----- Original Message ----- 
From: Downwithcapitalism <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, April 28, 2001 6:15 PM
Subject: [downwithcapitalism] FW: Vieques protests (con't.)



Associated Press. 28 April 2001. Navy resumes shelling on Vieques
despite nearby protesters. Excerpts.


VIEQUES, Puerto Rico  Five protesters were detained inside the target
zone overnight and three more were found after daybreak, spokesman Lt.
Corey Barker told The Associated Press.

Shelling from ship to shore, with non-explosive ammunition, began just
after 11 a.m., the Navy said, three hours behind schedule.

Navy spokesman Jeff Gordon said officials were confident the target area
was cleared of protesters before the shelling began, but protest leaders
insisted they still had people on the range.

In one close call Friday, fighter jets began the exercises by dropping
nine dummy bombs before eight protesters were spotted on an island
within 100 yards of the target zone, Gordon said.

The latest detentions brought to 55 the number of protesters arrested
since Thursday night, when people began breaching the restricted
military zone on the outlying island to prevent the first Navy exercises
since December.

Among the arrests announced Saturday was local Sen. Norma Burgos, a
longtime proponent of U.S. statehood for Puerto Rico.

At least three people were injured in violent confrontations. Those
arrested will be prosecuted for trespassing on federal property, the
Navy said.

Gordon said the exercises "have been hindered very little" by the
intruders. But it appeared a partial victory for demonstrators who
believe the military activity harms islanders' health and the
environment.

The military exercises have stirred up anti-U.S. sentiment on Puerto
Rico, a U.S. territory where residents cannot vote for president and pay
no federal taxes.

On the edge of the restricted military zone, sailors laid down new razor
wire and repaired some of the gaps that protesters cut in chain-link
fences in more than a dozen

Some demonstrators hurled rocks and cow manure at federal authorities
over a trampled section of fence on Friday. The authorities fired rubber
bullets and pepper spray at demonstrators, and a Roman Catholic priest
was lightly injured when he was hit in the abdomen by a rubber bullet.

The exercises began after a federal judge rejected a last-minute legal
complaint by the Puerto Rican government, which argued the exercises
would harm islanders and violate a new local law on noise pollution. The
government said it would appeal.

In a decision that could lessen tension, the Navy announced it would
suspend exercises for one day Sunday to honor the beatification of
Carlos Manuel Rodriguez Santiago in Rome. Rodriguez, a layman who died
in 1963, will be the first Puerto Rican beatified, a step before
sainthood.

The Navy exercises involve about 15,000 sailors and Marines and a dozen
cruisers and destroyers in the battle group led by the Norfolk,
Va.-based aircraft carrier USS Enterprise.

Among protesters who may remain in the restricted area is Myrta Sanes,
sister of civilian security guard David Sanes, whose April 1999 death by
bombs dropped off-target on the range provoked public anger.

After the guard's death, protesters occupied the range and prevented
exercises until they were removed by U.S. marshals in May 2000. Since
then, training has been limited to inert ammunition.

Actor Edward James Olmos arrived on Vieques Friday night and added his
voice to the protest: "(The Navy) should take everything they are doing
here to the United States," Olmos told 300 cheering protesters.


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