Newsweek - September 30, 2016
Newsweek - September 30, 2016
Newsweek - September 30, 2016
Right
Stuff
Uber
and the
Masses
09.30.2016
09.30.2016
VOL.167
NO.12
+
GO FIGURE: Donald
My Hooker
Has a Face!
18 Russia
In God We Bust
20 Hungary
Quota Approval
NEW WORLD
48 Kenya
Wet Work
50 Transportation
DOWNTIME
54 Art
Haring, Impaired
FEATURES
DEPARTMENTS
60 Media
J O E BU R BA N K /O R L A N D O S E N T I N E L / T N S/G E T T Y
Grudge Gone
Wild
22
BIG SHOTS
4 New York
62 Intelligence
Snowden,
a Love Story
Chelsea Blast
NEWSWEEK
6 Douma, Syria
64 Rewind
No End in Sight
8 North Las Vegas,
Nevada
Stand-In
10 Washington, D.C.
Monumental
Changes
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
20 Years
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
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EDITORIAL
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NATIONAL EDITOR
R.M. Schneiderman
John Seeley
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Matt Cooper
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Joe Veix
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Content
BIG
SHOTS
USA
Chelsea
Blast
S P E N C E R P L AT T/G E T T Y
New York
Passers-by stand
behind police lines
after a homemade
bomb in a dumpster
injured 29 people in
Manhattans Chelsea
neighborhood on
September 17. Police
found a second device
made with a pressure
cooker four blocks
away. There was no
immediate word on a
motive for the attack,
which came the same
day as a pipe bomb
exploded before a
running race in New
Jersey. The following
day, a number of pipe
bombs were found in
a backpack on top of a
municipal garbage can
in Elizabeth, New Jersey. About 36 hours after the Chelsea blast,
police announced
that they had arrested
a suspect.
SPENCER PLATT
BIG
SHOTS
SYRIA
No End
in Sight
A B D D OU M A N Y/A F P/G E T T Y
Douma, Syria
Wounded children
receive care at a
makeshift hospital in
the rebel-held town
of Douma after an
airstrike on September
12. The attack was
blamed on government forces and
came on the day the
cease-fire brokered by
Russia and the United
States went into effect.
A few days later, the
truce appeared close
to collapse after U.S.
forces accidentally
bombed Syrian army
troops instead of an
Islamic State (ISIS)
target and following
continuing violations
by other parties in
the conflict.
ABD DOUMANY
E T H A N M I L L E R /G E T T Y
BIG
SHOTS
USA
Stand-In
North Las Vegas,
NevadaBill Clinton
speaks at a campaign
event on September
14 while his wife, Hillary, the Democratic
presidential nominee,
was recovering from
pneumonia. The
former president was
due to preside over
the Clinton Global
Initiatives meeting
this month but has
promised to step away
from the Clinton
Foundation, which
the CGI is part of, if
Hillary is elected president. The foundation
has been rated one
of the most effective
global charities in providing medical care,
food and development
assistance around the
world, but Republicans claim it creates a
conflict of interest.
ETHAN MILLER
BIG
SHOTS
USA
Monumental
Changes
Washington, D.C.
Nobel Peace Prize
winner Aung San Suu
Kyi visits the Lincoln
Memorial on September 14 during her first
trip to the U.S. capital
since her party won
elections in Myanmar.
President Barack
Obama said the United States was ready
to lift sanctions on
her country, although
human rights groups
remain concerned
about the situation
there, particularly
for the Rohingya
ethnic group, who
are not recognized as
citizens. Suu Kyi has
been criticized for not
doing enough to help
the Muslim minority.
JONATHAN ERNST
P
HUNGARY
POLITICS
REFUGEES
O
PROSTITUTION
N
RUSSIA
E
ECONOMY
THE SCOOP
NEWSWEEK
12
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
BY
KURT EICHENWALD
@kurteichenwald
+
CARDBOARD TIGER:
Trumps claim
that hed put his
company in a blind
trust if elected
suggests he has no
idea how such arrangements work.
NEWSWEEK
13
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PAGE ONE/POLITICS
NEWSWEEK
14
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DOUBLE-BLIND
BIND: Trump knows
Morning America. Regarding the Newsweek article, she said, Theres something so much bigger
than our business at stake, and thats the future
of this country. As a private business, we can
make decisions that are not in our best interest.
We can say, You know what? Well do less deals,
and, Not going to do that deal, even though its a
fine deal. Its economically reasonable because
it could create a conflict of interest, and well act
incredibly responsibly.
