Is Agenda 2030 irreversibly entrenched in Latin American governments?

Ecuador: The Ecuadorian Government will require 5G installation by telephone companies as a condition to renew their contracts with the state in three months. Two of the private operators in the country, Claro and Telefónica, have been negotiating terms since 2021, and testing the technology since 2019, during the government of former president Lenin Moreno.

Ecuadorian Telecommunications Minister Diana Maino said regarding this new technology: “We aren't lagging behind other countries, in fact, we're one of the first in the region.”

As La Noticia reporter Jorge Escobar said, "Digital transformation is an unavoidable wagon that Ecuador recently got on."

A Costa Rican judge denied a motion by the Interest Of Justice (IOJ) organization requesting to suspend COVID-19 vaccines for children from 6 months to 5 years. The Costa Rican National Children's Board (PANI) has joined their efforts to request an end to the injection program.

According to the judge, both litigants [IOJ - health authorities] “argue for the defense of children and for the public interest,” and although the plaintiffs presented information about adverse effects to health of children who received the injections, it is impossible for the judge to rule on the magnitude of the harm, "since international organizations such as the WHO endorse vaccination as the only effective mechanism to mitigate the effects of the disease.”

Peru: Fear once again grips the South American country due to the forecast by the National Agrarian Health Service (Senasa), an entity under the Peruvian Agrarian Development and Irrigation Ministry, which now predicts five plagues in coming months due to the arrival of the El Niño climactic phenomenon. “Peru will experience the plagues of yellow rust, anthrax, fruit fly, rodents, and locusts that will threaten production in livestock areas and crops of farmers in the interior regions of the country.”

According to an expert, several coffee-producing regions will be affected, anthrax bacteria will spread to other regions, fungi will rise, and fruit flies will affect trade because of “climate change.” And since high temperatures will cause putrefaction, rodents and locusts will abound and spread disease.

Colombia: As preparations to commemorate Colombian Independence Day on July 20 continue, the President announced the celebration by posting a video on social media with alternating images of the new film Barbie – which premiered on the same date – along with images of President Gustavo Petro and Vice President Francia Márquez.

The video – which has since been removed – sparked a flurry of comments and memes, with netizens deeming the President's idea "embarrassing" and “ridiculous.”

Venezuela: Technology continues to become more entrenched among Venezuelan children and youth, who are being trained to participate in a robotics world championship to take place in a few months in Panama. The Center for Educational Innovation (CIED) of the Catholic University of Venezuela (UCAB) organizes local competitions by providing robotics kits and computers to schools that “lack resources.”

Registration for the basic educational robotics course is supported by the World Economic Forum. A video featuring Bill Gates, Barak Obama, and other well-known Latin American characters promotes “future skills for children around the world … to prepare for the future.”

The rotating presidency of the United Nations ECOSOC agency has fallen to Chile, which is tasked with promoting its global agenda and representing Latin American and Caribbean Group Member States (GRULAC). The new position will be for a period of one year until July 2024.

Chile's unanimous election by Council members came “in recognition of Chile's international leadership, especially in the field of sustainable development.”

Chile's role in this area is not new, as reported by El País: “Already in 2015, with the environmental crisis on their backs, they were assigned an even more specific task: monitoring and reviewing the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” The work includes “environment, reducing inequality and focusing on gender, and mitigating problems related to climate change.”

Nicaragua's Health Ministry recently eliminated COVID-19 vaccine requirements to enter the country. Approximately 90% of the Nicaraguan population is fully vaccinated. Health Minister Martha Verónica Reyes made the decision after the WHO declared COVID-19 no longer an international emergency.

In a press release a month ago, Nicaragua's Health Ministry reported that despite following vaccination requirements and obeying ministry advice, some people "presented arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity, heart disease, immunodeficiency syndrome, insufficiency chronic kidney disease, stroke, pulmonary tuberculosis, and chronic lung disease.”

However, the country still requires proof of yellow fever vaccination for travelers to and from Nicaragua, taking people's temperatures at different entry points.

 

Previous Frontline News Latin America Weekly Summary editions:

Latin America in globalist crosshairs