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  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    8:22pm, EDT

    US tourists swim for 14 hours after ship sinks off St. Lucia

    Courtesy of Dan Suski / AP

    This Nov. 2009 photo courtesy of Dan Suski shows Kate Suski, right, and her brother Dan while on vacation in San Diego, Ca. The brother and sister are recovering in the eastern Caribbean island of St. Lucia after their ship sank on April 21 during a fishing trip.

    By Danica Coto, The Associated Press

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The fishing trip off the rugged north coast of St. Lucia was supposed to last all day, but about four hours into the journey, the boat's electric system crackled and popped.

    Dan Suski, a 30-year-old business owner and information technology expert from San Francisco, had been wrestling a 200-pound marlin in rough seas with help from his sister, Kate Suski, a 39-year-old architect from Seattle. It was around noon April 21.

    He was still trying to reel in the fish when water rushed into the cabin and flooded the engine room, prompting the captain to radio for help as he yelled out their coordinates.

    It would be nearly 14 hours and a long, long swim before what was supposed to be a highlight of their sunny vacation would come to an end.

    As the waves pounded the boat they had chartered from the local company "Reel Irie," more water flooded in. The captain threw life preservers to the Suskis.

    "He said, 'Jump out! Jump out!'" Kate Suski recalled in a telephone interview Thursday with The Associated Press.

    The Suskis obeyed and jumped into the water with the captain and first mate. Less than five minutes later, the boat sank.

    The group was at least eight miles from shore, and waves more than twice their size tossed them.

    "The captain was telling us to stay together, and that help was on its way and that we needed to wait," Kate Suski said.

    The group waited for about an hour, but no one came.

    "I was saying, 'Let's swim, let's swim. If they're coming, they will find us. We can't just stay here,'" she recalled.

    As they began to swim, the Suskis lost sight of the captain and first mate amid the burgeoning swells. Soon after, they also lost sight of land amid the rain.

    "We would just see swells and gray," Dan Suski said.

    A plane and a helicopter appeared in the distance and hovered over the area, but no one spotted the siblings.

    Several hours went by, and the sun began to set.

    "There's this very real understanding that the situation is dire," Kate Suski said. "You come face-to-face with understanding your own mortality ... We both processed the possible ways we might die. Would we drown? Be eaten by a shark?"

    "Hypothermia?" Dan Suski asked.

    "Would our legs cramp up and make it impossible to swim?" the sister continued.

    They swam for 12 to 14 hours, talking as they pushed and shivered their way through the ocean. Dan Suski tried to ignore images of the movie "Open Water" that kept popping into his head and its story of a scuba-diving couple left behind by their group and attacked by sharks. His sister said she also couldn't stop thinking about sharks.

    "I thought I was going to vomit I was so scared," she said.

    When they finally came within 30 feet of land, they realized they couldn't get out of the water.

    "There were sheer cliffs coming into the ocean," she said. "We knew we would get crushed."

    Dan Suski thought they should try to reach the rocks anyway, but his sister disagreed.

    "We won't survive that," she told him.

    They swam until they noticed a spit of sand nearby. When they got to land, they collapsed, barely able to walk. It was past midnight, and they didn't notice any homes in the area.

    "Dan said the first priority was to stay warm," she recalled.

    They hiked inland and lay side by side, pulling up grass and brush to cover themselves and stay warm. Kate Suski had only her bikini on, having shed her sundress to swim better. Dan Suski had gotten rid of his shorts, having recalled a saying when he was a kid that "the best-dressed corpses wear cotton."

    They heard a stream nearby but decided to wait until daylight to determine whether the water was safe to drink.

    As the sun came up, they began to hike through thick brush, picking up bitter mangoes along the way and stopping to eat green bananas.

    "It was probably the best and worst banana I've ever had," Dan Suski recalled.

    Some three hours later, they spotted a young farm worker walking with his white dog. He fed them crackers, gave them water and waited until police arrived, the Suskis said.

