2:38 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Puerto Rico · Comments Off
13 Jun 2010
One of the things that has always bothered me a little about the Puerto Rican Day parade and associated festivities has been the commercialism of history and culture without any real context. It’s one of the reasons I rarely go to the parade. The times I have gone as an adult, I’ve been working, collecting signatures, handing out political fliers, or registering people to vote.
Instead of parading today ( I actually had to work), I’m asking Ricans and lovers of Ricans to help Puerto Rican political prisoner, Oscar Lopez Rivera. Oscar’s hermana is very ill and his supporters are trying get a furlough so that Oscar can travel to P.R. to see his sister. I signed. Will You?
8:51 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Puerto Rico · 2 Comments
29 May 2010
Puerto Rican political prisoner Carlos Alberto Torres, who has served 30 years for his work supporting Puerto Rican independence, was granted parole last week. He is expected to be released in July and live in Puerto Rico.
Two Puerto Rican political prisoners remain in U.S. custody. Oscar López Rivera, who this month will mark his 29th year in prison, is not scheduled for release until 2023; and Avelino González Claudio, who this month will be sentenced to a term not to exceed 7 years.
8:25 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · New York City|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
26 Apr 2010The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.prolibertadweb.com
prolibertad@hotmail.com
ProLibertad Hotline: 718-601-4751FREE AVELINO GONZALEZ CLAUDIO!
Friday April 30th, 2010 at 6:30pm
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
521 W126th St. (Btwn. Broadway and Amsterdam Ave.)
Take the 1 train to W125th St.
$10 Donation (No one will be turned away due to lack of funds)
Light refreshments will be servedWho is Avelino González Claudio?
The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign and El Comité Familiares y Amigos/as De Avelino González Claudio from Puerto Rico will answer that question with a special forum and discussion on the life and political work of the newest Puerto Rican Political Prisoner!
Hear from Avelino’s family what we can do to support this incredible brother! Join us as we build support for Avelino González Claudio!
Panel:
Blanca Figueroa, Avelino’s wife
Juan González Pedrosa, Avelino’s Son
Frank Velgara, ProLibertad
FREEDOM MONTH!
On April 4th, 2010 the Puerto Rican Political Prisoners will have completed 30 years in jail for FIGHTING FOR PUERTO RICAN INDPENDENCE!!
Every April, ProLibertad organizes a series of events to denounce the arrests of our political prisoners. We use this month as a time to raise awareness around the prisoners and of Puerto Rico’s colonial reality.
12:11 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|Puerto Rico · 6 Comments
14 Apr 2010Here is the 2nd part of Attorney Jan Susler’s presentation at the Union Theological Seminary on April 7th, 2010 on the issue of Puerto Rican political prisoners. This section of Susler’s presentation goes deeper into the history of Oscar Lopez and Carlos Alberto Torres.
In 1976, Carlos Alberto and Oscar, along with two companeras, went underground. Carlos Alberto and 10 others were arrested in 1980; Oscar in 1981; as well as others in 1983; they were accused of belonging to the FALN, Armed Forces for National Liberation. They invoked international law, articulating that colonialism is a crime against humanity; that anti-colonial combatants may use any means at their disposal, including armed struggle, to end that crime; and that the courts of the colonizing country may not criminalize captured anti-colonial combatants, but must turn them over to an impartial international tribunal to have their status adjudged. The U.S. did not heed international law, and proceeded to try them and send them to prison for sentences ranging from 35 to life… this, after the judge stated his regrets that there was no federal death penalty at the time, for that was the sentence he wanted to give them.
