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Puerto Rico Update, Summer 2004


Testimony of the Fellowship of Reconciliation before the United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization

Sonia Dueño, Coordinator of the Fellowship of Reconciliation Office on Vieques, and Coordinator of FOR's Program on Racial, Economic and Gender Justice, addressed the U.N. Special Committee on June 14, 2004 on the subject of self-determination for Puerto Rico.


Greetings. I am Sonia Ivette Dueño, Coordinator of the Fellowship of Reconciliation's Washington, DC Office on Vieques and Coordinator of its program on Racial, Economic and Gender Justice. I am also a Puerto Rican by birth. The Fellowship of Reconciliation is here today to call for self-determination for the Puerto Rican people.

Since 1915, the Fellowship of Reconciliation has carried out educational and action projects concerned with domestic and international peace and justice, nonviolent alternatives to conflict, and the rights of conscience. FOR is a nonviolent, multifaith, non-profit organization, has members from many religious and ethnic traditions, and is a part of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation (IFOR), which has affiliates in over 40 countries. The IFOR has observer and consultative status at the ECOSOC and UNESCO.

In the United States, FOR has over 100 chapters and affiliates and 14 Religious Peace Fellowships. We have worked since the mid-1990s in support of the people of Vieques, Puerto Rico, and in 2002, opened a Washington Office on Vieques. We are advised by a Puerto Rico Committee, whose members include Puerto Ricans from the big island, Viequenses, and US mainland supporters.

A few days ago, the people of Puerto Rico celebrated the 113th birthday of their flag, The Puerto Rican flag was inspired by that of Cuba, as both of our countries were at the time engaged in liberation struggles from our then-colonizer, Spain. Unfortunately for us Puerto Ricans, our flag does not fly by itself as does the flag of the Cuban people. For the last 106 years, the Puerto Rican flag has had to fly next to the flag of its second colonizer, the United States.

The Fellowship of Reconciliation applauds the Special Committee for its adoption and approval of the draft resolution without vote in 2003, whereby it urged that the United States return to the people of Puerto Rico the occupied land on Vieques Island, to respect their fundamental human rights, to assume the execution and costs of the cleanup of the lands and waters contaminated by military maneuvers, and to take care of the serious consequences to the health of Vieques inhabitants. Our thanks to the representative of Cuba, who introduced the draft resolution that was supported by the representative of Venezuela: These are two strong republics working to fulfill the dream of Bolivar.

Although the people of Vieques have, through nonviolent civil disobedience, won a victory with the cessation of bombing on Vieques, the United States nevertheless has failed on all counts requested by the resolution. This is not the first time the US fails to comply with the demands of the people of Puerto Rico and the principles of decolonization. The first failure occurred when it took over the colonizing duties from Spain in 1898 and promised Puerto Ricans that within one year, Puerto Rico would be granted independence. One hundred and six years later, we are still colonized.

This failure is demonstrated in various ways, and we will note five of those ways here.

1. The U.S. has failed to return the lands in Vieques it occupied militarily, choosing instead to transfer the lands administratively to another U.S. federal agency. The U.S. has failed additionally to exclude the possibility of returning to military practices on the island of Vieques. The legislation by which military training in Vieques ceased made the bombing range into a so-called “wildlife refuge.” Legislation for U.S. wildlife refuges allows continued use of the refuges “by other Federal agencies, including those necessary to facilitate military preparedness.” In other words, the Navy could return to Vieques.

2. Second, the United States government has failed to respect the fundamental human rights, not only of the Viequenses, but also of other Puerto Ricans, by retaining the political prisoners who have served over twenty years of their lives in U.S. prisons as a result of their fight for the independence of Puerto Rico. Additionally, the U.S. Government has incarcerated Vieques residents who are now also serving time for dismantling the vestiges of the U.S. military forces in Vieques. These arrests are another attempt by the U.S. Government to intimidate and silence the voices calling for justice in Vieques. However cruel and premeditated may be the U.S. government’s actions, the people of Vieques and Puerto Rico and their supporters remain united and tenacious in the struggle.

3. Third, the United States government has continued to fail by not taking care of the serious consequences to the health of the inhabitants of Vieques caused by the military bombing endured by Vieques inhabitants for over six decades. Obviously, the situation of Vieques must be seen in light of the colonial status of Puerto Rico. How can we expect an island municipality to gain full use of its ancestral lands when the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, of which it is a part, is the oldest colony in the Western Hemisphere?

4. Fourth, the application of the death penalty in Puerto Rico by the United States government is also an unacceptable manifestation of U.S. colonial rule over the island nation. Puerto Rico was one of the first nations to adopt a rule of law that prohibited the death penalty in its criminal justice system. Understanding the value of every human life, the creators of the Puerto Rico Constitution understood the injustices that can occur in any system and chose to refrain from exercising an inhumane and morally corrupt form of punishment. We vehemently oppose the U.S. Government’s intervention and undermining of the Puerto Rico Constitution.

5. Finally, the aggressive recruitment of Puerto Rican people, especially youth, into the U.S. armed forces is a further form of colonial exploitation. Puerto Ricans are induced to identify with a U.S. government for which they did not vote, and which decides to launch wars in defiance of international law.


• release Puerto Ricans imprisoned for fighting for independence or for peace in Vieques;
• compensate the people of Vieques for their exposure to contamination and the resulting devastating effects to their health;
• definitively desist from applying the death penalty in Puerto Rico; and
• remove ROTC and other military recruitment activities from Puerto Rico.

We urge the Special Committee to include these points in its resolution.

Thank you for your consideration.


Sonia Ivette Dueño
Coordinator, Fellowship of Reconciliation Office on Vieques
Tel: (202) 488-5613
Fax: (202) 488-5639
Email: sdueno@umc-gbcs.org


 

©2004 Fellowship of Reconciliation