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- From: christic@igc.apc.org (Christic Institute)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: salpress threatened
- Message-ID: <1992Sep2.020739.15352@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 2 Sep 92 02:07:39 GMT
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
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- /* Written 1:35 pm Sep 1, 1992 by cispesnatl in cdp:carnet.alerts */
- /* ---------- "salpress threatened" ---------- */
-
- Salpress Threatened Again
- Human Rights Abuses Escalate
-
- Less than two months after arson destroyed the offices of
- Salpress, the Salvadoran news agency is receiving threats once
- more. On August 27, an anonymous caller warned that "Salpress will
- burn again," and the following day a caller threatened the life of
- Salpress Director Ricardo Gomez. The threats have created an
- atmosphere of tension and insecurity in the office, making it
- impossible for workers to function effectively. Meanwhile, the
- investigation into the July 2 fire has made virtually no progress.
- There has been no official report from any government agency, and
- officials have interviewed no one but Salpress staff.
- The threats against Salpress come amidst the worst wave of
- violence to hit El Salvador since the beginning of the cease fire
- on February 1. According to the human rights group CODEFAM, 39
- people were assassinated in the month of August alone, and another
- 7 disappeared. In addition, there have been a number of searches
- and attacks against members of the FMLN and grassroots
- organizations, as well as an attack on a member of the staff of the
- Human Rights Ombudsman and an assault several days later against
- his wife.
- The government has attempted to dismiss the attacks as
- incidents of common crime. While it is true that El Salvador is
- experiencing a crime wave, many of the victims bore characteristic
- signs of death squad murders, their thumbs tied behind their backs
- and their tortured bodies dumped in public places. Opposition
- activists charge that the government is deliberately allowing
- common crime to go unchecked in an effort to create the impression
- of generalized chaos. "They want to cloak the dirty war in common
- crime," explained FMLN leader Francisco Veliz.
- Many of the victims were involved in controversial land or
- labor disputes, a further indication that the attacks are
- politically motivated. Interestingly, military and police officers
- have been targeted as well; the most prominent victim was Mauricio
- Quintanilla Abrego, a lawyer who worked with military intelligence
- and acted as adviser to Gen. Mauricio Vargas, the Army's
- representative to last year's peace negotiations between the
- government and the FMLN. Vice Minister of Defense Orlando Zepeda
- called the killing typical of a "dirty war," and implied that the
- FMLN was responsible. Archbishop Arturo Rivera y Damas, however,
- blamed members of the Army opposed to the peace process. He
- pointed out that the kidnappers were equipped with walkie-talkies,
- and that the victim was abducted from an area with a constant
- military presence. In characteristic death squad style, the
- killers dragged their victim into a vehicle with polarized windows,
- and left his body with the thumbs tied together.
- The increased violence comes as two human rights commissions
- created in accordance with the peace agreements are moving forward
- with investigations which are almost certain to implicate top
- ranking Army officers. The Ad Hoc Commission, whose mandate is to
- review the records of military officers, recently requested a one-
- month extension in order to compile more evidence. The Truth
- Commission, responsible for investigating the most serious human
- rights cases, opened its doors to the public in order to hear
- testimony from survivors. Thirty names have been presented to the
- Ad-Hoc Commission in connection with the murder of six Jesuit
- priests in 1989, and the non-governmental Human Rights Commission
- (CDHES) submitted a list of 78 officers, including Zepeda and
- Vargas, who are accused of violating human rights. According to
- FMLN Commander Joaquin Villalobos, the Army may be experiencing
- "internal problems" as a result of the commissions' investigations.
- Denying any FMLN involvement in the Quintanilla killing, Villalobos
- called the crime a "clear intimidation operation combined with a
- dirty war."
- The work of the Truth Commission and the Ad Hoc Commission is
- essential to the peace process. If peace is to last, officers
- responsible for human rights abuses must be removed from positions
- of power. Clearly, this is precisely what the guilty parties hope
- to avoid. The attacks against Salpress may also be connected to
- efforts by the Army to sabotage the work of the Truth Commission
- and the Ad Hoc Commission. After the July 2 fire, the non-
- governmental Human Rights Commission (CDHES) suggested that the
- motive may have been the destruction of archives covering twelve
- years of civil war, which could have been used by the Commissions
- to document human rights abuses by the Army.
- International pressure has been a key factor in the peace
- process thus far, and it can play an important role preventing
- further attacks against Salpress, and in halting the Army's dirty
- war.
-
- Suggested Action:
-
- Call your Congresspersons and:
-
- 1) urge them to call President Alfredo Cristiani to express
- concern over the threats against Salpress, and push the government
- to investigate the July 2 Salpress fire and the current threats.
-
- 2) urge them to vote to end all military aid. Senators should be
- encouraged to sign on to the Specter/De Concini letter, which calls
- for the transfer of all military aid into the Demobilization and
- Transition Fund (see earlier alerts for details). Representatives
- should be urged to support a conferenced bill containing language
- similar to that in the letter..
-