Archive for the ‘Today’ Category.

Peru’s girls won 33 awards in prestigious international ballet contest

Lima, Nov. 22 (ANDINA).- Fourteen girls from the ballet school “Danzaria” showed to be very talented by winning 33 awards at the 14th International Ballet Contest that took place in the city of Córdoba (Argentina) in October.

Danzamerica is one of the most important dance festivals in this part of the continent. It gathers thousands of children and young people from all countries of Latin America.

In addition, this contest allows them to participate in the pre-selection for the Prix de Lausanne, competition that provides them the opportunity to further develop dance skills in Switzerland.

Peru won a gold medal, four of silver, 12 of bronze and eight special mentions. Also, gold and bronze trophies, five special mentions in contemporary dance, and one of the most important prizes of Danzamérica: Dedicación (Dedication), given to the teacher who stood out for the presented work.

The most outstanding participations were performed by Arianna Crosato, Maria Gabriela Gutierrez, Andrea Lora, Ariana Gamero, Arantxa Cordova, Jose Maria Hartley, Daniella Laurie, Camila Leon, Mariana Chirinos, Andrea Carrion, Andrea Leon, Daniella Andrade and Diana Mendoza.

(END) ONP/MCS/GCJ

Movistar Classic Mancora Peru Presented By Rip Curl Is ON

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Stop No. 6 of 8 on the 2008 ASP Women’s World Tour
Mancora, Piura Peru
Transworld Surf

MANCORA, Peru (Monday, November 3, 2008) – Round 1 of the Movistar Classic Mancora Peru presented by Rip Curl is scheduled to hit the water at 6:30am in clean two-to-three foot (1 metre) waves at Mancora in Northern Peru.

Event No. 6 of 8 on the 2008 ASP Women’s World Tour, the Movistar Classic Mancora Peru pres. by Rip Curl is expecting a full day of competition as event organizers and competitors take advantage of the swell on offer.

“The surf is clean this morning, but it appears that we’re dropping from the last few days so we’ll be getting Round 1 out there this morning as soon as possible,” Rich Porta, ASP Women’s World Tour Head Judge said. “We want to take advantage of the conditions on offer as much as we can and we’re expecting a full day of competition.”

The Movistar Classic Mancora Peru pres. by Rip Curl is a crucial stop in the hunt for the ASP Women’s World Title.

Sofia Mulanovich (PER), 25, former ASP Women’s World Champion, is the new frontrunner on this year’s ASP Women’s World Tour following a solid result at the last event in Sydney. Despite a foot injury, Mulanovich is confident that she will be able to perform in her home country and will face Rosanne Hodge (ZAF), 21, and Valeria Sole (PER), in her opening round heat.

Stephanie Gilmore (AUS), 20, reigning ASP Women’s World Champion and defending event champion, follows closely behind Mulanovich and will look make ground here in Mancora. Gilmore faces Megan Abubo (HAW), 30, and Anali Gomez (PER), in Round 1 of the Movistar Classic Mancora Peru pres. by Rip Curl.

Up first will be current ASP Women’s World No. 4 Amee Donohoe (AUS), 27, up against powerful goofy-footer Jessi Miley-Dyer (AUS), 22, and 2008 Dream Tour rookie Nicola Atherton (AUS), 22.

The Movistar Classic Mancora Peru pres. by Rip Curl will be webcast LIVE via http://www.beachbyte.com.br/eventos/mancora08/ beginning at 6:30am.

