Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

China ya tiene su primer puerto en América Latina: ¿cuáles son los planes para la región?

Published

on


En una inversión que marca el camino de China en la región, Xi Jinping inauguró este jueves en Perú, donde está en ocasión de la cumbre de la APEC, el puerto de Chancay, una mega-base de cinco muelles con la intención de que sean 15. El proyecto demandó 1.300 millones de dólares, y su ampliación implicará un inversión final de 3.500 millones.

Junto a Dina Boluarte, Xi Jinping inauguró de manera virtual el mega-puerto de Chancay, al norte de Lima y el primero financiado por Beijing en Sudamérica, que promete potenciar el intercambio comercial entre ambos mercados.

Una vista aérea de las obras en el puerto de Chancay. Foto: Ernesto Benavides / AFP

Xi y su homóloga Dina Boluarte siguieron a través de una pantalla gigante la entrada en operaciones de la primera fase de la terminal marítima.

«Debemos trabajar juntos para construir, gestionar y operar bien el puerto de Chancay (…) haciendo contribuciones importantes para promover la conectividad entre la región de Sudamérica y China», destacó el líder chino.

“Además de ser un puerto de aguas profundas, también es el primer puerto inteligente y verde de Sudamérica», remarcó Xi.

Advertisement

La inauguración este jueves del mega-puerto pone en marcha el puerto más grande del Pacífico en Sudamérica, ubicado 78 kilómetros al norte de Lima.

La empresa china Cosco Shipping tiene el 60% de su propiedad, y el otro 40% la minera peruana Volcán.

El puerto entra en operación con cinco muelles, que han significado una inversión de 1.300 millones de dólares. El proyecto final es de 15 muelles y una inversión de más de 3.500 millones de dólares.

Para los buques más grandes del mundo

Será el único puerto en la región al que podrán llegar los buques más grandes del mundo. Su impacto en el incremento del intercambio comercial de China con Sudamérica y en el fortalecimiento de la influencia china en la región, ha despertado el recelo y preocupación de Estados Unidos.

La presidenta de Perú, Dina Boluarte, saluda al presidente de China, Xi Jinping, durante la inauguración del megapuerto. Foto: EFELa presidenta de Perú, Dina Boluarte, saluda al presidente de China, Xi Jinping, durante la inauguración del megapuerto. Foto: EFE

«Creemos que es esencial que los países de todo el hemisferio garanticen que las actividades económicas de la República Popular China respeten las leyes locales y protejan los derechos humanos y el medio ambiente», dijo a la prensa en Lima Brian Nichols, enviado de la Casa Blanca para América Latina.

El gobierno y los empresarios peruanos tienen gran expectativa en este puerto como un hub estratégico de la región en el intercambio comercial con Asia.

En el primer año de operaciones Chancay moverá un millón de contenedores, estima Cosco Shipping Ports, filial del gigante mundial del transporte marítimo China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO), la empresa estatal detrás del proyecto. Cosco Shipping Ports será su concesionario por 30 años.

Advertisement

«¿Qué va a ser de nosotros?»

Mientras tanto, hay cuestionamientos por su impacto ambiental y social. Se denuncia que afecta el ecosistema y el empleo de la mayoría de los cerca de 60 mil pobladores de Chancay, que viven de la pesca, la agricultura y el turismo a sus playas.

Hay cuestionamientos por el impacto ambiental y social del puerto. Foto: APHay cuestionamientos por el impacto ambiental y social del puerto. Foto: AP

«Lo que ha dejado hoy la construcción es un gran costo social, porque han sido dañadas playas históricas en el distrito, se ha afectado el medio ambiente con la cantidad de anfo que se ha detonado para traerse abajo cerros y también en la construcción del túnel», expresó a RFI Vladimir Cantoral, activista y presidente del Frente de Defensa de Chancay.

«Se han rajado más de 500 600 casas colindantes al proyecto han traído muchos problemas en las personas de tercera edad que muchos de ellos han sido conducidos a los hospitales por haberse subido su presión por los temblores que generaban diariamente por las explosiones», agregó.

«Lamentablemente, vemos un futuro gris porque no sabemos ciertamente qué va a hacer del distrito. ¿Qué va a ser de nosotros? Porque al final, como nosotros vemos lo que más necesita el proyecto son áreas muy grandes para desarrollarse y lo que tiene chancai son áreas muy pequeñas porque es un distrito bastante a costo en una franja de la zona costera y estamos bastante preocupados por eso», alertó.

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

Priest stabbed in the face during Mass as religion-based hate crime is on the rise worldwide

Published

on


Join Fox News for access to this content

You have reached your maximum number of articles. Log in or create an account FREE of charge to continue reading.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

Attacks against priests appear to be on the rise around the globe following the latest assault in which a priest in Singapore was stabbed in the face during a Mass on Saturday Nov. 9., marking at least the third attack of its kind this month.

