SOAW–West News for August, 2004


1) August Events Plus; Organizing for November Vigil at Ft. Benning.
2) Fresno suit hearing recalls Salvadoran cleric's slaying in '80.
3) Witness to Haiti; Movie on Venezuela; Caravan to Ft. Benning.

 



School of the Americas Watch–West ~ SOAW–W
August 13, 2004

San Jose Website - http://teachers.bcp.org/llauro
Los Angeles Website - www.soaw-la.org
National Website - www.soaw.org

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Note:  Items for SOAW–W e-mails should be sent to:
Dolores Perez Priem


SOAW Vigil at Ft. Benning, GA  
Nov. 19-21, 2004


NOTICE:  We would like to determine who is interested in going to the annual vigil and peaceful protest at Fort Benning, Georgia on Nov. 19-21.  Please let us know your names so we can begin organizing our greater Bay Area group, by contacting the following individuals in your area and let them know of your interest:

EVENTS:

Lisa Sullivan's schedule has been revised to reflect two new dates. For the latest information, and for news of an event coming in September,  please go to our calendar page:






School of the Americas Watch–West ~ SOAW–W
August 25, 2004

San Jose Website - http://teachers.bcp.org/llauro
Los Angeles Website - www.soaw-la.org
National Website - www.soaw.org

******

Note:  Items for SOAW–W e-mails should be sent to:
Dolores Perez Priem


SOAW Vigil at Ft. Benning, GA Nov. 19-21, 2004


SOAWW's regular update will be sent out Monday, August 30th – please send info on September events for posting in the 8/30 email.  Thanks. (One September flash: the movie about Venezuela's President Chavez "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" will be shown at the Unitarian Universalist Center, 1187 Franklin St, SF on Sunday, Sept 12 at 5:00 pm - more info to follow in 8/30 email.)



NOTE:  This email is sent today to alert you about an important legal case happening this week in Fresno regarding the murder of Archbishop Romero of El Salvador brought by The Center for Justice and Accountability.  Please check websites listed below and today's SF Chronicle article printed out below.

Our own Carlos Mauricio is quoted in today's Chronicle article (and printed below).  Also Dr. Terry Karl had this to say about the case:

"The Romero assassination is one of the most important political murders in the history of Latin America," said Terry Karl, a Stanford University professor of political science who will testify at the trial. "It is a signal that no one is safe, not even the archbishop, one of the most important figures in a country that is nearly 95% Catholic. Romero's murder led to the civil war."

You can access the article printed below about the trial: Fresno suit hearing recalls Salvadoran cleric's slaying in '80.

Also, the Center for Justice and Accountability will have daily postings about this trial on their website which is www.cja.org


Fresno suit hearing recalls Salvadoran cleric's slaying in '80

–Tyche Hendricks, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 25, 2004

Fresno – The brazen murder of El Salvador's Roman Catholic Archbishop, Oscar Arnulfo Romero, was vividly recalled Tuesday at an unusual hearing in a Fresno courtroom. Romero, an internationally revered peace advocate, was shot through the heart on the evening of March 24, 1980, while saying Mass at a San Salvador hospital chapel. He had been an outspoken opponent of the growing repression in his country and was described by the then-U.S. ambassador as "the most important leader in El Salvador at that time." The hearing in federal district court in Fresno, which continues through Friday, is the first time anyone has been taken to court for the assassination of the archbishop, whose death helped catapult El Salvador into a civil war that claimed 75,000 lives and lasted until 1992.

Using a little-known 18th century law, the Alien Tort Claims Act, as well as the 1991 Torture Victim Protection Act, the Center for Justice and Accountability, a San Francisco human rights group, filed a civil suit last year on behalf of Romero's brother against a former captain in the Salvadoran air force, Alvaro Rafael Saravia, for playing a key role in the assassination. The brother's identity is not being revealed in court out of concern for his safety.

Saravia, who until recently had been living in Modesto, did not answer the complaint against him, so the court ruled against him by default. But given the unusual nature of the case, Federal Judge Oliver W. Wanger scheduled this week's hearing to ensure he had jurisdiction in the case and determine liability and the amount of damages, if any. Saravia did not appear in court Tuesday, nor did he have an attorney represent him. He could not be reached for comment and is believed to have gone into hiding.

In 1987, Saravia was arrested in Florida and held for 14 months after a Salvadoran judge asked that he be extradited to stand trial in the Romero assassination. But the case never went to trial in El Salvador, and Saravia was eventually released. His Miami attorney, Neal Sonnett, was out of the country and could not be reached for comment. An amnesty law passed in El Salvador in 1993 at the end of the war prevents trial of the case there.

The center won a $54 million judgment in 2002 against two Salvadoran former ministers of defense on behalf of three torture victims, including San Francisco high school teacher Carlos Mauricio, who attended the hearing in Fresno on Tuesday. Mauricio said he hoped the hearing would represent the beginning of "an end to impunity" for human rights violators.

