I received the update on Saturdays action at Benning, in Georgia, yesterday afternoon. Sadly I couldn't make the event but wanted to share what they have going on with others who also couldn't or are not a subscriber to the School of the Americas Watch Newsletter.
18,000 human rights advocates from around the country and from all walks life have filled up Fort Benning Drive, the main access to Fort Benning's main gate. The presence began this morning with songs from the musicians collective and a welcome message from Fr. Roy Bourgeois and former prisoner of conscience Martina Le Force.
"We are gathered here today in the name of peace and to send a message of love and solidarity to our sisters and brothers of Latin America an all the countries of the world where people have been victimized by our government's foreign policy. We are here to express our outrage and call for the closing of this school, this combat training school for Latin American soldiers which has graduated so many human rights abusers year after year," said Fr. Roy.
As Martina Le Force said during her morning speech, "they fear us because we are branching out, we are a unified international movement and we have more friends than the Bush administration and it's silly wars will ever have".
The question of the SOA/WHINSEC, and what this country should do about it's very own terrorist training camp, though not all graduates turn out to be Despots, Murderers, or potential Dictators of the countries they come from, many seem to take their U.S. Military Training to advance their own Ideological wants, should be near the top of the lists of questions to all running for seats in Congress, especially those that would be new to those halls of representation of the people.
As it is apparently with Representative Jim McGovern.
who earlier this year introduced an amendment to the Foreign Operations Appropriations bill that would have cut funding for the SOA/WHINSEC, confirmed his commitment to continue working until the SOA is shut down for good. 203 members of Congress voted in favor of the McGovern/Lewis amendment which lost by a margin of only six votes. HR 1707, the bill that would suspend operations at WHINSEC is still alive and we encourage you to continue to pressure your members of Congress to become co-sponsors.
simultaneous events are taking place in Chile, Canada, Arizona, San Francisco and Monterey in California. We have also received solidarity statements from different countries in Latin America where human rights organizations are fighting to close the SOA and hold human rights violators accountable for their actions.
The evening closed with an amazing Puppet Peagant as a tribute to Rufina Amaya, the sole survivor of the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador, who passed earlier this year due to a heart condition.