Lets unpack this stunning statement. First,
note that it contains an admission that Trump
Organization deals would create multiple conflicts of interest for a President Trump. Second,
we should just trust the Trump children to figure
out which deals they pursue could affect American national security. Unless Ivanka Trump is
NEWSWEEK
15
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
PAGE ONE/PROSTITUTION
NEWSWEEK
16
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
BY
JOSH SAUL
@joshfromalaska
MY INCOME, LIKE,
DOUBLED WHEN
I SHOWED MY
FACE, SO I KIND
OF GOT ADDICTED
TO SHOWING.
well-off escorts who charge $400 an hour and
have their own websites and Twitter profiles,
while poor and marginalized prostitutes have
other, more pressing worries.
Escorts still risk arrest. Posting their faces
online can help law enforcement investigate and
prosecute sex workers. Having your face on
Twitter could be an opportunity for police to reach
out to you and entrap you, says Philadelphia
escort Mike Crawford, who calls himself a fulltime queer, part-time cashsexual on his Twitter profile. If you have the same image on your
Facebook page and on your ads, an investigator
could quickly use Google search to match them
up. (When Holiday was arrested on prostitution
charges in 2013, police said they matched photos
on her escort website to her drivers license.)
Still, Crawford says his decision to show his
face is cemented by his work as an advocate for
sex workers and decriminalization. He and other
advocates believe sex worker rights today are
evolving but are at the point where gay rights
were in the 1950s, where coming out can jeopardize a persons job and family ties.
Ive had sex workers apologize to me for
not being out, says McNeill. And Im like, Oh
honey, dont apologize to me! You have a life. I
made my decision. If I were 30, I might not make
the decision to show my face.
+
WITH INTEGRITY:
H I L A RY H O L I DAY
Minneapolis escort
Hilary Holiday says
shes able to provide for her family
through her work
in the sex industry.
face or not, McNeill says. You may get married, you may have children. Even if your family
of birth is cool with it, how do you know your
in-laws will be cool with it?
Prostitution has been a center of conversation in the media this year, with New York magazine running a cover story, Is Prostitution Just
Another Job?, in March and The New York Times
NEWSWEEK
17
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IN GOD WE BUST
NEWSWEEK
18
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BY
MARC BENNETTS
@marcbennetts1
CHURCH AND
STATE: A new law
pushing a major anti-Western propaganda campaign, from accusing the U.S. and U.K. of plotting
to overthrow Putin to boasting about Moscows
ability to reduce the U.S. to radioactive ash. So
far, the law has exclusively affected members of
minority foreign religionsthe Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, Jehovahs Witnesses and Protestants with Baptist, Pentecostal
and Seventh-Day Adventist roots. Believers of
these religions have frequent problems gaining
state permission for churches and temples, and
they often have little choice but to gather informally at the homes of their congregants.
The Russian Orthodox Church, a powerful
Kremlin ally that has traditionally been hostile to
minority faiths, has not been affected, and Orthodox officials have dismissed criticism of the law,
saying it does not prevent believers from sharing
their faith. Russias Muslims, who make up some
10 percent of the population, seem divided, with
regional muftis split on whether the law is a gross
violation of human rights or a necessary step in
the fight against Islamic extremism.
Ossewaarde believes its the former. Two days
after his conviction, he received a warning from
his court-imposed lawyer, Andrey Butenko; if he
and his wife chose to stay in Russia, the lawyer
said, they could be in danger. Concerned that
Butenkos warning was an indirect message
from authorities, Ruth Ossewaarde flew to the
United States on August 22. Donald Ossewaarde
remained in Oryol to appeal his conviction.
Butenko tells Newsweek he was not acting
on anyones orders and says his warning was
inspired by genuine concern for the couples
well-being. All religions except traditional Russian faiths are being slowly forced out of Russia,
he says. The state will do whatever it thinks it
needs to do in order to achieve this. This is how
the security forces work. If they need to, they
could do something bad to him.
The Ossewaardes are not the only ones who
have been affected. In late July, police officers
detained Ebenezer Tuah, a student from Ghana,
as he carried out a baptism at a swimming pool in
Tver, a small city near Moscow. Tuah and a group
of Ghanese nationals had rented the pool for their
Protestant group for the day, and there were no
Russian citizens present. The officers handcuffed
Tuah and held him overnight. He was later fined
50,000 rubles (about $780) for conducting religious rites and ceremonies without the necessary documents. (He declined to comment.)
They treated him like a common criminal,
says Konstantin Andreev, a lawyer at the Slavic
Center for Law and Justice, which has filed appeals
NEWSWEEK
19
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
QUOTA APPROVAL
NEWSWEEK
outnumber us, Orbn said last year. Its mathematics. And we dont like it. Many Hungarians
agreed with him.