For more information, log onto www.aspworldtour.com

Movistar Classic Mancora Peru pres by Rip Curl Round 1 Match-Ups:
Heat 1: Amee Donohoe (AUS), Jessi Miley-Dyer (AUS), Nicola Atherton (AUS)
Heat 2: Silvana Lima (BRA), Rebecca Woods (AUS), Serena Brooke (AUS)
Heat 3: Sofia Mulanovich (PER), Rosanne Hodge (ZAF), Valeria Sole (PER)
Heat 4: Stephanie Gilmore (AUS), Megan Abubo (HAW), Anali Gomez (PER)
Heat 5: Layne Beachley (AUS), Julia De La Rosa Toro (PER), Laurina McGrath (AUS)
Heat 6: Samantha Cornish (AUS), Jacqueline Silva (BRA), Karina Petroni (USA)

Tags: Movistar Classic Mancora Peru

Peru hopes for record with 7.5 tonne pair of jeans

Fri Oct 31, 7:46 pm ET
Yahoo News

LIMA (Reuters) – Peruvian seamstresses hoping to snag a Guinness World Record for sewing the largest pair of blue jeans celebrated on Friday, one day after cranes buckled while trying to lift the giant 7.5-tonne pants.

Workers laid the pair on the ground and put big balloons inside the legs to show off the size of the jeans, which are 141 feet (43 m) tall and 98 feet (30 m) wide.

They have pockets, red buttons and a brown belt.

On Thursday, disillusioned crane operators gave up trying to lift the pants with three machines and went looking for a fourth. They wanted to lift the pants to display them. On Friday, workers had to scrap the idea of hoisting the jeans altogether.

The Colombian city of Medellin currently holds the record for the world’s largest pair of jeans, which is measured by size, according to the clothing company that organized the event in San Juan de Lurigancho, a district full of textile plants east of the Peru’s capital, Lima.

The Colombian pair were 114 feet (35 m) tall by 82 feet (25 m) wide. Representatives from Guinness were not present to see the Peruvian-made jeans, but a notary who can send documentation to the group was.

The company’s chief executive said material from the pants will be cut to make backpacks for area school children.

(Reporting by Mariana Bazo; Writing by Dana Ford; Editing by Terry Wade and Eric Beech)

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Russia communists call Ukrainian Bond girl a traitor

Associated Press
Oct. 31, 2008, 4:05PM

Houston Chronicle

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — First it was Indiana Jones. Now it’s James Bond’s latest lady friend.

The Communist Party in St. Petersburg says Olga Kurylenko, the Ukrainian-born model who plays a Bolivian agent in the latest Bond film, Quantum of Solace, has betrayed her roots.

“In the name of all communists we appeal to you, prodigal daughter of poor Ukraine and deserter of Slavic world,” the party said in an open letter dated Oct. 21 and posted on their Web site Friday.

The Soviet Union “gave you free education, free medical care but nobody knew you would commit an act of intellectual and moral betrayal that you would become a movie kept girl of Bond, who in his movies kills hundreds of Soviet people and citizens of other socialist countries: Cubans, Vietnamese, North Koreans, Chinese and Nicaraguans,” the party said.

Sergei Malenkovich, head of the party’s regional organization, told the Associated Press that latest Bond movie is “an insult for Russians”

“In this movie they wanted to show that a Ukrainian girl sleeps with an American. It’s a part of information and psychological war,” he said.

In fact, Kurylenko does not have sex with Daniel Craig’s Bond — unlike nearly all other leading ladies in the Bond films — only exchanging a kiss toward the end of the film. And Bond is actually a British secret agent.

The vitriol from the St. Petersburg communists — an independent party not formally affiliated with the national Communist party — is the latest to be directed at a Western film.

The party took great umbrage at Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, which features an evil KGB agent played by Cate Blanchett, saying the film undermined communist ideology and distorted history.

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Hung jury in Venezuelan suitcase trial?

Posted on Wednesday, 10.29.08

BY JAY WEAVER
jweaver@MiamiHerald.com

Miami Herald

A Miami jury said Wednesday it could not agree on a verdict in the federal trial of a businessman accused of working as an illegal agent for Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez in a conspiracy to silence a political scandal over a cash-filled suitcase.

”We cannot reach a unanimous verdict,” the 12-member federal jury said in a note read by U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard. No other explanation was given.

Prosecutor Thomas Mulvihill urged the judge to ask the jury to continue deliberations, noting the trial lasted almost two months and the panel has been deliberating for four days. Attorney Ed Shohat, representing defendant Franklin Durán, said he wanted to discuss with his client whether to ask the judge for a mistrial or to request that jurors continue to decide his fate.

