed their position in defense of the territory of the now-Guayana Esequiba state and the Geneva Agreement.

“On December 3, 2023, the Venezuelan people, through a referendum, overwhelmingly supported the Geneva Agreement as the only way to achieve a practical and satisfactory solution to the territorial dispute,” the communiqué reads, “and ratified the historic position of not recognizing the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice to resolve said dispute.”

The statement also noted that the only possible solution lies within the framework of international law via the 1966 treaty. It asserted that, sooner or later, Guyana will have to return to the negotiating table to reach the practical and mutually acceptable settlement mandated by the accord.

Essequibo and Other Border Issues: Venezuela’s Territorial Losses to Imperialist Powers Through the Centuries (Part 2)

Below, you can read the full unofficial translation of the Venezuelan statement:

The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela categorically rejects the statement issued by the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, within the framework of the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the 1966 Geneva Agreement.

In its statement, Guyana continues its desperate and irresponsible attempt to distort and disregard the legally binding obligations assumed with the signing of the Geneva Agreement, according to which the territorial dispute over the Essequibo region must be resolved through a practical and mutually acceptable arrangement between the parties.

On December 3, 2023, the Venezuelan people, through a referendum, overwhelmingly supported the Geneva Agreement as the only way to achieve a practical and satisfactory solution to the territorial dispute and ratified the historic position of not recognizing the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice to settle said dispute.

Therefore, true to its historical position and the popular mandate, Venezuela reiterates that it will not recognize any decision emanating from the International Court of Justice regarding the territorial dispute over the Essequibo region. Guyana’s unilateral action before that body is a clear violation of the Geneva Agreement, whose obligations are incompatible with and mutually exclusive of any judicial ruling.

The only possible solution to the territorial dispute, within the framework of international law, lies in the Geneva Agreement. Sooner or later, the Cooperative Republic of Guyana will have to sit down at the negotiating table to reach the practical and mutually acceptable settlement mandated by this legally binding international treaty.

The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela asserts its historical rights over the Essequibo region and reaffirms that it will never renounce the territory that has belonged to it since its birth.

The sun of Venezuela rises in the Essequibo!

Caracas, February 18, 2026.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/AU


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By Chenchen Zhang  –  Feb 3, 2026

The far-right label is not easily applied in China, but nevertheless there is a rising tide of xenophobia, militaristic nationalism, racism, anti-feminism, and social conservatism in Chinese online discourse and sometimes within the state. The global fight against fascism requires movements worldwide to connect with grassroots activists within China and among the diaspora pushing for liberatory futures.

Is there a far right in China? What are its characteristics? How does it coincide with or differ from the far right elsewhere?
It can be tricky to talk about ‘left’ and ‘right’ as ideological labels in China because of the political and moral baggage associated with them. As the ruling party is nominally ‘communist’ and has historically referred to dissidents as ‘rightists’ (youpai 右派), the public tends to use ‘left’ and ‘right’ as a shorthand for describing attitudes towards the regime: ‘left’ as supporting the establishment and ‘right’ as being against it, such as the liberal intellectuals (ziyoupai 自由派) advocating constitutionalism and liberal democracy.

Members of the Chinese intelligentsia and the wider online public, however, increasingly recognise that both pro-regime and anti-regime camps are themselves divided into left and right orientations. The debate among intellectuals about Trump and Trumpism, broadly described as ziyoupai, in particular revealed the schism between left-leaning and right-leaning liberals. This has led some observers to identify a far-right (jiyou 极右) current within Chinese dissidence, characterised by racism, libertarianism and the rejection of progressive social movements.1

Academic discussions usually describe xenophobia, militaristic nationalism, Islamophobia, racism, anti-feminism, and social conservatism as right-wing. However, given the baggage of ‘left’ and ‘right’ in Chinese political culture, supporters of the regime rarely consider themselves to be ‘right-wing’, even if their views are overtly racist, misogynistic, chauvinist, and xenophobic. Anti-Americanism is typically considered to be on the ‘left’ given the anti-imperialist association. For example, known for his hawkish stance towards the US and Japan, Ai Yuejie, formerly a professor of military thought, is revered among some online communities self-identifying as ‘far left’ (jizuo 极左) or ‘Maoist left (maozuo 毛左). One of his best-known quotes, which his fans cite as a motto, encapsulates the principle of ‘might makes right’: ‘Dignity lies only at the tip of the sword; truth exists only within the range of artillery’. This means that those who are labelled as ‘far left’ in popular culture may in fact espouse militaristic, ultranationalist, and authoritarian ideologies more commonly associated with the right.

Interestingly, while conservative Chinese nationalists are unlikely to self-identify as right-wing, many are now comfortable with describing themselves as ‘conservative’. In other words, ‘progressive’ and ‘conservative’ are generally used in line with international conventions.

So, after this lengthy preface, yes, there are far-right discourses and ideological currents in China, both among nationalists and dissidents, even though supporters of the regime may consider themselves to be leftists. Like the far right elsewhere, these coalesce around racial nationalism and the backlash against social-justice movements. For conservative nationalists, feminism, LGBTQ movements, labour movements, and other forms of human rights activism are also de-legitimatised as instruments of ‘Western imperialism’, exemplifying the appropriation of the anti-imperialist language. This is not limited to China, but also seen in other countries in the Global South, and indeed in the Global North as well.2 In my forthcoming book, I highlight the transversal convergence across not only conventional geopolitical, but also ideological, boundaries in the post-liberal conjuncture, where we often see ideological cross-fertilisation in any number of ways.3

Reactionary politics everywhere do not have a coherent agenda. They may be rejecting similar things (whether immigrants or ‘wokeism’) but with very different proposals. Compared to the traditionalists or libertarians who have a stronger influence in the US, Chinese conservative and authoritarian techno-nationalist discourse is less concerned with safeguarding ‘traditional values’ than with upholding techno-scientific reason against the chaos and moral decay attributed to ‘postmodernism’, while remaining favourable towards globalisation and state capitalism. If the Silicon Valley techno-libertarianism is about ‘the government should do nothing to hinder technological progress’,4 then for the Chinese techno-authoritarians, the government should do everything to pursue and guide technological progress. They share a common aversion to democratic processes and progressive movements, along with various forms of racism and misogyny. However, both official and popular nationalisms in China are rooted in postcolonial developmentalism, where political sovereignty is most important, and the ethics of cultivating a neoliberal and entrepreneurial self is tied to the project of national development.

How about the Chinese state? And how is this influenced by what’s happening elsewhere in the world?
This is another reason for why it is difficult to talk about China in discussions of the far right. The Chinese state presents itself as anti-imperialist and, of course, socialist. The fact that there are no elections and no political movements allowed outside the official apparatus also contributes to China’s marginalisation in far-right studies, which tend to prioritise electoral politics. In a wonderful article on the global politics of the far right, Anievas and Saull talk about a set of ‘common enabling conditions’ that ‘laterally connect Modi’s India and Bolsonaro’s Brazil with the “UKIPisation” of Britain and ‘Trumpification’ of America insofar as the neoliberal-driven de-industrialisation of the “advanced” capitalist powers was internationally entwined with the large-scale processes of “accumulation by dispossession” most dramatically experienced by such “late” state-led industrialisers like the BRIC states and, most notably, China’.5 The article and the special issue it introduces, however, engage little with China itself beyond how its portrayal as a threat enable far-right politics in the US. Unlike Modi-ism or Erdoğan-ism, the one-party system and the socialist state probably make the usual frameworks and languages of analysis inadequate or a poor fit when it comes to China’s relationship with the global politics of the far right.