    "We asked if he knew anything about the captain and mate," Kate Suski said. "He said he had seen the news the night before and they hadn't been found at that time. I think we felt a sense of tragedy that we weren't prepared for."

    The Suskis were hospitalized and received IV fluids, with doctors concerned they couldn't draw blood from Kate Suski's arm because she was so dehydrated. They also learned that the captain and mate were rescued after spending nearly 23 hours in the water, noting that their relatives called and took care of them after the ordeal.

    St. Lucia's tourism minister called it a miracle, and the island's maritime affairs unit is investigating exactly what caused the ship to sink. Marine Police Sgt. Finley Leonce said they have already interviewed the captain, and that police did not suspect foul play or any criminal activity in the sinking of the ship.

    A man who answered the phone Thursday at the "Reel Irie" company declined to comment except to say that he's grateful everyone is safe. He said both the captain and first mate were standing next to him but that they weren't ready to talk about the incident.

    The brother and sister said they don't blame anyone for the shipwreck.

    "We are so grateful to be alive right now," Kate Suski said. "Nothing can sort of puncture that bubble."

    Upon returning to their hotel in St. Lucia earlier this week, the Suskis were upgraded to a suite as they recover from cuts on their feet, severe tendonitis in their ankles from swimming and abrasions from the lifejackets.

    "It's really been amazing," Dan Suski said. "It's a moving experience for me."

    On Saturday, they plan to fly back to the U.S. to meet their father in Miami.

    Once a night owl, Kate Suski no longer minds getting up early for flights, or for any other reason.

    "Since this ordeal, I've been waking up at dawn every morning," she said. "I've never looked forward to the sunrise so much in my life."

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    110 comments

    "subbie", you are pervert. Glad to hear everyone survived and what an adventure they had!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, ocean, tourists, st-lucia
  • 24
    Dec
    2012
    2:22pm, EST

    Hero of Superstorm Sandy dies in surfing accident

    Courtesy of NBC News 4 New York

    Undated photo of Dylan Smith, who died off Puerto Rico.

    By The Associated Press

    The Belle Harbor section of the Rockaways in New York, where so many heroes emerged during Superstorm Sandy, has lost one of them to a tragic surfing death in Puerto Rico.

    Friends of 23-year-old Dylan Smith and his family expressed sorrow Monday that someone who saved so many lives during the October storm could lose his own on vacation. A local funeral parlor said funeral arrangements were being made. 

    The New York City lifeguard was widely praised after the storm for using his surfboard to move several Queens neighbors endangered by high water and a fire to safety. 

    Smith's body was found floating Sunday morning near his surfboard in waters off Maria's Beach in the western Puerto Rican community of Rincon. The town's beaches attract surfers from across the world. 

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    166 comments

    Wow. That's F'd up. Just goes to show you how fragile life is; and that there are no guarantees in life. We all think we're going to live for X number of years. The truth is we don't have tomorrow, just today.

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    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, hero, hurricane-sandy, surfing-accident
  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    7:20pm, EST

    The 'third border': Puerto Rico a backdoor into US mainland for drug cartels

    A vicious drug war has come to the island home of 4 million Americans, which is being used as a transshipment point to the East Coast. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    By Gabe Gutierrez, NBC News

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The raids begin before dawn. Fierce knocks followed by shouts of “Policía!” rattle neighborhoods while a helicopter hovers overhead.

    On this day in late September, heavily armed agents swarm otherwise peaceful-looking homes throughout the island.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In Toa Alta, outside of San Juan, one suspected drug trafficker surrenders without incident. Amazingly, no neighbors wander outside to see what’s going on. They must already know — or would prefer not to.

    By 8 a.m., 16 people are in handcuffs, facing charges that include drug trafficking and money laundering.


    The arrests are part of "Operation Overtime." U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations special agents, working with officers from the Puerto Rico Police Department and San Juan Police Department, launched the initiative to combat drug trafficking in the Caribbean.

