Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Thursday, February 26, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan U.S. meddling in Nat. Am. politics w?1"'iKIA OF LEAt t " p 0 ... ........-.. .....,,r,. THE RESIDENTS OF Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota have successfully voted Tribal Chairman Dick Wilson out of office. Strongman at the 13,000 member reservation since 1972, Wilson has become a sym- 'bol of tribal government cor- ruption and federal favoritism because of his ripoffs of federal funds and his terrorist tactics. This article was prepared by members of the Native Ameri- can Solidarity Committee. Wilson lost his January 27 bid for a thirdhterm as tribal chairman to Al Trimble only be- cause the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service moni- tored the election, apparently in a fair way. Wilson is not surprisingly a poor loser. Retaliation came even before the January runoff. Wallace Little Junior,anAIM supporter, lost an eye and a hand in an explosion January 24. Someone threw a Molotov cocktail into his brother Rich- ard's home on January 31. Their brother Jimmy, who had called for Wilson's impeachment, was beaten to death last September. Four days after the election, another Indian rights activist, Byron DeSersa, was killed in what a member of the Wound- ed Knee Legal Defense / Of- fense Committee (WKLD/OC) called a "clear act of retribu- tion" for Wilson's defeat. Wil- son's followers, or "goon squad" shot into the home of the elderly Dull Knife couple and then arrested them for "malicious mischief." WE MUST RELY on contact with the Native American Soli- darity Committee and WKLD/ OC and occasional articles by the "alternative press" for re- ports of these atrocities. Gov- ernment perpetrated acts of ag- gression on Lndian people are not covered by establishment media. Russell Means, sentenced De- cember 31 to four years on a 1974 charge, faces several more trials (with a combined maxi- mum sentence of 111 years). Leonard Crow Dog, the highly respected spiritual leader of AIM, is in jail on charges of "aiding and abetting ani as- sault." It seems to be a calcu- lated insult to Indian culture and an attempt to demoralize AIM. Within the past six months AIM supporters have been ar- rested in Kansas, Minnesota, Oregon, Nevada and other states. Dennis Banks 'was ar- rested January 24 in El Cerri- to, California, after being un- derground since August. He had fled South Dakota rather than go to jail, where he believed he would be killed. He is now fight- ing extradition to South Dakota. The government is continuing its assault on the Wounded Knee Legal Defense / Offense Committee. In January of this year, three lawyers received subpoenas to testify before a grand jury. The tactic is an at- tempt to "drive a wedge" be- tween movement groups and their attorneys. "LAWYERS and legal work- ers are now on notice that when they seek to represent Indians in American courts, they will be subject to being hauled before grand juries, with all the pow- er and threat to them that those institutions represent," accord- ing to a statement in support of Marti Copleman, the first law- yer subpoen ter for Con NYC. sorting to illegal tactics. Last October FBI men broke into all three WKLD/OC offices in South Dakota, ransacked files, and attacked some of the staff or held them at gunpoint. 'The w trve peon f Ou g h I f i o mn where wo ing Cut rolls with ings, to state whe mish trib by fisher The FBI h al workersc Reservation Charlie Lon worker in th in Oglala, month on chl a federal of weapons. Th in cooperati undercut th defense com Having sp tax dollarsc Wounded Kn ernment fac track record victions. The aed, from the Cen- WHY IS THE U. S. govern- nstitutional Rights, ment so anxious to squash the American Indian Move- ment? Forthe answer we must look ;to their. land. Underground coal rr against Na- fields are located in Indian land in North and South Dakota, ple is being Montana and Wyoming. Energy everywhtere, companies plan to strip-mine the coal and build at least 42 Ann Arbor, coal-fired electrical generating plants. The first goal gassifica- omen are be- tion plant is to be built by Con f rot welfare solidation Coal (owned by Con- e tinental Oil)at Rapid City. ,out fail- hear- .No one has examined the en- vironmental impact on Indians. Washington D u r i n g the occupation at Wounded Knee a University of wr the SoO- Arizona professor told a mining 7e is attacked symposium that "the smoke doesn't bother anything but the ies officers.' Indians and a few sheep." Continental Oil is only one of ............ ..............:: ............ m any m ultinational corpora- tions attempting to rake in iarrassment of leg- their next profit by victimizing on the Pine Ridge the Indians. Peabody Coal, a is just as blatant. subsidiary of Kennocott Copper, g Soldier, a legal has leased 157,555 acres on the e WKLD/OC office Northern Cheyenne Reserva- was arrested this tion alone. The corporation is arges of assaulting illegally surveying the land. ficer and carrying THE INTERESTS of these e FBI was working monopoly capitals speak loudly on with Wilson to in Washington. The Department e effectiveness of of the Interior, which includes zmittee. the Bureau of Indian Affairs, ent millions of our (BIA) represents these inter- on trials related to ests. We can then understand iee, the U. S. gov- why the American Indian es an embarrassing Movement is demanding that on obtaining con- the BIA be removed from the y are therefore re- Department of the Interior and Banks restructured as an independent agency controlled Eby and ac- countable to Indian people. The war against Native peo- ple is being fought everywhere, from Ann Arbor, where women are being cut from welfare rolls without fair hearings, to Wash- ington state where the Skoko- mish tribe is attacked by fish- eries officers for fishing in treaty protected waters. Despite .overwhelming oppres- sion, Indian people have made clear their intention to fight until they win liberation. Their struggle is the cry of all of us who ononse the destruction of land, government harrassment, racism and genocide. A Native Americnn Solidarity Committee is forming in Ann Arbor. The- first meeti-g is Thursday, Feb. 26 at 8:00 in 1020 Angell Hall. 1 tde'n- on the occupation of Wounded Knee will be shown. i '' .Q7,, Ford cover-up suspected JN ORDERING THE FBI and Na- tional Security Agency (NSA) not to comply with a House subcom- mittee subpoena concerning the Government's interception of mes- sages carried by telegraph compa- nies, President Ford has raised the old Nixonian spectre of executive pri- vilege. Ford's argument consists of the old "national security" line. In Ford's view, the information requested by the Government Information and In- dividual Rights subcommittee cov- ered such an "extremely broad" spectrum of documents as to include the "most sensitive national secur- ity information". Consequently, Ford reasons, "the public interest" de- mands that the desired records not be turned over to the committee. In the bleak years of the Nixon Presidency, the words "executive pri- vilege" in conjunction with the catch-all phrase "national security" came to denote official chicanery and TODAY'S STAFF:. News: Phil Bokovoy, Lois Josimovich, George Lobsenz, Jeff Ristine, Tim Schick, Karen Schulkins, Bill Turque, Mike Yellin Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Stephen Hersh, John Pansius, Tom Stevens Arts Page: Kevin Counihan, Jeffrey Selbst, Jeff Sorensen Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens presidential cover - up. With Ford's memo, memories of past adminis- trations' sham explanations rise to the surface. Is Ford trying to cover up gov- ernment violations of the Constitu- tion and the Federation Communica- tions Act? According to subcommit- tee chairperson Bella Abzug (D-Man- hattan), this is possible. She notes that the Administration has said it has stopped picking up messages sent by cable, but the question of govern- mental monitoring of Telexes is still very much in the dark. TELEX OFFERS DIRECT, instan- taneous communication from one terminal to another across the world, and it is a system which may be leased by private companies or organizations. In Abzug's eyes, Ford may have acted to cover up an on- going interception program in sus- pect exercise of executive privilege. The President is developing an un- healthy affinity for secrecy. Some more openness in government, far from threatening our country's se- curity, would insure a gteater de- gree of conformity to the law. Editorial positions represent consensus of the Daily staff. 146 HC~ FEEL A5,-V6 l H ABOUC LWi' CAk)CR. :I F4s0 N69+6OkPM 9lRrGfcF KG 6 r~ 't 1piG't AL-tAYWI A PiP(- r~F E i-zr i%'r ~aV& (1t OF Y PoCOf0 t4l-l 'V 6 MY ME A600Xr fThROAT CAkCU. / IS U P w HEi &) ME Y ~ Mv~)L FLc OULr &WYO~ ZAIRE: Crisis endangers U.S. African policy I, 84N \/OVAGES / By REED KRAMER WASHINGTON, D.C. (PNS) - Last fall, as New York City teetered on the brink of default, Zaire (formerly the Belgian Congo) quietly skipped another: loan payment to American creditors. And the Ford Administration, adamant- ly opposing plans to bail out New York, asked Congress to approve millions in emergency first aid for Zaire. The southern Africa giant - Ameri- ca's leading ally in black Africa-faces an economic and political crisis which could draw the U.S. into a new Angola- type involvement. Zaire's treasury is close to bankrupt- cy, political