We can indeed situate Xiism within broader contestations of the ‘liberal international order’ from other emerging powers such as India and Türkiye.6 Rather than being an external challenger, China has been integral to both the relatively stable hegemony of global neoliberalism in the 1990s and 2000s, and to the intensification of the post-liberal contestations we now witness. This represents a partial and selective rejection of some aspects of the liberal international order, such as the normative hierarchy that tends to stigmatise or impose ‘symbolic disempowerment’ on nations or subjects considered illiberal,7 which co-exists with embracing other aspects, such as globalisation, multilateralism, and the United Nations (UN) system. In contrast to the anti-globalism of the Western far right, Kumral notes that for emerging powers, neoliberal globalisation continues to be seen as ‘opportunities for upward mobility for national economies in international stratification’.8 She argues that Modi and Erdoğan synthesise neoliberalism with developmentalism, offering ‘selective redistributionist policies that target the poorest sections’, providing the rising middle class with a ‘master development narrative of a rising Turkey/India in a period of global hegemonic transformation’ and a re-imagining of past empires.9 Xiism runs parallel to these projects in many aspects, being embedded in the ‘common enabling conditions’ mentioned earlier, including the shifting economic power relations and capitalism’s ‘spatial fix’ of manufacturing jobs, which has contributed to different attitudes towards globalisation in the North and the South. As Eli Friedman puts it, if the social ‘dissolution wrought by neoliberal capitalism has revitalized fascism in the West, it has been similarly important in the rise of ethnonationalist dictatorship in China’.10

Intersecting with these economic processes is postcolonial identity politics, which often takes the form of civilisational discourses that assert one’s identity and cultural particularities against ‘Western hegemony’ or ‘cultural imperialism’. This is not particularly new. For example, the Guomindang’s (the Nationalist Party) conservative revolution in the 1930s was doing very much the same: justifying authoritarianism and social conservatism through claims about cultural authenticity and resistance to Western imperialism.11 However, in contemporary China and shaped by the post-Cold War international order, we also see arguments about security in addition to those about authenticity. Certain values or movements are framed both as ‘not ours’ (not Chinese) and as instruments of regime-change attempts threatening national security. Among the cultural elites, conservative intellectuals in China have been influenced by figures such as Samuel Huntington and Carl Schmitt in their articulation of China as a ‘civilizational state’. Drawing heavily on Huntington and in an explicitly gendered language, Gan Yang, a prominent conservative philosopher based at Tsinghua University, characterised the earlier pursuit by Türkiye and Russia of ‘Westernised’ modernisation as ‘self-castration’, whereby they lose their own racial-civilisational identity.12 Jiang Shigong, another state-adjacent intellectual and a Schmittian legal theorist, argues that the prevailing discourse of ‘integrating with the world’ in the 1990s and 2000s means that ‘we’ have lost ‘our civilisational impulse and political will to defend ourselves’.13 Ironically, again, these prominent intellectuals of conservative civilisationism, such as Gan Yang, Jiang Shigong, and Zhang Weiwei, are known as the ‘new left’ despite their affinities with European and US conservative thought.

As I have recently argued,14 civilisational discourse becomes a vehicle for claiming difference internationally and suppressing difference domestically. At the international level, Xi’s ‘Global Civilisation Initiative’ advocates diversity and warns against ‘imposing one’s values and models onto others’. Domestically, assimilationist ethnic policy is accompanied with the re-centring of zhonghua minzu (Chinese nation or race-nation)15 and zhonghua wenming (Chinese civilisation) as key concepts in the country’s political discourse. Under the slogan of ‘forging a strong communal consciousness of the Chinese nation’, assimilationist policies seek to erase and securitise difference, while turning a depolitcised, exoticised version of ethnic difference into resources for tourism and consumerism. These policies scale back a range of preferential policies that ethnic minorities used to enjoy, infringe on cultural and religious rights, and remove minority languages as medium of instruction in formal education.16 At the same time, we see abundant scenes of minority ‘singing and dancing’ in domestic and external propaganda as a display of ‘diversity’ and ‘unity’, which reduces living religious and cultural traditions to exoticised patriotic performances.17 With the rise of ecotourism, as Guldana Salimjan argues, the rebranding of Indigenous lands as Han ecotourist destinations to appreciate ‘untainted nature’ is marked by land dispossession and labour injustice.18

What about in terms of social media and internet discourse? Do we see similar threads of xenophobia, misogyny, and reactionary social violence in Chinese social media that we see in other parts of the world?
Absolutely. My previous work has focused extensively on the transnational circulation of far-right narratives and tropes in the digital sphere.19 A lot of this is misinformation and conspiracy theories about demographic and cultural crises of ‘the West’. So, when internet users in China deploy the same imaginaries about ‘Western civilisation’ being undermined by ‘non-white’ immigrants and ‘woke’ ideologies as Western far-right actors, it’s about the decline of ‘the other’, told as a cautionary tale with a sense of geopolitical Schadenfreude. The cautionary tale serves to bolster ethnonationalist anxieties and delegitimise domestic social movements in a fashion of “this must never happen in China’. We have seen the rise of grassroots Islamophobic influencers or muhei (穆黑), who mobilise both globally, circulating scripts of Islamophobia, and more locally rooted patterns of prejudice.20

Many of the anti-immigration narratives are about portraying crises of ‘the other’, although they sometimes extend to China’s own immigration policy (statistically China has one of the lowest shares of foreign-born residents worldwide). The online backlash against the new regulations on foreigners’ permanent residency in 2020 provides one such example. Apart from ‘racist coverage of African immigrant communities in Guangzhou’,21 the backlash also features themes that reflect certain locally specific grammars of grievance. This includes the longstanding perception that foreigners get special preferential treatment, and the discontent with unequal status among Chinese citizens themselves due to the hukou system –  which produces an unequal citizenship regime that disadvantages rural migrant workers, who are often excluded from urban social citizenship and welfare provisions or included but on a differential basis.22 While this institution is unique to China, it is commonly observed in the affective politics of right-wing populism that grievances about inequalities or marginalisation are weaponised and channelled towards hatred against the ethnocultural other. Han supremacist narratives online also frequently frame ethnic minorities in China as undeservingly privileged and Han males as being victimised.23

In the more recent backlash against China’s newly introduced K-visa, which is intended to attract talent in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), we also see that blatant racism is entangled with socioeconomic anxieties. Ultranationalist influencers are spreading a wave of misinformation that claims that Indians were already ‘studying the visa’ and would come to China in large numbers, taking an already shrinking number of graduate jobs. These online posts reproduce racist stereotypes about Indians having ‘fake diplomas’ or ‘lack of hygiene’, while also tapping into widespread anxieties about economic slowdown and the lack of job opportunities. On the previous point about ideological fusion, some defenders of the Chinese regime on X (formerly Twitter) use an apparently socialist rhetoric to justify anti-immigration ethnonationalism, claiming that China is a socialist ‘ethno-state’, and that multiculturalism and immigration are the products of neoliberalism.24

Feminism has emerged as one of the most powerful mobilising issues in China’s digital sphere. Like reactionary movements elsewhere, the rise of misogyny and anti-feminism is a reaction to the growing influence of feminism and gender-related debates in public discourse. Some online communities known as the Chinese manosphere, and the techno-nationalist discourse I discussed earlier, have a strong misogynist undertone. Furthermore, anti-feminism is often geopoliticised. Feminists are stigmatised by anti-feminist nationalists as agents of ‘foreign hostile forces’ or as ‘connected to Islamists’,25 exemplifying the kind of right-wing intersectionality26 that fuses different and often contradictory talking points (Islamophobia and anti-feminism) that we also see elsewhere.

