RadioActive 3/1/07

Producers/hosts: Amy Browne and Meredith DeFrancesco

Topics:  A representative from Red de Defensores, a network of indigenous human rights workers from Zapatista communities in Chiapas, Mexico will be in the area on a speaking tour soon.  Manuel Mendez Guzman will talk about communities confronting globalization.  Today we talk with Nancy Hill, a local woman who has worked with the group and traveled to the area several times.  And the State Childrens Health Insurance program (SCHIP), which serves low-income children has come under threat due to budget cuts.  We talk with Anna Hicks, policy analyst at Maine Equal Justice Partners (www.mejp.org)

RadioActive 2/22/07

Producers/hosts: Meredith DeFrancesco and Amy Browne

Topics: Interview with Richard Paget and Abby McMillan, two local activists working on efforts to impeach Bush and Cheney (www.maineimpeach.org); and an interview with Zachary Heiden, Staff Attorney for the Maine Civil Liberties Union, regarding the Verizon case (www.mclu.org)

RadioActive 2/15/07

Producers/hosts: Amy Browne and Meredith DeFrancesco

Topic: Last week we introduced you to the staff at WERU’s Sister Station, Radio Sumpul, in Guarjila, Chalatenango, El Salvador.

Radio Sumpul is named for the Sumpul river, and in memory of the massacre that occurred there in 1980, in which more than 600 people were killed by the Salvadoran and Honduran armies as they attempted to flee the war by crossing the river to safety in Honduras. As the war raged on, through the 1980s and early 90s, many people decided to return to their communities. Radio Sumpul is coordinated by CCR, (Rural Communities of Chalatenango), a branch of CRIPDES (The Association of Rural Communities for the Development of El Salvador). CRIPDES was founded in 1984 by refugees of the war. They organized themselves and returned to their communities, even while the war was still raging on. Today the groups focus on organizing in their rural communities for social and economic justice.

Through the war, guerrilla RadioVenceremos and Farabundo Marti, often carrying their equipment on their backs as they evaded capture, provided an alternative to the government’s propaganda. With that legacy, the Radio Sumpul community has fought off the government’s attempts to shut them down and seize their equipment. We return today to the meeting that took place at Radio Sumpul, with representatives of sistering committees from WERU and MOFGA, Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association. We’ll have more information about sistering at the end of the program today. But now, back to the patio at Radio Sumpul. Jesse Dyer-Stewart translates as the staff of Radio Sumpul tell us about the strengths and challenges the station faces today:

RadioActive 2/8/07

Producer/host: Amy Browne and Meredith DeFrancesco

Topic: Radio Sumpul, WERU’s Sister Station in El Salvador. Staff introductions and a brief history, recorded at Radio Sumpul, January 2007 (Part 1 of 2. 2nd part will air on RadioActive next Thursday, February 15th, at 4 p.m.)

RadioActive 2/01/07

Producers/hosts: Meredith DeFrancesco and Amy Browne

Topic: An interview with Bonnie Preston, an area resident who recently returned from Venezuela, about the social and economic conditions she observed in that country.

RadioActive 1/11/07

Producers/hosts: Amy Browne and Meredith DeFrancesco

Topics: An interview with local activist Hillary Lister about the situation with incinerating “construction and demolition debris” and out of state waste in Maine, as well as an update from Hillary, and from attorney Phil Worden, about trends for sentencing activists who engage in civil disobedience in Maine.