Friday, May 8, 2009

PANAMA'S “LAID-UP” REGISTER

http://www.mgn.com/news/dailystorydetails.cfm?storyid=9891

Friday, 08 May 2009

THE Panama Maritime Authority (AMP) has created a special registry for vessels registered under the flag of Panama that are laid up due to the world financial crisis. The measure reduces registry fees by 40% to 50% and the vessels included in the Laid Up Registry need neither full crew manning nor regular inspections.

According to a press statement the special registry will be valid for one-year period, and could be extended by one additional year.
The Resolution 106-09 of February 9, 2009 that creates the Special Registry, warns the owner or ship operators that the vessel, registered under the Lay Up Special Registry Patent cannot be used for navigation and should comply will all the minimum safety and pollution prevention requirements for the purpose of not being a potential danger to the environment or the port where the vessel is laid up.
“If the vessel does not comply with this regulation it could be deleted for our registry, according to the formalities of the law,” says the Merchant Marine Director General Alfonso Castillero.
“We consider it was necessary to take administrative actions to mitigate the crisis and reduce our customers and ship owners’ actual financial load,” adds Mr. Castillero.
“The owner can reactivate the vessel whenever he decides to do it, providing there is an inspection by a Recognized Organization (RO) covering the following conditions: safety, contamination prevention, marine protection and compliance with all national and international regulations applicable to the vessel, after which the RO will certify that the vessel satisfies national and international regulations.”
Panama’s Merchant Marine totalled 8,487 vessels and 180 179m gt at the end of March, keeping its position as the largest register.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Opposition leader wins Panama's presidency

Last update: 12:19 p.m. EDT May 4, 2009

PANAMA CITY, Panama, May 4, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Opposition leader Ricardo Martinelli won Panama's presidential election, the country's election tribunal said.
Martinelli, of the conservative Democratic Change party, defeated former Panamanian Housing Minister Balbina Herrera of the ruling Democratic Revolutionary Party, CNN reported.
"This is a victory for all the people of Panama," Martinelli said. "And I make a call to all our opposition -- to all the parties that opposed us -- that you all are all Panamanians. ... Tomorrow we have to start a new day."
Panama's electoral tribunal declared Martinelli, a supermarket magnate, the victor after counting 43 percent of the votes cast Sunday, saying he had an insurmountable lead -- 61 percent to 36 percent over Herrera, the Los Angeles Times said.
A sinking economy, rising crime and dissatisfaction with President Martin Torrijos undermined Herrera's campaign, the newspaper said.
"Starting on July 1, a change is coming to Panama," Martinelli told supporters at his headquarters in Panama City.
Copyright 2009 by United Press International

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Supermarket magnate wins Panama presidential vote

By KATHIA MARTINEZ – 2 hours ago

PANAMA CITY (AP) — Panama's Electoral Tribunal says conservative supermarket magnate Ricardo Martinelli has won the Central American nation's presidential elections.
Tribunal President Erasmo Pinilla says that with 44 percent of the votes counted Martinelli is the "indisputable winner" of Sunday's voting.
Martinelli, of the opposition Alliance for Change, topped former Housing Minister Balbina Herrera of Panama's governing coalition, which is led by the Democratic Revolutionary Party.
Pinilla said he telephoned Martinelli to inform him of his victory.
The winner, whose term ends in 2014, will have to guide Panama through the world economic crisis and the $5.25 billion expansion of the canal to increase its capacity and accommodate larger ships.

Panama elects Martinelli

Panama's presidential candidate Ricardo Martinelli clasps hands with his running mate Juan Carlos Varela during his victory speech in Panama City, Sunday, May 3, 2009. Panama's Electoral Tribunal announced the supermarket magnate Martinelli won the Central American nation's presidential elections.
ARNULFO FRANCO / AP
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- Panamanian supermarket magnate Ricardo Martinelli won Sunday's presidential election after a campaign criticizing the ruling party's performance on crime, living costs and U.S. relations.

Martinelli, the owner of a supermarket chain called Super 99, defeated Balbina Herrera, a former housing minister in the current government, the electoral board announced at a news conference in Panama City. The final results of the vote were not immediately released.
Martinelli, 57, inherits a slowing economy and a free-trade agreement stalled in the U.S. Congress on concerns about Panama's tax and labor laws.
Going into the election Martinelli, of the opposition Alliance for Change, had a double-digit lead in the polls over Herrera, the candidate of the ruling Democratic Revolutionary Party.
Martinelli, whose term ends in 2014, will have to guide Panama through a $5.25 billion expansion of the Panama Canal to increase its capacity and accommodate larger ships.
Few problems were reported despite heavy turnout at the country's 2,382 voting stations, observers from the Organization of American States said in a preliminary report issued after polls closed.
The candidates cast their ballots and talked of unity, regardless of the outcome.
''I believe in God and the Panamanian people,'' Herrera said at a school in the capital.
''Both winners and losers must work to improve the country,'' Martinelli said. ``Our problems don't end with an election.''
The winner takes office July 1, replacing President Martin Torrijos.
Both Martinelli, 57, and Herrera, 54, supported the canal expansion, but recent world economic woes have generated uncertainty over the project, which is receiving $2.3 billion in international financing.
The canal project, which was approved in a 2006 referendum, is expected to create about 5,000 direct jobs in the small Central American nation between 2010 and 2011, when construction is at its peak, according to authorities.
The project would be ''one of the points most closely attended to'' by a Martinelli government, said Roberto Henriquez, vice president of Martinelli's political party.
Panama's economy grew by an annual average of 8.7 percent over the past five years, and unemployment fell from 12 percent to 5.6 percent. The growth was fueled by foreign and state investment by the outgoing government of President Martin Torrijos. Growth this year is projected to be 3-4 percent.
Also running was Guillermo Endara, a longshot candidate who served as president from 1989-1994.
Panamanians also elected a vice president, members of Congress, mayors and other local officials. More than 2.2 million people were eligible to vote, and the country's Elections Tribunal said it expected turnout of more than 75 percent.

PANAMA ELECTIONS 2009

VISIT http://www.tribunal-electoral.gob.pa/

Saturday, May 2, 2009

A fight against poverty and vandalism in Panama



Along with the Tourism Assistants, meet the historical balconies of the San Felipe neighborhood, that show neoclassic and colonial architecture.
The program called “Tourist Assistants”, is an idea the Minister of Tourism of Panama, Rubén Blades had at the end of the year 2004. He met with a group of younsters, all of them former gang members from popular areas of Panamá in the Washington Hotel in Colon City. In this meeting he explained his desire to implement a program where they could become tourist assistants after receiving full and complete training.


