WW2 has to end.

Colonialism has to end.

-Bob

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "Vigilius Haufniensis"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> http://upsidedownworld.org/main/content/view/1141/1/
>       From US to El Salvador: 'Gangs' and the 'Global War on Terror'    
>       Written by J. Heyward     
>       Wednesday, 20 February 2008  
>       Source: The San Fransisco Bay View
> 
> 
>        
>       Police Attack Students"We're under domestic insurgency. If we
don't get it, it will get us." - California Attorney General Jerry
Brown, Anti-Gang Conference, Riverside, Calif., December 2007 
> 
>       "We're mounting a coordinated, aggressive suppression strategy
that targets the worst offenders and the most violent gangs. We're
converging local, state, federal and even international efforts ...
coming at them with everything we have." - Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa, Feb. 8, 2007, press conference 
> 
>       On May 1, 2007, Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton was
scheduled to visit El Salvador with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to
announce a new policing partnership between Los Angeles, Mexico and El
Salvador. 
> 
>       His plans were interrupted, however, by a brutal LAPD attack
on a peaceful immigrant rights rally in MacArthur Park. Riot police
stormed the park, assaulting the crowd with teargas, clubs and rubber
bullets, then trampling and beating two mainstream journalists and
chasing people into the streets. 
> 
>       Villaraigosa made the visit to El Salvador alone. Insisting
that he wouldn't let "the immigration issue" distract from the purpose
of his trip, the mayor tried to distance himself from police violence
at home while depicting El Salvador as a new frontier in trade and
tourism but lacking in security. What he did not disclose, of course,
was the fact that the Salvadoran National Police (PNC) has been at the
forefront of El Salvador's safety concerns, having been recently
implicated in eight political assassinations, an attack on a student
march at the National University, at least a dozen violent raids on
street vendors and two student disappearances since the opening of a
new U.S. police training academy in El Salvador - the International
Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA). 
> 
>       Instead, he attributed El Salvador's instability to "gangs"
and signed an additional contract with the director of the PNC,
Rodrigo Avila, "to track and detain cross-border gang members and
Salvadoran deportees." Under the agreement, officers from the Los
Angeles Police Department's gang unit share training, tactics and
intelligence with the Salvadoran force. The program is intended to
augment Salvadoran President Tony Saca's "Mano Dura" (Iron Fist)
policy, a severe version of former New York Mayor Rudy Guiliani's Zero
Tolerance Program. 
> 
>       "These laws are never intended to solve crime," says FMLN
deputy Lorena Peña, "but to criminalize the poor. Now there's the
anti-terrorist law and the people of the informal sector, unions and
organizers have come under increased repression - all under the guise
of stopping crime. The right has a policy of keeping people terrorized
by selectively murdering organizers and people on the left to strike
fear." 
> 
>       In the seven months that followed Villaraigosa's visit, the
PNC carried out another massive raid on street vendors in San Salvador
that resulted in the brutal arrests of 28 street vendors, an attack on
a water privatization protest in Suchitoto where 14 people were
arrested and an invasion of a rural community, Cutumay Camones, in
Santa Ana on behalf of a private sewage company that resulted in a
four-month-long standoff. 
> 
>       The 28 street vendors and 14 Suchitoto protestors were charged
with "acts of terrorism" under the Salvadoran right wing's new
anti-terrorism law. (See this update on the case.) The Law against
Acts of Terrorism criminalizes the "simulation, preparation, financing
and organizing of any mobilizations and other acts of protest." While
the charges on the vendors were eventually dropped, the Suchitoto
charges still stand and, if found guilty, protestors could spend up to
60 years in prison for organizing a street march. 
> 
>       The PNC's actions and the Salvadoran government's
interpretation of terrorism have been consistently endorsed by the
U.S. State Department. Before he was forced to resign, U.S. Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales initiated the first phases of the
U.S.-Salvadoran "anti-gang" agreement and suggested that the
Salvadoran government consider also implementing the death penalty. 
> 
>       Upon leaving his post as U.S. ambassador in 2007, Douglas
Barclay applauded the ARENA government's achievement of approving the
Anti-Terrorism Law and urged officials to apply it and create more
repressive laws - including authorization for domestic surveillance of
phone calls - under the pretense of fighting crime. 
> 
>       "First they opened an FBI office and there's an INTERPOL
office here as well," said a member of Movimiento Para
Autodeterminaccion, a Salvadoran human rights monitoring group, in
March 2006. "Now they've opened this police training academy. It's
beginning to look a little bit like the X-Files in El Salvador." 
> 
>       The U.S. State Department has been steadily rebuilding its
