Tuesday, February 26, 2008
This South American country is one of the smallest hispanic counties. However it hsa some of the most nortorious graduates from the School of the Americas. An example of one of these men is Colonel Napoleon Alvarado. He graduated in 1974 and participated in a Military Police Officer course. He was also involved in the Las Hojas massacre in 1983. During this tragic event sixteen civilians were murdered and their corpses were burnt. This gives a great example of the violence that is put into the teaching at the SOA. Another example of an event caused by various SOA graduates is the Jesuit massacre. In this massacre 6 jesuit priests were brutally murdered. SOA graduates took part in the killing and the covering up of this horrific event. The SOA teachings of violence is shown all through the Americas. The graduates have been involved in some of the most tragic massacres all over. The SOA teaches these men to have no mercy. This idea is instilled in all the graduates throughout the world. El Salvadore just happens to be the home country of some of these men.
Bolivia
On the other hand, Bolivian President Evo Morales wrote a letter to Col. Gilberto Perez, a Commandant at the SOA (now the Western Hemisphere Institute for Cooperation), stating that Bolivia will no longer send its military to attend the school in Fort Benning, Georgia. This letter was dated February 18, 2008. In March 2006, President Morales met with Lisa Sullivan-Rodriguez, Salvadoran torture survivor Carlos Mauricio, and SOA Watch founder Father Roy Bourgeois, where they asked him to stop sending Bolivian Military to the School.
Unjustices in Panama
Are these the kind of people that our hard earned tax dollars are going to educate? Are these the kind of people we're promoting for the world? It is completely and utterly unjust that we, in essence, are subjecting innocent people internationally to suffer. It must end.
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Neal Romain-Guatemala
Bishop Juan Gerardi was Coordinator of the Human Rights Office for the Archdiocese of Guatemala. He was devoted to investigating thousands of gruesome killings, very similar to his. He was also the most visible human rights defender within the Catholic Church at this time. On January 21, 2000 SOA-trained Guatemalan Col. Byron Disrael Lima Estrada was arrested, along with his son, for the 1998 murder of Roman Catholic Bishop Gerardi.
A 1998 human rights report released by the Guatemala Archdiocese Human Rights Office helped link the SOA to the civilian-targeted genocide campaign, along with a report on the same campaign issued by the independent Historical Clarification Commission. The 1998 document cited SOA graduates for some of the worst human rights violations, including the murder of anthropologist Myrna Mack, the cover-up of the murder of US citizen Michael DeVine, and the torture and murder of Efrain Bamaca, husband of US lawyer, Jennifer Harbury. The Archdiocese report also named SOA graduates as top leaders in the fearsome Guatemalan military intelligence agency which both reports cite for horrible abuses.
These are two examples of the continuing violence coming form SOA graduates. This problem needs to be taken care of before more violent occurrences come up.
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Venezuela
Haiti
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Honduras by Kayla Wilmoth
Friday, February 15, 2008
The Chaos that is Ecuador
Ecuador is a small South American country roughly the size of Colorado. Although Ecuadorian military or civilian personal compose only 5% of the western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation’s (the School of the America’s new name, or WHINSEC), WHINSEC graduates have influenced the country. General Guillermo Rodriguez, a graduate, led a military coup d’etat and became the dictator of Ecuador from 1972 to 1976.
In recent years, Ecuador has suffered political instability that is not related to the activities of WHINSEC graduates. Colombian drug cartels and terrorist organizations have established bases in northern and northeastern Ecuador. Organized crime, weapons trafficking and drug smuggling have become major problems. Nonviolent crime permeates all of Ecuador and violent crime such as murder, armed robbery and rape are on the rise. The State Department has issued warnings to American tourists and government workers not to travel on public transportation and to be very careful when traveling in the countryside and in poorer cities.
These problems have led to the impeachment of eight presidents in ten years, the most recent occurring in 2006. Rafael Correa, Ecuador’s current president, has been battling the factious Ecuadorian legislature for years. Ecuador’s political, social and economic future is dim. Terrorism, crime and corruption are on the rise. Unless other nations come to aid Ecuador, conditions will deteriorate, giving dangerous demagogues a pathway to power.
Another more recent event happened in August 2007 when the colombian Army's third brigade went under inspection. It was found out that this part of the army had been protecting Diego Montoya who is the leader of the Norte del Valle Cartel. Which is a big drug cartel in Colombia. Montoya was also on the Fbi's top ten most wanted list. Thirteen high ranking army officials were arrested because of this and over half of them graduated from the School of the America's.
One final event happened on March and April 2007, Where Mario Montoya who the highest ranking colombian military official was investigated for being linked to the colombian paramilitaries which is considerd by the U.S. to be a terrorist organozation. They are financed by drug trafficing and have been linked to many crimes. Montoya graduated from the school in 1983 and was an instuctor to the school in 1993.
Thouhgout colombia's history and all of South America graduates of the School of the America's have been doing wrong things from the begining. They are taught to do these things and innocent lives die because of it. It is wrong that the U.S. is funding such a school and it should be stopped. It is nothing but trouble as these events show.