An interesting political slur that has gained currency among nationalist influencers in recent years is zhiren 殖人, supposedly meaning a colonial or ‘mentally colonised’ person. Critics of the regime in general, but feminists and queer activists in particular, are often labelled zhiren. It is of course a longstanding and widespread phenomenon to discredit social groups who hold dissenting political views by calling them traitors, collaborators, or otherwise ‘anti-national’. However, I read the explicit invocation of colonial here as symptomatic of a newly emerging and distinctively post-liberal sensibility (different from, say, anti-imperialism in the Maoist era) as the moral authority of the liberal order erodes. Rather than (or in addition to) denouncing perceived external hierarchies, the accusation of coloniality is turned inwards to target the internal other, whose identification with progressive values is recast as colonial subservience and national betrayal.27

How does Chinese popular discourse and the official state discourse respond to the demonisation of China by some elements of the right in the West?
Demonisation feeds into victimhood nationalism, which is useful in distracting attention from debates on concrete issues to moralised narratives about injury and humiliation.28 However, popular or official nationalism does not consider demonisation to be only from elements of the right. Sinophobia from the right tends to more blatant forms of racism, as seen in Trump’s rhetoric about ‘kung flu’ and ‘China virus’ during the COVID-19 pandemic. This of course invited strong reactions and led to the a ‘narrative battle’ of blame games with US and China accusing each other of causing the virus.29 But nationalists equally resent ‘demonisation’ from the centre and progressive liberals, which is seen as condescending and rooted in a sense of moral superiority. Some might regard this as more despicable than animosity based on straightforward racism or strategic calculation. Indeed, conservative nationalists largely favoured Trump over the Democratic candidate in both the 2016 and 2024 elections.30 In a global survey conducted by the European Council on Foreign Relations after Trump’s re-election but before he assumed office, more Chinese respondents saw his return a ‘good thing’ for US citizens, for the world and for China than those who saw it a ‘bad thing’ or were neutral.31

For conservative nationalists, apart from ideological affinities regarding gender and ethnicity, it is believed that since both US parties are anti-China, Trump is at least less interested in ‘preaching’ liberal values abroad or funding the ‘zhiren’ in China (a talking point used by some nationalist influencers during the 2024 US election). Trump’s newly released National Security Strategy in fact echoes Chinese techno-nationalist views in this respect: it criticises the liberal universalist agenda of promoting democracy and no longer approaches the US–China rivalry through the framework of democracy versus authoritarianism, but as a matter of strategic and geo-economic calculus.32 The competition might be ruthless, yet they share the same post-liberal political sensibilities.

Samuel Huntington, a US conservative, and John Mearsheimer, an International Relations (IR) neo-realist, have both been highly influential in shaping Chinese international thought in both intellectual and popular spaces. Convinced that all US actors are ‘anti-China’ anyway, Chinese nationalists consider strategic competition (realist IR) or ‘clashes of civilization’ (Huntington) to be more reasonable and honest grounds for hostility than the neoconservative or liberal internationalists’ moralised interpretation of world order. Leaving aside the factor of great power rivalry, far-right European leaders are well-regarded in popular and official discourse. Victor Orbán is a clear example, and Georgia Meloni has also been given favourable coverage in both state and social media.

Is China Doing ‘Colonialism’ in Africa?

Is there resistance to these trends of reactionary nationalism? What form does it take?
Yes. Resistance comes from a range of different positions: progressive liberals, feminists, queer activists, anticolonial internationalists, dissident Marxists, or dissident Maoists who speak an older form of Maoist language.33 As I mentioned before, digital feminism has been thriving within China’s online public sphere even though the space for offline mobilisation has diminished. Feminist discourses in China are extremely diverse, including currents that are, for example, neoliberal, trans-exclusive, or classist. There is no monolithic picture. However, feminist voices form one of the most distinctive digital counter-publics that offer an alternative to state-sanctioned or grassroots narratives of masculinist nationalism. One of the surprisingly lively spaces is podcasting. Some of the most successful podcasts are led by women who are critical and culturally progressive. Their popularity among younger and well-educated urban women have also brought commercial sponsorship and partnerships.

Despite stringent censorship, the digital ecosystem remains decentralised, allowing the existence of anonymous, informal, and non-institutionalised forms of publication. Yawen Li has, for example, detailed some of the initiatives of anticolonial internationalists in China, who run publications or WeChat accounts focused on colonialism, patriarchy, capitalist exploitation, and resistance across the world.34 From Ukraine to Palestine, Chinese internationalists refuse to align their expression of solidarity with the geopolitical interests of either China or ‘the West’. Jing Wang has written about how Chinese Muslims strategically voice dissent online in the shadow of both censorship and anti-Muslim sentiments.35 For many ordinary internet users, non-engagement with such racist, misogynist, and ultranationalist messaging is also a form of resistance.

There is also the incredible growth of diaspora Chinese communities engaged in feminist, anti-racist, decolonial, and anti-authoritarian activism, especially after the ‘whitepaper movement’ of late 2022.36 These growing spaces of transnational activism draw on feminist ethics of care and solidarity, challenging and critiquing patriarchal power structures and the dualistic geopolitical imaginary of ‘authoritarian China’ versus the ‘free world’ that shaped earlier forms of pro-democratic advocacy among the diaspora.37 In an ongoing project on digital counter-publics and transnational Chinese feminism, my collaborators and I have been working with queer feminist Chinese organisers across Europe, Japan, and North America to understand how they theorise and practise transnational solidarity beyond binaries and rooted in the interconnections of different structures of domination. Chinese diaspora activists have also done extraordinary work in mobilising for Palestine’s liberation and against genocide through collectives such as the Palestine Solidarity Action Network (PSAN). Their work provides a transnational analysis of connections between settler-colonial violence in Palestine and Xinjiang, standing against US imperialism without glossing over Chinese authoritarianism and colonialism.

How can we build global alliances against the far right that better integrate Chinese perspectives?
I think it’s essential to build global alliances that better integrate Chinese perspectives. The starting point would be listening to and building alliances with grassroots organisations from within China and in the diaspora. As I have said, there are many creative forms of resistance to authoritarian and conservative nationalism within China and among the diaspora. The Western left space is not particularly used to hearing voices that are critical of both Western imperialism and non-Western authoritarianism, as well as drawing linkages between them. Sometimes, the concern about racism and not wanting to encourage imperialist foreign policies leads to an unwillingness to engage with criticisms of the Chinese state, including those from Chinese nationals and from minoritised groups in China.

Yao Lin conceptualises this as what he calls ‘interregimatic missolidarisation’. By this he means an ostensibly supportive relationship that does not really correspond to struggles against injustice or oppression within a different regime. This is not only due to cultural or linguistic distance, but also because of the ways in which different structures give rise to different forms of injustice, creating both experiential and discursive barriers to transnational solidarity.38 Our conversations with diaspora Chinese organisers engaged in anti-racist, queer, feminist, and decolonial work reflect this. Their lived experiences are often exoticised or dismissed by ‘mainstream’ civil society, and they find it easier to connect with or be understood by other immigrant groups.

This also brings to mind Shadi Mokhatari’s critique of the ‘uncritical anti-imperialist solidarities’ and the victimhood politics of the ‘anti-imperialist-branding states’. Here again, allegedly anti-imperialist actors mis-solidarise with the oppressor, conflate the state with citizens at large, as well as essentialist notions of culture, and disregard the agency of the oppressed.39 A particular strand of decolonial discourse has been characterised by this kind of misguided anti-imperialism and cultural essentialism. In The Politics of Decolonial Investigations, for example, Walter Mignolo argues that countries like China and Russia are leading the process of ‘de-Westernization’ and ‘civilizational resurgence’ against ‘neoliberal globalism.40 This vision of the so-called ‘multipolar civilizational order’ bears a disturbing resemblance to that of the European far right, where racial-civilisational categories are defined in terms of ontological and epistemological difference and ‘indigenous’ civilisational identity is placed in opposition to the ‘globalist’ order.41

For me, then, solidarity requires calling out this misplaced equation of geopolitical opposition with decolonisation or emancipation. It requires listening to and understanding the lived experiences of activists from across the Global South who are organising against authoritarianism and imperialism. Historically speaking, and in the aftermath of 1989, overseas Chinese pro-democracy politics tended to be aligned with the right in Europe and the US. But this is changing. Younger diaspora groups are now looking for new languages and imaginaries, creating decentralised spaces of resistance and solidarity. They are already building transnational alliances against the far right in many ways. What remains is for established left-wing movements to recognise, engage with, and support these emergent transnational practices.