Once the program was accomplished with the former gang members from the San Felipe area who had been trained in tourism and the history of Panama, good manners, safety rules and basic english during a 6 month period, during which they received a monthly basic payment with the purpose of helping them leave their old habits and start a new and better life.
The program was intended to last 6 months only, but due to the positive response it had, it was extended indefinitely and it is still carried on successfully with about 100 participants.
The program now includes others who are in social risks like university students and high school graduates. This program is also being implemented in other areas of tourist interests like in the highlands, beaches, central provinces and in the International Airport of Tocumen.
After interviewing the assistants in their working environment, we realized they were feeling safe and grateful to the program.
Andrés Beckford, a 28 year old who has been working as a tourist assistant for two years and a half said: “This program has changed my life and the life of my family. My wife was 5 months pregnant and I was unemployed when I was offered this opportunity. In that very moment I felt it was my chance to improve myself. They taught me real values and place in society. Then, they trained me in different areas like basic english, history of the Old Quarter, communication skills, and much more.
José Uno, another 24 year old in the program, mentioned: “People have no idea of how many tourists comes by every day. Thanks to this program, we are able to give them full information about the place and the historical monuments. It would be great that more people could know about us, since most of the tourists, when they get here, already have a tour operator or a guide. We are here in the Old Quarter every day working as a team and there exists great communication between all of us. And the most important fact is that we are being paid for this work and this allows us to stay away from crime and vandalism.
So far, the success of this program has been measured based on the satisfaction of San Felipe residents, tourists, and especially the tourist assistants, who have been able to change their lives.
In some cases, tourist assistant services have permanently hired them to work in their business.

Panama Canal Expansion Update

Panama Canal Expansion Update:
Atlantic Dredging Contract Maintains Momentum
MEETS WITH BIDDERS; EXTENDS PROPOSAL DEADLINE
PANAMA CITY, Panama, April 30, 2009 - The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) held a site visit and pre-bid conference this week to discuss the Atlantic Entrance Dredging Project under the waterway's Expansion Program.
International dredging and excavation contractors, and equipment and service providers participated in the two-day event. Held April 29-30, it included a tour of the future Atlantic dredging and excavation areas, as well as the designated in-land disposal sites and a meeting where the ACP provided details on the project, including information on the extended proposal deadline.
On February 27, the ACP released its request for proposals (RFP) for the Atlantic dredging. In response to bidder requests, the ACP provided a two-week extension to June 30 for a geotechnical study and evaluation in Canal waters. As such, the ACP also extended the proposal due date from July 15 to July 30.
This project is an essential part of the Canal's expansion to ensure that larger, wider ships can reach the new locks. It lowers the Canal bottom to 15.5 meters below the mean sea level and includes the dredging of approximately 15 million cubic meters and 800 thousand cubic meters of dry excavation.
The ACP will award the Atlantic dredging contract to the lowest bidder complying with all the contract requirements. This dredging project's expected completion date is during the second quarter of 2013.
About the Panama Canal Authority The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) is the autonomous agency of the Government of Panama in charge of managing, operating and maintaining the Panama Canal. The ACP is governed by its organic law and the regulations approved by its Board of Directors. For more information, please refer to the Panama Canal Authority's Web site: http://www.pancanal.com/.

Influenza A(H1N1) - Update 9

2 May 2009
The situation continues to evolve. As of 06:00 GMT, 2 May 2009, 15 countries have officially reported 615 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.
Mexico has reported 397 confirmed human cases of infection, including 16 deaths. The 241 rise in cases from Mexico compared to 23:30GMT of 1 May reflects ongoing testing of previously collected specimens. The United States Government has reported 141 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death.
The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Austria (1), Canada (34), China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (1), Denmark (1), France (1), Germany (4), Israel (2), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (4), Republic of Korea (1), Spain (13), Switzerland (1) and the United Kingdom (13).
Further information on the situation will be available on the WHO website on a regular basis.
WHO advises no restriction of regular travel or closure of borders. It is considered prudent for people who are ill to delay international travel and for people developing symptoms following international travel to seek medical attention, in line with guidance from national authorities.
There is also no risk of infection from this virus from consumption of well-cooked pork and pork products. Individuals are advised to wash hands thoroughly with soap and water on a regular basis and should seek medical attention if they develop any symptoms of influenza-like illness.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Ocean cargo/global logistics: Panama Canal transit to become less expensive in June

Patrick Burnson
Executive Editor
Logistics Management, 5/1/2009

PANAMA CITY—Despite earlier signals of an economic rebound, the Panama Canal Authority is giving carriers a break on rates through the summer.

Panama Canal Authority (ACP) has announced a temporary plan that will provide short-term cost reduction and greater flexibility to its Reservation System. The temporary measures, designed to help mitigate the impact of the economic crisis on the Canal's clients, were approved by the ACP Board of Directors earlier in the week, said spokesmen.
The result of informal consultations with clients, the temporary measures will take effect June 1, 2009 and continue through September 30, 2009.
The two primary components comprise a redefinition of ballast (ships without cargo) for full container vessels transiting the Canal along with modifications to the reservation system to increase flexibility and reduce fees.
In an interview with LM earlier this year, Alberto Alemán Zubieta, administrator and CEO of ACP said shippers could expect a more robust recovery.
“Our economic advisors are studying trends pointing to a rebound in shipping,” he said. “Our findings suggest a recovery at the end of 2009 or early 2010.”
And while the latest news does not directly contradict that observation, it indicates that business is still lagging behind a bullish forecast.
Carriers will now have 30 days before the date of a vessel's transit to request slot substitutions without additional costs. Previously, carriers could make such requests without an additional charge if that request was made at least 60 days prior to the date of transit. This temporary measure grants shipping lines more flexibility for slot substitutions, allowing them to replace one vessel for another with similar dimensions.
The ACP will also modify the definition of ballast for full container vessels, allowing a ship that carries 30 percent or less of its capacity to be charged the ballast rate of $57.60 per twenty-equivalent unit (TEU) $14.40 less than the $72 laden (ships with cargo) rate.
Meanwhile, the base reservation price is being reduced depending on the vessel size for all segments that use the ACP’s Reservation System. For example, the base reservation price for a super vessel, with a beam greater than or equal to 100 feet and a length greater than or equal to 900 feet, is reduced by $5,000 per transit.
Currently, when vessels fail to arrive on-schedule, they lose their slot, but have the option to pay an additional charge to keep the reservation and transit that same day. The new temporary measure reduces the charges and provides shipping lines with greater flexibility. The percentage reduction varies depending on the vessel's arrival time.
Carriers will now have 30 days before the date of a vessel’s transit to request slot substitutions without additional costs. Previously, customers could make such requests without an additional charge if that request was made at least 60 days prior to the date of transit.
“This temporary measure grants shipping lines more flexibility for slot substitutions, allowing them to replace one vessel for another with similar dimensions,” said spokesmen.