presence in El Salvador since 2002. That year, the Bush administration
supported an attempted coup of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez that
failed. Since that time, Latin America has elected its first
indigenous leader, Evo Morales, in Bolivia, a socialist economist in
Ecuador, Rafael Correa, and two center-left presidents in Central
America, in complete defiance of the Washington Consensus. 
> 
>       The uprising in Oaxaca, Mexico, before, during and after the
heavily contested presidential victory of Felipe Calderon is perhaps
one of the best illustrations of changing power dynamics and national
uprisings throughout the region and clear evidence that the U.S. is
quickly losing influence. 
> 
>       After a complete round of regional elections, Latin America
has left Washington with only lukewarm support of the U.S.'s "trade
expansion" plans - or neocolonial project - and almost nowhere to
settle down militarily except in Colombia, where corporate-financed
right-wing militias and left-wing guerilla forces are entrenched in a
civil war almost two centuries old, and in El Salvador, where the
right-wing ARENA party - founded by former death squad architect
Roberto D'Abuisson - has exercised social control through brutal
economic, electoral and military repression tactics that Washington is
eager to reward, refine and replicate. 
> 
>       The FBI opened an office in El Salvador in January of 2005,
several months before the Bush administration engineered the narrow
passage of CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement) through the
U.S. Congress. Recognizing massive opposition on the ground to CAFTA,
Condoleezza Rice announced the opening of the U.S.-sponsored ILEA
(International Law Enforcement Academy) in El Salvador to "enhance the
functioning of free trade ... and to make Latin America safe for
foreign investment." 
> 
>       Fifteen Latin American countries have sent police recruits to
the ILEA to be trained by U.S. Department of Homeland Security in
social control and political repression. Not surprisingly, many Latin
Americans call the ILEA the "School of the Americas for the police,"
intended to train thousands of police recruits in torture and
repression tactics traditionally carried out by the military. 
> 
>       "They're trying to proscribe fear of protest into the public's
imagination." observed Lorena Peña, historic leader of the FMLN, El
Salvador 
> 
>       Less than one week after the first batch of ILEA recruits were
graduated in 2006, Radio Venceremos founder Mariposa Manzanares'
parents were assassinated on July 1, touching off a surge of political
assassinations that continued through the winter. Four days after the
Manzanares executions, an elite unit of the PNC called the UMO
ambushed a student march against bus fare and cost of living increases
and the Salvadoran military attacked, invaded and occupied the
National University in what the Human Rights Office declared "the
worst case of military violence in El Salvador since the signing of
the Peace Accords" in 1992. 
> 
>       The constant and growing response from the Salvadoran social
movement has been mass mobilization against every front of the
government's attacks. The FMLN, former guerilla force turned political
party that governs over 40 percent of the country's population, has
been consistently winning higher percentages of the popular vote as
each election year passes. 
> 
>       While the Latin American left is convinced that this
coyuntura, or blend of political forces in the region, paints the
picture of a falling empire and the "beginning of the end of 500 years
of colonialism," Washington's right wing allies are pulling out every
weapon in the cache. There is no mistaking the parallel between the
U.S.'s mounting presence in El Salvador and the resurgence of death
squad assassinations in El Salvador, just as there is only a thin veil
between "war on gangs" rhetoric and the recent attempts of the federal
government to intervene in local law enforcement on cases relating to
the U.S.'s punishing immigration policy. 
> 
>       Terrorism trials for the Suchitoto 13 will begin on Feb. 8,
2008. Stand in solidarity and defend the right to organize! 
> 
>       UPDATE: The terrorism charges against the Suchitoto 13 were
dropped last week. After this decision by the Special Tribunal, the
ARENA party attempted to bargain for lesser crimes -- "public
disorder" and "aggravated damages", which would've carried up to four
year sentences -- while hundreds of people marched for three days from
Suchitoto to San Salvador in protest. 
> 
>       News from San Salvador today is that ALL of the charges have
been dropped! The CISPES national office will have more details about
this case. But the struggle continues...
> 
>       The Salvadoran left is still pressing for investigations into
recent political assassinations and death squad activity and is
expecting heavy US-sponsored repression through its police training
academy, the ILEA (International Law Enforcement Academy), and various
fraud and intimidation intimidation tactics leading into the 2009
elections in El Salvador.
> 
>       For more information, visit the CISPES (Committee in
Solidarity with the People of El Salvador) website at www.cispes.org,
sister-cities at www.sister-cities.org, SHARE at
www.share-elsalvador.org. 
> 
>       Photo by Yuri Cortez, AFP-Getty Images
>


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