>-------------------------
>Via Workers World News Service
>Reprinted from the Oct. 5, 2000
>issue of Workers World newspaper
>-------------------------
>
>SOCIALIST CANDIDATES ON R.I. BALLOT
>
>Special to Workers World
>Providence, R.I.
>
>For the second consecutive presidential election, Workers
>World Party candidates Monica Moorehead and Gloria La Riva
>are on the ballot in Rhode Island.
>
>Party members and volunteers from Rhode Island,
>Massachusetts and New York donated their time and energy
>this summer to collect voters' signatures. One thousand
>signatures are needed to qualify. The petitioners gathered
>over 1,750 signatures in all, reaching out to working-class
>people at malls, supermarkets, demonstrations and even a
>free outdoor concert by the popular alternative rock group
>the Mighty Mighty Bosstones.
>
>In 1996 the Moorehead/La Riva campaign kicked off at Dorcas
>Place, a literacy center in Providence.
>
>This year Moorehead will be in Rhode Island twice while
>touring New England from Sept. 28 to Oct. 3.
>
>On Sept. 28, Moorehead will speak at the University of Rhode
>Island Multicultural Center, Kingston Campus, at 12:30 p.m.
>That evening she will talk live with Arlene Violet on WHJJ
>Radio 920 AM from 5-6 p.m. Violet's program is the number-
>one radio talk show in the state.
>
>That evening Moorehead will also tape a radio program with
>George Castro of the "Minority Monitor" show to be aired
>Oct. 1 at 6 a.m. on WSNE Radio 93.3 FM. Castro's listeners
>stretch from Maine to Cape Cod, Mass., to northern
>Connecticut.
>
>Then on Sept. 30, there will be a program devoted to
>Moorehead at the Davey Lopes Recreation Center at Dudley
>Street in Providence at 6 p.m. The center is in the heart of
>Providence's African American community. The Rhode Island
>WWP Campaign Committee expects a large turnout from the
>Black and Latin communities due to the high-profile work
>done by Party members against police brutality following the
>shooting death of Sgt. Cornel Young Jr. The committee is
>printing and distributing 5,000 flyers to publicize this
>event.
>
>A photo of Moorehead and information on the WWP campaign
>will be included in the League of Women Voters' "Rhode
>Island Voters' Guide '00," a publication which will be
>distributed free throughout the state. This gives the
>campaign the potential to reach up to 50,000 voters who may
>otherwise never hear of the Moorehead/La Riva ticket, due to
>the big business media's restricted coverage of non-
>capitalist candidates.
>
>Moorehead will also take part in activities in the Boston
>area that weekend, including a teach-in on Mumia Abu-Jamal
>at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sept. 29 and a
>protest outside the first Bush-Gore presidential debate Oct.
>3.
>
>Check the Web site www.vote4workers.org for updates on the
>New England portion of this exciting socialist campaign.
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>
>Message-ID: <01f501c02ae5$e9ebdc80$0a00a8c0@linux>
>From: "WW" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [WW]  Vieques protesters brace for new confrontation
>Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 09:54:12 -0400
>Content-Type: text/plain;
>        charset="Windows-1252"
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
>
>-------------------------
>Via Workers World News Service
>Reprinted from the Oct. 5, 2000
>issue of Workers World newspaper
>-------------------------
>
>VIEQUES PROTESTERS BRACE FOR NEW CONFRONTATION
>
>By Berta Joubert-Ceci
>Washington
>
>"We are here not to ask, but to demand peace for Vieques--to
>tell President Clinton that we are not willing to continue
>living under a state of war."
>
>Those were the words of Ismael Guad alupe, spokesperson of
>the Committee for the Rescue and Development of Vieques,
>during a Sept. 23 rally in Washington. The rally was
>organized in solidarity with the people of Vieques, a small
>island of Puerto Rico that has been used as a U.S. Navy
>bombing range since 1941.
>
>This, the largest rally for Vieques held in Washington so
>far, took place outside the White House. It comes at a time
>when both the United States and Puerto Rico are immersed in
>deceitful bourgeois election campaigns.
>
>It's also a time when the U.S. Navy has taken on the so-
>called "good neighbor" policy towards Vieques, trying to
>instill the island's residents with a favorable view of the
>Pentagon and shift the outcome of a referendum in favor of a
>continued military presence.