With no defense team to rebut the evidence, Wanger heard the plaintiff's dramatic case, which included slides of Romero's mangled body crumpled on the chapel floor and an audio tape of the archbishop's last words, punctuated by the explosion of gunfire. As Romero's voice resounded through the wood-paneled courtroom, clusters of Salvadorans in the audience wept quietly.

"The pain is still there," said Maria Pereira, a San Jose businesswoman who journeyed to Fresno with her family to attend the hearing. "Two months after Monsignor's death, I lost a nephew, 19 years old. The army took him away and we never heard from him again. Romero's death was the most significant for the country, but it was one of many thousands."

To Nora Sotelo-Kury of San Francisco, and many others, the assassination of the archbishop signified that the Salvadoran military and affiliated death squads would stop at nothing to terrorize the country into submission. "Here was this man who was the saint of the Americas, the voice of the voiceless," she said, dabbing at her eyes with a tissue. "If they could murder Monsignor Romero, they could do whatever they wanted."

U.S. church leaders and former U.S. Ambassador to El Salvador Robert White, who gave a video deposition that was played in court, were among the witnesses who testified about the importance of Romero's life and the impact of his death. "I felt Oscar Romero was perhaps the only person who could serve as a bridge between the rich and the poor," said White. "Had Romero lived, it's quite possible we could have avoided the civil war because he could channel popular discontent into more constructive channels."

In addition, Amado Antonio Garay, who said he had worked as a driver for Saravia, testified that Saravia was closely linked to Maj. Roberto D'Aubuisson, who was later identified by a United Nations truth commission as the mastermind of Romero's killing. D'Aubuisson died of cancer in 1992. Garay testified that Saravia instructed him to drive the sniper to the chapel, stop while the man fired, then drive him away again. He said he later heard Saravia tell D'Aubuisson, "mission accomplished." Wanger is not expected to issue a judgment for several weeks after the conclusion of the trial.

E-mail Tyche Hendricks at thendricks@sfchronicle.com






School of the Americas Watch–West ~ SOAW–W
August 31, 2004

San Jose Website - http://teachers.bcp.org/llauro
Los Angeles Website - www.soaw-la.org
National Website - www.soaw.org

******

Note:  Items for SOAW–W e-mails should be sent to:
Dolores Perez Priem


SOAW Vigil at Ft. Benning, GA Nov. 19-21, 2004


Regular SOAW-San Francisco meeting: Thursday, September 2 at 7:00 pm
First Unitarian Universalist Center
1187 Franklin (corner Franklin and Geary), San Francisco


NEW EVENTS/ACTIVITIES:

1) East Bay Sanctuary Covenant travels to Haiti.  Sept 1-15, Marilyn Langlois and Sr. Stella Goodpasture will participate in the Haiti Accompaniment Project.  The goals of this witness are to accompany poor communities facing repression and getting the voice of Haiti's poor out to the world.  They have been asked to bring toothbrushes, soap for women prisoners.  If you'd like to contribute to this expense, please send a check to "East Bay Sanctuary Covenant" with Haiti Accompaniment Project on memo line and mail to:

Marilyn Langlois
400 Western Dr
Richmond, CA 94801
For info: hometown.aol.com/haiti/project/


2) Join SOAW-SF to view the movie about Venezuela's President Chavez "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" to be shown on Sunday, Sept 12 at 5:00 pm.  Free.  Donations to the Maryknoll missioner, Lisa Sullivan, who lives and works in Caracas in the barrios, are welcome.

Unitarian Universalist Center
1187 Franklin St, San Francisco
Contact: Dolores at 415-387-2287


3)  SOAW activists!  Carlos Mauricio is organizing a bus caravan to the SOA Vigil in Ft. Benning.   He will leave San Francisco on about November 7th and go through LA, Phoenix, Tucson, cities in Texas, and New Orleans, giving speaking engagements as he goes through.  If you want to help organize this or have contacts with activists along this route, or want to go on the bus caravan, please contact Carlos at stopimpunity@cs.com.

4)  The ongoing trial in Fresno regarding the murder of Archbishop Romero of El Salvador brought by The Center for Justice and Accountability continues.  Please check their website for the latest information: www.cja.Org.

5) The National Radio Project will celebrate its 10th Anniversary
Thursday, September 23, 2004 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
War Memorial, Green Room
Van Ness and McAllister Streets, San Francisco
Details to follow.  Contact 510-839-3100 or visit www.radioproject.org

6) Plans continue for the national SOAWatch vigil at Fort Benning.  Please contact your area SOAWW representatives for further information:

SOAWW - East Bay:  Robert Nixon - (510) 533-3120; robertnixon@mindspring.com
SOAWW - Contra Costa: Natalie Russell - (925) 934-0759; russell1626@juno.com
SOAWW - Sacramento: Janice Freeman - (916) 812-7680; janice@compudigital.com
SOAWW - Placer: Denise Sewart - (916) 300-0482; sewart@quiknet.com
SOAWW - San Jose: William O'Connell - (408) 379-5441; wocdoc@earthlink.net
SOAWW - San Francisco: Dolores Perez Priem - (415) 387-2287; doloresmp@aol.com 


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