Now, as he rallies the country for a no vote,
Orbn is also pushing back against another perceived threat to Hungarys identitythe European Union. Under the terms of the European
Councils Emergency Response Mechanism,
adopted last September, member states agreed
to relocate 160,000 people under a quota system
(those asylum seekers are currently living mainly
in Greece and Italy). Hungary was penciled in to
take 1,294 refugees, but, along with Slovakia,
the Czech Republic and Romania, it was hostile to the quota system from the start and voted
against it. So far, Hungary has accepted no refugees under the plan. Instead, it has joined with
Slovakia in challenging the plan in the European
Court of Justice.
Hungary may be resisting the decision-makers
in Brussels, but, for now, nobody is talking
about a Huxita Hungarian exit from the EU.
The referendum is not legally binding, nationally or internationally. But neither can the EU
stop it or sanction Hungary. There will be a lot
of cluck-clucking in Brussels but nothing serious, says Gyrgy Schpflin, a member of the
European Parliament for Fidesz. This is about
strengthening the governments position when
20
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
BY
ADAM LEBOR
@adamlebor
+
BORDER FORCE:
Hungarian police
detain a Syrian
family in August
2015 after they entered the country
from Serbia.
BERNADETT SZABO/REUTERS
ORBN IS PUSHING
BACK AGAINST ANOTHER
PERCEIVED THREAT TO
HUNGARYS IDENTITY
THE EUROPEAN UNION.
NEWSWEEK
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22
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
NOT
YOUR
osapient et omnis que et facestiuntem as sercitio
DADDYS
CIA
BY ABIGAIL JONES
Y SON N
M.
MY FIRST O
S
M WAS MY 1993 Y
A WORLD TRADE
T
S CENTER T
S CENTER S
Y
E BOMBING BABY, A
R,
O
P SAYS GINA BENNETT,
a veteran CIA analyst who has spent her career tracking
down the perpetrators behind some of the worst international crises in recent memory. Bennett, a divorced
mother of five, can match the birthdate of each child by
the bad guys she was pursuing at the time. She calls her
second son her Khobar Towers baby (born shortly after
the 1996 bombing of a military housing complex in Saudi
Arabia); her third child, a daughter, her African embassy
bombing baby (she arrived a few weeks before the 1998
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania);
and her fourth, another son, her 9/11 baby.
Bennett was in the early stages of her pregnancy during
that attack, and despite all of her morning sickness,
NEWSWEEK
24
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
incredibly nasty foreign weapons developments, Lehnus says. Theres reason to be afraid. Theres reason to
be afraid all the time! She laughs. People would say,
What keeps you up at night? And Id say, Ive got a list
of nine, and I rotate through them, because there were
just so many bad things that could happen, whether its
a loose nuclear weapon or North Korea deciding they
are gonna lob one over. So I say, My job is to worry for
you. She laughs again. Its a bad world. Weve got bad
things going on out there.
At a time when the country may be just weeks away
from electing its first female president, many Americans
still have no concept of whos keeping them safeand
that women play a critical role in that effort. Some may
think CIA women were confined to the counterterrorism unit that pursued Osama bin Laden, which gained
extraordinary attention after his death. In fact, women are
operating at unprecedented levels on every floor of CIA
headquarters and throughout its far-flung global outposts.
Perhaps hoping to combat this misconception, the CIA
granted Newsweek access to seven women from all parts
of the agency, including a clandestine operations officer, a
bombing expert and a weapons and space analyst. A handful of them are undercover and cannot share their names
because of the sensitivity of their work (their names appear
here in quotes). Some are married and have children. Two
are single mothers. One was the
first CIA officer to come out as
gay and not get fired for it. And if
you found yourself sitting across
from any of them on the New
York City subway, shed look
more like a tourist from the Midwest than a master spy.
Despite their extraordinary
accomplishments, these women
have faced double standards
and sexism, and for some,
success has come at great personal cost. As former covert
CIA Operations Officer Valerie
Plame says of many women she
worked with, They were smart and ambitious and funny,
but to be very honest, they had stepchildren. They had not
raised their own children. Or they were divorced. Or they
went home to cats. They had really paid a personal price.
The work can break you, says Vivian, a scientist
and explosives expert. It is 24/7. It is always at a high
pace, and if you dont step outside of it every once in a
while, it will eat you alive.
MY JOB IS
TO WORRY
FOR YOU.
ITS A BAD
WORLD.
WEVE GOT
BAD THINGS
GOING ON
OUT THERE.