dissent against the dictator- ship of Mobutu Sese Seko is on the rise, and leftist Antoine Gizenga - former- ly a key deputy in the Lumumba gov- ernment which was overthrown (with CIA aid, according to recent disclo- sures) in 1961 - last month launched a military campaign from eastern Zaire against Mobutu's government. WITH THE WAR in neighboring An- gola all but over, Mobutu is also wor- ried about 3,000 troops from Katanga province in Zaire who have been fight- ing for the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). These troops fled Zaire when Mobutu, using largely white mercenaries, crushed the Katangese secessionist movement in the mid-sixties. Mobutu now fears they will return to fight his army once again. Diplomatically, Zaire's isolation in black Africa has increased as the west- ern-backed forces it supported in Angola have been run off the battlefield and the leftist MPLA has been recognized as Angola's legitimate government by - in part because of its strategic loca- tion (it straddles southern Africa and borders seven nations) and in part be- cause of its abundant natural resources. ZAIRE TODAY HOSTS the largest CIA station in Africa. Before the An- golan civil war, Zaire was a prime target of South Africa's U.S.-encouraged detente policy towards black Africa. Though its vast rain forests have bare- ly been explored, Zaire's known mineral wealth is prodigious - including gold, industrial diamonds, cobalt, copper and oil. U.S. firms have one of their largest African stakes in Zaire, with $250 mil- lion in direct investments and $800 mil- lion in loans. And the U.S. depends on Zaire and neighboring Zambia for rough- ly half its cobalt. But copper has long been the key to Zaire's future - and to its recent eco- nomic collapse. Providing 70 per cent of its foreign earnings and 50 per cent of its national budget, copper has plung- ed from $1.50 a pound on the world mar- ket in early 1974 to 55 cents today. ITH INCOME LAGGING and debts skyrocketing, Zaire soon began to default on loans. By October 1975, it had missed more than $8 million in pay- ments to U.S. banks. In response, the U.S. government - already committed to covert aid for one of the Angolan factions, for which it needed Zaire as a staging ground - quietly began to lobby on Zaire's be- half with its New York bank creditors. More important, the State Department began working on an $80 million aid package - a 16-fold increase over 1974 and 1975. WHEN THE STATE DEPARTMENT attempted to transfer the first $10 mil- lion of a requested $22.8 million in Se- curity Supporting Assistance to Zaire last month, however, a loud outcry from key committee chairmen blocked the move. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee subsequently recommended a $15 million ceiling this year. To help the administration lobby against such restraints, Mobutu recent- ly sent his top aide, Nguza Karl-i-Bond, to Washington. Even a 16-fold increase in aid may not be enough if current signs of politi- cal dissent continue, however. The sig- nificance of socialist Antoine Gizenga's campaign is not yet clear, but the for- mer Lumumba deputy will have no trou- ble operating out of Kivu province - which Mobutu has been unable to con- trol for years. (It was an anti-Mobutu force in Kivu which kidnapped one Dutch and three U.S. students last June.) MOBUTU HAS TROUBLE elsewhere. On a recent trip to northern Zaire, he was met by groups of irate women pro- testing high prices. Normally presidential visits are greeted by specially mobilized, cheering crowds - and overt dissent is risky. A plot to overthrow Mobutu by young officers last summer points to further weakness in Zaire's army, though its ex- tent is impossible to gauge. In a move which confused observers. Mobutu reacted to the plot by blaming the CIA and expelling the American am- bassador, Deane Hinton. Six months earl- ier, he had similarly confounded expec- tations by being the first black African leader to publicly criticize the appoint- ment of Nathaniel Davis as U.S. Assist- Alobiti jected to U.S. involvement in Angola.) MANY U.S. OFFICIALS believe the two slaps were intended by Mobutu - who felt ignored and abandoned in his economic crisis - to put pressure on Washington. Other observers feel Mobutu was try- ing to shake his reputation in black Africa as "an American stooge." Mo- butu came to power with direct Ameri- can aid - including a CIA-financed army of white South African mercenaries-and much of black Africa feels he has been beholden to American interests ever since. Now, with his economy verging on bankruptcy, the MPLA in almost com- plete control of Angola, a civil war springing up in Zaire's own back yard -... fpr o.f ffir.th~v ,'cheilionif the i'I . '