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Central America in the Wake of Hurricane Mitch


PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
May 3, 1999
Contact: Angélica Luévano
(512) 471-6178


Latino USA Airs Special Series "Central America in the
Wake of Hurricane Mitch"

AUSTIN, Texas — More than six months after Hurricane Mitch hit Central America with a fury that left more than 9,000 dead and destroyed a major part of the region’s infrastructure, Latino USA, the radio journal of news and culture, will broadcast a series of special reports looking at the human dynamics and complexities of the aftermath of Mitch.

The reports will air on approximately 175 public radio stations nationwide and will also be accessible through Latino USA’s web site. Please consult the web site for a schedule of broadcast times.

The series by Latino USA’s most experienced reporters will examine the hurricane’s effects on the political, economic, and social realities of Central America and their implications for the United States. The reports will begin the week of May 14 and will continue periodically through October, the one–year anniversary of what some call the worst natural disaster in the region’s history.

Hurricane Victim In the first report,
"The Street Children of Mitch," producer María Martin examines internal migration in Central America as it affects children. She reports how Mitch exacerbated the already growing problem of street children in Guatemala, while in Honduras, hundreds of homeless, orphaned children have gone north for a better life — only to find rejection, violence, and often, drugs and prostitution.

In another report, "Farming Honduras after the Storm," reporter Ingrid Lobet visited farmers near the Chiquito River. She reports that the hurricane has ruined many livelihoods and also revealed the long-term vulnerability of the nation’s soil and water.

In subsequent reports, "Hurricane Mitch and Broken Promises" will look at a town on Guatemalan’s Caribbean coast, where residents are still waiting for the help promised by politicians and the media. "When the Fish are Gone" examines the lives of subsistence fishermen, who have defended their sustenance for years from industrial shrimp farms. Now, in Mitch’s wake, their lagoons are polluted and void of fish.

Other topics to be covered include the hurricane’s impact on immigration to the United States, the challenge of rebuilding the economy of Central America, and the impact of the disaster on the democratization process and tourism in the region.

The series is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and distributed by National Public Radio. It was conceived as an effort to inform radio audiences about their neighbors in the hemisphere and the forces that are influencing migration north to the United States.

Celebrating its sixth year of award-winning programs, Latino USA is the only national English-language public radio program produced from a Latino perspective. It is a production partnership of the Center for Mexican American Studies and KUT-FM radio at the University of Texas at Austin. For more information, call executive director Kate Dearborn at (512) 475-6767, visit Latino USA’s web site, or call your local NPR station.




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