Panama Canal to Cut Some Tolls in June
















Photo courtesy Panama Canal Authority

Peter T. Leach



May 1, 2009 1:09PM GMT



The Journal of Commerce Online - News Story

Increases take effect May 1 but concessions to mitigate economic crisis

In a concession to financially pressed shipping lines, the Panama Canal Authority will cut back some tolls and fees while giving carriers greater flexibility in reserving movements through the canal.

But the canal authority also left in place new toll increases going into effect May 1, rejecting calls to put off the increases.
The new fee structure starting June 1 will temporarily reduce tolls on largely empty containerships and charges for transit reservations. The canal authority said the temporary measures are “designed to help mitigate the impact of the crisis on the Canal’s clients.”
Because of the global economic recession and the resulting slump in trade, the major global shipping lines and shipping organizations have been urging the canal authority to delay the toll increases that went into effect May 1.
But a reduction in tolls on ships in ballast and in reservation fees from June 1 to Sept. 30 of this year are the only concessions the authority was willing to make.
Major container lines have expected some kind of reduction in canal costs. Rodolphe Saade, chief executive vice president of CMA CGM, told The Journal of Commerce last month that the line was in discussions with both the Panama Canal and the Suez Canal authorities about lowering tolls or postponing scheduled toll increases.

“They do understand the situation. It seems that the Panama Canal is ready to make a move, while we have not heard yet from the Suez Authority,” Saade said.
Other container lines have been investigating ways to avoid the tolls altogether. Maersk Line, for example, told The Journal of Commerce that its analysis showed that it could reroute vessels from Asia to the U.S. East Coast around Cape Horn at the southern tip of South America and still save money on the trip by avoiding the Panama Canal tolls, despite the longer route.
The Panama Canal Authority said it will modify the definition of ballast for full container vessels, allowing a ship that carries 30 percent or less of its capacity to be charged the ballast rate of $57.60 per TEU, $14.40 less than the $72 laden (ships with cargo) rate.
It will also reduce the base reservation price depending on the vessel size for all segments that use the reservation system.
For example, it said the base reservation price for a super vessel, with a beam greater than or equal to 100 feet and a length greater than or equal to 900 feet, is reduced by $5,000 per transit.
It is also reducing the fee for late arrivals. Currently, when vessels fail to arrive on schedule, they lose their slot, but have the option to pay an additional charge to keep the reservation and transit that same day. The new temporary measure reduces the charges and provides shipping lines with greater flexibility. The percentage reduction varies depending on the vessel’s arrival time.
The authority said the temporary measures also allow more flexibility for slot substitutions. The canal authority will now allow shipping lines 30 days before the date of a vessel’s transit to request slot substitutions without additional costs.
Previously, shipping lines could make such requests without an additional charge if that request was made at least 60 days prior to the date of transit. The canal authority said this temporary measure grants shipping lines more flexibility for slot substitutions, allowing them to replace one vessel for another with similar dimensions.
Contact Peter T. Leach at pleach@joc.com .

Epidemic and Pandemic Alert and Response (EPR)

No Rationale for Travel Restrictions

1 May 2009 -- WHO is not recommending travel restrictions related to the outbreak of the Influenza A (H1N1) virus. Today, international travel moves rapidly, with large numbers of individuals visiting various parts the world. Limiting travel and imposing travel restrictions would have very little effect on stopping the virus from spreading, but would be highly disruptive to the global community.

Influenza A (H1N1) has already been confirmed in many parts of the world. The focus now is on minimizing the impact of the virus through the rapid identification of cases and providing patients with appropriate medical care, rather than on stopping its spread internationally. Furthermore, although identifying the signs and symptoms of influenza in travellers can be an effective monitoring technique, it is not effective in reducing the spread of influenza as the virus can be transmitted from person to person before the onset of symptoms. Scientific research based on mathematical modelling indicates that restricting travel will be of limited or no benefit in stopping the spread of disease. Historical records of previous influenza pandemics, as well as experience with SARS, have validated this point.
Travellers can protect themselves and others by following simple recommendations related to travel aimed at preventing the spread of infection. Individuals who are ill should delay travel plans and returning travellers who fall ill should seek appropriate medical care. These recommendations are prudent measures which can limit the spread of many communicable diseases and not only Influenza A (H1N1).
Influenza A(H1N1) - update 7

1 May 2009 -- The situation continues to evolve rapidly. As of 06:00 GMT, 1 May 2009, 11 countries have officially reported 331 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection.
The United States Government has reported 109 laboratory confirmed human cases, including one death. Mexico has reported 156 confirmed human cases of infection, including nine deaths.
The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths - Austria (1), Canada (34), Germany (3), Israel (2), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (3), Spain (13), Switzerland (1) and the United Kingdom (8).
Further information on the situation will be available on the WHO website on a regular basis.
WHO advises no restriction of regular travel or closure of borders. It is considered prudent for people who are ill to delay international travel and for people developing symptoms following international travel to seek medical attention, in line with guidance from national authorities.
There is also no risk of infection from this virus from consumption of well-cooked pork and pork products. Individuals are advised to wash hands thoroughly with soap and water on a regular basis and should seek medical attention if they develop any symptoms of influenza-like illness.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Swine influenza FAQ


Swine influenza, or “swine flu”, is a highly contagious acute respiratory disease of pigs, caused by one of several swine influenza A viruses. Morbidity tends to be high and mortality low (1-4%).
The virus is spread among pigs by aerosols, direct and indirect contact, and asymptomatic carrier pigs. Outbreaks in pigs occur year round, with an increased incidence in the autumn and winter in temperate zones. Many countries routinely vaccinate swine populations against swine influenza.
Swine influenza viruses are most commonly of the H1N1 subtype, but other subtypes are also circulating in pigs (e.g., H1N2, H3N1, H3N2). Pigs can also be infected with avian influenza viruses and human seasonal influenza viruses as well as swine influenza viruses. The H3N2 swine virus was thought to have been originally introduced into pigs by humans. Sometimes pigs can be infected with more than one virus type at a time, which can allow the genes from these viruses to mix. This can result in an influenza virus containing genes from a number of sources, called a "reassortant" virus. Although swine influenza viruses are normally species specific and only infect pigs, they do sometimes cross the species barrier to cause disease in humans.
Outbreaks and sporadic human infection with swine influenza have been occasionally reported. Generally clinical symptoms are similar to seasonal influenza but reported clinical presentation ranges broadly from asymptomatic infection to severe pneumonia resulting in death.

