Webpages concerning "Americas [2]"
A 16-year-old boy charged with killing one schoolmate and injuring another a week after the Columbine school killings in the United States appeared at a court hearing Monday on whether he'll be tried as an adult.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/28/canada.schoolshooting.ap/index.html
A smoldering dispute over native fishing rights in eastern Canada has reignited, with government agents seizing hundreds of illegal lobster traps and natives blockading a road in protest.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/15/canada.lobsterdispute.ap/index.html
CHARLOTTETOWN, Prince Edward Island (AP) -- A protester pushed a paper plate full of whipped cream into the face of Prime Minister Jean Chretien on Wednesday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/16/canada.piedprimeminis.ap/index.html
Thousands of people who sued the Canadian Red Cross over a tainted blood scandal that left more than 11,000 infected with HIV or Hepatitis C will vote on whether to accept a $53 million compensation package.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/04/canada.taintedblood.ap/index.html
Backed by war ships, Canadian troops dropped from a helicopter and seized control of a U.S.-owned vessel off its Atlantic coast Thursday, after the ship refused to deliver its cargo of Canadian military supplies because of a monthlong contract dispute.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/03/canada.ship.ap/index.html
President Fidel Castro celebrated the communist revolution he began more than 40 years ago by offering his analysis Saturday of the American presidential race, saying both George W. Bush and Al Gore are
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/05/cuba.castro.ap/index.html
Guatemalan President Alfonso Portillo urged Central American coffee producers on Monday to arrive at a joint policy to push up global coffee prices by staggering exports over the year instead of holding back exports.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/21/coffee.prices.reut/index.html
Making a controversial push for unity among OPEC members, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez departs Sunday on a 10-day trip to meet with leaders of the petroleum-exporting countries.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/05/venezuela.chavezopec.ap/index.html
President Hugo Chavez took off Sunday for a tour of OPEC nations that will include the first visit by a foreign head of state to Iraq since the 1991 Gulf War.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/06/venezuela.chavez.iraq.ap/index.html
A retired air force colonel has charged that more than 500 political dissidents missing since the early 1970s were slain by Chilean security forces, their bodies weighted down and tossed into the sea.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/09/chile.pinochet/index.html
A Chilean judge investigating lawsuits against Augusto Pinochet said Friday that he would announce next week when he planned to interrogate the former dictator about his alleged involvement in human right abuses.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/18/pinochet.chile.judge.reut/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/03/colombia.strike/index.html
President Bill Clinton on Tuesday paved the way for the release of a record $1.3 billion in aid to help Colombia fight drug trafficking, certifying that the Latin American country has met certain human rights requirements and waiving others it has not met.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/23/colombia.usa.reut/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/30/clinton.colombia/index.html
President Bill Clinton, on the eve of a trip to Colombia, tried on Tuesday to soothe any concerns among Colombians that a $1.3 billion anti-drug plan marked growing U.S. intervention in that country.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/30/colombia.clinton.06/index.html
President Bill Clinton on Tuesday paved the way for the release of a record $1.3 billion in aid to help Colombia fight drug trafficking, certifying that the Latin American country has met certain human rights requirements and waiving others it has not met.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/23/colombia.aid/index.html
U.S. President Bill Clinton will make a brief trip to Colombia later this month to promote U.S.-backed drug-fighting efforts there, the White House said Friday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/04/us.colombia.ap/index.html
One month after promising $1.3 billion to help Colombia in its war on drugs, President Bill Clinton announced on Friday he will travel there to lend his support to Bogota's efforts to crack down on drug production.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/04/clinton.colombia.reut/index.html
President Bill Clinton, on the eve of a trip to Colombia, tried on Tuesday to soothe any concerns among Colombians that a $1.3 billion anti-drug plan marked growing U.S. intervention in that country.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/29/colombia.usa.reut/index.html
A car bomb in Bogota at the weekend highlighted why U.S. President Bill Clinton will not come to the capital on a visit to war-torn Colombia this month but instead stay in a coastal resort further from security threats posed by Marxist rebels and narco-traffickers.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/14/colombia.usa.clinton.reut/index.html
Colombia's most-feared death squad leader has alleged that U.S. anti-narcotics agents sought to enlist his outlaw paramilitary gang to combat drug traffickers, raising fresh fears of U.S. covert operations in this war-torn Andean nation.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/10/colombia.paramilitary.reut/index.html
Colombia's armed forces chief, Gen. Fernando Tapias, said a U.S.-backed intensification of its war on drug traffickers and rebels marked
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/21/colombia.usa.drugwar.reut/index.html
In a pre-dawn strike Monday, Colombian soldiers rescued another kidnapping victim held by leftist rebels south of the capital Bogota.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/14/colombia.kidnapping.ap/index.html
Only days ago, the Colombian army was basking in praise after soldiers rescued hostages held by guerrillas. Now, the army is trying to explain the deaths of six children allegedly gunned down by its troops.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/18/colombia.triumphtotra.ap/index.html
Standing behind a wall of sandbags amid the rubble of a blown-up police station, officer Jose Borney Trujillo nervously surveys the forested mountains where leftist rebels roam virtually unimpeded.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/05/cops.undersiege.ap/index.html
Colombia's most-feared death squad leader has alleged that U.S. anti-narcotics agents sought to enlist his outlaw paramilitary gang to combat drug traffickers, raising fresh fears of U.S. covert operations in this war-torn Andean nation.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/10/colombia.paramilitary.02/index.html
