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FBI Witch Hunt Stokes Puerto Rican Independence Movement

By Jessica Pupovac, AlterNet. Posted January 31, 2008.


As an anti-terror task force targets three young Puerto Ricans in New York, people take to the streets.
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They say that when Filiberto Ojeda Rios was killed, all of Puerto Rico stood still.

"The financial district shut down," José Lopez, executive director of the Puerto Rican Cultural Center, explained recently in a small café along Paseo Boricua, the heart of Chicago's vibrant Puerto Rican neighborhood.

His eyes lit up as he went on. "Literally all of the banks and offices were closed, and people were just standing outside, watching the caravan go by. Usually it is a one-hour trip to his tome town of Nagüabo. That day, it took seven hours. Everywhere there were hundreds of people. Little kids made their own signs that said, '¡Viva Filiberto!' It was an incredible outpouring of love and compassion that really was felt throughout that whole time period."

Filiberto Ojeda Rios was the founder and longtime leader of the Popular Boricua Army, or Los Macheteros, a militant wing of the Puerto Rican pro-independence movement. He was shot by FBI agents in his home on Sept. 23, 2005, at the age of 72, and left to bleed to death.

Although Los Macheteros hasn't participated in armed actions for 15 years, the FBI has continued to aggressively pursue its leadership. It is an effort that has led it to the doors of multiple New Yorkers affiliated in some way with the Puerto Rican struggle to wrest control of the island from the U.S. government. Three of those people -- social worker Christopher Torres, graphic designer Tania Frontera and filmmaker Julio Antonio Pabón Jr. -- were recently handed subpoenas by the FBI/NYPD Anti-Terrorism Task Force and, after securing a postponement, were ordered to testify before a grand jury Feb. 1 at the Eastern District court in Brooklyn.

Torres and Frontera were both supporters of the successful struggle to force the U.S. Navy off the island of Vieques, which was used for decades as a bomb range and weapons testing ground. Pabón's father, meanwhile, is unsure why his son has been targeted, but he believes it might have to do with his coordinating a visit by The Welfare Poets, a radical arts collective and supporters of Puerto Rican independence, to Wesleyan University, which he attended years ago.

"We're preparing to challenge those subpoenas," Susan Tipograph, Torres' attorney, told AlterNet. "My concern is that the grand jury is being used in a way that undermines the First Amendment rights of people who are engaged in constitutionally protected political activity."

"There certainly is a history of the federal government using grand jury subpoenas to cast a wide net investigation into political movements," Tipograph added. "There is a particular history of that in relationship to the Puerto Rican independence movement."

There is also a long history of resistance to those subpoenas.

Puerto Rico, currently a commonwealth, has been under U.S. control since 1898. Although Puerto Ricans are subject to U.S. laws, they have no representation in Congress and don't have the right to vote in presidential elections. Though many Puerto Ricans fear changing the status quo and removing the island nation from U.S. tutelage, they are currently worse off economically than any state in the Union. The per capita income in Puerto Rico is $20,058, less than that of Mississippi, the poorest state. Almost half of Puerto Ricans live below the poverty line, and a third of its population is unemployed. The United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization has for decades repeatedly condemned Puerto Rico's status and called on the U.S. to return occupied land, release political prisoners and allow Puerto Ricans the right of self-determination and independence. Many Puerto Ricans have called for the same thing. A spectrum of organizations and political parties are currently promoting independence.

However, ever since the FBI was officially founded in 1935, it has regarded any and all opposition to U.S. sovereignty with suspicion. According to the FBI's own estimates, from 1936 to 1995, agents collected between 1.5 and 1.8 million pages of intelligence on organizations and individuals advocating independence.

In 2000, per his request, the bureau began handing over selected files to Rep. José Serrano, D-N.Y., and the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College has been sorting and filing them and publicly releasing select contents. Among them is a 1961 memo from then-Director J. Edgar Hoover to the San Juan field office, initiating Cointelpro activities against the movement and its leaders. The memo orders agents to begin collecting information on independence leaders' "weaknesses, morals, criminal records, spouses, children, family life, educational qualifications and personal activities other than independence activities," so as to "disrupt their activities and compromise their effectiveness."

A U.S. Senate committee in 1975 found the program "imposed summary punishment, not only on the allegedly violent, but also on the nonviolent advocates of change."


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See more stories tagged with: fbi, puerto rican independence, filiberto ojeda rios

Jessica Pupovac is an adult educator and independent journalist living in Chicago.

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So, what's the big deal?
Posted by: buddyedgewood on Jan 31, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are they still a commonwealth? I say let them have their independence. Let them figure out what they want to do. If they want to become the next Haiti, so be it.

The island is no longer a strategic asset.

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Good article
Posted by: BBaumer on Jan 31, 2008 10:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a good article Yessica. This story has been getting a lot of play in NYC which has always been a hotbed of Puerto Rican political activity.

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subversion?
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Jan 31, 2008 3:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gee,, the FBI and our government fucking somebody over? Who knew? Repression always leads to revolution,, jackasses.

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PuertoRicans are discriminated American Citizens
Posted by: FreeBrain on Jan 31, 2008 4:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we really are American citizens we need to have the SAME RULES!!!... We are not treated as equal! ...I am PRO STATEHOOD, because my people deserve the same rights and priviledges... How can we defend our positions if we dont have votes or equal representation in Congress? How can we be happy with 100 years of inequality? How can it be that OUR PRESIDENT (BUSH) is not elected by us?...

Before criticizing put YOURSELVES in our shoes!.. WE also LOVE IT when every good offer reads VOID in Puerto Rico... People are starting realize we are a COLONY subdued by an EMPIRE... It could be worse if it wasn't for Abe Lincoln, at least we are not slaves...

OBAMA 2008

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Puerto Ricans didn't stand still when Filiberto was killed
Posted by: FreeBrain on Jan 31, 2008 4:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Puerto Ricans didn't stand still when Filiberto was killed ...Thats the BIGGEST lie... At least 95% of the PRican people knew of him as a terrorist...

But I think most of the people believe he could be captured without being killed...

If people were standing still, they were just watching the news... And thats the truth! Most of us didn't like any of his actions...

The independence movement in PR rarely gets 4% of the VOTE!!! And thats the TRuth!

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FBI Needed in Puerto Rico
Posted by: Zagreus221 on Jan 31, 2008 10:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live on the island and honestly, I'm telling you that the FBI is the only reason this place has not become a cheap, mafia-controlled banana republic. There are many wonderful Puerto Ricans of all political parties ~ and MOST of them are echoing the fact that corruption runs rampant on the island and needs to be dealt with before real progress can be made in improving even basic infrastructure. Improvements are being made, thanks to some honest dynamic political leaders and much needed federal oversight. Unfortunately, however, there are others who cloak themselves within nationalist camp as a way of expressing petty racism ~ yes, there is a palpable anti-American sentiment here. I've lived all over the world and never felt this kind of resentment before. Puerto Rico's status can be debated and resolved by a plebiscite and may the best platform win ~ but as long as this country is an American protectorate we need the FBI and the Federal Judiciary here to give all citizens the same kind of civil and legal protection it affords those living on the continent.

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