Since typical clinical presentation of swine influenza infection in humans resembles seasonal influenza and other acute upper respiratory tract infections, most of the cases have been detected by chance through seasonal influenza surveillance. Mild or asymptomatic cases may have escaped from recognition; therefore the true extent of this disease among humans is unknown.
Since the implementation of IHR(2005)1 in 2007, WHO has been notified of swine influenza cases from the United States and Spain.
Humans usually contract swine influenza from infected pigs, however, some cases lack contact history with pigs or environments where pigs have been located. Human-to-human transmission has occurred in some instances but was limited to close contacts and closed groups of people.
Yes. Swine influenza has not been shown to be transmissible to people through eating properly handled and prepared pork (pig meat) or other products derived from pigs. The swine influenza virus is killed by cooking temperatures of 160°F/70°C, corresponding to the general guidance for the preparation of pork and other meat.
Swine influenza is not notifiable to international animal health authorities (OIE, www.oie.int), therefore its international distribution in animals is not well known. The disease is considered endemic in the United States. Outbreaks in pigs are also known to have occurred in North America, South America, Europe (including the UK, Sweden, and Italy), Africa (Kenya), and in parts of eastern Asia including China and Japan.
It is likely that most people, especially those who do not have regular contact with pigs, do not have immunity to swine influenza viruses that can prevent the virus infection. If a swine virus establishes efficient human-to human transmission, it can cause an influenza pandemic. The impact of a pandemic caused by such a virus is difficult to predict: it depends on virulence of the virus, existing immunity among people, cross protection by antibodies acquired from seasonal influenza infection and host factors.
There are no vaccines that contain the current swine influenza virus causing illness in humans. It is not known whether current human seasonal influenza vaccines can provide any protection. Influenza viruses change very quickly. It is important to develop a vaccine against the currently circulating virus strain for it to provide maximum protection to the vaccinated people. This is why WHO needs access to as many viruses as possible in order to select the most appropriate candidate vaccine virus.
There are two classes of such medicines, 1) adamantanes (amantadine and remantadine), and 2) inhibitors of influenza neuraminidase (oseltamivir and zanamivir). Most of the previously reported swine influenza cases recovered fully from the disease without requiring medical attention and without antiviral medicines.
Some influenza viruses develop resistance to the antiviral medicines, limiting the effectiveness of treatment.
The viruses obtained from the recent human cases with swine influenza in the United States are sensitive to oselatmivir and zanamivir but resistant to amantadine and remantadine.
Information is insufficient to make recommendations on the use of the antivirals in treatment of swine influenza virus infection.
Clinicians should make decisions based on the clinical and epidemiological assessment and harms and benefits of the treatment of the patient2. For the ongoing outbreak of the swine influenza infection in the United States and Mexico, national and local authorities are recommending use oseltamivir or zanamivir for treatment of the disease based on the virus’s susceptibility profile.
Even though there is no clear indication that the current human cases with swine influenza infection are related to recent or ongoing influenza-like disease events in pigs, it would be advisable to minimize contact with sick pigs and report such animals to relevant animal health authorities.
Most people are infected through prolonged, close contact with infected pigs. Good hygiene practices are essential in all contact with animals and are especially important during slaughter and post-slaughter handling to prevent exposure to disease agents. Sick animals or animals that died from disease should not be undergoing slaughtering procedures. Follow further advice from relevant national authorities.
Swine influenza has not been shown to be transmissible to people through eating properly handled and prepared pork (pig meat) or other products derived from pigs. The swine influenza virus is killed by cooking temperatures of 160°F/70°C corresponding to the general guidance for the preparation of pork and other meat.
In the past, human infection with swine influenza was generally mild but is known to have caused severe illness such as pneumonia For the current outbreaks in the United States and Mexico however, the clinical pictures have been different. None of the confirmed cases in the United States have had the severe form of the disease and the patients recovered from illness without requiring medical care. In Mexico, some patients reportedly had the severe form of the disease.

To protect yourself, practice general preventive measures for influenza:
Avoid close contact with people who appear unwell and who have fever and cough.
Wash your hands with soap and water frequently and thoroughly.
Practice good health habits including adequate sleep, eating nutritious food, and keeping physically active.
If there is an ill person at home:
Try to provide the ill person a separate section in the house. If this is not possible, keep the patient at least 1 meter in distance from others.
Cover mouth and nose when caring for the ill person. Masks can be bought commercially or made using the readily available materials as long as they are disposed of or cleaned properly.
Wash your hands with soap and water thoroughly after each contact with the ill person.
Try to improve the air flow in the area where the ill person stays. Use doors and windows to take advantage of breezes.
Keep the environment clean with readily available household cleaning agents.
If you are living in a country where swine influenza has caused disease in humans, follow additional advice from national and local health authorities.
If you feel unwell, have high fever, cough and/or sore throat:

Stay at home and keep away from work, school or crowds as much as possible.
Rest and take plenty of fluids.
Cover your mouth and nose with disposable tissues when coughing and sneezing and dispose of the used tissues properly.
Wash your hands with soap and water frequently and thoroughly, especially after coughing or sneezing.
Inform family and friends about your illness and seek help for household chores that require contact with other people such as shopping.
If you need medical attention:
Contact your doctor or healthcare provider before travelling to see them and report your symptoms.
Explain why you think you have swine influenza (for example, if you have recently travelled to a country where there is a swine influenza outbreak in humans). Follow the advice given to you for care.
If it is not possible to contact your healthcare provider in advance, communicate your suspicion of having swine influenza immediately upon arrival at the healthcare facility.
Take care to cover your nose and mouth during travel.

Understanding Swine Flu’s World Spread: Questions and Answers

By John Lauerman
April 30 (Bloomberg) -- Swine flu has sickened at least 257 people in 11 countries, including Mexico, the U.S., New Zealand, Canada and the U.K., according to the World Health Organization.
The organization raised its six-tier pandemic alert to 5 and said the world’s first influenza pandemic since 1968 may soon be declared. Hundreds of more cases are suspected, as health officials around the world check to see whether infections have occurred in their countries and ready measures to prevent its spread.
Here are answers to some frequently asked questions about swine flu.
The information is drawn from the data released by the World Health Organization in Geneva and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
Q: What is swine flu?
A: Influenza is a virus that infects people, birds, pigs and other animals such as ferrets. Swine flu, or swine influenza, is a form of the virus that normally infects pigs. There are many forms of flu, and the different varieties have the ability to exchange genes with one another. The form of flu that originated in Mexico is a genetic mixture of viruses that have been seen in pigs, birds and people. It’s being called a swine flu because the overall structure of the virus is of the type that affects pigs, said Keiji Fukuda, a WHO official.

Q: How do people catch swine flu?
A: Studies are ongoing about how this particular swine flu is transmitted. Flu is generally transmitted through the respiratory tract. Droplets of infected body fluids may carry flu when people cough or sneeze. Studies indicate that masks called N95 respirators, when properly used, filter germs from the breath and hamper the spread of flu. Neither contact with pigs nor eating pork has been linked to the spread of the flu, Fukuda said.