The deliberations first got underway on Friday afternoon in the closely watched trial dubbed “Suitcase-gate.”

During much of the trial, Durán listened impassively as the prosecution argued he was at the center of an attempt to hide the origins and destination of the cash that was discovered last year in an Argentine airport — money that prosecutors allege was a gift from the Venezuelan government to the campaign of Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.

Durán is charged with conspiracy and acting as an unregistered government agent. He faces up to 15 years in prison if he is convicted.

Durán’s business partner, Carlos Kauffmann — who already pleaded guilty to playing a role in the alleged conspiracy — testified during the trial that the pair’s multimillion-dollar business deals in Venezuela were built on an extensive network of bribes to government officials.

He told jurors that the partners expected to obtain more lucrative contracts in exchange for coming to South Florida to hush up a business associate who was stopped with the suitcase filled with $800,000 in alleged campaign cash in Argentina last year.

Durán, 40, would receive ”big time favors” for his cooperation, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Shipley told the 12-member jury during his closing arguments.

Shohat said that Durán had personal motivations for attempting to end the scandal, chief among them a desire to help his friend, Guido Alejandro Antonini Wilson, the Key Biscayne resident who was stopped at a Buenos Aires airport in August 2007 with the cash-filled suitcase.

Antonini was traveling with a group of Argentine and Venezuelan officials — including state oil company executives — at the time and said in the trial that he had been carrying the suitcase as a courtesy for another passenger.

”Everything [Durán] did, he did for himself, for Kauffmann, and . . . for his best friend in the world, Alejandro Antonini,” Shohat said. “He was not acting as a government agent.”

Shohat said Durán was entrapped by Antonini.

The investigation that led to Durán’s arrest came after Antonini returned to Miami in the days after the cash was discovered. He went to the FBI and agreed to wear a wire.

Durán, Kauffmann and two other men — Moises Maionica and Rodolfo Wanseele Paciello — were later arrested, and all but Durán pleaded guilty and cooperated with the prosecution. A fifth man, José Canchica Gómez, was charged in the case and is still at large.

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Chef Acurio brings Peru’s food boom to the poor

Tue Sep 30, 2008 4:56pm BST

By Maria Luisa Palomino

PACHACUTEC, Peru (Reuters Life!) - In a tucked away neighborhood in a dirt poor part north of Lima, Peru’s capital, a school started by an elite chef is training students from humble backgrounds in the skilled art of Peruvian cuisine.

Like its economy, Peru’s culinary community is exploding, and chef Gaston Acurio says people from all walks of life should have a chance to take part.

“On the one hand, we have a booming food culture … and on the other hand, we have youth without opportunity. The school is meant to bring the two hands together,” said Acurio, who runs the school and dozens of successful restaurants all over the world.

Though trained in Spain and France, Acurio is best known inside Peru for combining classic European techniques with typical ingredients in the Andean country, and for telling Peruvians their cuisine is world-class. Plates in his restaurants reflect the country’s desert coast, frigid mountains and sweltering jungle, while appealing to people with different size wallets.

Students at the cooking school in Pachacutec are encouraged to experiment while being taught to make the classics.

“For us, it is the best school in Peru. The cooks that will graduate from here already have contracts with the best restaurants. They are fighting over students,” Acurio told Reuters at a food festival in Lima this week.

His top-end flagship restaurant is Astrid y Gaston, now with branches in Lima, Santiago, Caracas, Bogota, Quito and Madrid. Acurio has two middle-range chains, Tanta, an urban classic, and La Mar, a ceviche restaurant with kitchens in Lima, Mexico City, Santiago and soon, in San Francisco. And he has a fast-food chain called Pasquale Hermanos, which serves criollo dishes like fried pork skin on bread.

Students at the school pay roughly 60 soles ($20.20) a month to attend classes taught by some of the country’s most prominent chefs. Private companies also make contributions and students, like Cesar Raul Toribio, help clean to cut costs.

Toribio lives near the school and pays for his classes by hopping on public buses to play music and ask for donations.

