----- Original Message -----
From: Claudia K White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, October 22, 2000 10:26 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] VIEQUES RESISTANCE UNDAUNTED (from the Nuclear Resister)


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK



--------- Forwarded Message ---------

DATE: 22 Oct 2000 19:13:22 -000
From: "Vieques Libre" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: List Member <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Vieques Libre - http://www.viequeslibre.org

VIEQUES RESISTANCE UNDAUNTED
from the Nuclear Resister #122 (October 10, 2000)

        With more than one hundred of their companeros behind bars,
supporters of the struggle to liberate Vieques from the U.S. Navy rallied
July 23 in front of the federal prison in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico.  They
demanded court dates for the men and women imprisoned there, most for
nearly three weeks by then.  Most of those who were locked up are members
of the Puerto Rican Independence Party, who refuse to recognize the U.S.
court's jurisdiction and who, except for a few cases of personal hardship,
would not post bond.  A few young Vieques Horsemen for Peace and activist
Alberto "Tito Kayak" de Jesus also refused to post bond, and were being
held pending trial as well.
        Two groups did appear before separate judges that day, resulting in
24 people sentenced to time served, and 12 of them also fined $1,000.  Over
the next three weeks,  more small groups were brought to court, where most
were sentenced to time served, varying from 3-4 weeks, and some also fined.

        On August 3, the Navy began a new round of bombing practice.  That
evening, writes Robert Rabin of the Committee for the Rescue and
Development of Vieques (CRDV), "more than 200 people participated in a
People4s Assembly at Peace and Justice Camp, in front of the entrance to
the bombing range of Camp Garcma. A resolution was approved by the
assembly, reaffirming the commitment of the community organizations to use
peaceful civil disobedience in the struggle for peace on Vieques. [Later],
around 125 people crossed the street, walked up the the Navy4s fence -
heavily fortified with several rolls of razor wire creating a concentration
camp atmosphere - to tie ribbons on the fence, sing hymns and chants and
reflect while Norma Torres recited her most recent poem, The Silent
Fence..."
        This "creative tension" induced in a community by the power of
deeply-rooted nonviolent direct action is a stark presence in the daily
life on la isla nena.  Reinforcement of the boundary fence separating the
people from their island at the bombing range requires many truckloads of
construction material through the civilian sector.  The vehicles are
escorted at high speeds by Puerto Rican police, and the careening trucks
have caused several collisions and property damage, often to the base gate!
Consequently, military convoys are tracked and sailors venturing off base
into the towns are sometimes heckled to get out of Vieques.
        Taking a hyperbolic public relations offensive, Navy Lt. Jeff
Gordon claimed "militants" had thrown rocks at sailors on the bombing range
in recent days, and declared with no regard for the evidence, "This is not
a grassroots movement.  This is a band of thugs."
        Appearing in federal court August 4th, four officials of the
Independence Party were jailed for nonpayment of $1000 fines for trespass
on Vieques.  Puerto Rican Senator Manuel Rodriguez Orellana, Representative
Victor Garcia San Inocencio, Rev. Luis Acevedo and mayoral candidate Jaime
Negron spent six weeks in jail until their release on September 14.  While
scores of other resisters have also not paid fines, or have not reported to
probation officers, or have publicly defied orders to stay off Vieques
while on probation, they have not been contacted by the federal court.
        On Sunday, August 6, 5,000 Puerto Ricans, including some barred
from returning to Vieques by conditions of their sentence or pretrial
release, demonstrated at Ft. Buchanan in suburban San Juan.  That night 32
women, led by 11 Vieques residents, quietly slipped onto the bombing range.
As dawn broke on Monday, the women held a ceremony and briefly reclaimed
the land.  The flags of Puerto Rico and Vieques were unfurled, along with a
white flag for peace.  The women were arrested for trespass and released
that day.
        The next morning, eleven United Vieques Youth were also arrested on
the bombing range.   When they could not each post $10,000 bail, they were
held overnight on Puerto Rico before being released to their homes in
Vieques.
        On Nagasaki Day, August 9, Puerto Rican television revisited a
story first told in 1995, but now with more evidence to rebut longstanding
Navy denials.  In 1966, the Navy dropped a nuclear weapon in the waters off
Vieques and spared no expense for two months in recovering the device,
which fortunately "had not exploded."  The story provided more evidence of
the Navy's willingness to lie to keep their access to the bombing range.
        A human chain of 1,000 people, mainly from Vieques, stretched along
the bombing range fence on Sunday, August 13.  One message shared with the
crowd explained,
...Today we meet in front of the military fence to know it close up, to
contemplate the lands trapped on the other side. Today we place ribbons and
flags, we reflect and pray for our peace and that of future generations.
        There will be another moment when we will be together in front of
this fence with our duty in our hands, with the history of so many abuses
in our hearts and with the commitment to eliminate the barriers that
separate us from our territory and our peace.
        The Viequense family is united before the threat of the Navy.
Vieques is ours, let's rescue her!"
        The Vieques organizers are working with Dr. Luis Nieves Falcsn to
conduct an International Tribunal on Human Rights in Puerto Rico and
Vieques, to be held on Vieques in November.  Nieves Falcsn is also an
attorney for Puerto Rican political prisoners, and has arranged a series of
visits to the schools and community in Vieques by former Puerto Rican
political prisoners.
        Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., Methodist lay minister Andris
Thomas Conteris had been fasting in front of the White House on liquids
only since July 25, asking that the President meet with the affected people
of Vieques, and not exclusively with the Navy and the office of the
Governor of Puerto Rico.  On August 14, Conteris started taking only water.
        The next arrests reported from Vieques were of nine artists who
entered the bombing range on August 28 to perform an original play titled
"I Believe in Vieques," before they were cited for trespass.
        With the release of the four Independence Party officials September
15, the federal prison was emptied of Vieques resisters for the first time
in months.
        September 22 was declared a National Day of Solidarity with the
People of Vieques in Washington, D.C.  Hundreds rallied in Lafayette Park
to demand the Navy leave Vieques.  Park Police arrested 78 people who stood
in the no-protest zone directly in front of the White House, each with a
large letter on their t-shirt to spell out "Peace for Vieques" in both
English and Spanish a few times over.  All were cited and released.  The
event kicked off several activities in Puerto Rico leading up to a major
march on October 1 and renewed resistance to planned Navy combat exercises
this month.
        On September 29, members of Amigos de Vieques and Amigos del Mar
climbed atop the Puerto Rican parliament building to hang Peace for Vieques
banners.
        The spirited weekly rally at Camp Peace & Justice on Saturday
evening, September 30 was followed Sunday morning, October 1, by civil
disobedience at the Navy's ammunition storage depot on the western end of
Vieques.  Sixty-five people entered the base before dawn and were cited for
trespass, bringing the total number of protest arrests on Vieques since May
to over 600.  More than 400 still await trial.  The organized resistance
action was supported by the largest protest gathering on Vieques to date,
sponsored by at least a dozen local community groups plus churches and
merchants.  An estimated 5,000 people took part in a march through the
civilian sector that morning, most of them from among the 9,400 residents
of Vieques.
        The fasting Andris Conteris returned to Vieques for the major
demonstration and to consult with community leaders about his continuing
witness in Washington, where the White House's Puerto Rico point man
Jeffrey Farrow had flatly declared the President would not meet with Puerto
Rican religious or community leaders calling for an immediate end to the
bombing practice.  On October 4, Farrow told a Puerto Rican newspaper that
"Puerto Rico can get out of the presidential directives in Vieques whenever
it wants.  And I challenge Puerto Ricans to break the directives so that
they then see how the Navy will bomb however it wants, as often as it
wants, where ever it wants, so that they see how they're not going to get
even a bit of federal land, and that Vieques will be chaos."  CRDV
spokesman Rabin said Farrow was now persona non grata in Vieques.
        On October 5, Cliff Kindy, an organizer with Christian Peacemaker
Teams who took part in the October 1 civil disobedience, was in court for
arraignment and had his bail from an unresolved May citation revoked.
Kindy was jailed until October 10, when a plea agreement was reached on
both trespass charges for a sentence of time served plus a $300 fine.
        One of the native Puerto Ricans attending the September 22
demonstration in Washington, D.C., was Marine Pfc. David Rivera.  As a
young recruit, Rivera found the education and training promises made by
assertive recruiters were broken, and then experienced racist threats.  The
dispute over Vieques was the last straw, and while not considering himself
a conscientious objector, the young man found he could no longer serve as a
Marine.  He refused to report for duty, and after publicly appearing at the
pro-Vieques demo he surrendered to Marine Corps authorities at Quantico
base in Virginia, where he is currently confined to the Casual Platoon.
Rivera has applied for administrative discharge and seeks support for his
case to be processed quickly and without imposition of jail time for being
absent without leave.