Q: What are the symptoms of swine flu?
A: About one to four days usually elapse between the time a person is infected and the onset of symptoms. Influenza normally causes symptoms such as coughing, sneezing, headaches and body aches, fever, chills, and sometimes vomiting and diarrhea. Swine flu causes the same symptoms, and may be difficult to distinguish from other strains of flu and respiratory illnesses. Severe cases of flu that lead to death are normally seen in very young and very old people whose immune systems are too weak to fight off the virus. Adults with severe illness may also have difficulty breathing, dizziness, confusion, or severe vomiting and diarrhea.

Q: Is there a vaccine against the swine flu that’s now spreading?
A: Flu vaccines generally contain a dead or weakened form of a circulating virus. The vaccine prepares the body’s immune system to fend off a true infection. For the vaccine to work, it must match the circulating, “wild-type” virus relatively closely. There is no vaccine currently that exactly matches the swine flu. The seasonal flu vaccine isn’t effective against swine flu, said Richard Besser, acting head of the CDC. Vaccine makers have contacted the World Health Organization about obtaining samples of the virus needed to make a vaccine. Making flu vaccine can take three to six months. No decision has been made to order a vaccine against swine flu, Besser said.
Q: How can I tell if my child is sick?
A: Children who are breathing abnormally fast or slowly may have respiratory illness. Bluish skin indicates a need for quick attention. Children who are abnormally sluggish and sleepy, irritable, or have fever or rash may also need attention.

Q: Have there been outbreaks of swine flu before?
A: Yes. Health officials said in 1976 that an outbreak of swine flu in people might lead to a pandemic. Widespread vaccination was carried out in the U.S. before experts determined that the virus was not dangerous enough to cause a pandemic. Swine flu occasionally infects people in the U.S. without causing large outbreaks. From 2005 through January 2009, there were 12 reported swine flu cases in the U.S. None of them caused deaths.

Q: Why are health officials concerned about the outbreak of swine flu?
A: When flu viruses mix genes with one another, they can take on new forms. New flu viruses are harder for the human immune system to defend against. With little or no opposition from the immune resistance, the virus can grow quickly and invade many tissues and organs. They may also set off a harmful immune overreaction in the body, called a “cytokine storm,” that may be lethal in itself. The swine flu virus from Mexico may have the ability to spread quickly and kill people, possibly causing a worldwide pandemic, according to the WHO. Researchers are conducting studies to determine how easily the virus spreads in people and how dangerous it is.

Q: What’s a flu pandemic?
A: A flu pandemic occurs when a new influenza virus spreads quickly and few people have immunity. While influenza viruses were only discovered about a century ago, researchers believe flu pandemics hit about two or three times each century. Some pandemics kill a few million people globally. The most severe flu pandemic on record was the 1918 Spanish Flu. Researchers estimate it killed about 50 million people around the world.

Q: Are there any similarities between the swine flu and earlier pandemic viruses?
A: Flu viruses are classified by two proteins on their surface, called H for hemagglutinin and N for neuraminidase. The swine flu found in Mexico and the 1918 Spanish Flu viruses are of the H1N1 subtype. Both viruses appear to have originated in animals. Researchers believe the Spanish Flu spread to people from birds. The two viruses are not identical, and there are still many genetic differences between them that researchers are studying.

Q: Do all H1N1 viruses cause pandemics?
A: No. H1N1 descendants of the Spanish Flu virus continue to circulate in people and sometimes cause outbreaks of seasonal flu.

Q: Are there drugs that treat swine flu?
A: Yes. Roche Holding AG’s Tamiflu and GlaxoSmithKline Plc’s Relenza both react against swine flu. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has released 25 percent of its stockpile of Tamiflu and Relenza, according to Secretary Janet Napolitano. Flu viruses sometimes develop resistance to antiviral drugs. The human form of H1N1 seasonal flu that’s currently circulating is resistant to Roche’s Tamiflu (not Relenza). If the two viruses were to exchange genes, the swine flu might become resistant, too. The drugs should be administered within the first 48 hours of the onset of symptoms, according to the CDC. Tamiflu and Relenza may also help prevent swine flu in people who have been exposed to someone who was sick.
Q: How else can I protect myself from swine flu?
A: Personal hygiene measures, such as avoiding people who are coughing or sneezing and frequent hand-washing, may prevent flu infection. Those who aren’t health professionals should avoid contact with sick people. People who get sick with flu symptoms should stay home. Studies have suggested that closing schools, theaters, and canceling gatherings in the early stages of a pandemic can limit its spread. Such measures would likely take place if health officials determine that the virus is spreading quickly enough and is deadly enough to cause a pandemic.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Lauerman in Boston at jlauerman@bloomberg.net;
Last Updated: April 30, 2009 14:42 EDT

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Democratic Policing Essential to Protect Individual Liberties

Washington
Police officials are often the first contact a person has with a country's legal system. The American Bar Association's Rule of Law Initiative (ABA ROLI) helps train law enforcement officials around the world so that the first citizen-police encounter is a positive one.

ABA ROLI is a nonprofit program that implements legal reform programs in more than 40 countries. It has more than 400 professional staff working in the United States and abroad, including a cadre of short- and long-term expatriate volunteers who, since the program's inception in 2007, have contributed more than $200 million in donated legal assistance.

ABA ROLI "fully recognizes the direct link between democratization efforts and the ability of states to protect [their] citizens and maintain order while protecting individual liberties and civil and political rights," said Mary Greer, senior adviser to ABA ROLI's Criminal Law Reform Program.
"We work with training academies, whether they're prosecutors, police academies, or, to some extent, judicial academies," Greer said. "Often our work with police is in the context of a changing criminal-procedure-code environment," she told America.gov.
Changing a country's criminal procedures to conform to international standards means a shift in roles and responsibilities, Greer explained.
In former Soviet Union countries, she said, police and prosecutors ruled supreme under the old system. Now, judges, not police, issue search warrants and approve arrest warrants.
ABA ROLI's goals when conducting training overseas are to insure that international standards of fairness and transparency are met. "Fair trial standards," Greer said, "start with investigations that are conducted by people with the expertise as well as the knowledge of human rights - whether [those] human rights are victim's rights or the accused or witnesses."
PROMOTING A RULE-OF-LAW CULTURE AMONG POLICE
One of ABA ROLI's most recent programs is a comprehensive review and reform of the Panamanian police curriculum and training methods. Begun in February, the goal of the yearlong effort is to help Panamanian police trainers in promoting a rule-of-law culture among Panamanian police.