He spoke as his teacher poured over the texture of his causa — a typical Peruvian dish made from mashed potatoes, aji pepper, lime, vegetables and fish.

“My idea is to work five years at a good restaurant where I can learn and gain enough experience to be able to open my own place,” Toribio said.

($1=2.99)

(Writing by Dana Ford; Editing by Terry Wade and Patricia Reaney)

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Russia repels Cartoon Invasion

26/09/2008 | Moscow News №38 2008

The Moscow News Weekly

The television channel “2×2,” which airs many popular Western cartoons, such as South Park and The Simpsons, may lose its license following accusations of “extremist” content of some of the series it has been broadcasting. Meanwhile, youths in Moscow and St.Petersburg are staging rallies in support of their favorite channel.

In early September, a Moscow prosecutor’s office sent an address to court, demanding that the content of South Park be ruled “extremist” and issued a warning to the channel, referring to experts’ evaluation of 12 cartoon series aired by the channel as “promoting violence and pornography.” The prosecutor’s office ruled that South Park “disgraces Christians and Muslims and is offensive to all believers regardless of their religion, can provoke an ethnic conflict and extremist activities and instigate violence between adherents of different religions.” A second warning of this kind would lead to revoking the channel’s license, which is already set to formally expire in mid-October.

Meanwhile, the channel shrugs off the accusations. “We haven’t violated any law,” said Maria Telesheva, the channel’s spokesperson. “We air adult content after 11pm, but there isn’t anything really graphic - there couldn’t possibly be anything graphic in an animation film.” Telesheva stressed that 2×2 never positioned itself as a children’s channel, nor did it register itself as such. “Our target audience is 14 years old and older, although we do air some animated series for family viewing in the daytime,” she said.

The recent campaign against 2×2 has been spearheaded by the Russian Union of Christians of Evangelical Faith, which said in an address quoted by Gazeta.ru that the channel helps to develop “an unequivocally deficient personality inclined to violence, debauchery and immoral actions.”

Gazeta.ru quoted Konstantin Bendas, a top official of the religious group and a member of the State Duma’s expert council on public and religious associations, as saying that the management of 2×2 should “go to prison and for a long time.”

Meanwhile, observers say that the campaign could actually be masterminded by someone who is after the channel’s air frequency. An ad campaign that 2×2 has been running promotes such an argument.

2×2 was launched in April 2007 with plans to expand across the country by October 2008. But within the first year of its operation, the channel got bogged down in trouble with official agencies. In March 2008, Rossvyazokhrankultura, the governmental agency that has the power to withdraw TV channels’ licenses, issued a warning to the channel. It accused the animated series, “The Adventures of Big Jeff” and “Happy Tree Friends” of “propagating violence, doing harm to children’s physical and mental health, as well as infringing on public morals.” Back then, the channel backed down and took the “offensive” series off the air.

Responding to the recent accusations, 2×2 suspended the airing of 12 animated series last week. In addition to South Park, the channel took off the air The Simpsons, The Griffins, and Lenore, the Cute Little Dead Girl. “The channel disagrees with the experts’ decision [on the extremist content of “South Park”] but until the situation is solved, these animated series won’t be broadcasted,” 2×2 said in a press release.

Meanwhile, the channel encouraged its viewers to openly express its support, which some did. On Sunday, several hundred youths gathered to voice support for their favorite channel in downtown Moscow and St. Petersburg. On Monday, Moscow police detained one of the organizers of a youth rally in support of the channel near Novoslobodskaya metro station, RIA Novosti reported, quoting a police source as saying that the detention was due to the fact the number of participants was several times higher than indicated in the application for permission to hold a gathering.

On the same day, police dispersed about two thousand youths who showed up for a concert in support of the channel at Moscow’s club “Plan B,’ Gazeta.ru reported. The management of the club called the police after more people than expected had shown up, realizing they couldn’t handle such a huge crowd.

By Vladimir Kozlov

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Peru’s first ‘visionary’ editor

BBC News

Doris Gibson, who 58 years ago founded Peru’s leading news magazine, has died at the age of 98. Her strength of character and determination helped the magazine withstand military dictatorships and repressive governments, as Dan Collyns reports.

