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http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=18843

'Homies Were Burning Alive'

By Tom Hayden, AlterNet
June 1, 2004

TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS - In first-ever interviews, representatives of the
Mara Salvatrucha (MS) gang in Honduras this week described how security
forces were to blame for the May 17 prison fire that killed 105 of those
they call their homeboys. In addition to starting the fire, police and
prison guards allegedly kept the facility's gates locked for over an hour
while trapped inmates were burnt alive or died due to smoke inhalation.

Human rights observers, children's advocates, and MS members say the tragedy
is a direct consequence of Honduras' mano dura (strong fist) policies. These
policies employ suppression tactics based on New York City's "zero
tolerance" police strategies of the '90s, and were instituted on the advice
of the Manhattan Institute think-tank and the Giuliani Group, which have
exported the New York model to Latin America.

Mayor Rudy Giuliani's policies, while popular with many New Yorkers,
resulted in notorious police shootings of innocent individuals such as
Amadou Diallo. The tactics also included stop-and-frisk sweeps that led to
the preventive detention of thousands of young blacks and Latinos, until
lawsuits challenging racial profiling methods spelled the demise of the
NYPD's Street Crime Units.

An over-the-top version of the New York City model is, however, gaining a
new lease on life in countries like Honduras and El Salvador as the street
gangs become a global phenomenon - fueled mainly by deportations from the
U.S.




A survivor of the May 17, 2004 prison fire in San Pedro Sula, Honduras shows
his burns. 105 members of the MS gang died; inmates blame police.


One of 51 members of the 18th Street gang executed by police in El Porvenir
prison, Ceiba, Honduras on April 5, 2003.


Thirty Honduran youth, ages 12 to 17, were detained indefinitely without
charges or trial dates, in a cell without a toilet, in Tegucigalpa,
Honduras.
In the past five years, over 900 kids, 18 and younger, have turned up dead
in the streets, ditches, or dumpsters of Honduras - in terms of the nation's
population, that is roughly equivalent to 45,000 fatalities in the U.S.
Honduran officials estimate that 20 percent of the victims were killed by
police or private death squads who prowl the streets in station wagons with
tinted windows and no license plates. Most of the victims - usually
deportees from Los Angeles - were identified as gang members because of
their tattoos, although a majority had no criminal history.

The prisons themselves have become the scenes of mass-scale killings. On
Apr. 5, 2003, 68 inmates affiliated with the 18th Street gang were killed in
a prison massacre near La Ceiba, in northern Honduras. Initially, prison
officials blamed the inmates for causing the fatal fire, but a
government-appointed commission later concluded that 51 of the dead
prisoners had been summarily executed by police officials, who then set the
fire to cover up the killings. No one has been charged for these murders.

The latest fire catastrophe on May 17 was in a prison near San Pedro Sula,
the center of maqiladora employment in northeast Honduras. Police officials
blamed the blaze on faulty wiring, but human rights observers are
skeptical - and with good reason.

The evidence on hand justifies their suspicions. The fire broke out only in
the MS cellblock even though the prison has more than 15 other blocks.
Before the fire started, inmates phoned friends on the outside to express
their worries about smelling gas in the air. After the fire exploded and
inmates began screaming, police officials on the scene failed to open the
compound gates for two hours. They instead fired shots in the air to
discourage inmates from escaping. Firefighters didn't arrive for at least an
hour, even though a substation was less than five minutes away. And three
massive containers of water, used for showers, were inexplicably empty on
the day of the fire.

Gang Members Speak Out for First Time

The harshest denunciation of the official story of May 17 comes from gang
members themselves, who spoke under condition of anonymity.

They received secret warnings of an impending crisis just after midnight.
"Homie, we're having trouble. I smell gas" was the message. Then an object
emitting a gas-like substance was thrown into cellblock 19, and immediately
ignited.

"We thought we all would die. The homies ran to the cellblock door. We
started screaming for help. The police could see us. They were shooting and
doing nothing. Homies were burning alive or dying from the smoke. We started
trying to break the [doors] with our weights," an inmate says.

One surviving inmate could not explain why he was alive. As in a religious
experience, he said, the fire seemed to part as he jumped for his life and
rolled into a bathroom between the burning cellblock and an outer wall. He
was saved by an overhead air vent that could be turned on.

The same prisoner also recognized police anti-gang units as the men standing
at the gates. Locally known as "Cobras" since the Contra wars of the '80s,
they were yelling "Die, you motherfuckers! Die!"

