Archive for June 20th, 2006

20
Jun

letter writing sunday #9.1

*sigh* i wish this were a joke, but its not. not only is Ohio looking over at South Dakota and saying to itself, “huh, ban abortions. not bad,” but it decided that South Dakota is a pansy state that’s not willing to take a hard stance on the issue. so Ohio is proposing to make it a felony to even help someone cross state lines to have an abortion in one of those bleeding heart states. It is certainly the most extreme ban yet.

So get on over to Planned Parenthood and send an email to State Representative Tom Brinkman (who’s pushing the ban). Tell Rep. Brinkman to stop trying to undercut Roe v. Wade and start focusing on real prevention of unwanted births by supporting the Prevention First Act.

20
Jun

assault on dissent pt.3

This one comes to you from the Sonoran Desert in Arizona (thanks, RadFem!), where two activists are facing a Federal Grand Jury and 15 years in prison for saving the lives of three people (who just happen to be illegal immigrants).

The Crime of Compassion
The Durango Telegraph
by Will Sands

On July 9, Shanti Sellz was pulled over in the vicinity of Arivaca, Ariz., handcuffed and arrested by the U.S. Border Patrol. The 23-year-old former Durango resident and 23-year-old Daniel Strauss were both incarcerated, charged with two felony counts each and are now facing up to 15 years in prison. Their crime? Showing compassion to three illegal migrants. But Sellz and Strauss are fighting the charges, and the case could be a legal landmark and change how people who are literally dying along the U.S./Mexico border are treated.

Sellz left Durango in 2004 to take a job as a nanny in the border town of Bisbee, Ariz. She was immediately shocked by the situation along the border, where migrants were crossing large areas of the Sonoran Desert without food or water, often perishing along roadsides without help from U.S. residents living in the area.

“I had no idea about the current conditions of the border,” Sellz said. “People are terrified to help each other for fear of prosecution.”

Sellz promptly overcame her own fear of prosecution and began working with the direct action group, Citizens for Border Solutions. She volunteered her time in relief camps outside of the Tucson area and made numerous trips into the desert, leaving water and food caches for people in need. Eventually, she got involved with No More Deaths, a coalition formed in 2003 in response to human rights abuses along the border. Since 1998, more than 2,000 men, women and children have lost their lives attempting to cross the arid and unforgiving lands. No More Deaths works to counter this trend with movable desert support camps, support of migrant aid centers, maintenance of water stations, Samaritan patrols searching the desert for migrants in need, and advocacy on behalf of migrant-related issues.

“The death toll has been rising incrementally over time,” Sellz explained. “This year, there have already been 282 documented deaths, and there are typically three additional bodies for every one that is found.”

This summer, Sellz began work at a No More Deaths camp near Arivaca and took part in many Samaritan patrols. “We usually find people who are alone and wandering the desert or groups of two or three who can’t go any further and have been left behind,” she said. “Everyone we encounter always needs food and water, and we give much-needed support. In severe cases, we evacuate people to medical facilities. It’s humanitarian aid, nothing more.”

On July 9, Sellz and Strauss came upon three migrants near the Arivaca camp in desperate need of help. Two were ill and covered in blisters. A third was vomiting and had severe diarrhea. After consulting with two doctors and a nurse, Sellz and Strauss realized the third individual was in danger of liver failure and death and that all three were in need of immediate medical attention. The volunteers then consulted an attorney and were advised to take the migrants to the nearest medical facility. However, they were pulled over and arrested by U.S. Border Patrol en route.

Sellz and Strauss were charged with two felony counts each: one for transportation of an undocumented person and the other of conspiracy of smuggling. The pair was arraigned on July 11.

The fact that the car was even pulled over was unusual, according to Sellz. No More Deaths conducts all of its activities in plain view of the law and makes no attempts to hide its actions.

“There’s question as to why in this instance we were even pulled over,” she said. “This was the first time in the organization’s three-year history that a member has been arrested. Everything has always been in full view of the Border Patrol. It’s all been transparent.”

Following arraignment, Sellz and Strauss were offered a plea agreement from the federal prosecutor but rejected it. Rather than accepting one year of probation and time in a diversion program, Sellz and Strauss responded that they have committed no crime and something bigger than the two of them is on trial.

“This is a really important case,” she said. “Humanitarian aid is what’s really on trial.”

The future of life and death along the U.S./Mexico border will go to court in late December. Sellz commented that a victory in the case might dramatically improve the picture along the border. Defeat could worsen it. “Right now, migrants are dying along the side of the road in plain view of passing cars,” she said. “If Daniel and I win this case, hopefully American citizens living along the border will be empowered to help others, knowing that giving humanitarian aid is not a crime. If Daniel and I are convicted, it could become an even worse situation down there.”

A federal grand jury will weigh the case on Dec. 20 and determine whether Sellz and Strauss are innocent or should spend up to 15 years behind bars for saving three lives. For her part, Sellz is confident that justice will prevail.

“This has been taken further than I ever thought it would be,” she said in closing. “But I feel very confident that we will prevail. After all, the death toll is only rising every year, and it’s right in our back yard.”

20
Jun

assault on dissent pt.2

I know i said i was going to focus on the US, but this one is just too messed up not to give it some space. And considering the US’s attempt to greatly weaken labor rights in Mexico, i figured it was still pertinent to the US assault on dissent.

via Indymedia

Today, June 14 at 4:30 a.m., some 3000 elements from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead. The Teachers Union office building was also broken into and the installations of Radio Plantón were destroyed (Radio Planton is a free/un-licensed community radio station that has been a point of reference for social movements in Oaxaca).

With 3 weeks until elections and with the events in San Salvador Atenco still present (with 28 persons charged and jailed), once again the use of force instead of dialogue is the privileged response to citizens exercising their constitutional rights.

Since May 15, the first day of the present period of action in the teachers’ struggle, an atmosphere of hostility and confrontation against the teachers union has been sown within Oaxacan society. This, far from fortifying the search for a peaceful and negotiated solution to the teachers’ demands, has encouraged the conditions of scaled-up violence against this sector.

May 22 was the first day of Section 22 of the SNTE teacher-working class actions (some of the teachers are adherents to The Other Campaign) to support the educational demands of the people of Oaxaca. 70,000 teachers begin an extended sit-in in the center of the city in front of the old Government Palace and in 56 surrounding streets, to ask for fulfillment of their list of demands (first presented on May 1) that includes improvements to educational infrastructure (construction of classrooms, laboratories and workshops; uniforms; free student breakfasts; and more funding for scholarships and staff hiring), legal recognition of Radio Plantón, salary increases and recognition of the legitimacy of the union.

On June 1, the State Congress closes off dialogue without explanation and demands that all teachers return to their classrooms by June 5 or face salary sanctions and cancellation of labor contracts. An express request is also made to national public security organs to intervene and proceed with the removal of the thousands of men and women teachers maintaining the sit-in in the center of the city (3500 federal preventive police (PFP), state Preventive Police, the Special Police Operations Unit (UPOE, an elite grouping) and Municipal Police are moved to Oaxaca City). These decisions are endorsed on June 2 by more than 300 municipal presidents that make up the State Coordinating Body in Favor of Education. Section 22 of the SNTE decides during its assembly no to accept the ultimátum and to continue with the sit-in and resistance actions: road blocks; closures of the airport, PEMEX installations, the Chamber of Deputies, and the State Prosecutor’s Office; takeover of a highway toll booth; removal of parking meters, connections to city drainage and security cameras in the center of the city; the burning of election propaganda; and massive mobilizations (120,000 people participated in actions on June 7). They also demanded the resignation of the governor for refusing to dialogue.




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