THE
GESTAPO
CONSIDERED
VIRGINIA
HALL THE
MOST DANGEROUS OF
ALL ALLIED
SPIES.
have become so accustomed to this repository of interchangeable female CIA screwups and honeypots, and
their unstable, erratic behavior, that we forget that the
job involves saving lives and preventing atrocities, and
you must be able to compartmentalize your emotions at
precisely the most horrifying moments. Thanks to Hollywoods clichs, the American public has been largely
kept in the dark about Virginia Hall, who joined the OSS
in 1944, organized sabotage operations across France,
mapped drop zones, and helped POWs to safetyall
while disguised as an elderly female farmhand and with
a prosthetic leg she named Cuthbert. The Gestapo considered her the most dangerous of all Allied spies.
It was easier to be a woman in the OSS than in the CIA
in the early days, says Toni Hiley, the CIA Museum director. Eloise Page was one of 4,500 women who served in
the OSS. She began her career as the secretary to General
William Donovan, head of the OSS, and ended it as the
third-highest ranking officer in the CIAs Directorate of
Operations, the home to case officers who carry out covert
assignments and recruit spies. Page, who was known
among some colleagues as the
Iron Butterfly, also became
the first female station chief,
the highest-ranking job for case
officers abroad, and the first
woman to head a major intelligence community committee.
Before Julia Child introduced
American families to French
cuisine, she, too, worked for
General Donovan and the OSS.
In the early days, it was
benign neglect. There were
more men than women. They
didnt even think about [us],
says former clandestine officer
Suzanne Matthews, who joined the CIA in 1975 as a secretary. When she entered the operations training course,
the precursor to becoming a case officer, she was one of
three or four women in her class. Some of the instructors down there misbehaved and made sexual advances
to the studentsand they were rebuffed, of coursebut
the students were just trying to get through this very
intense program, she says.
They tried to push all the women into becoming
analysts. Or reports officers. That was acceptable, says
Janine Brookner, who joined the CIA in 1968. I insisted
on going into operations. She says she was one of six
women in her 66-person officer training program. When
she landed her first job as a case officer in Asia, her station chief saddled her with ridiculous paperwork and
assignments. In the meantime, I went out and met people. I used my training and background. By the time my
next chief of station got there, I knew people from the
presidential palace all the way to the Communist Party. I
was in my 20sthis little blond woman. No one ever sus-
+
A LEADER AMONG MEN: Lehnus, who has claimed the first
woman to... title six times in the CIA, interviewed all the
senior women in the directorate during her early days.
Didnt take me long, she says. There werent that many.
who sexually harassed men and wore provocative clothing. It was 1992, and Brookner was, at that point, a 24-year
veteran of the clandestine service. She vehemently denied
their claims, sued the CIA and won. In December 1994,
the agency settled for $410,000. Brookner resigned soon
after. Today, shes a lawyer in Washington, D.C., specializing in cases against the CIA and other federal agencies.
As women continued to fight for more opportunities
in the 1990s and 2000s, legal troubles plagued the CIA.
In 1995, it paid $1 million in a class-action case accusing the CIA of blanket sexual discrimination. In 2007, a
group of women filed a class action alleging that female
officers were punished more severely than their male
colleagues for having affairs with foreigners. Brookner
brought the case to the Equal Employment Opportunity
NEWSWEEK
27
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
who take key leadership courses critical to being promoted to the SIS. Women also hold the No. 3 and No. 4
positions at the CIA: Meroe Park is the executive director, and Carmen Middleton is the deputy executive
director. In 2013, Avril Haines became the first female
deputy director; shes now deputy national security
adviser to the White House.
Still, problems persist. A woman has yet to hold the
agencys most prestigious job, head of the Directorate of
Operations. Women are more likely than men to decline
high-profile assignmentswhich are critical to advancementbecause they require long, unpredictable hours. I
have about seven years out of my career when I could not
take certain assignments that were high-profile, incredibly demanding and involved travel, Bennett says. So
naturally, when you look at my depth and breadth of
experiences compared to a man of my rank and age, you
will see a disparity. You wont see any points for the skills
I gained being the mother of five.
She also rattles off anecdotes about female colleagues
whove been told they talk too much, or have sharp
elbows, or are too pushy or too emotional. Once, a col-
NEWSWEEK
league was told she needed to show more executive presence and should stop dominating meetings. You can act
like a man, but youll be judged like a woman, Bennett
says. If you act like a woman and try to get into executive
leadership, youre shamed. Every woman here believes
theyre being measured by behaviors of professionalism
defined by white men decades ago.
Im so sick of the deputization of women. Deputy is
the worst thing you can be. Youre carrying out the vision
of someone else. Its not a glass ceiling; its a wall.
28
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
+
A WOMANS PLACE: Julia Child was a spook before
117 stars and explains that only 11 are for women. One
honors Barbara Robbins, who joined the agency in July
1963 as a secretary-stenographer and was killed two years
later when terrorists bombed the U.S. Embassy in South
Vietnam. She was the first female CIA officer to be killed
in the line of duty, and, at 21, she remains the youngest.