Caretas magazine is famous for its mocking of the authorities

She began with 10,000 soles (£2,066), which her uncle had given her, and a typewriter in a single room.

The magazine was going to be called Caras y Caretas - faces and masks - but as Peru was under a military dictatorship at the time they decided to call it just Caretas to symbolise the repression they were living under.

They planned to revert to the original title after the dictatorship but it never happened.

Soon afterwards, the magazine was shut down for the first time. It was to be the first of eight closures, most of them during another military dictatorship in the 1970s of General Juan Velasco.

“She would be very creative in how she overcame the closures,” says her granddaughter Diana. “With her everything was possible.”

Genteel poverty

She was born in Lima, by accident, in 1910.

In those days, people travelled by boat between the capital and Arequipa, Peru’s upmarket second city nestled in the Andes to the south.

Her mother was aboard ship and about to head home to Arequipa when her waters broke and she had to go ashore to give birth.

She was the daughter of Percy Gibson, a poet who rebelled from his wealthy merchant family of British descent to live a literary life.

Doris’ younger sister Charo says he never worked a day in his life and she and her many sisters grew up in genteel poverty.

Bohemian life

At a young age Doris married an Argentine diplomat, Manlio Zileri, and bore an only son, Enrique, who went on to become the longest-standing editor of Caretas, earning a reputation as Peru’s best journalist.

Doris' son described her as an instinctive fighter

Just a few years later she was granted one of staunchly-Catholic Peru’s first divorces and she began an intensely bohemian life surrounding herself with artists, intellectuals and politicians.

Doris was a very beautiful young woman and famous for her long, shapely legs. She had a relationship with the artist Servulo Gutierrez to whom she was both a lover and a muse.

He famously painted a life-size nude portrait of her which - following an argument - he sold to a wealthy businessman.

She was independent at a time when women were dependent on their husbands

Her granddaughter Diana says she went to the man’s house with a photographer from the magazine.

They said they needed to photograph the painting in the sunlight, so they put it outside on the car and promptly drove away with it.

“I don’t want to be nude in your house,” she told the man when he called to ask for it back.

Defiance

Despite her upper-class background her friends say she had an old-world warmth for all the people she knew from the shopkeeper down the road to her domestic servants.

Having money, or not, was a question of luck, she was fond of saying.

Her warmth was also volcanic, says her son Enrique, like the famous Misti volcano which overlooks her home town of Arequipa. Their arguments were legendary.

But she also aimed that fire at successive repressive governments which tried to silence the most important political magazine in Peru.

She confronted soldiers when they raided the office and had photographers poised to record the break-ins.

“Mala hierba nunca muere” - Bad weeds never die - exclaimed the leaflets she had scattered throughout Lima as if freedom of speech would grow up through the cracks in the pavement.

Caretas could not be silenced.

Doris' determination helped Caretas withstand Peru's military regimes

The magazine is famous for its front covers. Always visually audacious, ironic and mocking authority.

When Alberto Fujimori’s birthplace - and thus eligibility to be president - was called into question in 1997, his head was superimposed on the rising sun of the Japanese flag with the words: Once again: Where was he born?

“She was instinctively a fighter,” says her son Enrique, “and a natural businesswoman.”

Visionary

For years she lived on the eighth floor in the same building as the magazine. It survived for all its years due to her intense presence which inspired fierce loyalty in her journalists.

She was independent at a time when women were dependent on their husbands.

A feminist before the movement had begun, and according to many, a visionary who influenced the course of Peru’s recent history through the brave and defiant reporting of the magazine she created.

For some time we shared the top floor of a block of flats.

Her carer, Chela, invited me across the hall to meet her. The flat she shared with her younger sister Charo was like a museum. Full of copper pans, paintings and artefacts.

She had just celebrated her 97th birthday. Her cheeks were hollow and her eyes had sunken into her skull, but she looked straight at me.