(Transnational Institute)


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“We reiterate our government’s commitment to strengthening ties between our two countries,” he wrote on social media.

Tarique Rahman is a politician and prime minister-designate of Bangladesh.

He has served as president of the country’s Nationalist Party and has been a member of Jatiya Sansad since 2016. He is the eldest son of Ziaur Rahman, the seventh president of Bangladesh, and Jalada Zia, who made history as the first woman to hold the office of prime minister of the Asian nation.

jdt/jha/bbb

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Upon receiving the Cuban ambassador to Spain, Marcelino Medina, at her ministry headquarters, the minister emphasized her support for Cuba in the face of the “grave humanitarian vulnerability” caused by Washington’s embargo.

Rego referred in particular to the impact of the “economic, commercial, and humanitarian blockade” on Cuban children and youth.

She unequivocally criticized the “imperialist ambition” of US President Donald Trump, whom she accused of carrying out “criminal acts,” while also taking the opportunity to remind everyone that the blockade has been condemned on numerous occasions at the United Nations General Assembly.

The minister stated that Trump “financed the genocide in Gaza, which he wants to turn into a resort to make money, and is now preventing the entry of humanitarian aid, causing widespread blackouts in Cuba, and threatening countries that want to support the Cuban people with tariffs.”

Spain will send aid to Cuba through the UN, as announced by Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares upon receiving his counterpart, Bruno Rodriguez, in Madrid.

Official sources confirmed that the Spanish assistance will consist of one million euros worth of food and essential medical supplies through the World Food Programme and the Pan American Health Organization.

jdt/jha/ft

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Under the slogan “We are from peoples who have saved themselves in community!”, the organization, which brings together groups from various sectors, stated in a press release:

“Today Cuba needs us, and from El Salvador we respond with solidarity” to the urgent needs of the Caribbean island.

Join us in sending medicines and medical supplies, light bulbs, solar lamps, batteries, personal hygiene products, medical supplies, and non-perishable food, the Salvadoran solidarity appeal states.

According to internet user Patricia Jarquin, “there is no one who doesn’t have something to give,” and other Salvadorans from different political backgrounds expressed their willingness to send aid to the island to Prensa Latina.

jdt/jha/lb

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In an article titled “The Economic War Against Cuba and the ‘Eternal Baragua,'” the professor from the Department of Political Science at the National University of Colombia pointed out how Washington’s suffocating siege seeks to “show —through a brutal exercise— that it is impossible to conceive of a social formation different from capitalism.”

In Estrada’s view, this is an attempt to impose an insurmountable punishment on the ideals and the real movement of workers, and at the same time, it seeks to prefigure present and future scenarios for political action, in which there is no room for projects that question the foundations upon which the capitalist model is built.

“Cuba’s accumulated heroic experience in its endeavor to build an alternative society—without having had a stable and lasting opportunity to demonstrate this, because it has not been allowed to—must be forced into a single possible outcome: failure,” he denounced.

The columnist evoked Fidel Castro’s phrase in which he asserted that “Cuba will be an eternal Baragua,” meaning that the rebellious spirit of its people will prevail under any circumstances.

“Beyond life in Cuba, which is also at stake, what is at stake is what that country represents for all of humanity,” Estrada concluded.

jdt/jha/ifs

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  In a statement signed by its president, Argentine journalist Juan Carlos Caamano, and its secretary general, Puerto Rican Nelson Castillo, FELAP strongly condemns the tightened blockade against the neighboring island nation.

  It also repudiates “the policy of threats and the attempt at definitive strangulation with which the United States anticipates, gradually and steadily, ending the revolutionary resistance of a people defending their sovereignty and self-determination.”

In its statement of solidarity, the federation of journalists asserts that “Cuba is not alone in the face of a leading power in crimes against humanity.”

  From Argentina, voices and actions are growing in support of the Cuban people, who are experiencing a shortage crisis due to Washington’s intensified economic war, which threatens other states to prevent them from supplying Cuba with oil.

  Led by the Argentine Movement of Solidarity with Cuba (MASCuba) and its main hub, the Casa de la Amistad (House of Friendship) in Buenos Aires, a fundraising campaign is underway to purchase solar panels, medical supplies, medicine, and food.

More than fifty organizations and prominent figures in the country have joined this campaign, from Nobel Peace Prize laureate Adolfo Perez Esquivel to labor unions, neighborhood groups, Cuban residents in Argentina, and human rights defenders.

jdt/jha/mh

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Every day, President Claudia Sheinbaum gives a morning presidential press conference and Mexico Solidarity Media posts English language summaries, translated by Mexico Solidarity’s Pedro Gellert Frank. Previous press conference summaries are available here.

Wellbeing Housing in Zacatecas

The Mexican government delivered 45 homes under the Wellbeing program in Zacatecas, to support low-income families. Governor David Monreal Ávila participated via remote link in the ceremony and thanked the federal government for its support. The event highlighted the goal of reducing the housing backlog with decent and accessible homes.

Constitutional Austerity: End to Privilege Pensions

President Claudia Sheinbaum will send a bill amending Article 127 of the Constitution to the Senate next Monday to end multi-million peso pensions for high-ranking officials. Cases such as the Luz y Fuerza electric power company, Pemex, and the Federal Electricity Commission concentrate retirement pensions that in some cases exceed the president’s salary.

The bill stipulates that no high-ranking retiree may receive more than half the President’s salary. This will allow resources to be redirected to social programs, reinforcing republican austerity.

International Solidarity with Cuba

The President welcomed Spain’s decision to join the ranks of countries sending humanitarian aid to Cuba and called on more nations to do so. Sheinbaum reiterated that Mexico will continue supporting the Cuban people and any nation in need, because solidarity and generosity are Mexico’s historic hallmark.

Energy Sovereignty with Environmental Responsibility

Sheinbaum reiterated that all countries must advance toward energy sovereignty. She recalled that Mexico already produces 85% of the gasoline it consumes, though 75% of natural gas still comes from Texas. She pointed to work on alternatives to extract gas without fracking, ensuring continuous baseload electricity generation, and eliminating fossil fuels by the end of her term in office.


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Workers Party Deputies today proposed reforming Article 123 of the Constitution to guarantee two days of rest for every five days of work. The President’s 40 hour workweek proposal, which was recently approved in the Senate to be gradually implemented by 2030, made no allowances for a five day workweek, despite it being common to every previous legislative proposal and a long-standing demand of trade unions, leading to substantial criticism. The proposal was put forwarded by the PT’s Parliamentary Group deputies.

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By Abdul Rahman  –  Feb 17, 2026

Protesters demanded the cancellation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s scheduled visit to Israel next week, accusing his ultra-right-wing government of “double speak” on the issue of Palestine.

Rallies were organized in different parts of India on Sunday, February 15, to protest against the upcoming visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Israel, as it continues its genocide in Gaza in complete violation of the ceasefire it agreed to in November.

Protesters, under the banner of the Indian People in Solidarity with Palestine (IPSP), demanded Modi cancel his visit and break all ties with Israel. They also expressed their solidarity with the Palestinian people.

The IPSP is a forum of dozens of civil society groups, individuals, and political parties in India, including Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) India chapter and the Revolutionary Workers Party of India (RWPI), among others.