These eyewitness accounts were given by MS members, who also brought in four
survivors with raw burns covering most of their bodies to be photographed.
The hallway outside their cell was filled with dozens of heavily-tattooed
homeboys who leaned alertly against the walls. Each fully expects to be the
next victim of a "mysterious" fire or some other convenient disaster.

Exposed wires stretch across the prison over their heads and along the
walls, including a crowded space with a dilapidated refrigerator, stove and
hotplates. The stench from open toilets is omnipresent, no matter how much
the inmates try to clean their cells and press their clothes.

In the yard, Protestant evangelicals wave Bibles and preach repentance, as
blank-faced guards shouldering automatic weapons stand a few yards away.

At an earlier interview in McDonald's in San Pedro Sula, while children
skipped and jumped on indoor slides, two designated MS representatives, both
armed and wary, remain defiant. They insist that the security forces'
efforts to "exterminate" the gang will not succeed. Police hatred of MS,
they claim, is because the pandilla (gang) refuses to pay "rent" to the
drug-trafficking mafia who enjoy official impunity.

MS and its rival gang, 18th Street, grew among refugees from the
U.S.-sponsored Central American wars of the 1980s in Los Angeles. Fleeing
violence in their homelands, the refugees started gangs for safety and
solidarity in places like the Pico-Union immigrant community of downtown LA.
Many thousands of their members have been convicted and deported back to
Central America, triggering a globalization of the gang phenomenon.

One of those interviewed at McDonald's says that his elder brother created
MS in Honduras just over a decade ago. Youngsters joined the gang in those
days, he says, "to kick it, for something to do, some weed, to disco, to
learn how to dance, just normal stuff." (A recent survey of 499 Honduran
gang members and parents by Dr. Jose Acevedo for the Christian Youth
Association revealed that 33 percent said their motive for joining their
gangs was "la diversion"; 29 percent said "la amistad"; and 17.4 percent
said "la baile," or dancing.) The war with 18th Street began in Los Angeles
in 1991 over equally minor grievances, "like over their girls wanting to
hang with us." The squabble soon escalated into a Hobbesian war for survival
with rival gangs on the one hand, and police and death squads on the other.

Two weeks before the Mcdonald's interview, the MS representative said, he
evaded police in a car chase and shootout. He constantly changes cell phones
and residences. Yet he has never been convicted or imprisoned in either
Honduras or the U.S. A father of two, he readily acknowledges that "we are
not angels, we will kill our enemies, and we don't pay no fucking rent to
the police." But he insists, "We are human beings, not animals. If we break
the law, convict us fair and square. But they are picking up, violating and
killing kids off the street just because they have tattoos."

Ernesto Bardales, a youth worker who originally supported the harsh
anti-gang law, believes the law he once favored has only created "a climate
of incitement against the pandilleros." Nothing has changed since last
year's massacre, he said, "there is the same hate, the same fantastic
projections" about the gang crisis.

This MS representative says he wants "this shit to end." He wants reforms of
the anti-gang laws to exclude convictions solely for tattoos. His partner,
who is a significant leader in the international MS network, claims that he
was picked up earlier this year and tortured by police with needles and
electrical wires to his genitals. (The Honduras Human Rights Commission has
accused prison police of using electric shock and water immersion
techniques.)

The government policy, they say, is to sweep the trash off the streets, then
burn it. The gang members point to the policy of indefinite pre-trial
detention, and the country's virtual lack of any rehabilitation programs.

Sweeping the Trash

While gang atrocities are real, U.S. Embassy officials say that only three
percent of all prison inmates are gang-members. A U.S. security expert
acknowledged that "you can't get much cooperation on white-collar crime,
corruption and drugs, but everyone agrees on cracking down on street crime."

The government's real goal is to 'sweep' the streets to make Honduras safe
for sweatshops, increasingly the leading employment sector. Honduras' failed
economy leaves 80 percent of the population in poverty with 40 percent
subsisting on less than one U.S. dollar per day.

The social crisis is aggravated by a prison system filled to twice its
intended capacity, and where almost 90 percent of inmates are pretrial
detainees - arrested without warrants and never charged with a crime. The
prison budget allocates 46 cents (U.S.) per day for food and medicine. U.S.
State Department reports document severe overcrowding, malnutrition, poor
sanitation, beatings and other abuses. The prison where the recent fire took
place was designed for 800 inmates, and currently holds 2,200.