She held my hand in her tight grip, pulling me forward slightly as she tried to utter some words. I told her who I was and Chela repeated what I had said at volume.

As I walked out of the room I saw a black and white photograph portrait of a beautiful, bright eyed young woman. She had dark flowing hair, porcelain skin and rosebud lips. It was Doris, aged 16.

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Marine Channels Near-Death Experience Into Helping Poor in Peru

Monday, August 25, 2008

By David Mac Dougall
Fox News

Marine Corps Staff Sergeant Todd Bowers knows the exact date and time an insurgent bullet embedded itself in his head: October 17, 2004 at 11:36 a.m.

At the time, Bowers was serving in Fallujah with a U.S. Marine Corps civil affairs unit. His job was to help Iraqi residents rebuild their lives — literally and figuratively — by repairing battle-damaged homes.

Then came the gunshot wound that changed his life.

USMC Staff Sgt Todd Bowers distributing books to school kids in Ayacucho.

“It’s funny. Everybody seems to think you’ll have an afterlife experience, your whole life will flash before your eyes,” reflected Bowers. “I initially thought my rifle had exploded because I couldn’t see out of my left eye and my safety glasses had blown off and my helmet had blown off.”

Aware that he no longer held onto his rifle, Staff Sgt. Bowers instead pulled out his 9mm side-arm, and crawled for cover.

“When I looked into the ground, I just saw blood pouring into the dirt and realized something had gone really, really wrong,” he said. “I was having difficulty seeing out of my eye and obviously losing a lot of blood.”

Bowers’ close call with death didn’t sink in at first. “It wasn’t until probably about five minutes later when I was getting patched up by the Corpsman that they realized the bullet had actually struck the side of my rifle and skimmed into my left temple. The rifle took the brunt of the blast, and that’s pretty much what saved my life.”

Even with a bullet lodged in his head, dangerously close to his brain, Bowers rescued some wounded Iraqi civilians who were caught in the crossfire of battle, and drove them to the emergency room himself.

“There was a 10-year-old boy who had been shot in the arm and the shoulder, and his father who had been shot in the stomach,” Bowers recalled. “We were able to pull the civilians out of their vehicle … get them initial treatment, and then I loaded them into the back of my Humvee, and drove back to the surgical center on Camp Fallujah.”

Now, almost four years later, Bowers is using his near-death experience to help others. This time, not in war-torn Iraq, but in Peru’s remote Ayacucho region, building schools, homes and medical clinics for rural communities.

• Click here to view photos.

Bowers is one of 1,000 Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force personnel taking part in Operation New Horizons — a humanitarian mission quite unlike previous deployments in war zones like Iraq and Afghanistan.

After months in combat, Bowers said that volunteering for a mission like New Horizons is like “chicken soup for soul” because it allows him to help people improve their lives as he continues to recover from his life altering experiences.

At this time of year, daytime temperatures in Ayacucho hover around the 80-degree mark and night time lows dip into the 40s.

The days are long and sunny, meaning conditions are perfect for more than three months of dawn-to-dusk construction projects — the schools and medical clinics sorely needed in a country where the average income is a little more than $2,000 per year. Among Ayacucho’s poor rural communities, incomes are much lower than that.

The saying goes, “if you build it, they will come,” and Operation New Horizons is proving that point, attracting many military volunteers from locations across America.

One contingent of Air Force civil engineering personnel — known as a “RED HORSE” team and headed up by Capt. Stacy Nimmo — is drawn from bases in Nevada and Montana.

Previously, Nimmo was deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan.

“There are a lot of differences between there and here, but the hearts and minds aspect of our work is the same,” she said.

One of her most memorable moments on the Peru deployment, she said, was when she visited a local orphanage.

“The orphanage was amazing — the kids were so grateful for everything we’ve done for them.”

Those sentiments are echoed by Marine Cpl. Kathleen Ruscio, who’s been part of a construction team drawn from units in Pennsylvania, Wyoming and Massachusetts.

“We love interacting with the locals that live around the job site and learning a little bit about their culture,” said Ruscio. “The country is beautiful and the people have been very thankful and welcoming. We enjoy being in a different country, helping those that are less fortunate.”

