US State
Department must respond to false statements threatening
immigrants
On the eve of the first
round of El
Salvador’s most contested elections since the
1992 Peace Accords, a right-wing campaign of dirty propaganda, media
misinformation, provocation and violence continues to escalate. Beginning in
late October and continuing to this day, Fuerza Solidaria—a right-wing organization
founded in Venezuela—has
flooded the Salvadoran airwaves and streets with a series of advertisements
attempting to frighten Salvadoran voters with threats of U.S.
retaliation. The ads state that an FMLN victory would mean the end to good
relations with the U.S.
government and thus the end to remittances sent home from Salvadorans living in
the U.S. They also claim that an FMLN
victory would threaten the Temporary Protective Status (TPS) which allows over
200,000 Salvadorans to remain in the U.S. These absurd threats are similar
to the ones made back in 2004 by members of the U.S. Congress, together with the
governing ARENA party; such threats turned a close election into a decisive
victory for the right-wing party. In the face of Fuerza Solidaria’s blatant
misrepresentation of the ramifications of an FMLN victory, the U.S. State
Department—which has privately pledged neutrality in El Salvador’s
electoral process—has remained silent rather than refute these
claims.
The right wing’s
dirty campaign has not stopped at propaganda and misinformation. Over the past
year, political violence carried out by ARENA and their allies has continued to
rise, ranging from street attacks to uninvestigated murders of more than a half
dozen FMLN and social movement leaders in 2008 alone. In September,
ARENA campaigners attacked FMLN supporters conducting
door-to-door visits, sending four people to the hospital in San Salvador. In response
to these attacks, ARENA's mayoral candidate for San Salvador, Norman Quijano, publicly admitted
that his campaigners are armed and should be "considered dangerous." Numerous
other incidents of government violence have occurred since the beginning of the
year.
With ten days to
go until the municipal and legislative elections (the presidential election will
be on March 15), the U.S. continues to be complicit in the
dirty campaign by not countering right-wing propaganda related to its foreign
policy. This is not neutrality! Demand that
Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Thomas Shannon make
a public statement refuting the right wing’s fear-based threats and declare that
the US
will maintain a
positive relationship with any government freely elected by the Salvadoran
people.
Take
Action!
1) CALL Hillary
Thompson at the El Salvador desk of the State Department at (202) 647-4161
and tell her
to urge Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Shannon to refute the baseless threats related to
U.S. policy (see call script below.)
You can also
email Shannon directly at
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2)
PARTICIPATE in the CISPES week of action from January 12-18.
Contact your local CISPES chapter in Boston,
New York, Washington DC, Seattle, Olympia, Portland, San Francisco and
Los Angeles (go
here for contact info.) Or organize your own local action - more
information at www.cispes.org
3)
ATTEND a delegation to monitor the March elections. More
information at www.cispes.org/delegations
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You
can use the following script to contact Hillary Thompson at the El
Salvador Desk of the State Department – (202)
647-4161
1. I am calling to urge
Assistant Secretary of State Tom Shannon to publicly support democracy in
El Salvador by
refuting Fuerza Solidarida’s baseless threats, and
to state the U.S. government’s
intention to maintain a positive relationship with
any government freely elected by
the Salvadoran people
2. Recent ads in
El Salvador attempt to scare
voters by stating that an FMLN victory would mean the end to good relations with
the U.S .government and thus an end to remittances sent home from Salvadorans
living in the U.S.
·
In addition to
threatening remittances, the ads also threaten Salvadoran American’s Temporary
Protective Status (TPS) which allows over 200,000 Salvadorans to remain in the
U.S.
·
Similar
statements were made in 2004 by Roger Noriega of the State Department and by
Rep. Tom Tancredo of Colorado, among
others.
·
These statements
caused many Salvadorans to vote out of fear of U.S.
retaliation, rather than according to their convictions. As someone who believes
in democracy, I want to make sure the U.S. does allow untrue, fear-based
threats to affect elections again in 2009.
3.
It is extremely important that the State Department stand up for the Salvadoran
people’s right to freely elect their government, without fear of foreign
retribution. I am calling on Mr. Shannon to denounce the Fuerza Solidaria’s baseless statements
regarding the U.S.
relationship with El
Salvador, and to assert that the United States
will maintain a positive relationship with any government freely elected by the
Salvadoran people. When a third party lies about U.S. policy, it
is the responsibility of the Department of State to correct those
statements.
For
more background information:
·
read this CISPES
article in the latest issue of Z magazine
·
check out recent CISPES
updates and press releases
·
Read the summer CISPES
fact-finding delegation report challenging the US
government role in human rights violations and
intervention
·
watch “Unidos Por El Cambio”,
the CISPES video about the upcoming elections
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