Sunday’s protests were held in the capital, New Delhi, as well as in Mumbai, and in Pune in the western state of Maharashtra; Visakhapatnam and Vijayawada in the south-eastern state of Andhra Pradesh; in Hyderabad, Telangana; Patna in the eastern state of Bihar; and Kolkata in West Bengal.

Protesters waved Palestinian flags at the actions and carried banners expressing solidarity with Palestinians and denouncing the imperialist aggression against them. They shouted slogans against the so-called Board of Peace on Gaza, calling it yet another imperialist project.

In various places protesters also burnt the effigies of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, calling him a war criminal while chanting the slogan “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”

Several speakers addressed the protest in New Delhi including professor Madu Prasad and senior journalist John Dayal, among others.

Double speak on PalestineIn Pune, several protesters were injured and close to two dozen of them were arrested. They were only released later after being booked under criminal charges like unlawful assembly.

In a statement, the IPSP and BDS chapter called the arrest and booking of protesters a violation of the basic democratic rights of the Indian citizens. The statement accused the Indian government of engaging in double speak on the issue of Palestine “by strengthening ties with Israel on one hand and officially supporting Palestine on the other.”

“Very clearly it is the fascist BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] government that is hands in gloves with the genocidal Israel, that wants to suppress voices of dissent, while maintaining a facade of being democratic,” the statement claimed.

The IPSP claimed that no amount of repression will stop the people from standing in solidarity with the Palestinians.

Trump Visit Met by Popular Protests in Malaysia Over US Backing of Israel

Sever all ties with IsraelModi is scheduled to visit Israel (for the second time in his 12 years in power) next week, despite strong opposition at home as the ultra-right BJP asserts its pro-Zionist stance.

The Modi-led BJP government has developed strong military and economic ties with Israel in the last decade, while largely maintaining silence over its violations of international and humanitarian laws in Palestine and elsewhere in the region.

“At a time when the ceasefire is being used as an excuse to bomb and vaporize Palestinians and occupy Gaza, the Indian government is choosing to stand with genocidal Israel and its imperialist masters like America and working overtime to benefit the corporations from the occupation of Palestine,” a joint statement issued by the IPSP and BDS chapter said.

Despite agreeing to a ceasefire in November, Israel continues to block the flow of humanitarian aid to Gaza. Violating the provisions of the ceasefire, it has killed over 500 Palestinians in the meantime in almost daily attacks on the besieged territory.

Within India, opposition has already been raised to the so-called Board of Peace announced by US President Donald Trump last year. Critics state that such a Board lacks legitimacy and have called on the Indian government to reject the invitation to join, as countries like Mexico have done.

Major left parties in the country have already issued a statement condemning the formation of the Board and demanding the Indian government to not join it.

(Peoples Dispatch)


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By Prince Kapone  –  Feb 16, 2026

The New York Times sells a procurement shift as national independence. The numbers reveal a structural escalation anchored in NATO and continental integration. The pivot redistributes contracts while entrenching a war-oriented political economy. Workers and movements face a choice: defend the arms budget or reorganize production itself.

When Independence Comes with a Price Tag
Let’s speak plainly. The article we are excavating—Ian Austen’s “Canada Gives U.S. Arms Makers the Cold Shoulder on Military Spending”, published in The New York Times on February 15, 2026—is presented as sober reporting from Ottawa. Canada, it tells us, has had enough of Washington’s hostility. Tariffs bite, threats fly, and so the Canadian state decides to shift its military purchases away from U.S. arms corporations and toward domestic industry. On the surface, it is a story about procurement. But underneath, it is a lesson in how empire narrates adjustment without ever saying the word empire.

The storyline is smooth. Canada appears as the reluctant but rational middle power—pushed, not aggressive; reactive, not strategic. The shift in military spending is framed as “sovereignty insurance” in a world whose order has supposedly cracked. Yet the deeper security architecture—NATO alignment, continental defense integration—remains untouched, treated as natural as winter in Winnipeg. And the imagination of the piece is strictly managerial: percentages of GDP, industrial targets, export projections, job creation. Politics shrinks to accounting. History shrinks to a vague “rupture.” Power shrinks to “tensions.”

Now, about the messenger. Austen is not a provocateur; he is a seasoned correspondent. He writes in the calm tone of institutional credibility. That is precisely the point. His authority comes from sounding measured, informed, pragmatic. Local knowledge, filtered through the American paper of record, becomes common sense for a transatlantic managerial class. The translation is subtle: what serves security elites appears as neutral reporting.

And the platform matters. The New York Times Company is a publicly traded corporation structured for elite governance. It markets independence and delivers responsible discourse. Not crude propaganda—never that. Something more refined. The voice of the establishment explaining itself to itself.

The article’s logic also travels easily through the NATO-security commentary circuit. Spending escalations and interoperability commitments are treated as if they are weather reports, not political decisions. The narrative does not need to shout allegiance; it simply assumes the framework. And assumption is the most powerful ideology of all.

Read closely, and you see how the mechanics work.

First, the personalization of rupture. The geopolitical strain between Canada and the United States is pinned to Donald Trump—tariffs, Greenland remarks, talk of annexation. The structural asymmetry between the two countries disappears behind the behavior of one man. Empire becomes temperament. Dependency becomes a reaction to volatility. This narrowing of cause makes the solution look technical rather than systemic.

Second, sovereignty is quietly redefined. It is no longer about democratic control over the direction of society. It is about “sustaining defense” and redirecting procurement. Change the supplier, claim independence. The militarized premise remains untouched. The deeper question—sovereignty for whom, and for what purpose—never arrives.

Third, the tone of inevitability. The prose leans on numbers and official speeches. GDP targets. NATO thresholds. Industrial growth projections. Davos pronouncements about a broken order. The message is simple: the world is unstable; therefore, expansion is mature. Rearmament becomes adulthood. To question it is to appear unserious.

Fourth, jobs enter like a hymn in church. 125,000 positions. Domestic industry revitalized. Exports expanded. This is the moral lubricant. Workers are folded into the narrative as beneficiaries of state contracts. But the text does not ask what kind of economy is being built, or who ultimately controls the surplus. Labor appears as a statistic blessing militarization.

Fifth, continuity hides behind the curtain while change dances in the spotlight. The shift away from U.S. arms makers is dramatized. Meanwhile, NATO commitments and continental defense integration sit quietly as unquestioned constants. The furniture is rearranged; the house remains the same.

And perhaps most telling—who is missing? No union critics asking whether billions could serve housing or healthcare instead. No peace organizations. No Arctic Indigenous communities discussing what militarization means for land and livelihood. No working-class voices beyond projected employment figures. The field of agency is restricted to prime ministers, ministers, and contractors. Politics is rendered as elite negotiation.

This is not crude propaganda. It is more disciplined than that. It narrows the range of imaginable alternatives without ever announcing that it is doing so. It treats militarization as administrative adaptation. It turns sovereignty into a procurement spreadsheet. It reassures workers that their future lies in tightening bolts on a larger war machine.

In simple terms: the story suggests that independence can be purchased at the arms counter. Change the logo on the missile, and call it emancipation. It is a comforting tale for a nervous imperial core and its junior partners. But comfort is not clarity. And clarity begins by asking the question the article carefully avoids: if sovereignty is measured in weapons contracts, what happens to the people whose lives are shaped by the consequences of those weapons?

The Scale They Don’t Show YouBeyond the calm prose of vendor diversification, the measurable facts tell a far larger story. Canada has formally aligned itself with NATO’s five-percent-of-GDP defence spending pledge by 2035, structured explicitly as 3.5 percent core defence spending plus 1.5 percent defence- and security-related expenditures, accompanied by annual implementation plans. At the same time, Ottawa is advancing a Defence Industrial Strategy designed to redirect procurement toward domestic firms, reassess elements of its fighter fleet, and secure submarine contracts tied to Canadian industrial offsets. In the article, these appear as prudent adjustments. In budgetary terms, they form an institutional architecture.

