4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 4, 1983 The Michigan Daily Fighting for the poor in Central America 4 By Matthew P. Levine SAN JOSE, Costa Rica-This is a story of poor people. The setting is early 1983 in Costa Rica, but it's playing in your neighborhood, too. Time and time again, the stage has been set and the banners raised in the name of the poor. But time and again the results have been equally as poor as the people or worse. With lit- tle to lose and so much to gain, the im- 'poverished are dangerously vulnerable to out- side manipulation and rabble-rousing fabrication. And being poorly educated, they are taken easily. TRUTH ALWAYS HAS been an elusive *,commodity. It is the end product of a long and ;rigorous process of intake, filtration, metabolism, and a resynthesis sprinkled with judicious impartiality. Yet these tools simply are not available to these under-instructed and over-indoctrinated players. So here in colorful Costa Rica, in the name" of justice for poor people, the show goes on. There is a cast of thousands, but they're mainly f6reigners. There are some big names, but they're not the main attraction. The producers handling the promotion, direction, and finan- cing from Costa Rica, the United States, Hon- duras, Panama, Argentina, and other nations are better left behind the scenes. - A com- ,ehensive playbill has yet to be published, for rious inquiries into a precise who's who in Is play leads quickly to dead ends and broken .nes. "Auditions to join the fight for freedom -are lid throughout the Americas, but it's here, in the port of Limon and across the sprawling m'esaof San Jose, that our story unfolds. The 4nain characters are the susceptible and .. sometimes desperate young men who's hands and minds make the pages of history. USING FICTITOUS identities, they speak openly of their exacting enlistments while taking us on a brief vault into their valors and vulnerabilities. The curtain goes up on a young man from- Cabo Gracias a Dios, Nicaragua. He is a dark- skinned, muscular, mustachioed Indian who fled to Costa Rica after his native village was burned to the ground following an attack by an armed group "fighting" for liberation for his Atlantic homeland. These self-proclaimed freedom fighters crossed the Coco River early last year in the name of these poor Miskito In- dians. As a result, he lost his family and what little else he had. His youngest brother was killed, one of his sisters became a refugee in Hon- duras, and his mother and the rest of the family moved inland to a camp under the protection of the Sandinist government. SINCE THE FALL of dictator General Anastasio Somoza in 1979, the rugged northeast territory of Nicarauga has been a battleground between the Sandinistas and an estimated 10,000 veteran Somocistas fortified by 2,000 newly recruited Miskitos. The common hit and run assaults, apparently given the green light by U.S. Secretary of Inter- American Affairs Thomas Enders, are, accor- ding to our unemployed maritime cook, "designed to create serious problems for the Sandinistas by sparking a separatist movement in order to isolate the Indian- speaking Atlantic Coast from the rest of the Spanish-speaking country." But, he continued, counting and recounting the last of his 400 colones (about $10), "the real losers are my own Indian people." Ian, our Nicaraguan national, is a loser, too. He has lost his family, his livelihood, and many of his Indian friends. He can't work in Costa Rica and is awaiting word on a work permit for a maintenance job in the Grand Cayman Islan- ds. IAN SAID a life-long friend who works for the Nicaraguan Democratic Union here "now brags of plenty of money. But he won't help me because I told hin that I want nothing to do with his organization. "They try to recruit us here and in Limon by promising us money and telling us we have to fight for our people." But Ian is also a winner. He proudly said that "no matter what happens," he won't "work for dirty money." He said, "These people are not fighting for the Miskitos, but for themselves. What they are really doing is using and hurting their own people, and I feel sorry for them." ENTER ALFRITO, a young mulatto who has gone through 3 weeks of guerilla training before escaping to the sanctity of central San Jose. He said his training included "running and hiking with a pack full of rocks, meals of rice and beans, and lots of marijuana." He could care less about ideology or his In- dian people. Alfrito said he left the camp "because they make you stay in the camp and you can't even spend the little money they give you. These security precautions are meant to regulate the flow of information about these camps, but the information is easy to find. OUR LAST PLAYER is Roberto, another Miskito exile. Carefully clutching a paperback version of the scriptures of Jehovah, he described the events leading up to his depar- ture from Cabo Gracias a Dios in March, 1982. He was recruited for another training camp only two hours from San Jose. He said he was "one of 40 men smoking grass and working constantly with full packs, but without arms." He left after 15 days when he ,realized the training camps "will only create more problems" for himself and his people. He recalled how he and so many others were manipulated and driven to lead the lives of refugees. In late 1979, just after the triumph of the revolution, he was working with the Moravian Church. Problems started early in 1980 when he was teaching sociology and human development for an organization called Action Social. According to Roberto, "This program was funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The Sandinistas were afraid that under the guise of helping the Indian people, the AID program was a CIA plan to inititate a separatist movement." Subsequen- tly, the Americans were deported and the program was banned. More problems surfaced in October 1980, when Steadman Faggoth was elected leader of the Misurasata, a group formed to promote unity among the Miskito, Sumo, Rama and Sandinist people. "But Faggoth, in the name of the poor, called on his people to reclaim the In- dian land," Roberto said. "In late December, 1981, many Sandinistas and Indians were killed, hundreds of villages were destroyed and over 50,000 were left homeless." And today, the suffering of these poor people continues. Ian, Alfrito, Roberto, and thousands of others are still living beneath the dark shadows of an uncertain future. They are vic- tims of those who raise the banner in the name of justice for the poor. Levine is traveling in Central America. He is a regular contributor to the Daily. 