    This is a war on American soil.

    The murder rate in Puerto Rico is higher than in any U.S. state — and it’s roughly six times the national average. The island — best known for its stunning beaches and rich history — is home to roughly 4 million American citizens.

    The island’s police superintendent, Hector Pesquera, told NBC News that more than two-thirds of the homicides are tied to the drug trade.

    Luis Romero Font, 60, and his wife Marie Jane Rodriguez, 57, know the pain that comes with the incessant violence. Their son, Julian, was murdered during a robbery in April 2011.

    He had just celebrated his 20th birthday.

    Luis Romero Font and Marie Jane Rodriguez remember their son, who was killed last year in San Juan. Puerto Rico's murder rate is now roughly six times the U.S. national average.

    "I try to focus my thoughts away from the negative, away from what I don’t have, and I try to remember what I did have,” his mother told NBC News. "That’s what sustains me."

    'A hero had died'
    Julian was stabbed to death as he walked down the street with his girlfriend. The robber cut him three times as Julian lunged to protect her.

    "A hero had died," his father said, choking back tears. "I am very proud of him. I am very saddened … [by] this huge weight I have to continue bearing."

    The teenager who killed Julian made off with his cell phone — a valuable tool that is often stolen for drug traffickers to communicate with each other.

    In memory of his son, Romero Font, a telecommunications company CEO, has become an activist, starting his own group called "¡Basta Ya!" meaning, "Enough is Enough!"

    "Puerto Rico cannot survive with this horrendous crime wave," he said.

    Violent crime has been a part of life on the island for decades — ever since the 1980s when Colombian cartels began to thrive here.

    But the last several years have seen a dramatic spike.

    According to the Puerto Rico Police Department, there were 1,016 murders in 2010. That number rose to 1,136 in 2011.

    Outgoing Gov. Luis Fortuno credits a police crackdown for reducing homicides in certain parts of the island by 22 percent so far this year. But he stresses it’s not enough.

    He told NBC News that he feels ignored by the federal government and that he’s "banging on Washington’s door" for more help.

    Federal agents and local police are cracking down on drug trafficking in Puerto Rico. NBC News speaks with an ICE agent and the island's recently appointed police superintendent, and tags along on a raid.

    "We are American citizens," Fortuno said. "And we deserve to be protected."

    Puerto Rico’s governor-elect, Alejandro Javier Garcia Padilla, was not immediately available for comment.

    Earlier this summer, federal agents arrested dozens of workers at Puerto Rico’s main airport who had allegedly helped smugglers move cocaine to the mainland.

    Drug seizures rising
    According to ICE, agents have seized 22,000 pounds of illegal drugs so far this year. That’s up from 13,961 pounds in 2011 and 9,275 in 2010.

    The street value of the recovered cocaine alone totals $250 million, ICE said.

    Since Puerto Rico is a U.S. territory, once illegal drugs reach the island, they’re unlikely to face further U.S. customs inspections on their way to the mainland.

    "I think the cartels are smart," said Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas. "They realize we're putting all of our efforts on the Southwest border (with Mexico) and we're not paying attention to the 'third border' — the Caribbean — so now they're exploiting that."

    In June, McCaul chaired a hearing on Capitol Hill that focused on the increased drug smuggling in Puerto Rico.

    "We have no strategy for the Caribbean," McCaul told NBC News. "There is no comprehensive plan."

    He said that hopefully would change quickly as Washington learns more about the problem. In July, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano visited the island and promised to study the issue, adding that an increase in aid to Mexico did not come at the expense of the Caribbean.

    A senior homeland security official told NBC News that since then, the department had conducted a comprehensive review of the situation in Puerto Rico and planned to focus on "quality over quantity."

    The official, who asked not to be identified, said any future manpower surge would likely be "modest" and the department’s priority would be to increase efficiency among the officers already on the ground as well as resources outside the island — instead of simply pouring more money into the operations.