Father Christopher Lee – parish priest of St. Joseph church in the west-central Singapore region of Bukit Timah – was attacked by Basnayake Keith Spencer with a knife while he was distributing Holy Communion, reported Catholic media outlet OSV News on Friday.

Spencer has reportedly been charged with the «offense of voluntarily causing grievous hurt by a dangerous weapon» and remanded by a court in Singapore for three weeks.

Advertisement

Priests attend a mass beatification of Antonio Gonzalez Alonso, Isidoro Fernandez Cordero, Genaro Fueyo Castanon y Segundo Alonso Gonzalez, known as the martyrs of Nembra, who were killed during the Spanish Civil War, at Oviedo’s Cathedral in Spain on Oct. 8, 2016. (REUTERS/Eloy Alonso)

US CATHOLIC CHURCH UNDER EXPLICIT ATTACK, ARCHBISHOP WARNS — BUT SAYS THERE’S HOPE

Lee was reported to have sustained a «laceration on his tongue,» along with a cut on his upper lip and on the corner of his mouth. He is said to be recovering from his injuries. 

The Father in Singapore was not the only priest to have been assaulted last Saturday, as a monastery in Spain’s Valencia region was also attacked by a middle-aged man who yelled out «I am Jesus Christ» during his ambush before he was subdued.

Three friars at the Monastery of Santo Espíritu del Monte in Gilet, Spain were injured in the attack after the unidentified man «wielding a blunt object, burst into the premises with a violent and provocative attitude,» according to a statement by the Immaculate Conception of the Franciscan Order, the community to which the monastery belongs, reported multiple reports.

Father Juan Antonio Llorente, 76 – one of three friars attacked in the incident – died two days later in a hospital after succumbing to his injuries on Monday. 

Nov. 9 was marred by one other attack on a priest in Poland, where Father Lech Lachowicz, 72, died due to extensive brain damage following an attack one-week prior.

Advertisement

An axe-wielding 27-year-old – whose identity remains unclear – attacked Lachowicz on Nov. 3 in his rectory during an alleged robbery attempt in a Szczytno parish in northeastern Poland.

The assailant has been taken into custody.

The series of attacks across the globe came roughly one month after a priest was brutally attacked inside his Philadelphia home located across the street from St. Maron’s Maronite Catholic Church, though he is reported to be recovering. 

CHICAGO JEWISH MOTHER SPEAKS OUT AGAINST RESPONSE TO ALLEGED HATE CRIME: ‘TERRORISM ON MY PROPERTY’

Hate crimes against not only Catholics, but Jews, Muslims and others, are growing across the globe, particularly in Europe and the U.S.

a Small sanctuary

Sanctuary of a small church with pews and pulpit. (iStock)

A report released Friday by the Organization for Security and Co-operation (OSCE) in Europe found that across 48 nations in Europe, there were over 4,480 incidents of hate crimes committed against Jews, more than 580 incidents targeting Christians and nearly 240 reported incidents against Muslims.

While anti-Christian and anti-Muslim incidents dropped from 2022 OSCE records, crimes against Jews grew by more than 20% from the previous year.

Advertisement

In the U.S., 2023 attacks against Catholics came in fourth behind targeted attacks against Sikhs, Muslims and Jews respectively – an increasing trend in recent years, though the assaults have skyrocketed following the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent war that has ensued in the Gaza Strip, which has since extended into Lebanon, and increasingly, Syria, Iraq and Iran. 

The FBI reported in September that there was a 3% decrease in overall hate crimes committed in the U.S. between 2023 and 2022, but according to its figures, there was also a 20% increase in the number of religiously motivated hate crimes committed over the last year.

More than 2,500 incidents of religion-based hate crimes were reported in the U.S. in 2023, a jump from the nearly 2,050 incidents reported the year prior. 

While more than half of the religion-based hate crimes in 2022 were driven by anti-Jewish bias, that percentage jumped in 2023 to account for some 67% of all religious hate crimes in the U.S.

Anti-Muslim hate crimes came in second with 236 attacks last year, which accounted for less than nine percent of all religion-based hate crimes that year, according to the FBI. 

Adas Torah synagogues in Los Angeles

An armed private security guard watches the front doors to the Adas Torah synagogue on Monday, June 24, 2024 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Attacks against Sikhs accounted for 5%, and attacks against Catholics accounted for nearly 3%. 

Advertisement

All attacks against Christians, as defined by Catholic, Protestant and «other Christians,» made up over 6% of religious hate crimes, accounting for 176 incidents reported in 2023.

The BBC in October reported a similar trend in Britain and Wales where there was a 5% decrease in overall hate crimes but a 25% increase in religion-based hate crimes.

Crimes against Jews more than doubled in 2023 where more than 3,280 incidents were reported, up from just over 1,540 incidents in 2022. Attacks against Muslims also grew by 13% in Britain and Wales.  


Continue Reading

LO MAS LEIDO

Tendencias

Copyright © 2024 - NDM Noticias del Momento - #Noticias #Chimentos #Politica #Fútbol #Economia #Sociedad