4 'They (the Nicaraguan Democratic Union) try to recruit us here and in Limon by 4 promising us money and telling us we have to fight for our people.' -Nicaraguan refugee 'Ian' 4 .*1 Y -- -- z. :Y .t v< x . "< F'°' a j : '"r II {;., g. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair . , ~t93 -r Vol. XCIII, No. 103 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 A Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board IN .4,No time for HE STATE Legislature got its first look at Governor Blancard's icome tax hike plan Wednesday and : ready partisan snipers are arming to botage it. If Republican leaders wbe their way, the proposal, along ith the state's chances at solving its budget crisis, will fall in the crossfire. Blanchard unveiled his 38 percent tpx hike plan along with a call for $225 ; million budget cuts in his State of the Q; State address a week ago. The elixir is sour, but at last someone in Lansing is addressing the state's chronic deficits with a long-term cure. Recognizing this, former governor William Milliken endorsed Blan- c chard's plan "in principle." In his own administration, Milliken presided over huge cuts in state services, aid to cities, and particularly large cuts to universities. This years cuts are hardly less pain- . ful, as they involve more than $25 million in cuts to higher education - $5 :million from the University. But party politics unlike past years, they are being coupled with a more permanent solution to Michigan's chronic fiscal problems. Unfortunately, the Republican leadership is more interested in playing party politics than com- promising for the state's future. Both of the party's leaders in the house and senate refuse to support the governor and Milliken's pull with the rest of the party is no longer considered strong. At this state, with budget deficit looming toward the $1 billion mark, there is no longer room for inter-party squabbling. Blanchard is not just trying to stifle opposition when he urges Republicans to stop party pet- tiness and compromise. He knows too much is at stake. And he is willing to take a tough stand to solve the crisis. As the governor said Tuesday in a plea for citizen support in recession- wracked Flint, "The money's been spent. The bill is due and it's time to pay. - _ :.. r 14 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Muzzling the fans at Crisler Pao AIAAII/IAHN lyi4 oe .0 W* To the Daily: Of the three deplorable acts connected with last Saturday's basketball game, I cannot say which I consider to be worse. First, before the game began, the security guards in Crisler Arena warned the fans sitting in the student section not to take part in or provoke any demon- stration in favor of the Michigan Basketball team during the game. It seems that it has been so quiet in Crisler Arena because Mr. Don Canham wants it that way. I do not understand this as Mr. Canham was a student here at Michigan and would hopefully know what it is like to support the team that represents your school. Perhaps, as I am talking about something from the heart and not the checkbook, Mr. Canham no Christianity and truth longer remembers. I have nothing but admiration, pride and respect for the job Mr. Canham does for this school, but I cannot go along with muzzling the student fans in Crisler Arena. Manners are fine for a tea party but I am talking about Big Ten basketball. Second, during the game, a Big Ten referee, Phil Robinson, lost any professional composure he may have had and ordered a fan to be removed from the arena. Sure, referees are only human (I think), but at the major college level, any referee should have the professional ability to refrain from such displays of incom- petence and remain involved in the proper officiating of the game. Third, the action of the referee was ignored by the media until finally being reported in a Daily sports column, four days after off their hands and make some noise, the Daily sports staff responds with a total lack of sup- port for the students and remained as quiet as the alumni fans in Crisler Arena. I did not mind that other publications neglected the fan/ref altercation, but the ab- sence of any comment from the Daily, the student newspaper that proclaims 93 years of editorial freedom, did hurt. -Michael Hoffman February 3 Bulimia and badjourn alism To the Daily: I was incensed by an article I read in the Daily ("Bulimic ex- pelled from ZTA house," Daily, Feb. 1). What is the purpose of To the Daily: Thank you for the insightful ar- ticle about Christianity on cam- pus ("Christianity: Keeping faith on campus," Weekend, Jan. 28). It is rare for an outside viewer to make such a balanced and thorough presentation of Christian phenomena. Yet I would suggest that Beth University is to pursue truth and to dismiss untruth. Our philosophies and our lives must be made to conform to truth. False ideas must con- tinually be purged. Christianity must be true or false. If the Christian message is false, it should be dismissed from the U~nivpmty~f -.--4.sm