Measure the jump against baseline reality. Recent Department of National Defence projections place Canada’s defence spending at roughly 1.37 percent of GDP in FY 2024–25. Moving toward five percent represents more than incremental growth — it implies more than tripling the relative share of national output directed toward military and security expenditure. Parliamentary analyses of NATO’s new benchmark have warned that reaching even the 3.5 percent “core defence” threshold would require tens of billions in additional annual allocations by the mid-2030s compared to a two-percent baseline. That magnitude does not adjust a budget. It reorganizes it.

Continental integration compounds this trajectory. NORAD modernization carries a projected $38.6 billion commitment over twenty years, embedding aerospace surveillance, missile warning, and domain awareness upgrades into a long-term funding arc. Within that envelope, Arctic Over-the-Horizon Radar systems expand persistent monitoring across northern territories and emerging shipping corridors. These systems are framed as modernization; structurally, they deepen integrated command architecture across the continent.

Imperialism Is the Logic of the Pedophile

On the fighter jet front, the financial structure is equally concrete. Canada finalized a 2023 agreement to acquire 88 F-35 aircraft at an estimated $19 billion. The government has confirmed that funds for the initial tranche are legally committed, even as the broader fleet remains under review. Meanwhile, projected program costs have risen significantly beyond earlier estimates. Payments proceed inside a system whose interoperability standards remain aligned with U.S. platforms, regardless of rhetorical diversification.

The submarine procurement reveals how industrial stabilization is braided directly into defence expansion. Algoma Steel entered into a binding memorandum with Hanwha Ocean, linking Canadian steel production to submarine construction. Hanwha has pledged up to USD $250 million in investment — including support for a structural steel beam mill and anticipated steel purchases tied to shipbuilding and maintenance infrastructure. These commitments unfold amid steel tariffs escalated to 50 percent, intensifying pressure on domestic mills. Tariffs operate as economic leverage; procurement offsets operate as industrial counterweight.

The Defence Industrial Strategy formalizes the scale of redirection. The plan targets 70 percent of defence acquisitions for Canadian firms, an 85 percent increase in defence R&D, a 50 percent expansion in exports, and approximately 125,000 additional jobs. These targets aim to scale sector revenue substantially while embedding export growth into the industry’s future trajectory.

Taken together, these elements situate the procurement pivot within a broader fiscal and geopolitical alignment. A five-percent NATO framework institutionalizes long-term expansion. NORAD modernization embeds continental integration across decades. Fighter and submarine contracts lock industrial capacity into alliance interoperability standards. Tariff escalation reshapes domestic industrial planning. Export mandates extend domestic expansion outward.

What appears as prudent vendor diversification is, in measurable terms, a structural reordering of fiscal priorities, industrial capacity, and alliance commitments under intensifying bloc competition.

Sovereignty Without Exit: Recalibration Inside the Bloc
Once the numbers are placed on the table, the contradiction sharpens. The shift away from U.S. contractors is presented as a gesture of independence, yet the fiscal trajectory binds Canada more tightly to a militarized alliance architecture whose benchmarks, planning cycles, and interoperability standards are externally defined. The supplier may change; the command structure does not. The rhetoric speaks of insulation. The math speaks of integration.

The central maneuver is subtle: sovereignty is reframed as procurement diversification rather than strategic autonomy. Instead of asking whether the five-percent spending architecture itself serves democratic priorities, the debate narrows to who manufactures the platforms. Independence becomes a matter of contract allocation. The deeper premise — that security must be measured in escalating percentages of GDP tied to alliance commitments — remains untouched. What is called “rebalancing” is in fact compliance with a new spending escalator.

This is not a rupture with the Atlantic security order. It is a recalibration within it. The five-percent benchmark institutionalizes a permanent upward ratchet. NORAD modernization embeds long-term continental command integration. Fighter and submarine procurements are structured around interoperability requirements that bind industrial capacity to alliance doctrine. Even industrial offsets function inside this logic: they cushion domestic firms against tariff pressure while expanding capacity for export into the same bloc-aligned markets. The pivot does not exit the system; it fortifies Canada’s position within it.

Here the language of “jobs” performs crucial ideological work. Employment projections are mobilized as moral justification for sectoral expansion. Yet the industrial strategy’s explicit export-growth mandate reveals the structural tension. Scaling capacity beyond domestic defence requirements necessitates foreign markets. Arms production does not sit idle. Once revenue targets are institutionalized, foreign sales become structural necessity. The promise of 125,000 additional jobs thus binds labor to the stability of global military demand. What appears as national development is entwined with the perpetuation of bloc competition.

The tariff environment intensifies this dynamic. Steel duties raised to fifty percent are framed as hostility from Washington. But they also function as disciplining mechanisms within an asymmetrical continental relationship. Faced with coercive trade pressure, Ottawa responds not by loosening security alignment, but by deepening industrial-military investment. Economic friction accelerates militarized planning. The result is not decoupling, but strategic consolidation under conditions of strain.

The Arctic illustrates the geopolitical stakes. Surveillance systems and radar installations are justified as defensive modernization amid renewed great-power rivalry. Yet they expand persistent monitoring across northern territories while reinforcing binational command structures. As ice routes open and resource corridors become more accessible, militarized infrastructure precedes economic extraction. Sovereignty rhetoric thus converges with continental security planning in a region where Indigenous governance, environmental fragility, and strategic competition intersect.

Viewed historically, this pattern is familiar. Moments of hegemonic stress rarely produce disarmament; they produce redistribution within alliance systems. When dominant powers signal unpredictability, subordinate partners hedge — not by dismantling integration, but by investing more heavily to secure their place within it. Canada’s current trajectory reflects that logic. The procurement pivot absorbs tariff shock and political volatility while reinforcing long-term alignment with the same security bloc whose spending architecture now defines fiscal policy.

From the standpoint of working people — whether in Canadian steel towns, Arctic communities, or nations on the receiving end of expanded arms exports — the question is not which firm signs the contract. The question is whether public wealth is being organized around social development or permanent military scaling. A five-percent benchmark embedded in alliance doctrine narrows that choice. It turns budgetary debate into compliance with external ratios. It recasts industrial policy as war-economy planning.

What the article frames as prudent diversification is therefore something more systemic: a disciplined adjustment within a militarized bloc under pressure. The pivot does not interrupt escalation. It normalizes it under a different managerial vocabulary. And once escalation is institutionalized in percentages, plans, and export targets, it becomes far harder to reverse through routine politics alone.

From Rearmament to Reorganization: What Is to Be Done
If the contradiction is clear—industrial nationalism deepening a war-oriented political economy inside an anxious imperial bloc—then the question is not academic. It is practical. What do working people, colonized nations, and socialist forces do when public wealth is being redirected toward permanent militarization?

First, we recognize that this terrain is not empty. In Canada, peace and disarmament organizations such as Project Ploughshares and the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace have long tracked military spending escalations and arms export patterns. Their work is not symbolic; it is grounded in procurement transparency, parliamentary submissions, and policy analysis. These spaces already exist. They must be strengthened, not rediscovered.

Second, Arctic Indigenous communities are not passive spectators to “increased military focus.” Militarization of the North intersects with land, sovereignty, ecological stewardship, and resource extraction. Indigenous political organizations and land defenders are already engaged in debates around Arctic policy and territorial governance. Any serious mobilization must link anti-militarization with Indigenous sovereignty struggles, not treat them as separate conversations.