Juvenile offenders are treated as harshly and arbitrarily as gang members. A
visit to one cellblock for 12-to-17-year-old juvenile offenders outside
Tegucigalpa reveals 30 youngsters packed in a room without a toilet. Half of
those interviewed have no shoes. Several have chicken pox to which the rest
were exposed. Open electrical wires were draped across their blankets. They
have built makeshift beds out of any materials they can find. None of them
have been convicted or sentenced for any crime, and most expect to be
detained longer than any sentences they eventually might receive.

According to the 2001 UN report, only five percent of all crimes and
misdemeanors and only 0.02 percent of murders are committed by children. The
same report concluded that "in the end, every child with a tattoo and street
child is stigmatized as a criminal who is creating an unfriendly climate for
investment and tourism in the country"

One 12-year-old in the prison stands out because of his blue eyes and strong
American accent. He admits to stealing money from a friend of his family,
which includes a former U.S. Marine stepfather and a mother from Texas. Even
though the victims asked the court to drop all charges, he says the judge
insisted on detaining him to teach a lesson. He expects to spend two years
in prison.

Honduras has a variety of determined children's rehabilitation
organizations, such as Casa Alianza and Victory Outreach, which try to
rescue street children and monitor disappearances, extra-judicial
executions, child trafficking and prostitution. They are consulted by
government agencies and cited by the media and State Department human rights
reports. But they lack the capacity to rehabilitate more than a few hundred
children in a sea of social and economic neglect. In visits to Casa
Alianza's urban center and Victory Outreach's rural encampment, counselors
said that while they could rehabilitate countless youngsters, it is almost
impossible to reintegrate them safely into society. While over 400,000
Honduran youngsters are employed in the illegal underground economy, many
more have no employment prospects at all.

In such conditions, the growth of gangs like MS and 18th Street appears
inevitable and unstoppable.

The U.S. Connection

The 2001 "mano duro" campaign of President Ricardo Maduro grew from daily
crime crises in Honduras, specifically the 1997 killing of the president's
own son in a botched kidnapping attempt. But the initiative was also "made
in the U.S.A" from the very beginning. "I saw how it worked in New York, and
I liked how it worked," Maduro told the Associated Press in 2001. He was
referring to the "zero tolerance" policies of cracking down on littering,
graffiti, vagrancy and traffic violations. "Instead of taking the long route
of accumulating proof of types of crimes committed, we opted to make it
illegal to belong to gangs," he said in another interview.

Although his only previous experience was running the Honduras Central Bank,
Maduro won the 2001 election against a 71-year-old candidate who stressed
improving public education. A political novice, Maduro was mesmerized by the
New York model. Honduran officials met with Mayor Giuliani's staff and New
York police officials, and with experts at the Manhattan Institute, the
ideological fountainhead of the doctrines of "zero tolerance" policing that
were adopted by the Giuliani administration. Maduro, however, outdid his
mentors, assigning more than half the Honduran army to joint patrols with
local police, often personally going on early morning raids of
neighborhoods.

Not only did Giuliani's foundation staff pay a visit to Tegucigalpa, but so
did law-enforcement gang units from Los Angeles, the other epicenter of the
gangs and immigration crises. These cities had one aspect in common: street
gangs were becoming the scapegoats justifying an intensified rhetoric
emphasizing law-and-order.

Martha Savillon, an attorney who works with Casa Alianza in Tegucigalpa,
remembers L.A. sherriffs' deputies visiting San Pedro Sula in 1997 for
"training" workshops, which led to the establishment of the Salvadoran
special anti-gang units. Some of their rhetoric sounded good, she says, like
"crime prevention" and "community policing," but in practice, the
ill-trained Honduran police would "just investigate, detain, and act as
guardians of the data base" - a secret law enforcement tracking system
coordinated with the F.B.I. that was created and is used without any
guidelines or civilian oversight.

In his small human rights office in San Pedro, Ernesto Bardales also
remembers the L.A. sheriffs' visit, and even retains their business cards.
One was from an inter-agency "gang homicide task force" and another from the
homicide division. Bardales willingly participated in the trainings, but
noticed that it was about intelligence-gathering, identifying and targeting
gang members more than building a new, law-abiding police force.

After the May 17 fire in the San Pedro de Sula prison, Savillon noted, the
American FBI "came right away to investigate, so there must have been a
previous relationship."

