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...throughout the Caribbean basin, with its exploding population of nearly 200 million, but the price has been high. Each new hotel or factory takes away a bit of jungle, sometimes replacing valuable mangrove, whose matted roots provide shelter and sustenance for aquatic life. Says Puerto Rico's Arsenio Rodriguez Mercado, a scientific adviser to the U.N. Environment Program: "Sewage generated by 30 million people is dumped more or less untreated into the Caribbean." On some islands, hotels discharge wastes into the waters where guests swim. Adding to the mess are the cruise ships and yachts anchored offshore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Fighting Blight in Paradise | 4/4/1983 | See Source »

...their collections of picturesque coral and nourishing sea grasses, the Caribbean's shallow coastal waters are a rich breeding ground for sea life, ranging from shrimp, mollusks and crustaceans to numerous varieties of finfish. Any major disturbance of this fragile ecosystem could have far-reaching repercussions. Unfortunately, as Rodriguez Mercado notes, there is little awareness of the economic importance of these resources. Few officials seem willing to trade off the immediate payoff of a new hotel for the long-term benefits of a protected reef or thriving coastal estuary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Fighting Blight in Paradise | 4/4/1983 | See Source »

...reduce such losses in the future, but even the most sophisticated technologies have so far been little help against the growing threat of Caribbean oil spills. In addition, there is the danger of seepage from offshore fields along the coasts of the U.S., Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago and Mexico. Rodriguez Mercado points out that past experience suggests that 6.7% of total offshore oil production will spill into the sea because of such mishaps as blowouts, platform fires and other accidents. The world's largest oil spill, in fact, occurred in the Caribbean when a well being drilled by Pemex...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Fighting Blight in Paradise | 4/4/1983 | See Source »

...years, Amnesty International is investigating the "disappearances" of 250 prisoners of conscience. All political parties and activities are banned in Chile, and the government routinely makes arrests, banishes dissidents to remote areas of the country, holds people incommunicado for weeks, and worse. Justice is meager. One man, Guillermo Rodriguez Morales, was accused in 1981 of killing a government agent and sentenced to life imprisonment after a 45 minute trial...

Author: By Errol T. Louis, | Title: Fire and Brimstone | 3/15/1983 | See Source »

...Harvard's chapter of Amnesty International (A.I.) has its way this week. Dr. Marko Veselica and Juan Antonio Rodriguez Orlando-two "prisoners of conscience" massoon be released...

Author: By David B. Pollack, | Title: Rights Group Kicks Off 'Amnesty Week' | 2/15/1983 | See Source »

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