WAR ON TERRORISM - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Bolivian Human Rights Leader Barred from Entering the United States |
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by Benjamin Dangl CounterPunch Entered into the database on Tuesday, February 28th, 2006 @ 17:08:00 MST |
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Another Casualty of the War on Terror Leonida Zurita Vargas, a Bolivian coca farmer organizer and alternate Senator,
was planning to be in the US right now as part of a three week speaking tour
on Bolivian social movements and human rights. This tour would take her to Vermont,
Harvard, Stanford and Washington DC. However, upon checking in at the airport in Santa Cruz, Bolivia on February
20th to fly to the US, she was informed her ten year visa had been revoked because
of alleged links to terrorist activity."I said if I was a terrorist then I should be in jail," Zurita told
reporters. She obtained this visa in 1998 and had used it to travel to the US
on four previous speaking tours. A letter from the US Embassy in Bolivia explained her visa was revoked in May,
2004 due to a section of the USA-PATRIOT Act which bars anyone from entering
the US that poses a security threat or has participated in or incited terrorist
activity. Her background, however, tells the story of someone who has fought for human
rights and peace in her country for years. This mother of two young sons is
one of the leading women politicians in Bolivia. She came into the political
realm, like President Evo Morales, through her work in coca farmer unions in
the Chapare, a coca producing region in Bolivia where the US sponsored war on
drugs has resulted in forced eradication of crops sold for traditional use and
violence against poor farmers. Though coca leaves are used to produce cocaine, for centuries the leaves have
been utilized as a mild stimulant and medicine to combat altitude sickness and
fatigue. A large market in Bolivia makes coca farming a legal, viable occupation. According to the University of Vermont, "In 1997, The Coordinating Committee
of the Six Women Peasant Federations of the Tropics was formed under Leonida's
leadership and she continues to be democratically re-elected every two yearsLeonida
has traveled extensively abroadand on four US tours sponsored by Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom, The Kensington Welfare Rights Union Poor People's
March, People's Global Action, and most recently Harvard University's Kennedy
School. Last year, Leonida was a candidate for the RF Kennedy Human Rights Award." Zurita is a long time colleague and friend of President Evo Morales, who was
elected in a landslide victory on December 18th, 2005. Morales spoke of her
visa rejection at a recent press conference in the presidential palace. "I
want to tell the U.S. government not to confuse us with some parties implicated
in drug-trafficking," he said. "We are not terrorists or drug traffickers
but rather humans who want to democratically change our history in Bolivia." So why was her visa canceled? According to Jim Shultz of the Democracy Center in Cochabamba, "In 2003
[Zurita] was accused of "terrorism" by the government of ousted-President
Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, served a brief time in jail in Cochabamba, and was
released for lack of evidence." The Center for International Policy (CIP), and think tank in Washington DC
which invited Zurita to speak on this tour, reported that she has been accused
of crimes in Bolivia but found innocent in each case. "In Bolivia the word "terrorism" is too often used to brand one's
political opponents. If the terrorism label does not stick--and we strongly
believe it does not--the reason for the visa decision must be politics,"
explains an article on the CIP's website. In Burlington, Vermont, Zurita was invited to be the keynote speaker at the
"Winds of Change in the Americas" conference which will take place
on Sunday, March 5th. Robin Lloyd, an organizer of the conference, said she
met Zurita in 1996 during one her first tours of the US. "At that point
I saw her very strong commitment to her community, the farmers in the Chapare
and I heard about the oppression they were facing from then Bolivian President
Banzer, a drug war zealot. He was following the dictates from Washington down
the line, supporting a plan for zero coca in a country where this is impossible
because coca is a leaf that many people chew as part of traditional ceremonies
and daily work," Lloyd said. "Leonida Zurita is an important figure
in Bolivian politics and we invited her here to exchange ideas and articulate
the change that needs to happen in the war on drugs." The case for Zurita's visa cancellation is not an isolated one. Dr. Waskar
Ari is an Aymara Indian from Bolivia who received his Ph.D. from Georgetown
University. He was recently offered a teaching position at the University of
Nebraska, but his visa was denied because his name was "placed on a list
of individuals under 'conspicuous revision'-that is, he is being subjected to
extensive background checks due to alleged security concerns," reported
the American Historical Association. Barbara S. Weinstein, the President of the American Historical Association
told the Chronicle for Higher Education that Dr. Ari "has certainly never
been a member of any movement that would be of a security concern to the U.S.
government." In the Name of the War on Terror "We invited Leonida here to increase the dialogue between US citizens
and Bolivians at a time of historic change in Latin America. Yet the US government
is clamping down exchanges such as this in the name of the war on terror,"
Robin Lloyd said. "The US government is taking a hard line against countries
like Venezuela and Bolivia; they are trying to stifle the winds of change that
are sweeping through Latin America." The "Winds of Change in the Americas" conference will take place
on Sunday, March 5th from 3-9 PM at the Unitarian Church at the head of Church
Street in Burlington, Vermont. In addition to the presentation by Zurita, George
Ann Potter, Zurita's political advisor in Bolivia, will also to speak at the
event. There will be discussions led by Vermonters who recently returned from
Caracas, Venezuela for the World Social Forum, a gathering of social movements,
NGOs and activists from around the globe. Representatives from the Vermont Worker's
Center will be discussing social movements in Vermont. For those interested in calling the US Embassy in La Paz to voice their concerns,
and support Leonida Zurita Vargas' right to travel to the US, the number is
011-591-2216-8000. For more information on the "Winds of Change in the
Americas Conference," call 1-802-862-2024 Benjamin Dangl just returned from Bolivia where he was
doing research for "The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements
in Bolivia and Beyond" which will be published by AK Press in January,
2007. He is the editor of www.UpsideDownWorld.org,
a website uncovering activism and politics in Latin America and www.TowardFreedom.com,
a progressive perspective on world events. Email: ben(at)upsidedownworld.org
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