Another star is for Monique Lewis, who was just hours
into her first day as a CIA officer when a suicide bomber
attacked the U.S. Embassy in Beirut in 1983. Her husband,
James Lewis, a paramilitary officer there, was also killed.
Another star honors Jennifer Matthews, a top Al-Qaeda
expert who was killed in 2009 when a Jordanian double
agent blew himself up at a CIA base in Khost, Afghanistan. The deadly incident, which took the lives of six
other CIA officers, ignited
a debate over Matthewss
field experience, her role in
the tragedy (shed been the
base chief ) and the fact that
she had a family. Being a
mom and a wife really has
nothing to do with it, says
Suzanne Matthews (no relation to Jennifer). There
are lots of moms serving in
areas like that. Nowadays,
if you expect a promotion,
you have to serve in war
zones, whether youre a
man or a woman.
There were a lot of people criticizing her for being
there because she had three kids at home, but no one
criticized the men, Bennett says. It was such a low
point for us. We realized people still thought that way,
even in our organization!
IF YOU
EXPECT A
PROMOTION,
YOU HAVE
TO SERVE IN
WAR ZONES,
WHETHER
YOURE A
MAN OR A
WOMAN.
TAKE A
GOOD LOOK
AROUND
THIS ROOM.
WHEN WERE
DONE, SOME
OF US ARENT GONNA
BE HERE.
M AT T H EWS FA M I LY
NEWSWEEK
31
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THE FARM
WAS A
WHOLE
DIFFERENT
LEVEL OF
OH SHIT,
WHAT HAVE
I GOTTEN
MYSELF
INTO?
+
COUPLES THERAPY: Plame was outed by the White
House, which was angry at her husband, Joe Wilson, left,
for his criticism of its narrative about Saddam Husseins
alleged weapons of mass destruction.
be full of individuals who look like me, talk like me, who
have similar backgrounds and experiences. I do think if
you all are looking the same and acting the same you tend
to have a group-think which does not help us understand
all the complexities of this world.
Before Lehnus became the deputy CFO, she was chief of
the Diversity and Inclusion Office. I gotta say, that was a
really hard job. I said, somewhat jokinglybut not really
that protecting America from weapons of mass destruction
was easier than leading diversity and inclusion.
Over the past decade, Sarah has seen positive change,
as well as frustrating setbacks. You have someone come
in, and theyll be a champion for diversity. Then once that
director leaves, youll see another shift, which typically
goes back to the way things were, she says. I honestly
believe it was better when I first started, in terms of
diversity. There are still leaders who think white males
should be leading the organization.
Tracey Ballard, a technical analyst who joined the
agency over 30 years ago, calls herself the first vocal, visiNEWSWEEK
ble, cleared person to come out at the CIA. She was raised
by her single mother in Bladensburg, Maryland, and
joined the agency as a young, single mother herself. It was
the mid-1980s, when being gay was considered a threat to
national security. We all knew you could be weeded out
if you happened to be LGBT, Ballard says. She quickly
learned to live a double undercover life, not talking about
work at home and hiding her true self at work.
By the time her daughter turned 5, she couldnt keep
up the lie any longer. I was raising a girl in a society that
already had limitations on young ladies, she says. It was
important for me to be myself and stand up for myself so
I could teach her to do the same thing.
Ballard came out during a routine polygraph test and
spent the next year and a half under investigation. Colleagues, including those who were gay, ostracized her. It
was the most stressful time of her career. She considered
33
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
MOMS A BADASS
34
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YOU DO
A COVER
JOB ALL
DAY, THEN
YOURE
OUT DOING
CIA WORK
ALL NIGHT.
NOT GREAT
IF YOUR
BABY
SITTER
CANCELS.
GUATEMALAS
NEW PATH
Ave Indiana que vive en tu escudo,
Paladin que protege su suelo,
Ojal que remonte su vuelo,
ms que el cndor y el guila real!
Y en sus alas levante hasta el cielo,
Guatemala, tu nombre inmortal! (*)
uatemala is undergoing a period of
profound change. Its national anthem,
as though it were a metaphor for this
juncture, alludes to the quetzal, the
countrys national bird, which hopes will
WDNHLJKWDQGFDUU\WKHFRXQWU\WRWKH
heavens vis--vis its neighbors: Mexico,
Belize, Honduras and El Salvador.