Defense Minister Luis Fernando Ramirez appealed to Colombians Saturday to report rebel troop movements amid intelligence reports that show the guerrillas are preparing for an offensive.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/05/colombia.military.ap/index.html
Human rights officials on Wednesday denounced U.S. President Bill Clinton's release of 1.3 billion dollars in mostly military aid despite his own government's negative appraisal of human rights in Colombia.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/23/colombia.us.human.rights.ap/index.html
The bodies of three policemen who had been taken prisoner by Marxist rebels 18 months ago were found with their throats slit and dumped in a mountain region of northeast Colombia, police said on Thursday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/17/colombia.violence.reut/index.html
President Bill Clinton, on the eve of a trip to Colombia, tried on Tuesday to soothe any concerns among Colombians that a $1.3 billion anti-drug plan marked growing U.S. intervention in that country.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/30/clinton.colombia.03/index.html
Colombian rebels have adopted the tactic of hurling hundreds of combatants against small police outposts in remote areas and apparently taking no prisoners.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/01/colombia.rebels.ap/index.html
Their fuselages flashing in the sun, two airplanes lazily circled over fields of coca, ready to dump a load of herbicides onto the robust, green bushes used to make cocaine. Rebels waited below.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/29/colombia.gunningforcoca.ap/index.html
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/07/colombia.violence/index.html
Drug dealers say they will begin assassinating Colombian leaders and supreme court judges until the government reverses its decision to allow a notorious drug kingpin to be extradited to the United States.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/17/colombia.threats.ap/index.html
Colombia's most militant unions Wednesday called a last minute 24-hour strike by an estimated 700,000 state workers to protest against government austerity measures and the highest unemployment rate in Latin America.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/02/colombia.strike.reut/index.html
Colombian rebels are using forced labor to build a drug-smuggling corridor that furrows right through protected Amazon rainforests, a government official said Friday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/04/colombia.guerrillas.ap/index.html
Colombian authorities have rounded up some 300 street children and beggars in the Caribbean coastal resort of Cartagena and banished them to its outskirts ahead of U.S. President Bill Clinton's visit next week, local media said on Monday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/21/colombia.usa.clinton.reut/index.html
U.S. and Colombian authorities seized three metric tons of cocaine, with a wholesale value of up to $108 million, from a ship sailing in international waters near the coast of Mexico, the head of Colombia's Navy said Tuesday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/22/crime.colombia.drugs.reut/index.html
One-month-old conjoined twin girls have died in a Santo Domingo hospital where doctors were unable to perform the surgery to separate them or find a U.S. hospital that would do the procedure.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/10/dominican.conjoined.ap/index.html
A spate of scandals rocking Puerto Rico has prompted a U.S. government crackdown and calls for accountability from the most populous U.S. territory, which gets $13 billion a year in federal aid.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/07/puertorico.scandals.ap/index.html
Chile's Supreme Court on Tuesday failed to agree on whether to strip Gen. Augusto Pinochet of his immunity to allow him to stand trial on human rights charges.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/01/chile.pinochet.02.ap/index.html
A retired air force colonel has charged that more than 500 political dissidents missing since the early 1970s were slain by Chilean security forces, their bodies weighted down and tossed into the sea.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/07/chile.pinochet/index.html
Cuba accused the United States on Wednesday of attempting to manipulate immigration issues for political gain during the American presidential campaign and rejected a U.S. protest over cases in which Cubans with U.S. visas were prohibited from leaving the island.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/30/cuba.us.ap/index.html
Cuba blamed
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/18/cuba.usa.immigration.reut/index.html
Three Swedish journalists who met dissident journalists in Cuba were in detention on the communist-ruled island for a second day on Wednesday, apparently on charges of not having reporting visas.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/30/cuba.sweden.journalists.reut/index.html
For weeks, Cuba's state-run media have given Cubans a rare and close-up look at America's presidential campaign, calling the two major parties
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/21/cuba.uselections.ap/index.html
The United States has denied a visa to the president of Cuba's National Assembly, preventing him from attending an international conference of parliamentarians in New York, two U.S. officials said Tuesday.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/29/us.cuba.ap/index.html
Cuba accused the United States on Wednesday of attempting to manipulate immigration issues for political gain during the American presidential campaign and rejected a U.S. protest over cases in which Cubans with U.S. visas were prohibited from leaving the island.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/31/cuba.migration/index.html
One month after promising $1.3 billion to help Colombia in its war on drugs, President Bill Clinton announced on Friday he will travel there to lend his support to Bogota's efforts to crack down on drug production.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/04/castro.olympics/index.html
Cuba on Thursday will deport three Swedish journalists who met with dissident reporters and were then detained on the communist-run island for two days for
not having the correct visas, the Swedish Embassy said.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/WORLD/americas/08/31/cuba.sweden.journalists.reut/index.html
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Wikipedia-Article "Americas [2]"
World map showing America
CIA map of the Americas (as it is now known in English)
The Americas commonly refers to the landmass in the Western Hemisphere consisting of the continents of North America and South America with their associated islands.
