As the crisis of imperialism sharpens, the U.S. government is responding by lashing out harder against national liberation forces. This is particularly true for national liberation movements that are fighting for self-determination and against U.S. imperialist interests. Freedom Road Socialist Organization stands in solidarity with all peoples fighting for national liberation—both within the U.S. and abroad. We demand the release of all political prisoners that are part of the movements demanding self-determination for their peoples.
Former Black Panther Party member Mumia Abu-Jamal and American Indian Movement member Leonard Peltier are the best-known political prisoners in the U.S. They have been imprisoned for decades and we call for their immediate freedom.
But they are not the only ones. We call for freedom for the many political prisoners and Prisoners of War in U.S. jails from the Puerto Rican, Black, Chicano, and Native American liberation movements.
We demand freedom for the growing number of military resisters. We demand freedom for political activists who have been jailed for their progressive political activity.
We also denounce the use of imprisonment and torture by the U.S. in its “war on terror” in the Middle East and South Asia. Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib are atrocities of justice, which violate international law and trample on sovereignty. We denounce the United States’ use and justification of torture. These prisons are examples of how the U.S. is criminalizing national liberation movements, and we demand their immediate closure. The prisoners in U.S. prisons in Guantanamo Bay and in Iraq and Afghanistan have committed no crime. They have the right to resist U.S. imperialism.
In Colombia, the U.S. has supported the right-wing government with military aid and advisors. The Colombian government uses U.S. assistance to criminalize, fight, and jail any resistance to their free trade, imperialist agenda. The recent U.S. trials of FARC-EP members, Ricardo Palmera (Simon Trinidad) and Anayibe Rojas Valderrama (Sonia), demonstrate the U.S. government’s use of their legal system as a new tool of imperialist aggression in Colombia. We denounce the illegal extradition, kidnapping, “kangaroo trials,” and punishment of these fighters. The U.S. has no right to prosecute them and they have committed no crimes. We stand in solidarity with all the peoples of Colombia who challenge U.S. imperialism—including the FARC-EP. The FRSO has been leading the work in solidarity with Ricardo Palmera’s trial and has exposed it for the sham it is.
The FRSO stands in solidarity with the brave fighters for a free Palestine. We demand that the political prisoners are let free and that there is an end to the criminalization of all those fighting to end the apartheid system and occupation of all of historic Palestine. This is especially true for Ahmad Saadat, the General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), who was kidnapped from the Palestinian Authority’s Jericho prison by Israeli forces in March 2006. In addition to funding Israel’s apartheid regime that targets and jails Palestinian freedom fighters, the U.S. has played a direct role in jailing Saadat. While imprisoned in Jericho, U.S. and British soldiers provided security for the prison. In 2006 both British and U.S. soldiers left their posts to allow the Israeli military to lay siege to the prison and kidnap Saadat and his jailed comrades. We demand that Ahmed Saadat and all other political prisoners in Palestine are freed!
Long live the resistance to U.S. imperialism!
Freedom for all political prisoners now!
1 comment:
It is easy to opine from afar, in your ivory towers, and cheer the FARC, condemning Colombia's actions against them as an extension of American intervenionism. Perhaps, like Oliver Stone, you view the FARC as a "peasant army fighting for a decent living." Such idealized infatuation ignores the truth of the decades of terror the FARC guerillas have visited on their innocent countrymen. Amongst your calls for social justice, where is the justice for P._._., murdered by FARC guerrillas in front of his family in their rural village for refusing to leave the small farm that he worked to enable his family to subsist? Where is the justice for his wife, B._._., kidnapped by FARC guerrillas for attempting to keep the family together on the farm after P's death? And where is the justice for their children, orphaned and scattered amongst family members and the slums of Bogota?
The FARC is no peasant army fighting the forces of imperialism. They are terorrists, murderers, and bombers. They oppress and murder the very people you seem to think they are fighting to help. Shame on you for placing political agendas above human life. Shame on you for being unwilling to condemn murder, when it is done to serve your political ends. There are many great causes of social justice which deserve our attention, respect and action. The war of terror perpetrated by the FARC is no such war.
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