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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | November 2006 

22,000 Protest the "School of the Americas"
email this pageprint this pageemail usElliot Minor - Associated Press


Voices on the Border Director Tanya Snyder stands in front of the fence at Fort Benning, holding a cross memorializing Elba Julia Ramos, a Salvadoran woman killed by SOA grads along with her teenaged daughter and the six Jesuit priests she worked for in 1989. (VOB)
Check out photo slideshows with audio recordings and news coverage of the November vigil at the SOA Watch website.
Columbus, Ga. - Thousands of demonstrators paraded, chanted and raised white crosses Sunday outside the Army's Fort Benning as they continued a 17-year-long effort to close a military school they blame for human rights abuses in Latin America.

"This is about men with guns," said the Rev. Roy Bourgeois, a Catholic priest who spent five years as a missionary in Bolivia and founded the group SOA Watch in 1990 in the effort to close the school.

"People of these countries are hungry," said Bourgeois, a naval officer during the Vietnam War. "You can't eat guns. You can't eat bullets. They want food ... medicine. They need schools for their children."

The Army's School of the Americas moved to Fort Benning from Panama in 1984 and was replaced in 2001 by the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (WHINSEC), under the Defense Department. The school trains Latin American soldiers, police and government officials.

Officials of the Muscogee County Sheriff's Department estimated the crowd size at 14,000, but Eric LeCompte, events coordinator for SOA Watch, which organized the protest, said they counted 22,000.

Sixteen demonstrators, including two grandmothers, got around, under, or over three chain-link fences - one topped by coils of barbed wire - and were arrested for trespassing on military property. Each could face up to six months in a federal prison and a fine of up to $5,000.

Among the demonstrators were toddlers led or carried by their parents, senior citizens, Catholic nuns and priests, and military veterans.

Others included members of a group called 1,000 Grandmothers and a civil rights group known as "Living the Dream," dedicated to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream of a unified, nonviolent world.

Living the Dream ended a weeklong pilgrimage from Selma, Ala., at the three-day demonstration, which concluded Sunday after a solemn procession honoring victims of murders, assassinations and other human rights abuses allegedly committed by Latin American soldiers.

The demonstrations are timed to commemorate six Jesuit priests who were killed along with their housekeeper and her daughter in El Salvador on Nov. 19, 1989. Some of the killers had attended the School of the Americas.

The military has acknowledged that some graduates committed crimes after attending the School of the Americas, but says no cause-and-effect relationship has ever been established.

The new Western Hemisphere Institute has mandatory human rights courses, but the demonstrators contend changes at the school are only cosmetic.

On the Net: SOA Watch - 1,000 Grandmothers



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