----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2000 1:35 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] 65 Vieques Protesters Detained By Navy, Protests Expand


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Anti-Navy Protesters Detained on Vieques
Associated Press
Monday , October 2, 2000 ; A02
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Oct. 1 -- The Navy detained 65 protesters
today near a former weapons depot on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques,
part of a day of anti-military demonstrations.
The protesters entered the base by crawling under a fence before dawn,
Navy spokesman Lt. Jeff Gordon said. They would likely face trespassing
charges, he said.
Later in the day, thousands of Puerto Ricans marched to demand that the
military abandon the Vieques training ground it has used since the
1940s.
"What's that sound I hear? It's the people on the warpath!" they
chanted, waving the blue-and-white flag of Vieques.
Authorities have arrested more than 600 protesters since May. More than
400 await trial on trespassing charges.
The Navy controls about two-thirds of the 20-by-four-mile island.
Opposition to the military's presence on Vieques flared in April 1999,
when a Marine Corps F-18 jet dropped two 500-pound bombs off target,
killing a civilian guard on the range.
Protesters occupied the bombing range to thwart further exercises until
U.S. marshals forcibly removed them May 4.
Navy opponents say the military exercises have damaged the environment,
stunted the island's economy and endangered residents. The Navy says
their claims are exaggerated and argues that the training is necessary
to national defense.
President Clinton promised the Navy would abandon the western weapons
depot and leave Vieques completely if the island's 9,400 residents vote
in a referendum to expel it. That vote is expected before mid-2002.
The march today in Vieques was to culminate events that began with a
demonstration in front of the White House on Sept. 22, when hundreds of
people chanted for the Navy to leave the Caribbean island. U.S. Park
Police said 78 protesters were arrested.
Those arrested were put in plastic handcuffs and loaded onto buses for
processing, said Robert Rabin, spokesman for the Committee for the
Rescue and Development of Vieques, a Puerto Rico-based group that has
launched several civil disobedience demonstrations in the United States
and Puerto Rico.
Park Police cited the Washington protesters for breaking a federal
regulation that prohibits stationary demonstrations in front of the
White House, a violation carrying fines up to $50.


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