In an interview on deep background, a U.S. official in Tegucigalpa said that
American policy is to "export best [police] practices" to Honduras, which
includes recent visits by Los Angeles and San Jose gang experts. Another
U.S. security expert acknowledged "tracking and monitoring" gang activity to
protect U.S. interests. He insists that the May 17 fire "could have been
wiring - my take is it's credible, it started with inmates in clothing
[trying] to escape."

Other American officials readily admit, also on background, that Honduras
"lacks a rule of law." Nevertheless, their reports on human rights abuses
notably omit criticism of the anti-gang laws. State Department reports
simply note that the law was passed in 2003, and that human rights
complaints against its provisions "did not have standing." The same official
report cites the 2001 UN report but makes no mention of its criticism of
Honduran law enforcement.

The U.S. government's silence towards the sweeping anti-gang laws and
crackdowns may reflect its own complicity in the creation and continuation
of these policies.

Honduras was cynically known as the "Pentagon republic" in the '80s when it
served as the base of military and intelligence operations against the
Nicaraguan Sandinistas in the Contra wars. That period was marked by
military regimes, a security apparatus linked to Sun Myung Moon's religious
anti-communist crusade, nearly 200 officially organized disappearances and
assassinations, repression of popular organizations, and an economy
subjected to Reaganomics. That shadowy and violent gangs should emerge in
its aftermath is hardly surprising. (The architect of those destabilizing
Honduran policies during the Ronald Reagan presidency, John Dmitri
Negroponte, is the newly-appointed U.S. ambassador to Iraq.)

One of the MS representatives attributes his survival thus far to having
been "trained to have a military mind, how to be a bad motherfucker" during
training for the Honduran infantry in the 1980s at a U.S. facility in
California.

Thanks to continued U.S. involvement, the future does not look any brighter
for Honduras. The MS member warns, "If they don't stop, we're gonna do
something crazy. If I get treated like an animal, I'm gonna treat you like
an animal."

Tom Hayden is the author of Street Wars (New Press, 2004). He visited
Honduras from May 27-30. For his photos from inside Honduran prisons, go to
www.tomhayden.com.
------------

NEWSDAY
Cuomo: GOP convention to be ``very, very good'' for Giuliani
By MARC HUMBERT
AP Political Writer

June 1, 2004, 12:32 PM EDT

ALBANY, N.Y. -- A starring role at the Republican National Convention will
set tongues wagging about former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani as a
GOP presidential contender, former Gov. Mario Cuomo said Tuesday.

"They'll probably play Rudy heavier than any other part of the convention,"
Democrat Cuomo said during an interview about the Republicans bringing their
convention to New York City for the first time.

"So Rudy will go up and people will start talking about him replacing (Vice
President Dick) Cheney or him running for president," Cuomo said. "It'll be
very, very good for Rudy."

Giuliani spokeswoman Sunny Mindel declined to comment on Cuomo's remarks.

On Friday, a spokesman for the GOP convention said Giuliani, mayoral
successor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. George Pataki would all be featured
prominently at the event, in part, because of their post-Sept. 11 star
power.

"The role they played in New York, the strength, the resiliency that they
demonstrated to the world is very much a part of what we're going to show
the world at our convention," Leonardo Alcivar had said.

In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that brought down the
World Trade Center towers, killing almost 3,000 people, approval ratings for
Giuliani, Pataki and President Bush soared. With their help, Bloomberg
became the second Republican in a row to become mayor of heavily Democratic
New York City.

"They'll make the most of 9-11, the most of Rudy," Cuomo said.

"He is now still iconic, you saw that in 9-11 and that's it," the Democrat
added. "He's received a stature which is, for the time being, absolutely
unshakable."

Giuliani has said he may return to elective politics as early as 2006 by
running either for governor, should Pataki call it quits after three terms,
or for U.S. Senate against Democratic incumbent Hillary Rodham Clinton. In
the face of prostate cancer, Giuliani withdrew from the 2000 Senate race won
by Clinton.

Both Giuliani and Pataki are considered potential GOP candidates for
president in 2008. Cuomo said there is no reason for Pataki not to cast an
eye toward a run for the White House.

"If he looks around after George Bush, who's in a better position than he?"
Cuomo said. "The interesting thing is people would say, `Giuliani.' That's
not bad, if your competition is a guy who was a mayor when you were a
governor."

Giuliani angered many Republicans in 1994 when he crossed party lines to
endorse Cuomo's bid for a fourth term. Pataki beat Cuomo in that election.

The GOP convention is being held Aug. 30-Sept. 2. Democrats are holding
their convention in Boston at the end of July.

Copyright © 2004, The Associated Press


www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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