The country recently lived through a watershed moment in the history of Latin America when Otto Prez Molina went from being President of the Republic of Guatemala to being a common prisoner in
a matter of hours. Guatemalas Congress took away
his immunity so that he could resign; the National
Public Prosecutor asked for his detention and a judge
made him declare in court in relation to a corruption
case. He ended up going to jail charged with bribery,
XQODZIXO DVVRFLDWLRQ DQG VFDO IUDXG UHODWHG WR WKH
La Lnea customs administration corruption case.
Roxana Baldetti, Guatemalas former Vice President,
was also accused of leading a corruption ring and
was charged with passive bribery, unlawful association and customs fraud.
This placed the Central American country and its
protagonists Guatemala civil society, public Administrations, and the International Commission
against Impunity in Guatemala, CICIG, (an independent body working under the auspices of the UN
and which has become the countrys main upholder
of the law) in the international spotlight.
Guatemala is one of the regions strongest and most
solid economies. American companies are aware of
this and have continually trusted a country known
for its hardworking skilled laborers, which are keen
to improve their knowledge base and feel a great culWXUDODIQLW\ZLWKWKH86
G
(*) Indian bird that lives on your seal,
a Palladium protecting your soil,
4H`P[`OPNOLY
than the condor and the royal eagle!
And may its wings take to the heavens,
Guatemala, your immortal name!
5HQp6FKZHUGWHO
Jimmy Morales was elected the countrys 50th president during the 2015
General Election and he has spent nine
months as the head of a Government
intent on bringing about change.
-LPP\0RUDOHV3UHVLGHQWRI *XDWHPDOD
GUATEMALA IS A
COUNTRY WITH ITS ARMS
WIDE OPEN TO ANYONE
WHO WANTS TO GET TO
KNOW THIS BEAUTIFUL
AND FRIENDLY LAND!
Q: How would you rate your relationship with the U.S., a destination
for thousands of Guatemalas citizens?
A: ,W LV YHU\ JRRG :H KDYH UHTXHVWHG
9LFH 3UHVLGHQW -RH %LGHQ IRU D 736
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,*6564@ -05(5*,
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(TLYPJHZSHYNLZ[LJVUVT`0UP[NYL^I`HUKP[Z.+7YLHJOLKIPSSPVU
ment-backed institutions such as MCC
(Millenium Challenge Corporation
Guatemala) and USAID are giving a
lot of support.
MC
THE AMCHAM
info@mc-press.com
Pedro Conesa
MC
TOURISM
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Question: What would you highlight about the Master Plan?
Answer: 7KH 0DVWHU 3ODQ HQFRPSDV
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Q: How important are visitors from
the U.S.?
A: 9HU\ LPSRUWDQW 7KH 86 KDV WUDGL
tionally been one of Guatemalas main
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mentality.
Q: What sets Guatemala apart from
its neighbors?
A: More natural and cultural resources
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Holiday Inn franchise.
IRTRA
Camino Real
Tigo Guatemala
Q: A list with the richest men of Central America was recently published.
<RXUVZDVWKHUVWQDPHRQWKHOLVW
What is the key to your success?
A: There is no formula. Some may
think that success comes about because
of intelligence, but the fact is that nothing substitutes hard work. In other
words, in order to succeed you need
5% inspiration and 95% perspiration.
Success must not be measured in how
much money you can earn but, rather,
in how many lives you can improve. The
human aspect is probably the most important factor leading to success, which
is why in our companies we try to turn
ordinary people into extraordinary people. If we succeed, these extraordinary
people will also do extraordinary things.
Any company wishing to be successful
and sustainable in the long term needs
three things. First, it needs to make a
SURW6HFRQGSDUWRI WKDWSURWQHHGV
WR EH GLVWULEXWHG WKURXJK EHQHWV DQG
services among its employees so that
they are happy to work for the company
and feel like they are an important part
of it. The third thing it needs, and this is
probably the most important of all, is to
serve the community where it is based,
DQGQRWMXVWEHQHWIURPLW
THE HUMAN
ASPECT IS THE MOST
IMPORTANT FACTOR
LEADING
TO SUCCESS
the start and I have overseen all of the
Foundations investments towards those parts of society which are most in
need, focusing primarily on Education.
Thus far we have built 300 of what we
call ABC schools -the acronym stands
for the Spanish words for Classrooms,
Restrooms and Kitchens (Aulas, Ba-
Allied Global
ALLIED GLOBAL
Manuel Gordo started with a small
Call Center and 50 employees in 2005.
Today he heads Allied Global, has a
VWDII RI RYHUDQGRSHUDWHVLQYH
countries (Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, the U.S. and Canada). Allied Global
is a communications company offering
Call Center support and BPO offerings such as IT Services and Quality
$VVXUDQFH ,W DOVR RIIHUV %DFN 2IFH
solutions such as 3D modeling, Data
Allied Global
Universales
BANTRAB
Ronald Garca is a banker with over
25 years of experience behind him.
