💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › politics › pol-pris.txt captured on 2023-11-14 at 11:42:29.
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-06-16)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Freedom Now! Campaign for Amnesty and Human Rights for Political Prisoners in the United States POLITICAL PRISONERS IN THE U.S.A.? The government denies it. Yet, today there are more than 100 people locked up in U.S. prisons because of their political actions or beliefs. The United States alone among the world's major governments maintains the fiction that it holds no political prisoners. The official position is that all those jailed here for politically motivated actions are "criminals." Yet in all other countries, regardless of the politics of the rulers, it is an accepted truth that dissenters, jailed for opposing the government, are, in fact, political prisoners. The United States tries to hide the existence of political prisoners because they challenge the image that the U.S. is a truly democratic and humane society. These prisoners expose the fact that there are political resistance movements of such political impact that the government is compelled to use repression against them. By labelling political prisoners as criminals, the U.S. government has also been able to shield from serious view human rights violations against them. These include prison sentences longer than in most dictatorships, psychological torture, and brutality including sexual assault. The men's federal prison in Marion, Illinois, which includes several political prisoners among its 400 inmates, has been condemned by Amnesty International for violating international standards on the minimum treatment of prisoners. The men in Marion are under permanent lockdown and are sometimes chained to their beds for days at a time. The control unit for women at Lexington, Kentucky, was an experimental underground political prison that praticed isolation and sensory deprivation. It was finally closed by a federal judge after two years of protest by religious and human rights groups. HUMAN RIGHTS MUST BEGIN AT HOME! Who are America's political prisoners? Like the four women and men pictured on the facing page [pictures not available in computer text file] -- Alejandrina Torres, Leonard Peltier, Geronimo Pratt, and Susan Rosenberg -- they represent many movements for freedom and social justice. People of color are most often targetted. Black activists participating in the fight for Black Liberation and against racism are the largest group represented, with well over 50 political prisoners. Many of them, like Geronimo Pratt, have been in jail nearly 20 years. The movement for Puerto Rican independence has also been heavily attacked with the imprisonment of many of its members. These include 14 women and men such as Alejandrina Torres who consider themselves prisoners of war. They have taken this position because they believe that as colonized people they have the right to fight for independence, and their captor, the United States, has no right to criminalize them. Other political prisoners in the United States include more than thirty white North American activists. These militants are accused of various actions opposing foreign, domestic and military policies of the U.S. government. Their protests have been directed against symbols of U.S. support for the apartheid regime in South Africa, military intervention in Central America, and the continued colonial oppression of Blacks and Puerto Ricans. Among these prisoners are women and men from the religious peace community who have received long sentences for direct actions against U.S. nuclear installations. Revealing the existence of all these political prisoners is of extra importance now because greater world attention is being focused on human rights. Many countries, including the Soviet Union and Cuba, have released most of their political prisoners. They have also started to raise questions about human rights problems here in the U.S.A. Now is the time to break through the wall of silence that has surrounded these political prisoners in the United States. We in the Freedom Now campaign are making information available on all their cases to the people of the U.S. and the world. While the government will continue to deny holding political prisoners, we seek to make their existence common knowledge in every American community. At the same time all of us can begin to speak out against the terrible human rights violations taking place against political prisoners and all prisoners in the U.S. Jails and prisons have abandoned all pretenses of "rehabilitating" inmates, and have become concentration camps for warehousing the youth from the ghettos and barrios of America. We must especially denounce the spread of prison control units which attempt to rob prisoners of their humanity, sanity and even their lives. Ultimately we must seek the freedom of all political prisoners in the U.S. Other countries are now doing it. Why not here? Freedom Now is initiating a campaign for amnesty for all the women and men imprisoned in this country as a consequence of their political actions. Officials of the U.S. government have signed many international laws and treaties governing political repression. We must now hold them to those standards! The Freedom Now campaign is about real people, women and men behind bars who care deeply about justice and humanity. The government has sought to isolate them, not only from their friends and families but from their ability to influence and lead political movements. Our campaign is breaking that isolation. We are bridging the walls with a common effort that includes the active participation of the prisoners and their families, along with political activists, clergy and professionals. We welcome your participation! Join us in stopping the continued imprisonment and mistreatment of political activists in the United States. Human rights must begin at home. AMNESTY FOR POLITICAL PRISONERS! [Photo captions. Actual photos are not available in computer text file format.] In 1983, Alejandrina Torres, a longtime Puerto Rican community and church activist, was arrested in Chicago. Because of her role in the Puerto Rican independence movement, she was convicted and sentenced to 35 years for conspiring to overthrow the U.S. government. Three times in prison she has been beaten and sexually abused by guards. For two years, until international pressure forced it to close, she was held in the infamous Lexington Control Unit. Today, though she remains imprisoned, Alejandrina is regarded as a national hero in Puerto Rico. In 1977, Leonard Peltier, a leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM) was wrongly convicted of the murder of two FBI agents on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. Hundreds of federal agents had invaded the reservation to stop Indian people seeking