Shem Ha Boreh Records is a young successful production founded in 2008 in St Anns, Jamaica. Their first release and video "Herbs Man" by Zacharri got a great worldwide response. This is followed by another 7" Ruff Road - Zacharri feat Natty King.
They are currently working on "No violence" riddim featured by Zacharri, Ti Wony and Winston McAnnuff. Also Zacharri's debut LP will be out soon under Shem Ha Boreh Records (feat Natty King, Gregory Isaacs, Luciano...)
All their releases and mp3 are available in all good record shops or online. www.junodownload.com ; www.onelovehp.com ; or direct from them
SHEM HA BOREH at work, Gregory Isaac studio, Jamaica
Before I Get His Love: JENNIFER KHAN Racial Profiling by :KING BENJ-I You Must Be Crazy by: TEDDY BROWN To Jiggy For Me by: LUCIANO Only You by: PRINCE ALOYSIOUS Are We One Family by: FAMOUS STARFIELD Good Vibes by: JR. HOLT Crying Pen by: MILTON BLAKE World Problem by: SLUGGIE RANK Don't Drink And Drive by: JOHNNY BULL It's Over by: SIR NEAL Six For A Nine by: LATTY GUZANG Rasta Life by: KING KONAN Jah Keep We Going On by: RAGGAMUFFIN CB
Continued Aggression Leads to Mapuche Declaration of War Continued aggressions of the Chilean state has led the Arauco Malleco Coordinator of Mapuche Communities in Conflict (CAM), a radical indigenous Mapuche organization, to formally renounce their Chilean citizenship and declared war on the government. The declaration was issued on Oct. 20, the same day that two trucks belonging to the El Bosque forestry corporation were intercepted by CAM and set on fire in the province of Malleco. As reported by the Latin American Herald Tribune, “the attacks, which began at 1:10 a.m., came hours after five Mapuches were formally indicted under a Pinochet-era anti-terrorism law for similar assaults carried out Oct. 11 near the city of Victoria.” The declaration, much more than a symbolic gesture, comes at a time of increasing violence against Mapuche children and youths, particularly over the past three months, when Mapuche communities began reclaiming illegally occupied lands in the region of Araucania. For instance, according to the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH), on Oct. 16 “a large group of police, for as yet unknown reasons, began to fire pellets and tear gas canisters” in a school in Temucuicui, Araucania. “Several children suffered pellet wounds and had trouble breathing,” Hundreds of Mapuche and non-Mapuche activists protested the attack on Oct. 23—including several children, who carried the empty canisters with them as the marched in Temuco, Araucania’s capital.