    The increased cooperation would help prevent the flow of illegal weapons to the island as well as illegal drugs from the island, the official said.

    Police department 'broken'
    The drug-trafficking crackdown comes as Puerto Rican police fight to reclaim the trust of residents.

    The 17,000-member force is the second largest in the United States. In a report last year, the Justice Department accused officers of engaging "in a pattern and practice of misconduct that violates the Constitution and federal law."

    According to the DOJ’s findings, the department was "broken in a number of critical ways," including repeated instances of civil rights violations and illegal searches and seizures.

    In 2010, the FBI arrested dozens of law enforcement officers on the island for allegedly providing protection to drug dealers.

    Earlier this year, Hector Pesquera, the former head of the FBI's Miami division, was named superintendent of the Puerto Rico police. He told NBC News that weeding out corruption within his department has been a priority — and he’s seen progress.

    "We have streamlined our procedures to work on the internal affairs cases,” Pesquera said. "We're getting rid of the backlog that existed. The word out there is clear: 'If you commit a transgression, you're going to be terminated.'"

    For now, Pesquera said he and other Puerto Rican leaders are simply asking for a shift in federal resources. He said he realizes the difficult fiscal position the U.S. is in, but "we should not be begging for assistance."

    Luis Romero Font, the activist who lost his son, agrees. He’s pushing the U.S. government to help stop the violence.

    "When you lose a son, it’s like losing a huge part of yourself," he said. "Either [the U.S.] stops this now, or this crime wave will become something that infects Florida and the rest of the U.S. down the line."

    So away from the tourists, the raids continue. America’s "third border" — the place known as the "island of enchantment" — remains at war.

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    214 comments

    Puerto Rico is a hellhold away from the tourist areas and resorts. We should give them full independence and cut all welfare checks and investment. Let them have their full freedom.

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    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, drugs, murder, crime, homicide, san-juan
  • 4
    Oct
    2012
    10:19am, EDT

    Philadelphia cop caught on video hitting woman has been suspended

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    By Karen Araiza and Lauren DiSanto, NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey will take "Commissioner's Direct Action" against Lt. Jonathan Josey, the Philadelphia police officer who was caught on tape hitting a woman during a public event on Sunday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    That means that effective on Thursday, Lt. Josey will be suspended for 30 days with the intent to dismiss.

    Yong Kim / Philadelphia Daily News

    Aida Guzman's lower lip shows a wound she received during Sunday's Puerto Rican Day Parade.

    Josey was caught on video striking Aida Guzman during a traffic stop on Sunday.

    Guzman was part of a crowd gathered for festivities after the Puerto Rican Parade, and Josey was the commanding officer on the scene.


    Read the original report  |  More from NBCPhiladelphia

    The video shows Josey right after she sprayed silly string near the officer. Josey was with several other officers involved at the time in a traffic stop. He turns around and hits Guzman, who falls to the ground.

    Guzman was quickly handcuffed, led off with a bloody lip by other officers and later charged with disorderly conduct. Those charges were dropped on Wednesday, shortly before NBCPhiladelphia.com learned that Josey was being suspended and likely fired.

    Guzman's attorney, Enrique Latoison, says his client never asked for the lieutenant to be fired, but what she does want is an apology.

    "We want an apology, we want an official apology, a public apology, instead of a no-comment during this process," said Latoison.

    Related: Cell phone video sows cop striking woman after Philadelphia parade

    Jessica Griffin / Philadelphia Daily News

    Lt. Jonathan Josey in 2006, when he was a Daily News Sexy Single sergeant.

    Guzman and her attorney will meet with Internal Affairs on Thursday, which will be the first time she has talked to police.

    Lt. Josey is a 19-year veteran of the department, whose career highlights include a commendation for shooting a would-be robber who was trying to hold up a convenience store clerk in 2010. Josey was off-duty when he walked in on the robbery. Earlier that same year he was stabbed by two women while breaking up a bar fight between them and another off-duty officer. In 2006, Josey was selected as one of the Sexiest Singles by The New York Daily News.