BANTRAB is an organization created
50 years ago by decree law whose main
REMHFWLYHLVWRJLYHQDQFLDORSWLRQVWR
Guatemalas workers, giving economic
VXSSRUWWRWKHLUQDQFHVDQGVDYLQJV
He spoke proudly about keeping the
rating Guatemala got from Fitch.
When asked about the banking sectors
strength in Guatemala he went on to
say that: The monetary, exchange and
credit policy decisions which the Monetary Board has taken these past few
years have been very successful. The
stability shown in these decisions regarding the macroeconomic aspects has,
in turn, given stability to Guatemalas
banking system.
WE EXPECT TO DOUBLE
OUR CUSTOMER
BASE BY 2020
Question: BANTRAB is the counWU\V VL[WK QDQFH JURXS $UH \RX
comfortable with that ranking?
Answer: Our primary
aim is to offer Guatemalas workers the best
possible service because
ZHDUHWKHEHVWQDQFLDO
solution for them. We
expect to double our
customer base by 2020
and we want to become
the leader within our objective market, which is
consumer credit, through Guatemalas workforce. Nevertheless we also
expect to grow developing and strengthening
our business area.
Q: What are Guatemalas
competitive
advantages when it
comes to investment?
A: Guatemala keeps a
Bantrab
Universales
MC
GUATEMALA EXPORTS
GUATEMALAS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
ACCOUNTS FOR 13.7% OF GDP AND
ITS MAIN EXPORTS INCLUDE SUGAR,
COFFEE, FRUIT AND VEGETABLES.
PLANESA
Roberto Castaeda is the President,
and owner of Planesa. He learned the
business from his successful father and
is now passing on his knowledge to his
children, Roberto and Andrea, who are,
what he calls, the companys driving
force. Planesa, a dynamic company
which has grown exponentially and
operates in four different countries, is
mostly dedicated to the cultivation of
berries as well as vegetables, among
other crops. In the U.S. it operates un-
+
BANK BYPASS: In
a country where
many people
dont have a bank
account, M-Pesa
allows residents to
pay bills and make
other payments
via a text on their
mobile phone.
NEWSWEEK
48
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
NEW WORLD
MEDICINE
INNOVATION
AGING
TRANSPORTATION
BRAIN
ANIMALS
GOOD SCIENCE
WET WORK
T R EVO R S N A P P/ B LO O M B E RG/G E T T Y
BY
TONNY ONYULO
@TonnyOnyulo
NEWSWEEK
49
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NEW WORLD/TRANSPORTATION
NEWSWEEK
50
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BY
ALEXANDER
NAZARYAN
@alexnazaryan
A N D R EW BURTO N /G E T T Y
NEWSWEEK
51
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
+
TRAINING WHEELS:
Ubers biggest nemesis is not Lyft, or the subway system, or a bike-share kiosk on every corner. Rather, its staunchest enemy resides in a
200-year-old Federal-style building at the foot
NEWSWEEK
52
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Altamonte Springs
has solved the
last-mile problem
for commuters by
subsidizing Uber
rides to and from
SunRail stations.
NEW WORLD/TRANSPORTATION
P H E L A N M . E B E N H AC K /A P
UBERS OVER-UNDER
A SORT OF GIANT,
TRANSLUCENT SNAKE
WOULD STRETCH
BETWEEN BROOKLYN
AND MANHATTAN.
astonishing speed to the separate cities they were
before 1898, as if theyd simply been waiting for
an excuse to divorce. This simply because city
planners didnt have the vision to prepare for the
L-pocalypse, so that in future years, historians
will cite 2019 as the moment in which New Yorks
dysfunction reached a new crescendo, the yuppified masses fled for the suburbs, as they had in the
1970s, and Greenwich Village became affordable
again, though not quite for the right reasons.
Uber is hoping it wont come to that.
53
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DOWNTIME
THEATER
ART
MUSIC
INTELLIGENCE
MEDIA
FILM
HARING, IMPAIRED
+
RADIANT BABY:
B E R N A R D G OT F RY D/ H U LTO N A RC H I V E /G E T T Y
Haring quickly
jumped from
graffiti artist being
chased by the transit cops to being
chased by gallery
owners in Paris
and Amsterdam.
BY
STAV ZIV
@stavziv
NEWSWEEK
55
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
A MASSIVE WORK BY AN
ART ICONEXTREMELY
VALUABLE AND SIMULTANEOUSLY PRICELESSIS AT
RISK OF BEING DESTROYED.