Third, labor faces a decisive crossroads. Steelworkers, aerospace workers, and shipbuilders are being promised stability through defense contracts. That promise is powerful because it addresses immediate material insecurity. But history teaches us that when labor’s survival becomes tied to war budgets, labor is forced to defend those budgets. The alternative is not unemployment; it is conversion. Unions and rank-and-file formations can push for industrial transition plans that redirect capacity toward civilian infrastructure—public transit, renewable energy systems, housing, climate adaptation. The same mills that forge submarine hulls can forge bridges. The same assembly lines that build fighter components can build rail systems. Conversion is not fantasy; it is planning.

Fourth, democratic oversight must be reclaimed. NATO spending benchmarks and defense procurement frameworks cannot remain elite agreements insulated from public debate. Parliamentary hearings, municipal resolutions, pension fund activism, and public budget campaigns are tools already in motion across Canada and Europe. Connecting these campaigns across borders—where similar spending escalations are underway—turns isolated resistance into coordinated pressure.

Finally, solidarity must extend beyond the Atlantic bloc. Multipolar currents in the Global South are already challenging the inevitability of militarized hierarchy through regional cooperation, economic diversification, and non-aligned diplomacy. Workers in the Global North have a shared interest in reducing escalation rather than fueling it. The struggle is not for one national defense sector to outperform another; it is for public wealth to be liberated from permanent war preparation.

This is not a call for moral outrage alone. It is a call for organization grounded

(Weaponized Information)


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Venezuela paid tribute to singer-songwriter, musician, poet and political activist Ali Primera with the traditional March of the Red Carnations on Monday, February 16. Marches were held in Caracas, as well as in other states of the country, in homage to the Venezuelan people’s musician on the occasion of 41 years of his passing.

The march, organised by the National Company of Music and the Culture Mission, coordinated by the Venezuelan Ministry of Culture, convened citizens and various social movements to honor the memory of the people’s musician.

The march in the capital started at 10:00 a.m. at the Casa de la Libertad y Cultural Ali Primera in the San Carlos Barracks. From this historic site, the participants began a march through the city center to Plaza Bolívar.

Part of the March of the Red Carnations in Caracas, February 16, 2026. Photo: Telesur.

Part of the March of the Red Carnations in Caracas, February 16, 2026. Photo: Telesur.

Distinctive features of the march include the participants carrying red carnations and the collective singing of Primera’s emblematic songs such as Techos de cartón, Tin Marín, La Patria es el Hombre and Los que mueren por la vida. Through these songs, culture promoters, authors, artists, and other participants reaffirm Primera’s commitment to social struggles and his condemnation of injustices, elements that defined his professional career.

The composer’s work remains a fundamental pillar of Venezuelan culture, uniting various generations through his revolutionary legacy.

A marcher carries a bust of Alí Primera with a red carnation. Photo: Telesur.

A marcher carries a bust of Alí Primera with a red carnation. Photo: Telesur.

**From classrooms to “Canción Necesaria”**Ely Rafael Primera Rossell, born in Coro, Falcón state, on October 31, 1941, was nicknamed by his relatives as “Alí” for the Arab origin of his grandparents. Despite losing his father, Antonio Primera, in an accident when he was just three years old, Alí forged a path of resilience with his mother, Carmen Adela Rossell.

In 1960, Primera’s arrival in Caracas marked the beginning of his academic and political training. After graduating from Caracas High School, he entered the Central University of Venezuela (UCV) in 1964 to study Chemistry. It was in the university corridors that his voice began to resonate, transforming what he began as a hobby into his life mission. Songs such as Humanidad and No basta rezar became his first protest anthems.

His education continued in Europe between 1969 and 1973, where he studied Petroleum Technology thanks to a scholarship from the Communist Party of Venezuela (PCV). However, when he returned to Venezuela, his professional title was left in the background. He found his true vocation in music and political activism.

Alí Primera’s music made him a reference of the Latin American protest music genre “Canción Necesaria.” With 18 record productions, he consolidated a style that mixed poetry with social denunciation.

Primera participated in numerous music festivals in Latin America and performed on several occasions in the Aula Magna of the UCV. He also took his message to where the struggle was: factories, high schools, unions, and working-class neighbourhoods. Politically, after his time in the PCV, he supported the cause of José Vicente Rangel in the Movement towards Socialism (MAS) party during the 1973 electoral campaign.

Venezuela: March of the Red Carnations Commemorates 40th Anniversary of Musician Alí Primera’s Passing

Passing and legacyOn February 16, 1985, Alí Primera lost his life in a car accident on the Valle-Coche Highway in Caracas when he was returning from a recording. However, his death did not silence his work. Decades after his passing, the songs of Ali Primera continue to show that his songs were not simply music, they are the reflection of the feelings and hopes of the majorities in Latin America.

To honor Primera’s legacy, Falcón state will hold the March of the Red Carnations on Sunday, February 22. This march in Punto Fijo will depart at 10:00 a.m. from the Alí Primera House Museum, in Paraguaná, following the historic route to the Santa Elena Cemetery where the musician is buried.

(Telesur)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SC


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Some 32,880 pregnant women in Cuba face additional risks as a result of the intensification of the fuel blockade imposed by the United States, reported the Ministry of Public Health, highlighting the direct impact that the fuel deficit is having on medical care and vital services provided by the healthcare system.

According to official data, restrictions in fuel supply primarily affect the Maternal and Child Care Program, limiting pregnant women’s access to obstetric ultrasounds for foetal monitoring and genetic studies, which are essential for the timely diagnosis of malformations and complications.

The fuel deficit also hampers the mobilization of medical commissions responsible for evaluating cases of extremely severe maternal morbidity and critical newborns, in addition to causing delays in childhood vaccination schedules.

Cuban public health authorities decried that these effects could significantly impact the 61,830 children under one year of age who require special care during their first stage of life. Similarly, care for children with specific needs such as home ventilation, mechanical suction, and climate control is at risk due to instability in electricity supply and the limited availability of transport for urgent and emergency cases.

The Ministry of Public Health added that the situation also compromises care for oncology patients, people with chronic non-communicable diseases, as well as the monitoring of programs related to communicable diseases, which could impact mortality indicators.

Logistical limitations and increased cost of suppliesThe tightening of the US blockade has caused greater difficulties in acquiring medicines, reagents, disposable supplies, medical instruments, and spare parts for hospital equipment. In addition to this, the reduction in commercial flights and the increase in freight costs are hindering the urgent arrival of supplies to the country.

The minister of Public Health of Cuba, José Ángel Portal Miranda, explained that the healthcare system has adopted strategic measures to preserve the vitality of services in the current situation. Among them, he highlighted the concentration of essential services, the strengthening of the family doctor and nurse program, the prioritization of the maternal and child program, and the reduction of hospital stays when clinically possible.

Surgical activity will also be reduced, prioritizing only emergency interventions, while guaranteeing care for patients with chronic conditions, including those requiring hemodialysis.

Cuba: Option Zero

Sustained effort of healthcare personnelSince the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Cuban healthcare system has faced a scenario of high logistical and financial pressure. Authorities point out that the current fuel blockade worsens conditions for providing hospital services, intensive therapies, and operating rooms.

Nevertheless, the ministry emphasized that medical personnel and healthcare institutions remain committed to ensuring care for the population, prioritizing the most vulnerable cases and reorganizing resources to confront the limitations arising from the US blockade.

Cuban authorities have reiterated that the US blockade constitutes a policy of maximum pressure that directly impacts the lives of millions of people.

(Telesur)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SC


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This article by Victor Hugo Doran originally appeared in the February 13, 2026 edition of Milenio.

The entry of a new union is preparing for a strike at the Tridonex plant in Matamoros, one of the auto parts factories linked to First Brands Group.

The workers decided to give entry to the 30-22 Movement headed by Susana Prieto Terrazas, while the process was referred to the federal authorities.

