From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 4 Aug 2001 11:44:16 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] Clash over bombing site turns violent in Vieques

Published Saturday, August 4, 2001
in the Miami Herald
Clash over bombing site
turns violent in Vieques
Rubber bullets fired at crowd
BY NANCY SAN MARTIN
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


A clash between protesters and U.S. security personnel that
involved the firing of rubber bullets at civilians heightened
tensions Friday between the U.S. Navy and opponents of
its use of a target range in Puerto Rico.

The latest clashes on Vieques island ended in the predawn
hours Friday when U.S. marshals assisting the Navy with
security along the range's perimeter fired ``rubber foam
ballistics,'' bean bags and tear gas at a group consisting of
protesters and journalists. Another round of bombing
maneuvers had started hours earlier.

No one was seriously hurt, but the fact that someone -- in
this case, a photographer for the Associated Press -- was
struck raised concern over the escalating drama.

``It is very clear the Navy will use whatever is necessary to
make this [protests] go away,'' said F�lix Matos-Rodr�guez,
director for the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter
College in New York.

Navy officials said security personnel retaliated after hooded
protesters shook the fence surrounding the northern part of
the range and threw rocks, Molotov cocktails and other objects
at armed security guards.

Authorities also detained at least 19 protesters Friday who
were caught trespassing restricted areas of the 900-acre
range. Activists deny they were hostile.

Authorities said the use of rubber bullets is one of several
options they can use for crowd control, but it was not clear
if this particular type had been employed before to quell
disturbances by civilians at military installations.

``I don't know if we've used these foam rubber ballistics
before or when was the last time we've used them,'' said
Melyssa Webb, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Marshals Service in
Washington.

The disturbance again placed a national spotlight on a debate
that could force President Bush into a politically precarious
corner.

``This is not just a Puerto Rico issue,'' Matos-Rodr�guez
said. ``It has become a Latino civil rights, environmental and
social justice issue.''

Bush has promised the Navy will leave Vieques by 2003, a move
that was viewed by critics as a way to boost support among
Hispanic voters. But in a nonbinding local referendum earlier
this week, nearly 70 percent of Vieques' voters
If the Puerto Rican police `would provide the protection they
have agreed to, we would not get into these unfortunate
situations.'

``Any change in the 2003 deadline is going to be seen as an
even more aggressive way to pander to the Latino vote,''
Matos-Rodr�guez said. ``But Bush also runs the risk of the
situation in Vieques continuing to escalate.''

An early pullout also could undermine the president's
Republican support.

Several members of Congress have been vocal about the
military's need to train, including Rep. Curt Weldon,
R-Pennsylvania, chairman of the House Readiness Subcommittee
and a senior member of the Armed Services Committee.

Earlier this week, the committee recommended that the Navy
continue bombing practices until an equal or better site
becomes available.

``You can't just get rid of a major facility without finding a
suitable alternative site,'' said Bud DeFlaviis, a spokesman
for Weldon. ``Congressman Weldon is committed to ensuring that
our troops are properly trained, that our military is ready
when they are called upon.''

Over the past two years, protest organizers have stepped up
their campaign to oust the Navy by including celebrities and
high-profile politicians in groups penetrating the target
range in an effort to disrupt practices.

Puerto Rico's Gov. Sila Calder�n also has backed the effort to
shut down the target range with full-page ads in some of the
nation's largest newspapers at a cost of at least $400,000.

Her administration also has matched a $50 million pledge tied
to a binding referendum in November.

If the referendum takes place, Vieques voters will determine
if the Navy must leave by May 2003.

If it is allowed to stay, it can resume using live ammunition
and the Vieques municipality of 9,300 would have access to $50
million to be used for economic development, housing and
infrastructure.

Calder�n also has stressed that protests must remain peaceful
and has ordered additional police officers to maintain order
in Vieques.

But police presence in the hilly area where the disturbance
occurred remains sparse, Navy officials complained.

``They know that this has been a problem area,'' said Bob
Nelson, a Navy spokesman at Roosevelt Roads Naval Station,
which operates the range. ``If they would provide the
protection they have agreed to, we would not get into these
unfortunate situations.

``There are people who are calling this civil disobedience,
but is rock throwing, cutting of fences, assaulting security
personnel and destroying government property civil
disobedience or a criminal act?'' Nelson asked.

The military exercises are scheduled to continue for another
week.

They involve ship-to-shore shelling, air-to-ground bombing and
beach assaults with 23,000 personnel.



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