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Puerto Rico sues FBI for stonewalling probe of independentistas
murder
By Bill Van Auken
30 March 2006
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The government of Puerto Rico went to federal court last week,
accusing the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the US Justice
Department of obstructing justice by stonewalling a local investigation
of the FBIs killing of a leading figure in the islands
independence movement during a raid last September.
An unprecedented legal challenge to the dominance that the
US has exerted over its Caribbean colony for over a century, the
court action reflects growing anger within the Puerto Rican population
as a whole over the strong-arm tactics exercised by Washington,
employing the methods of the war on terror against
its nationalist opponents on the island.
The case stems from the September 23, 2005 raid carried out
by the FBI against the home of Filiberto Ojeda Rios, founder of
the militant independence Macheteros group in the southwestern
municipality of Hormigueros.
At least 100 agents backed by helicopters and military sharpshooters
surrounded the home where Ojeda, 72, and his wife were living.
Ojeda, convicted in absentia of having participated in the planning
of a $7.3 million armored car robbery in Connecticut in 1983,
was a well-known political figure who regularly addressed pro-independence
meetings and rallies by means of recorded messages.
After wounding him in a shootout, the FBI cordoned off the
area surrounding the house, refusing to allow in emergency medical
personnel, attorneys and even the Puerto Rican police. He was
left to slowly bleed to death on the floor of his home over the
course of many hours.
Outrage over the killing was heightened by the FBIs decision
to launch the raid, dubbed Operation Order, on the
137th anniversary of the Grito de Lares, which marked
the beginning of the struggle for independence from Spanish rule
and which is commemorated each year as a milestone in the struggle
against colonialism.
The methods used in the raid strongly suggested that the FBIs
aim was to carry out an extra-judicial execution.
The case filed by the Puerto Rican Department of Justice charges
US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, FBI Director Robert Mueller
and other officials with an unjustified, arbitrary, illegal
and unconstitutional denial of the demands to reveal information
that is materially necessary to complete the local criminal investigation
into the violent death of Mr. Filiberto Ojeda Rios.
In a press conference announcing the suit, filed exactly six
months after the FBI killing in Hormigueros, Puerto Rican Justice
Secretary Roberto Sanchez Ramos declared, Faced with the
repeated and inexplicable refusal of the FBI to cooperate it was
necessary to bring these charges in seeking to have the federal
court oblige the FBI to carry out its legal duty to cooperate
with the Justice Department of the ELA [Estado Libre AsociadoFree
Associated State, the formal title given to Puerto Ricos
colonial status].
The FBI has denied requests by the Puerto Rican justice officials
to interview agents involved in the raid and has refused even
to identify them. It has also stonewalled the authorities in San
Juan over their request for documents related to the raid and
its planning.
In a related case, the FBI has also refused to make available
or even identify its agents who were involved in a violent and
unprovoked attack on reporters and bystanders during a raid on
the home of a Puerto Rican independence activist in Rio Piedras,
one of several carried out on February 10. That incident, which
was videotaped and broadcast on local television, saw armed paramilitary
agents shoving and kicking members of the local news media, spraying
them with pepper gas and beating some of them after they had been
forced to the ground.
While the FBI claimed that the raids were initiated to thwart
a domestic terrorist attack, no evidence of such an
attack was forthcoming and none of the targets of the raids were
arrested. The Puerto Rican government said it was aware of no
such threat.
The Puerto Rican justice department issued the local federal
prosecutor and FBI chief with subpoenas for information in this
case, prompting federal authorities to go to court demanding that
the subpoenas be thrown out.
The case filed by the Puerto Rican government is based on the
premise that it has the authority to conduct its own criminal
investigation into the actions of federal authorities and that
the federal government is obliged to cooperate.
Federal authorities, however, have treated the demands with
contempt. A spokeswoman for the local US attorney told the San
Juan daily El Nuevo Dia, We dont have time
to listen to [Sanchez Ramoss] press conference because we
are working actively to combat crime in Puerto Rico.
The reaction reflects the reality of Puerto Ricos colonial
status as well as the general conviction of the Bush administration
that it can act with impunity in carrying out police-state measures.
The US government has carried out political repression, harassment
and imprisonment of independence supporters in Puerto Rico for
many decades, and now feels emboldened to conduct even more aggressive
actions in the name of the war on terror.
To be sure, the challenge of the Puerto Rican government amounts
to a rebellion on its knees. This was made clear Monday with the
appearance of the islands representative in Washington before
a hearing convened by Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee
into the controversy over the FBIs actions.