Finsa Industrial Park Occupation

On Thursday afternoon, the union leader was outside the facilities of the complex located in the Finsa Industrial Park to ask the 1,300 affected workers to take over the facilities. She promised that the procedures to move the machinery and equipment to the safeguarded status would be accelerated, until buyers or businessmen who will resume operations are found.

The staff were part of the Union of Day Laborers and Industrial Workers and the Maquiladora Industry of Matamoros (SJOIIM) a few days ago.

Susana Prieto Terrazas

Labor Ministry Questions Occupation

In this regard, the Secretary of Labor in Tamaulipas, Gerardo Illoldi Reyes, stated that those involved made a desperate decision.

He noted that, although the deadline for reaching a settlement was met, the collection of signatures and the corresponding procedure were lacking.

Workers Take Possession of Industrial Buildings

“Yesterday, possession was taken of the three industrial buildings (two in Ciudad Juárez), there is no administrative staff and even less security personnel,” Prieto Terrazas declared. She stated that, with no company presence, the workers are now responsible for the facilities.

Prieto Terrazas mentioned that Juan Carlos Ruiz, a labor judge in the state, declared himself incompetent to hear the case, referring it to the Collective Labor Court in Mexico City.

She added that lawyer Victor Manuel Ortega is currently handling the legal process.

Strike Will have to be Rescheduled

“The strike was scheduled for February 19, but we need to change it,” the leader explained, saying that it is necessary to grant a period of six days between the notification and the declaration of the strike, which is key to requesting imputability and the safeguarding of assets.

After two weeks without a response, Prieto Terrazas stated that the procedure will be faster through the federal route. She reiterated that local authorities have not fully supported the workers.

“We must help them in the legal and judicial sphere, help 1,300 families in the uncertainty they are experiencing,” she said.

First Brands Group Bankruptcy Impacts Tridonex

The case is part of the First Brands Group network, a corporation that declared bankruptcy at the end of January after a fraud committed by its executives. Tridonex manufactured parts used in General Motors and Ford models.

The post Workers To Take Over Matamoros Maquiladora appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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In the commune Las Cinco Fortalezas de la Revolución Bolivariana in Cumanacoa, Sucre state, the cultivation of cane and the production of cane blocks (panela) represent the economic strength of the region, known as the sweet land of eastern Venezuela.

In this commune, with a population of 1,216 inhabitants belonging to 474 families and five communities, the processing and production of sugarcane is carried out by the Trapiche Direct Communal Socialist Company.

Two derivative products are processed in this place: cane block (panela) and cane molasses, explained Vanessa Pérez, spokesperson of the company.

She explained that per month the commune produces 16,000 kilos of cane blocks and 4,000 liters of pure molasses. She added that the Trapiche has a grinding capacity of 40 tons and cooking capacity of 10 tons per day.

In addition, 200 tons of cane are produced monthly that are then converted into these products by a group of commune members and producers committed to the cultivation and processing of sugarcane.

“Here is the people of a commune who are always working to improve production, supply, and economic growth,” Pérez said.

Acting President Promotes Communal Economy at National Meeting in Caracas

Distribution and marketingPérez explained that the majority of the harvest, approximately 60%, is supplied nationally while the rest is used to supply the local market and the 4,200 communal wineries throughout the country.

Through a sowing plan launched by the national government on January 20, the distribution and marketing of this item is strengthened for the benefit of the more than 474 families that belong to the commune.

According to Pérez, this project, which is part of the productive chain policies, will increase production and leverage economic development in the area.

This strategy constitutes of the integration of local farmers under a direct financing scheme, which ensures that the processed raw materials meet optimal quality standards intended for the mass consumption of the people.

She said that the cane blocks will be supplied through the Bodega Plan, which means that this product made with love, with history and a lot of struggle, will reach every Venezuelan home at fair prices.

“We feel proud because we continue to lead the communal economic system,” she said.

(Últimas Noticias) by Olimar Salazar Guevara

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SC


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Toronto. With the federal government bringing a “Team Canada” trade delegation to Mexico this week – excluding any labour representation – members of the United Steelworkers union (USW) are making a parallel trip to join Mexican and American allies in advocating for trade policies that put workers first.

The Canadian-American labour delegation to Mexico includes representatives of the USW, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) and the AFL-CIO Solidarity Center. They will hold meetings with allies from several Mexican unions over several days, from Feb. 18 to 24.

The unions will hold meetings in Mexico City and will visit the city of Aguascalientes to meet with workers organizing at several multinational corporations. They will discuss the challenges Mexican workers face in forming unions, and the need for stronger protections for labour rights under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA).

“Unions in our three countries are committed to building cross-border solidarity to fight for fair-trade rules that raise working and living standards for all workers,” said Marty Warren, USW National Director for Canada.

The union representatives also will discuss the impacts of the Trump administration’s tariffs and trade war on workers and communities across North America, the pending review of the CUSMA and reinforcing solidarity among workers at multinational corporations that operate in all three countries.

The labour groups also are seeking to meet with officials of the Mexican, American and Canadian governments and the International Labour Organization (ILO) while in Mexico.

“We need a worker-centred trade strategy,” Warren said. “The Canadian government must engage with unions and bring them into trade negotiations. Workers need a seat at the table.”

Warren reiterated the USW’s warning that the Canadian government must not agree to a bad deal in any renegotiation of the CUSMA.

“Workers don’t want the government trading away their jobs, livelihoods, or economic future just to renew a flawed deal,” he said.

“We want to see trade policies that deliver good union jobs, fair wages and long-term economic security, not short-term fixes that leave working people behind.”

The post Steelworkers Plan Parallel Trip to Mexico During Labour-Excluded “Team Canada” Trade Mission appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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“Many congratulations to our art instructors, who teach, promote, and defend Cuban culture and carry its most genuine values ​​to every corner of the world, with the certainty that their work emancipates and saves,” he wrote in his post.

On April 14, 1961, amidst the Literacy Campaign and three days before the start of the Bay of Pigs invasion, Fidel Castro inaugurated the country’s first National School of Art Instructors, with an enrollment of four thousand students.

Such was the importance given to culture in the nascent process of social transformation, as well as the need to make it the heritage of the people and to liberate art from the elitist character it had held until then.

Olga Alonso Gonzalez, a young woman from Havana, was part of that youthful vanguard tasked with bringing culture to every corner of our nation.

At just 19 years old, she lost her life on March 4, 1964, in an accident in what is now the municipality of Fomento, in the province of Sancti Spiriitus, where she worked as a theater instructor. Her birthdate, February 18, was chosen to celebrate Art Instructor’s Day ever since.

jdt/jha/bbb

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Activistss and members of solidarity organizations brought their message of peace and defense of social justice to the celebration, which was headlined by the Pacotao bloco, one of the most emblematic groups in Brazil’s capital, drawing a large crowd to the city center streets.

Described by local media as the most politically charged bloco among those that enliven Carnival in the Federal District, Pacotao has been characterized by irreverence, satire, and social criticism since its inception in 1978, when it was created by journalists who used humor to confront the censorship of the military dictatorship.

Within the atmosphere created by the collective, a group of people joined in, carrying flags of Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Palestine, and the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), as well as a banner of the Antifascist International – Brazil Chapter, to show their solidarity during a time of aggression and threats against these territories.

“Carnival is a celebration of great joy, but also of great resistance, and Brazil has always used culture as a means of resisting all forms of oppression,” Federal Deputy Erika Kokay, who joined the initiative at one point during the parade, told Prensa Latina.

“Today we are in the streets to say that great solidarity with the Cuban, Venezuelan, and Palestinian people is essential.

Another participant, Afonso Magalhaes, when questioned about his presence there, explained that he is a member of the Solidarity Movement with Cuba, which for many decades has been committed to the fight against the blockade imposed by the United States and the defense of the Cuban people’s right to build socialism.

jdt/rgh/mar

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