The term is a relatively recent and less ambiguous alternative to the term America, which may refer to either the entire landmass or the United States of America. The former, and original, usage is now often considered archaic in English-speaking nations but still in use in other areas, in which the Americas is often described as a single continent or supercontinent, and therefore called America (singular). When used to describe a single landmass, an analogous term to America or (the) Americas is Eurasia, which consists of Europe and Asia collectively.
Peoples of the Americas
Names
Main article: Use of the word American
Many people living in the Americas refer to themselves as American; however, most of the English-speaking world (including Canada), use of the word refers solely to a citizen of the United States of America. This may be due, at least in part, to the fact that the phrase "United States" does not easily translate into an adjective or descriptive noun in English. While Spanish-speaking Latin America uses the word estadounidence (literally, "of the united states"), calling someone a "United Stater" or other such name sounds highly awkward in English, thus leading to use of the word "American". Nevertheless, calling a U.S. citizen simply americano or americana in Spanish is considered offensive to citizens of Latin America.
Ethnology
The American population is made up of the descendents of three large ethnic groups and their combinations: the native inhabitants of the Americas, being "Indians" (or "Native Americans" or "Amerindians"), Eskimos, and Aleuts; Europeans (of mainly Spanish, British, Irish, Portuguese, French, Italian, German and Dutch, origin); and black Africans. There are also more recent immigrants, such as from the Balkan, Central Europe and Central and Eastern Asia.
The majority of the American people live in Latin America. Most of Latin America is Spanish-speaking, with Portuguese-speaking Brazil as the major exception. Canada and the United States are linguistically, culturally and economically quite different from Latin America, with the whites being more predominantly of North European ancestry. As part of the more prosperous northern world, the United States especially has long overshadowed and attempted to manipulate southern Latin America, most notably during the Cold War.
Languages
Various languages, both European and native, are spoken in America.
Primary:
Others:
Most of the non-native languages have, to different degrees, evolved differently from the mother country, but are usually still mutually intelligible. Some have combined though, which has even resulted in completely new languages, such as Papiamentu, which is a combination of Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch (representing the respective colonisers), native Arawak, various African languages and, more recently, English. Because of immigration, there are many communities where other languages are spoken from all parts of the world, especially in the United States and Canada, two important destinations for immigrants.
Naming of America
Map of America by Jonghe, c. 1770.
The earliest known use of the name America for the continents of the Americas dates from 1507. It appears on a globe and a large map created by the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller in Saint-Dié-des-Vosges. An accompanying book, Cosmographiae Introductio, explains that the name was derived from the Latinized version of the explorer Amerigo Vespucci's name, Americus Vespucius, in its feminine form, America, as the other continents all have Latin feminine names. However, as Dr. Basil Cottle (Author, Dictionary of Surnames, 1967) points out, new countries or continents are never named after a person's first name, always after their second name. Thus, America should really have become Vespucci Land or Vespuccia if the Italian explorer really gave his name to the newly discovered continent. Christopher Columbus, who had first brought the continents' existence to the attention of Renaissance era voyagers, had died in 1506 (believing, to the end, that he'd discovered and conquered part of India) and could not protest Waldseemüller's decision.
A few alternative theories regarding the continents' naming have been proposed, but none of them have any widespread acceptance. One alternative first proposed by a Bristol antiquary and naturalist, Alfred Hudd, was that America is derived from Richard Amerike, a merchant from Bristol, who is believed to have financed John Cabot's voyage of discovery from England to Newfoundland in 1497. Supposedly, Bristol fishermen had been visiting the coast of North America for at least a century before Columbus' voyage and Waldseemüller's maps are alleged to incorporate information from the early English journeys to North America. The theory holds that a variant of Amerike's name appeared on an early English map (of which however no copies survive) and that this was the true inspiration for Waldseemüller.
Another theory, first advanced by Jules Marcou in 1875 and later recounted by novelist Jan Carew, is that the name America derives from the district of Amerrique in Nicaragua. The gold-rich district of Amerrique was purportedly visited by both Vespucci and Columbus, for whom the name became synonymous with gold. According to Marcou, Vespucci later applied the name to the New World, and even changed the spelling of his own name from Alberigo to Amerigo to reflect the importance of the discovery.
Vespucci's role in the naming issue, like his exploratory activity, is unclear. Some sources say that he was unaware of the widespread use of his name to refer to the new landmass. Others hold that he promulgated a story that he had made a secret voyage westward and sighted land in 1491, a year before Columbus. If he did indeed make such claims, they backfired, and only served to prolong the ongoing debate on whether the "Indies" were really a new land, or just an extension of Asia.
See also
External links