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    102 comments

    Get rid of him.

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    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, pennsylvania, police, philadelphia, crime-courts
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    9:24am, EDT

    Cell phone video shows cop striking woman after Philadelphia parade

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    By Jackie Gailey, NBCPhiladelphia.com

    Police chiefs are investigating an incident, captured on cell phone video, in which a woman was struck by an officer at the Festival de las Americas after the city's Puerto Rican Day Parade.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The video shows several police officers at Sunday's festival amid a crowd of people. The woman, identified as Aida Guzman of Chester, Pa., is shown being hit by one of the officers and falls to the ground.

    For more visit NBCPhiladelphia.com.

    "You only see one vantage point, but what you do see is disturbing, I have to be honest about that," said Deputy Police Commissioner Richard Ross.

    The incident happened near 5th and Lehigh streets in North Philadelphia, after the parade on the parkway.  Parade organizers say they had nothing to do with the North Philadelphia event. Officials say Guzman was spraying silly string at officers involved in a traffic stop.

    "The guy was out there spinning wheels and burning up tires in the middle of the highway, which is not normal. And we're out there to make sure that stopped. As we're doing it, things are being thrown, liquids are being tossed, substances being sprayed from a can," says Fraternal Order of Police President John McNesby.

    Guzman was cited for disorderly conduct. Her face was bleeding as officers took her away. She told NBCPhiladelphia.com: "I feel angry, very angry. I go to someplace, got a good time and look this happen, for no reason."

    Philadelphia police confirm the officer involved in the incident is Lt. Jonathan Josey. Josey has been with the department for more than 17 years and is a decorated supervisor with the Highway Patrol. He is now on administrative duty.

    Internal Affairs is investigating the incident, according to police. The FOP says it will defend Josey "to the end." McNesby said people often throw things such as bleach and urine at officers, and urged people not to judge the incident based on the video alone.

    Lt. Josey has made headlines before. He was exonerated in the shooting death of a Philadelphia man shortly after the man robbed a convenience store in Lower Merion in March 2010.

    In July 2010, Lt. Josey was stabbed in the back while trying to break up a fight outside a West Philadelphia bar.

    The executive director of Concilio, which organizes the parade every year, called on police to fully investigate the incident.

    "While we have no knowledge of what led to the incident, it is clear from the video that a police officer unnecessarily and brutally struck a woman in the face," the statement read. "Even as we celebrate the tremendous advancements of Philadelphia’s Hispanic community over the decades, we cannot overlook this episode. We call on the Philadelphia Police Department to fully investigate and take appropriate action."

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    627 comments

    No fricken way was that ok to do he needs to be removed from the force. If that was my wife, daughter it would not have ended so pretty for him. If she did something wrong she needed to be arrested but his arrogant actions to smack her down he needs to be smacked down see how he likes it.

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    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, police, pa, philadelphia, cop, featured, crime-courts
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    4:36am, EDT

    Tropical Storm Isaac threatens Haiti, Dominican Republic

    Tampa, Fla., the site of the Republican National Convention, remains vulnerable in the event of a storm surge, bound by water to the south and west that could put much of the city under water. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

    By NBC News, Weather.com and wire reports

    Updated at 1:15 a.m. ET: Tropical Storm Isaac brought rain and gusty winds to Puerto Rico on Thursday as it passed south of the U.S. territory. It is forecast to remain a tropical storm after crossing into the Dominican Republic and Haiti and then passing over Cuba into the Florida Straits, the National Hurricane Center said.

    Forecasters said it was too soon to gauge Isaac's potential impact on Tampa on Florida's Gulf Coast, where the Republican National Convention is to run from Monday through Thursday.

    Related: Track Tropical Storm Isaac

    Some computer models showed Isaac shifting slightly to the west and eventually moving parallel to Florida's western coastline. Others forecast the storm to make landfall in South Florida and then move inland.