Michael McCullough, director of ABA's Latin America and the Caribbean ROLI program, told America.gov that a 2006 survey conducted by the Inter-American Development Bank concluded that 46 percent of Panamanians believed the criminal justice system fails to punish criminals.
"A lot of citizen confidence is going to be based on their perceptions of the police," McCullough said.
"Police in many cases are the first contact that a citizen has with the legal system - and sometimes the only direct contact," he said. "
So to a large extent, the impressions that citizens have of the legal system will result from their impressions of the police. We think it is very important for the police to be highly professional, ethical and competent in the performance of their duties."
Especially important is that the police understand how to conduct effective investigations, he said.
"If [police] don't effectively gather the proper evidence and follow the chain of custody and comply with the constitutional guarantees, the prosecutor's hands will be tied at trial," McCullough said.
The ABA ROLI program in Panama, which is funded in part by the U.S. government, is part of a larger agreement between the governments of Panama and the United States to reform Panama's justice sector, McCullough said.
INTERNATIONAL RAMIFICATIONS
A properly trained police force enhances the international community's efforts to control transnational crime, Greer said.

For example, an ABA ROLI training program for police officers in Ukraine has made extradition requests by the United States proceed more smoothly, she said. Likewise, cases involving the trafficking of women from Moldova to Ukraine were facilitated by ABA ROLI training regarding legal issues between jurisdictions.
"So much more crime is global," Greer said. "Terrorism, money laundering, cybercrime are truly global crimes."
"You really have to work even harder ... at trying to devise a regional strategy within country-specific priorities," she said.
More information about ABA ROLI ( http://www.abanet.org/rol/ ) is available on the ABA Web site.
(This is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://www.america.gov/)

Monday, April 27, 2009

Panama to signal Obama's Agenda

APRIL 26, 2009, 8:53 P.M. ET

Panama to Signal Obama's Agenda
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124079102550957773.html

By GREG HITT

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama has signaled in recent days a more positive stance toward free trade than he did on the campaign trail, pleasing business groups but courting a backlash among trade-skeptical Democrats in Congress.
An early test of just how much Mr. Obama will push trade in addition to the other issues on his agenda -- like health care, climate change and financial regulation -- will be whether he prods Congress soon to ratify a free-trade agreement with Panama negotiated under the Bush administration.
The White House's newly confirmed trade representative, Ron Kirk, indicated that was under consideration in a speech last week, saying "we believe there is strong bipartisan support for the pending free-trade agreement with Panama." Mr. Kirk also mentioned possibly moving forward with other stalled Bush-era pacts with Colombia and South Korea.
That came a few days after Obama aides suggested the president wouldn't seek to reopen the North American Free Trade Agreement to address concerns about labor and environmental protections.
Mr. Obama had, as a candidate, pledged to renegotiate the deal. And it followed a decision by the Obama administration not to label China a currency manipulator, though Mr. Obama himself had done just that during the campaign. Critics of China say Beijing keeps the value of the yuan artificially low to give their exporters a leg up in the world economy.
After Mr. Obama and congressional Democrats talked tough on trade during the 2008 campaign, business leaders worried about new protectionism out of Washington. Now, some say they are more encouraged.
"If the president could just move the Panama agreement, it would send a signal to the world that we're open for business," Jim Owens, chairman and chief executive of Caterpillar Inc., said in remarks at the Council on Foreign Relations the same day as Mr. Kirk's speech.
But trade skepticism and populist economic sentiments still run high on Capitol Hill. Those sentiments derailed the trade agenda in the final years of the Bush presidency and helped fuel Democratic gains at the polls in the last two elections.
Rep. Mike Michaud (D., Maine) issued a statement after Mr. Kirk's speech denouncing the talk of acting on Panama as "absolutely outrageous and a serious mistake."
Mr. Michaud, a strong critic of U.S. trade policy, suggested Mr. Obama risks alienating voters who are worried about trade and globalization, and dividing Democrats on Capitol Hill. "You're just courting trouble," he said in an interview.
That came as other leaders in Congress have stepped up their campaign for Mr. Obama to stick more closely to his trade promises.
"I am disappointed that the Treasury Department did not cite China as a currency manipulator," Ohio Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown told a Washington audience last week.
He called on Mr. Obama to convene a blue-ribbon commission to "help create a new path on trade." He added, "The basic premise of redirecting U.S. trade policy is that we must see evidence that our trade model is working before we pass new trade agreements -- whether with Panama, Colombia or South Korea," he said.
Already this year, Mr. Obama has had some small tussles with Congress on trade. Lawmakers tucked into the stimulus legislation a "Buy American" provision requiring preferences for domestic suppliers on government contracts. That has stirred tensions with trade partners, prompting the administration to vow to water down the rules.
Congress attached to a separate spending bill a provision that killed a program that allowed Mexican trucks to transport cargo into the U.S. Mexico responded with tariffs on a list of American exports. The White House has said it was working to resolve the dispute.
The next big test for trade is Panama. Mr. Kirk said last week that the deal wasn't ready yet for a congressional vote, saying, "I'm working to resolve some labor and other issues before we ask Congress to consider it."
Deborah Mesloh, spokeswoman for Mr. Kirk, said the administration is ready to work with Congress to address concerns on the trade agenda.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Dalai Lama discusses global economy at UC Santa Barbara

'This crisis is good,' Tibetan leader says, because it reminds people that money has limitations.
He also speaks about arcane aspects of Buddhist history and philosophy.
By Louis Sahagun April 25, 2009
Reporting from Santa Barbara
The Dalai Lama, in a ringing denunciation, declared Friday that the ailing global economy is the result of "too much greed, and lies and hypocrisy.
"These are some of the factors behind the global crisis," he said at a news conference at UC Santa Barbara. "Those people who feel that money is the most important thing in life, when economic crisis hits, learn that it is only one way to be happy. There is also family, friends and peace of mind."
Therefore, this crisis is good," he added with a laugh, "because it reminds people who only want to see money grow and grow that there are limitations."The Dalai Lama's remarks followed the first of two sold-out public lectures in the university events center Friday on "the nature of mind."
That discourse, delivered from an ornate wooden couch with ocher robes draped over his bony shoulders and with his legs folded beneath him, drew an audience of 4,800 people.Tickets, which had sold out within two hours, ranged in price from $20 to $40. Scalpers fetched up to $600 per ticket, university officials said.