control over their own lives and land. Ample evidence exists that the FBI withheld documents to frame Leonard. His appeals for justice have been supported by 75 members of Congress, Desmond Tutu, and Jesse Jackson. Despite this, he remains in jail serving two life sentences. In 1971, Geronimo ji Jaga Pratt, a leader in the Black struggle for human rights, was framed on a murder charge in California. The key witness against him was in the pay of the police. Government spies infiltrated his defense team. Many pages of evidence, proving Geronimo's innocence, were "lost" by government lawyers. It was later revealed that he was a target of the FBI COINTELPRO program which sought to destroy the Black movement. Today, nearly 20 years later, Geronimo is one of the longest held political prisoners in the world. In 1984, Susan Rosenberg was arrested and charged with possession of weapons, explosives, and false ID. A white North American woman, Susan has been deeply committed since childhood to struggles for human rights including the movements for Puerto Rican independence, Black liberation, and women's liberation. Although she and her co-defendant Tim Blunk were convicted of possessing the materials, not using them, they received sentences of 58 years, the longest ever given on this charge. Susan also endured two years of psychological torture in the Lexington Control Unit before it was closed. Freedom Now Offices: -------------------- National Office: 5249 N. Kenmore, Chicago, IL 60640 (312) 278-6706 East Coast: 1560 Broadway Suite 807, New York, NY 10036 West Coast: 3543 18th St. #17 San Francisco, CA 94110 (Please write or call for more information, if needed.) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Freedom Now! Campaign for Amnesty and Human Rights for Political Prisoners in the U.S.A. Dear Friend, A long-time activist is arrested and beaten for hours, while police scream racial epithets and death threats in his face. The police shove his face in a flushing toilet, tear his toenails out, and burn him over and over with cigarettes. The political prisoner's pancreas is nearly destroyed in the beating, and he is hospitalized for three months. Three women political prisoners are held in isolation in an underground sensory deprivation unit. The unit is painted high-gloss white; bright flourescent lights are on round the clock' there is no way to tell if it is day or night. The women live under the unblinking eye of eleven video surveillance cameras monitored by male guards -- one camera is pointed at the uncurtained shower area. This special unit -- "the living tomb" -- is condemned by Amnesty International, the American Civil Liberties Union, and a number of church denominations. CHILLING SCENES FROM SOUTH AFRICA? CHILE? ARGENTINA? NO -- THE UNITED STATES. Although the government denies it, today there are more than 100 people locked up in U.S. prisons because of their political actions and beliefs. People like Leonard Peltier, Geronimo ji Jaga Pratt, Katya Komisaruk, Sekou Odinga, and the women of the Lexington Control Unit, Alejandrina Torres, Silvia Baraldini, and Susan Rosenberg. While the government calls them common criminals, these people are known and respected for their long activism in movements for Native American soverignty, Black liberation, Puerto Rican independence, and against racism, imperialism, women's oppression, and nuclear weapons. SOme of them have been framed; others have utilized a variety of forms including civil disobedience, armed political actions, and grand jury resistance. Freedom Now considers these activists political prisoners and, for some of them, prisoners of war. Like political prisoners from South Africa to El Salvador, they are among the most courageous and principled people in movements for social justice. Human rights violations like the ones described above occur all too often -- not far away or long ago, but right here, right now. Some political prisoners in the U.S. have been imprisoned for 20 years, nearly as long as Nelson Mandela. Others have received sentences four times as long as those meted out by Latin American dictatorships. Women have been held down by male prison staff, disrobed, and assaulted with vaginal and rectal finger probes. A leader of the Puerto Rican independence movement was held for over three years in pre-trial preventive detention. SO WHY DON'T YOU KNOW THESE SHOCKING FACTS? Because the U.S. government denies that it holds political prisoners. Their existence exposes deep injustices in U.S. society. Behind a screen of secrecy and indifference, the jailers attempt to break the prisoners' bodies and spirits and strike fear into the hearts of others who would struggle for justice. WE CAN CHANGE IT. The Freedom Now Campaign was launched at the United Nations on the 40th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This is an important time to be advocating amnesty and human rights for political prisoners in the U.S. Throughout the world, there is a groundswell of concern for human rights. This year alone, hundreds of political prisoners have received amnesty from the governments of Mexico, the Soviet Union, Cuba, and even South Africa. BUT WE MUST HAVE YOUR HELP TO BREAK THE SILENCE. On April 27-29, 1990, New York City will be the site of the International Tribunal on Political Prisoners in the U.S. Presiding will be an impartial body of ten internationally known jurists and human rights experts. The judges will be presented with a Complaint which outlines the conditions faced by political prisoners in the U.S. Evidence and testimony to substantiate the Complaint will be given by family members, expert witnesses, and the prisoners themselves. The findings of the Tribunal will be published as a report for presentation at international and national human rights forums. WE WANT YOU TO ENDORSE THIS HISTORIC EFFORT BY JOINING US IN SIGNING ON AS A PETITIONER IN THE COMPLAINT. We are asking all persons or organizations who want to be a Petitioner to send $50.00 along with the enclosed form to the Freedom Now office in New York. If you want to be a Petitioner but are financially unable to contribute $50.00 or more, we ask that minimally you send $25.00. Contributions from Petitioners are the primary way that the Tribunal will be financed. If you become a Petitioner, the final draft of the complaint will be sent to you by January 1990. If you prefer to read the final draft prior to authroizing your name as a Petitioner, please indicate that on the enclosed form. We still ask that you make a contribution now, if possible. Then we will require your signed authorization at the time of your decision before you will be listed as a Petitioner. Thank you for your support. We look forward to your participation in this important effort. Together we can stop human rights abuses in our own backyard. For human rights, (signed) Adjoa Aiyetoro, Rafael Cancel Miranda, Margaret Randall *