For Bowers, the differences between Iraq and Peru are even more striking.

“I would say the welcome we received in Iraq was different in that we were needed to sustain life there. A lot of humanitarian aid we conducted in Fallujah was providing food for people, immediate medical assistance and things along those lines. They were depending on our ability to be able to take care of them.”

By contrast, Bowers explains, the Peruvians’ needs are still basic but not necessarily as urgent. The people, who have peace in the country after a long and bloody guerrilla war with rebel groups like Sendero Luminoso and Tupak Amaru, now need education and improved health conditions. He hopes that facilities like the new schools, clinics and fresh drinking water provided by Operation New Horizons will help and make lasting improvements.

Bowers, who will end his deployment to Peru soon, plans to return to civilian life, but will continue as a Marine Corps Reservist, working with the veterans’ advocacy group “Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.”

Along with his fellow military comrades, Bowers said in Peru he leaves behind a quantitative improvement in the lives of thousands of below-the-poverty-line Peruvians, and improved relations between the U.S. Military and the Government of Peru.

As with all deployments, Bowers has learned some lessons in Peru — like don’t sweat the small stuff.

“There are a lot worse things in life to worry about than a traffic jam or your cell phone bill being overdue,” he mused.

The lessons they have taught him have helped him to appreciate what he has.

“When you realize there are a lot of people (dealing) with a lot harder time in life in a lot more difficult situations, but they can still persevere.” he said.

As for the lesson learned in Iraq Bowers joked, making light of his war wound. “I probably should have ducked, but I didn’t,” he said.

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Peru town rues taking name of former president’s wife

Mon Aug 25, 2008 8:13am EDT

By Terry Wade

SATOMI KATAOKA, Peru (Reuters Life!) - When a group of poor Peruvians named their desert town after Satomi Kataoka, the Japanese hotel magnate married to former President Alberto Fujimori, they thought it would bring good luck.

A child plays next to a billboard reading

But now they are in a jam. They think Kataoka, who lives in Japan and is nearly 20 years younger than 70-year-old Fujimori wants to divorce him — and it’s too late to change the name of their patch of sand.

“The name is in the public registry, in all of our land titles. We can’t change it now,” said Leonidas Yupanqui, 38, a painter. “She’s never given us a gift or paid us a visit. Now it looks like they are going to divorce.”

The town on the windy dunes 34 miles south of Lima has no sewage system or paved roads, and most houses are little more than makeshift huts with dirt floors.

Kataoka has not visited Fujimori since Chile extradited him to Peru last year to stand trial for human rights and corruption charges stemming from his 1990-2000 rule.

This month, she appeared to confirm suspicions in Peru that the marriage was political, telling media in Japan: “My relationship with Fujimori is like that of a father and daughter … The marriage was done to help him.”

Fujimori’s critics say he married Kataoka for her political connections. They wed in 2006 in an exchange of vows by mail while he was under house arrest in Chile, just as Japanese politicians moved to block Peru’s effort to extradite him.

Fujimori — who has dual Japanese-Peruvian nationality — fled to Japan in 2000 when his government collapsed. He went to Chile in 2005, seemingly to prepare a political comeback in Peru. He is now on trial for human rights charges.

His supporters tried to downplay Kataoka’s comments.

Fujimori’s daughter, Keiko, from his first marriage to Susana Higuchi, said Kataoka’s comments might have been poorly translated, but added: “Satomi Kataoka was there for my father during his toughest times, not now, but when he was in Japan.”

Residents say they are not supporters of Fujimori, even though the town’s birthday is on July 28 — which happens to be Peruvian independence day and the day he was born.

The nicest buildings, including a new cockfighting ring, are also painted white with touches of orange, the color of Fujimori’s party. But residents say it is all coincidental.

“People think we chose our name to get benefits from Fujimori’s party, but it’s not true. We’ll accept help from any politician,” said Yupanqui.

(Editing by Dana Ford and Belinda Goldsmith)

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