In his characteristic self-effacing manner, the 74-year-old leader of Tibet's government-in-exile began by apologizing for a serious cold that had him frequently pausing to clear his throat or blow his nose.
Midway through the talk, he began speaking for up to 15 minutes at a stretch in Tibetan about arcane aspects of Buddhist history and philosophy, leaving his assistant to translate for fans.Advanced students of Buddhist philosophy leaned forward in their seats, hanging on every word.
Many others, however, began fidgeting or heading off to the restrooms. Some people snoozed.Joyce Tapper, 74, of Van Nuys took it all in stride."It's amazing that he pushes ahead despite little things like a cold and big things like the condition of his homeland," she said. "Just being in the room with him lifted me to a higher place, even if I didn't get it.
"Then there was Melanie Strickland, 48, a substitute teacher from the Joshua Tree area. Moments after the Dalai Lama left the stage, she was reciting large portions of the teachings -- nearly verbatim -- over her cellphone to a friend.
"The key is to rise above thoughts of pain and anger," she told her friend, "and focus on the here and now between those thoughts. See?"It was the Dalai Lama's fourth visit to this prosperous seaside community, which prepared for his appearance with four weeks of social gatherings, public talks by local scholars and Buddhist-oriented art exhibits, including an elaborate sand mandala under construction by 10 monks. On Friday night, the California-based Global Institute for Tibetan Medicine hosted a reception in honor of Gyalo Thondup, older brother of the Dalai Lama.
UC Santa Barbara became a leading center of Buddhist and Tibetan studies after the Dalai Lama's first visit there in 1984. He was invited to return this week by Jose Cabezon, the first occupant of the university's XIV Dalai Lama chair in Tibetan studies.
The invitation was made "quite a while ago because the Dalai Lama books his appearances about seven years in advance," Cabezon said.
"Finally, our number came up and he flew here direct from his headquarters in India.""We are institution unusual in its support and admiration for the Dalai Lama," said Eva Haller, a longtime trustee of the UC Santa Barbara Foundation. "He knows that, and feels at home here."

Friday, April 24, 2009

U.S. to push on Doha, Bush trade deals: Kirk

By Doug PalmerReuters
Thursday, April 23, 2009; 1:30 PM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration is committed to concluding long-running world trade talks and wants to move forward on trade deals with Panama, Colombia and South Korea negotiated by former President George W. Bush, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said on Thursday.
"Now is the time to revive global trade, and to lay the groundwork for an even more robust, more open trading system in future decades," Kirk said in what was billed as his first major policy speech since taking office last month.
"To get our economy back on track, we need to increase exports," Kirk said at the Georgetown University law school.
But with many Americans doubtful of the benefits of trade, it was also time to "take a new approach," Kirk said.
That meant rigorous U.S. enforcement of trade agreements to ensure countries honor commitments to open their markets and ensuring U.S. workers who lose their jobs because of trade know the government will "have their backs," he said.
The United States also must help small and medium-sized companies export more, Kirk said, noting that 97 percent of American exporters have fewer than 500 workers.
President Barack Obama tapped into strong anti-trade sentiment during last year's election by criticizing the North American Free Trade Agreement and opposing trade deals the Bush administration negotiated with Colombia and South Korea.
But with U.S. exports plummeting along with the rest of global trade, Obama has joined other world leaders in warning against the danger of protectionism.
LABOR PROTECTIONS
In meetings with leaders of Canada and Mexico, Obama has said he wants to add stronger labor and environmental protections to NAFTA without unraveling the pact.
Kirk said the Obama administration believed there was strong bipartisan support in Congress for a Panama trade deal left over from the Bush administration and was looking for new solutions to concerns that have blocked the pacts with Colombia and South Korea.
Opponents of those deals say pursuing the pacts would cause a split among Democrats that could damage Obama's ability to accomplish other legislative goals.
"This is absolutely outrageous and a serious mistake," said Rep. Mike Michaud, a leader of a group of 54 lawmakers, most of them Democrats, in the House of Representative who have called for major changes in U.S. policy.
The White House, if it submits the agreements to Congress, will likely have to rely heavily on Republican votes to get them approved, especially in the House.
Kirk, who also promised to bring more transparency to U.S. trade policy, did not take questions after the speech. Aides told reporters he was scheduled to meet with Georgetown students and already had a news conference on Monday.
The United States also wants a successful conclusion to the long-running Doha round of world trade talks, "and in coming weeks we will have more to say about how we think Doha can finally move forward," Kirk said.
(Reporting by Doug Palmer; editing by David Storey)

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Tax Haven Questions Could Trip Up Panama Trade Pact

APRIL 22, 2009, 1:15 P.M. ET

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090422-713050.html

By Martin Vaughan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--Questions about Panama's status as a tax haven have raised a new hurdle for U.S. approval of a free trade deal between the U.S. and the Central American nation.

The U.S.-Panama trade pact was signed in June 2007, but the deal has been stalled along with separate bilateral trade pacts with Colombia and South Korea.
The latter two trade deals are ensnared in controversial human rights and market access disputes. But the White House said earlier this year in a "trade policy agenda" document that it hoped to send the Panama deal to Congress for consideration "relatively quickly."
Democratic lawmakers and Obama administration officials now say Panama must take steps to increase transparency and information exchange with U.S. authorities on tax issues, before the free trade agreement can advance.
"I would say with respect to Panama that there are also some important issues that need to be worked through having to do with cooperation in resisting tax evasion," White House National Economic Council Director Larry Summers said at an April 18 press conference at the Summit of the Americas.
The Treasury Dept. launched talks with Panama towards a tax information exchange agreement in 2002, but the talks have made little progress.
U.S. business lobbyists who back the U.S.-Panama trade deal have been pushing for a vote prior to Congress' August recess. But the demands from the Obama administration on tax transparency seem to make that timetable unlikely.
Panama holds presidential and parliamentary elections May 3, and it is doubtful whether the Treasury Dept. would be able to conclude a tax information exchange agreement with the lame-duck administration of outgoing President Martin Torrijos.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on April 2 listed Panama as one of 30 tax haven jurisdictions that have committed to international standards on bank secrecy, but have "not yet substantially implemented" those standards.
Panama is also mentioned in legislation introduced by Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., with sanctions for tax haven jurisdictions.
Panamanian officials did not immediately respond to inquiries for this article.
In a March letter to the OECD, Panama said that while it is not a tax haven, it is taking steps to strengthen its "legal and regulatory framework, thus helping our international financial center to not by unduly utilized by citizens of other States to evade or defraud their respective tax authorities."
But the letter from Minister of Commerce and Industry Gisela A. de Porras said Panama will insist on protecting fundamental privacy, and will respond only to "individual requests provided with a specific rationale and justification."
Automatic exchange of information will thus not be considered, the letter said.
It is only in recent days that U.S. politicians have linked progress on tax and bank secrecy issues to approval of the trade deal, however. Opponents of the Panama pact - led by fair-trade activist group Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch - have long sought to bring attention to Panama's history as a tax haven.
Their efforts have been helped by a flurry of media interest in global tax evasion, as U.S. and European authorities have ramped up pressure on such jurisdictions as Switzerland, Liechtenstein, and Bermuda to relax secrecy laws.
House Ways and Means Committee Democrats have long been pressing Panama to make changes in its labor laws, as a prerequisite for allowing the free trade deal to advance.
Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., raised the tax haven issues in connection with the free trade deal during a March address to a Washington trade group.
By Martin Vaughan, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9244; martin.vaughan@dowjones.com

Rainforest clash in Panama signals larger debate

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/04/21/panama.deforestation/

KUNA YALA, Panama (CNN) -- Hunched over a campfire in eastern Panama, Embera tribesman Raul Mezua chanted a song his grandfather taught him when he was a boy.

