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	<title>Comentarios en: Chuchú Martínez (1929-1991)</title>
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	<description>...Oh, la pupila insomne y el párpado cerrado.                        Rubén Martínez Villena</description>
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		<title>Por: Rafael</title>
		<link>http://lapupilainsomne.jovenclub.cu/?p=7302#comment-61827</link>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Rafael]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2015 17:22:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[No hay tal en la afirmacíon sin base, sobre Graham Geene:
Aquí los documentos que la desmienten:
The Times on December 21, 1989, as follows: Headline: Greene defends the general; US invasion of Panama Source: The Times. Issue Date: Thursday December 21, 1989 Copyright: Reuter Paris (Reuter) - Graham Greene, the British novelist, a passionate defender of Panamanian sovereignty, said yesterday that General Manuel Noriega was not ``half as bad&#039;&#039; as Washington&#039;s record in Central America. 
Reached by telephone at his French Riviera home, the 85-year-old writer condemned yesterday&#039;s intervention by US troops. 
``The United States has no business interfering in Panama,&#039;&#039; Greene
said. 
Greene, who developed a deep attachment for Panama during several visits there beginning in the late 1970s, said he hoped General Noriega would harass the invaders from bases in the mountains.  General Noriega took command of what became the Panama Defence Forces in 1983, two years after the death in a plane crash of Omar Torrijos, the charismatic Panamanian leader, a nationalist with whom Greene had forged a close friendship. 
The novelist, whose own adventures resemble those of the characters in his prolific works, has recounted his admiration for Torrijos in Getting to Know the General, subtitled ``The story of an involvement&#039;&#039;. 


Le Monde Diplomatique, Sept, 1987:&quot;Je pense que si le général Noriega tombait, cela signifierait la fin des accords sur le canal, pour lesquels mon ami Omar Torrijos s&#039;est battu si dur&quot;, nous dit l&#039;écrivain Graham Greene, en bon connaisseur du sujet. &quot;Ce serait aussi, ajoute-t-il, la fin de l&#039;indépendance réelle de Panama (3).&quot;]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No hay tal en la afirmacíon sin base, sobre Graham Geene:<br />
Aquí los documentos que la desmienten:<br />
The Times on December 21, 1989, as follows: Headline: Greene defends the general; US invasion of Panama Source: The Times. Issue Date: Thursday December 21, 1989 Copyright: Reuter Paris (Reuter) &#8211; Graham Greene, the British novelist, a passionate defender of Panamanian sovereignty, said yesterday that General Manuel Noriega was not &#8220;half as bad&#8221; as Washington&#8217;s record in Central America.<br />
Reached by telephone at his French Riviera home, the 85-year-old writer condemned yesterday&#8217;s intervention by US troops.<br />
&#8220;The United States has no business interfering in Panama,&#8221; Greene<br />
said.<br />
Greene, who developed a deep attachment for Panama during several visits there beginning in the late 1970s, said he hoped General Noriega would harass the invaders from bases in the mountains.  General Noriega took command of what became the Panama Defence Forces in 1983, two years after the death in a plane crash of Omar Torrijos, the charismatic Panamanian leader, a nationalist with whom Greene had forged a close friendship.<br />
The novelist, whose own adventures resemble those of the characters in his prolific works, has recounted his admiration for Torrijos in Getting to Know the General, subtitled &#8220;The story of an involvement&#8221;. </p>
<p>Le Monde Diplomatique, Sept, 1987:&#8221;Je pense que si le général Noriega tombait, cela signifierait la fin des accords sur le canal, pour lesquels mon ami Omar Torrijos s&#8217;est battu si dur&#8221;, nous dit l&#8217;écrivain Graham Greene, en bon connaisseur du sujet. &#8220;Ce serait aussi, ajoute-t-il, la fin de l&#8217;indépendance réelle de Panama (3).&#8221;</p>
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