Time does not allow a complete catalog the myriad of human rights violations they experienced in U.S. prisons… the years of torture, withholding medical attention, lockdowns, harassment, false accusations of violations of prison rules and criminal laws. But we must take time today to consider what 30 years of prison means: Carlos Alberto’s father, Reverend Jose Torres (el Viejo) retired from his position as pastor of the United Church of Christ church and later succumbed to prostate cancer. Carlos was not permitted to go to his father’s deathbed or to the funeral. Oscar’s parents passed away. His mother, Mita, suffered from Alzheimer’s, and had difficulty understanding why she was unable to hug her son, as their visits were through thick plexiglass. Oscar was also not permitted to attend her funeral. Both Carlos Alberto and Oscar are now grandfathers… they have known their grandchildren only in prison visiting rooms, where guards hover closely and limit their physical contact.
In the early 1990’s, people in Puerto Rico and the U.S., who had worked to defend their human rights since the moment of their arrest, joined to form a campaign for the release of the Puerto Rican political prisoners. By the mid 1990’s, the campaign had moved beyond the movement for the independence of Puerto Rico and expanded to include broad sectors of Puerto Rican civil society… a most unusual phenomenon in Puerto Rico, where status preference lines rarely allow for such convergence. The churches— in both the U.S. and in Puerto Rico— were key in this effort. The campaign created the understanding that the men and women in prison for independence were Puerto Ricans who were being punished with disproportionately lengthy sentences and cruel prison conditions because of who they were, and not for what they had done: if they had been social prisoners, convicted of crimes not related to the independence of Puerto Rico, they would never have been given such lengthy sentences, and they would have been released after serving far less time in prison. And if they had been political prisoners in any other country of the world— be it in South Africa, in France, in Germany, for example, they would have been released after serving less time in prison.
Read more…
7:10 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · history|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
14 Apr 2010The following came via my Facebook feed and is part one of a presentation given by human and civil rights attorney Jan Susler on April 7, 2010 at the Union Theological Seminary. I feel it really gives some good background on Puerto Rican history and it’s colonial context.
In the past month, activists in Puerto Rico, New York and Chicago participated in art installations, voluntarily locking themselves into store-fronts converted into jail cells, each person spending a long and lonely 24 hour shift, symbolically deprived of their liberty, privacy, society, movement, and sensory stimulation.
Why on earth would dozens of people voluntarily submit themselves to such symbolic privations? To reflect on an historic moment: the 30th anniversary of the arrest of 11 Puerto Rican men and women who would be accused and convicted of seditious conspiracy, and sentenced to serve the equivalent of life in U.S. prisons. And to call attention to the fact that one of them—Carlos Alberto Torres—has been in prison for 30 years, another—Oscar Lopez Rivera—, for 29 years; and another—Avelino Gonzalez Claudio—, for 2. Of the 2,000 some Puerto Rican political prisoners since the U.S. invasion of Puerto Rico, Carlos Alberto is the longest held.
What could motivate a Carlos Alberto, an Oscar, or an Avelino, to risk not symbolic, but real, concrete, privations? What is it about the situation of the Puerto Rican nation that could lead to people being accused of conspiracies related to winning independence, including seditious conspiracy— conspiring to use force against the “lawful” authority of the U.S. over Puerto Rico?
10:43 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Events|New York City|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
4 Apr 2010Puerto Rican Political Prisoners: A Panel Discussion!
Wednesday, April 7th 2010
6-8pm
Union Theological Seminary
Social Hall
The Church and Society program and the Latin@ Caucus of Union Theological Seminary would like to invite the faculty and student community of Union, as well as the wider community, to a panel discussion regarding the plight of the Puerto Rican political prisoners currently being held in the United States. The political status of Puerto Rico will also be addressed.
Our Panel will consist of legal and pastoral activist/scholars that will frame the issue of these political prisoners within a context of justice, mercy,democracy and the right to political self-determination. Our panelists include:
Attorney Jan Susler of the Poor People’s Law Office in Chicago, IL;
Attorney and Law Professor Eduardo Villanueva Muñoz, of Maria de Hostos School of Law, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
Episcopal Priest Father Luis Barrios, Professor/Chair Department of Latin
American & Latin@ Studies, John Jay College of Criminal Justice-City University of New York.We eagerly anticipate your presence and participation in this critical
discussion. For further information please contact Professor Cruz or Richard Colon, Chair of Latin@ Caucus.