The words are memorized, passed down from an aging generation to a new group of tribal youths.
"The song means a lot to me," Mezua told CNN, the fire's dying embers splashing a red glow across his face. "But I don't know what it means."
It's not just the song but their language and culture that Mezua and his tribe fear losing as deforestation from logging and cattle ranching threatens the rainforest that is part of their identity.
But recent trends could usher in a welcome reversal for Mezua and his tribe. Rural workers are migrating toward cities in search of jobs, and forests are re-emerging where now abandoned farms and cattle ranches once flourished, according to a 2009 report from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
Such "secondary" forests in the tropics can rapidly grow in areas once cleared for logging and cattle ranching if left alone, said Joseph Wright, senior scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. "After about 20 years (of being left alone) the forest will be about 60 feet tall," he said. Watch Mezua sing a traditional tribal song »
Deforestation and re-growth in Panama may reflect a snapshot of a bigger picture involving rainforests throughout Central America. With more than three-quarters of people across the region now living in urban centers, the United Nations expects rural farming and population growth -- the usual culprits behind deforestation -- to dwindle.
Some call forest re-growth a victory in the climate crisis. Trees consume carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that traps heat within the Earth's atmosphere. "Biology is the only way we can remove carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere," Wright said. "There's no way to do it faster than to let tropical forests re-grow on abandoned land."
Others say threats to primary forest, or original jungle, is the real issue and that its loss can cause irreparable damage to the surrounding ecosystem.
"Places in Colombia, places in Central America, places in Mexico, places in many of the Andean countries are the last bunkers, the last bastions of hundreds of unique species in each place," Lider Sucre, director of Panama's Museum of Biodiversity, told CNN.
"If you replant 10 times as much forest but you lose these last large pockets, you lose a huge amount of biodiversity forever and ever."
The value of primary and secondary forests is a debate heating up within the environmental community as new woodlands begin to wrap themselves around barbed-wire fences that still dot cattle-driven landscapes across Panama.
We have to make that distinction, that fundamental difference, between re-growth and the original forest," Sucre said. "Re-growth is only a shadow in terms of the diversity of life within it."
In places like Panama's Kuna Yala, a semi-autonomous tribal region and the country's largest tract of rainforest, new growth can bridge gaps between the remaining pockets of pristine old growth forest.
"Because of its size, because of the health of the entire ecosystem, it has an extraordinary potential to serve as a kind of a Noah's Ark -- a place that can safeguard biodiversity and the full complement of species," Sucre said.
Recently, a scientific expedition unearthed 10 new amphibious species on both sides of Panama's mountainous border with Colombia, according to Conservation International, an environmental advocacy group based in Washington.
At least 25 percent of the area is being deforested, putting the rich biodiversity in jeopardy, the group said. Across the region, the United Nations says tropical rainforest land is still being lost at an alarming pace.
More than 7 million hectares of forests were destroyed globally each year between 2000 and 2005, the U.N. says
Slightly less than one-fifth of the world's carbon dioxide emissions stems from the effects of deforestation in poor countries, the U.N. said -- a figure comparable to the total output of the United States and China.
For indigenous tribes -- who rely on the rainforest for everything from medicine and food to homes and artwork -- the reality behind the figures is staggering. "The rainforest is something we depend on," Kuna tribesman Toniel Edman said, standing beside a thatched hut made from rainforest wood.
"The problem is actually with the farmers and ranchers," Edman said. "They invade our land and deforest it for their own gain." But here, cattle is king. "We don't have another way to support ourselves," rancher Oriel Gonzalez said, overlooking cow pastures where rainforest once dominated.
"We go looking for work elsewhere but there isn't any. We don't know how to do anything else." He added that loans for raising cows are just easier to come by than financing for crops or other livestock. "It's partly tradition. The banker is used to lending money for cattle -- that's what he's always done," said Wright, the Smithsonian scientist.
Wright noted that for lenders, there is inherently less risk with raising cattle. "We have droughts. We have plagues of microbes. Plagues of insects. You can have a 100 percent loss with a row crop," he said. "That just never happens with cattle. You can always get the cattle to market and sell them."
For lawmakers, striking a balance between preservation and the "need for people to grow the land" comes with "difficulties," Panama President Martin Torrijos told CNN.
Torrijos highlighted his country's recent successes in combating deforestation; Panama recorded drops in rainforest loss during the 2000 to 2005 period, the U.N. reported. But he also recognized a brewing conflict between indigenous tribes and the ranchers, farmers and loggers who encroach on tribal land. "Every now and then, issues occur and we deal with it," Torrijos said.
Part of the problem is "unclear ownership of the land," said U.N. Forestry Officer Merilio Morell. "By law, the indigenous own the comarca (tribal district). But exercising ownership is not easy," he said. "They cannot patrol ever single meter of land ... and the borders aren't marked."
Scientists say efforts to promote carbon trading -- a process intended to get companies that exceed their allowed CO2 emissions to buy credits from groups that pollute less -- could provide the mechanism needed to slow deforestation.
Earlier this month, delegates from donor and developing countries around the world met outside Panama City to address carbon trading amid the fallout from a global recession. Environmental consequences from the economic crunch are still uncertain.
But U.N. projections show a growing global demand for rainforest products like fuel and timber.
That demand could thwart the resurgence of the rainforest.

Rainforest clash in Panama signals larger debate

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/04/21/panama.deforestation/

KUNA YALA, Panama (CNN) -- Hunched over a campfire in eastern Panama, Embera tribesman Raul Mezua chanted a song his grandfather taught him when he was a boy.
The words are memorized, passed down from an aging generation to a new group of tribal youths.
"The song means a lot to me," Mezua told CNN, the fire's dying embers splashing a red glow across his face. "But I don't know what it means."
It's not just the song but their language and culture that Mezua and his tribe fear losing as deforestation from logging and cattle ranching threatens the rainforest that is part of their identity.
But recent trends could usher in a welcome reversal for Mezua and his tribe. Rural workers are migrating toward cities in search of jobs, and forests are re-emerging where now abandoned farms and cattle ranches once flourished, according to a 2009 report from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
Such "secondary" forests in the tropics can rapidly grow in areas once cleared for logging and cattle ranching if left alone, said Joseph Wright, senior scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. "After about 20 years (of being left alone) the forest will be about 60 feet tall," he said. Watch Mezua sing a traditional tribal song »
Deforestation and re-growth in Panama may reflect a snapshot of a bigger picture involving rainforests throughout Central America. With more than three-quarters of people across the region now living in urban centers, the United Nations expects rural farming and population growth -- the usual culprits behind deforestation -- to dwindle.