al * OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 10, 1989 University targeted for repression: The Michigan Daily be diianrtoaiig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Salvador education 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 By David Austin Vol. IC, No. 94 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. This is the first of a series focusing on El Salvador Members of the University community should all be aware of the events occurring at the University of El Salvador. We should be concerned not only because we have a sister university relationship, but because the U.S. government is heavily involved in the civil war in El Salvador and is partly to blame for repression di- rected against the University there. The University of El Salvador is a mi- crocosm of the situation in El Salvador. Students, workers and faculty at the Uni- versity are involved in a struggle with the Salvadoran government to establish a truly democratic university, one open to and serving all people. This battle parallels the popular struggle in El Salvador, a fight to change an unjust status quo that benefits a The Salvadoran oligarchy and army have maintained their position with the aid of the United States, which currently sends two million dollars a day to the Salvado- ran government. This aid has been used for repression. From 1980 to 1983 roughly 30,000 opposition people were killed by govern- ment death squads. In 1984, the govern- ment's strategy shifted to focus on rural areas and sought to separate the guerrillas from their civilian supporters by indis- criminate bombings and massive ground sweeps. The training and arms came from the United States. Now 25 percent of the Salvadoran population is homeless. Popular organizing and corresponding government repression have also occurred at the University of El Salvador (UES), the only public university in El Salvador. Part of the University's struggle is to ob- tain a budget and university autonomy from the government, both guaranteed by the Salvadoran constitution. bombing followed a sit-in by more than 1,000 students and employees at the Trea- sury Department demanding enough money from the government to pay em- ployees' and professors' salaries for the month of December. Government repression of the Univer- sity has also been directed at people. Since 1980, 715 students have been assassinated, 301 "disappeared," and one University president murdered. In March, 1986 the president of AGEUS, Antonio Quezada, was kidnapped and held at the headquarters of the National Police. He was subjected to psychological torture and was released only due to inter- national pressure. His successor, Daniel Huezo, was subjected to similar treatment at the hands of the National Guard last December. Events such as these are normal for people engaged in the popular struggle. Because the Salvadoran government is un- able to defeat the guerrillas militarily, it can only strike at civilians. Thus, as the j l 0 Student at the University of El Salvador which was occupied and rav- aged by the Salvadoran army, 1980-1984. Attacks on the university and student leaders are on the rise. Civilians at risk: Salvador held hostage "Respect for human rights will deteriorate dramatically if American aid is cut off... if the armed forces feel their survival is in danger, they williforget human rights and go after any communist they canfind. If there is more violence by the guerillas, their will be more violence by individuals in the armed forces who take things into their own hands." -Alfredo Christiani (New York Times 1/29189) 'Government repression of the University has also been di- rected at people. Since 1980, 715 students have been assassi- nated, 301 "disappeared," and one University president mur- dered.' 4 I ALFREDO CHRISTIANI IS the presi- dential candidate of El Salvador's far- right National Republican Alliance (ARENA), the party likely to win the sham elections for president in March, 1989. ARENA is the party of the death squads; it was founded by Roberto D'Aubuisson, who is the center of the death squad network. The United States is intent on dumping at least $600 million into El Salvador next year to prop up the government, and :D'Aubuisson is unacceptable. Hence Christiani - even though, as The New York Times Magazine (2/5/89) says,"he has no political experience." Christiani's "experience" reveals El Salvador's likely future. First, he says that the army will kill all the commu- :nists if U.S. aid is cut off. But the army and its death squads ran out of 'communists it could kill long ago; they are all dead, in exile, or fighting with the FMLN, the armed opposition to El salvador's present government. After the communists, the army turned on social democrats, Christian democrats, ;editors, nuns, priests, labor leaders, :and farmers. In addition, the United ,States trained Salvadorans to napalm ;nd bomb peasants. It is ordinary Sal- v~adorans like this who will be victim- ized by "individuals in the armed forces .who will take things into their own ,hands." Christiani's implication is that the off-duty military, if faced by increased attacks by the FMLN, will step up their attacks on civilians. In essence he is holding El Salvador hostage. It makes brutal sense in the nightmarish logic of the Salvadoran military: if most of the population supports the guerillas, you have to kill most of the population. After ten years, the Salvadoran army and its allies have been unable to kill all the opposition. That is because the majority of the population is the opposition. If the guerillas have sur- vived and grown stronger over the years, it is because of civilian support. A Salvadoran government that depends on U.S. support - rather than the people -- for its survival is nothing more than a puppet. Cut the aid, and it falls. Meanwhile, the opposition grows stronger without such aid. It has the support of the majority of the popula- Since the United States in unwilling to practice the democracy that it preaches, it will make sure that official descriptions of Christiani are benign, as in The New York Times Magazine 's depiction of Christiani as "a more pre- sentable candidate" and a "wealthy, squeaky clean businessman." (2/5/89). The United States has no choice; it has invested $3.5 billion in El Salvador's status quo, and Christiani now is the status quo. small minority at the expense of the ma- jority. In both cases organizing for funda- mental civil and human rights has been met with repression by the Salvadoran government. The roots of the civil war in El Salvador lie in a skewed economy. In an agrarian society, roughly 65 percent of the rural population is landless and of those who have land 95 percent do not have enough to support their families. Throughout the twentieth century, land expropriations by the rich have accelerated, displacing sub- sistence farming with export crops such as coffee and beef. Food production has dropped, while increasing numbers of landless peasants have provided ancheap labor supply for work in the export sector. Years of repression under military dictatorships made peaceful change impossible and civil war broke out in 1979. A coalition of guerrilla armies and pro- gressive political parties, known