>
>But those at the rally spoke of the determination of the
>Viequenses to oust the Navy once and for all. As Guadalupe
>said, "The struggle in Vieques is not for sale."
>
>Speakers said presidential candidate Al Gore's statement a
>day earlier--calling for the Navy's early withdrawal from
>the island and supporting President Bill Clinton's directive
>for a military withdrawal after three years--was an
>opportunistic attempt to win the votes of Puerto Ricans in
>the United States.
>
>Congressperson Luis GutiÈrrez of Illinois said: "The U.S.
>military are a bunch of liars. We will not stop our fight
>until the people of Vieques tell us that the Navy is gone."
>
>There was also international solidarity at the rally. Father
>Jeonghyeon Mun came from south Korea representing the
>struggle against U.S. bombing at Maehyang-ri.
>
>Mun said: "We have strong solidarity for each other. Vieques
>is not isolated. The people have many friends in the world
>and we are among them. U.S. troops out of Korea and
>Vieques!"
>
>EL GRITO DE LARES SPARKS SOLIDARITY
>
>That day Lares, Puerto Rico, saw the largest ever held
>demonstration to commemorate the anniversary of "El Grito de
>Lares," the 1868 armed uprising against Spanish colonial
>domination. For the first time in 30 years, all the pro-
>independence forces united in a single massive
>demonstration.
>
>The struggle of La Isla Nena--"the Baby Island," as Vieques
>is known--has been the spark for unity among these groups.
>
>The struggle in Vieques has reached a mature stage. The
>cause has been taken up by community organizations through
>out the Big Island of Puerto Rico.
>
>During this week of solidarity with Vieques, a group called
>Florecer Vie quense (Blooming Vieques) crafted hundreds of
>paper flowers made by residents from poor communities in the
>northern part of Puerto Rico. Group spokesperson Zoraida
>Figueroa explained that "poor people cannot afford much, but
>wanted to be part of the struggle, so they made flowers,
>each representing the solidarity of one person in the
>community."
>
>The Citizen's Commission for the Rescue of Caimito, a group
>fighting speculators, developers and governmental agencies
>that build luxury neighborhoods at the expense of the poor
>and the environment, has also joined the surging movement to
>oust the Navy from Vieques.
>
>In Mayaguez, on the west coast of Puerto Rico, 50 people
>started a walk through the northern part of the island in
>support of Vieques. They hope to reach Fajardo, the point of
>departure for Vieques on the east coast, by Oct. 1.
>
>Along their walk the group has met with students and others,
>spreading the word that an important demonstration will take
>place on Vieques Oct. 1.
>
>Military practice scheduled
>
>That day, the U.S. Navy and NATO plan to resume military
>practice. Two battleships stationed in Virginia are
>scheduled to practice bombing in Vieques.
>
>But the people of Vieques and Puerto Rico are preparing to
>stop them. As Carlos ZenÛn said at the Washington rally,
>"Three times the Navy wanted to bomb Vieques [this year] and
>three times we got in and stopped them."
>
>This time the activists are better prepared than ever
>before. They plan a massive rally with many different
>components, including acts of civil disobedience both in
>Vieques and throughout Puerto Rico. Plans are being laid to
>transport activists from the Big Island to Vieques. A
>flotilla of dozens of fishing boats will sail there from
>Fajardo.
>
>The government is also preparing. It wants to make this
>protest as difficult as possible for the activists.
>
>Norma Torres, from the Vieques Wo men's Alliance, told
>Workers World that the government had reduced the number of
>ferryboats carrying passengers between Puerto Rico and
>Vieques to only one.
>
>The struggle of the people of Vieques won't be stopped by a
>lack of ferryboats. When their own lives and those of their
>loved ones are endangered daily by the impact of Navy
>practices--be it poisoning of their water and soil or
>ordnance falling from the sky--they have made it clear they
>will make whatever sacrifices are necessary to get the U.S.
>Navy out.