    Isaac was centered late Thursday evening about 145 miles southwest of the Dominican Republic's capital of Santo Domingo, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm had top sustained winds of 45 miles per hour.

    The storm is expected to dump between 8 and 12 inches of rain over parts of Hispaniola, with total accumulations up to 20 inches in some areas, the Hurricane Center said.

    The Bahamas issued tropical storm warnings for its southeastern areas; Cuba issued tropical storm warnings for several provinces, including Guantanamo.

    The largest threat was the potential for extremely heavy rainfall over the islands near Isaac's path, weather.com reported.

    The Red Cross was ready in Haiti to help evacuate people to shelters and camps but was in a "wait and see" mode, Jerry Anderson, senior director of international services, told NBC News.  

    Residents and visitors of the northern Caribbean, Yucatan Peninsula, southeastern United States and the central/eastern Gulf Coast should watch the progress of Isaac closely over the next week or more, weather.com reported.

    With nearly 400,000 people still living in evacuation tents, a hurricane or even a tropical storm could lead to deaths and more damage to the already fragile country. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    Get the latest on this story from weather.com

    As the storm approached, Puerto Rico Governor Luis Fortuno declared a state of emergency, canceled classes, closed government agencies and activated the National Guard.

    The government also froze prices on basic necessities such as food, batteries and other supplies and prepared emergency shelters at schools and other facilities.

    Heavy rainfall, flooding and mudslides will be threats in all of the northern Caribbean islands regardless of how strong the system becomes, weather.com reported.

    Isaac may also threaten U.S. energy interests in the Gulf of Mexico, weather experts said.

    From weather.com: Isaac's looming US threat

    At the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in southeast Cuba on Wednesday, authorities said Isaac forced the postponement of pretrial hearings that were to begin on Thursday for five prisoners accused of plotting the Sept. 11 attacks.

    The U.S. military was preparing flights to evacuate the base of lawyers, paralegals, interpreters, journalists, rights monitors and family members of 9/11 victims who had traveled there for the hearings.

    In Key West, Fla., Mayor Craig Cates told NBC News that officials were monitoring Isaac but hadn't made any decisions about evacuating because the storm hadn't yet strengthened. All agencies were preparing in case an evacuation would be needed if the storm gets strong, he said.

    The tropical storm may also cause damage in Tampa, Fla., where the GOP convention will take place. Weather Channel meteorologist Jim Cantore reports.

    From weather.com: Track Isaac's path

    Coordinating Meteorologist Tom Moore at The Weather Channel said it was difficult to predict how Isaac would affect Tampa when the Republican National Convention to nominate Mitt Romney gets under way on Monday.

    Because the storm was tracking farther south than earlier predictions, it could track to the west side of the Gulf of Mexico over the weekend, he said. That would leave Tampa facing rain and thunderstorms with20-30 mph winds gusting up to 40 mph on Monday.

    Tropical Storm Isaac churns over Caribbean, could threaten GOP convention

    Orange juice prices rise
    Florida has not been hit by a major hurricane since 2005 and forecasts showed Isaac was not expected to strengthen beyond a weak Category 1, with top sustained wind speeds of about 80 mph.

    The threat to Florida triggered a nearly 6 percent jump in orange juice prices on Wednesday as they surged to a six-week high in trading in New York.

    Florida produces more than 75 percent of the U.S. orange crop and accounts for about 40 percent of the world's orange juice supply.

    Lurking behind Isaac, the hurricane center said Thursday another tropical depression grew into Tropical Storm Joyce, the 10th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season.

    Located about 1,280 miles east of the Leeward Islands, it was packing winds of 40 mph and was moving northwest at 14 mph on Thursday afternoon.

    Forecasts predicted it will eventually veer toward the open Atlantic and away from the Caribbean. No coastal watches or warnings were in effect for Joyce.