collec- tively as the FMLN/FDR, has put forward a platform for changing El Salvador. This program seeks a mixed economy, based on agrarian reform providing land, credit and technology to small producers. It would respect human rights; guarantee rights of assembly, organization, expression and movement; guarantee health care and edu- cation; and pursue a non-aligned foreign policy. David Austin is an Opinion Page staffer, and wrote this for the Latin America Solidarity Committee. The government cannot grant these ba- sic rights because the UES community is seeking to transform the University from an institution run by and for elites to one where democracy and equality can be pro- moted and where technical and scientific knowledge can be used to promote the well being of all people. The UES com- munity has recognized that meaningful change at the University can occur only in the context of societal change and their struggle has, by necessity, become linked to the popular struggle. Students have been at the forefront of this struggle, working through two stu- dent organizations, AGEUS, the General Association of Salvadoran University Students, and FERS, the Salvadoran Rev- olutionary Student Front. AGEUS has focused its organizing on the demands for autonomy and a budget, while FERS is organizing young people of all ages around the political demands of the opposition. Not surprisingly, this organizing has been met by government repression. In 1980 the University was invaded by the army and closed for four years. During that time most of the University's books, equipment and buildings were destroyed. Since then the government has refused to provide money for reconstruction, leaving students and professors with no alternative but to hold classes outdoors, in tents or in buildings not on campus. Last December the biology building was bombed, killing one worker and causing damages estimated at $200 thousand. The opposition grows stronger, the Salvadoran death squads will become more active. The University of El Salvador will con- tinue to bear its share of government re- pression and the United States will con- tinue to finance it. As citizens we have the responsibility to force our government to respect the Salvadoran people's right to self determi- nation. We must end U.S. intervention. And as a university community we have much to learn from the students, workers and faculty at the University of El Sal- vador about creating a truly democratic in- stitution, one which serves society and does not perpetuate elite dominance. Representatives from both FERS and AGEUS will be speaking on the popular movement in El Sal- vador tonight at 8 pm in the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union. S I ::::j::.:::.:::er:::.:..t......th e" "::::::dito r..::":":....:::. .. . . . Brown bag discussion BAKER- - MANDELA ' ' CENTER : How do race, class and gender intersect in the fight against AIDS? What should the focus of the struggle be? Educational? Gaining access to drugs? Support of those who are dying? The Ella Baker-Nelson Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education, a student or- ganized and run alternative resource center, is sponsoring a series of weekly brown-bag discussions. This week's topic is "Unite to Fight AIDS." Bring lunch, drink coffee (free), and participate in the stimulating, informal discussion. Today at 12 noon in the Baker- Mandela Center, first floor of East Engineering, Room 3. Mi bcigan Daiy Mass Meeting Monday, February 13th, 7:00 pm Seminar on health care To the Daily: The Black and Latin Ameri- can/Native American Medical Associations and The Center for Health, Peace and Under- standing are proud to announce their health care seminar enti- tled: "The Fallacy of a Healthy United States: A Global Per- spective." The seminar will feature the historian and politi- cal scientist Dr. Manning Marable presenting "The Poli- tics of Health Care in the United States" on Friday, February 10, at 6:30 PM. Ac- tivities on Saturday, February 11, will include panels entitled "Health, Poverty and Race," and "Medical Education," and also workshops exploring nu- merous issues of pressing health import. Registration and Continental Breakfast are at 8:30 AM on Saturday, Febraury 11. For more infor- mation call the Medical School Office of Student and Minority Affairs at 764-8185 or Mary February is designated Black History Month, a time to con- sciously recognize and celebrate the struggles and contributions of our foremothers and forefa- thers throughout history. It is also, however, a time to reflect on the condition of our com- munities and analyze our strengths, weaknesses and the obstacles in our paths. Often, especially in the last eight years or so, this type of analy- sis has been produced and pop- ularized by conservatives, Black and white, who have taken it upon themselves to not only observe and evaluate our communities, but to pre- scribe solutions to what they identify as our problems, and influence public policy in that direction. This process happens not only in the general society, but on this campus as well. As members of the larger Black community, we must not let this continue unchecked. We must take an active role in determining our futures and take responsibility for presenting alternative and more accurate views of Black communities and the society as a whole. To this end, the United Coalition Against The Media Rewrites Our His- tory" - "Access To Education: A Right Or A Privilege" - "The Struggle For South- ern Africa: What's Next" Many of these issues are usually inadequately addressed in the mainstream media and always evidence the biases of those who control the "free press." We also discuss this issues among ourselves in small, informal groups. Hopefully, this teach-in will give us an opportunity to get together and share our insights and analysis on these issues. We can also begin to struggle with each other to develop possible answers to these questions and determine our role in making positive changes happen. This informal forum will be held on this Saturday, February 11 from 11:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union Anderson Rooms. -Rosalind Reeves February 8 'U' does it date for a senior position in LS&A. As clearly shown in the let- ter from UCAR and other groups (Daily, 1/31/89), the candidate was more than quali- fied. We view the rejection as symptomatic of the pervasive institutional bigotry which throws up a thousand barriers to the full participation of mi- norities, working people, women, lesbians and gay men in the University community. It should be clear to all that the administration has not committed itself to serious ac- tion to remove these obstacles. Is the "Michigan Mandate" nothing more than a cynical public relations stunt by a slick publicist who hopes to avoid having to make real changes by throwing up a smokescreen of talk about change? The administration's interest lies in maintaining the status quo. The experience of the last two years have shown us that we've got to make noise if we want the administration to budge. We must unify our ef- forts to pressure the administration to institute a mandatory class on racism, de- 4 NEWS hDIMIflI I The Daily is seeking new staff members. No previous