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>
>Message-ID: <01fd01c02ae6$18ee77e0$0a00a8c0@linux>
>From: "WW" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [WW]  U.S. shelters Haitian death squads
>Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2000 09:55:31 -0400
>Content-Type: text/plain;
>        charset="Windows-1252"
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
>
>-------------------------
>Via Workers World News Service
>Reprinted from the Oct. 5, 2000
>issue of Workers World newspaper
>-------------------------
>
>More attacks on vote count
>
>U.S. SHELTERS HAITIAN DEATH SQUADS
>
>By G. Dunkel
>
>Over 100 supporters of the Tonton Macoute death squads held
>a public meeting in Brooklyn, N.Y., Sept. 10 to promote
>former dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier as a
>candidate in Haiti's November presidential election.
>
>Toto Constant, wanted in Haiti for complicity in the murders
>of 3,000 people, lives the peaceful life of a real-estate
>broker in Queens.
>
>Still the United States complains that Haiti's May 21
>parliamentary elections were "flawed" even as it shelters
>some of the most vicious fascists Haiti has ever known.
>
>The Macoutes are a fascist organization that engaged in
>torture and murder to repress Haiti's people during the
>decades long Duvalier family dictatorship.
>
>Both the New York Daily News and Newsday gave prominent
>coverage to the Macoute meeting. The gathering was widely
>seen as a maneuver by Duvalier supporters to influence the
>elections, rather than a serious bid for Duvalier's return,
>which would almost surely ignite a civil war.
>
>During Duvalier's rule and that of his father, over 40,000
>Haitians were killed by the Macoutes and billions were
>stolen from the national treasury, without the U.S.
>government saying more than "tsk-tsk."
>
>Constant was the head of FRAPH, an organization set up by
>the Haitian Army to do the work of the Macoutes during the
>1991-1994 coup against Aristide. Constant has admitted that
>while heading FRAPH he was also on the CIA payroll.
>
>WORKERS, PEASANTS BACK ARISTIDE
>
>Last spring's elections saw 18 of 19 contested seats go to
>Ex-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's Fanmi Lavalas party.
>Since Aristide's political strength is based on his support
>among the impoverished workers and peasants, Washington
>would prefer to see his opponents win.
>
>All summer the United States conducted a political pressure
>campaign to force the Haitian election board to count the
>May 21 vote the way it feels it should be counted, not as
>Haitian authorities consider proper. The U.S. State
>Department says it does not consider this to be interference
>in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation, but rather
>"promoting democracy."
>
>The rule in Haiti is that a candidate needs 50 percent plus
>one vote to be declared the winner without a runoff
>election. The way this is calculated by the Haitian board of
>elections is to take the votes of the top four candidates,
>add them up and see if one of the top four has 50 percent
>plus one. The U.S. position is that they have to count the
>votes of all the candidates.
>
>There were between 15 and 25 candidates for each seat.
>Washington's position would have meant 10 runoffs out of 19
>seats.
>
>Generally, the people knocked out of the runoffs by this
>rule would have been U.S. backed candidates. The opposition
>wouldn't have won many, if any, more seats. It would have
>cost more, let the U.S. meddle more and frustrated the
>people with having to go to the polls again and again.
>
>Both the United States and Canada, Haiti's two largest
>foreign aid donors, threatened to cut off assistance if the
>vote was not recounted. The Organization of American States
>sent a mission to Haiti in early September to add further
>pressure for a recount.
>
>The OAS failed to change the tally. So U.S. Ambassador to
>the OAS Luis Lauredo announced Sept. 5 that Washington will
>send all development aid to private organizations, not to
>Haiti's government.
>
>The United States also threatened to withhold hundreds of
>millions of dollars in pending loans from international
>financial institutions.
>
>Forwarding the aid to private groups allows Washington to
>claim that it has not cut off aid to the Western
>Hemisphere's poorest country. At the same time it puts
>tremendous financial pressure on Haiti.
>
>New York's Haitian community responded strongly Sept. 7.
>Hundreds turned out for a street protest to support Haitian
>sovereignty from foreign interference while President RenÈ
>PrÈval gave his address to the United Nations Millennium
>Summit.
>
>The increase in world oil costs has hit Haiti hard, abruptly
>raising prices for many goods. The sudden spike of
>inflation, together with U.S. financial and political
>pressure, will make the situation in Haiti even more
>unstable.
>
>- END -
>
>(Copyleft Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to
>copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document, but
>changing it is not allowed. For more information contact
>Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011; via e-mail:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send message to:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org)
>
>
>
>
>


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