The representative read out a statement from Puerto Rican Governor
Anibal Acevedo Vila. We have been and continue to be, willing
partners of any federal agency in pursuing the war against terrorism
and protecting the safety of our citizens. Acevedo Vila
said in the statement. It must be clearly stated that in
no way does the Commonwealth [of Puerto Rico] wish to impinge
on any FBI investigation related to domestic terrorist activity
nor to infringe on the FBIs ability to do its job.
The Acevedo Vila administrations concern over the FBIs
police-state tactics is that they are throwing into sharp relief
the real colonial status of Puerto Rico and the fundamental impotence
of the commonwealth government. A member of the Partido Popular
DemocráticoPopular Democratic Party (PPD), which
favors continuing Puerto Ricos present status, Acevedo Vilas
concerns have been heightened by apparent moves in Washington
to stage another referendum on the islands political future.
Last December, a White House task force initiated by the Clinton
administration and continued under Bush proposed a two-stage vote,
with the first round offering a choice between maintaining the
current commonwealth, or moving to a new permanent status. If
the latter choice is supported by a majority, a second round would
be held to choose between independence and becoming the 51st US
state.
The proposal, which implicitly recognizes the current status
as an illegal colonial relationship, also calls for holding periodic
votes in the event that no permanent status is chosen.
The PPD has charged that this arrangement implicitly favors
statehood and has sought to enlist US Congressional Democrats
to push for an alternative plan that would call a constitutional
convention in Puerto Rico to decide the nature of the referendum
Supporters of Puerto Rican independence, meanwhile, have charged
that the FBI repression is directed at suppressing their movement
in advance of any such referendum.
Under the current commonwealth arrangement, Puerto Ricos
nearly 4 million people are denied many of the political rights
and benefits of US citizenship. While serving in the US militaryand
suffering disproportionate casualties, with at least 50 Puerto
Ricans having been killed in Iraqthey are denied the right
to vote for president and have no representation in the US Congress.
With almost no notice in the US media, the US Supreme Court
last week rejected an appeal seeking to grant Puerto Ricans the
right to vote in presidential elections. The decision was handed
down without comment.
In addition, while a narrow layer constituting the local financial
and business elite has profited off of the commonwealth arrangement,
the bulk of the islands population lives in poverty, with
income levels less than a third of the US average. Annual per
capita income on the island currently stands at $12,000, half
that of Mississippi, the poorest US state.
These conditions have pushed many to leave the island for the
US, where the population claiming Puerto Rican background has
grown steadily, reaching some 3.2 million according to recent
census data.
The FBI repression has struck a deep chord within the Puerto
Rican population, leading to major protests and widespread expressions
of outrage. Throughout the island political slogans have been
painted along the roadside declaring No to the FBI murders,
no to the colony and Wanted, for murder, the FBI.
During the recent World Baseball Classic in San Juan, demonstrators
lined the road to the stadium for a half a mile carrying signs
denouncing the FBI repression and many wearing T-shirts bearing
the face of the assassinated Ojeda Rios.
Anger over the killing and the raids is fed by mounting discontent
over the social crisis in Puerto Rico, characterized by a continuing
decline in manufacturing jobs, an uninterrupted attack on the
large state sector and growing social polarization.
None of the choices proffered in the proposed referendum offer
a solution to this crisis. Even if the majority were to vote for
statehood, it is highly unlikely that the US Congress, which would
have to amend the constitution to annex the island as a state,
would act on such a mandate, given opposition within the ruling
establishment to the increased expenditures such a change would
entail as well as right-wing hostility to incorporating a Spanish-speaking
territory.
Despite broad sympathy for the independence movement based
on hostility to colonial subjugation, there is considerable reluctance
to embark upon the project of forging an independent Puerto Rican
nation, both because of the dispersal of much of the population
to the US and because of the failure of other mini-states in the
Caribbean to achieve any genuine independent development from
imperialism.
The only way forward in putting an end to political repression
and social inequality on the island lies in the social struggle
of Puerto Rican working people in alliance with workers throughout
Latin America and in the US itself. This combined struggle must
be armed with a socialist and internationalist perspective independent
of all of the competing bourgeois factions and based on the fight
for the United Socialist States of the Americas.
See Also:
FBI stages violent raids in
Puerto Rico
[14 February 2006]
FBI murders Puerto
Rican independence figure
[27 September 2005]
Puerto Ricos
Referendum: A vote of social protest
[22 December 1998]
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