For Immediate Release: November 21st, 2004
Contact: Christy Pardew, media@soaw.org
Over 16,000 Converge at Fort Benning
Many Scale Barbed-Wire Fences and are Arrested While Calling for Closure of US Army’s School of the Americas
PRESS RELEASE
Columbus, GA
– Over 16,000 people from across the Americas—including actors Martin Sheen
and Susan Sarandon—gathered this weekend outside the gates of Ft. Benning,
Georgia in the most diverse demonstration yet of opposition to the School of the
Americas (SOA), a combat-training school for Latin American soldiers. Hundreds
of thousands of Latin Americans have been tortured, raped, assassinated,
“disappeared,” massacred, and forced into refuge by graduates of the SOA,
renamed in 2001 the Western Hempishere Institute for Security Cooperation or
WHINSEC.
The gathering culminated today with a solemn “funeral” procession to the
gates of Fort Benning led by actor Martin Sheen. As of 4 PM, at least 20 people
had been arrested in acts of nonviolent civil disobedience, many negotiating a
10-foot-high barbed-wire fence to enter the base. They took this action despite
knowing they likely face 3-6 months in federal prison. Since protests against
the SOA/WHINSEC began fourteen years ago, 170 people have served prison
sentences of up to 2 years for civil disobedience.
“Prison will not deter us,” said Elizabeth Nadeau, who was among
those arrested today. “We will be here until we close the school and change
the foreign policy that it represents.” Nadeau, 27, is a student and
member of the Steelworkers Union in Minneapolis, MN.
SOA/ WHINSEC graduates return to their countries to utilize their training
domestically and are consistently cited for atrocities against their own people.
New research introduced by SOA Watch earlier this year confirms that the school
has continued to support known human rights abusers. Despite having been
investigated by the United Nations for ordering the shooting of 16 indigenous
peasants in El Salvador, a massacre recorded in the US State Department’s
Human Rights Record Country Reports, Col. Francisco del Cid Diaz returned to
WHINSEC in 2003.
“Like many of its graduates, this school continues to operate with
impunity,” said Carlos Mauricio, torture survivor, plaintiff in a
successful lawsuit against two Salvadoran Generals living in the US and a
featured speaker this weekend. “Shutting down the SOA once and for all
would send a strong human rights message to Latin America and the world.”
Thousands of college students, labor unions, faith-based communities, torture
survivors, immigrant organizations and numerous human rights groups gathered
together to make this weekend’s demonstration the largest and most diverse yet
for SOA Watch, which has held a vigil at the gates of Fort Benning every
November since 1990.
For more information go to the School of the Americas Watch
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