South Bronx. Benny Soto, a self-described
poor kid who was a regular volunteer at Grace
House, had no exposure to any kind of fine art
growing up; it was an interest in clubbing as a
teenager that brought him into the art world. He
discovered the Paradise Garage in the early 80s
and quickly became a fixture at the SoHo discotheque, where he kept seeing pins and T-shirts
featuring a mysterious glowing baby. Someone
finally pointed him to Harings show at the Tony
CRACK IS WACK
NEWSWEEK
56
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+
WALL OF FAME:
D O W N T I M E/ A R T
Working for Haring was an exhilarating experience, Soto says, until he got wrapped up doing
a lot of drugs and hanging out. I had to really
take a step back and get myself together.... Keith
was very, very supportive, even after Soto
stopped working for him.
It was Soto, in part, who inspired one of Harings
most famous public works in New York Citythe
Crack Is Wack mural he painted in 1986 on the
wall of an abandoned handball court uptown, on
Harlem River Drive. Now, theres a very personal
reason why I wanted to do this particular mural,
Haring is quoted as saying in a biography by John
Gruen. Back in 1984, I hired a young studio assistant. He was a Puerto Rican kidvery intelligent,
top star of his school, and ready to go to medical school. He did volunteer work for a Catholic
community center and he was just an all-around
good and wonderful person. But, little by little, he
became a crack addict. I got really distressed.
But because he was also intelligent, he wanted
desperately to stop. Finally, he was put on a program and, thank God, he was cured.
Within a year after Soto got sober in the late
1980s, Haring was diagnosed with AIDS. Soto will
never forget one of his last visits before Harings
death in February 1990. The artist was changing his shirt in his studio before they headed out
somewhere, and Soto saw lesions on his back. He
knew what they were but didnt want to believe
it, so he asked. Bennnnny, come on, he recalls
Haring saying, mimicking the impatience on his
face and in his voice. I have AIDS.
The last time Soto saw Haring, he was no longer the same energetic man buzzing around the
studio or dancing up the stairs as a mural poured
out of his brush. It was devastating to see. You
feel so powerless, says Soto, who cried as he
walked away from the studio that day. It was so
sad. He was so young and so talented. I think he
would have done so much more.
NEWSWEEK
57
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DOWNTIME /ART
NEWSWEEK
58
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
DOWNTIME /MEDIA
NEWSWEEK
60
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
BY
ZACH SCHONFELD
@zzzzaaaacccchhh
THANKS FOR
THE MEMORIES:
Franciss version
of how he helped
take down Gawker is colorful and
at odds with the
recollections of his
own lawyer.
+
J E F F B OT TA R I / W I R E I M AG E /G E T T Y
NEWSWEEK
61
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
DOWNTIME/INTELLIGENCE
NEWSWEEK
62
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
BY
JEFF STEIN
@SpyTalker
IT WAS JUST
REVOLTING AND
DISGUSTING THAT
WE ALLOWED
[9/11] TO HAPPEN.
on him and his girlfriend. Stone,
in a conversation with a journalist
at the September 7 after-party in
Georgetown, allowed that the scene
is a cinematic device to explain
Snowdens decision to download
thousands of top-secret documents
and hand them over to reporters from The Guardian and The Washington Post. The decision will
likely re-energize Stones persistent, mostly rightwing critics, who have hounded the director for
decades over his unconventional portrayals of
U.S.-backed Salvadoran death squads, Vietnam
atrocities, Wall Street greed and especially the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
But Stone hews far closer to the facts in Snowden
than in his other films. The film climaxes with the
whistleblower, charged with espionage, fleeing
from Hong Kong to Moscow, en route, he hoped,
to Ecuador, which has no extradition treaty with
the United States. Instead, the State Department
revoked his passport, stranding him in Russia.
Now, over three years later, a coalition of human
rights groups is launching a campaign to persuade
Obama to grant Snowden a pardon. Its not likely
to be successful. Putting aside Snowdens depiction as a traitor in many quarterseven Hillary
Clinton has said he needs to come home to face
the musicObama has shown no inclination to
lessen, much less drop, the charges against him.
Binney, meanwhile, says the Obama administration has expanded the NSAs spying programs.
They are collecting vastly more amounts of information every year, he says, with plans to build a
massive new data storage facility at Fort Meade,
Maryland, besides the one that opened in Utah
in 2014. Its all for naught, he says, because it
doesnt help prevent terrorist attacks at all.
+
THE LEAKER:
J RG E N O LCZY K /O P E N ROA D F I L M S
63
0 9 / 3 0 / 2016
REWIND20
SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
YEARS
Im bemused
to see so
many senators leaving
Washington because
theyre depressed by
the pettiness of politics.
Im delighted by the
pettiness of politics.
On Sale Now
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