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POLITICAL PRISONER
By Charles J. Hanley
MARION, IL-In the solitude of his cell, Prisoner 87651-024 has
time to reflect - on his Puerto Rican childhood and his baptism
of fire in Chicago and his years on the run from the FBI. Time
for many things. But not for regrets. "I cannot undo what's
been done," says Oscar Lopez Rivera. "The whole thing
of contrition, atonement, I have problems with that."
At age 55, after 17 years in federal prison, with 53 years left
on his sentence, Oscar Lopez is a graying reminder of another
America, of a time when radical leftists planted bombs against
the "imperialist" state, and Puerto Rican separatist
groups like the one Lopez helped lead, the FALN, were rated by
the FBI as the most active and violent terrorists in the United
States. (Of course, the Puerto Rican revolutionaries were really
doing nothing more than copying the revolutionary example of the
Founding Fathers of the U.S. Federal Republic. WFI Editor)
History has left them behind - in Cuban exile or anonymous middle
age or the maximum security of U.S. penitentiaries. But history
may now lead Oscar Lopez into the spotlight again. In this centenary
year of the U.S. takeover of Puerto Rico (as a conquest of the
Spanish-American war. WFI Editor), activists on
that Caribbean island and in the United States are seeking presidential
clemency for Lopez and 14 other Puerto Rican militants they describe
as political prisoners. The White House says it has received 100,000
cards and letters on their behalf. (When U.S. officials mine harbors
or arm insurgents, that is for the "national interest,"
but when the victims of these officials act to do the same thing,
it is a "terrorist act." WFI Editor).
At the same time, the Puerto Rico question - should it be a state,
an independent nation, something in between? -- is being debated
more seriously than ever in Congress, as it decides whether to
authorize a referrendum on the issue in the U.S. territory. Puerto
Rican voters have regularly rejected pro-independence candidates
at the polls, and Lopez said he and his ex-comrades would accept
their decision in a plebiscite. But if independentistas
find the process is rigged against them, they will react violently,
he said. "If annexation [statehood] is the answer, I would
say there would be a good number of Puerto Ricans who would advocate
and practice armed struggle (against the United States),"
he said.
The FBI's latest report on domestic terrorism said support for
Puerto Rican militants has waned, but "some extremists are
still willing to plan and conduct terrorist acts in order to draw
attention to their desire for independence." The Marion U.S.
Penitentiary, Lopez's home for much of the last 17 years, is a
low-profile, high-security compound among the soybeans and Holsteins
of southern Illinois. His 360 neighbors here include New York
crime boss John Gotti and Colombian drug lord Carlos Lehder.
Interviewed via an intercom phone through a glass divider, in
an otherwise empty visitors' room, the once-feared Puerto Rican
militant is a small, lean man in red prison garb, with a thick
brush mustache, big eyeglasses and stubby gray ponytail. He speaks
with a high voice and wry smile - and a supply of up-to-date political
information gleaned from phone conversations and news articles.
But when the questions turn to the violent work of the long-dormant
FALN, Lopez turns uninformative. In the 1970s and early 1980s,
the FALN - the Spanish-language acronym for Armed Forces of National
Liberation - claimed responsibility for more than 100 bombings
of public and commercial buildings in such U.S. cities as New
York, Chicago and Washington, as well as in Puerto Rico. Few caused
injuries, but one still-unsolved bombing, at New York's landmark
Fraunces Tavern in 1975, killed four people and injured more than
60 in a lunchtime crowd.
At their trials in 1980-81, Lopez and his Chicago-based FALN comrades
were not tied to specific bombings. Instead, he was convicted
of seditious conspiracy ("to overthrow the government of
the United States in Puerto Rico by force"), armed robbery
and lesser charges. Asked now about Fraunces Tavern, Lopez says,
"I don't know who did it." In fact, he adds, he has
"problems" with "that particular action."
He went on: "I as an individual would never set out to inflict
pain and suffering on any person not identified as my enemy."
His time as a U.S. infantryman in Vietnam in 1966-67 "taught
me the fragility of life," he said. Vietnam, where he won
a Bronze Star for Valor, taught him other things as well - such
as how to make bombs. He said he carried out his first "armed
action" for Puerto Rican independence - he won't say what
- not long after his Army discharge. He worked, above-ground,
as a Chicago community organizer, but by 1977 he was under federal
indictment on explosive charges and on the run. He was captured
in May, 1981, stopped by police in a Chicago suburb when the car
he was in made an illegal turn. The sentencing judge ordered maximum
prison terms on most of the charges against Lopez, a punishment
that clemency petitions call disproportionately harsh. Seventeen
years should be enough, they say.
But others, including Puerto Rico's pro-statehood governor, believe
that Lopez and his partners should offer something in exchange
for freedom. "Maybe some of them are willing to say that
they made a mistake or that they would not do it again,"
Gov. Pedro Rossello told Associated Press in San Juan. Waiting
for Oscar Lopez's words of contrition could take a long time.
"I have no regrets for what I've done in the Puerto Rico
independence movement," the ex-FALN leader said. "The
onus is not on us. The crime is colonialism. If Puerto Rico was
not a colony of the United States, I would have had a totally
different life." In the silence of his cellblock, the aging
"freedom fighter," as he called himself at his trial,
has time to reflect on a different life, as a free man.
"I would settle down in Puerto Rico and have a life with
my daughter and granddaughter," he said. And remain an active
independentista? After a long, quiet moment, Lopez replied,
"I cannot stop being a Puerto Rican. I cannot be anything
but a Puerto Rican." SOURCE: Reprinted from the 14 June, 1998, issue of the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Edition. Excerpted in the public service of the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: The problem any society faces that was founded in a violent revolution is the legacy of violence. Americans believe that it was okay for them to employ violence in 1776 to overthrow the legal government of the king; but it is not okay for the colonists of America's colony to use violence to overthrow the illegal government of the republic. No matter how hard we may try to justify this ridiculous outlook, there will always be individuals who will recognize it for what it is, illogical and unsound.) |
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