12:39 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|New York City|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
17 Mar 2010Puerto Rican Political Prisoners: A Panel Discussion!
Wednesday, April 7th 2010
6-8pm
Union Theological Seminary
Social HallThe Church and Society program and the Latin@ Caucus of Union Theological Seminary would like to invite the faculty and student community of Union, as well as the wider community, to a panel discussion regarding the plight of the Puerto Rican political prisoners currently being held in the United States. The political status of Puerto Rico will also be addressed.
Our Panel will consist of legal and pastoral activist/scholars that will frame the issue of these political prisoners within a context of justice, mercy, democracy and the right to political self-determination. Our panelists include:
Attorney Jan Susler of the Poor People’s Law Office in Chicago, IL;
Attorney and Law Professor Eduardo Villanueva Muñoz, of Maria de Hostos School of Law, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico;
Episcopal Priest Father Luis Barrios, Professor/Chair Department of Latin American & Latin@ Studies, John Jay College of Criminal Justice-City University of New York.
We eagerly anticipate your presence and participation in this critical discussion. For further information please contact Professor Cruz or Richard Colon, Chair of Latin@ Caucus.
2:14 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|Puerto Rico · 3 Comments
3 Feb 2010On January 19, 2010, Carlos Alberto Torres attended a video hearing presided over by a U.S. Parole Commission hearing examiner whose task was to consider the disciplinary charges stemming from last January, and to make a recommendation for what should happen with respect to his request to be released on parole. Carlos Alberto answered the questions posed, and his attorney Jan Susler asked that the Parole Commission release him on parole as previously recommended, regardless of the wrongful charges. She pointed out the vast, ongoing support for his release, and argued that there is absolutely no risk in releasing him, as evidenced by the impressive example of his compatriots who were released by presidential commutation in 1999. The hearing examiner then made a favorable recommendation. The Parole Commission will make the final decision, hopefully within the next 30 days.
The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is launching a 30 day online petition campaign! We want 1000 people to sign our petition within the next 30 days showing their support for Carlos Alberto Torres.
At the end of the thirty days the petition will be mailed to the Parole Commissioner.
4:30 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|Puerto Rico · 2 Comments
11 Jan 2010
Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Carlos Alberto Torres will meet with the Parole Commission’s hearing examiner once again on January 19.
The Bureau of Prisons continues its role of interfering with his release. Carlos Alberto learned today that the BOP received an order from the Parole Commission on November 12, 2009, indicating that the Commission wanted to see him about the disciplinary report at the next available date. The FCI Pekin staff member responsible for communicating this to Carlos Alberto told him simply, “I must have overlooked this.”
The prison disciplinary committee found him guilty of possessing home made knives which, unbeknownst to him, a cellmate had hidden in the light fixture of the cell. This finding came not only after the first guilty decision was expunged, but after the guilty cellmate confessed in person to the committee.
The U.S. Parole Commission had postponed its decision whether to adopt its hearing examiner’s recommendation to release Carlos Alberto on parole on April 3, 2010, waiting for the disciplinary committee’s decision. At the January 19 hearing, Carlos Alberto will ask the Commission to adopt the recommendation and order his release, and to ignore the Bureau of Prisons’ attempts to derail his parole.
Write to the Parole Commission to encourage them to adopt the recommendation and order his release! Sample letter available at www.boricuahumanrights.org.
8:28 am By Maegan La Mala · Puerto Rico · Comments Off
30 Dec 2009
Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Avelino Gonzalez Claudo is being denied medical treatment. Since his incarceration, he has developed a neurological condition. In November 2008, Avelino requested, several times, medical attention receiving only a “I do not know”, “I will read some books” answer from the Doctor assigned to his facility. Avelino has been mvoed to a new prison, so the campaign has a new target: Peter J. Murphy, the Warden of Avelino’s new prison, MacDougall-Walker Correctional Institution.
Read more…
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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