    Reuters and weather.com contributed to this report.

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    287 comments

    a hole e your selection of politics profanity is repugnant in that any TS or Hurricane does not sets its sights on particular demographics and all you have done is initiate inflammatory remarks that will only take away the effect this story was designed for - A Warning to ALL people that could be af …

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    Explore related topics: haiti, weather, puerto-rico, caribbean, featured, tropical-storm-isaac
  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    5:22pm, EDT

    No Puerto Rico statehood without English as 'main language'? Santorum rolls back

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    Christopher Gregory / Getty Images

    Presidential candidate Rick Santorum signs an autograph as he walks through the Old City in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Thursday.

    Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum appeared Thursday to try to undo some of the damage done by his comments that English should be Puerto Rico's official language if the predominantly Spanish-speaking commonwealth -- where he is campaigning ahead of the Sunday primary -- wants to become a state.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    “Obviously Spanish would be the language here,” he told reporters before stopping for lunch in Old San Juan, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    “We understand that you know the people of different cultures speak different languages, but we have a common language, and that’s what I was saying yesterday.”


    Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens who have a non-voting representative in Congress and can vote in presidential primaries -- but not the general election.

    They will hold a referendum this November to decide whether or not the Caribbean island should become a state – a decision ultimately left to Congress. Past votes have ended with Puerto Ricans opting to maintain their commonwealth status.

    'You have to comply'
    In comments to the San Juan newspaper El Vocero, in which he also backed Puerto Ricans' right to self-determination, Santorum said English should be the official language in Puerto Rico if it wants to become a state:  "As in any other state, you have to comply with this and any federal law. And that is that English has to be the main language. There are other states with more than one language, as is the case in Hawaii, but to be a state in the United States, English has to be the main language."

    On Thursday, he stood by the “condition” aspect of his remarks. “What I said is English has to be learned as a language, and this has to be a country where English is widely spoken and used, yes,” Santorum told reporters, according to ABC News/Univision. The island, he said, “needs to be a bilingual country, not just a Spanish-speaking country.”

    About 4 million Puerto Ricans live on the island, with 4.2 million living in the mainland United States.

    The U.S., which took over Puerto Rico from the Spanish in 1898 at the end of the Spanish-American War, tried to anglicize it and its institutions. The “Language Law” of 1902 recognized Spanish and English as official languages, and in the early part of the 20th century an attempt was made to make English the obligatory language of instruction, according to University of Puerto Rico Law School Professor Luis Muñiz-Argüelles. In 1947, the education commissioner ordered that Spanish be the language of instruction except for English instruction classes.

    Losing a backer
    Santorum’s comments led to the departure of one supporter: Oreste Ramos, a former Puerto Rican senator who rescinded his endorsement, ABC News/Univision reported.

    “Such a requirement would be unconstitutional, and also would clash with our sociological and linguistic reality. As a question of principle I cannot back a person who holds that position,” Oreste said, Univision said, citing El Vocero. “As a Puerto Rican and Spanish-speaking U.S. citizen, I consider the position of Mr. Santorum offensive.”

    Others in the island questioned the impact of the entire primary since Puerto Ricans can’t vote in the general election.

    “It doesn’t even register on the radar for a lot of people here other than it’s in the media,” said Martiza Stanchich, an associate professor of English at the University of Puerto Rico’s Rio Piedras campus.

    Local officials have organized mayoral primaries for the same day, which could help boost turnout.

    But, she added that the Republican and Democratic presidential primaries were “really kind of a disgusting use of the island … what does Puerto Rico get back for this?”

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    151 comments

    Thanks Santorum. I've been saying Repubicans are racist, ignorant, hateful, uninformed and idiots. Here you come and prove it! Don't worry other Repubicans here, you'll get your chance to show off your Republican Skills. PS: Santorum, English is not the law in the United States of America. Again, an …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: puerto-rico, english, official, santorum, language, rico, puerto, featured, rick

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