support action

        Calls and letters of support for Pfc. David Rivera should be sent
to Lt. General Bruce Knutson, C.O., Quantico Combat Development Command,
Quantico, VA 22134-5001, (703)784-3464.  For more information, contact
Citizen Soldier, 267 Fifth Avenue #901, New York, NY  10016; (212)679-2250.

National and International
Solidarity with Vieques
        In late July, 3 representatives of the Vieques struggle visited
South Korea and Okinawa, where U.S. fighter aircraft also bomb and strafe
next door to communities organized in resistance.  They joined 27,000
people encircling Kadena Air Force Base on Okinawa, and expressed
solidarity with the residents of Maehyang-ri village, 50 miles south of
Seoul.
        The Koon-yi bombing range, only a mile from Maehyang-ri village
homes, is used five days per week, 15 hours per day, and has been for most
of the last 50 years.  As in Vieques, periods of popular local resistance
have punctuated the decades.  Yet today, A-10s, F-16s and other warplanes
still bomb and sometimes miss their marks, blasting an elderly woman's
garage just last May.  As confirmed in Vieques and Okinawa, depleted
uranium ordnance is alleged to be fired on the range.  Rising cancer rates,
miscarriages, birth defects and learning disabilities have contributed to
the outrage that is now nation-wide, and recently brought thousands of
Korean students, farmers and workers to protest alongside village
residents.  Five hundred people occupied the bombing range during the large
demonstration on June 17.  Several demonstrators were arrested and jailed
for up to a month for demanding "U.S. Military out of Korea."
        In New York City, attorneys for the seven activists who carried the
banner for Vieques into a Yankees game last May argued for dismissal of the
charges.  The judge reserved his decision until October 30.
        At a San Francisco hearing for twelve people arrested at the Navy
Recruitment Center last May, Assistant District Attorney Mike Menesini
listened to the reasons given for the protest.  He then told the defendants
he "reads the newspapers" and "You were in the right place at the right
time."  Charges dismissed.

_____________________________________
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--------- End Forwarded Message ---------
=============================
Claudia White~Main Line News
http://www.angelfire.com/ut/Angel1
=============================




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