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US forces expel protesters from Puerto Rican bombing range
By Gerardo Nebbia
5 May 2000
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In a pre-dawn raid Thursday morning hundreds of US Federal
Marshals, FBI agents and military forces forcefully expelled more
than 140 protesters who were occupying a US Navy bombing range
on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. Protesters had been occupying
Camp Garcia on the facility for 380 days, demanding that the Pentagon
stop using the island as a bombing range and return the land to
civilian use.
A raid to clear the base had been expected since May 1, when
three US warships, reportedly carrying 1,000 Marines, arrived
near the small island eight miles southeast of Puerto Rico.
On arrival, the marshals and FBI agents, wearing helmets and
bullet-proof vests, demanded that the protesters leave or face
arrest. When no one moved the agents began handcuffing the demonstrators,
who were hauled into military trucks as they sang the Puerto Rican
national anthem.
Among those removed were nationalist leaders Lolita Lebron
and Isabel Rosado. Lebron, 80, spent 26 years in jail in the United
States as a result of an armed assault on the US Congress in 1954.
Rosado, 93, is a long-time Vieques activist who was first arrested
in a 1979 protest against the Navy presence. Also detained were
singers Danny Rivera and Tito Auger and other Puerto Rican artists
and intellectuals. A New York Democratic congresswoman who had
joined the protest was also taken away.
As news of the raid reached mainland Puerto Rico, students
and workers began spontaneous protests. University of Puerto Rico
students who went on strike surrounded Fort Buchanan near San
Juan and protesters also gathered outside Roosevelt Roads base,
where the protesters were taken. Several hours later the protesters
were released. US Attorney General Janet Reno then announced that
no charges would be filed unless the protesters attempted to re-enter
the installation.
Meanwhile, hundreds of US Marines established a perimeter around
the bombing range with concertina wire to prevent demonstrators
from returning. Coast Guard ships established a security zone
in the waters around the base to prevent further protesters arriving
by boat.
In Washington, Rear Adm. Robert Natter said the Navy aimed
to return as soon as possible to inert-only training,
which could include shells without explosive warheads fired from
the aircraft carrier George Washington's battle group.
Many of the protesters and residents of Vieques vowed to continue
their fight. The demonstrations began a year ago when protesters,
including leaders of the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP),
set up "Camp Garcia" on a Vieques beach. The demand
that the US leave the island won popular support.
The protests were sparked by the April 19, 1999 death of security
guard David Sanes and the wounding of four others after two 500-pound
bombs, dropped from jets on training maneuvers for the Kosovo
War, missed their target and exploded near the observation tower
where Sanes worked. Two days later Vieques fishermen erected a
white cross on the beach and renamed it Mount David, in honor
of Sanes.
The incident unleashed pent-up anger over the disruptions to
fishing and the island's ecology by war games, a series of near-misses
of civilians by live ammunition, and the Navy's failure to implement
a 1983 agreement to limit live-fire exercises and to fund anti-poverty
programs for the island's residents.
The population of Vieques has been resisting the US presence
since 1940, when American troops occupied the island, which is
40 kilometers long and 3 kilometers wide, and took over two-thirds
of it for a bombing range. Originally, the Pentagon intended to
expel all the inhabitants. However, popular resistance in both
Vieques and mainland Puerto Rico made that impossible. The present
population of 9,300, consisting mostly of poor fishermen and their
families, are crammed into just one quarter of the small island,
between the bombing range and an ammunition depot.
The Pentagon insists that Vieques is the only facility available
for joint exercises by the US armed forces. US military bases
in Puerto Rico are an important component of Washington's control
over the Caribbean Sea and have been used to support military
operations in Central America.
In addition to regular war games that have involved up to 20,000
soldiers, the Navy has used live-fire war games on Vieques to
certify the combat-readiness of aircraft-carrier battle groups
and Marine Corps units bound for deployment overseas. The exercises
include forced landings on hostile shores involving amphibious,
airborne and air units, naval bombardments of land targets and
coordinated amphibious, naval and air maneuvers.
The Navy, however, canceled certification exercises for two
carrier battle groups after protesters set up encampments on the
training ground and bombing range in April 1999 in a drive to
close them down.
In response to mass sentiment in Puerto Rico against the Navy's
presence, the US government has moved cautiously. President Bill
Clinton ordered last year that live bombs not be used until the
year 2003. He also drafted a bill, now stalled in Congress, to
return some of the island to its inhabitants and to use federal
funds to develop the area. Clinton has also proposed a referendum
on the issue by the Vieques population. Protesters say the deal
offers no guarantees and they want the range to remain closed.
Formally, Puerto Rico is a commonwealth in free association
with the US. The use of its territory by the Pentagon is supposedly
bound by joint agreement. In reality the US exercises semi-colonial
control over the island, which Spain ceded to the US after its
defeat in the Spanish-American War of 1898.
The expulsion of the protesters from Vieques and the US government's
announcement that it will resume military exercises on the island,
notwithstanding Clinton's attempts to provide a diplomatic gloss,
constitute an arrogant assault on the rights of the Puerto Rican
people and one more demonstration of US militarism.
See Also:
US liberals join right-wing
attack on clemency for Puerto Rican nationalists
[27 September 1999]
US jets kill civilian
during training mission in Puerto Rico
[21 April 1999]
Puerto Rico's
Referendum: A vote of social protest
[22 December 1998]
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